Wednesday, November 9, 2011

God's Purpose or our purpose for the husband:wife relationship: Questions for the Reader (Part 7) - Genesis Chapter 2

 
God's Purpose or our purpose for the husband:wife relationship

1.  What is God's purpose for the husband:wife relationship?

2.  What is our purpose for the husband:wife relationship?

3.  Whose purpose for this relationship dictates your thoughts and actions in this relatioship?

Insights from Scripture:

          In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth...And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness...so God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.
          And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it...(Genesis 1:1, 26-28)

Excerpts below from the book Adulterous Heart (by Barbara Lynette Peters)
          Imagine for a few moments, if you will, the truth.  This truth is contained clearly throughout Scripture and warrants your thorough analysis as well as mine.  Imagine that “in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth . . . he created it not in vain, he formed it to be inhabited” (Genesis 1:1, Isaiah 45:18). 
          So in this initial setting, Earth, God meticulously and carefully created a most suitable place for Himself to dwell among man.  He began by adding light to that which was previously dark.  He organized the two opposing states of light and dark and created what He called Day and Night.  As the details of Genesis chapter one and two slowly unfold, the order and purpose that is created out of emptiness and chaos are phenomenal and incomprehensible.  God not only created macro-order, He created micro-order to levels that we have yet to fathom.  The Garden of Eden was free of decay, death and sin.  It was full of life.
          God ordained every detail for His purposes.  One such purpose He revealed not in words, but in His actions.  God created a most suitable environment where He communed with man, spoke to man, allowed His presence to be sensed by man, provided for man, taught man, and walked near man.  God blessed man.  The intimacy of God’s relationship with man at this point, in this God designed and structured setting, may be far beyond our human ability to perceive.
_______________________________________________end of excerpt_____
          The Garden of Eden was the initial setting created by God where He would commune and relate intimately to man.  After man's ousting from this setting, God began orchestrating the next setting for Himself to intimately commune with man, dwell among man.  This setting was amongst the people He created, the Israelites, in the Tent of Meetings, and later the Temple. 
          Even before the destruction of this second setting specifically ordained for the intimate communion of the Holy God with men, God began orchestrating the next place in which the Holy God would dwell among man, a human temple.  His name is Jesus Christ.
          God's orchestration of life on Earth did not stop there, He made it possible for the Holy God to dwell within man by the death & resurrection of His Son, Jesus the Christ.  When Christ died on the cross, overcame death and ascended into Heaven, His sacrifice made it possible for people who believed in God's provision to have the Holy Spirit dwell within them.  God enabled His Spirit to be deposited into human temples.  In order for these human temples to be a suitable place for the Holy God, they needed to be redeemed, purified, transformed, changed, willingly die to their flesh, and live by the Power of God alone!  God begins a work of preparing our human temple for His dominion in it after we believe upon His Son Christ, and as we willingly die to self daily.  God desires to meticulously and carefully create a most suitable place for Himself to dwell within man. 

          Will we surrender to His creative work, or are we more concerned about what we desire to create of our lives?

          The purpose of marriage has to do with our human temple being used by God to be spiritually fruitful and multiply the likeness of the Godhead in our own lives, and that of those God places in our lives (our children, neighbors, friends, etc.)  The purpose of marriage has less to do with us being entertained, meeting a societal goal, having a mate for the sake of having a mate, us not being alone, having an instant sexual partner, or changing someone into what we want them to be.  While God said it was not good that man should be alone (Genesis 2:18), He also said that He would never leave us or forsake us (Deutoronomy 31:6,8; Joshua 1:5; 1Chronicles 28:20; Hebrews 13:5).  He never promised that humans would never leave or forsake each other.  His Word demonstrates repeatedly that we are faithless, but He is the only forever faithful Husband. 

          Do we trust God enough to be the One and only for us?  Or are we still too overcome by our fears, our own desires & expectations, and those of the world around us so that we don't let go of everything else and hold on to Him alone?  Are we able to surrender our desire for a person to fill the void, and trust God to provide whatever He chooses, when He chooses, while we instead go about doing the Kingdom work for which He designed us? 

          I sense by the many conversations with Christ followers and others that we are instead gripped by fear, paralyzed by our expectations, mesmerized by the teachings of our world, and overcome by our desires.  We are more loyal to what we want for ourselves, than what God desires for the life He created in us.

Created in God's image?
         In Chapter 1 of his book, One for All, H. Daniel Hilliard gives amazing perspective on the spiritual implications of being created in God's image.  My natural mind has most often reverted to thinking of this concept from a physical perspective, but my natural thoughts are so very limited and lacking.         
          The word image has both spiritual and physical meanings. In spiritual (non‐physical) terms, an image is a shade (shadow) or phantom (mental representation); and, in physical terms, an image is an idol or figure (figurine or statute).  Both categories of definitions have the same implication: a thing that represents someone or something else greater than itself.  Adam was an image of God because Jehovah God personally left a deposit or imprint of Himself—Eternal Breath and Mindset—in him; but, Adam was not exactly the same as, or identical to God.  

Adam’s Purpose
          At the time of his creation, Adam was an immortal living soul—mind and body—that was inspired by an eternal God-consciousness or spirit. In truth, he was an interface. An interface connects two or more things that could not otherwise be connected or joined directly together.  Adam bridged or connected the supernatural (unseen) world of God to the physical world.
     With his visible self or body, Adam could sense (see, hear, touch, taste and smell) things in the physical world and then process those senses with his mind or thoughts.  And, with his spirit, he could perceive and sense things in the unseen world of God and then process those perceptions and senses, too, with his mind or thoughts. 
    And God blessed them; and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it…”        Genesis 1:28a
     Although Adam was the first one of his kind of life-form, when God looked at him He saw the fullness of humanity or the entire human race. As such, Adam had, at least, three primary responsibilities:
1. To stand before God and receive the blessing—verbal adoration or warm salutations—and the Earthly authority for all (the rest) of his kind of life-form.
2. To set the tone or pattern of agreement with God for all (the rest) of his kind of life-form
3. To reproduce others of his kind, in the image and likeness of God, and then equally share with them the blessing and authority he received from God.

Excerpts from:  One for All: the message of salvation in God's own words by H. Daniel Hilliard.

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