And then will I declare to them, I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness. – Matthew 7:23
Reading Origen last night put me on this track. He sees goodness and existence as being
essential to one another – two sides of the same coin. God knows only what is, and what God knows
is. God does not know evil; therefore,
evil is equivalent to non-being. Not too
surprisingly, Satan lied when he said to Eve, You shall not surely die.
When Jesus told the rich young ruler that no one is good but God, He was
simply saying what had been told to Moses and the prophets. I AM THAT I AM. I am, and there is no other.
Evil does exist.
People do practice lawlessness.
There are tragedies. Jesus was
incarnated in this world and experienced, as man, the tests and fears and
losses. He wept at the tomb of
Lazarus. God sees evil and is aware of
it. We see dead leaves blowing about in
the fall. We see smoke hanging in the
air, fog in the morning stillness, dust thrown up by the wind. What we are seeing is an effect. We know the wind is blowing or not blowing,
that a fire is burning, that there is cold air above warm ground. God sees the effects of evil, but the
evil-doer, the instrument of evil has nothing in common with God. There is no connection, no intimacy, and no
communion.
We read that the eyes of God are too pure to look upon
evil. This is offensive to the secular
mind. God is so judgmental, so
sanctimonious. Who does He think He
is? Yes, we really can be that stupid. For God to know sin would be for everything
to cease to exist. It is not
possible. Nonetheless, as 2 Corinthians
5:21 tells us: He who knew no sin became sin for us in order that we might become the
righteousness of God in Christ. When
we think about this in terms of existence it quickly becomes mind-boggling. How could the sinless Son of God experience
death at all? How could He, who is God,
be separated from the Holy One? It’s not
hard to see how the staggering incomprehensibility of such thoughts could lead
to partial and heretical explanations.
Somehow the Lord took upon Himself the burden and penalty of
our sin, identifying so perfectly and fully with us in the Incarnation that He
was able to partake of our death and taste non-being as we know it. Jesus went all the way down into the lowest
depths, the deepest darkness, and from there He rose because He is Good. No one can ever say that God does not
understand or that He does not know what we are going through. Jesus knows better than you or I know. It is the one who has fully resisted
temptation and gone all the way through the trial that knows how hot it gets at
its worst. We say that we cannot stand
anymore and give up.
To live is to be known by God; to be known by God is to
live. Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 6:9
make a little more sense to me now, … as
unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and behold, we live. In my unrighteousness, I was nothing. It didn’t matter how successful I might have been. I might have been acclaimed and celebrated by
the world, but I was a non-being because I was unknown to the Lord. The poorest, most worthless, most
insignificant soul, from the world’s point of view, who is known by God is
worth all the world.
I was talking about the Pearl of Great Price a few weeks
ago. It occurs to me that there are two
sides to that parable. Certainly from
the human side, what we give up to know God and be known of Him is
nothing. It is smoke, dust, vapor, and
swirling leaves. The other side is that
God Himself sought such a Pearl. He,
too, gave up everything that He might know it as His own.
2 comments:
"Somehow the Lord took upon Himself the burden and penalty of our sin, identifying so perfectly and fully with us in the Incarnation that He was able to partake of our death and taste non-being as we know it. Jesus went all the way down into the lowest depths, the deepest darkness, and from there He rose because He is Good. No one can ever say that God does not understand or that He does not know what we are going through. Jesus knows better than you or I know."
Aye, that He does. He also knows all our diseases, wounds, sicknesses, and infirmaries better than we do, as He experienced them all.
Great post, Mushroom!
That's true, Ben. Thanks.
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