Sunday, December 15, 2013

Power of God

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first and also for the Greek. (Romans 01:16, NKJV).

Even as a Materialist immersed in so-called Scientific Naturalism, I knew – I just knew – that there was Something or Someone that had some kind of power beyond what I could see, hear, feel, or measure. It was a conviction based on suspicion rather than desire, for I certainly did not want such a thing to be.

It was also a conclusion reached solely by logic, that is, that there had to be at least a Divine Finger that knocked over the first Domino and then sat back and watched the rest fall in succession. I could not conceive (and still can't) of Something coming from Nothing, which is what the purely Naturalist viewpoint required as an explanation for All That Is.

Of course, I fought against this suspicion “tooth and nail”, for I did not want it to be true.

When I finally became a disciple of Jesus Christ (for, by definition, that is what all true Christians must be if the label “Christian” has any meaning), I realized that even my sneaking suspicion of a Deity behind the whole works was woefully simplistic.

How could the Finger of God just initiate the first Event (the falling Domino), without having created the successive Events waiting to happen? In the word picture of my example, Who or What created all the Dominos, lined them up just so, and then formulated the Law of Cause and Effect so that things proceeded along some inevitable course from that Initial Action forward?

It couldn't have been that Deity got the ball rolling and then sat back and watched. It first had to create the playing field and the rules. And if It could do that, then what couldn't It do?

You see, Atheism, the willful denial of the existence of God, is too childish a concept to hold any water. From first to last, all its premises are far too weak to explain anything. They waft away in the wind of rational thought.

There MUST BE a First Cause, and given the intricate complexity of subsequent events, that First Cause must have, at minimum, Eternality (existence outside of time in order to start the clock ticking, so to speak), Intelligence (the ability to design and plan ahead), and Power (the means to create and cause action).

To say it another way, God must exist. He is the Inescapable Conclusion.

And since He must exist as God, He must have Power, and the Apostle Paul in the verse above begins to detail perhaps the most important aspect of that power to all of Creation: the power to save.

Think of it this way: even beyond our own existence (also the result of the power of God), salvation is the most important event in the Universe. Without the possibility of escape from the inevitable destiny of eternal punishment through whatever means the Creator has ordained, it would be, as Jesus Himself said, better to have never been born (Mark 14:21).

Now, some think it strange that we need to be saved at all. I know I thought as much before I came to believe in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. But once I understood that my existence was not a matter of random chance over time, but was due to an act of power by Deity, then it was no great leap to consider that the same creative Deity had the authority to determine my destiny according to His rules.

I knew I was far from perfect, that over the course of my life I had committed evil, and that I fell far short of the standards of right and wrong that, even in my most God-hating years, I had to admit existed in my and the world's consciousness. (As can readily be observed, the concept of Justice, is an inherent component of every thinking person – be he a mass murderer, a thief, a philanthropist, or an every day, run of the mill liar.) Given that, the inevitable question is: where did the universal idea of “fairness” come from, the primordial goo from which we are all supposed to have emerged?

The need for salvation then, is only a ridiculous notion if you willfully ignore the facts of life. And not only does it apply to each individual, but to the whole creation which, Paul will tell us later, was corrupted when Adam fell into sin. All That Is groans and labors until now awaiting the restoration that comes when sin is finally eliminated.

Following the same line of reasoning, while some may admit to the need of redemption, they chafe at the means outlined in the Bible. Many of the objections can be expressed as these questions:

How can mere belief or faith in Christ wipe away my sin? It seems too easy.

How could His death make me righteous? It seems barbaric and cruel to make someone else pay my penalty?

How can God, being God, die?

How can someone in a grave for days be made alive again?

In one sense, the unspoken aspect of all these inquires is the implied statement, “Well, I certainly wouldn't do it that way.”

Taking these one by one, then – there is nothing “mere” about faith, especially in regard to the fallen and corrupt human heart. True and sincere faith in Someone else is antithetical (directly opposed or contrasted) to the natural human mind. Suspicion and doubt is the norm, particularly when it comes to life and death. To believe in Christ is, in itself, a supernatural work of God. While we are all “dealt a measure of faith”, placing that faith in the Person and work of Christ alone is a miracle. It flies against our desire to “do something” ourselves, or to have some personal control over our destiny. Trusting in Jesus exclusively to avoid Hell is not easy because it requires a regenerated spirit and a recreated human heart.

On the other hand, if it weren't “mere faith” that saves, but rather attaining godly perfection ourselves, there would be no hope. We would all fail before we took the first step. If God did not choose to make belief in His Son the prerequisite for entrance into eternal life, no son of Adam or daughter of Eve would escape eternal death.

But Jesus's death, in itself, does not make anyone righteous. His death wipes clean the debt of sin, and is the necessary first step that allows the Holy Spirit to work in us towards sanctification, which is our gradual transformation into the image of Christ. And while it may seem “barbaric and cruel” to us, the Father did not compel His Son to die, but His Son did so out of love and obedience voluntarily. He willingly went to the Cross so we might live. The fact that He had to demonstrates the horrific nature of sin, and the depths of His love.

Next, because it was our forefather Adam, a man, who began the long, bloody road of rebellious human history, it had to be a perfect Man who ended that journey. Sin kills. To kill sin necessitates a death. There was no other way in the brilliance of God's plan of redemption. It is the ultimate outworking of the ancient equation of justice: an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a life for a life.

And that Man had also to be of infinite value, and sinless, so that His death would take away sin for all humanity who believes. So He had also to be God. Therefore, it was the second Person of the Divine Trinity who emptied Himself to become one of us so that as a Man, His death would satisfy God's decree that the “wages of sin is death”, and “the soul that sins must die”. Is it possible to know all the magnificent details of how this was accomplished, how Deity became humanity, how immortality became mortality, how God could separate from God, and of what it means for God to become one of His creatures?

I don't think so, at least not for this father in this life. But I recognize this – for the whole thing to work out as it has, literally took the “power of God”. Nothing else would do.

And the final objection, how can Someone be raised from the dead, can only be answered by again pointing to the gospel. One the one hand, it makes perfect sense that death could not hold Jesus, because death is the result of sin, and Jesus was sinless. But on the other hand, once truly and utterly dead, life itself is not possible. There is no way to conceive of death being undone; like unscrambling an egg, or transporting into another Reality.

Yet, that is precisely what happened. Jesus rose from the dead after three days in the tomb. He was made alive again. Interestingly, the Bible credits all three persons of the Trinity in His resurrection; Romans says He was brought to life by the Father, John says Jesus Himself had the power, and 1st Peter tells us He was resurrected by the Holy Spirit.

And this fact of the Resurrection is perhaps the greatest tribute to the power of God.

Of course, to us who believe that God created the Heavens and the earth, that He built All That Is, it may not seem that bringing the dead to life again is all that much different, but I submit otherwise.

In a way difficult to describe, I suspect that creation ex nihilo, Latin for making something out of nothing, is somehow “easier” than restoring specific, immensely complicated, and measurelessly profound life to a conscious being made in the image of God. How much more of an accomplishment to do the same with the life of God Himself?

That last bit is just me, thinking out loud, but one thing is certain - Paul's statement that the gospel of Jesus Christ IS the power of God to salvation is something not to be overlooked. Again, I suspect that we will have all eternity to explore and marvel and what all that really is.

Love,


Dad