By Bryan McAlister
At the beginning of creation,
Moses records how the Lord set out to form the pinnacle of
His creation, mankind. “Let Us make man in our image,
according to Our likeness…” (Gen 1:26).
From the beginning, our
relationship with God has been the most unique of all
aspects of creation. We possess the “breath of life” (Gen
2:7).
Our fulfillment was a great
concern to God, and thus He made, “a helper comparable to
him” (Gen 2:18). As man lived and inhabited Eden, the
greatest blessing was that of the direct fellowship with
God, “in the cool of the day” (Gen 3:8). If you pause and
think about it, our beginning was with the greatest benefit
for our souls, because we had the presence of our God,
daily.
Due to man being removed from
the presence of God, we are dependent on the Lord revealing
to us His will and His desires for our lives. We cannot
truly know how to please God or how to respond to Him
without being aware of who God is and what He, as deity is
like. Furthermore, we will not know these things unless God
chooses to reveal them to us. Paul gives us a concise
commentary on this truth with I Corinthians 2:11,
“For what man knows the
things of a man except the spirit of the man which is in
him? Even so no one knows the things of God except the
Spirit of God.”
God has also made Himself
known to us by His relationships. We learn of His compassion
and mercy when we look to God and His relationship with King
David (Psalm 17:6). We learn of God’s deity when we see Him
with Job (Job 38:4). Justice is clearly seen with God and
Israel, during Israel’s days of departure and sin from God’s
holiness (Isaiah 30:9). Much of what we know about our God,
we learn through His dealings with those of the past, and in
so doing we understand how the Lord deals with us in the
present.
The assurance we have
in knowing our God through His revelation of Himself to us,
is that our Lord has not and will not change (Malachi 3:6).
Our God is our creator, He is our source of compassion and
mercy, He will be our God, and He will show us justice, and
when He does, we will understand His grace. Peering into the
word, we will peer into our Lord’s identity, and in doing
so, we will understand more of His presence with us, see the
depth of His promises, and know His power, still reserved
for us, the church, of today.
- Bryan McAlister preaches for the Centerville Church of
Christ, in Centerville, TN. He may be contacted
through the congregation's website:
http://www.centervillechurchofchrist.org
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