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"What
To Do About God" When I was a small boy, as I pondered the mysteries of the universe,
I asked someone: "Who made God?" Needless to say, no one has
ever answered that question for me, and I don't need an answer to the
question: God Is, and that's that! My problem and yours has to do with
what kind of God there is and what we are going to do about the entire
matter. We can find answers to those questions. Today, you and I are confronted with the same God confronting Moses
and the people of Israel: "Hear, 0 Israel!: The Lord is our god,
the Lord alone!" (Deut. 6:4 NRSV) There we have the matter in a
flat-out statement. And what a claim it is! In Moses' time there were
many so-called gods to worship. But, if the Lord is one, then,
the other gods, real or imagined, have to go—or at least take a back
seat to the one who is really in charge. We might say: "Oh, that was just Moses talking," and take
his opinion with a grain of salt. After all, we have a right to our
opinions, don't we? Well, sure, we do! But think about this: the
testimony of the Psalmist echoes what could well be the conclusions of
any or all of us: When
I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers, The truth is, any way you turn, God meets you, whether by the witness
of a believer or by the testimony of all that you sense from the world
or the universe about you. But that is not the end of the matter. We can't just turn aside as if
it makes no difference that the Lord is God or that God is Lord. We
cannot walk away from that with a shrug. Listen to Moses as he
continues: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul, and with all your might." (Deut. 6:5 NRSV)
Isn't it fair to say, if God is our Creator and Lord, then he can
demand our love, our total love? Surely he created us for a purpose, and
it makes sense that if this purpose includes our loving him, then he can
rightfully expect us to love him. I can imagine some young person wondering about what it means to love
God at all, to say nothing of loving God with all that is within us,
heart, soul, and strength. That is a big order! Now this is not all that
this means, but God has given his people, including you and me, a
practical way of showing our love to him. The Ten Commandments give us
ways, in several real life, human situations to express our love to him.
And we shouldn't be surprised that we, when we obey the commandments,
also show a proper love for ourselves. The commandments were not given
to us to enslave us, but to free us for what is good and helpful and
creative. Have you noticed that the Ten Commandments not only point
toward God, but also toward the people about us and our attitude and
behavior toward them. Jesus said, that the commandment, "You shall
love your neighbor as yourself," is as important as the commandment
to love God. The Apostle Paul went so far as to say that "the whole
law is summed up in a single commandment, ‘You shall love your
neighbor as yourself.’"(Gal. 5:14 NRSV) Now some of what I have been talking about may seem fairly easy.
After all, surveys show that about 95 per cent of the American people
believe in God. They may not all mean the same thing when they say that
they believe in God: they may say that they believe in "a higher
power" or in "a supreme law of the universe" or something
else different from the words most use. These ways of talking about God
may only touch the hem of God's garment, but they are still saying
something positive and can lead to an understanding that touches the
heart and that fires the imagination with glory. But the more personal God seems to us to be and the more God
seems to know and feel and act, the more God is open to blame when
things go wrong for us. As long as you think of God as one might think
of Ole Man River, who just keeps rollin' along, then you can be spared
some painful thoughts, some rage, and you may be able to grit you teeth
and let it go at that. But no! God has revealed himself as a God of
love. Prophets and psalmists and especially Jesus showed and taught that
God loves us. The apostles and Christians after them have gone the world
around saying that God loves us, and they have pointed to the cross,
God's gift of love that ought to prove forever that God loves all of us
with an everlasting love. But sometimes, the closer we get to this love and the more deeply we
feel it, the more we may be tempted to doubt that God really loves us
when things go wrong—when tragedy strikes; when war, a flood, a
tornado, or an airplane disaster takes the homes or lives of innocent
people. Forever etched in my memory, is the image of a man pictured on
the cover of a magazine I saw not long after an earthquake. The
grief-stricken man stood on the rubble of a house in ruins, his clenched
fist lifted toward the heavens. Recently I read the confession of a
physician who has brought comfort and hope to thousands by her books—books
that underscored the reality and certainty of the life to come. After
all that she had said and written and believed, she cursed God when one
dear to her died. But that was not the end of the story. The God she had
cursed helped her through, and she continues her work of faith and hope. Has it ever shocked you to read in your Bible the angry,
bitter complaints against God hurled by a prophet or a psalmist? Some of
the best people who ever lived have at times found it impossible to love
God at all, to say nothing of loving God with all their heart, soul, and
strength. Do you remember that the prophet Jeremiah as much as called
God a liar because it seemed to him that God let his enemies have their
way with him? But the Lord said to him, "If you turn back, I will
take you back, and you shall stand before me...And I will make you to
this people a fortified wall of bronze." (Jer. 15:19a NRSV) Perhaps the more subtle temptation, the temptation that keeps tugging
at us is the temptation to idolatry. Idolatry in our day? No, not the
bowing down before images like the one that King Nebuchadnezzar
commanded the people to worship. Not the altars to dozens of gods like
those that filled the landscape and grieved the heart of the Apostle
Paul as he looked about him in ancient Athens. Not that kind of
idolatry. What are the idols that people give themselves to right here
in our own nation, in our own community? What are we drawn to
love with all our heart, all our soul, and all our strength? Power,
that's an idol. Pleasure. Money. Beauty. Popularity. Family. But what's wrong with power? Authority can keep people from hurting
each other. Or pleasure? We are made to enjoy things. Or money? We need
it, and we can do great good with it. Or beauty? We thrill to the colors
of a sunset, the majesty of the mountains, the wonder of the stars at
night. Or popularity? It's better to be liked than ignored or rejected.
