Scripture Readings : Psalm 96; Romans 11:33-36; John
17:1-24
An Iowa
farm kid named Roger was a friend of mine during my seminary days. Roger loved
to sing, but he couldn’t carry a tune in a bucket. When I sat next to Roger in
chapel, and we were singing, when the music went up Roger went down, and when
the music went down Roger went up, and he wasn’t singing harmony.
He had absolutely no idea what pitch we were singing.
I don’t think he even capable of knowing what the word “pitch” means. But Roger
loved to sing.
Around that house above Vantage, WA, Summer 2014 |
Some people, when they know they can’t carry a tune,
stop singing completely. The very thought of singing embarrasses them. Roger
knew perfectly well that he wasn’t doing what anyone else was doing when we
sang, but he didn’t care. He sang anyway.
He told me that, when music was going on, he felt it
do something inside him and he wanted to be a part of it. He wouldn’t let the
fact that he couldn’t sing stop him from the happiness of being part of it. He
told me this because I was young enough, in those days (I was 23), to be much
ruder than I am now, and I just came straight out and asked him about this. Why
do you sing?
Once I understood this, it was fun sitting next to
Roger in chapel. It was all I could do to keep from laughing, and he knew it.
Sometimes, when it was really bad, I would catch his eye, and he would just
give me a knowing look.
This is important, because it helps us understand
something about glory, and especially about the glory of God. It helps us
understand why it is that God seems to want glory.
For God to love glory is like what it is to love
music. The best way to understand glory is to soak it in from the poetry of the
Bible. The Book of Psalms is the songbook of the Old Testament. It was meant to
be sung. If you spend enough time with that ancient songbook, you will realize
that most of the places in the Old Testament that speak of God’s glory are on
the verge of music.
“Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all
the earth. Sing to the Lord, praise his name; proclaim his salvation day after
day. Declare his glory among the nations.” (Psalm 96:1-3) The glory of God is
like joyful music. The glory of God is like the invitation to sing.
With God there is something to sing about: for “the
Lord made the heavens.” (96:5) “Proclaim his salvation day after day. Declare
his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples.” (96:2-3)
The creation of the heavens and the earth, the story
of salvation (which is new life for the soul, and the healing of all wounds,
and the restoring of all losses, and the mending of all tragedies, and the new
heavens and the new earth): these are truly works of love. These things are
like joyful music. To give glory to God is to take part in the music of
something worth celebrating.
There’s a high school football team I know of that
sings a victory song on the field when they win a game. The words are set to
the tune “You’re a Grand Old Flag”. They don’t sing it very well, but they sing
it with gusto.
I don’t believe they sing it because they think they
are great singers who deserve to be heard. They sing because they are happy.
For one thing, they are relieved. The game is done.
They have won, and it is a great thing to win. They are happy.
They have put all they had into a game; or they have
watched their teammates play and give their hundred and ten percent, just like
their coaches wanted. When you have won, after all that, you have a natural invitation
to sing. It’s a plunge into glory and it’s not big headed at all.
Some seasons, the song doesn’t get sung as often as
they would like. But the fact that such a song exists reminds us that the
enjoyment of glory is not necessarily selfish or egotistical. It is just happy.
No harm can come from the glory of being happy. This is at the hart of the
glory of what God does, and who God is.
There is an ultimate game (an extreme game) that is
being played on the field we call the heavens and the earth. At the end of this
ultimate game (this extreme game) a victory song will be sung. Part of the
beauty of this game is that even our defeats, and our injuries, and our losses
play into the victory.
The Lord is the coach, the team captain, and the
quarterback, all in one. The Lord is the player on whom the whole team depends.
The Lord does not play for his ego. God plays for happiness. God relishes that
victory song. He waits for it and works for it.
“Proclaim his salvation day after day.” Salvation is
shorthand for the long story that includes everything that has ever happened
and ever will happen. Salvation is the story, most of all, of everything that
God has done, and everything that God will do.
“Ascribe to the Lord, O families of nations, ascribe
to the Lord glory and strength. Ascribe to the Lord the glory due his name;
bring an offering and come into his courts. Worship the Lord in the splendor of
his holiness; tremble before him, all the earth.” (96:7-9)
This psalm pictures the whole world coming to The Temple
in Jerusalem .
The Temple was
the place where one could worship and watch the sacrifice that was made for the
forgiveness of sin. The Temple
was where the God’s word was kept, and spoken, and heard.
Everything was there. The celebration of God’s creation
was there. The story of the fall of our world into sin, and misery, and
disaster was there. The story of the calling of a people to be God’s people,
who would be a blessing to all other people, was there. The history of
everything that happened to those people was kept there: their stubbornness,
their lack of faith in God, their repeated betrayals of God, their worship of
other things besides God, their repeated times of repentance and grace.
