Pt. 4
Chp. 4 God's love and God's Wrath
A. The love of God and the Wrath of God
1) The wrath of God; scripture uses "high intensity" language
Isa. 13:4, 6:9
Ezek. 5:11-17
Revelation 14
"Wrath like love, includes emotion as a necessary component. Here again, if impassibility is defined in terms of the complete absence of all "passions'', not only will you fly in the face of the biblical evidence, but you tumble into fresh errors that touch the very holiness of God. There reason is that itself, wrath, unlike love, is not one of the intrinsic perfections of God. Rather, it is a function of God's holiness against sin. Where there is no sin, there is no wrath- but there will always be love in God. Where God in his holiness confronts his image bearers in there rebellion, there must be wrath, or God is not the jealous God he claims to be, and his holiness is impugned. The price of diluting God's wrath is diminishing God's holiness."
2) How can the wrath and love of God relate?
God hates the sinner and the sin- Rom. 1:18, John 3:36
Wrath not blind rage- entirely reasonable and willed response "not generated by the loveliness of the loved"
3) A. Misconception- OT More wrath, NT a "softer" God approaches; not true look at the cross
Wrath- OT temporal categories
Wrath -NT eternal category
B) Misconception- God's wrath mollified by Jesus
Jesus and father one in "project of redemption"
Rom. 3:21-36
B. The Love of God and the Intent on the Atonement
"Limited" is limiting and misleading
Rather say "general" and "definite" over "Unlimited" and "Limited"
"surely is is best not to introduce disjunctions where God himself has not introduced them. If one holds that the Atonement is sufficient for all and effective for the elect, then both sets of texts and concerns [L/UL] and concerns are accomated. As far as I can se, a text such as 1 John 2:2 states something about the potential breadth of the atonement"
"I argue, then, that both Armnians and Calvinists should rightly affirm that Christ died for all, in the sense that Christ's death was sufficient for all and that the Scripture portrays God as inviting, commanding, and desiring the salvation of all our of love[ God's salvinic stance to the world] . Further all Christians ought also to confess that, in a slightly different sense, Christ Jesus, in the intent of God, died effectively for the elect alone, in line with the way the Bible speaks of God's special selecting love [his love for the elect]"
C. The Love of God for the World
John 3:16
1 John 2:15-17
D. The Love of God and the People of God
1) Like a parent to his child (eg. Heb 12:4-11; cf Prov. 4:20)
Jude 21
Ex. 20:6
2) "Love of God is not to be merely analyzed, understood, and adopted into holistic categories of intergrated theological thought, It is to be received, to be absorbed, to be felt." Eph 3:14-21
3" Never, never, underestimate the power of the love of God to break down and transform the most amazingly hard individuals"
Les Miserables
"God's love so transforms us that we mediate it to others who are thereby transformed We love because he first loved us; we forgive because we can stand forgiven"
1) intra-Trinitarian love- ensures plan of redemption
2) Providential love- protects, feeds, clothes and forbears
3) Yearning inviting love, commanding love- displayed on the cross
4) Elective love-enables us to see his sheer glory and power of Christ's vicarious death
5) God continues to love us- with immutable love (romans 8) but with love of a father (jude 21)
Remain in his love John 15:9ff
"All this has transformed us, so that we in turn perceive the sheer rightness of the first commandment- to love God with heart and soul and mind and strength. As that is the first and greatest commandment, so the first and greatest sin is not to love God with heart and soul and mind and strength. For this there is no remeddy, save what God himself has provided- in love"
Monday, April 19, 2010
For the Love of God pt. 3
Notes and personal commentary on "The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God"(D.A.Carson)
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Some titles are directly quoted
Chp. 3 God's love and God's Sovereignty
The Affective Element in God's love
Hosea 11
The emotional intenstity
God is a jeolous God
Abounds in love and faithfulness- shown to Moses Ex. 34:6
God grieves Ps. 78:40; Eph. 32:10
Pities (Ps. 103:13)
Everlasting love (Isa. 54:8, Ps. 103:17)
1 John 4:7-11
'Dear Friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another' (4:11)
Model and incentive
The impassiblity of God?
