June 7, 2020 It was and is, VERY GOOD!
Once upon a time, three people who had been blind from birth and therefore had never actually seen an elephant were asked to describe what they thought an elephant looked like. The first one, holding onto the elephant's large leg, described the animal as probably looking something like a big tree. Another described the elephant as a branch of a tree, since she had hold of the elephant’s tail. The final describer, equated the elephant's appearance to a snake, since he held onto the elephant’s trunk. Each one held a small and even accurate description of a portion of the elephant's appearance while at the same time, each failed and fell short of describing the totality of the elephant.
Today on the church calendar is Trinity Sunday; a day when we acknowledge that the church has traditionally tried to describe and understand God in three ways; as the creator, as the redeemer and the sustainer. Another way of speaking of the Trinity in the orthodox language of Father, Son and Holy Spirit; or the less traditional language of "God beyond us, God beside us and God within us!"
Like trying to describe the elephant, we all have a limited perception of what God is like and any attempt to describe God in words, pictures, sounds or form, will by definition fall short; for none of us can completely know God's majesty. And so, we use images, metaphors, illusions and adjectives; the best picture language we can find, to describe our experience, our perception of the God who has made us, a little lower than God's own self.
Certainly, one of the earliest descriptions of God, throughout many if not most cultures has been God the creator; the one who has brought into being, everything that exists. All life forms respond or at least relate to their environment. Some, through the creation process, evolution or random selection have acquired the abilities to survive, to fend off the dangers of the jungle just long enough to instinctively reproduce, perpetuating the species. Other life forms have developed some form of intelligence, where actions are not simply learned responses but are deliberate choices among many. Those higher, more developed species, like homo sapiens, "thinking earth creatures" pride themselves in being created just a little lower than the angels. We have come to understand ourselves as having dominion over all other life forms; to have power, authority and rights.
It is not hard to understand how earth creatures of antiquity began to ask those ultimate questions about the nature of the One who had made them; for we ask those same questions still. "Who is this God that made us and everything … what is the true nature of the world in which we live? What is the relationship between this God and this world, if anything... and who are we, anyway?"
Many answers have been given to those questions over the eons. Some of the answers have led civilizations to prosperity, cooperation and peace; sometimes those answers have led to destruction, hostility and war.
People of the book, Jews, Christians and Muslims have begun their ultimate descriptions of the nature of God and all things, sort of like grabbing hold of whatever part of the elephant they could, while trying to make sense of it all; recognizing the inadequacy of any language used.
This Trinity Sunday, it is good for us to think about God as Creator. But this creator-God is not one who causes us to be and then retreats; this God is a creative artist, who not only causes things to be, but is One who never quite leaves the creation alone; who always wants to meddle a bit, perfecting a little bit, enabling the creation to move along, to grow, to change to become. In this sense, as we speak about the Creator, we are also speaking about the Redeemer and the Sustainer [three in one]. God is beyond us, beside us and within us, causing us to become what God hopes we shall.
The Biblical writers had wonderful insight into creation. And for me, whenever we seem to be getting off-track, we need to return and listen to the description language of the Genesis writer who describes the elephant.
"In the beginning, God." Actually, the Hebrew: Bereshit Elohim means: in beginning God. There is no article in the word, although some say it is implied. In the beginning would be ba-reshit. So the Hebrew text causes a controversy in the very first word! This is not a scientific treatise; it is not an historical account, upon which we should argue evolution versus creation. This is the main faith statement of scripture. "In beginning to telling about the creation of all: GOD!"
How are we to understand ourselves and the environment in which we find ourselves? "In beginning GOD!" How should we relate to those with whom we share this planet, this nation, this community, this family? "In beginning: GOD!"
Over the chaos, the darkness, the void and the evil, God says "Let there be light!" And there was! And do you know what, "God saw that it was good!" And when God had finished creation, "God said that it was very good!" There is resistance, chaos and evil in the world but creation is good and God can overcome anything. By studying any art-work, any music, any novel, any form, we can learn something about its creator; not everything but a little. Our reverence for creation or the lack of it, reflects our reverence for the Creator or lack of it.
Jesus came into the world so that we could see the light more clearly, love the light more dearly and follow the light more nearly, day by day. How are we to live in relation to creation, to one another? Remember: "In the beginning: God!" It is God who has made and still makes. We, they, you, me, God's creation, none other.
Matthew’s Gospel began describing Jesus of Nazareth, the one born in a manger in Bethlehem as the Emmanuel, which means "God is with us!" Now, as Jesus departs from the disciples, leaving them to nurture and to teach, to baptize and be the church, Jesus reminds them that they’re not alone in creation, that "Emmanuel" God is with. Remember, I am with you always to the end of the age." Creation is dependent upon God and God shall not leave the earth creatures alone. For it is very Good!