Today is the day that we celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. When you think about how much history there is in the world, both that we know about and that which was never recorded, we can forget that all of those things are connected. Nothing happens in a vacuum. Thus historians throughout the ages have sought to explain not just the facts of history but also the relationships between them. Why did the Roman Empire rise to such great power but then fall apart? Why did Germany fall under the spell of Adolph Hitler? Of course was WWII a failure or a success? It all depends upon your view point. Thus the facts of historical events can all be the same but many different interpretations of the relationships that existed will be promoted today.
The Bible is a book from history, but it is also a book about history. In fact it has been stated that the history is really His story (God’s). You can approach the Bible as the history of mankind from God’s perspective when you think about it in that way. There are multitudes of viewpoints among mankind, but only one view point of God’s. Which will you live by?
Thus God gives us a narrative of what is really going on throughout history. Of course, today, politicians and various groups have learned that you can control people by controlling the narrative that they accept. So instead of responding to accusations with facts and events, we respond with a “narrative” that the people would rather believe. We have ceased to be a people who look for truth, but rather a people who believe the story that we like best. Well, into this pool of narratives, God gives his take. Many may accuse religions of trying to manipulate the people, but the truth is we manipulate ourselves all the time. Let’s look at history from God’s perspective
In Genesis 1 we are told, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Then in verse 26 God says, “let us make man in our own image.” Here we see that God purposefully created all that we can see including ourselves. Modern man has embraced the idea that there is no purpose to what we see and probably no real beginning. We are simply an accident of nature. But that begs the question, “What was nature an accident of?” Societies cannot function on a foundation of purposelessness and amorality and so we create a hybrid philosophy that keeps the concept of morality that God gives us and makes society itself as the arbiter of what is good and bad. Yet, this means our definitions of good and bad will shift from generation to generation. This shifting sand cannot hold up society very long before it will go through cataclysmic social change, over and over again. Without God the foundation for defining good and evil will become a quagmire that will never sustain anything we build on it.
God not only tells us that He created us, but that he created mankind to be able to relate with Him. Thus God places Adam and Eve in a Garden and gives them a purpose. He also converses with them daily. This picture of a relationship is central to all that follows in human history.
Now in John 1:1-5 we see that God is the giver of light to mankind. But that is not just natural light. Just as he gave natural light, so God has given intellectual and spiritual light to mankind. It is easy to exist merely on a natural level. And, yes, God did create all the natural beauty we see around us and wants us to enjoy it. Yet, there is more to life than just nature. Some people will say, “I don’t believe in the Bible. I believe in science.” But doesn’t science mean knowledge? The Bible is definitely knowledge. What is really meant by the above statements is that the person only accepts a certain method of obtaining knowledge. They categorically reject any knowledge that doesn’t come by the scientific method. Yet, we cannot put the ultimate questions of life into a test tube. We can only find circumstantial evidence in regards to the origins of the universe, but nothing by which to determine without a doubt what it really was. Even our attempts to analyze human psychology and social dynamics has found that such thing evade yielding ultimate answers about ourselves. Without God, man is doomed to a future of making purpose out of the sand of the beach, only to have it either destroyed by the next generation stomping on it, or by the waves of time crashing on the beach.
But Hebrews 1:1-3 tells us that God has been there all along. He has been talking to mankind and helping us to understand what is going on. He even sent Jesus who was the perfect light and knowledge concerning God’s purpose for this world. Francis Schaeffer, after talking with many college age students, came to the conclusion that many felt that God was not there because they didn’t hear him or see him. Yet, he stated that, “God is there and He has not been silent.” Of all the books and teachers of history only Jesus and the Bible have verified themselves with prophecy and resurrection from the dead. All of history has been God speaking to mankind about its problems and its destiny. Will you not give it an honest reading?
