For Starters, Substance Matters

The Beginning. It matters. It matters a lot.

Our origins are important. We have to talk about how things started. Where did we come from? How did we get here?

Genesis was a message to the people of Israel communicated through Moses. It was book of stories that showed us how the Lord got things going.

Consider this reality: the sons of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had spent 400 plus years in Egypt. The latter portion of those years were years of slavery — hard labor afflicted upon them by the rule of Pharaoh. He feared this people because their numbers just kept growing. Their population was out of control.

The hard work they were made to do only served to increase their numbers. This terrified Pharaoh even more so he instituted an infanticide policy, every baby boy was to be tossed into the Nile River. Moses escaped this because of his clever-thinking mother and the compassion of one of Pharaoh’s daughters.

Most of us know the story of Moses. He met God and he was raised up by the Lord to speak for the release of the Israelites.

When Pharaoh refused and became stubborn in that refusal, the Lord sent a series of plagues, the last one being the death blow to all of the first born in Egypt.

That knockout plague forced the ruler’s hand. He sent Israel away.

Once through the Red Sea and into the wilderness, I am convinced that the people had questions. And Moses was the one with the answers.

The Lord spoke to him, first at the burning bush in the desert of Midian and later in a variety of ways as the deliverer and leader of the people.

What we have in Genesis is a series of reports that offer explanations for those with curious hearts. It traces the activity of God in Creation as a whole and then His purpose in setting in motion His plan of Redemption.

Definition of the Source

The words at the start of Genesis must be considered in the light of the plagues God leveled upon Egypt. Every plague was directed toward an idol embraced and worshipped amid the culture of that empire.

The group that left Egypt was a “mixed multitude.” Among the throng of the delivered people, were those who still carried an affinity for the gods of the land they just left, a land now in ruins because of the things that God brought against it.

Genesis gives definition. The text tells us that God is the Source of all things. His commandment is to worship Him and Him alone and not the things. By His good pleasure He determined to create all that we know through the expression of His Wisdom.

We find this element to the sequence of Creation in Proverbs 8. There we read that Wisdom was with God and in God before the whole process was set in motion.

And how did He set Creation in motion? With the sound of His Voice. He spoke and there was Light. He proceeded to establish realms of existence —the heavens, the sky, the seas, and the land. He formed the frames of reference and then filled those frames.

Stars and planets and suns filled the heavens. The fowl were sent into the skies. Fish and whales and eels and even something known as Leviathan were introduced to the seas.

Last came the land, which brought forth vegetation in the form of plants and trees and fruit. Also set upon the land were animals and creeping things — insects.

All of these things possessed substance and so we must take substance to be sacred. The material elements of Creation were declared by God to be good and very good, especially when it came to Man.

Like the rest of Creation, Man was made to be filled. Genesis explains that Man was formed from the dust of earth. His existence began materially before it was animated; that is, quickened and made alive.

Once fashioned in the design of the Lord as we read in Psalm 139, God breathed into Man and Man became a living soul. To quote another line from Proverbs, He chose to create and enjoy what He formed to be His dwelling places – “Rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth; and my delights were with the sons of men” (Proverbs 8:31). He made Man to contain something of Himself.

This is a truth about every human being if we are to believe the Bible record. Imagine what life in this world would be like if every one of us really accepted and related to each other on the basis of this reality. God is in me and He is also in every one of my neighbors, even the ones who choose to operate as enemies toward me and Him.

Substance and Spirit

We must recognize the importance of the created pattern and order. Man first had substance; he was material before he was spiritual.

This distinction is no small thing. What we are on the outside mattered very much to the Lord.

It mattered so much that God the Son incarnated Himself in the material of humanity. He entered into a life of dust. God took our substance. He lived His life along all of its lines. He did so in every respect. Whenever challenged to operate as more than a man, He rebuked that challenge with Word, with Wisdom, with an understanding of how His sacrifice of Himself had to be one defined by perfect, innocent humanity.

He never ceased being God, but He allowed His deity to face this world and its cosmically charged atmosphere in every detail. He did it without exercising supernatural prerogatives in ways that would aid His humanity. He spoke to the forces that opposed Him. The Word carried the force of nature that was behind it the nature of the Creator. He did touch those in need and brought healing. Again, things of substance often figured in the equations — mud, spit, thread, water.

There’s a reason why substance and materiality are questioned and attacked. It is because Satan possesses neither of these things. There’s nothing solid to him or to the air of which he coordinates and agitates. He is all soul — mind, will, emotions. He fosters idols and figures in deceived imaginations to gain himself a representation. He can stimulate, but he cannot create. He may only use what’s left open to him.

We meet the devil in Genesis 3 as the wily one employing the shape of a subtle snake. He works craftily to create a fog in the mind of the woman. He doesn’t argue, rather he fashions an atmosphere of doubt and distrust.

Other-ness and One-ness

Let us get back to the first words: In the beginning, God. He is, He was, He always will be. From everlasting to everlasting, He is the Lord. Read through these opening chapters of the Bible and see that He saw all that He created as good and very good.

