Whether we’re talking about our relationship with God or with other people,
the quality of our relationships can never go beyond the level of trust the
relating parties have in each other’s character. We cannot be rightly related to
God, therefore, except insofar as we embrace a trustworthy picture of him. To
the extent that our mental picture of God is untrustworthy, we will not rely on
him as our sole source of life. This is why the first thing that Satan went
after was Eve’s conception of God. The story reflects the truth that the root of
our alienation from God and our bondage to fallen powers is our own
untrustworthy and unloving mental pictures of him.
This is as true today as it was in the garden. Paul tells us that the gospel
continues to be “veiled … to those who are perishing” because the “god of this
age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of
the gospel that displays the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.” And
notice, the seeing Paul is talking about is a seeing in our mind (2 Cor.
3:14-15). Nor can those who are yet under Satan’s blinding oppression receive
the “light” that God wants to “shine in [their] hearts to give [them] the light
of the knowledge of God’s glory displayed in the face of Christ (2 Cor 4:3-4,
6).
Only when the Spirit lifts the veil from our minds and hearts can we form and
embrace a truly accurate picture of God. Only when the Spirit frees us from the
blinding oppression of the “god of this age” can our hearts and minds see the
glorious beauty of the God revealed in Christ. And only as we “with unveiled
faces contemplate the Lord’s glory” can we be “transformed into his image with
ever-increasing glory” (2 Cor 3:17-18).
What this shows is that the revelation of God in Jesus, most clearly
reflected on the cross, is the foundation of the new covenant because it is
God’s definitive refutation of all false images of him. Jesus described himself
as “the way and the truth and the life” (Jn 14:6). The Greek word for “truth”
(aletheia) has the connotation of something “uncovered” or “not
concealed.” While we’ve been, to one degree or another, blinded by our sin and
the “god of this age” from seeing the true, glorious character of God, he is
finally fully unveiled in Christ.
This is why Jesus is also the “way” to the Father as well as the “life” of
the Father. We can only experience the life that God wants for us when we know
and trust his true character as it’s unveiled in Christ.
And we are making the same point from the opposite direction when we point
out that, when Jesus fully unveiled the true character of the one true God on
the cross, he “disarmed the powers and the authorities,” vanquished Satan and
his minions (Col 2:14-15), and thereby set free all who would accept this truth.
On the cross, the light expelled the darkness, the truth vanquished all
deception, and the beauty of the true image of God destroyed the ugliness of all
false images. And so now, for all who will yield to the Spirit, as the veil over
our minds is removed, we can see “God’s glory displayed in the face of Jesus” (2
Cor 4:6) and be set free to enter into the loving, trusting, and transforming
relationship God has always wanted to have with his people
- Greg Boyd
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