Monday, January 12, 2026
Free will or free choice?
Friday, July 25, 2025
From Adam to Christ
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
Love and/or consequences
Friday, February 9, 2024
Whoever is not with me is against me
Choosing our way feels natural and normal, i.e. it's our default setting. It's not necessarily conscious because it's all we know. It seems harmless and doesn't feel like a choice against God.
This would be like our child misusing the things that we as parents have labored to acquire and provide, with little or no regard by them of our wishes as the parent. This can result in the child's harm and/or harm to others and often does (like when a child uses and wrecks their parent's car injuring themselves or others).
It's not that a loving parent doesn't want their child to enjoy and use what they provide. A loving parent loves their child and wants them to feel their love. They want what's best for them.
No matter how little we consider God as we go about our lives, the reality is all that we are and have not only comes from God but is maintained by him. Without God, nothing would be, including ourselves, with all the unique abilities we were born with. In reality we hate to acknowledge this. It grates against every fiber of our being because we do not want to be accountable to an all Supreme Being for our choices and actions.
¹This was the essence of the choice presented to Adam (primarily) and Eve on whether to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
²And what exactly is it that we should trust? That God not only knows what is best but desires what is best for us. And what He desires He can fully accomplish, i.e. He's all-powerful. In short, we trust that God loves us and knows what is best better than we do and perfectly able to bring all this about.
³And what exactly are those designs? For us - His image bearers - to be the caretakers of His creation, and be fruitful and multiply.
Wednesday, August 3, 2022
What does God value in us?
1. We must know - in our heart, not just our head - that all that we are and have comes from God - especially our being in His image with the capacity to partake of and participate in the union of Father, Son, and Spirit.
2. We must know God values us regardless of our failures (or struggles). In fact, He actually uses struggles to advance us and strengthen our relationship with Him.
What is the basis of God's value of us? It is threefold.
1. God made us like Himself. It is His image in us that He values. Or it may be more accurate to say he values us because we are in his image.
But why does God value his image in us? What is it about His image He finds so attractive and appealing, even though we are so broken, often ugly, full of doubts and distrust of Him? (...or maybe in part indirectly because of these - i.e., because of the humility our failures and struggles help develop in us. Plus what normal fathers care isn't more heightened when his child is in more distress, not less).
God knows our capacity and sees fully what we are becoming and will be that day we are finally and fully glorified and perfectly united with Him in ²eternity (because we are in his image we will be more ³like God on that day than we can even imagine or now see).
2. God no longer holds our failures against us - Christ already fully addressed them ⁴legally.
God is thrilled and delighted in us - because He is thrilled and delighted in Himself and His Son first, and how we are becoming more like His Son through our struggles - and how we will finally be like Him when we are fully in union with Him and fully glorified alongside Him the moment we step into eternity. Because, at that time, our union with Him will be complete and perfect in the same way His Son's is - and was from eternity past and is again since his resurrection - the Son who is already and fully in the perfect image of the Father.
We will be like the prodigal son that his father lost, ⁵who returned. For now, God eagerly watches our progress as we grow in greater trust. He awaits our perfect restoration and union with him (in the same way the prodigal son's father did). At that time God will throw His arms around us, kiss our neck and throw a feast for us, ⁹celebrating our complete union and exaltation with Him forevermore. We will fully experience our glory by fully partaking of His.
Like Christ, His only begotten Son, we too are his sons and daughters (even though Christ is the only eternally begotten Son; like Christ, we are the sons and daughters of the all-glorious Creator God).
And the greater our ⁷humbling in this life - whether self imposed (through self denial and sacrificial love of others) or through painful circumstances - the more fully we will participate and engage in, experience, and enjoy the Father and Son in, by, and through the Spirit - both now, but more importantly throughout eternity. At that time we will fully join in the celebration and divine dance of glory and love between the Father and Son in, through, and by the Spirit. The greater our humility and trust now the more we enter into and partake of the only true God now but especially in eternity.
So never shy away from discipline, obedience to the Father, struggle, disappointment, setbacks, suffering, but embrace them - in the same way Christ did. The more we do, the more we become like Christ, and the more fully we will partake of glory (God's and our own), in the same way Christ does.
