PacKnow 03-5-53 |
||
|
KNOWING GOD J. I. Packer InterVarsity Press, 1973, 286 pp. |
|
This
classic is a must study for every Christian. Ignorance
of God’s ways and of communion with him lies at the root of much of the
church’s weakness. This arises from
two trends: being conformed to the modern spirit which spawns great thoughts
of man and small thoughts of God and confusion arising from the skepticism of
the modern naturalistic worldview.
(12) The Study of God “Nothing
will so enlarge the intellect, nothing so magnify the whole soul of man, as a
devout, earnest, continued investigation of the great subject of the
Deity.” (quoting Spurgeon 18) ”The
world becomes a strange, mad, painful place, and life in it a disappointing
and unpleasant business, for those who do not know about God.” (And who
therefore must “stumble and blunder through life blindfolded”) (19) 5
foundational principles: 1.
God has spoken to man
through the Bible, his word to make us wise unto salvation. 2.
God is Lord and King
over his world. 3.
God is Savior, active
in sovereign love to rescue believers from the guilt and power of sin. 4.
God is triune. 5.
Godliness means
responding to God’s revelation in trust and obedience, faith and worship,
prayer and praise, submission and service. (20) “Our
aim in studying the Godhead must be to know God himself better.” “We turn each truth that we learn about
God into matter for meditation before God, leading to prayer and
praise to God.” “Meditation is
the activity of calling to mind, and thinking over, and dwelling on, and
applying to oneself, the various things that one knows about the works and ways
and purposes and promises of God.”
“Its purpose is to clear one’s mental and spiritual vision of God, and
to let his truth make its full and proper impact on one’s mind and heart.” (23) The People Who Know God “A
little knowledge of God is worth more than a great deal of knowledge about
him.” (26) Evidence
of Knowing God (27 ff.) 1.
have great energy for
God 2.
have great thoughts of
God (Daniel’s prayers are the best
evidence of a man’s view of God. (30) 3.
show great boldness
for God 4.
have great contentment
in God. “We
must learn to measure ourselves, not by our knowledge about God, …but by how
we pray and what goes on in our hearts.” (32) Knowing and Being Known “What
were we made for? To know God. What aim should we set ourselves in
life? To know God. What is the ‘eternal life’ that Jesus
gives? Knowledge of God.” (Jn
17:3) What makes life worthwhile is
having a big enough objective. What
higher, more exalted, and more compelling goal can there be than to know
God?” (33-4) “As
you listen to what God is saying, you find yourself brought very low; for God
talks to you about your sin, and guilt, and weakness, and blindness, and
folly, and compels you to judge yourself hopeless and helpless, and to cry
out for forgiveness.” “You come to
realize as you listen that God is actually opening his heart to you, making
friends with you and enlisting you as a colleague….” (36) “…knowing
God involves, first, listening to God’s Word and receiving it as the Holy
Spirit interprets it, in application to oneself; second, noting God’s nature
and character, as his Word and works reveal it; third, accepting his
invitations and doing what he commands; fourth, recognizing and rejoicing in
the love that he has shown in thus approaching you and drawing you into this
divine fellowship.” (37) “Knowing
God is a matter of personal involvement—mind, will and feeling. It would not, indeed, be a fully personal
relationship otherwise. To get to
know another person, you have to commit yourself to his company and interest,
and be ready to identify yourself with his concerns.” “Knowing God is an emotional relationship,
as well as an intellectual and volitional one, and could not indeed be a deep
relation between persons were it not so.
The believer is, and must be, emotionally involved in the victories
and vicissitudes of God’s cause in the world….” (39-40) God Incarnate The
incarnation is the real stumbling block in Christianity. (54)
“It
is not strange that he, the Author of life, should rise from the dead. If he was truly God the Son, it is much
more startling that he should die than that he should rise again.” (54) “The
Christmas spirit is the spirit of those who, like their Master, live their
whole lives on the principle of making themselves poor—spending and being
spent—to enrich their fellow humans, giving time, trouble, care and concern,
to do good to others—and not just their own friends—in whatever way there
seems need.” (64) He Shall Testify “It
is not for us to imagine that we can prove the truth of Christianity by our
own arguments; nobody can prove the truth of Christianity except the Holy
Spirit, by his own almighty work of renewing the blinded heart.” “Do we honor the Holy Spirit by
recognizing and relying on his work?” “The inevitable consequence of
unregeneracy is unbelief.” (71) “Living
becomes an awesome business when you realize that you spend every moment of
your life in the sight and company of an omniscient, omnipresent Creator.”