In Romans 8:19-22 we have a passage that points to creation groaning. Today many fear and point out that man has the ability to drastically affect the earth. They arrive at this without the Bible. Interestingly enough, this is the Bible’s position. The actions of the first human couple have affected mankind and the world in a negative way. Though God and man enjoyed a perfect relationship in a perfect world, man rebelled against God after it was manipulated by Satan. They were seduced by the idea that God was holding out on them. If they disobeyed God they could become like Him themselves. Yet, when you read the whole Bible, you see that it was God’s intention to make us like Him all along. We are on a path to try and make ourselves God’s and yet we do so having rejected a path in which God has promised to make us like Him. This choice leads in two very different directions. The Bible pictures mankind as willfully persisting in accomplishing on its own what God has promised for those who love Him and wait upon Him. Because God is the creator of nature, we find our rebellion against him bleeding into nature. We do not like the “nature” he has created and thus try to manipulate it into our desire and will. Sometimes this is innocent enough. But think about those who are born a certain gender and yet feel like they want to be another gender. We can reject the way we are naturally and replace it with the way we are mentally. But this only causes grief and trouble. When you fight against nature you always find yourself fighting a losing battle.
This rebellion of mankind has affected not just man, but also the rest of creation. The creation has been subjected to futility because of man’s sin. This curse that God placed upon Adam caused something to change in the earth. It would not grow things like it used to. Later after the flood we see something else changing to where people did not live as long. The effects were drastic for us and for the creation. However, the curse could just as easily be called “The Effects of our Choice.” We live in a nature in which each choice brings about certain effects. We don’t always like those effects and try to avoid or counteract them. But this too has effects. God does not wish to destroy mankind. Rather He has promised to fix the problem. That is why Paul states in Romans 8 that the Creation groans awaiting the revealing of the Sons of God. God is bringing this broken world to a place where things are going to be fixed. Yet, mankind persists in trying to fix the problem without Him. Yet, the problem today is not the perfecting of our forms of governance. Our founding fathers did their best to create a new and better form of republican governance. And yet, they testified that it would only work for a godly people. No matter how much we perfect governance, it will be ran by faulty humans. Even if we put in their place computers, they will be programmed by faulty humans. Like the movie “Minority Report” we can build a system to remove all murder and yet someone will learn to game the system. We have a rebellion problem. Neither can we fix how our society functions because it will always be the interactions of fallen people.
Our problem is much deeper than DNA, politics, and religion. As Romans 5:12, 18 says, sin has come into the world and by it death has spread to all men. We are all sinners and under the judgment of a righteous God, completely condemned. Our problem is an internal, moral problem. Some may ridicule looking to an ancient book for wisdom and knowledge in this modern technological age. However, the moral problem of man has not gotten better with our technology. We are the same people we were 2,000 years ago. A people filled with bitterness, hate and anger. A people still manipulating others in order to get what our flesh wants. We are still the same actors acting out the same plot lines, only on a different stage with better special effects. If we could travel 6,000 years into the future and mankind hasn’t destroyed itself by then, we would find people struggling with the same moral issues, in spite of the great technology we will have by then. Notice that Star Trek and Star Wars still assume people will be morally the same no matter how much we learn about physics. But God offers a different answer.
Romans 5 goes on to say in verses 18 and 19 that God has an answer for man’s continual wandering in the wilderness of right and wrong. God has implemented a plan to fix mankind and the creation and it centers upon Jesus. All of the Old Testament was God’s attempt to ensure that the world would be able to understand what was going on when Jesus came. God’s plan starts with a spiritual fix or internal one, and then has a second phase of a physical fix.
Our spiritual problem cannot be fixed through changing our DNA, and any physical problems we are able to fix will only make the spiritual worse. Thus God promises to transform our spirits and then re-create our bodies. Notice how the book of Revelation ends with the reality that God will complete His purpose of fixing not only mankind, but all of creation. We will dwell with God in perfect relationship in a New Heavens and a New Earth (Revelation 21:1-5). God states unequivocally that this story will have a particular ending. We will be back in close fellowship with God. The heavens and the earth will be remade. This is no reason to abuse the earth, but rather recognition of what God’s desire is. Will you embrace God’s story today? There is a place for you within this story. However, if we reject the Creator of all creation, we not only will find ourselves fighting against nature, but also nature’s God. The other narrative puts man in the driver’s seat of a vehicle that is careening out of control.