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Showing posts with label man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label man. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2018

GET YOUR HEAD RIGHT; GET YOUR HEART RIGHT; GET YOUR FAMILY RIGHT (audio)

The 3rd message in the sermon series:  HEALING WOUNDED FAMILIES.  The title of this message is:  GET YOUR HEAD RIGHT; GET YOUR HEART RIGHT; GET YOUR FAMILY RIGHT.


Listen well and leave a comment.


If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/   

 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 
Visit the ministry’s website at baileytabernaclecme.org

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
P.O. Box 3145 
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35403

Monday, October 1, 2018

WHAT IS YOUR FAMILY SUPPOSED TO LOOK LIKE

Message #2 in the sermon series:  HEALING WOUNDED FAMILIES.  The title of this message is:  WHAT IS YOUR FAMILY SUPPOSED TO LOOK LIKE.


Listen well and leave a comment.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/   

 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 
Visit the ministry’s website at baileytabernaclecme.org

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
P.O. Box 3145 
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35403

Thursday, August 23, 2018

LET US MAKE MEN

A message for all of us and for all of us men.  The title is LET US MAKE MEN


Listen well and leave a comment.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/

 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 
Visit the ministry’s website at baileytabernaclecme.org

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
P.O. Box 3145 
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35403


Thursday, September 8, 2016

Has God Surely Said?


Now the serpent was more cunning than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. And he said to the woman, “Has God indeed said, ‘You shall not eat of every tree of the garden’?”
And the woman said to the serpent, “We may eat the fruit of the trees of the garden; but of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God has said, ‘You shall not eat it, nor shall you touch it, lest you die.’ ”
Then the serpent said to the woman, “You will not surely die. For God knows that in the day you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” (Genesis 3:1-5)

The serpent was slick (figuratively and literally).  He mixed his lies with God’s truth the way an assassin uses wine to mask the taste of poison or a politician uses a national distress to obscure a grab for power.  The snake said that knowing good and evil would make the humans more like God, but he conveniently neglected to stipulate that they still wouldn’t be gods. They’d just be mortals with the knowledge of how thoroughly they’d screwed up.

The funny thing is, we still fall for that half-truth.  We shorten the name of the forbidden tree to the “tree of knowledge” as if defying God brings enlightenment and omniscience.  But the tree didn’t give all knowledge, only the awareness of good and evil.

Like God, humanity became instinctively aware that every choice in every moment holds good options and bad options.  Unlike God, we don’t omnisciently know which option is which.  So here we are with all the accumulated knowledge of human history just a Google search away on our phones and we still can’t figure out how to make the world better without almost every time also making it worse.

Adam and Eve had been naked and unashamed, but, after they listed to their snaky friend, they knew so doggone much that they no longer knew if being naked was a good thing or a bad thing.  Maybe they should be less open with one another.  Maybe it wasn’t so good to let your spouse know EVERY thing about you.  Maybe they should hide certain parts of themselves from each other.   It hadn’t been a problem before, but now every choice had a pro and a con.
 
The serpent told Eve that she wouldn’t “surely die,” and Eve did not drop dead the moment she ate from the forbidden tree.  God didn’t strike Adam down when he bit into the forbidden fruit.  They didn’t immediately die, but they did “surely die.”

They lost access to the tree of life that could have healed them from all injuries (Revelations 22:2).  They were evicted from Eden where food grew easily and the animals lived in harmony with them.  The entire ecology of the planet mutated and they exchanged potential immortality in Paradise for an existence that “is of few days and full of trouble” (Job 14:1).  

Humanity gained the knowledge of good and evil and lost everything else, and that is why we have religion.

A friend recently argued with me that religion is a human invention, created to foster division and impose power over others.  I disagreed.  I disagree.

In Genesis 3, God set aside His right as Creator and Judge to destroy our progenitors for their disobedience.  He posted their bail by promising a human descendant who would pay the price for their sins and undo the damage the serpent had done.

“And I will put enmity
Between you [the serpent] and the woman,
And between your seed and her Seed;
He shall bruise your head,
And you shall bruise His heel.” (Genesis 3:15)

God injected the hope of Messiah into human history. 