The Soverignty and Transcedence of God
1) God is utterly sovereign, transcendent, and omnipotent
Jer. 32:17
2 Cor. 6:8; Rev 1:8
Matt 19:26
Prov. 16:23
Heb. 1:3
Eph. 1:11
Prov. 21:1
Romans 9;21
Enjoys all Knowledge
Matt. 11:20-24
1 Sam. 23:11-113
Job 37:16
Ps. 90:4
2 Peter 3:8
Isa 57:15
2) His Sovereignty extends over election
Rom. 9:11
Acts 13:48
Eph 1:4-5 cf. Rev. 13:7-8, 17:8
2 Thess. 2:13
Election over angels -1 Tim 5:21
Chosen race - 1 Peter 2:9
Electing love- immutable John 6:37- 40
3) Christians are not fatalists- "compatablism"
Gen. 50:19-20
(speaking about this story) " in one and the same event, God was operating and his intentions were good, and the brothers were operating and their intentions were evil"
Acts 4:23- 29
Pilate, herod, gentiles, Jews in evil act; on other hand God's appointing events
Not to stress either too much
4) God's immutability; unchangeableness
Ps. 02:27
Mal 3:6
Isa 46:8-11
Ps 33:11, cf. Matt 13:35; 25:3; Eph 1:4, 11:1; 1 Peter 1:20
"God's immutability is enormously imporatant, It engenders stability and elicts worship"
5) The sketch of God coming under attack - "open" view of God
Some scriptures to defend each postion
"Sooner or later on retreats into the recognition that, so far as we are concerned, there are some mysteries in the very Being of God The deepest of these, I think are tied to the fact that Go as he has disclosed himself in Scpriture is simultaneously soverign/transcendent and personal"
Ways to unpack that quote-
No personal level illustration of soverigenty and transcendence
"personal" in our being- attached to finite things; God is not "finite"
C. A Rightly Constrained Impassibility
Love in line with his will
Sets his affections on elect no "falling in love"
emotional but not sentimentalized love
"God loves, whomever the object, because God is love...God exercises this love in conjunction with all his other perfections, but his love is no less love for that..his love emanates from his own character; it is not dependent on the loveliness of the loved, external to himself"
"because we have been transformed by the Gospel, over love is to be self-orginating,not elicted by the loveliness of the the loved
1John 4:19
Rom. 5:8
John 4:10
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Some titles are directly quoted
Chp. 3 God's love and God's Sovereignty
The Affective Element in God's love
Hosea 11
The emotional intenstity
God is a jeolous God
Abounds in love and faithfulness- shown to Moses Ex. 34:6
God grieves Ps. 78:40; Eph. 32:10
Pities (Ps. 103:13)
Everlasting love (Isa. 54:8, Ps. 103:17)
1 John 4:7-11
'Dear Friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another' (4:11)
Model and incentive
The impassiblity of God?
The Soverignty and Transcedence of God
1) God is utterly sovereign, transcendent, and omnipotent
Jer. 32:17
2 Cor. 6:8; Rev 1:8
Matt 19:26
Prov. 16:23
Heb. 1:3
Eph. 1:11
Prov. 21:1
Romans 9;21
Enjoys all Knowledge
Matt. 11:20-24
1 Sam. 23:11-113
Job 37:16
Ps. 90:4
2 Peter 3:8
Isa 57:15
2) His Sovereignty extends over election
Rom. 9:11
Acts 13:48
Eph 1:4-5 cf. Rev. 13:7-8, 17:8
2 Thess. 2:13
Election over angels -1 Tim 5:21
Chosen race - 1 Peter 2:9
Electing love- immutable John 6:37- 40
3) Christians are not fatalists- "compatablism"
Gen. 50:19-20
(speaking about this story) " in one and the same event, God was operating and his intentions were good, and the brothers were operating and their intentions were evil"
Acts 4:23- 29
Pilate, herod, gentiles, Jews in evil act; on other hand God's appointing events
Not to stress either too much
4) God's immutability; unchangeableness
Ps. 02:27
Mal 3:6
Isa 46:8-11
Ps 33:11, cf. Matt 13:35; 25:3; Eph 1:4, 11:1; 1 Peter 1:20
"God's immutability is enormously imporatant, It engenders stability and elicts worship"
5) The sketch of God coming under attack - "open" view of God
Some scriptures to defend each postion
"Sooner or later on retreats into the recognition that, so far as we are concerned, there are some mysteries in the very Being of God The deepest of these, I think are tied to the fact that Go as he has disclosed himself in Scpriture is simultaneously soverign/transcendent and personal"
Ways to unpack that quote-
No personal level illustration of soverigenty and transcendence
"personal" in our being- attached to finite things; God is not "finite"
C. A Rightly Constrained Impassibility
Love in line with his will
Sets his affections on elect no "falling in love"
emotional but not sentimentalized love
"God loves, whomever the object, because God is love...God exercises this love in conjunction with all his other perfections, but his love is no less love for that..his love emanates from his own character; it is not dependent on the loveliness of the loved, external to himself"
"because we have been transformed by the Gospel, over love is to be self-orginating,not elicted by the loveliness of the the loved
1John 4:19
Rom. 5:8
John 4:10
Thursday, April 15, 2010
For the Love of God-Part 2
Notes and personal commentary on "The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God"(D.A.Carson)
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Some titles are directly quoted
Ch. 2 God is love
John 4:8,16
"God is love" means what?
