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Have You Seen God Anywhere?
based on Psalm 139:1-18
by Dr. David Rogne
In the earliest days of exploration of America one of the explorers,
Verrazano, landed on the Accomack Peninsula of what is now Virginia,
walked west for twenty-five miles and discovered what he believed to be
the Pacific Ocean. Actually, it was Chesapeake Bay. He was wrong, but he
was operating on partial truths: the Pacific Ocean did exist; he was
going in the right direction; and Chesapeake Bay has the same kind of
water as does the Pacific. The problem was that he didn't have a large
enough concept of the Pacific.
Some people, in their search for God, have fallen on partial
understandings of what God is like and finding their concepts to be
inadequate, have given up the possibility that God exists. I have had
opportunity to talk with a number of people who doubt the existence of
God. Instead of challenging their lack of faith, I ask them to share
with me their understanding of the God in whom they do not believe. As
they share with me, I often have to confess that I can't believe in the
kind of God they are describing either!
Some of our difficulty regarding belief in God arises from our
maintaining childish conceptions of God as we mature in every other
aspect of life. A college student said, "I have always pictured God
according to the description in "Paradise Lost," as someone seated on a
throne while all around are angels playing on harps and singing hymns."
Still others, who have grown up in austere religious tradition, may
picture God as an aged bookkeeper, with a white flowing beard, standing
behind a high desk, writing down everyone's bad deeds. It is no wonder
that some people subsequently say that they cannot believe in God. They
are not really atheists; they simply cannot accept some of the things
they learned in the past. I would like to suggest that many persons’
understanding of God is dissatisfying because it is partial - they are
defining the Pacific Ocean in terms of Chesapeake Bay. Rather than
giving up the search for God -saying that God does not exist because
they can't believe in their inadequate definitions - they would do far
better to expand their definitions.
Today I would like to invite all of us to do that. I confess that my own
understanding of God is incomplete. This opportunity to think aloud with
you is as much for my benefit as for anyone else's.
One of the ways I think of God is as taught by Jesus, when he taught us
to address God as father. (Matt. 6:9) When I call God "Father", I am
reminded that Jesus used the term "Abba", meaning "Daddy", and I am
filled with new understanding of my relationship to God, as was Coventry
Patmore, who wrote these words:
My little son, who looked from thoughtful eyes
And moved and spoke in quiet grown-up wise,
Having my law the seventh time disobeyed,
I struck him, and dismissed
With hard words and unkissed,
His mother, who was patient, being dead.
Then, fearing lest his grief should hinder sleep,
I visited his bed
But found him slumbering deep
With darkened eyelids, and their lashes yet
From his late sobbing, wet.
And I, with moan,
Kissing away his tears, left others of my own;
For, on a table drawn beside his head
He had put, within his reach,
A box of counters and a red-veined stone,
A piece of glass abraded by the beach
And six or seven shells,
A bottle with bluebells
And two French copper coins ranged there
with careful art,
To comfort his sad heart...
As Patmore thought through that experience, he came to appreciate how
the Heavenly Father feels toward his children and their accumulated
toys. When I call God Father, I believe that God is similarly interested
in me.
Along with the Psalmist who wrote the Psalm we read this morning, I too
think of God as the Source of Creation. Contemplation of creation gives
us some perspective on ourselves. William Beebe, a naturalist, used to
visit fellow nature-lover, Theodore Roosevelt, in Roosevelt's home at
Sagamore Hill. Often, in the evening, after a good conversation dealing
with the problems of the world, the two would walk out on the lawn, look
up at the stars, and then, one or the other would go through their
customary ritual:
"That is the Spiral Galaxy of Andromeda. It is as large as our Milky
Way. It is one of a hundred million galaxies. It is 750,000 light-years
away. It consists of one hundred billion suns, each larger than our
sun." Then there would follow a period of silence. Finally, Teddy
Roosevelt would say, "Now I think we are small enough. Let's go to bed."
But contemplating creation also gives us some perspective on God. W.B.J.
Martin tells about a minister who preached a sermon on astronomy one
Sunday every year. After several years his associate asked, "Why do you
preach a sermon on astronomy each year? It has nothing to do with the
Bible or the Christian faith." "To help us enlarge our concept of God,"
was the minister's reply. The preacher was trying to say with the
Psalmist: "The heavens are telling the glory of God and the firmament
proclaims his handwork." (Psalm 19:1)
But contemplating creation can produce more than awe: it can make us
aware of God's presence. Pablo Casals, the cellist, writes: "When I
awake in the morning I go immediately to the sea, and everywhere I find
God in the smallest and largest things. I see him in colors and designs
and forms. I constantly have the idea of God when I am at the sea....The
world is a miracle that only God could make. Think of how no two grains
of sand are alike....how among billions and billions of living and
non-living things in the universe no two are exactly alike. Who but God
could do that? God must be present all the time. Nothing can take that
from us I"
For me, God is also the Source of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty. I do not
deny that there are evil circumstances in life which are difficult to
explain - many of them coming from the abuse of our freedom - but it is
far more difficult to explain goodness if there is not a good God. I
think conscience is a device God uses to keep the goal of goodness alive
within us. The "National Enquirer" asked a group of children the
question, "What is a conscience?" One six year old said he didn't know
but he thought it had something to do with feeling bad when you kicked
girls or little dogs. Another said it was something that makes you tell
your mother what you've done before your sister does. James Metcalf
defined conscience as "the walkie-talkie set by which God speaks to us."
