Michael
unread,Jun 13, 2010, 10:41:52 AM6/13/10Sign in to reply to author
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to Friends of Radius
Romans 15 cont'd
Even the most powerful man of all, Jesus Christ, didn't use his power
to create for himself a pain-free and pleasure-filled earthly life. As
scripture says, "I have personally identified with and embraced the
rejection they have shown you O God." All the scriptures have been
written to impart knowledge, patience and comfort to us so that we can
live in hope- a confident expectation of a glorious future.
Comments:
Moving more deeply into the heart of understanding how we, as "fallen
image bearers" (who possess both dignity and depravity) develop, face
and surmount problems, we see that human beings and relations are like
icebergs...what you see on the surface of the water is much smaller
than the mass of what lies below. This can complicate our lives a bit!
Furthermore, we do not become easily conscious (self-aware) of what
moves us at the core of our beings. We must turn to the wisdom of
scripture to help us pinpoint what goes on in the depths of the human
soul. (How many of the Bible's narratives...and it's
instructions...are recorded to achieve this very end!) And then...we
must also rely on the Holy Spirit and the feedback of wise friends to
make it more personal for our own selves.
Larry Crabb summarizes the essence of our nobility as the longing for
intimacy and the longing for impact. From the very beginning of life
we yearn to connect with and be loved by "another" and not be
rejected. We also have a core desire to use our abilities to make an
impact for good on the people and world around us. Dr. Crabb
emphasizes that these desires, in their essence, should be affirmed,
because they are aspects of the Imago Dei...the image of God...in the
human being. They cannot actually be repented of and the attempt to do
so wastes our energies and damages our humanity.
The Imago Dei in a human being...according to the good
doctor...consists of our being, as God is, relational, rational,
volitional and emotional. I imagine there are other classic aspects of
the Imago Dei, but these certainly will do for a start. These things
about us, also then, are to be acknowledged, affirmed, accepted and
celebrated. To do less is an insult to our Creator.
So...our genuine problems do not lie with these two embedded longings.
Rather, they develop from our profound reactions to how these longings
become stymied and frustrated as we live and relate in this broken
world. Instead of experiencing the kind of intimacy we have been
designed for, we experience an insufficient love...and even outright
rejection...from the people we look to for this intimacy. No one loves
us the way we long to be loved. Instead of freely making the impact we
long for, we experience injustices that block and hinder our freedom
to use our talents. Some people, we expect will help pave the way for
us to make our contribution, become envious of or threatened by our
strengths, and intentionally undermine our efforts and/or discredit
our motivations.
This situation, extended over the course of some years leaves us, when
left to our own resources to cope with the reality, in a terrible and
tragic pain at the center of our souls. It is our very human reactions
to having this kind of pain in our deep hearts that then activate our
own depravity. We have been victimized by others' sins of rejection
and injustice and, out of our effort to "survive", we become agents of
sin ourselves. This age is weighed down by a vicious cycle of human
depravity...and the evil of it runs right through our own souls.
Yet still, there is hope for transformation....