How God Sees Us?
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In this
country, because of the pervasiveness and power of social media, people who are
relatively unknown can suddenly become media stars.
That’s
the case with America’s Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman, age 22, who at the
recent presidential inauguration recited a poem about what it means to be
America and American. She has been interviewed by practically everyone, and is
scheduled to recite a poem at the Super Bowl, of all unexpected places. The inaugural
poem itself was wonderful, in my esteem, but the way she recited it was also remarkable
in its expressiveness.
More
than any of the lines of the poem, this optimistic observation struck me. Apparently
talking about an America that has been battered by a deadly pandemic and
perhaps even deadlier division, she said, “We are not broken but simply unfinished.”
This
statement, coming from a young African-American woman, appears to me to be
generous. I wonder how many Americans would agree, considering that, evidenced
by recent and not so recent events, America appears to be nearly as racist as
ever.
Simple but Profound
“Not
broken but simply unfinished” is simple but profound. And it occurred to me
that that undoubtedly is how God looks at us, as a group and as individuals.
We’re simply unfinished.
The
Hebrew Bible is filled with stories about how the ancient Jews ignored God’s
love and how he continually tried to bring them back. And the gospels, and
other books of the Christian Bible, take up that theme. We have never been “finished.”
Although
the authors of the Bible, speaking as we humans speak and act, portrayed God as
being impatient at times and often punishing his people for their indifference
and even hostility, he was usually portrayed as repenting of his actions. His
love wouldn’t allow him to abandon his people, who were not broken, “just
unfinished.”
Christian
biblical authors began to see everyone as God’s people after the Hebrew Bible
hinted at this view. But like the ancient Hebrews, the Church’s history is
filled with unfaithfulness – Christians exhibiting their “unfinished” status. Google Image
Those
of us searching for God – especially those who have given up on God and/or
religion - should recognize that we are incomplete and unfulfilled. Though
modern psychology may not agree, only God can complete us, in my view.
The
Apostle Paul and his associate, Timothy, wrote to the Christian converts in the
ancient Greek city of Philippi that the two were thankful for the Philippians’
partnership in spreading the gospel, and that they were “sure that he who began
a good work in you will bring it to completion....”
This
completion promises happiness. Many of us say to ourselves that we will be
happy when certain conditions are filled – after we get that raise, when we can
move to another place, when we’re not so busy with making a living. But the
happiness promised by faith is one that isn’t dependent on the right stuff or
the right time or place, or even on us.
Peace Guarantees Happiness
Once we
establish a relationship with God, and begin to grow into it, we experience
“the peace that surpasses all understanding,” as that same letter to the
Philippians says. And peace guarantees happiness.
Peace,
of course, is not just the absence of conflict or problems. As humans, we’ll
always have them and some may never go away. But once we begin to experience
God as loving father - as Jesus always refers to him - or mother, or just
parent, everything changes. Whatever happens, our father/mother is always with
us.
There’s
a certain comfort in thinking about humans as “unfinished,” as Amanda Gorman
suggests. It means that, with all our doubt and indifference, there’s hope for
us yet.
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