What was not good? The missing complement to Adam. The man needed an Other to relate to. Without this Other, he was deficient in regard the image of God.

“Let us, make man in our image.” This was the Lord’s declaration. The pronouns “us” and “our” reveal the nature of God in His Persons – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

The Lord is One and His One-ness is expressed in the midst of His Other-ness. Who the Lord is is a mystery far beyond our understanding. In Genesis, we read of the sense of relationship. The Hebrew verbs indicate that the Persons of the Lord have been involved in something of an eternal dance.

Once Man was made, he needed a dance partner. And so the Lord took something from the Man and fashioned Woman. She was his Other. She complemented him – body, soul, and spirit. The two were designed to become one flesh and to be fruitful and multiply.

Man now had a neighbor he could love as he loved himself. More than a neighbor, he had a sister and a spouse.

All was glorious. All was right. All was finished. All was very good.

And so the Lord rested.

This last point is important because the first hearers of these words had never known rest. As slaves, they were worked and worked and worked to death.

These freed people had to learn faith and truth in the work and power of God. They had to choose to believe and rest in the Lord’s loving character.

Herein is the application for us. We were made by God and for God, according to His pleasure. He freely gave us all things and He freely gave us responsibility. We may choose and He expresses His love and care in the hope that we choose Him and His ways and not our own ways.

The Lord put His breath in us and as we breathe we say His Name – YAHWEH. This brings Him glory.

This is what we were made for.

Happy Now Year

We tend to think in terms of past and future, of what we did, and of what we are going to do. Such thinking leaves us ignoring the moment. But our God is the God of Now. He revealed His Name — “I AM THAT I AM” — to Moses at the burning bush. He is the God of life, the God of the present tense, the God of the here.

God is with us, at this very moment, and He never leaves us nor forsakes us. These words are written in Joshua 1 and Hebrews 13. These thoughts make my heart warm. These words are the source of all courage.

Let’s look at Joshua. He was the man who came after Moses. He had spent his life as the sidekick, the second in command. Moses opened the sea. Moses brought water from the rocks. Moses called down manna to feed the nation. Moses guided the people through the wilderness.

But Moses was not the man to take the people into the land of promise. He had dishonored the Lord, according to the account in Numbers 20:11; and the Lord held him accountable. Moses would die before crossing the Jordan River into Canaan with the people.

Joshua was given the job to lead Israel to its destination.  A large assignment before him, Joshua surely felt the pressure of the moment. But the Lord showed up. God encouraged this man with a set of promises.

A promise for his walk:  “Every place the sole of your foot will tread I have given you …” (Joshua 1:3).

A promise for his battles:  “No man shall be able to stand before you all the days of your life” (Joshua 1:5).

And, the promise of His presence:  “As I was with Moses, so I will be with you. I will not leave you nor forsake you.”

Substance from the Word

It wasn’t until after God made these promises that He commanded Joshua:  “Be strong and of good courage.” The Lord always supplies the stuff that we need, the substance that will allow us to stand.

That substance, that stuff, is all wrapped up and presented to us in our Bibles. The Lord said as much to Joshua, telling him to “be careful to do according to all the law.” The Word makes all the difference; this is what God told Joshua and it is what He continues to tell us.

Meditate on the Book day and night was God’s instruction. Hear. Read. Think. Consider. Ponder. Practice.

Let this be the pattern of your life. Keep the wood on the fire. This is what meditation is all about. Modern concepts have corrupted the reality of meditation and can stir up images of weird chants and abstract adventures.

The biblical model is taking up the Scriptures, a little bit at a time. We read a couple verses and think about them. This sparks something in us. The Holy Spirit does His work in us and fans the flames. We move through the Word with care and concentration.

It is quite simple on the surface. But it is not easy. We do have distractions flying at us from every side. We live in a wicked atmosphere controlled and manipulated by the prince of darkness and lies. The pattern is there for us, however.

Hear. Read. Think. Consider. Ponder. Practice.  Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God – this is what Romans 10:17 tells us.

What will be the results? Prosperity and good success, according to Joshua 1:8.

Just in case Joshua didn’t catch it the first time, though, the Lord said it all again.

Be strong and of good courage. Fear not, neither be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.

Now we are back to where I started. God is with us, right here and right now. I remember learning this great principle from one of my first pastors. He called it the principle of God’s “Eternal Is.” The way he put it went like this: The past is gone forever; now just passed by; and tomorrow does not exist today.

God is, He eternally is. He’s always with us.

With Us, Always

Yes, He has given us much to do. He has saved us, but He has also left us – for now – in a broken world full of fragile and crushed people. Let’s not get overwhelmed by all of that. Meditate – think on what the Word says about His presence. It’s the now that matters.

Do you have small thing to do? Do it with all your heart as unto the Lord. Really, He’s right there with you as you do it.

“Lo, I am with you always.” Jesus said this at the close of Matthew’s gospel. He said this to a small group of nervous and hopeful disciples. He sent them with His blessing, and He sent the Spirit to live in them.

He is the God of our now. Let’s believe Him for it always.

Happy New Year? That’s OK to say. How about this one?

Happy Now Year.