The following meditation is from Doug Hood's book,
Nurture Faith: Five Minute Meditations to Strengthen Your Walk with Christ.
“Pray like this: Our Father who is in heaven.”
Matthew 6:9 (Common
English Bible)
For many, the most challenging part of
faith is belief in a personal God. Membership in a local church usually
requires “a profession of faith.” Often, this is little more than mental
consent that there is a God. That same consent to God’s existence usually
assumes that the individual intends to place themselves under God’s authority.
Yet, what is often present in that “profession” is a sincere desire to know God
personally, to experience a relationship with God in such a manner that in
those hours of deepest need, we may personally address God and feel that we are
heard and cared for. Harry Emerson Fosdick is helpful here, “No one achieves a
vital, personal, Christian experience without a profound sense of need.”i
But the question presses, is belief in a personal God possible?
One difficulty for experiencing a personal
God today is the tendency of impersonal thinking and living. Anything sensory
is found to be inferior to reason and intelligence. During my ministry in Texas
a number of years ago, one individual criticized my preaching as too personal,
too emotional. He was a medical doctor and sought sermons that would stretch
his thinking, not move his heart. He was suspicious of preaching that stirred
the emotions. To think of God in personal terms, he argued, was
unsophisticated. I suspect that the Sunday morning pews are filled with people
who are in agreement.
But look at what Jesus does here for his
disciples: Jesus takes the qualities of human parenting as a clue to
understanding God; asks that we address God as father. God is not an impersonal
force that moves through the universe. God is a living being that knows us,
loves us and has a divine desire for our lives. Jesus draws from what is the
best in our hearts to show us its higher ideal in God. Certainly, it is true
that God has given us minds and expects that we should be growing in knowledge.
But we cannot pursue God and fully know God without the heart. One of the basic
convictions of our Christian faith is that the universe is directed by a loving purpose.
Moments confront each of us that demand more
than a mere belief in the existence of God. They are moments of such great
personal need that more study - more knowledge about God - fails to satisfy. A
calm strength in the midst of life’s storms is possible only as God is known
personally. The Christian lives not by a higher knowledge of God. The Christian
lives by faith, by prayer, by love and communion with God. When the soul cries
out for a personal God, Jesus shows us the way. It is so simple we doubt its
power. Get down on your knees, patiently silence all the voices in your mind,
and then say, “Our Father, who is in Heaven.”
_____________________
i Harry Emerson Fosdick, Riverside Sermons (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1958), 168.
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