How NOT to proceed
1.The Word for love cannot be tied to anyone word group- "careful diachronic work has been done on Greek words for love"
Word group disintictions and arguments (see book for further understanding)
How to proceed
Text in context
John 5:17- "Sonship' is very often a functional category in the Bible. Because the overwhelming majority of sons ended up vocationally doing what their fathers did, 'like father, like son' was the cultural assumption' -Jesus did what his father did, illustrates Matt 5:9
2. Did God keep the Sabbath? 1st Centuray Jewish Arguement
Yes- God is sovereign and does not work (ie. lift anything higher than shoulders..he is bigger than universe)
No- If he rested creation would unwind and go swirling out of order
How can Jesus be God's son?
He did everything God wanted him to do
1) Did not set himself against God, or enourage ditheism but rather monotheism; Jesus subordinate and entirely dependent on the father
John 5:19-20
"Like Father like Son"
"He can do only what he sees the Father doing (subordination) because he does whatever he Father does (coextensive action). This makes his sonship unique"
2) John 5:20- Why does the Son do everything the Father does?
The Father Loves the Son and shows him all he does "craftsman shop model"
"Jesus is so uniquely and unqualifedly the Son of God that he Father shows him all he does, out of sheer love for him, and the Son, however dependent on his Father, does everything the Father does"
3.A) " The Son by his obediance to the Father doing only what God gives him to say, yet doing such things in funiction of his ablitiy to do whatever the Father does, acts in such a way as to reveal God perfectly"
b) " It is because the Father loves the Son that this pattern of divin self-disclosure pertains"
John 5:23
Romans 8:32
4) The Son's love for the Father
John 8:29, 14:31
5)Father loves the Son and shows him all that he does
John 5:20a
John 5:20b-21
"In the past God occasionally used human agents i the resuctation of someone (e.g., Elijah). Jesus is different. Because the Father has 'shown' him this, Jesus raised the dead as he please, just as the Father pleases"
Some Concluding Synthetic Reflections
"Mark well the distinction between the love of the Father for the Son and the love of the Son for the Father. The Father commands, sends, tells, commissions- and demonstrates his love fo the Son by 'showing' him everything- and demonstrates his love for the Son by 'showing' him everything, such that the Son does whatever the Father does. The Son obeys, says only what the Father gives him to say, does only what the Father gives him to do, comes into the world as the Sent One- and demonstrates hi love for the Faher prcisely by such obedience"
John 15
The model of how Jesus loves the Father should be our model in how we should love and obey Jesus
John 14:15
John 15:14-15
John 17
Distinction between slaves and friends
"not once is Jesus or God ever described in the Bible as our friend. Abraham is God's friend; the reverse is never stated."
He has shown us what the Father does and says, revealed this to us, so therefore we are his friends
" The difference of friendship is that the full information has been conveyed. It is an informational difference...of revelation not of obediance"
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Some titles are directly quoted
Ch. 2 God is love
John 4:8,16
"God is love" means what?