(86) God Only Wise “For
us to be truly wise, in the Bible sense, our intelligence and cleverness must
be harnessed to a right end. Wisdom
is the power to see, and the inclination to choose, the best and highest
goal, together with the surest means of attain it. Wisdom is, in fact, the practical side of moral goodness.” (90) “What
is his goal? What does he aim
at? When he made us, his purpose was
that we should love and honor him, praising him for the wonderfully ordered
complexity and variety of his world, using it according to his will, and so
enjoying both it and him. And though
we have fallen, God has not abandoned his first purpose. Still he plans that a great host of
humankind should come to love and honor him.” (92) “What
Abraham needed most of all was to learn the practice of living in God’s
presence, seeing all life in relation to him, and looking to him, and him
alone, as Commander, Defender and Rewarder.” (93) “We
should not be too taken aback when unexpected and upsetting and discouraging
things happen to us now. What do they
mean? Simply that God in his wisdom means to make something of us which we
have not attained yet, and he is dealing with us accordingly.” (97)’ God’s Wisdom and Ours “The
moral qualities which belonged to the divine image were lost at the Fall;
God’s image in man has been universally defaced, for all of humankind has in
one way or another lapsed into ungodliness.
But the Bible tells us that now, in fulfillment of his plan of
redemption, God is at work in Christian believers to repair his ruined image
by communicating these qualities to them afresh. This is what Scripture means when it says that Christians are
being renewed in the image of Christ (2 Cor 3:18) and of God (Col 3:10).”
(100) According
to Scripture there are two prerequisites for wisdom, learning to reverence
God and learning to receive His Word.
We do this by “soaking ourselves in the Scripture.” (101) It
is a bit like learning to drive. You
simply try to see and do the right thing in the actual situation that
presents itself. You keep alert and
notice what is in front of you. “To
live wisely, you have to be clear-sighted and realistic—ruthlessly so—in
looking at life as it is.” “Most of
us live in a dream world, with our heads in the clouds and our feet off the
ground; we never see the world, and our lives in it, as they really are. This deep-seated, sin-bred unrealism is
one reason why there is so little wisdom among us…” (104) “Among
the seven deadly sins of the medieval lore was sloth—a state of hard-bitten,
joyless apathy of spirit. …symptoms
are personal spiritual inertia combined with critical cynicism….” (106) “Wisdom
consists in choosing the best means to the best end. God’s work of giving wisdom is a means to
his chosen end of restoring and perfecting the relationship between himself
and human beings.” “Thus the effect of his gift of wisdom is to make us more
humble, more joyful, more godly, more quick-sighted as to his will, more
resolute in the doing of it and less troubled….” (108) Thy Word is Truth God’s
Word to us includes commands, promise and testimony. (110) “He made us with the intention that he
and we might walk together forever in a love relationship.” “Therefore God sends his word to us in the
character of both information and invitation.” (110) “God’s
word is his executive instrument in all human affairs. …what he says goes.” (112) “…the claim of the word of God upon us is
absolute: the word is to be received, trusted and obeyed, because it is the
word of God the King.” (113) “Truth
in the Bible is a quality of persons primarily, and of propositions only
secondarily. It means stability,
reliability, firmness, trustworthiness….” (113) “As
rational persons, we were made to bear God’s moral image—that is, our souls
were made to ‘run’ on the practice of worship, law-keeping, truthfulness,
honesty, discipline, self-control, and service to God and our fellows. If we abandon these practices, not only do
we incur guilt before God; we also progressively destroy our own souls. Conscience atrophies, the sense of shame
dries up, one’s capacity for truthfulness, loyalty and honesty is eaten away,
one’s character disintegrates. One…is
steadily being dehumanized.” (114) “True
Christians are people who acknowledge and live under the word of God.” (116) The Love of God “’God
is love’ means that his love finds expression in everything that he
says and does.” (122) “God saves, not
only for his glory, but also for his gladness.” (125) The Grace of God Four
critical underlying truths: 1.
The moral ill-desert
of man. In the moral realm people
tend to be far too generous toward themselves, “treating small virtues as
compensating for great vices….” “The
thought of themselves as creatures fallen from God’s image, rebels against
God’s rule, guilty and unclean in God’s sight, fit only for God’s
condemnation, never enters their heads.”
(130) 2.
The retributive
justice of God. “The accepted maxim
seems to be that as long as evil can be ignored, it should be…. In our pagan way, we take it for granted
that God feels as we do.” 3.
The spiritual
impotence of man. 4.
The sovereign freedom
of God. “Modern paganism feels “that
God is somehow obliged to love and help us….” (131) “The
grace of God is love freely shown toward guilty sinners, contrary to their
merit and indeed in defiance of their demerit. It is God showing goodness to persons who deserve only
severity….” “Justification is the
truly dramatic transition from the status of a condemned criminal awaiting a
terrible sentence to that of an heir awaiting a fabulous inheritance.” (132-33) God the Judge There
are few things stressed more strongly in the Bible than the reality of God’s
work as Judge.” In the New Testament God’s action as Judge is actually
intensified. “The entire New
Testament is overshadowed by the certainty of a coming day of universal
judgment….” “The heart of the justice
which expresses God’s nature is retribution, the rendering to persons
what they have deserved….” (138-142) The Wrath of God Wrath
is an attribute of God. “To an age which
has unashamedly sold itself to the gods of greed, pride, sex and self-will,
the church mumbles on about God’s kindness but says virtually nothing about
his judgment.” Divine wrath has become taboo in modern society. But “just as God is good to those who
trust him, so he is terrible to those who do not.” (148-49) We
are unhappy with the idea of a wrathful God.