Certainly, conscience helps me to know when I have offended a person. It
prompts me to confess my error and hope for restoration. But sometimes
it isn't so much a person I have offended, it is an awareness that I
have not lived up to my capacity and I need to confess it. But you can't
confess to an empty universe. I think God uses conscience to lift us
toward the goodness of which we are capable and to call forth our best.
For me, it is God, the Source of Goodness, who holds the possibility of
goodness before us.
When I think of God as the Source of Truth, it means to me that all our
attempts to uncover truth, no matter how secular, are really attempts to
discover God. Knowledge of God is not the exclusive domain of theology.
God is discovered through astronomy, botany, physiology and physics.
There is a creator at the heart of the universe who cares for truth, and
when we seek truth it becomes possible for us to find him. Louis
Pasteur, who gave us much of our understanding of germs, said, "The more
I study nature, the more I am amazed at the work of the creator. I pray
while I am engaged at my work in the laboratory." The Swiss scientist,
Louis Agassiz, wrote at the beginning of his career, "I have no need of
the hypothesis of God." As a result of his scientific studies he came to
be a devout worshiper of God, who subsequently wrote, "If you think
strongly enough you will be forced by science to the belief in God,
which is the foundation of all religions."
Some people who are hard pressed to find God elsewhere will respond when
God is acknowledged as the Source of Beauty. In one of her letters, the
novelist, Katherine Mansfield, who was an atheist, described waking up
in her house in the south of France one morning and being overwhelmed by
the beauty of the sea, the rocks, the trees, and the flowers. Then she
added: "How I wish there were Someone to thank!" When I say that, for
me, God is the Source of Beauty, I am saying that I have found Someone
to thank, and much to give thanks for.
An artist tells that it was his father who taught him to see and love
beauty. His father used to take him out in the evening, and the father
and son would lie in the long grass beside the woods. They watched the
rabbits play, the birds swoop by, and the corn rippling like the waves
of the sea beneath the wind. One evening there was a sunset of
surpassing majesty and splendor, and at the sight of it his father stood
up, removed his cap, looked at the splendor of the dying sun, and said:
"My son, God is passing by." Some of us have had similar feelings.
I have also come to see God as the Source of Love. George Matheson was a
Scottish Presbyterian preacher whose faith and courage inspired many.
Early in his ministry he felt that he had lost his faith. He felt that
he could no longer believe in God as he had always conceived of God. He
decided to leave the ministry, but his presbytery told him to hang on
and try to work through his theological problems. He stayed on in his
church, preaching as much vital Christianity as he could believe in,
until his ideas of God expanded, and he was able to write those words
that we sing yet:
Love that wilt not let me go,
I hide my weary soul in thee,
I give thee back the life I owe
That in thine ocean depths its flow
May richer, fuller be.
In the experience of love he found God. Many theological concepts may be
difficult to comprehend, but not that one. "God is love," says the New
Testament, “and those who abide in love abide in God, and God abides in
them." (I John 4:16) When we give or receive love we are in touch with
God and God becomes real.
For some, God is experienced as a Source of Strength. Some of the
profoundest insights into the meaning of God have come from those who
have found themselves in difficult circumstances. Soft occasions seldom
bring out the deepest things in us. Rather, it is in the formidable
hours, in the times of testing, in the personal calamities, that people
have found their deepest insights and assurances. When did Moses find
God? When he was a fugitive in the desert, cut from his people. When did
Job discover the meaning of his life? When he had lost everything and
was sitting on his ash heap. When did Jesus
say, "Not my will, but yours be done?" In the agony of Gethsemane. When
did Luther write "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God?" When he was risking his
life. When did Thomas More say, "I die the king's good servant, but
God's first?" On the scaffold. Some of life's most revealing insights
come, not from life's loveliness, but from life's difficulties. It is in
those times of descending to the depths that brave souls have found the
bedrock that sustains them, a bedrock they call God.
While it does not exhaust the characteristics by which I describe God,
let me say, finally for today, that God is for me that Someone who is
behind the mystery of life. H.G. Wells tried to describe this Presence
when he wrote: "At times in the silence of the night and in rare, lonely
moments, I experience a sort of communion of myself with something Great
that is not myself." It can be felt in the first holding of a new baby;
It can be felt as we stand by at the passing of one we love; I have felt
it when I have been present at momentous occasions. I have felt it when
I have seen a small town parade pass by with the junior high marching
band playing with all the earnestness of the Marine Corps Band. A lump
welled up in my throat and I felt in the presence of something very
basic. When we have such an experience, we become aware, as did
Wordsworth, of
A presence that disturbs me with the joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
And the round ocean, and the living air,
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man.
It is that Presence which the Psalmist described in the passage that was
read this morning: "Where can I go from your Spirit? Or where can I flee
from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there. If I make my
bed in Sheol, you are there. For me, God is that Reality, which, for all
my words, still remains a mystery.
All of this may sound very subjective and feeling-oriented. I confess
that it is. Many people may help us to understand God, but only our own
personal appropriation of what others tell us will make God real. It is
one thing to subscribe to a whole list of correct words about God. It is
another thing to experience God personally in our lives.
Whenever I go to San Francisco, one of the things I like to do is to
take a cable car ride. The cable car has no power of its own; and yet it
can climb the steepest hill. The power is in a cable which is moving
endlessly beneath the surface of the street. The gripman on the car can
believe as much as he likes in the power of the cable, but until he
actually reaches down below the surface and gets a grip on that power,
the car will not move.
God is such power. But it is not enough to believe what others have told
us. We've got to become attached so that we can make God a part of our
own experience. Then we may say with Job:
"I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you."
(Job 42:5)
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