How NOT to proceed
1.The Word for love cannot be tied to anyone word group- "careful diachronic work has been done on Greek words for love"
Word group disintictions and arguments (see book for further understanding)
How to proceed
Text in context
John 5:17- "Sonship' is very often a functional category in the Bible. Because the overwhelming majority of sons ended up vocationally doing what their fathers did, 'like father, like son' was the cultural assumption' -Jesus did what his father did, illustrates Matt 5:9
2. Did God keep the Sabbath? 1st Centuray Jewish Arguement
Yes- God is sovereign and does not work (ie. lift anything higher than shoulders..he is bigger than universe)
No- If he rested creation would unwind and go swirling out of order
How can Jesus be God's son?
He did everything God wanted him to do
1) Did not set himself against God, or enourage ditheism but rather monotheism; Jesus subordinate and entirely dependent on the father
John 5:19-20
"Like Father like Son"
"He can do only what he sees the Father doing (subordination) because he does whatever he Father does (coextensive action). This makes his sonship unique"
2) John 5:20- Why does the Son do everything the Father does?
The Father Loves the Son and shows him all he does "craftsman shop model"
"Jesus is so uniquely and unqualifedly the Son of God that he Father shows him all he does, out of sheer love for him, and the Son, however dependent on his Father, does everything the Father does"
3.A) " The Son by his obediance to the Father doing only what God gives him to say, yet doing such things in funiction of his ablitiy to do whatever the Father does, acts in such a way as to reveal God perfectly"
b) " It is because the Father loves the Son that this pattern of divin self-disclosure pertains"
John 5:23
Romans 8:32
4) The Son's love for the Father
John 8:29, 14:31
5)Father loves the Son and shows him all that he does
John 5:20a
John 5:20b-21
"In the past God occasionally used human agents i the resuctation of someone (e.g., Elijah). Jesus is different. Because the Father has 'shown' him this, Jesus raised the dead as he please, just as the Father pleases"
Some Concluding Synthetic Reflections
"Mark well the distinction between the love of the Father for the Son and the love of the Son for the Father. The Father commands, sends, tells, commissions- and demonstrates his love fo the Son by 'showing' him everything- and demonstrates his love for the Son by 'showing' him everything, such that the Son does whatever the Father does. The Son obeys, says only what the Father gives him to say, does only what the Father gives him to do, comes into the world as the Sent One- and demonstrates hi love for the Faher prcisely by such obedience"
John 15
The model of how Jesus loves the Father should be our model in how we should love and obey Jesus
John 14:15
John 15:14-15
John 17
Distinction between slaves and friends
"not once is Jesus or God ever described in the Bible as our friend. Abraham is God's friend; the reverse is never stated."
He has shown us what the Father does and says, revealed this to us, so therefore we are his friends
" The difference of friendship is that the full information has been conveyed. It is an informational difference...of revelation not of obediance"
For the Love of God- Pt. 1
Notes and personal commentary on "The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God"(D.A.Carson)
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Chapter titles and underlines are directly quoted
Chp. 1
Why the Doctrine of the Love of God is judged difficult
1) The Majority of the people today believe God (it, she, he, fill in their own perfered word) is a loving God, and are not surprise by the "God loves you" phrase. But the definition of this love is vastly different than the Christian definition of love, or at least the definition that they come to has been set in a place outside of Christian theology
2) Other "complementary" truths about God are widely disbelieved such as sovereignty, holiness, God's wrath, providence etc...
