Friday, March 14, 2014

Who Is More Normal: Humans or God?

The word “normal” can have positive, neutral, or negative connotations. For example, if you call your day “normal,” maybe you were pain-free for the first time all year, possibly nothing strange happened, or perhaps you were bored.

Well, to call humans or God “normal” might sound insulting. American kids learn in school that everybody is unique. In a medical or psychological sense, “normal” is an acceptable label. But in terms of peer pressure or intelligence or talent, normal may not be your favorite adjective. As for God, the Bible sings His praises so boldly that calling Him “normal” could sound blasphemous.

To answer the title question, juxtapose the common activities of man and God with their original or actual nature. If man is normal, then his thoughts, words, and deeds often or always match his nature. The same goes for God. In this sense, “normal” relates more to accurate versus inaccurate than positive versus negative.

What about Man?

Is he normal? Do his common practices and habits reflect his moral and physical nature? A non-Christian might say “yes”—we mess up occasionally, but most of our actions are morally sound. Further, as evolving creatures, our physical exercise, inventive minds, and modern society mimic our generally progressive status.

A Christian might also say “yes”—we are fallen and sinful people, in great need of God’s mercy; see Romans 5. Moreover, our efforts to fight disease, raise living standards, and end violence and bad governance are simply evidence of the Fall; see Genesis 3.

I agree with the latter points, but I think they fail to answer the question. I believe man is entirely abnormal. In the creation story of Genesis 1-2, God called His work “very good” after He created Adam and Eve. They had never sinned, there was no curse, and life and reality were as similar to heaven on earth as we ever knew.

No one knows how long the first man and woman followed God’s original plan for their lives—a day, a decade? But until that first transgression, they were not only innocent—they were normal. Their actions matched their nature, which was both moral and immortal. Through wickedness we became permanently abnormal. Death and danger threaten every soul—except those whom Jesus Christ glorifies in heaven following repentance and faith in Him.

What about God?

Is He normal? That is, does His conduct match His character? If normal means living out exactly who oneself is supposed to be, then God is the embodiment of normalcy! The Bible supports this in Numbers 23, 1 Samuel 15, Nehemiah 9, Isaiah 46, Malachi 3, Romans 11, and Hebrews 13. A favorite of mine is in James 1: “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning.” Were He less than normal, the universe would be in chaos—if it would exist at all.

If I can avoid sounding blasphemous once more, God is so consistent with His nature—of which thankfully He has revealed so much in the Bible—that He is even predictable! Think about it…if you have a perfectly normal day, you can essentially forecast what will happen when you awake. If God always does what He says He will do, you can trust in everything He says all the time.

None of this is meant to demean God, only to glorify Him. He is so abnormal to our mindset that He is supremely normal. His power and sovereignty are so unpredictable to us that God exercises them in ways that are altogether predictable and awesome at the same time.

God’s perfect track record includes offering love, grace, mercy, and justice to all of His creation, particularly in sending Jesus Christ into this world as “the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14). Yet when the Son of God died on the cross and rose again on the third day—the least imaginable but most powerful event in history—Jesus also did something greater than extend salvation to all who believe in Him. John 17 cites Jesus and God, His “righteous Father,” as giving glory, one to the other…and that is the most normal thing the biblical Triune God ever does!

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