¹Self promotion - exaltation - is at the heart of pride and pride is the opposite of humility. We seek to promote ourselves to fill the void caused by God's absence, brought about by our rejecting and distrusting God in all His care, love, value, support, advancement and promotion of us. To lay down attempts to advance ourselves and receive the love, care and support of another requires humility and trust (and not just any "other" but the all wise, loving and powerful Creator God). It is acknowledging our dependence on another versus being our own god i.e. vs being independent. It is the reversal of the spirit of distrust and rebellion displayed by Adam in the Eden.
"So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient (temporary, fleeting), but the things that are unseen are eternal (permanent, unshakable)" 2 Cor 4:16-18
³The potential of our being like God and fully experiencing Him lies dormant in us as bearers of His image. This capacity was not lost in our rebellion but lethally suppressed i.e. we died spiritually the day we rebelled and chose to be our own god. When we rebelled and broke trust with God, our spiritual light went out (though the capacity for that light to be turned back on remained). When we turned away from God, our full brilliance - glory - went dormant. What was left was a spiritual void - hunger - that we now seek to fill. But due to our rebellious distrust of the only One who can fill it, we seek glory outside of and apart from God through creation, instead of in and through Him who is the Creator.
Now we treat God as our enemy and the one that blocks (prevents) us from obtaining fullness of life - or so we think - through created things instead of the Creator of them.
⁴Our rebellious unbelief (sin) is addressed in 2 ways:
Legally - objectively. Our rebellion is no longer held against us because of Christ and His bearing the full legal consequences of that rebellion i.e. God's condemnation and judgment for our rebellion are gone, removed forever and never revisited again by God. Christ bore all of it when He died and came back to life, putting these away from us forever.
Practically - subjectively. As we become more aware of the depth of our rebellious distrust we are humbled and increasingly understand the significance of Christ fully removing the legal consequences of our rebellion and our desperate need for Him.
⁵Due to his son humbling himself because of his failure to make it on his own.
⁶And not the Father only but the Son also eagerly anticipated His return as well.
So "count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing..." - Jas 1:2-5
A personal note regarding this post...
I used to dread dying and have always hoped I would die quietly in my sleep some day but after understanding the truths above I am inclined to accept the most challenging death, and now recognize going through such a death might humble me further so I might be exalted even more when I finally step into eternity with God.
Thursday, June 17, 2021
Immutability vs Aseity...Does God change
This post may raise more questions than it answers. If so, I think they are worth raising. Anyone who wishes to add to this discussion, I invite you to in the comment section below.
Is the community of Father, Son, and Spirit, static or dynamic? (The operative word being "community" vs God's essence).
What do I mean?
We are told God never changes (he is immutable). We see this along with His ¹aseity when he describes Himself as "I AM" i.e. Who God is, He always has been and always will be. He is the same, yesterday, today, and forever. He is the only never-changing, ever-present, self-sustained (aseity) being among all beings.
We might even say he is never changing (immutable) because he is self-sustaining (aseity). He needs nothing or no one - outside of himself - to be fully and perfectly God.
But in what sense is he never changing? Is he unchanging in every aspect of His being? Does he ever change in the way he expresses or experiences Himself - within the community of Father, Son, and Spirit - or without toward others, i.e. in the "economic" expression of His unchanging essence?
Does the way - or manner in which - He displays the fullness of His majesty and glory ever change? But this is a different question, right? Or is it?
Is it possible that God can enter into and experience a fuller participation of himself - of His essence? Does God's immutability require that God can never engage in a new or fuller expression of his love within the relationship of Father, Son, and Spirit by extending it out to others and doing whatever is necessary to do so? This certainly appears to have occurred during and since the incarnation of Christ.
Everything is present to God, yet somehow Christ entered and took part in time in a way he had not before the incarnation. Possibly Christ's stepping into time via his physicality was the primary expression of His incarnation i.e. taking on human form was necessary for him to participate in time since everything is present to God. We could say this was a change in how God addressed things outside Himself (vs within Himself, which never changes). A paradox we might not be able to fully grasp and make sense of logically since God is three persons while only one God, yet, in some real way, it is true.
Some try to address this paradox by saying Christ experienced time as a man but not as God. The problem is Christ was both God and man in one person (he may have emptied himself of certain divine attributes while on earth but he never stopped being God). The best we can determine, he is both God and man to this day and will be ²throughout eternity. Only logic - certainly not scripture - seeks to separate what God appears to have joined.
