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* It's good to suffer loss, for it draws me to the Cross where God's loss is more than what anyone ever lost. * We cannot hear what the stories of the Bible are saying until we hear them as stories about ourselves. * Let go of control. * Trust God. Thank God. Think about God. Talk to God. Talk about God.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

The Simplicity and Complexity of God


The simplicity and complexity of the Godhead is that God is a triune God, yet God is one (Dt 6:4; Mk 12:29). Being made in the image of the triune God (Gen 1:26-27), we are happy when we live out our being in God by loving God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength (Dt 6:5; Mt 22:37; Mk 12:30).

Though this might seem confusing or baffling, I think this diagram is helpful:

Father

Son

Spirit

Mind

Will

Heart

Thinking

Doing

Feeling

Cognition

Volition

Emotion

Plans

Executes

Sustains


So:
  • If we think too much, we might do little to nothing and lose heart.
  • If we are primarily doing things, we could become mindless, emotionless robotic people.
  • If we mainly depend on our feelings, our minds and lives could degenerate or deteriorate.
As fallen, flawed and fallible human beings, we invariably are imbalanced in some ways. We need God's mercy and grace to live out our lives with thoughtful reflection, practical activity and controlled emotions. We need:

Orthodoxy

Orthopraxy

Orthopathy

Right beliefs

Right practices

Right emotions


Systematic theologian, John Frame, is known for what is called triperspectivalism. Frame is indebted to Cornelius Van Til, whose ethical triad of standard, goal, and motive was the seed of thought behind all his triads. Triadic thought (also called perspectivalism and triperspectivalism) arises out of the transcendence and immanence of God expressed in the Creator-creature distinction, in divine revelation and in the covenant context in which the divine Lordship attributes (control, authority and presence) are recognisably present. When man encounters God there are necessarily three perspectives involved in this meeting:
  • the normative or the standard, as God is everywhere Lord;
  • the locus in which the nature of God's authority is made known, or the situational perspective;
  • and the subjectivity of man as the creaturely receptor, or the existential motivational-subjective perspective.

Frame insists that these perspectives are three aspects of one reality: "The key point is that in dealing with these triangles, it is important to note what the whole triangle represents. In the triad normative, situational, existential, the whole triangle represents all of reality. So each corner of it also deals with all of reality, and each is ultimately identical with the others." (Systematic Theology, p. 971). It could be tabled as such:

Standard

Goal

Motive

Control

Authority

Presence

Normative

Situational

Subjective


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