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On the Incarnation
Chapter 2, p. 20
That the baby Jesus could be both fully divine
and fully human, as Christians believe, defies logic. And for those
who believe that God’s greatness inheres in his distance, in his
difference from us, the incarnation is an offense. How can it be, and
why should it be? No one can answer how it can be. On this point we
stand on the precipice of mystery. But why it should be is easier to
comprehend. A God far distant from us in being and power, if he desires
any relationship with us, will have to make himself known to us somehow.
The question is how and to what degree. To what extent does God remain
above and beyond, and to what extent does God move among us?
We see God in the majesty and complex elegance of nature, yet nature
leaves us with many questions about God. We learn more about God from
holy books composed through some extraordinary, God-influenced process.
Yet even the Scriptures—though precious, instructive, and indispensable—are
not enough. Neither the natural world nor volumes of books are sufficient
to reveal the fullness of God because neither is like enough to God.
If God is a personal being, then the best means to make himself known
to us is through personhood, in a form with which we are familiar: the
human. Christians believe that God took on human form in order to give
us the key to unlock the mystery of himself. To take on our nature like
this may seem to reduce God’s glory and power, but this is precisely
what we most need to know about God: that God’s essential nature
is love, the kind of love willing to diminish oneself for the sake of
another. In the incarnation God in a way reduces his own stature out
of love, like a parent kneeling down to comfort a frightened child,
pressing the face of compassion to the face streaked with tears and
saying: “Do not be afraid. I am with you.”
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On Suffering
Chapter 5, p. 111
The fundamental question for all of us is this:
How big is our hope? Will we let our hope be small and feeble, invested
only in the human spirit and the temporary endurance of our remarkable
and terrible species? Or will we fling out our hope beyond the stars
themselves toward the repair of all things? When we hear the promises
of the Bible; when we see light in the love of others, in deeds of mercy,
in gestures of hope amid despair, in the renewing seasons of creation,
in new life, what will we take that light to be? Pinpricks in an enduring
field of darkness? Or glimpses of a real light beyond that darkness,
a light more true in the end than the darkness?
Paul wrote to the Colossians that he wished for them the “full
riches of complete understanding, in order that [you] may know the mystery
of God, namely Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge” (2:2–3). The Greek here for “complete
understanding” is more literally translated “underflowing”—the
deep interconnection among all things. In the depths of God, all things
are ordered and harmonized, even the jangling surfaces of our suffering.
We cannot explain it; we can only begin to touch that underflowing by
receiving the transforming hope offered us in the mysterious, suffering
love of Christ.
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On Prayer
Chapter 6, pp. 136-37
I know from experience that there are places
of grief and desperation when even that heartbeat of desire seems to
go silent, when it is beyond our strength to form even a shadow of a
prayer. At those times we depend on the prayers of others and on the
knowledge that prayer “does not depend on us.” Here I turn
to that passage from Romans 8 so necessary whenever I think about prayer:
“In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not
know what we ought to pray, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us
with groans that words cannot express” (verse 26). When we pray,
and also when we do not pray, we are surrounded by the prayers of others
and sustained by the Spirit.
In fact, we are surrounded by the prayer of creation itself. That heartbeat
of desire to be drawn into the heart of God rises wordlessly from the
colors, sounds, and structures of creation. The psalmist writes that
the heavens declare the glory of God;
the skies proclaim the work of his hands. (19:1)
Paul adds that the creation “groans as
in the pains of childbirth,” awaiting freedom from its “bondage
to decay” (Romans 8:22, 21). The pulse of that praise and longing
sets our tempo.
Even when we cannot pray, the creation itself cries out to God. The
wild irises bloom, the waves crash, the trees wave their branches, humpback
whales set their tails toward the sky and sing.
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On Service
Chapter 10, pp. 214-15
Another paradox involves the value
of our help. On the one hand, nothing we do, no matter how noble and
self-sacrificial, earns us points with God. There are no points. Salvation
comes by grace through faith, “not by works, so that no one can
boast” (Ephesians 2:9). However, another strong current in the
Bible suggests that our behavior has enduring consequences. The author
of the New Testament book of James writes, “faith by itself, if
it is not accompanied by action, is dead” (2:17). Jesus told a
story of the “Son of Man” (a title he used for himself)
sitting in judgment and separating people like sheep from goats. The
sheep are the ones who have acted in mercy and helped those who were
hungry, thirsty, strangers, naked, sick, or imprisoned. The Son of Man
welcomes them to receive their “inheritance, the kingdom prepared
for you since the creation of the world.” The goats are the ones
who lacked these deeds, and they wind up going “to eternal punishment”
(Matthew 25:31–46). Sermons on this passage predictably make people
squirm. Is it all about grace or not? Do our deeds matter or not?