Read the psalms. It was all there to be sung about.
It was all a part of what God was up to, and it was all a part of God’s glory.
The Temple was
as full of singing as it was supposed to be full of glory. The singing was a
rehearsal for the victory song at the end of the old creation and the beginning
of the new one.
In The Temple, the pattern of what God is about could
be seen: a pattern of love and of victory. In this world we often don’t see
God’s patterns. Sometimes we see only random events like random dots on a
canvas.
There was a French painter of the late eighteen
hundreds (named George Seurat) who made his paintings out of tiny drops of
paint on the canvas. If you stand too close to his paintings you see nothing
but spots. You don’t see the pattern that makes the spots into a portrait, or a
landscape.
Worry, fear, anger, and doubt are like taking a
position in life that puts us too close to events to see the pattern they form.
We only see random, meaningless spots. Faith means standing at the right
distance to see the whole picture and what it means.
There are medical cases where, as a result of a
stroke or tumor, a person becomes unable to recognize the pattern of the face
of their wife, or their husband, or anyone at all. This is not dementia,
because these people remember the other person clearly; but not their face.
They can’t recognize the familiar pattern of the face. (See the writings of Dr.
Oliver Sacks)
Some people are actually born with this rare
condition. It’s called “prosopagnosia”. People with this condition recognize
voices, and clothing, and even smells, but not faces. They lack the ability to
see the pattern that is always with them; the pattern of a familiar face of
another person who is the center of their life. The pattern is there, but they
don’t see it.
It is hard to join in singing the music of the glory
of God when we cannot see the pattern of his love and his victory. The worship
and the sacrifices in the temple told the story of salvation from the point
where the pattern could be seen. They clarified that pattern for those who had forgotten
it.
The scriptures also tell us the story of our
salvation, with all its ups, and downs, and repetitions. We even see the
pattern in the enormous length of the story: those long centuries of the story
that lead up to Jesus.
The story of God coming down into our world in the
poverty and hardships of the birth of Jesus, in Bethlehem , shows us the pattern of how God
loves and wins in poverty and hardship. The story of the long silent years of
the childhood of Jesus, and the long silent years of his work in the
carpenter’s shop (about which we know nothing) shows us how God loves and wins
in long, long silence.
There is the story of the wandering life of Jesus on
the road as a teacher and a healer of the sick. There is the story of his
brutal and gruesome death on the cross. There is the story of his resurrection,
and the ascending of Jesus into heaven. All of these show us the pattern of how
God loves and wins. They show us God’s glory: how God enters our life and goes
to every needy place in us. There he changes us as only God can, and gives what
only God can give.
There are phrases that sum up teachings in the Bible
in ways that keep us safe. These phrases are like anchors in a storm that keep
a ship safe from being tossed and broken by the waves, or driven onto the
rocks. There are phrases like “grace alone” and “faith alone”. One of those
anchors is the phrase “to God be the glory”; or, “glory to God alone”.
For the most part, I don’t think we usually think of
wanting glory for ourselves, and we may have trouble thinking about God loving
glory without having some unsavory thoughts about God. After all we have been
taught that it is not right for us to go around looking for glory. So it’s hard
for us to imagine it being right for God.
There are reasons why glory should be given to God
alone.
One reason why glory should be given to God alone is
that it is the only safe thing to do with glory. It is safe to give glory to
God because God doesn’t need glory.
If we have a notion of what it means to seek glory we
think it has something to do with self-seeking. We want something for
ourselves. We want some measure of control. We might even seek glory as a
substitute for love, because we don’t understand love.
God is the only safe focus for glory because he doesn’t
need it. I think God doesn’t need glory because God is love (1 John 4:8).
People use other people for glory without giving it a
name. Sometimes they know what they’re doing; sometimes not. We use people for
our own glory because we are not so good at love. We want control because we
don’t trust love. We don’t think love is enough.
We don’t trust God because we don’t trust love.
Perhaps we can’t grasp the concept of being truly loved by God and so we seek
substitutes. We even may make our religion into a glory-machine, a thing to
make us impressive to others, and to ourselves. We turn religion into a means
of achieving mastery.
With God, it’s not like that. The universe does not
revolve around us, but it does revolve around God. Everything comes from God.
It continues through God’s care. It has a purpose that is known only to God.
Everything is intended to lead us to God, if we will let it.
