I Am a Distorted Image-Bearer

Who am I? God made us in his image, after his likeness. God made us like him to think, to love, to work, to rest, to live morally upright. But then came the Fall. Adam and Eve sinned. And we all became distorted image-bearers. The likeness became distorted.

  • God made us rational beings to think like him, but now we don’t think rightly. The devil promised Eve that the fruit would make her wise, but it made her and all of us fools. Our think has become futile; our understanding has become darkened (Romans 1:21-22, Ephesians 4:17-18). Our thinking is distorted by sin.
  • God made us relational beings to love like him, but now we don’t love rightly. Instead of taking responsibility for his sin, Adam blames God and Eve – hardly the height of love. Jesus says that if we love him, we will obey his commands. Adam failed to love by disobeying God, and so it continues in each of us to this day. Not only do we fail to love, but our relationships are broken. We are alienated from God by our sin (Colossians 1:21). And our human relationships are often characterized by strife. We see broken relationships all around us. Our love has been distorted by sin.
  • God made us occupational beings to work like him, but now we don’t work rightly. Not only has our work been frustrated by the Fall, but we also have become lazy. It may show itself in our jobs, or are chores around the home, or in our relationships, or in our church ministry, or in any number of other places. We struggle with sloth. Our work has been distorted by sin.
  • God made us recreational beings to rest like him, but now we either refuse to rest or live to rest. The proper balance of work and rest has been distorted. Some are workaholics. Others live for the weekend. Either way, we have fallen from what God intended. Our rest has been distorted by sin.
  • God made us moral beings to live uprightly like him, but now we live in sin. We miss the mark of righteousness. Our attitudes, our thoughts, our desires, our words, our actions are all marked by sin.

We are not like God as he made us to be. We have become distorted image-bearers. Tomorrow, we will explore this further before considering God’s incredible plan of rescue.

Also in this series:

Designed to Image God

DiscipleHumans are designed to image or reflect God their Creator (Gen. 1:26-27).  Don’t let the subtlety of this escape you.  Our design as humans inherently requires something to image – God….  And when we don’t image him, by default we image ourselves and elevate ourselves as god.  This is the height of idolatry….  We humans fail to grasp that we are most human when we image God.  We vainly seek an image of our own to bear, hoping to project a self-image so captivating that others will love and accept us.
– Bill Clem in Disciple

I Am an Image-Bearer, Part 3

Who am I? In the last two posts (Part 1 and Part 2), we said that we are image-bearers of God – made in his likeness, we are like God is several ways. Here are three more implications of being image-bearers of God:

First, I am a reflection of God. I am made in God’s image (Genesis 1:26-27). An image is a reflection, a representation. I look in a mirror, and I see my image – it is a reflection of me. I take a picture of myself, and that picture is a reflection of me. In the same way, we are created to be pictures, representations, reflections of God. We are created to reflect God to others. In my thinking, I am to reflect God to others. In my relationships, I am to reflect God to others. In my work, I am to reflect God to others. In my rest, I am to reflect God to others. In my behavior, I am to reflect God to others. I am to point not to myself but to God. I am to live for his glory, not my own. As the moon reflects the light of the sun, so I am to reflect the glory of God.

Second, I am accountable to God. God commanded Adam not to eat of a certain tree, and if Adam disobeyed there would be dire consequences (Genesis 2:16-17). He was accountable to God. And so are we. All of us will one day have to answer to God. How well did I use my mind? How well did I love God and people? How well did I work? How well did I rest? How well did I live uprightly? How well did I reflect God in my everyday life, instead of creating my own image for people to see?

Third, I am valuable to God. Yes, I am a creature made from the dust, but I am also made in God’s image which gives me great value, great dignity. I bear the Creator’s image. As one poster I remember from childhood said, “God don’t make no junk.” This is where I find my identity – not in what others think of me, not in my circumstances, not in my accomplishments or failures – but in what God thinks of me. He made me in his image, and so I have value. He made you in his image, so you have value. And so we ought to respect one another.

As I am to respect God, so I am to respect people made in God’s image. James 3 warns us about blessing God and then turning around and cursing people made in his image. When I curse, insult, belittle, and make fun of people, I do the same to God. How often have we cursed God? We must respect one another as image-bearers of God – regardless of behavior, political leanings, sexual orientation, color of skin, economic status, or whatever tempts you to belittle another person. Everyone is an image-bearer of God, and so we must respect one another. That doesn’t mean we will always approve of what others do – often we won’t. But we must treat people with respect because they are made in God’s image.

I Am an Image-Bearer, Part 2

Who am I? Yesterday, we said that we are image-bearers of God. We are made in his likeness. We are like God – made in his likeness as rational, relational, occupational, recreational, moral beings. That is who we are. And we ought to live like it. But we need to make an important clarification:

I am a rational being, but I am not the sum of my learning.
I am a relational being, but I am not the sum of my relationships.
I am an occupational being, but I am not the sum of my work.
I am a recreational being, but I am not the sum of my vacations and holidays.
I am a moral being, but I am not the sum of my good behavior.

My identity is found in being an image-bearer of God. My identity is found in God, not in my learning, relationships, work, rest, or behavior. Those are all applications or out-workings of my identity, but they are not my identity.

If I look for my identity in these out-workings, and these out-workings are good – I have a lot of degrees, and good family with good friends, and a good job, and some killer vacations, and really good behavior – I am tempted toward pride. I begin to think I am better than others. But no, I am a creature made from the dust. I am an image-bearer of God.

