Americans have this habit of...
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Americans have this habit of making God into their own image. When we do that, we get it wrong. That is why Moses was told by God that one cannot see his face and live. French intellectual Blaise Pascal tells us why:
Man is nothing by a subject of natural error that cannot be eradicated except through grace. Nothing shows him the truth, everything deceives him... The senses are disturbed by passions, which produce false impressions.
(Pensees, p. 45)
Since as a result of our sinfulness we mess up the way we perceive things, no wonder we don't get God right and we cannot see his face. The only way to know Christ, it seems, is in Christ. He is the lens we need to see God as he really is, in all his forgiving love. Martin Luther sheds penetrating insight on why we need Christ to know God:
So completely does everything depend on the Son that no one can really know anything about God unless the Son, who thoroughly knows the Father's heart reveals it.
(What Luther Says, p. 149)
The incarnate Son of God is, therefore, the covering in which the divine majesty presents himself to us with all his gifts and does so in such a manner that there is no sinner too wretched to be able to approach him with the firm assurance of obtaining pardon. This is the one and only view of the divinity that is possible in this life.
(Luther's Works, Vol. 2, p. 49)
Man is nothing by a subject of natural error that cannot be eradicated except through grace. Nothing shows him the truth, everything deceives him... The senses are disturbed by passions, which produce false impressions.
(Pensees, p. 45)
Since as a result of our sinfulness we mess up the way we perceive things, no wonder we don't get God right and we cannot see his face. The only way to know Christ, it seems, is in Christ. He is the lens we need to see God as he really is, in all his forgiving love. Martin Luther sheds penetrating insight on why we need Christ to know God:
So completely does everything depend on the Son that no one can really know anything about God unless the Son, who thoroughly knows the Father's heart reveals it.
(What Luther Says, p. 149)
The incarnate Son of God is, therefore, the covering in which the divine majesty presents himself to us with all his gifts and does so in such a manner that there is no sinner too wretched to be able to approach him with the firm assurance of obtaining pardon. This is the one and only view of the divinity that is possible in this life.
(Luther's Works, Vol. 2, p. 49)

