Showing posts with label light. Show all posts
Showing posts with label light. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Blinded by Sin

by Pastor Paul Wolff

The transfiguration of Jesus is one of the great mysteries of the Bible. However, the mystery is NOT that we don’t really know what happened. On the contrary, three of the Gospels recount the events of the transfiguration so we know well what happened. The mystery is: what does the transfiguration mean?

What happened was that Jesus took Peter, James, and John up a mountain and the appearance of Jesus was transfigured so that he shone with a bright light. The ancient prophets, Moses and Elijah, appeared talking with Jesus about his upcoming “departure” in Jerusalem. Then a voice from a cloud said, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him.”

Needless to say, this doesn’t happen every day, and that is part of the mystery, but it was not unprecedented in the history of the world. In the exodus from Egypt, Moses was talking with God on Mt. Sinai, receiving the law for God’s people, and when he came down the mountain his face was shining because he had been in the presence of God. Moses’ presence at the transfiguration of Jesus gives us a clue about the meaning of this mysterious event. The shining light was the glorious holiness of God. The difference is that in the case of Moses the light was residual from God’s glory and it eventually faded away. In Jesus’ case, the light came from within Him. He was the source of the light.

When God created light on the first day of creation he did not create any “natural” sources for the light until day four so we must conclude that God, Himself, was the source of the daylight for the first three days of creation. Also, in the Revelation that Jesus gave to John on Patmos later in his life, John writes of the heavenly paradise, “And night will be no more. They will need no light of lamp or sun, for the Lord God will be their light.” (Revelation 22:5)

The question is, if Jesus was the source of the glorious light on the mount of transfiguration, why didn’t anyone see it in His life before then? Again, we can look back to Moses for a clue. When the Israelites saw Moses reflecting the holiness of God they could not bear to look at him. Sinners cannot bear the holiness of God, even the greatly diminished reflected glory in the face of Moses. Scripture tells us that “no one can see the face of God and live.” (Exodus 33:20) Moses received special grace from God to be in His presence, but even Moses was not permitted to see the full glory of the face of God.

Like everything that Jesus did in His life, it was out of love for us that Jesus hid His glorious holiness except for this brief time on the mountain with Peter, James, John, Moses, and Elijah. Sinners cannot bear holiness because it shows us just how corrupt we are because of our sin. We are all blinded by our sin. We see everything through corrupt, sinful eyes. This is a twisted view of reality. We are so used to sin and comfortable with it that we imagine that we aren’t so bad and that some of the things we do are actually so good that even God Himself must be pleased. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Sin corrupts us totally. Everything that we are and do is tainted by sin so that even our righteous deeds are as filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6) in God’s holy sight. For sinners to stand in the presence of God’s holiness would make us so aware of the corruption of our sin that we would die. Even to get a glimpse of God’s holiness (as the Israelites saw in Moses) would be unbearable. This is a function of the Law of God – to show us our sin. However, as Jesus tells us, “God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him.” (John 3:17) So Jesus hid His holiness and lived an ordinary life no different from any other man, except that He was without sin – but even this He did quietly without drawing attention to Himself.

The glory of God’s holiness revealed in Jesus in the transfiguration is set in sharp contrast to the grotesque horror of the crucifixion, and yet, both events reveal the same glory of God. The holiness of God is not a pure abstraction, and it is not only made tangible by an unbearable light. The holiness of God is, more than anything else, expressed in a love that moved God to become incarnate as Jesus Christ as one of His created people to bear the sins of the world and to suffer and die to pay the price for our sin to redeem us. As Jesus hung dying on the cross He not only continued to hide His glory, but He endured God’s wrath over our sin to spare us from the punishment that we deserve. Jesus did not make us endure the guilt of our sin, but He endured the punishment of the sins of the whole world.

The hiddenness of Christ’s glorious holiness is a mystery that is only partially revealed in the event of the transfiguration. However, this is how God works in the world. Out of love for us, God does not blast us with His glory. God does not force us to love Him, nor does He force us to endure the unbearable reality of our sin. Instead, God is merciful to us and works through the means of His Word and Sacraments to show us our sin and our savior. The “weakness” of these “Means of Grace” is that they can be rejected by people. The strength of these Means of Grace is that God works through them to bring us the salvation won for us by Jesus on the Cross.