It seems somehow unworthy of him.
But his wrath is never capricious, self-indulgent, irritable or
morally ignoble. “It is, instead, a
right and necessary reaction to objective moral evil.” “It is the wrath of
the Judge, administering justice.” “The essence of God’s action in wrath is
to give men what they choose, in all its implications….” (150-53) Goodness and Severity Both
goodness and severity are attributes of God.
We take them not singly but together. God’s severity…denotes God’s
decisive withdrawal of his goodness from those who have spurned it.” “…behind
every display of divine goodness stands a threat of severity in judgment if
that goodness is scorned.” (163-64) The Jealous God “God’s
jealousy is not a compound of frustration, envy and spite, as human jealousy
so often is, but appears instead as a (literally) praiseworthy zeal to
preserve something supremely precious.”
There is a jealousy of positive virtue, such as the zeal of married
persons to protect their love relationship or to avenge it when broken. God’s jealousy is of this type, “an aspect
of his covenant love for his own people.”
“Our right response to his jealousy over us is zeal for him.” “Zeal in religion is a burning desire to
please God, to do His will, and to advance His glory in the world in every
possible way.” (170-73) The Heart of the Gospel: (Propitiation) Man’s
root problem before God is his sin, which evokes wrath. God has made his basic provision for the
satisfaction of God’s wrath, propitiation, which out of wrath brings peace.
(189) “The
peace of God is first and foremost peace with God; it is the
state of affairs in which God, instead of being against us, is for
us.” It is “a new relationship of
forgiveness and acceptance….” (196) Sons of God The
Old Testament laid the greatest stress on God as holy and separate, on his
greatness and purity. New Testament
religion can be summed up as “the knowledge of God as one’s holy
Father.” “The revelation to the
believer that God is his Father is in a sense the climax of the Bible.” The highest privilege that the gospel offers
is adoption. “God intends the lives of believers to be a reflection and reproduction
of Jesus’ own fellowship with himself.” Fatherhood implies authority,
affection, fellowship and honor. The
entire Christian life has to be understood in terms of adoption, sonship. (201-09)
The
Holy Spirit is the Spirit of adoption.
The three aspects of His work are 1) keeping us conscious that we are
God’s children by free grace, 2) moving us to look to God as father, showing
respectful boldness, and 3) acting up to our position as royal children by
“manifesting the family likeness (conforming to Christ), furthering the
family welfare (loving the brethren) and maintaining the family honor
(seeking God’s glory).” (220) “In
this world, royal children have to undergo extra training and discipline
which other children escape, in order to fit them for their high
destiny. It is the same with the
children of the King of kings. The
clue to understanding all his dealings with them is to remember that
throughout their lives he is training them for what awaits them, and
chiseling them into the image of Christ.” (222) “…while…justification
frees one forever from the need to keep the law, or try to, as the means
of earning life, it is equally true that adoption lays on one the abiding
obligation to keep the law, as the means of pleasing one’s newfound Father.” (223) Thou our Guide “Wisdom
in Scripture always means knowledge of the course of action that will please
God and secure life…” (232) Christians
seeking guidance often overlook the guidance that is ready at hand. They look
for inward prompting apart from the written Word. An inward voice sounds attractive and spiritual but leads to
“frantic bewilderment or lunacy.” God guides us fundamentally by “the
rational understanding and application of his written Word.” “The basic form of divine guidance is the
presentation to us of positive ideals as guidelines for all our living.” “The Spirit leads within the limits which
the Word sets, not beyond them.” (234-37) Six
common pitfalls: unwillingness to think, to think ahead, to take advice, to
suspect oneself, to discount personal magnetism, to wait. “God often keeps us waiting.” And God’s guidance is not proved or
disproved by a trouble-free life thereafter.
“Trouble should always be treated as a call to consider one’s
ways. But trouble is not necessarily
a sign of being off track…”
Christians have many troubles “nor does God always tell us the why and
wherefore of the frustrations and losses which are part and parcel of the
guided life.” “The right context for
discussing guidance is one of confidence in the God who will not let us ruin
our souls. Our concern,
therefore…should be more for his glory than for our security….” (237-42) These Inward Trials “God
wants us to feel that our way through life is rough and perplexing, so that
we may learn thankfully to lean on him.
Therefore he takes steps to drive us out of self-confidence to trust
in himself…, to ‘wait on the Lord.’
This truth has many applications.
One of the most startling is that God actually uses our sins and
mistakes to this end. He employs the
educative discipline of failures and mistakes very frequently. It is striking to see how much of the
Bible deals with godly people making mistakes and God chastening them for
it.” “God can bring good out of the
extremes of our own folly…” (250-51) |
||