This is another example of a useful tension in Scripture, and different
branches of Christianity tend to lean toward one side or the other of
it. Roman Catholics traditionally emphasize the importance of works
and Protestants generally emphasize faith, but both acknowledge the
necessity of both. I was taught to resolve the tension by declaring
that good works do not earn salvation but are a sign of salvation. Good
works grow naturally when God replants us by grace, like sick little
trees, in the soil of himself. That’s true; people do experience
that kind of natural result when they surrender their lives to God.
Roman Catholics would wisely add that good works can serve as restitution
for our sins and help us along that path of salvation. At any rate,
we have to retain the tension and live with it. The “works count,
so watch out” passages in the Bible do not express the final truth
about salvation; but they remind us that God cares about what happens
here and now, and they can keep us, shall we say, highly motivated.
When we manage to do good works, the question remains whether our service
accomplishes anything. If we all work very very hard, do we actually
bring in the kingdom? After all, good hospitals and schools and just
governors and well-motivated scientific advances do make a difference
in the world. At the college where I teach, we expend a great deal of
effort urging students to find their gifts and use them to build the
kingdom; to go out there and infiltrate every field of knowledge and
every profession, from accounting to filmmaking to civil engineering;
and to infuse a Christian perspective into everything they do. We often
sound like cheerleaders: “Engage the world! Redeem culture! We’re
hard-working Protestants and we can do it! Yes!” I believe with
all my heart that God uses people’s efforts to heal and bring
hope; I see it every day. But the danger is that we might get all triumphant
and think that we’re doing it and not God. Humanity is evolving;
we’re contributing to progress; and if we keep at it, someday
angels will descend on clouds to thank us.
This kind of self-congratulation amounts to self-flattery. We would
all love to be worthy of God’s favor; we would love our work to
earn points with the Almighty. Probably that’s why the staunchest
saved-by-grace people work so hard: deep down, we would rather earn
it. We like to think of ourselves as competent and deserving, so that
grace is harder to accept than fair wages. This is, at heart, the sin
of pride. A tendency to work too hard, even for God, can participate
in the idolization of work in the culture around us. We might put a
label of Christian service on it, but hard work without rest can be
a mask for a sense of our own indispensable importance and a desire
to look good and earn God’s favor. If we’re honest when
we look under the surface of even our best efforts, we see them tainted
by vanity, ignorance, arrogance, hypocrisy, foolishness, and any number
of other flaws large and small. Better to rest from our work regularly
and remember that whatever good comes of our service is God’s
doing.
What a great relief, because no matter what you choose as your contribution
to the world, you will have many moments of failure, frustration, discouragement,
and even despair…. No matter how many surgeries you perform on
children in Guatemala with cleft palates, many more will still need
help. No matter how many homeless alcoholics you shelter and help, many
more will die on the streets. The world’s pain is far too big
for you or your government or your organization to solve completely.
We have to credit our successes to God so that our failures also can
rest in God’s open hand.
Leaving the outcome to God frees us from the need to succeed. We’re
not planning the entire kingdom operation, and we’re not responsible
for its ultimate success. We’re just the agents. We have to do
our own part the best we can, with God’s help, and let the Spirit
of God move freely in fire and wind.
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On Mystery
Epilogue, p. 228-29
I have found that the mysteries of the faith do not require that we
shut down questions but that we open ourselves to greater answers and
perhaps to questions we have never asked. We perceive the energy of
the atom and its infinitesimal particles only through a combination
of higher mathematics, powerful electron microscopes, and theorizing
minds. Similarly the mysteries of God call from us a combination of
all our capacities and then some—intellect, imagination, will,
feeling, and the gift of the Spirit—before we can touch their
truth.
Developing these capacities takes time and daily practice. When it comes
to apprehending mystery, we cannot expect, as we do in so many areas
of life in the postmodern world, to follow a programmed pattern of behavior
and receive instant and repeatable results. We tend to expect these
days that we can purchase experiences in convenient packages—the
thrilling movie, the perfect restaurant meal, the fabulous vacation.
The capacity to apprehend mystery is not like that. It cannot be packaged
or purchased. Instead it requires, as writer and pastor Eugene Peterson
puts it, a “long obedience in the same direction.”
So the Christian faith invites us into daily practices in the same direction,
into what soon begins to look like a pilgrimage: we study the Bible,
worship together, serve in Jesus’ name. We pray and hope and seek
God’s guidance and wait. We face discouragements and setbacks.
As we do these things, it’s not so much that we understand the
mysteries more clearly but that the mysteries have their effect on us,
slowly molding us over time. Our behaviors change; our thoughts change;
our desires and hopes slowly transform. We start becoming the people
God has designed us to be, people in communion with God—friends
of God who take on the reflected light of God’s presence. As the
psalmist observes, “Those who look to him are radiant” (Psalm
34:3).
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