“For God was pleased to have all his
fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things,
whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood,
shed on the cross.”
Colossians
1:19-20
Writing is hard work. Plain and simple. Most writers will tell you that writing isn’t
something that they want to do but something they have to do. It is a compulsion rather than volition. It goes way deeper than just thoughts flung
across a page. There is an underlying
disturbing tension that flip-flops between the factual and the creative,
fashioning brilliance versus producing trash and paranoia in general about what
ultimately lands on the page. It is
never good enough, profound enough or punctuated enough. Yet write we do. We must.
It isn’t a suggestion for us. It
is our breath. To do it means to embrace
torture, to not do it is equally excruciating.
We are an enigma. Yet we are
committed to our craft.
This is where you
find me this week with the above verses from Colossians. I want to run from these verses. They are too strong and the truth impossible
to bear. I have walked past my office
more than a few times this week hesitant to go in. Peering at my laptop on my desk from the edge
of the doorframe, knowing, fully knowing that eventually I have to cross over
and write about Colossians 1:19-20. I don’t
want to but I have to. Truth be told, I
can not wrap my mind around these verses.
As much as I want to embrace them and allow them to reach into the
depths of my person I push back. I can’t
let them in. They are too strong and
mean too much. I can’t fathom them. Not with this earthly mental capacity and
frail human heart. It isn’t
possible. Not for me.
What pleases
God? Therein rests my turmoil. We learn
in the above verse that “God was pleased
to have all his fullness dwell in him.” By
fullness, Paul is referring to God’s deity.
(Col 2:9) I am good with
that. Whether doctrinally,
theologically, experientially or any other “ally”, I am fine with it.
My question, “what
pleases God?” doesn’t have anything to do with what we can do to please God but
rather what does God do to please himself.
If God wanted to do something to bring Him pleasure, what would it be? Here is my debilitating quandary. According to this verse, not only was He
pleased to have all his fullness dwell in Jesus but He was pleased to reconcile
all things to Him by making peace through Christ’s blood shed on the
cross. Christ his dearly beloved Son in whom He is
well pleased. Jesus’ death on a bloody
cross brought Him pleasure. That is what
it says. Plain as day. I. Can’t. Even.
Perhaps, you are a
skeptic. Perhaps you think I am reading
to deeply into this verse. Let your
skepticism thrust you, as it did me, deep into the subtlies of the scriptures
and their accompanying individual word meanings starting with Isaiah 53:10.(NASB)
“But the LORD was pleased to crush Him,
putting Him to grief; if He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will
see His offspring, He will prolong His days, and the good pleasure of the LORD
will prosper in His hand.”
The scripture is
from the intensely prophetic passage referencing Jesus as our suffering servant
and messiah. The LORD was pleased to
crush Him. Read the definition for the
Hebrew word “pleased” that is used in this verse but often translated “will”
unfortunately in different translations.
ḥā·p̄êṣ - “to find pleasure in, delight in, be
pleased with, have an affection for; to desire, choose.” (The Key Word Study Bible)
Absorb how the word is used in this Psalm and many
similar passages in scripture.
“The LORD does whatever pleases him, in the
heavens and on the earth, in the seas and all their depths.”
Psalm
135:6
God’s will is to do whatever pleases Himself. His pleasure was to rescue us by crushing His
son. I. Can’t. Even.
You see I have two
sons. There is not even a fraction of
the kind of love in me that would embrace the notion of personally directing
either of my sons to give up their lives for a good person let alone a depraved and rebellious sinner, of which I am one of them. So are you.
I just can’t go there. What kind of love is that?
I always like to
think that God sent Jesus out of compulsion to pay the penalty of
reconciliation. It was kind of like “I
guess I have to do this and rescue them”.
No, scripture tells us that it wasn’t compulsion but love. He was pleased about it. Really?
My love for my sons drives to protect them, not give them up. Sorry, I am not God. Not even close. It was the objects of His love that compelled
Him. I am one and so are you. God was pleased to sacrifice His son.
I am really
wrestling with embracing this kind of love.
There are no earthly parameters that I can equate with this. There is no frame of reference. I. Can’t. Even. I struggle.
Perhaps you don’t. I am happy for
you, really. Mazel Tov.
It took more love for God to give his Son
to die than it would to die himself. You
would a thousand times sooner die yourself in your son’s place than have him
taken away. If the execution was about
to take your son to the gallows, you would say, “Let me die in his stead; let
my son be spared.” Oh, think of the love
God must have had for this world that he gave his only begotten Son to die for
it.
Dwight
L. Moody
Tears! Lots of tears!!!!
ReplyDeleteI can't speak to sacrificing my child not having had any, but I've known what it is to love. Hmmmm.... to say that I thoroughly and profoundly understand the love of God in that he gave me Jesus, is totally beyond my capacity to even imagine. So, I'll keep my thoughts simple, rather unintellectual. I'm just OVER joyed in knowing that GOD loves ME!!!! I have Jesus Christ!!!... I have the Holy Spirit!!! WHOA!
Thanks for disturbing my placid thoughts once again. :)