Knowing God, Chapter One — The Study of God
// June 12th, 2009 // Comments Off // Books, Knowing God - J.I. Packer
Current Mood:
Happy
I’ve had this book for YEARS, and I’ve never made it all the way through. That’s not the fault of the author; I just have ADD when it comes to books, especially theological ones. I read some of this, some of that and then back to some of this. As I’ll be going back to school this fall, I’m trying to discipline myself as far as reading and Bible study go. So here I am, starting this excellent book again.
In Chapter one, Packer establishes that the study of God is CRUCIAL for everyone:
Knowing about God is crucially important for the living of our lives.….we are cruel to ourselves if we try to live in the world without knowing about the God whose world it is and who runs it. Disregard the study of God and you sentence yourself to stumble and blunder through life blindfolded, as it were, with no sense of direction and no understanding of what surrounds you. This way you can waste your life and lose your soul.
He then provides five basic truths that Christians know about God as a guide on our journey of studying God:
1. God has spoken to man, and the Bible is his Word, given to us to make us wise unto salvation.
2. God is Lord and King over his world; he rules all things for his own glory, displaying his perfections in all that he does, in order that men and angels may worship and adore him.
3. God is Savior, active in sovereign love through the Lord Jesus Christ to rescue believers from the guilt and power of sin, to adopt them as his children and to bless them accordingly.
4. God is triune; there are within the Godhead three persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and the work of salvation is one in which all three act together, the Father purposing redemption, the Son securing it, and the Spirit applying it.
5. Godliness means responding to God’s revelation in trust and obedience, faith and worship, prayer and praise, submission and service. Life must be seen and lived in light of God’s Word. This, and nothing else, is true religion.
He then goes on to inform the reader of the themes that this journey will consist of:
The Godhead of God: the qualities of deity which set God apart from humans and mark the difference and distance between the Creator and his creatures. Such qualitities as his self-self existence, his infinity, his eternity, his unchangeableness.
The powers of God: His almightiness, his omniscience, his omnipresence.
The perfections of God, the aspects of his moral charcter which are manifested in his words and deeds — his holiness, his love and mercy, his truthfulness, his faithfulness, his goodness, his patience, his justice. We shall have to take note of what pleases him, what offends him, what awakens his wrath, what affords him satisfaction and joy.
He then says that we need to stop and ask ourselves a “very fundamental” question before going further: What is my ultimate aim and object in occupying my mind with these things? What do I intend to do with my knowledge about God, once I have it?
The point of the question is for us to really examine ourselves and think about WHY we’re embarking on this study. Is it because we want to gain knowledge and look down on other who don’t have such knowledge? Or is it because we truly want to know and enjoy God for ourselves, so that we may respond to it and CONFORM our lives to it?
I sat for a few minutes and really thought about the question. Honesty, yes, I DO want to study to be smarter than other people. I like being smart. But being smart about God does nothing for me personally, unless I APPLY it to my life and desire to live according to His word. That’s my ultimate goal: To learn all I can about the God who created me, and in so doing, become the person he created me to be. Any other reason is truly a waste of time.
Lastly, Packer talks about meditating on the truth. I know when I think of meditating, I think of yoga, gurus, so-called spiritual enlightenment, and a whole host of other unbiblical things. But that’s not what he means here. He defines meditation as:
.…the activity of calling to mind, and thinking over, and dwelling on, and applying to oneself, the various things that one knows abou the works and ways and purposes and promises of God. It is an activity of holy thought, consciously performed in the presence of God, under the eye of God, as a means of communion with God.
Its purpose is to clear one’s mental and spiritual vision of God, and to let his truth make its full and proper impact on one’s mind and heart. It is a matter of talking to oneself about God and oneself; it is, indeed, often a matter of arguing with oneself, reasoning oneself out of moods of doubt and unbelief into a clear apprehension of God’s power and grace.
Its effect is ever to humble us, as we contemplate God’s greatness and glory and our own littleness and sinfulness, and to encourage and reassure us.…as we contemplate the unsearchable riches of divine mercy displayed in the Lord Jesus Christ.
THAT kind of meditation I can DO!
The last sentence of the chapter says:
God help us, then, to put our knowledge about God to this use, that we all may in truth “know the Lord.”
AMEN!
Knowing God, Chapter One — The Study of God