Where we finite creatures get into trouble is trying to force things to be logical when God doesn't. There is and always will be mystery within God because of God being infinite and we, in our understanding, power, and presence, are finite i.e. we are limited, God is not. There are no actual contradictions within God but that doesn't mean we are able to fully understand everything about Him. Though we are in His image, God's ways are not our ways and ours are not his. The infinite God trying to explain to finite man all there is to know about Him is like a calculus teacher trying to explain calculus to an ant. The only way that would be possible is if the teacher somehow imparted special knowledge to the ant to just get the basics - and in this case, since the teacher is Almighty God himself, this is not only possible but necessary. But if God chose to do so, it would only be because God did this supernaturally and not because of us i.e. not because of any natural, innate ability we have to grasp the infinite God unaided. Nor would God do so out of something lacking within Him. Remember he is the "I AM" - self-sustaining God - who needs nothing or no one other them himself.
If God chose to go about things in such a way as to enter a fuller and deeper experience of himself, this is not something God has to do i.e. there is nothing missing or lacking within God. He does not need to and is no less or more God in doing or not doing so. It is simply a fuller engagement and participation in who He already is. If anything drives God it is a desire to more fully participate in the fellowship of love between the Father, Son, and Spirit.
To say it another way, there is nothing outside of God forcing him to act in any particular
way. But that is different from something within God moving Him to carry out a particular action. All God's actions are determined by who God IS, within Himself, and not by any outside influence. Any and all things done by God come from within Him i.e. are driven internally, not externally. For nothing is greater than God or more worth knowing than God, even for Him.
One thing we can be sure of, scripture must always be the acid test of defining who God is, not logic. I say this because efforts to understand God often look to logic more than scripture.
I'm not suggesting scripture is illogical, but there are truths in scripture that go beyond our ability to reason and understand (i.e. we are finite - limited). They do not always appear logical but appear to contradict each other. Yet we see this in scripture often. Examples would be how man is fully accountable for choosing or not choosing God but God is the author and "finisher" of salvation or that God is 3 persons yet one God or Christ is fully God yet fully man. As a result, we have different conclusions among great minds on these as well as other theological points. Whereas if we allow scripture to say what it says and not force it to say something else in order for it to work for us logically i.e. in order to believe it's true whether we can make logical sense of seemingly contradictory qualities about God in scripture - we would have less disagreement and get much closer to an accurate understanding of who God is, even though we might not have a full understanding and "closure" about who he is to the degree we would like to ³logically.
The bottom line is God called us to live by faith, and that is not always simple or easy. We like control over faith and can use logic as a form of control e.g. if we can understand how God operates, we might be able to predict (i.e. "control") how he will work in our lives. Use reason, but when reason comes up short, we simply must trust God, and accept His ways are not ours or ours are His.
What makes God "tick"
The love of God poured out to others is love flowing out from the fullness of God's being, i.e. it is not done out of a need or void within Him, but out of the fullness of who He is. God acts out of fullness, not out of need or something lacking within Himself. God's desire to pour himself forth and the giving of Himself comes from a desire that others benefit by the fullness of who He is. Does God also benefit? Yes, in the sense that he finds joy in seeing other's experience and know him to a greater degree, but not in the sense that this adds anything to God's being or essence i.e. makes Him more God. He already is fully God. He is not becoming God.
Why? Because God needs nothing or no one. He already has everything in the fullness of community within the Father, Son, and Spirit. If God had never created, he would be just as much God as he has been from all eternity past.
However, because God has the greatest worth above all things, and is Father, Son, and Spirit, and desires for us to take part in this Trinitarian community to the greatest extent possible it is only reasonable that God would desire, if possible, to partake of this community to the greatest extent and experience more of who he is in fuller and deeper ways. You could say God "needs" himself i.e. He desires to participate more fully into His love, among and between Father and Son, in by and through the Spirit. And if there is a way for God to increase or expand participation in the love between Father, Son, and Spirit by creating others like Himself as His image-bearers and giving them a will to choose or not choose him, then rescue them from the consequences of not choosing him, this would certainly not involve God needing anyone or thing outside himself.
For a further discussion on how God stepped into time for us click here.
For a further discussion on why Christ is the only begotten of the Father click here.
