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Dei
Part 2 – The Plausibility of the Physicality of Bearing God’s
Image
At first, it would seem implausible that a spirit being could have any
form at all. However, in Part 2a – God as Spirit, it was demonstrated
that scripturally, spirit beings evidently do have spatial dimensions
(form) for they are constrained by both time and space. Consequently,
it must be concluded that the clear declaration that “God is Spirit” in
John 4 does not by itself preclude the possibility that God has a form
which could be represented by the physical human body.
God is not bound by space or time, so we cannot assume that God has
form simply because other spirits evidently do. At the same time, it
seems clear enough from Scripture that God chooses to operate within
both time and space. Therefore the next logical step in examining this
plausibility is to see if God is portrayed in Scripture as having form.
o Again, the plain reading of this account is that God was not
with Adam and Eve, but then He approached. This
approach is described as “walking.” Naturally, walking
requires legs. This would then suggest that God
approached them in some sort of tangible form, and that
form included legs.
• Matthew 18:10 – “See that you do not despise one of these little
ones, for I say to you that their angels in heaven continually see
the face of My Father who is in heaven.”
• John 5:37 – “And the Father who sent me has himself testified
concerning me. You have never heard his voice nor seen his
form.” (KJV – “shape”)
These are certainly not the only passages where God is portrayed in
human terms or human form, but these all have unique characteristics
which make it unreasonable to dismiss the idea of God having “form”
by invoking the label of “theophany” or “anthropomorphism.”
The next example is, however, the most compelling of them all. It is
also the most extensive passage.
18 Then Moses said, N/A This beautiful prayer of Moses comes from
‘I pray You, show me one who already knew God well. He was
Your glory!’ not asking God for an “approximation” of
His glory in some form that he as a man
could comprehend, he was asking to be
shown the true glory of God. If he was
shown anything different than God’s true
glory, it would not be a real answer to his
prayer.
19 And He [God] Since God is Here and in the verses that follow, if we
said, ‘I Myself will omnipresent, He cannot deny that God really did what He said He
make all My literally make “all His would do, we are calling His words untrue.
goodness pass goodness” to pass If our theology requires us to explain
before you… before Moses, for God is away the plain meaning of God’s words
not localized anywhere. about Himself, it is time to reevaluate our
theology.
20 But He said, ‘You This is only This would make the words of God
cannot see My face, metaphorical because meaningless. If God has no face, then
for no man can see God has no form and what possible purpose could there be in
Me and live!’ therefore does not have declaring that if a man were to see a face
a face which actually God does not have, that man could not
could be seen by human live? If we claim that it was simply the
eyes. “appearance” of a face that God would
call His own, but actually was not, then
we are suggesting that God is only putting
on a display of a human idea about what
He is like but which in truth is not who He
is. Furthermore, we would be claiming
that God fabricated a “face” for Himself
which He then told Moses that he could
not see.
22 and it will come This again is only Can we really be so sure that we have
about, while My metaphorical insight to say which words of God in this
glory is passing by, description of God not passage are literal and which are not? In
that I will put you in allowing Moses to see all the Scriptures, there are countless
the cleft of the rock His face, since God does passages which reference the “hand of
and cover you with not have a “hand” per God,” yet never once are we ever told
My hand until I have se. The “cleft of the that God does not have hands! It is only
passed by…’ rock” however, can be the presumption of our traditional
literally understood as theological understanding which requires
exactly that, but the us to do so. And when we apply it to a
obscuring of Moses view passage like this, we are forced into the
within the cleft of the duplicity of declaring parts of it as literal
rock by God’s “hand” and parts as non-literal with absolutely no
cannot be literal. justification within the text to do so!
‘Then I will take My God allows Moses to see Here again, the traditional theology forces
hand away and you the “afterglow” of His us into treating God’s words as
shall see My back, presence. Because God disingenuous since they cannot be taken
but My face shall not is only spirit, God does literally. God speaks of His face as if it is
be seen.’ not really have a face, real. God speaks of His hand as if it is
nor a “front”… nor a real. God even speaks of His back as if it
back. is real! Dare we suggest that these words
of God are mere pretense?
Our hermeneutics tell us that the Scriptures mean today what they
meant to the people to whom they were originally written. By the same
token, we have to conclude that God’s words here to Moses in this very
private and personal revelation actually mean what they would have
meant to Moses.
Must we assume that Moses prayed to see God’s glory, but then was
fully “aware” that God’s words about seeing His face were not literal;
God’s description of how He would use His hand were only
metaphorical; and that the “back” of God was only a visual display of
something not God’s back, but an “afterglow” of God’s pretending to
“pass by”? Was this what Moses had to accept as the answer to His
prayer to see God’s glory?
Moses had already seen the glory of God through His many
supernatural works… starting at the burning bush, the leprous hand,
and the rod that became a serpent. God’s glorious works continued
and Moses watched YHWH humiliate the gods of Egypt and embarrass
Pharaoh into submission. God’s glorious deliverance was visibly seen in
a fearful pillar of fire behind Israel and in the walls of water on either
side as they traversed the dry floor of the Red Sea. God’s glorious
provision came in the form of daily manna, a flock of birds, and water
that flowed out of the rock which followed them in the desert.
Moses was not asking God for one more private “light show.” Moses
knew that all of those miracles displayed the glory of God’s power, but
they were not themselves God’s Glory. His prayer was to see God
Himself!
This is why God had to say – in essence – “I will grant your request, but
there is a limit to how much you can see.”
Moses understood that God’s words meant exactly what they sounded
like. And that’s what they must mean to us today. God literally showed
Himself to Moses because there really is something of God that can be
seen by human eyes. God literally prevented Moses from seeing His
face because He really has a face which cannot be literally seen by a
living man. But God did show Himself to Moses and God does have
form. Moses saw it.
Significantly, the words that described what Moses was going to see –
before he saw it – were directly from God’s mouth; Moses only
recorded what God said. These words are not the feeble attempt of a
man to describe an indescribable experience (Moses doesn’t even
record his own response to the experience!); they are God’s own
descriptions of Himself and His own actions.
Conclusion
Yes, God has form. But we have no need to wonder what form God has,
for the words of Scripture in Gen. 1:26-27 tell us precisely what the
form is… it is the form which is physically visible in the bodies of
mankind – male and female. While this is certainly hard to fully
comprehend, we have absolutely no biblical basis to interpret these
words any other way.
Of all the people in the world who should know and understand this,
Bible-believing Christians should be at the top of the list. We have
God’s clear revelation in the Bible. We have a dependable hermeneutic
by which we can reliably understand it.
We should know the truth, but instead we’ve embraced and promoted
the lie.
Correcting this error can and will have a profound impact on how we
understand the rest of Scripture. In fact, this reordered understanding
will unlock insights into God’s purpose for mankind as fully integrated
body-spirit (or body-soul-spirit) beings that we’ve never seen before.