In verse 21, God took the life of an unblemished (cause everything in Eden was perfect) animal and used its skin to cover the man and woman who now saw themselves through the stained glass of sin and shame.

God Himself made the first sacrifice for sin. 

Religion is the means by which sinful humanity pursues reconciliation with holy God.  Religion is a partnership between humanity and the divine.  Each played their part in creating that partnership.  Man pioneered sin, and God invented religion.

Even if you don’t take Biblical Creation literally and you read the beginning of Genesis as an allegory for the long evolution of Earth and humanity from the big bang to literate homo sapiens, logic still demonstrates that God, not people, created religion.

Humans developed medicine and defenses to protect life, but life itself is a gift from God.  God gave us food; we just figured out how to cook and cultivate it.  We form social units but the need to connect with others and to improve our condition is written into our DNA; we didn’t write it.  The impulse to worship God is hardwired into our brains, coded there by the same hand that designed us for nurture, technology, and love.

“Know that the Lord, He is God.  It is He who has made us, and not we ourselves” (Psalm 100:3).

Religion is a gift from God --- a gift we have marred and manipulated for sinful ends, but then how is that any different from what we’ve done with all of God’s other gifts?

Eve and Adam screwed over Paradise because they believed the serpent’s half-truths beautifully packaged and cleverly delivered, more than the plain words of God.

It’s about time we stop repeating the same mistake.

Has God surely said?
                                 
Yes, He surely has.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132

Fairfield, Al 35064

Monday, August 29, 2016

THE MATHEMATICS OF POWER COUPLES. blogging Geneisis 1:23-25

23 And Adam said:
“This is now bone of my bones
And flesh of my flesh;
She shall be called Woman,
Because she was taken out of Man.”
24 Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.
25 And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed. (Genesis 2:23-25)


During Sunday school, my 14 year old son explained the origin of the term soulmate to the adult Sunday school.  Why did a Sunday school lesson on Romans 12 require this explanation? Well, it involves a question about how much Christian culture attributes ideas to the Bible that actually don’t come from the Bible, a few points about neo-Platonism and first century Jewish theology, and a Bible teacher (me) who’s philosophy is “Embrace the tangents.”

So anyway, as the junior Anderson explained: According to Greek mythology, the first human beings had 4 arms, 4 legs, 2 hearts, etc.  Zeus, king of the Gods, fearing the power of these creatures,  split each human in half and scattered the halves across the earth.  Thus every person searches for the missing half of his/her self, the matching person who will make them whole again: their soul-mate. (Apparently my son learned all of Greek mythology in the 8th grade .)

When a Christian calls his wife “my better half,” or tells her boyfriend, “You complete me,” or says that marriage is 50-50, the Christian is referencing the polytheistic theology of ancient Greek paganism.

Let the church say, “Amen.”

Adam and Eve were not two halves of a whole.  They were complete ones who each separately and sinlessly reflected the image of God.   This brings up some interesting mathematics, because Adam declared that the 2 were meant to become 1.

1 + 1 doesn’t equal 1.
1 – 1 doesn’t equal 1.
½ + ½ makes 1, but if you’ve ever seen a halfway man and a halfway woman together you know that usually comes out as one total mess.
You can get 1 with division, but that would violate the instructions.  After God made them male and female, He instructed man and woman to “be fruitful and MULTIPLY.”
1 x 1 = ONE

God didn’t ordain marriage to fix what’s wrong.  He designed marriage to make what’s right better.

My wife and I are not matching halves of a single soul.  We are each complete individuals who make a single powerful unit that is qualitatively greater than the sum of our individuality.  Her love and groundedness exponentially increases the impact of my ADHD fueled multi-tasking.  My unsophisticated country boy ethics gives her the security to pursue career goals.  We have individual issues, but we’re a formidable team.

You don’t need someone to complete you.  You don’t need an opposite to attract you.  You don’t need someone who’s just like you.  You don’t need someone who is lost without you or without whom you are lost.  You need the ONE, the one whole and complete other with whom you are both more and better than either of you is alone. 


