Whether we’re talking about our
relationship with God or with other people, the quality of the relationship 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.
Paul tells us that the gospel is “veiled …
to those who are perishing” because “the god of this age has blinded” their
minds so that they cannot see “the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2
Cor 3:14-15). Satan’s strategy is to attack our conception of God. The root of
our alienation from God and our bondage to sin is our untrustworthy and
unloving mental pictures of him. Those who are under Satan’s blinding
oppression cannot 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 4:3-6).
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 when 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).
Jesus describes himself as “the way and the
truth and the life” (John 14:6). The Greek word for “truth” (aletheia) means
something like “uncovered” or “not concealed.” The glorious character of God is
fully unveiled in Christ on the cross. As John wrote, no one had “ever seen
God” or really known God up to that time. But the Son, “who is himself God …
has made him known” (John 1:18).
When Jesus fully unveiled the true
character of the one true God on the cross, he “disarmed the power and
authorities,” vanquished Satan and his minions (Col 2:14-15), and thereby set
free all who would accept the 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.
The cross is first and foremost the full
disclosure of the true character of God and his pledge to demonstrate this
loving, self-sacrificial character in all his dealings with us. We are
challenged to take him at his word and to reciprocate by cultivating this same
character in our relationship with him and all others. We do this not by
striving, but by simply gazing on the beauty revealed in the cross with our
minds and hearts open to the Spirit.
—adapted from Benefit of the Doubt, pages
235-237 - Greg Boyd
No comments :
Post a Comment