Posts Tagged ‘theology leads to doxology’

Proverbs 19:2 Desire without knowledge is not good

Ever had someone give you a hard time for being a student of the Bible?  Ever had someone ridicule your love for theology?  Ever had a Christian brother or sister say, “Just love Jesus and avoid asking the hard questions.  Theology just divides people.  Just love Jesus.”

While I certainly advocate loving Jesus with my heart and soul, I also know that the Bible tells us to love Jesus with all of our MINDS, too.  Theology is simply the study of God and Who He is.  And here in the passage from Proverbs for today, we read that “Desire without knowledge is not good.”   How can we truly love and worship Someone we do not know?  God has revealed Himself to us in Scripture and in His Son, Jesus.  We should be joyfully pursuing the knowledge of Him!  The more we KNOW of Him (THEOLOGY), the more we will LOVE Him and worship Him (DOXOLOGY).

Endless singing of love songs to Jesus in worship is empty unless we really KNOW Who it is that we are singing about.  The reverse is also true.  If we endlessly pursue knowledge of God and it never leads us to break out in worship, we are missing the main point!  John Piper puts it this way,

All theology, rightly grasped, leads the mind and the heart to doxology. The story of God is about the glory of God. All revelation of the ways of God leads to exultation over the wonders of God.

In our Bible reading plan, we have days at the end of each month that are intentionally left open.  How can you fill your daily time in the Word?

  1. Catch up if you are behind
  2. Start fresh with us in February, even if you didn’t read with us in January
  3. Take some advice from C.S. Lewis, and let your heart SING! —

For my own part I tend to find the doctrinal books often more helpful in devotion than the devotional books, and I rather suspect that the same experience may await many others. I believe that many who find that “nothing happens” when they sit down, or kneel down, to a book of devotion, would find that the heart sings unbidden while they are working their way through a tough bit of theology with a pipe in their teeth and a pencil in their hand. Introduction to Athanasius: On the Incarnation

Proverbs 19:2 Desire without knowledge is not good

Ever had someone give you a hard time for being a student of the Bible?  Ever had someone ridicule your love for theology?  Ever had a Christian brother or sister say, “Just love Jesus and avoid asking the hard questions.  Theology just divides people.  Just love Jesus.”

While I certainly advocate loving Jesus with my heart and soul, I also know that the Bible tells us to love Jesus with all of our MINDS, too.  Theology is simply the study of God and Who He is.  And here in the passage from Proverbs for today, we read that “Desire without knowledge is not good.”   How can we truly love and worship Someone we do not know?  God has revealed Himself to us in Scripture and in His Son, Jesus.  We should be joyfully pursuing the knowledge of Him!  The more we KNOW of Him (THEOLOGY), the more we will LOVE Him and worship Him (DOXOLOGY).

Endless singing of love songs to Jesus in worship is empty unless we really KNOW Who it is that we are singing about.  The reverse is also true.  If we endlessly pursue knowledge of God and it never leads us to break out in worship, we are missing the main point!  John Piper puts it this way,

All theology, rightly grasped, leads the mind and the heart to doxology. The story of God is about the glory of God. All revelation of the ways of God leads to exultation over the wonders of God.

We come to a doxology in Romans 11 today, and to help us unpack these verses is an excerpt from John Piper’s sermon, “The Deep Riches and Wisdom and Knowledge of God”

The riches and wisdom and knowledge of God are described here as indescribably “deep.”Oh, the depth!” means, The depth is very deep. It is so deep that it simply elicits from the inspired apostle, as he peers into the ravine of God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge, an undefined “Oh!” The deeps here are indescribably deep.

Three things come to mind with this expression of the depths of God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge.

1. Unspeakable Hiddenness

First, hiddennessDaniel 2:21-22 says, “[God] gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding; he reveals deep and hidden things; he knows what is in the darkness.” Notice the connection between “deep” and “hidden.”Oh, the depth!” means, There are hidden dimensions to God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge. They are deep in the sense that they are out of our sight, unreachable. We can’t go down there. There will always be depths of God we do not know, because he is infinite and we are finite. We will always be seeing more forever.

2. Objective Reality

Second, after “hiddenness,”depth” implies reality. There is something down there. If there is nothing really down there, then the riches and wisdom and knowledge are not deep. They are a delusion. I mention this even though it is obvious because of how many public sophisticated denials of the obvious happen today. Friday night I heard on MPR an interview with a woman who with a sophisticated, authoritative air about her, say, “Theology is poetry.” And the awed interviewer said, “That’s a beautiful thought, say more about that.” Which she was happy to do, concluding with, “After all, religion is a human art form.” Frankly, I wanted to throw up. But when the moral nausea passed, I prayed that God would open their eyes so that they would no longer talk like three-year-olds who call their parents make-believe while they eat the supper daddy bought and mommy prepared. It was not a beautiful thought. It was a tragic and ugly thought. The riches and the wisdom and the knowledge of God revealed in Scripture are not a human art form, and biblical theology is not a poetic product of human imagination. When Paul says, “Oh the depth!” he means there is something down there. He has revealed some of it. He knows there’s more. He is speaking of objective reality—that God knows and we know in part.

3. Ultimate Foundation

Third, the words “Oh the depth!” signify that this reality is foundational. He could have said, “Oh, the heights of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God!” That would be true too. It’s the difference between the deep roots and the high branches of an infinite tree. It’s the difference between deep causes and high effects. It’s the difference between beginnings and goals. Here Paul is saying: God is at the bottom of things. It is true that God is also at the top of things. All things are rooted in God, and all things are moving toward God. As verse 36 says, “From him and . . . to him are all things.” The infinite depths are his, and the infinite heights are his. He is the foundation, and he is the destination of all things. There is no explanation beneath God. No matter how deep you go, there is only God. He is the last explanation whether you go down to causes or go up to purposes.

