It was a sobering revelation, the day I realized I had made
God into my own image. Oh, I would’ve
fought you on it if you told me I had done so.
I would have carefully pulled out book, chapter and verse to make my
point on what God should be in my life – and everyone else’s, for that
matter. But God, being all that He is,
has stripped away my illusions of who He is one-by-one.
When I first met God, I saw Him as fierce, full of judgement
for those who strayed too far from His perfection. I worked very, very hard to keep His ways and
follow His pathway toward a righteous life.
I constantly examined and re-examined my every thought and motive,
comparing it to some impossible standard I could never reach. On the rare occasions I could keep everything
perfectly in check, I found myself emotionally numb and detached from those
around me. It was like living in a glass
house, constantly waiting for the wrong move, the wrong step, the wrong stone
thrown to bring the whole thing crashing down.
It was exhausting.
Of course the house eventually shattered. As I sat there sifting through the pieces,
trying to understand, God sat down beside me and helped me sort through them. He reminded me of His grace, and of His deep
mercy. Placing an arm around my
shoulder, friend to friend, He reminded me that Jesus came so I didn’t have to
live in a glass house anymore. He came
that I “may have and enjoy life, and have it in abundance, to the full, till it
overflows,” (John 10:10). And I
grew.
Later, God’s blessings started suspiciously masking
themselves as an upwardly mobile career, complete with 2.5 children, a
McMansion and financial abundance. Somehow,
if I had a leave-it-to-beaver lifestyle, and I was materially blessed, somehow
God must be in that, right? God
patiently and lovingly stripped the scales off my eyes, allowing me to realize
worldly success is hollow, and no amount of financial blessing in the world can
bestow peace and joy to my soul. And I
grew.
Finally, I realized my natural tendency to gravitate toward
a plain vanilla world, full of people who acted and reacted and worshipped
exactly like me, was just another way I was trying to make God into my own
image. God is a God of bright, vibrant
color! God is a God of creativity, of
beauty, of all that is unique and wonderful and different. “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible
qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being
understood from what has been made,” (Romans 1:20). All of creation shows us how infinitely
diverse our God is. Why would I expect
Him to reach out to each and every person the way He reaches out to me? And once again, I grew.
Since then, I have learned to look for God’s beauty in many,
many places. I see it in the weathered
hand of an old woman, gently stroking the tender cheek of a grandchild. I see it in the different ways I watch people
worship God, some with a solemn formality and some with reckless abandon, and I
know God smiles. I see it in the midst
of my mistakes, as God has shown me my best lessons have come from that hot furnace
of challenge which has purified and refined me into a woman who has found peace
and happiness and joy, even when such things shouldn’t exist.
I am sure I will have more heartfelt moments moving forward
where God steps in my path and reminds me His ways are not my ways. Times where He shows me He is so much more,
so much greater, so much more complex and subtle and powerful and real than the
tiny little “God box” I have a tendency to want to try to fit Him into. The difference is now I search for them
because I know – I will grow.
For Further Thought: “Now we see a reflection in a mirror; then we will see
face-to-face. Now I know partially, but then I will know completely in the same
way that I have been completely known,” (I Corinthians 13:12). The Bible
makes it clear we will never completely understand God while we are on this
earth. Still, there is such value in
learning more and more about who He is! Do
you find yourself trying to fit God into your box of who you think He should
be? It’s so easy to do! This week, consider praying for God to broaden
your understanding and perceptions of how He can work in your life.
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