If you are like me, this whole idea of truth is a little confusing. It conjures up images of times when I was in trouble, and I knew that coming out with the “truth” was sure condemnation. In a way, I learned early that truth was a quick way to get into trouble. As I have gotten older, I have noticed that culture has adopted this same attitude toward truth. We are taught to avoid truth. And, in the instances where the truth is brought to bear, we are taught to be suspicious of it.
This attitude can have a dramatic affect on our faith. You see, since the time Christ came to tell us He was the truth people have been avoiding him and gazing from a distance with a large amount of skepticism. If we are not careful, we, as believers, will fall into this same sort of pattern. As you thumb through Scripture I want you to notice all the times that Jesus sought to bring people out of this posture into an experience with Him. He not only wanted them to know the truth, but he also wanted them to experience the truth. This then is how we are meant to live the Christian life. We are not simply designed to know the truth in Christ. We are designed to experience the truth in Christ by living a life following him not in the shadows but rather in the illuminating truth.
The question still remains, “If God is so big and before and after all things how can we, as limited creatures, really know the truth about Him?” I mean, haven’t we all had those people in our lives that we shared life with for days and years on end who because of some circumstance or some decision confuse us by their actions. We have all at one time or anther said of someone, “Man, you think you know someone.” If God is truth then how can we know truth? A great Christian thinker, N.T. Wright speaks to our dilemma when he writes:
If we are to speak of something that transcends space and time, that is beyond our ordinary world, how do we know what we are talking about? How can we know whether we are talking sense, let alone true sense? How can we be sure we are not (as Feuerbach, Freud, and others have suggested) merely projecting our own self-image or our authority-figure fantasies on to the cosmic stage and calling them “god.” The main stream Christian answer has always been that, though the one true God is in various ways beyond our imagination, let alone our knowledge, and though even such knowledge as we may have is beyond our own unaided power to obtain, this God has not left us to speculate, imagine, or project our own fantasies onto the screen of transcendence; this God instead, through self-revelation, has given us such knowledge as is possible and appropriate for us. And this same mainstream Christian answer has gone on to say that this self-revelation has taken place supremely in Jesus, the crucified and risen messiah of Israel.
The whole point of such a claim is, of course, that the one true God is known in Jesus himself, the human being who lived, worked, and died in first century Palestine. By close attention to Jesus himself, we are invited to discover, perhaps for the first time, just who the creator and covenant God was and is all along. And when we discover that, we discover that the claim to truth is not a power play. It is a love ploy – something that post modernity and the hermeneutic of suspicion cannot recognize but cannot ultimately deconstruct.
Man that is a long quote! What the heck does it mean? Well, it means that over time some people have seen the dilemma we are in about knowing the truth about God and decided that there is really no God. God is just something that we thought up because we needed Him. This idea is a little like a child who gets picked on a lot at school so they invent an imaginary friend that is always nice to them and helps them cope with the cruel world. This, however, is not what we as Christians believe. We believe God is real. We believe he is real in a big way a way that is bigger than our problems, our families, our successes, our failures, our past, our present, and our future. In one of the most amazing parts of any story ever, we see that even though God is this real and this big he wants us to know Him. WOW! He wants us to know him in a way that we can understand.
The main way God accomplished the task of allowing us to know Him was through Jesus. In the person of Jesus, we as people can see what God is like. What does he approve of? What does he say to people that are hurting? How does he react when people treat him poorly? All these questions have real answers that get us closer to the truth of who God is. He is a dependable truth. He is an absolute truth. If we are to try to see him from far away, we will never get to the heart of the matter. He is meant to be seen close-up. I encourage you to take some time right now and seek out this man who claimed He was the exact representation of God. That He was the truth. Start in Matthew chapter one and watch the truth unfold. You will be amazed at how available and vulnerable God actually has become to us through Jesus Christ. Take some time to get to know the truth.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
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