Trowel and Sword: Does God have real feelings?
Steve Voorwinde
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In taking all of the Bible's references to God's emotions metaphorically, Calvin was not alone. He was following a tradition that went all the way back to the very beginnings of Christian theology. The Church Fathers had so reacted against the antics of the Greek gods (such as the lusts of Zeus, the incontinence of Aphrodite, and the cowardice of Ares) that by default they had opted for the description of God provided by the Greek philosophers. Such a God has been described as 'heartless, graceless, and faceless.' He was apathetic and without compassion. In their efforts to distance the God of Israel from the immoral gods of Greek mythology, the Fathers had unwittingly embraced the cold God of Greek philosophy. Rather than run the risk of ascribing unworthy emotions to God, they would rather he have no emotions at all!
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This very brief historical sketch places Calvin's comments in a context. His view was typical, rather than exceptional. He was representative of a consensus that had dominated Christian theology since the days of the early Fathers. This consensus was not decisively challenged till the twentieth century. Following the horrors of World War 2 Christian theologians found it increasingly difficult to believe in a God who was remote and emotionally uninvolved. The challenge was spearheaded by two prominent theologians in the Lutheran tradition - Jurgen Moltmann in Germany and Kazo Kitamori in Japan. In the aftermath of Auschwitz and Hiroshima the biblical evidence stood in urgent need of re-examination. The breakdown of the age-old consensus, based as it was on Greek philosophy, had begun.
This has led to one of the most significant theological developments in recent times. At long last theologians are beginning to take God's emotions seriously. Bible verses that for centuries - if not millennia! - had been taken metaphorically are now being read literally. So great has been the change that Kitamori has spoken of 'the revival of the Jewish way of thinking as against the Greek.' The result has been a God who is near, who is involved, and who suffers with humanity.
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But this re-evaluation of the Bible's picture of God brings with it some problems of its own.
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For Christians there is a further deterrent against simply projecting our own emotions onto God. How do we know that God is not fickle and capricious on the one hand or unfeeling and distant on the other? The answer of course lies in Jesus Christ. He is the perfect image of God. Therefore in him we see more clearly than anywhere else not only God's love, compassion and joy, but also his sorrow, anger and zeal. Because of Jesus we know beyond the shadow of a doubt that God does have real feelings. He is passionate and full of pathos. The emotions that Scripture attributes to him are to be taken at face value.
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A careful reading of the Old Testament shows that God's emotions do not occur randomly. They come in a distinct pattern. That pattern is covenantal in character. The Rev. Michael Flinn of the Reformed Church of Dovedale, New Zealand, has done some significant work on this and I am indebted to him for this insight. The emotions of God are invariably related to his covenant with his people.
It is out of love that he enters into the covenant (Deut 7:6-13). His jealousy or zeal arises from the intensity and exclusiveness of the covenant bond (Exod 20:4-6). When his partner breaks the covenant he reacts with anger/wrath (Exod 32:10-13). Subsequently it is in compassion that he restores the covenant relationship (Deut 30:3). When the covenant is restored, he again rejoices and delights in his covenant partner (Deut 30:9, 10).
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