Or family? Even the Bible tells us that God has set the solitary in
families. So what's the problem? All of these things I listed are, in
their proper place, good. It's really a matter of what should take first
place, isn't it? So, a totally consuming demand is made of us: first, to recognize God
for who he is—the one and only Lord, and then to love this God with
all that is within us, a challenge that seems almost impossible for us
to meet. You and I really need to make up our minds to let God be God. Like it
or not, God is going to be God anyway. I like what Chad Walsh said,
"The fact that the creeds are true is no reason for assuming that
God can and will work only through those who believe them to be true.
God roams; He breaks; He enters; He is not above using an alias; He
chooses and stations His witnesses where He will." (Behold the
Glory, quoted in Edmund Fuller, ed., Affirmations of God and Man
(New York: Association Press, 1967, p.19)). Still, we pray in the words
of the hymn, "O thou who changest not, abide with me!" We can
trust this God of whom Moses spoke: "The Lord is our God, and the
Lord alone!" Why do we dare trust this God? For myself, I can say I trust God
because of what I see in Jesus Christ. Jesus said to one of his
disciples, "Whoever has seen me has seen the Father." (John
14:9b NRSV) Follow Jesus along the dusty trails of his native land, and
see and listen to him as He reaches out to people of all kinds, to Jew
and Gentile alike, to the good and the bad, to little children and the
aging—accepting them, loving them, forgiving them, and setting them on
new and better paths. If God is like Jesus, then I can love God, no doubt about it! Whether
I love God with all that is within me, that is another matter. However,
the command is there; the challenge is always before me. I have a choice
to make, and that choice, that decision to let the reality of God make
me what I ought to be is what it means to love God. How wonderful! It is
a cup that overflows, spilling over with grace and concern for my
neighbor. Remember, Jesus put a second commandment right alongside the
commandment to love God: "You shall love your neighbor as
yourself." That love shows for sure our love for God. Interview with
Lydia Talbot: Dr. Cox, we now know why are you are Professor of Preaching at Southern Baptist Seminary and why you are a judge for the Best Sermons award sponsored by 30 Good Minutes. A compelling message. You say in your message that we are "wired for God." Does that imply a special receptivity, though? James Cox: Yes, that is indeed what is implied. This was a statement by a physician whose book or part of a book was excerpted in Readers Digest magazine. That’s where I first encountered this phrase. Talbot: Now you told me a moment ago that at the seminary you have learned so much from your students. How is that? Cox: Well, in the give and take of discussion, in the evaluating of what they have done in their practice preaching, in some of the essays they have written, they have contributed to my own understanding and appreciation. There is such a wide variety of individuals that it helps to gain an appreciation for differences and how all of us working together—if we have a common goal— can with our own individual characteristics make our personal contribution. Talbot: You made a decision years ago to leave your local congregational work as a local minister of churches to do what you’re doing today. You’ve been at Southern Baptist Seminary since 1959. What has that decision about? Cox: That decision was whether to continue in the pastorate or to teach what I had been doing. There was a friend of ours who expressed it this way to my wife when they were talking about my leaving; he said to her, "He has been retailing it up until now and now he’ll be wholesaling it!" So my wife, who enjoyed the pastorate so much, felt better about our leaving and was comforted by what he said. Talbot: Dr. Cox, your message referred to the Ten Commandants as not enslaving us but freeing us to be free, to be good and helpful and creative, as you put it. What was that revelatory moment for you when you saw it that way? Cox: It would be hard to pinpoint that time. I think it has been a growing appreciation to see that God is not certainly against us, but God is for us. There was a Scottish minister who used the phrase—it was the title of a sermon—"The Explosive Power of a New Affection." If you love someone then you are going to try and please that person. Talbot: Thank you so much for providing that message for us, Dr. Cox. It’s been a delight to have you here. Cox: Thank you for the opportunity. |
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