Eve was the one for Adam.  When God brought them together, neither of them held anything back.  They were naked and unashamed --- open, honest, and completely vulnerable. 

This is the hard part in the math of modern marriage.  Culture and trauma condition us to hold back a piece of who we are, to give 50% to the union just in case we need the other half to make an exit.  We enter marriage naked under an inch of emotional armor, and that is partly why so many marriages fail. 

.50(of you) x 1.00(of them) = ½(of what ya’ll could be)

The other one isn’t getting all of your one, so instead of being fruitful and MULTIPLYING, you become a house DIVIDED, and that math won’t stand (Mark 3:25).

Get the math right and get the marriage right, and that’s how dynasties are made.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

BREATH ON THE MIRROR. Blogging Genesis (Genesis 2:15-23)

And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being. . . .15 Then the Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to tend and keep it.
16 And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, “Of every tree of the garden you may freely eat; 17 but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.”
18 And the Lord God said, “It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him.” 19 Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. 20 So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him.
21 And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. 22 Then the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man.  (Genesis 2:15-23)



In the beginning, God spoke life out of the sea, Earth, and sky.  “Let there be,” God said, and there was.

But God didn’t speak humanity into existence. The Creator dug down in the dust, mining the surface for water, salts, carbon, and all the offerings of asteroids and stars.  He laid a double-helixed frame and forged the elements on it, forming man of the dust of the ground.

Later, the Lord declared, “It is not good that man should be alone,” which is an interesting conclusion since Adam was doing just fine all by himself.  He had two jobs: tending the garden of Eden required physical exertion (Genesis 1:15); naming the animals required intellectual discernment (Genesis 1:19).  By God’s account, Adam performed both tasks flawlessly.  Still, God saw that it wasn’t good for Adam to be alone. 

Adam needed Eve because God’s plan was for people to be social creature, to fulfill the calling to dominion and blessing as a herd, a pack, a world-wide family.

Just because you do what you do well doesn’t mean that’s all there is to what you do.

A human had succeeded alone.  God wanted humanity to succeed together.

So God anesthetized Adam, made an incision in his torso, extracted a tissue sample from his rib cage, and formed the rib into a human female.  Today we call it cloning.   (Yeah, God did that first, too.)

The female was made from the perfect, sinless flesh of a  perfect, sinless man under perfect, sinless conditions by infinitely perfect and sinless God Himself.   She wasn’t inferior.  He wasn’t a failed first draft.  They had been individually handcrafted by the inventor of the universe.  The first Man and Woman were both perfectly what God wanted them to be.

He wanted them to be more than everything prior to them had been.  The Lord didn’t just give humanity form and life, He gave us a portion of His spirit.  He breathed into man’s nostrils the breath of life and man became a living being. 

“It is,” as Jesus said, “the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing.” (John 6:63)

The imago dei is not (or not simply) in our opposable thumbs and upright gait.  We bear the image of God in and by our spirit.  The soul that animates every man and woman is a breath on the mirror from the mouth of God.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064



Monday, August 15, 2016

THE WEEKEND: (Blogging through Genesis)




1 Thus the heavens and the earth, and all the host of them, were finished. And on the seventh day God ended His work which He had done, and He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had done.
Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His work which God had created and made.  (Genesis 2: 1-3)

Friday, at 5 P.M., I posted a grant application, acknowledged a confirmation text, and closed my laptop.  The rest of my weekend was dedicated to moving my daughter into her dorm room to begin her first year as a college student. You could say that “I ended the work which I had done, and rested from my work which I had done.”

As I write this post it’s Sunday evening and my daughter’s all moved in.  Monday, bright and early, I’ll be back in the office doing the same work which I’d ceased from doing for the weekend.  I mean, just because I stopped working for the weekend doesn’t mean I quit my job.

In the 6 days of Genesis chapter 1, God showed Moses how He had created the heavens, the earth, and the earliest forms of terrestrial life. Then for a single one-day weekend God rested.  No new building projects for 24 hours.   But, God taking a weekend off doesn’t mean He quit creating.

