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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The Jesus of The Shack

Our high school Girl's group is working through William P. Young's The Shack, which seems to be the "it" book of the season. It has been hyped to be the Pilgrim's Progress of this generation, and I'm anxious to know it's greatness.
This week, Megan's many accents led us into what seems the beginning of the real action. And we met God, in three persons. I won't get into the details, why ruin the suspense, instead I want to take you to a quote that has rocked my thoughts, God the Father is in conversation with Mack, the main character. And as Mack tries to make sense of God's identity and God as trinity, (somewhat heady topics, eh?), God challenges the assumptions Mack might have about Jesus. And apparently assumptions that I do hold. The quote is a bit long, but stick with it.

"When we three spoke ourself into human existence as the Son of God, we became fully human. We also chose to embrace all the limitations that this entailed. Even though we have always been present in this created universe, we now became flesh and blood. It would be like this bird, whose nature is to fly, choosing only to walk and remain grounded. He doesn't stop being the bird, but it does alter his experience of life significantly.

..."Although by nature he is fully God, Jesus is fully human and lives as such. While never losing the innate ability to fly, he chooses moment-by-moment to remain grounded. That is why his name is Immanuel, God with us, or God with you, to be more precise."

"But what about all the miracles? The healings? Raising people from the dead? Doesn't that prove that Jesus was God - you know, more than human?"

"No, it proves that Jesus is truly human."

"What?"

"Mackenzie, I can fly, but humans can't. Jesus is fully human. Although he is also fully God, he has never drawn upon his nature as God to do anything. He has only lived out of his relationship with me, living in the very same manner that I desire to be in relationship with every human being. He is just the first to do it to the uttermost - the first to absolutely trust my life within him, the first to believe in my love and goodness without regard for appearance or consequence."

"So, when he healed the blind?"

"He did so as a dependant, limited human being trusting in my life and power to be at work within him and through him. Jesus, as a human being, had no power within himself to heal anyone.

..."Only as he rested in his relationship with me, and in our communion - our co-union - could he express my heart and will into any circumstance. So, when you look at Jesus and it appears that he's flying, he really is...flying. But what you are actually seeing is me; my life in him. That's how he lives and acts as a true human, how every human is designed to live - out of my life." (Pg. 99-100)

There's more, but I'm sure this is all you'll get to in one read. Even my concentration is slipping into the fuzzy recesses of my mind. What a quote! If this is true, I need to read my gospels again with new eyes.

1 comments:

middie said...

yeah the book is pretty crazy theological at points...I like GOd telling Mack about freedom and then basically pointing out that were are pretty limited human beings with a finite capasity and where is the freedom in that? haha
anyway,enjoy your read...