3/11/18
Colossians 1:15
He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all
creation.
In the scripture, no one can really see God. Jesus has made a
point multiple times that only He has been to heaven and only He has seen the
Father. But then He explains (all of this is in the Gospel of John) that if you
have seen Me (Jesus), then you will have seen the Father. Jesus is the living,
breathing, character of God in man form. That is what Paul means here in
Colossians. Jesus is the very image of God, the true image bearer of God, since
we are failed images. Jesus is the true Adam, the Imago Dei. He represents us
as the firstborn of all creation, though He Himself wasn’t created, but has
been there from the Beginning and before the Beginning. Jesus is God, affirmed
over and over again throughout the Scriptures, and this is one of the
foundational doctrines of Christianity.
I have wondered about this, is Jesus is the living image of God,
then why don’t we have a good idea of what He looked like? I can’t help but
remember Billy Graham saying that there is a reason Jesus’ physical image was
never preserved, and that was predetermined and necessary for future
Christians. Instead of trying to imagine what Jesus looked like, to look upon
the Image of Jesus, we look to His character, His teachings, and of course His
sacrifice and love for us: The Cross. That is what it means to be the “image of
the invisible God.” For all intents and purposes, the Bible hints that Jesus
wasn’t even good looking, but instead easily passable and probably looked older
and more withered than the 30ish year old He really was. People mistook Him to
be closer to 50 when He was teaching. But when He taught, when He revealed the
tiniest parts of His power to heal and save, He drew multitudes of people!
There was power in His teachings, that is what was recorded in the Gospels. He
was different from the teachers of the Law. And after He came back from the
dead, His entire image was changed. It was like He was permanently in His
transfigured state, and when the disciples saw, they fell down and worshipped
the glorified Image of God who is Jesus.
I am also sad that Satan has successfully blinded many others,
many who call themselves Christians too. Why does God let this happen? Why was
this predestined as well? I probably will never understand. I guess I will have
to ask God when I see Him. All I can do is preach the Gospel earnestly and to
as many people I can. Help me love people. Help me serve people. Help me be
selfless. Help me look forward to the Day of the Lord, to Eternity. Help me
Lord.
3/23/18
Looking at the context, Paul is talking about the life and death
of a Christian, what happens after a Christian becomes a believer. This is
towards the beginning of the passage, and is outlining what regeneration looks
like. God puts the Holy Spirit into us, since only the Spirit has the
“knowledge of the glory of God”, and we are to become like the “face of
Christ,” the true Imago Dei, so we are also reflecting the Glory of God unto
all men and all of creation. Yes, also in the passage, Paul talks about how
Satan will blind those who are perishing, and the Gospel will be veiled from
them. Such is the reality, that God has chosen some to not be able to be saved.
I don’t know why. I don’t have a good answer why God does this. But it is clear
in this passage that it happens. Some people will just never comprehend the
Gospel, and God will not put His Holy Spirit into them. But among those
perishing in the darkness, God puts His Holy Spirit into those who He has
chosen, and we become the light to shine in the darkness. We will be little
pillars of light in the neighborhoods, cities, and nations we live in. We will
be surrounded by darkness, and in the passage Paul talks about being pressured
and crushed by that darkness, but we will never be destroyed. We will never
falter. We will not despair. Light will always beat darkness, it is not a ying
yang situation. Where there is light there will be no darkness. Christ has
overcome the world!
3/24/18
3/15/18
2 cor 4:4
in
whose case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving so
that they might not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is
the image of God
Again, the doctrine of Imago Dei. I am thankful that through my
circumstances, my birth, and the path that I’ve been taken on, I met Jesus
Christ and saw glory in His image. I am thankful that the god of this world,
Satan, did not blind me from seeing the light of the Gospel. I am glad.
3/23/18
2 Corinthians 4:6
For
God, who said, “Light shall shine out of darkness,” is the One who has shone in
our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face
of Christ.
3/24/18
2 Cor 3:18
But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the
glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to
glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.
Ah this is the key verse I am looking for, a cumulation of the
past few devotions. We are no longer veiled. What does this mean? It means we
can see God. Before, as Jesus said, no one has seen God except Jesus, who came
from God and is God. But Jesus tore the veil, opening up the Holy of Holies
(I almost typed Chamber of Secrets by accident), so we can enter the presence of God!
Mirror. We are like mirrors of the Glory of God. When people see
us, they don’t see our image (which is a broken hollow shell), but instead see the
reflection of Jesus Christ, glorified by the Cross, who is the true Imago Dei
and is the image of the Glory of God incarnate. Jesus Christ is the true Adam,
who was made in God’s image. Now we are being molded, transformed, into
that same image. From glory to glory. Such a fun and powerful phrase to
say. We won’t be perfect. But we can be holy. Godly. It may start off little.
Little changes in behavior, the ceasing of certain sins, the thankfulness of
the Gospel. But these small things will supernaturally cascade into bigger
changes. A heart consumed by the fire of the Holy Spirit cannot remain cold. It
will grow warm, then hot. It will become like a hot coal, similar to the one
brought to the lips of Isaiah. That is what our hearts will become when the Holy
Spirit resides in it. These hearts of ours will become the Temple, the Body of
Christ, the family of God. Step by step. Little by little.
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