Saturday, April 2, 2011

Intention of the Image of God in Man: The Father revealed by Sons

God intended man to reveal God Himself to every generation. Man was created in the image of God—not to replace God, but to point everything in heaven & earth to God. Man’s rejection of God & the introduction of sin led to a broken image of God being revealed to further generations.

Each generation becomes more & more broken, unless there is a repentance & returning to God. The priests were meant to be the inheritance of the Lord that pointed others to God, but in the book of Malachi, they were rebuked because they were leading the people astray. The problem was that they had no honor or reverence for God as their Father or master. They had become over-familiar with Him & did not maintain the respect & honor that a father deserves. This is the foundation for the Fear of the Lord.

The fear of the Lord is clean & the revelation of it must be in conjunction with the Love of God so that a spirit of fear is cast out of us, love is perfected, & we can be subject to the spirit of adoption that cries out, "Abba, Father!" (I Jn. 4:17-9, Rom. 8:15).

When Jesus came, He restored the image of God in human form. He was fully God. God chose that in Him all the fullness of God would dwell (Col. 1:19). This was so that He could reconcile all things to Himself through the finished work of the Cross (Col. 1:20).

Jesus was also fully man & He was the exact representation of God. He fully restored the image of God in a human frame. He told His disciples that if you have seen the Son, then you have seen the Father.

He came not only to save us, but also to show us the Father. Not only did He restore us as sons, but He also restored the image of God in human frame that we can behold Him & become more like Him (I Cor. 3:18). As we become more like Him, the image of God is restored from glory to glory in our lives, & we become more like the Father. This is the only way we can become fathers ourselves.

Jesus is the perfect example of how we are to also represent the Father to others. This is the reason Paul could say, “Imitate me as I imitate Christ…” (I Cor. 4:15-1, 11:1). Paul told the church in Corinth that they may have 10,000 instructors, but they don’t have many fathers. He said that they should imitate him as He imitated Christ, because he birthed them in Christ. He labored for them to know the Father.

He said to imitate Him, but the amazing thing is that he sent Timothy in his stead because Timothy was a beloved & faithful son. The church was being taught to imitate Christ through Timothy who imitated Paul who imitated Christ. This is the inheritance of sons & the way that we should reflect the image of God to the world as fathers who are rooted in being sons.

This is the foundation for being a father to others in the spirit, and a necessary concept for those who are called as messengers that will “turn the hearts of the Fathers to the children & the hearts of children to the Fathers…” (Malachi 4:6).

“For though you might have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet you do not have many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the gospel. 16 Therefore I urge you, imitate me. 17 For this reason I have sent Timothy to you, who is my beloved and faithful son in the Lord, who will remind you of my ways in Christ, as I teach everywhere in every church.” (I Cor. 4:15-17)

No comments:

Post a Comment