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¹The Aseity (Self-Existence) of God | Monergism
https://www.monergism.com/topics/god’s-attributes/aseity-self-existence-god
The Aseity (Self-Existence) of God "The Father has life in himself." - John 5:26
"The God who made the world and all things in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands; neither is He served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Himself gives to all life and breath and all things." Acts 17:24-25
²Is Christ less God because he is fully man or less of a man because he is fully God? No, not according to scripture which takes precedence over logic which may appear to suggest otherwise. However scripture is the final authority, not reason. This does not mean scripture is unreasonable or illogical but when it appears God's words are in conflict with logic, the God inspired words recorded - i.e. the Bible - must be the final authority by virtue of being God's words i.e. God is the final and only arbitrator of truth.
³For a fuller discussion on the limits of logic and the value of paradox and biblical truths in tension, click here.
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
It all depends on God and you
You may have heard the following…
Pray as if it all depends on God and work as if ¹it all depends on you; because it does... both of them.
Is this true? If so, how do we reconcile this seemingly contradictory and paradoxical statement? Can we?
First, God is the cause - driving force behind all things. As Paul under the Spirit's inspiration said,
“...For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever...” Amen. Rom 11:36
All that we are and have comes from God, is by Him, and points back to Him. Nothing exists or happens without God and outside His perfect rule.
This includes our obedience. It is God who works in us to will and do of his good pleasure... so work out your salvation (which is already ²fully ours in Christ... this means we are to bring forth in practice what God has already declared about us i.e. we are perfectly righteous in Christ, so live accordingly) with fear and trembling.
Why fear and trembling? Not because we are afraid we'll lose our salvation but because obedience matters and honoring God matters. There is significance to our conduct that has real consequences, either positive or negative, for God, others and ourselves.
Phil 2:12 Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, 13 for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.
Our "work" is to believe in God, what He says about Himself and us. He says He is the almighty, all-loving, wise God, and his love is set upon us in Christ. It never stops, no matter what we do or don't do, and no matter what our circumstances are. Nothing happens to us, in us, or through us without His complete care and rule. The more we believe this, the more his love and power are released in and through us to others.
Make no mistake, it is only by God's love, which empowers us, that we are able to faithfully follow him. However, we must believe God's love and His claims about his care and control and act accordingly, to partake of and participate in this power. We must receive His love - by faith - to give love i.e. for it to empower us...we play a major part in how God empowers us. We must believe Him and His promise that nothing, no adversity, no challenge, no pain can or will ever separate us from God's loving care and will. To believe this, is our part in obedience. Without faith, we will not subjectively and consciously take part in what he freely extends to us in Christ… his full and perfect love, care, and guidance.
What is it exactly we must believe about God and ourselves that makes this work?
God - He is the all-wise, all-powerful, all-loving, and everywhere present God. He is working in all things, at all times to advance our greatest good and His greatest glory, regardless of how it might appear to the contrary. All things are from, through, and to him. To him be the glory forever, Amen!! There are no exceptions. Full stop!
Us - We are his image-bearers, perfectly accepted, valued, and loved in Christ. Nothing we did, do, or don't do can change this. This is based on Christ and that we are in his image. This is who God made us be – first by creating us like Himself in key ways and second by restoring us by grace to Himself in and through Christ - and therefore it is a fixed reality. It is not based on anything we did, are doing, or will do; ever (other than simply believing it is true). He made us in His image and considers us worth his love, enough to send His Son to die in our place and restore us. So much so that we were told by Christ Himself we are loved by God in the very same way he loves His Son 🤯. Christ's words, not mine!!!
To fully experience all God designed for us, and seeks to do in, and through us, we must believe all God says about us, to us, and for us, and about Himself regarding us. When we do, we will act (obey) accordingly, and the more we believe the more faithfully - full of faith - our pursuit of him will be i.e. we act/obey, regardless of how challenging it may be.
So while God is the driving force and cause and everything depends on Him, we are the means by and through which He works to bring about His good purposes and it is through our trust in this God, He works to accomplish this i.e. *it all depends on us...our trust in who he claims to be for us.
John 6:28 Then they said to him (Jesus), “What must we do, to be doing the works of God?” 29 Jesus answered them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.”
Related posts:
The necessity of faith in an infinite God
Obedience... the fruit of abiding
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Footnotes:
¹This is why man is always fully accountable for all his actions. He may not possess the power to obey God, but he does possess a will by which he can either choose to believe what God says about himself and us or refuse to believe. Which one we choose determines how we will live, and how we live, we are fully accountable for. No one else is.
²His love is always there objectively if we are in Christ, but we won't experience it subjectively until we believe, receive, and act upon it.



