For God, who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. (2 Corinthians 4:6)
I’ve been thinking about the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. That turn of phrase has intrigued me for a long time.
The glory of God is a frequent topic in Scripture. In the Old Testament, God’s glory is a serious issue. The people of Israel could not bear to hear His voice on Sinai, and asked Moses to be their mediator instead (Exodus 20). When Moses was permitted to see God’s “backside” (Exodus 34) on the mountain, he got the merest glimpse of the least part of the divine glory, and yet his face shown for days.
The Holy of Holies in the temple was so sacred that common people couldn’t enter. When Uzzah touched the Ark of the Covenant – even to keep it from slipping off a cart – God struck him down (2 Samuel 6).
In short, the Hebrews took God’s holiness deadly seriously. God was just and merciful, but nobody to treat lightly. Holiness meant separation, and nothing was holier than God. His holiness could kill you. He was so Other that even images of Him were forbidden.
Then along comes Jesus Christ, claiming to be God incarnate.
Suddenly God – of whom no image might be made – had a face.
That’s amazing, when you think of it.
If He really was the incarnation of that same God who terrified the Hebrews, a tremendous condescension had happened. The voltage had been stepped down infinitely, just so God could walk among men without leaving corpses behind wherever He went. To the contrary, this Holiness healed the sick and raised the dead.
Too often Christians forget what we’re dealing with in Jesus Christ. We take the incarnation for granted. We handle holy things lightly. We ought to remember what incredible power we’re dealing with. The Lion has agreed to be our friend, but it would be wise not to poke the Lion.
More than that, how amazing is it to look in a kind Man’s face, and encounter God Himself? As theologians have observed, only the Highest can descend to the very lowest level. God has always been perfect goodness, but Jesus Christ made that perfection touchable.
The phrase “perfection made better” comes to mind. It’s probably wrong in some theological way, but it’s what strikes me.
I have wondered about the passage in St. Matthew’s Gospel that says that, at Our Lord’s crucifixion, some saints rose from the dead. If I may put it this way without irreverence, it seems to be something that just happened; it doesn’t seem that Someone took action. So I have wondered if they rose because, such was the divine virtue of that shed blood, that some seeped into the ground at Calvary and raised (some of) the dead.