"the love of God in our culture has been purged of anything the culture finds uncomfortable. The love of God has been sanitized, deomocratized and above all else sentimentalized"
"today most people seem to have little difficulty believing in the love of God; they have far more difficulty believing i the justice of God, the wrath of God, and the noncontridictory truthfulness of an ominicient God"
3) Our culture believes that all religions are the same, and a postmodern mindset has taken over. "the only hersey is that there is such a thing as heresy"
4) "Within Christian confessionalism the doctrine of the love of God poses its difficulties"
thinking through fundamental truths, to keep truths about God in balance
5) Love of God thought more easily understood than it is, overlooking distinctions
Some Different ways the bible speaks of the love of God
1) Love of the Father for the Son and Son for the Father
John 3:35, 5:20, 14:31
2) God's providental love over his creation
Gen. 1, Matt.6
3)God's "salvfic stance toward his fallen world"
John 3:16, 1 John 2:2, John 15:19
"inviting" "commanding all humans to repent"
Ezek. 33:11
4) God's particular effective selecting love toward his elect
Duet. 7:7-8; cf. 4:37, 10:14-15
" when Israel is contrasted witht he universe or other nations, the distinguishing feature has nothing of personal or national merit; it is nothing other than the love of God"
"the discriminationg feature of God's love surfaces frequently"
Mal. 1:2-3
Christ loves the Church
Eph. 5;25
5) "God's love is sometimes said to be directed toward his own people in a porvisional or conditional way- condtitoned, that is, on obedience"
Jude vs. 21
John 15:9-10
"to a thousand generations"
Ex. 20:6
Ps. 103:9-11, 13, 17-18
Three Preliminary observations on these distinctive ways of talking about the Love of God
1) The results of absoltizing and making exclusive one aspect of God's love over another, or making one the lense by which you see all the rest
Trinitarian model- between Jesus and followers; Father does not redeem Son nor vica versa
Providental love lense- God is a "mysterious force"- stance of pantheism
Inviting seeking love lense- semi-plageans, pelagians, arminians, + interested parties in God's emotional inner life
Election lense- God loves elect; hates reprobate; same assertion that has "engendered hyper calvinism"
Obediance love lense- bring people into merit theology instead of the cross
2) These views not "compartments" but complimentariasm -not "loves" but "love" God is love
All these truths are needed and needed to be held together
3) Do "certain evangelical cliches stand up"? aka "God's love is unconditional" "God loves everyone the same way"
What applies and what time is essential and important
"Christian faithfulness entails our responsibility to grow in our grasp ow what it means to confess that God is love"
Started 4/8/10- Completed 4/15/10
All "" are direct quotes. Notes are in summary/paraphrased form unless other wise noted. Chapter titles and underlines are directly quoted
Chp. 1
Why the Doctrine of the Love of God is judged difficult
1) The Majority of the people today believe God (it, she, he, fill in their own perfered word) is a loving God, and are not surprise by the "God loves you" phrase. But the definition of this love is vastly different than the Christian definition of love, or at least the definition that they come to has been set in a place outside of Christian theology
2) Other "complementary" truths about God are widely disbelieved such as sovereignty, holiness, God's wrath, providence etc...
"the love of God in our culture has been purged of anything the culture finds uncomfortable. The love of God has been sanitized, deomocratized and above all else sentimentalized"
"today most people seem to have little difficulty believing in the love of God; they have far more difficulty believing i the justice of God, the wrath of God, and the noncontridictory truthfulness of an ominicient God"
3) Our culture believes that all religions are the same, and a postmodern mindset has taken over. "the only hersey is that there is such a thing as heresy"
4) "Within Christian confessionalism the doctrine of the love of God poses its difficulties"
thinking through fundamental truths, to keep truths about God in balance
5) Love of God thought more easily understood than it is, overlooking distinctions
Some Different ways the bible speaks of the love of God
1) Love of the Father for the Son and Son for the Father
John 3:35, 5:20, 14:31
2) God's providental love over his creation
Gen. 1, Matt.6
3)God's "salvfic stance toward his fallen world"
John 3:16, 1 John 2:2, John 15:19
"inviting" "commanding all humans to repent"
Ezek. 33:11
4) God's particular effective selecting love toward his elect
Duet. 7:7-8; cf. 4:37, 10:14-15
" when Israel is contrasted witht he universe or other nations, the distinguishing feature has nothing of personal or national merit; it is nothing other than the love of God"
"the discriminationg feature of God's love surfaces frequently"
Mal. 1:2-3
Christ loves the Church
Eph. 5;25
5) "God's love is sometimes said to be directed toward his own people in a porvisional or conditional way- condtitoned, that is, on obedience"
Jude vs. 21
John 15:9-10
"to a thousand generations"
Ex. 20:6
Ps. 103:9-11, 13, 17-18
Three Preliminary observations on these distinctive ways of talking about the Love of God
1) The results of absoltizing and making exclusive one aspect of God's love over another, or making one the lense by which you see all the rest
Trinitarian model- between Jesus and followers; Father does not redeem Son nor vica versa
Providental love lense- God is a "mysterious force"- stance of pantheism
Inviting seeking love lense- semi-plageans, pelagians, arminians, + interested parties in God's emotional inner life
Election lense- God loves elect; hates reprobate; same assertion that has "engendered hyper calvinism"
Obediance love lense- bring people into merit theology instead of the cross
2) These views not "compartments" but complimentariasm -not "loves" but "love" God is love
All these truths are needed and needed to be held together
3) Do "certain evangelical cliches stand up"? aka "God's love is unconditional" "God loves everyone the same way"
What applies and what time is essential and important
"Christian faithfulness entails our responsibility to grow in our grasp ow what it means to confess that God is love"
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Memorization Pt 2
This is the message we have heard from him: that God is light and in him there is no darkness at all. If we say we have fellowship with him and yet walk in darkness we lie and do not practice the truth. But if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Jesus Christ cleanses us from all sin. If we say we have not sinned we deceive ourselves and his truth is not in us. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar and his word is not in us.