If I look for my identity in these out-workings, and these out-workings are bad – I am not well-educated, and my relationships are a wreck, and I a have a dead-end job (or just lost my job), and I’ve never had a real vacation, and my past is a wreckage of poor choices – I am tempted to despair or depression. I feel like a loser. I must be worthless compared to those who have succeeded in these areas. But no, I am a creature made from the dust to be an image-bearer of God. That is who I am.

My identity is found in God as an image-bearer, not in my circumstances, accomplishments, or failures.

I Am an Image-Bearer of God

Who am I? Last week we said that we are creatures made by God and dependent upon God. We are also image-bearers of God. God made us in his image after his likeness (Genesis 1:26-27). That means that I am like God in certain ways:

I am a rational being – God made me like him to think. Consider the thought that went into creating the world. And then God gives Adam and Eve the task of having dominion over it (Genesis 1:26). In one day, Adam names the animals (Genesis 2:19). Consider the thought required to do all of that. God made us to think like he does. And so we ought to think! We ought to use the minds God gave us. We ought to learn. We ought to think through our actions. We ought to think.

I am a relational being – God made me like him to love. God is three persons in an eternal loving relationship with each other. God shows his love for Adam and Eve as he provides for their needs and enters into a relationship with them. And God made us to love as he does. The two great commands are to love God and love people. We are to live in a relationship with God and the people around us. And those relationships are to be governed by love.

I am an occupational being – God made me like him to work. Again consider the work that went into creating the world. And then God gives Adam and Eve the job of having dominion over it (Genesis 1:26). He creates a garden and tells Adam to take care of it (Genesis 2:15). God made us to work like he does. Whether it is a job, the raising of our families, or the chores around the house, God made us to work.

I am a recreational being – God made me like him to rest. After 6 days of creating, God rested on the seventh day. He looked at his creation, and proclaimed it good. He enjoyed the results of his work. And we too are called to rest, to enjoy the work of our hands, the work of our minds. Rest from our labors is a good thing. God created us to rest like he did.

I am a moral being – God created me like him to live uprightly. God is righteous, holy, pure, good – without any taint of evil. And we are to be holy as he is holy (I Peter 1:15-16). God commanded Adam not to eat of a certain tree, and Adam was to obey (Genesis 2:16-17). And God has given us commands that we are to obey. God made us to live uprightly.

I am like God – made in his likeness as a rational, relational, occupational, recreational, moral being. That is who I am. And I ought to live like it.

I Am a Creature

Who am I? This is a huge question in our world. And many people are looking for the answer in all the wrong places. Who am I? The Bible has a lot to say about who we are. And the answer begins in creation: I am a creature.

I am a creature made by God. “So God created man” (Genesis 1:27). God made us. He is the Creator; we are the created – the creatures. There is an infinite difference between God and us. He is God; we are not. What’s more, we were formed from the dust of the ground (Genesis 2:7). We are living walking dirt.

And we are dependent dirt. He made us – our very existence depends on God. We depend upon God for food – we have food only because God created a world for us to live in that has food. We depend upon him for our abilities – he made us with mouths, eyes, ears, hands, and feet able to do numerous things. We are creatures made by God and dependent upon God.

My identity as a creature made by God and dependent on God calls for a response of humility. The cocky “look at me” attitude so common in our world is completely out of place – and downright foolish. What are we saying? Look at me – one big pile of dirt! I am dust boy. I am dust girl. Not very impressive. Not much to look at. We need humility.

And as a creature, I am not God. The world doesn’t revolve around me. God is not at my beck and call to answer my every whim. The people around me are not my personal slaves. Things don’t have to go my way. I need humility.

I am a creature made by God and dependent upon God – and my identity calls for humility.

Are You Ready To Speak?

The opposition catches up with Paul in Acts 21, and a riot ensues. Paul is seized, dragged out of the temple, and beaten. The mob tries to kill him, but Paul is rescued by Roman soldiers. Battered, bruised, and bloody, he wants to speak to the hostile crowd. It doesn’t matter how he feels (read: lousy); he is ready to speak for the name of Jesus. It doesn’t matter that the crowd just tried to kill him; he wants to tell them about the Savior. In Acts 23, he is ready to speak to a hostile council testifying to his hope in the resurrection. In Acts 24-26, he is ready to speak the gospel before wicked pagan rulers. Later in Rome, he speaks to anyone who will listen.

Are you ready to speak?

No matter how you feel?

No matter who it is?

How intimidating they are?

How unlovely they may appear?

Are you ready to speak for Jesus?

What Worship Is

In his commentary on Acts, R. Kent Hughes shares this excellent quote on the definition of worship.  To worship is:

To quicken the conscience by the holiness of God,
to feed the mind with the truth of God,
to purge the imagination by the beauty of God,
to open up the heart to the love of God,
to devote the will to the purpose of God.
– William Temple

Are You Ready To Sacrifice?

Upon arriving in Jerusalem, Paul is encouraged to participate with four other men in a vow involving the cutting of their hair, purification, and sacrifice. He is to pay for all of them. He agrees to do so. He is ready to sacrifice.

Andrew and Peter are mending their nets when Jesus comes along and calls them to follow him. They leave their nets behind and follow him. They were ready to sacrifice for Jesus.

As I posted two days ago, Chris Norman could have played NFL football, but God called him to go to seminary instead. He was ready to sacrifice for Jesus.

Are you ready to sacrifice?

Are you ready to sacrifice your dreams for better dreams?

Are you ready to sacrifice your plans for God’s plans?

Are you ready to sacrifice your time to share the gospel, to show the love of Christ to someone?

Are you ready to sacrifice your money to spread the gospel to other parts of the world?

Are you ready to sacrifice everything if God calls you to do so?

Are you ready to sacrifice for Jesus?