Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Re-visioning God

My current reading includes Dallas Willard's The Divine Conspiracy. I shouldn't be surprised, but this book, as with any other book by Willard, is absolutely masterful. Willard has, again, skillfully clarified a series of important features of the Christian life. In this book, he does so by taking a nice long look at the sermon on the mount - the most in-depth and helpful teaching I've ever heard on Jesus' "discourse on the hill" as Willard calls it. From there, he develops the topic of discipleship, which is one of Willard's passions, as you may know from his other writings. If you are interested in studying discipleship, start here. Other authors will tell you the same thing: "Here's what I want to teach you. But I must recommend you read Dallas Willard's book, because he wrote about the topic best, and I'm not going to try to rewrite it here." (Not an actual quote, just my summary of what I've seen in other books).

Writer Janet Batchler has commented on The Divine Conspiracy before, in better words than I ever could. Make sure to check out her posts:

Book Thoughts: The Divine Conspiracy
Notes from The Divine Conspiracy

As I've been swimming through the richness of this book, I've found numerous quotes and passage which I would love to share with you. There are so many that I would be breaking copyright laws to post them all here for you. So, all I can say is: if you want to grow and train as an apprentice of Jesus Christ, read this book. It's up to you to sink the bucks and devote the time.

Today, I have chosen one little topic and a few quotes to share with you. Hopefully this will be a pleasant appetizer for you. This is only a crumb of the goodness in this book.

Early in the book, Willard explains the importance of re-visioning God in our current lives. It is essential to view God in a certain way, to behold him and give him the proper consideration that is due him by his very nature. It is not only easy to forget how grand God is and who he is, but it is also easy to make him something he isn't, in our own minds. If we understood God as he truly is, it would be impossible to belittle him as we tend to do. Willard says:
"Central to the understanding and proclamation of the Christian gospel today, as in Jesus' day, is a re-visioning of what God's own life is like and how the physical cosmos fits into it." (The Divine Conspiracy, HarperSanFrancisco, 1997, p.62)
All things point to our great God, the Father, whom Jesus proclaimed. If this is so, then it follows that we should properly understand and imagine God. He is as he is, not as we want him to be, and not who we make him to be for our own uses. Willard goes back to appreciating and loving God much later in the book, when writing about discipleship. But how can we love a God we do not properly understand?

Willard goes on:
"We should, to begin with, think that God leads a very interesting life, and that he is full of joy. Undoubtedly he is the most joyous being in the universe. The abundance of his love and generosity is inseparable from his infinite joy. All of the good and beautiful things from which we occasionally drink tiny droplets of soul-exhilarating joy, God continuously experiences in all their breadth and depth and richness."
Thank you, Dr. Willard for reminding us of the vast good of God. God is so wonderful, so terrible, that it is difficult for us to find fitting words. Our minds can hardly begin to grasp it without straining and bursting. Only when we see God as Willard describes him, can we learn to love him as he is. Oh, but when we do see him and love him as he is, this is the seed that will grow in our hearts, beginning our transformation. This is a big point late in the book.

As humans, we often live for great experiences. As physical beings, we desire to squeeze the value out of life by experiencing good and grand things, and sharing them with others. Willard says:
"We treasure our great experiences for a lifetime, and we may have very few of them. But he is simply one great inexhaustible and eternal experience of all that is good and true and beautiful and right." (p.63)
These quotes from Willard are just tidbits. With them, I hope to turn your mind to your love for the Holy God. And in that place of love, I hope you will take time to read The Divine Conspiracy and allow yourself to receive Willard's unique training. This training will lead the intentional reader toward the transformed life of those who aspire to be true apprentices of Jesus of Nazareth.


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