So his initial words, “Oh, the depth!” signify at least: Unspeakable hiddenness, objective reality, and ultimate foundation.

 

Think of Christmas carols and songs, especially the ones people like to sing the most, and the people and events surrounding Jesus’ birth. We sing of angels, shepherds, Mary and Joseph, the stable, Bethlehem, Wise Men, and all the familiar details. How often do we really think about the doctrine or theology of Jesus’ birth? Maybe if we hear a sermon on Sunday, or read the “Christmas passages” in the Bible, then we give it some thought.

I challenge you, in the midst of the hurry and worry of this season, to see with new eyes the wonderful and rich symbols and images in the Christmas songs and hymns.   Look for doctrinal references and teachings of the Incarnation. It’s interesting to pull out these kernels of incarnational theology found in the hymns.  For instance:

Hark! The Herald Angels sing,

“Glory to the new-born King;

Peace on earth, and mercy mild,

God and sinners reconciled!”

Joyful, all ye nations, rise.

Join the triumph of the skies.

With th’ Angelic Hosts proclaim,

“Christ is born in Bethlehem!”

Hark! the herald angels sing,

“Glory to the new-born King.”

 

Christ, by highest heaven adored,

Christ, the everlasting lord

Late in time behold Him come,

Off-spring of a Virgin’s womb

Veiled in flesh the Godhead see,

Hail, the incarnate deity

Pleased as Man with men to dwell,

Jesus, our Emmanuel.

Hark! the herald angels sing,

“Glory to the New-born king!”

 

Hail the heav’n-born Prince of Peace,

Hail, the Sun of Righteousness

Light and life to all He brings,

Risen with healing in His Wings.

Now He lays His Glory by,

Born that man no more may die

Born to raise the sons of earth,

Born to give them second birth.

Hark! the herald angels sing,

“Glory to the New-born king!”

The Incarnation is such a mystery!  This doctrine teaches that the entire nature and work of God took on human form in the person of Jesus. Jesus was at the same time fully human and fully divine.

Bruce Ware, in his book “Big Truths for Young Hearts,” says

The greatest miracle ever done in all of history is the joining together of God and man.  And this was not done for show or to prove some point.  It was done because this was the only way that our loving and holy God would be able to save us from our sin.  Oh, the wonder of the Incarnation.  Oh, the wonder of the cross.

In Latin, the term caro or carnis means “meat” or “flesh” (as in chili con carne…chili with meat) So by “incarnation”, Christians mean that God the Son, Jesus, fully God, was joined to human flesh or human nature.  Fully God becoming fully man.  The word “incarnation” does not appear in the New Testament, but the idea or concept is found in many places.

  • John 1:14  “And the Word became flesh and lived among us.”
  • Hebrews 1:1-4 God reveals, speaks, and creates through Jesus. Jesus is “the exact imprint” of God.
  • Philippians 2:5-11  Jesus, though in the form of and equal with God, took on human form, even to the point of death. Jesus is to be worshiped as Lord in heaven and on earth.
  • 2 Corinthians 5:19  “In Christ,  God was reconciling the world to himself.”

This Christmas, don’t just sing the words to the familiar hymns.  Think of the deep, rich meaning behind the words.  Be awed by the Incarnation!  Here is a quote from J.I Packer, from  “Knowing God”, Chapter 5:

The WORD had become flesh: a real human baby.  He had not ceased to be God; he was no less God than before; but he had begun to be man.  He was not now God minus some elements of his deity, but God plus all that he had made his own by taking manhood to himself.  He who made man was now learning what it felt like to be man.  He who made the angel who became the devil was now in a state in which he could be tempted—could not, indeed, avoid being tempted—by the devil; and the perfection of his human life was achieved only by conflict with the devil.  The epistle to the Hebrews, looking up to Him in his ascended glory, draws great comfort from this fact…

The mystery of the Incarnation is unfathomable.  Perhaps is has never been formulated better than in the words of the Athanasian Creed.  “Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God and man…perfect God, and perfect man…who although He be God and man, yet He is not two, but one Christ; one, not by conversion of the Godhead into flesh: but by taking of the manhood into God”  Our minds cannot get beyond this.  What we see in the manger is, in Charles Wesley’s words,

Our God contracted to a span;

 Incomprehensibly made man.

Incomprehensibly.  We shall be wise to remember this, to shun speculation and contentedly to adore.

Proverbs 19:2 Desire without knowledge is not good,

Ever had someone give you a hard time for being a student of the Bible?  Ever had someone ridicule your love for theology?  Ever had a Christian brother or sister say, “Just love Jesus and avoid asking the hard questions.  Theology just divides people.  Just love Jesus.”

While I certainly advocate loving Jesus with my heart and soul, I also know that the Bible tells us to love Jesus with all of our MINDS, too.  Theology is simply the study of God and Who He is.  And here in the passage from Proverbs for today, we read that “Desire without knowledge is not good.”   How can we truly love and worship Someone we do not know?  God has revealed Himself to us in Scripture and in His Son, Jesus.  We should be joyfully pursuing the knowledge of Him!  The more we KNOW of Him (THEOLOGY), the more we will LOVE Him and worship Him (DOXOLOGY). 

Endless singing of love songs to Jesus in worship is empty unless we really KNOW Who it is that we are singing about.  The reverse is also true.  If we endlessly pursue knowledge of God and it never leads us to break out in worship, we are missing the main point!  John Piper puts it this way, “All theology, rightly grasped, leads the mind and the heart to doxology. The story of God is about the glory of God. All revelation of the ways of God leads to exultation over the wonders of God.”