All people on earth live under the grace of God, and part of this grace is that we are blind to the full reality of our sinful corruption, just as we are blind to the glorious holiness of God. We should not attempt to perceive the holiness of God because in our sinful condition we are likely to be led astray by the lies of the devil. We may think we see a divine revelation, but it is most likely to be our own sinful desires within us. Yet God has given us His Holy Scriptures to show us our true savior, Jesus Christ, so that all who believe in Jesus are saved from their sins and will share in the glorious holiness of God, of which we see a brief glimpse in the Transfiguration.


Saturday, October 25, 2008

In the Beginning

From Emmanuel

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, "Let there be light," and there was light. God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness. God called the light "day," and the darkness he called "night." And there was evening, and there was morning--the first day. Genesis 1:1-5 (NIV)


This is how everything began. There was no destructive "BANG." There was only God saying, "Let there be …" and it was just as He planned it to be, and it was good.

Notice that already here in the first few verses in the Holy Bible we see the Triune God. Do you see Him? When we see the word "God" we take for granted that it refers to God the Father, and that is true. In verse two the Holy Spirit is said to be "hovering over the waters." The eternal Son of God is there in the Word that God speaks as described by the Evangelist, St. John: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made." (John 1:1-3)


From Emmanuel

The Triune nature of God is also seen in the original Hebrew language where the word for "God" is found in the plural form. In Hebrew the singular form of the generic word for a "god" is "el." This elsewhere can refer to anything that is seen to be a god, whether true or false. The Hebrew Scriptures refer to the true God using the plural form "Elohim" but the contextual pronouns refer to this God in the singular as "He" and not "They." Jewish scholars, and others who do not wish to acknowledge the Triune nature of God explain this away as simply a literary convention where the majesty of God is demonstrated by using the plural form, while simulataneously refering to Him in the singular, as there is only one God.

From Emmanuel


Another interesting thing to note about the seven days of creation is that God does everything in an orderly manner. This reflects God's nature as a rational, orderly, intelligent being, who is involved with His creation, and not absent or uncaring. "The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1) And, "God is not a God of disorder, but of peace." (1 Corinthians 14:33) This refutes the idea of creation as an "accident" which miraculously evolved over an impossibly long time. Science does not contradict the account of creation in Genesis, and actually confirms it in many ways, as long as the scientists are not ignoring any evidence which suggests that creation is God's handiwork. Unfortunately many scientists (though by no means all) use their God-given talents to vainly try to disprove God through God's own creation.

You may find it strange that God creates light several days before He creates a natural source for the light. This wonderful fact shows us that God is in control of His creation and not the other way around. God can separate light from darkness so that there is "day" and "night" without any natural source for either light or darkness. This is very reassuring that God is with us through the gift of His creation. This is not to say that creation is God -- it is not. However, God remains active in keeping creation from going the way of all entropy, and He does it out of love for us. God does not need His creation, He is above it. We need creation and God's power to sustain our lives, and God provides that for all people, even all those who do not acknowledge Him as creator. Note also that "day" and "night" clearly denote one day, and not an impossibly long period of evolution.

"God saw that the light was good." Everything that God created was good, as God Himself is good. Whatever we see in this world that is not good did not get that way because of any deficiency in God. Many ask the question, "If God is so good, then why is there so much evil in the world?" That is the wrong question to ask because it assumes that God is the cause of everything in the world, and if you answer this question you will always get the wrong answer.

A better question to ask is, "Why is there so much evil in the world?" People rarely ask this question because if they honestly seek the answer they will find that God is not the cause of any evil. We are the cause of all evil in the world. All people have rebelled against God and are sinners and have brought sin, death, and destruction into God's beautiful creation. I will discuss this more in the post on Day Six of creation, but here is the good news: Even though we rebellious, sinful people have corrupted God's good creation, God Himself has fixed the problem of our sin by sending Jesus Christ to redeem us from our sin and its deadly consequences. We are not perfect yet, but we live by God's grace in this wonderful world that God made for us and we still may enjoy God's blessings until we reach that new earth where we will live forever free from the evils of this world.



The Seven Days of Creation

In the Beginning
The Orderly Creation
Distinctions in Creation
The Center of the Universe
Designed by God
The Crown of God’s Creation
A Sabbath Day Rest