Paul says something like this in the verses we read
from Romans. “For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be
the glory forever! Amen.” (Romans 11:36)
There is glory, showing up again. It’s true that
there is control in God’s. God is in control. But God’s glory is not aimed at
control. It is aimed at mercy and it is aimed at giving happiness, which is
another way of saying that God’s glory is his love.
In Romans, Paul has been struggling with his
observation that the human race, in its rebellion and fallenness, seems to
throw up obstacles and resistance to God at every step of the way. It seems to
be human nature to take the gifts, the blessings, the callings, and the
promises of God to use them for our own glory.
So Paul writes about God’s radical way of dealing
with this situation. In Romans 11:32 he writes: “God has bound all people over
to disobedience so that he may have mercy on them all.”
It is a way of saying that God has let us be
ourselves so that he can be perfectly himself and show us that his grace and
love can make the difference. He is the secret that changes our lives. That is
what makes Paul sing about the glory of God. It is the glory of God to give us
the glory of mercy.
In John we see into the heart of God before the
creation of the universe. We see that
the everlasting nature of God is to give glory. Jesus is praying to his Father like this, “I have brought you glory on earth
by completing the work you gave me to do. And now, Father ,
glorify me in your presence with the glory I had with you before the world
began.” (John 17:4-5)
The everlasting glory of the Son is to give glory to
the Father . The everlasting glory of
the Father is to give it to the Son.
They are always giving each other glory: not grabbing it for themselves. The Father , the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as well, are
an eternal fountain of glory-giving.
So God does not need glory from us. In himself, from
everlasting, God is a love that loves to give glory as an expression of love.
In the Biblical languages, the word “glory” carries
the impression of light and weight. Here is how the Bible expresses this. For light,
Isaiah says, “Arise and shine, for thy light has come and the glory of the Lord
has arisen upon thee.” (Isaiah 60:1) For weight, Paul says, “This slight,
momentary affliction is preparing us for an eternal weight of glory beyond all
comparison.” (2 Corinthians 4:17)
Glory reveals, as light does. Glory is like a light
that shows you that you have never really seen anything so great before.
What does weight have to do with glory? Car-makers
design car doors to shut with a certain sound that makes people think that
their cars are built solid and heavy. They build a glorious sound into their
car doors. The glory of God is the sense of something being more substantial,
more solid, and more real than anything you have seen or heard before.
When Jesus glorifies his Father
it is because he reveals his Father ,
and it is because he shows the solidness of the faithfulness of the Father . And the Father
gives the same glory back. What is the solidness of the Father
and of the Son? It is the cross: heavy and revealing. Solidness, in God’s case,
is a faithfulness you can trust, because it involves him in the cross, for your
sake. “He gave his only begotten Son.” It is light because it shows you how
“God so loved the world.”
Jesus’ glory (that shows the Father ’s
glory) is the cross. This has been done to take away the sin of the world, and
our sin. (John 1:29) God has done this for all people, to “have mercy on them
all.” (Romans 11:32)
We say “glory to God alone” because God has done the
incredible, the impossible, the inconceivable. God has done for the world (God
has done for us) what no one else could do.
And God has done this in order to give us as a gift
to himself, for his own victory and joy. This is his glory. Jesus prays about
this, in this way, as he prays for us and for those who will believe through
us: “My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in
me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father ,
just as you are in me and I am in you…. I have given them the glory that you
gave me.” (John 17:20-21)
We are like plants rooted in the soil of God, and
rained on by the love and nurture of God. We are like plants, whose roots, when
they are healthy, grow deeper and deeper, protected from drought and frost.
How can a plant boast about its good soil and the
rain that makes it grow? To God alone be the glory!
To say that the glory belongs to God alone does not
mean that we have a God who is hungry for glory. It means that we have a God
who loves to give glory, and we can belong to God no other way than by loving
to give glory.
To say “Glory to God alone” is to respond to an
invitation by God to live by learning how to trust. It means we can live
without giving our life the “white-knuckle treatment”. It means not having to
be afraid and worried all the time.
Since the glory of God is to be a giver, trust means
you being a giver. Since the glory of God is faithfully merciful, living for
God’s glory alone means being merciful. And it does mean giving glory to
others: out of love, not out of neediness.
It means you connect the dots of life and you see the
patterns of God. You see how God loves, and how God wins. You see the cross and
the resurrection, and you live accordingly, God’s people must live accordingly
together, because that is where God lives. That alone is the place where God
dwells and can be found. There, alone, is the glory. Glory be to God alone.
hi pastor dennis,
ReplyDeleteinspiring as ever! most definitely something i needed to read today. thank you.
have a great day! :)
When I think of the words, "All to the glory of God", I think of Bach.
ReplyDeleteLove his music but I love even more that he wrote it to the Glory of God.