1 John 1
1 John 1
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Memorization-Pt. 1
1 John 1:1-4
That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and have touched with our hands , concerning the word of life- the life was made manifest, and we have seen it, and testify to it, and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was made manifest to us- that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the father and with the Son Jesus Christ, and we are writing these things so that our joy may be complete
That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and have touched with our hands , concerning the word of life- the life was made manifest, and we have seen it, and testify to it, and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was made manifest to us- that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the father and with the Son Jesus Christ, and we are writing these things so that our joy may be complete
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Honey as Sweet
As I was reading out of "Seeing and Savoring Jesus Christ" a paragraph on one of the last pages seem to strike deep within my heart.
Piper states:This is another path (referring to how one comes to see Jesus as real and true)...It starts with the conviction that divine truth can be self-authenticating. In fact, it would seem strange if God revealed himself in his Son Jesus Christ and inspired the record of that revelation in the Bible, but did not provide a way for ordinary people to know it. Stated simply, the common path to sure knowledge of the real Jesus is this: Jesus, as he is revealed in the Bible, has a glory- an excellence, a spiritual beauty- that can be seen as self-evidently true. It is like seeing the sun and knowing that it is light and not dark, or like tasting honey and knowing that it is sweet and not sour. There is no long chain or reasoning from premises to conclusion. Their is a direct apprehension that this person is true and his glory is the glory of God....(seeing and savoring jesus christ. pp. 119;120)
2 Corinthians 4:4-6
4In their case(J) the god of this world(K) has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing(L) the light of(M) the gospel of the glory of Christ,(N) who is the image of God. 5For what(O) we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, with(P) ourselves as your servants[b] for Jesus’ sake. 6For God, who said,(Q) "Let light shine out of darkness,"(R) has shone in our hearts to give(S) the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
I pray that everyone may see the sun as light, and honey as sweet.
Piper states:This is another path (referring to how one comes to see Jesus as real and true)...It starts with the conviction that divine truth can be self-authenticating. In fact, it would seem strange if God revealed himself in his Son Jesus Christ and inspired the record of that revelation in the Bible, but did not provide a way for ordinary people to know it. Stated simply, the common path to sure knowledge of the real Jesus is this: Jesus, as he is revealed in the Bible, has a glory- an excellence, a spiritual beauty- that can be seen as self-evidently true. It is like seeing the sun and knowing that it is light and not dark, or like tasting honey and knowing that it is sweet and not sour. There is no long chain or reasoning from premises to conclusion. Their is a direct apprehension that this person is true and his glory is the glory of God....(seeing and savoring jesus christ. pp. 119;120)
2 Corinthians 4:4-6
4In their case(J) the god of this world(K) has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing(L) the light of(M) the gospel of the glory of Christ,(N) who is the image of God. 5For what(O) we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, with(P) ourselves as your servants[b] for Jesus’ sake. 6For God, who said,(Q) "Let light shine out of darkness,"(R) has shone in our hearts to give(S) the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
I pray that everyone may see the sun as light, and honey as sweet.
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