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Monday, January 2, 2012

Too Small God?


I borrowed this illustration - out of context - because it is such a great word picture:
Sin will always appears as a trifle to those whose view of God is small. If you were to discover a little boy pulling the legs off of a grasshopper, you would think it strange and perhaps a little bizarre. If the same little boy were pulling the legs off of a frog, that would be a bit more disturbing. If it were a bird, you would probably scold him and inform his parents. If it were a puppy, that would be too shocking to tolerate. You would intervene. If it were a little baby, it would be so reprehensible and tragic that you would risk you own life to protect the baby. What's the difference in each of these scenarios? The sin is the same (pulling the limbs off). The only difference is the one sinned against (from a grasshopper to a baby). The more noble and valuable the creature, the more heinous and reprehensible the sin. And so it is with God.
If God were a grasshopper, then to sin against Him wouldn't be such a big deal and eternal punishment wouldn't be necessary. But God isn't a grasshopper, He's the most precious, valuable, beautiful being in the universe. His glory and worth are infinite and eternal. Thus to sin against an infinitely glorious being is an infinitely heinous offense that is worthy of an infinitely heinous punishment.
We don't take sin seriously because we don't take God seriously. We have so imbibed of the banality of our God-belittling spirit of the age that our sins hardly trouble us at all. Our sin seems small because we regard God as small. And thus the penalty of hell--eternal conscious suffering under the wrath of God--always seems like an overreaction on God's part. If we knew God better, we wouldn't think like that.
Denny Burke's original post can be viewed here --> http://www.dennyburk.com/rob-bell-outs-himself/ - again I am using his illustration to make a point that has a different focus than Mr. Burke's topic.
Another thing happens when we minimize God and trivialize sin - the enemy has the opportunity to magnify the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches so they appear to be larger than our perception of God. We meditate on our sickness, our lack in finances, feelings of rejection, lonliness and low self esteem. We listen to the lies of the enemy that God is far off and we cultivate feelings that God couldn't possibly love us or is not willing to hear & answer our prayers.

When God is "big" in our thinking, the thought of him not meeting our needs or answering our prayes should be shocking. The trouble is that we expect God to only live up to the failed expectations of those around us who walk in unbelief. We don't pray with confidence for healing because we know of some wonderful saint of God that died in sickness when they prayed for healing. We don't understand what went wrong so we bring down our expectations of God and say that it was not God's will to heal - but when we say this we actually call God a liar. Ouch! Yes, because He reprents Himself as "I am the Lord that heals thee". Some how there is more we need to know about how to appropriate the fullness of who God wants to be known as among men.

We have all been here - when circumstances seem so much bigger than we are and even so much bigger than hope in God to come to our rescue.

When Jesus walked this earth as the Son of God, Scripture notes a couple of times where he was astonished by Faith...great Faith & lack of Faith. He was astounded, first at the lack of belief in his hometown (critical astonishment) and second at the faith of the Capernaum centurion (admiration). And note, Jesus could perfom only a few miracles in his own home town - because of their lack of faith.

No one is immune to bouts of unfaithfulness, and we all must be on guard against thoughts of magnifying our circumstances and minimizing God. Consider the unbelief of men in scripture:
  • Abraham (Gen. 17:7), 
  • Moses (Num. 11:21; 20:12), 
  • The Disciples of Christ (Mt. 17:19,20; Lk. 24:11), 
  • Zacharias the father of John the Baptist (Lk. 1:20). 
Each in their own fit of weakness turned their back on the Lord for a time.

The scripture calls us to “Be still, and know that I am God” in Psalms 46:10. As I meditate this verse and read what other men of God have had to say about this, I sense the Lord calling me to stop all of my efforts that are self directed, to stop all of the thinking that "worries" over the circumstances, the facts of what troubles us in our life -- and instead, replace the worry and anxious thoughts with how big our God, how mighty our God, how good, loving & willing our God is to save us and supernaturally turn the circumstances for our good.

In scripture it is always God's will to heal, guide, prosper and save his own people. When we contimplate all that scripture says that He is, and all that scripture says that he can do... we overcome by the blood of the Lamb and the Word of our Testimony. We do not overcome by meditating the circumstance - we overcome by our spoken testimony of God's Faithfulness & His Word.

Preparation for whatever comes your way today is to take the magnifier off of yourself, & your circumstances and magnify your almighty God. It is always a good time to "Be Still and know that He is God" on a regular basis.
16 I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, 17 so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, 18 may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19 and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Ephesians 3:16-19
I pray that you would know God's love that surpasses knowledge -that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. A BIG, BIG God.

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