The Pleasure of God’s Soul – Part 1 – “Bad News”

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The “pleasure of God’s soul” – There is something unsettling, yet compelling about that phrase. Unsettling because I don’t think of God as having a “soul”. Clearly, He is Spirit (John 4:24). But the idea of Him “having a soul” is somehow foreign. Unsettling also, because it seems that I might have something to do with this pleasure . . . and compelling for the same reason. Also compelling because it seems like a good thing for God’s soul to have pleasure. If I can impact that . . . Wow!

It is this idea – the “pleasure of God’s soul” – that draws me back to Hebrews 10-11. It is so powerful that I memorized Hebrews 10:35-39 a few years ago –

“Therefore, do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have need of endurance, so that when you have done the will of God, you may receive what was promised. ‘For yet in a very little while, He Who is coming will come, and will not delay. But My righteous one shall live by faith; and if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him.’ But we are not of those who shrink back to destruction, but of those who have faith to the preserving of the soul.”

Right there in the middle is the idea that draws me – “. . . and if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him . . .”. God is speaking, ascribing a soul to Himself. And the pleasure of His soul is linked to our choices. Very unsettling. How do we “shrink back”? As I read on, it seems that the destruction of my soul is at stake. How can that be? I thought we were saved “by grace, through faith”. What about eternal security?

This confusion reveals a flaw in our understanding of the Gospel. We have condensed the message down to this – “God is mad at you because you are a sinner, and He is going to punish you, unless you trust Jesus, who will take your punishment for you. If you do that, then everything will be ok, and you can go be with Jesus when you die.” The flaw begins in our description of the problem. Yes, we are objects of God’s wrath. But our problem is much bigger than that. Which means that the Gospel – the Good News – is much more comprehensive as well.

So, what is the problem – the Bad News, that the Good News answers? We find that at the beginning of the story.

We were created in God’s image. That means that when you look at us, you should see Him – He created us to represent Him. As His representatives, He gave us two responsibilities – fill the earth with life, and rule over creation. The responsibility to “rule over” involves “subduing” creation, so that everything is brought into conformity with His agenda. This gives fuller meaning to our role as “His representative”. Not only were we to physically represent Him in creation, but as His representative, we were to enforce His agenda. Thus, in a given situation, we would make the decision He would make.

At this point, the problem becomes evident. As we look around us, it seems pretty clear that there is a lot going on outside His agenda. Further, consideration of our own lives reveals very little clarity regarding God’s agenda for even ourselves. If we are uncertain about God’s agenda for our own lives, there’s no way we can know God’s agenda for all of creation, much less, how to resolve all the conflicts with that agenda.

Clearly, we are not what we were created to be. What went wrong?

We made a choice – a choice to walk away from all that God created us to be. Rather than representing Him, we chose to pursue life on our own terms – to be the master of our own fate, the captain of our own ship – to be like God, deciding right and wrong for ourselves. This choice was made when we ate.

Life and Death

Remember God’s warning to Adam, about eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil –  “for in the day that you eat from it, you will surely die”. Originally, they had life. Eating from the forbidden tree would bring death. Of course, that does not turn out like we anticipate – we expect them to keel over the instant they eat. But they didn’t. So, either God lied, or our understanding of death is flawed.

I’m going with option two.

To see what God meant, let’s observe what happened when they ate. Right away, they felt shame, and, even before God acted or spoke, they began to hide from Him. When He arrives, He curses the serpent, the ground, and them. The woman is impacted in her primary relationships. Instead of the fulfillment and significance that was to be hers as a mother and wife, she would suffer pain and domination.  Likewise, the man’s significance is muted. Futility will be the reward for his strenuous labor, until he disappears into the dust. For all his effort, he will have no marked impact. And, since he stopped making the decisions God would make – he no longer represents God. This, in turn, renders him incapable of ruling on God’s behalf.

So, before we ate, we were alive, possessing all the identity and significance that came with representing God. We were fulfilled, experiencing all of the sustenance, beauty, and intimacy of life in the Garden. But in the day that we ate, we abandoned all of that. We died. And now we are rebels, objects of God’s wrath. That is the Bad News.

So what’s the Good News? We’ll have to save that for next week, but I can assure you that it’s a lot more than simply being forgiven.