OK,
so this is seriously the last post on the issue of “Which God?” – for now. The
next post will be different, likely moving on to chapter two of The Story. Yet I must do one more for a
few reasons, one of which is how it ties in nicely to the season of Advent.
If
more people read the Bible and gained a better understanding of God’s Story, they
would be truly amazed at the amount of grace and mercy present. It is practically
everywhere.
The
distinction between some “god” and YHWH God has already been established. The
God of the Bible does not operate how people often expect Him to function. We
already Him pursue Adam and Eve in the midst of their rebellion. Yet to
illustrate this again let me ask you this.
Why
did God kick Adam and Eve out of the Garden of Eden?
Quite
often people say Adam and Eve were kicked out because they sinned. Or they were
kicked out because God was punishing them. However, what does the text say?
If
we read the Bible this is what we see:
22 Then the Lord God said, “Behold, the man has become like one of us in
knowing good and evil. Now, lest he reach out his hand and take also of the
tree of life and eat, and live forever—” 23 therefore the Lord God sent him out from the garden of Eden to
work the ground from which he was taken. 24 He
drove out the man, and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim
and a flaming sword that turned every way to guard the way to the tree of life. [Genesis 3:22-24]
Did
you catch that? The reason God kicked them out of Eden was to keep them from
the tree of life. In other words, He could not bear the thought of Adam and Eve
having continual access to the tree of life, and therefore living forever, in a
distorted relationship with Him.
We
need to be honest; the fear of death is real. Many people are so terrified of
it that they do not talk about it, refuse to go to funerals, and try and “move
on” with life whenever death interrupts their daily plans. I do not think it is
a stretch for you to think of a few people who would gladly eat of the tree of
life as long as they had access to it.
To
be clear; I am not insensitive to those who have lost loved one – whether in
the distant or recent past. The truth is, losing a loved one hurts. And that is
OK…it is one of many signs that a life had significance; that the person
mattered.
However,
we need to trust God on this one. Knowing that an eternity with a distorted
relationship with Him is not an eternity worth living, in His mercy and grace
God bars His children from something that would be harmful to them. He bars
them from the tree of life.
Yet
notice he bars them. The text does not say He destroyed the tree of life, which
was intended to be for the good of humanity. No, God merely made it off limits
until the other bookend of God’s Story occurs – the new heavens and new earth.
In the new heavens and new earth God’s people will once again have access to
the tree of life (cf. Revelation 2:7; 22:2,14,19), and there will be no more
death.
Can
you imagine it? No death (nor no anything of a lot else – Rev21:4), because the
Kingdom of God will have come in its fullness.
And
this is where Advent comes in. Advent is an entire season leading up to the
Christmas Season. And on the first Sunday of Advent (this past Sunday – 12/1)
the focus was on the return of Jesus…when everything is made right in the new
heavens and new earth.
So
which god; a perception of a god formed out of isolated verses and personal
experience? Or the God who took on flesh and came to earth as Jesus?
What
a glorious day it will be, when Jesus returns and the fullness of the Kingdom
of the God of the Bible is here. There will finally be true peace in that day.
And in that day what God’s Story says so clearly, if we have ears to hear, will
come to fruition. God’s Story says sin, death, and the current state of this
world will not have the last word. No, God has the last word. This is His Story
– period.
Maranatha
– Come Lord Jesus!
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