"What is God?"
Answer: A.
W. Tozer wrote, “’What is God like?’ If by that question we mean ‘What is God
like in Himself?’ there is no answer. If we mean ‘What has God disclosed about
Himself that the reverent reason can comprehend?’ there is, I believe, an
answer both full and satisfying.”
Tozer is
right in that we cannot know what God is with respect to Himself. The book of
Job declares, “Can you discover the depths of God? Can you discover the limits
of the Almighty? They are high as the heavens, what can you do? Deeper than
Sheol, what can you know?” (Job 11:7–8).
However, we
can ask what God has revealed about Himself in His Word and in creation that
“the reverent reason” can grasp.
When Moses
was directed by God to go to the Egyptian Pharaoh and demand the release of the
Israelites, Moses asked God, “Behold, I am going to the sons of Israel, and I
will say to them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you.’ Now they may
say to me, ‘What is His name?’ What shall I say to them?” (Exodus 3:13).
The answer
God gave Moses was simple, yet very revealing: “God said to Moses, ‘I AM WHO I
AM’; and He said, ‘Thus you shall say to the sons of Israel, “I AM has sent me
to you”’” (Exodus 3:14). The Hebrew text in verse 14 literally says, “I be that
I be.”
This name
speaks to the fact that God is pure existence, or what some call pure
actuality. Pure actuality is that which IS with no possibility to not exist.
Put another way, many things can have existence (e.g., human beings, animals,
plants), but only one thing can be existence. Other things have “being” but
only God is Being.
The fact
that God alone is Being leads to at least five truths about what God is – what
type of being God is.
First, God
alone is a self-existent being and the first cause of everything else that
exists. John 5:26 simply says, “The Father has life in Himself.” Paul preached,
“He is not served by human hands, as if He needed anything, because He Himself
gives all men life and breath and everything else” (Acts 17:25).
Second, God
is a necessary being. A necessary being is one whose nonexistence is
impossible. Only God is a necessary being; all other things are contingent
beings, meaning they could not exist. However, if God did not exist, then
neither would anything else. He alone is the necessary being by which
everything else currently exists – a fact that Job states: “If He should
determine to do so, If He should gather to Himself His spirit and His breath,
All flesh would perish together, And man would return to dust” (Job 34:14–15).
Third, God
is a personal being. The word personal in this context does not describe
personality (e.g., funny, outgoing, etc.); rather, it means “having intent.”
God is a purposeful being who has a will, creates, and directs events to suit
Him. The prophet Isaiah wrote, “I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and
there is no one like Me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient
times things which have not been done, saying, ‘My purpose will be established,
And I will accomplish all My good pleasure’” (Isaiah 46:9–10).
Fourth, God
is a triune being. This truth is a mystery, yet the whole of Scripture and life
in general speaks to this fact. The Bible clearly articulates that there is but
one God: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one” (Deut. 6:4). But
the Bible also declares that there is a plurality to God. Before Jesus ascended
to heaven, He commanded His disciples: “Go therefore and make disciples of all
the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy
Spirit” (Matthew 28:19). Notice the singular “name” in the verse; it does not
say “names,” which would convey three gods. There is one name belonging to the
three Persons who make up the Godhead.
Scripture in
various places clearly calls the Father God, Jesus God, and the Holy Spirit
God. For example, the fact that Jesus possesses self-existence and is the first
cause of everything is stated in the first verses of John: “All things came
into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has
come into being. In Him was life” (John 1:3–4). The Bible also says that Jesus
is a necessary being: “He is before all things, and in Him all things hold
together” (Colossians 1:17).
Fifth, God
is a loving being. In the same way that many things can exist but only one
thing can be existence, people and other living things can possess and
experience love, but only one thing can be love. First John 4:8 makes the
simple ontological statement, “God is love.”
What is God?
God is the only one who can say, “I be that I be.” God is pure existence,
self-existent, and the source of everything else that possesses existence. He
is the only necessary being, is purposeful/personal, and possesses both unity
and diversity.
God is also
love. He invites you to seek Him and discover the love He has for you in His
Word and in the life of His Son Jesus Christ, the one who died for your sins
and made a way for you to live with Him for eternity.
No comments: