A recent small group conversation discussed legalism in Christianity and other religions. A friend (Coralee) asked, "What is it about us that makes us want to make Rules?" My wife, Jan, later generalized this question to me as, "Is human rule-making due to our being made in the image of God? What human characteristics are due to us being in God's image?"
Genesis 1:27 says that God made mankind, male and female, in His image. If we are in the image of God, how does that manifest itself in our life and culture? And, recognizing the fall, what aspects of our life and culture are due to the fall, not to being in God's image?
As Jan and I discussed this, it is clear that some things do follow from God's image, as they are characteristics of both God and humans. Our desire for community is inherited from God; God desires our communion with Him and in Genesis 2 recognizes that Adam cannot be alone. Indeed, loneliness is torture to many of us; we all want to be part of a small commune!
Our creative desires come from God, the Creator. Our love of Beauty follows from the One who looked on His creation and said, "It is good." Indeed, most forms of art can be traced to our desire to Create Beauty.
In Genesis 1, God creates Structure out of Chaos; He organize the earth and nature, separating light from darkness, sky from sea. In my experiences in math and science, it is a natural human desire to classify and organize the world around us. It is from this structure that we put objects in boxes and create rules.
In Genesis 2: 19-20, God bring the animals to Adam and he names them. The Old Testament concept of "naming" implied some type of understanding or prediction about the object -- notice how Eve and other mothers name their sons! -- and so we see there the first step in cataloguing the world around us. Some might even argue that the biological process of taxonomy flows out of our image of God. (For example, see Taxonomic Theology: An Interdisciplinary Approach to a Biblical and Biological Theology of Naming by professors Stovell and Morris.)
Mankind's desire for justice come from God's Righteousness and from our recognition that people made in the image of God are invested with value and significance.
This video at the Bible Project argues that the prohibitions against idolatry (pervasive in the Old Testament) come from the fact that we are God's image! God has already made special images of Himself and it is us!
Wikipedia has an article in the Image of God. There it suggests three slightly different views of this concept: the Substantive, Relational and Functional. These are described there as:
"The Substantive view locates the image of God in shared characteristics between God and humanity such as rationality or morality. A Relational understanding argues that the image is found in human relationships with God and each other. A Functional view interprets the image of God as a role or function whereby humans act on God’s behalf and serve to represent God in the created order."
I argue that all three views are correct -- we receive rationality and morality (and creativity) from God and our desire for justice and community comes out of human relationships and our desire to represent God in these relationships.
In mathematics we describe functions as mapping one set into another; the elements in the second set, the range of the function, are the images of the first set. God has created a mapping into the brains (the intellect, soul, heart) of these little human beings so that we react in various ways that display that image. This mapping is not one-to-one; much is lost in that mapping, but in many ways our thoughts, our joys and creativity, our desire for justice, are all shadows of the mind of God!
A day will come when we leave these Shadowlands... but it is not yet.
No comments:
Post a Comment