[image][image][image][image][image][image][image][image]
[image]
[image]
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
[image]
[image][image][image][image][image]
July 25, 2008
[image][image][image][image][image][image][image]
Free E-mail Newsletters:
[image]RSS Feed | More Feeds | RSS Help

WRESTLING WITH ANGELS
The Grace of Wrath
Is there any story about God that isn't a love story?



ADVERTISEMENT

When Evan Almighty hit theaters last summer, some evangelicals worried that elements of the movie were sacrilegious. One of their particular objections got me thinking.

In the film, God (played by Morgan Freeman) claims that people miss the point of the story of Noah's Ark because they think it's about God's anger, when really it's a "love story." Some Christians saw that statement as an offensive distortion of the Genesis account of God's wrath. Their protest left me pondering what I suspect is a fundamentally important question: Is there any story about God that isn't a love story?

Growing up, I had two images of God. The first was a painting on my bedroom wall, Bernhard Plockhorst's Jesus Blessing the Children. After bedtime prayers, I would drift off imagining I was one of those children in Jesus' embrace. Everything about that picture reinforced the first thing I was taught in Sunday school: God Is Love.

My other image was a mental one I'll call "the Vengeful God," a peeved Father Time crossed with an accusing Uncle Sam. That picture helped me remember that God hates sin, and reinforced the second thing I learned in Sunday school: God Is Holy.

We sang about grace at my church, and we meant it. But we suspected that an exclusive emphasis on God's love would lessen our desire to live holy lives. So periodically, our preacher would thunder about God's wrath and judgment, ensuring we were never "soft on sin."

God is love, BUT God hates sin. How does one hold those two realities in tension? I unconsciously developed a theology that intermittently had God the Son and God the Father in a good cop, bad cop routine, with the Holy Spirit stepping in as a sympathetic parole officer.

I professed that God was love all the way through, but deep down I couldn't help assuming he was a bit like me. Even his love had to have limits. It stopped at sin and turned into wrath. Naturally.

My understanding began to change when I read Baxter Kruger's depiction of God's wrath as his love in action—his emphatic "No!" to anything that leads to our destruction. That perspective flipped a switch for my husband and me. If our daughter stepped into oncoming traffic, she might perceive our reaction (screaming "No!" and yanking her out of harm's way) to be harsh and unloving. But in reality it would be an expression of our fiercest and purest love. Is that how it is with God?

What if God's wrath is not a caveat, qualification, or even a counterpoint to his love, but an expression of it? What if God grieves sin less because it offends his sensibilities, and more because he hates the way it distorts our perceptions and separates us from him?

Recently, my friend Liliane told me the story of her conversion. Years ago, someone handed her a pamphlet with Jesus on the cover asking, "Do you love me?" Honestly, I can't say I do, Liliane whispered to Jesus. I really like you, though. I want to get to know you.

For a year, Liliane attended church and spent time with people who knew Jesus. One day, with a start, she realized she did love him. He'd captured her heart.

"That whole first year, I didn't read the Bible, and I'm really glad I waited," she told me, laughing at my raised eyebrow. "You know how, when you're with someone you really trust, you can say the hard things if you need to? Now that I know God, I see his love all through the Bible, even in the hard bits."

There are some pretty hard bits in Scripture. It is difficult to frame, say, the saga of Sodom and Gomorrah as a love story. But if we truly believe that God not only loves, but is love, we must believe there is no action he can take that is not animated by love.





[image]E-mail this page [image] [image]Write CT [image] [image]Print this article [image] [image]Post a comment



[image]


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders[image]2-for-1 Gifts!

[Reader Reviews]
[image]
Average User Rating: [image]

Displaying 1 - 3 of 20 comments. See all comments
MA Woodward    Posted: May 15, 2008 11:56 PM
[image]
This understanding is partial at best. You don't pull your child out of the road and then put him in a room and spank him forever. God is not motivated by what is best for people. God is motivated by what is best for the most glorious person of all... JESUS. Luckily that happens to include the adoption of some few that walk the narrow path. To those that He calls His, all evil will be as correction but not to those He says He never knew. Their end will glorify Him as well but in a way we do not want to know.

Darren King - Precipice Magazine    Posted: May 12, 2008 2:09 PM
[image]
I read once that God hates sin in the same way that a parent hates the disease that is crippling a child.

Mark    Posted: May 13, 2008 9:57 AM
[image]
Nicely written and good as far as it goes. (Does celebrity push an item from the editor's desk to the press or screen?) This piece misses the mystery of the cross, of God's righteous wrath propitiated by Himself through the Person of His Son. There's certainly not less to wrath than God's protective love for His children; but there seems to be more, a "more" that is at the core of the full gospel -- God's love for Himself issuing in holy burning against all that "suppresses the truth in unrighteousness," especially after rejecting God's absorption of His own wrath by Himself in Jesus Christ. And we cannot afford to explain righteous wrath without this dimension of God's love. Now what I've expressed doesn't perhaps sing as Ms. Arends graceful writing does, but it conveys crucial truth that shouldn't be elided.

[image]
sponsors 








[Browse More Christianity Today]

Search
[image]
[image]

[image]
[image]
[image] [image]


[image]

[image]
[image]
[image]
[image] [image]

[image]
[image] [image]

[image]
[image]
Search by Name
Or use Advanced Search to search by program, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by:
[image]

[image][image] [image]

[image]
[image] © 2008 Christianity Today International  
About Us | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Customer Care | Advertise with Us | Job Openings | Help  
[image]


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser