Going through a long line of prophets, God has been addressing our ancestors in different ways for centuries. Recently he spoke to us directly through his Son. By his Son, God created the world in the beginning, and it will all belong to the Son at the end. This Son perfectly mirrors God, and is stamped with God’s nature. He holds everything together by what he says—powerful words! (Hebrews 1:1-3 MSG)
When the average Christian is asked about the Word of God, what comes to mind? Most of us would likely think of our Bibles, those books from which passages are read on Sunday morning, which upon conclusion, the pastor adds the exclamation point, “And this is the word of God. Amen.” However, the Bible itself testifies that the Word of God is infinitely more than the Book. The Word has never been confined by cowhide or ink or language or principles.
The Word was at the beginning and Jesus was that Word. The cosmos (not just the speck that is earth) was created by Him and for Him. From outside of time and space, He created them and then chose to enter into it. It was as if He created the stage and then stepped onto it, saying, in perfect humility, “I am the origin and the glue that holds your reality together; I am the ointment that heals this sin-scarred planet; believe in me and become co-heir of all that is mine.”
Let’s shift for a moment though from the Word to “words” in general and their value to our worship. In The Divine Conspiracy: Discovering Our Hidden Life In God, Dallas Willard talks about the perpetual “dumbing down” our image of God has experienced over time due to language. He asks us to compare our contemporary description of God to one offered one hundred years ago by Adam Clarke:
God is…the eternal, independent, and self existent Being; the Being whose purposes and actions spring from himself, without foreign motive or influence; he who is absolute in dominion; the most pure, the most simple, the most spiritual of all essences; infinitely perfect; and eternally self-sufficient, needing nothing that he has made; illimitable in his immensity, inconceivable in his mode of existence, and indescribable in his essence; known fully only by himself, because an infinite mind can only be fully comprehended by itself. In a word, a Being who, from his infinite wisdom, cannot err or be deceived, and from his infinite goodness, can do nothing but what is eternally just, and rich and kind.
Willard acknowledges that those words are pretty hard slogging for a modern reader, but adds, “we can all appreciate what a vast difference it would make in anyone’s life to actually believe in such a God as these words portray.” To emphasize his point he says that we might describe God as love, “but this proves to be very different from forcing a bedraggled (dumbed-down) human version of “love” into a mental blank where God is supposed to be, and then identifying God as that.” When we drag God into that blank and then try to worship Him, it shouldn’t be surprising if the results are lukewarm.
But even Adam Clarke’s words, eloquent and accurate as they may be, don’t even get us close to fully describing the Word of God. Furthermore, they are not our words. We must develop and express our own language with God. Hopefully, it will be with us as it was with the psalmists, who found their own songs, animating their worship to God.
We are the most fortunate of people since God has revealed Himself in His Son to us, this Son who perfectly mirrors God, and is stamped with God’s nature. I have a fair inventory of words that I can draw from to envision God. I believe it is a tremendous aid in my worship of Him, but more important to me is that God is my Father, now on earth as He will be in heaven. When my mind is confronted with the myriad doctrinal conundrums out there, I pass it through my father-filter and see what comes out. My point is that while vocabulary is wonderful, we need to stay focused on Jesus, the eternal Word of God, who is an exact representation of the Father. He who has seen the Son has seen the Father. Father is the most powerful Word in my vocabulary.
Father, restore an image of Your transcendent glory to our hearts that delivers us from every debased notion lodged in our brains. May we bow to the mystery and the majesty of the Word of God, acknowledging His central place in all that was and is and is to come. Amen.