Since that first weekend, God has made the trees at  the edge of my yard, the clouds in the sky today, the earthworms burrowing under the foundation of wherever your wifi hotspot is connected,  you, me, and all the species of plant, animal, and microbe that did not exist when the first human beings walked around naked, munching on nuts, and berries, and “every green herb for food” (Genesis 1:30).   Bright and early everyday God is busy in the Creating business.

With so much work yet to do, why did God take a day off?  Same reason the owner or CEO at our jobs takes a day off:  He wanted to.

God wasn’t physically exhausted.

“ Have you not known?  Have you not heard?  The everlasting God, the Lord,the Creator of the ends of the earth, neither faints nor is weary.” (Isaiah 40:28a)

He wasn’t out of ideas.

 “His understanding is unsearchable.”

And, God didn’t rest on the 7th day because day #7 was holy.  He set apart the 7th day because that happened to be the day He’d rested.  Wine and bread aren’t objectively holier than any other drink-carbohydrate combination.  When wine and bread are consecrated, they become holy communion.  When the end of the week was sanctified, it became the Sabbath. The Sabbath is holy, but the number 7 isn’t special. 

No. No, it isn’t. 

God simply chose to spend a day experiencing and enjoying His creative work cause He felt like it, and it’s O.K., for God to rejoice and enjoy Himself, too.  (Zephaniah 3:17)

And, though He didn’t say so, God clearly thought the way He spent the day was good because “God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it.” 

The benefits of a weekly day of rest are so good, so very good for us that the Lord made it mandatory.  As Jesus said, “The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath” (Mark 2:27). 

So, the day after God invented humanity, God invented the Sabbath for the benefit of humanity. 

Even on His day off, God was taking care of us.

Take a day this week, and every week to think about that. 

Do what God did.  Take a break from pursuing wealth, influence, attention, or whatever it is we spend the rest of the week doing to rest and reflect on how good, how very good God is.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064


Tuesday, August 9, 2016

A PORTRAIT OF THE 6TH DAY (Blogging Genesis)

Then God said, “Let the earth bring forth living creatures after their kind: cattle and creeping things and beasts of the earth after their kind”; and it was so.
God made the beasts of the earth after their kind, and the cattle after their kind, and everything that creeps on the ground after its kind; and God saw that it was good.
Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”
God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.
God blessed them; and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”
. . .
God saw all that He had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day. (Genesis 1: 24-31)



Fingerprints of the Artist
Have you ever been in a working artist’s studio?  It’s pretty cool.  Painting and prints in varying stages of completion are set on easels and stacked on pallets.  Step back and scan the room.  The faces on the canvasses are different, but there’s sameness to all of them.  Depictions of building and babies, of landscapes and dreamscapes differ in content and color, but if you zoom in each unique image emerges from the same brushstrokes from the same creative hand.

On the 6th day, God created the ancestral forms of land-based animals, including social animal groups which Genesis generically calls cattle.  Herds, colonies, flocks, packs, etc.  God drew color from the existing materials on the earth, developed biological themes He’d used in earlier days, and formed unique creatures which, when we zoom in, closely bear the same genetic brushstrokes of a single creative hand.

Then God created us.  Humans.  Social creatures who live in herds called families and packs called nations.  A little bit prey, a whole lot predator.  Same Artist, same Earthy palette, but a fresh, new theme. 

Imago Dei
Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness.

All previous creatures, plant and animal, God made after their kind.  They are defined by their biology and instincts.  Being  animal means being the same kind of thing as the rest of their species.  God didn’t make people after their kind.  A person is greater than the sum of his/her evolutionary biology.  To be human is to be defined by choices that arise from mind, will, and spirit.  Human be-ing means how we reflect or distort the nature of God. God made people after His kind.

Humanity is God’s self-portrait, but the image is so complex that He created the picture in two parts. 

. . . in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.

That’s unusually gender specific for the Old Testament.  Usually Scripture will say man or mankind to encompass both genders, but in the very first reference to humanity in the Bible, the Holy Spirit inspired the male, patriarchal author of Genesis to very specifically impress the point that men and women are both, each, and equally made in the image of God (the imago dei). 

Notice in the Creation  that God never blessed a singular him or her.  He only blessed them.  Then God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” (Genesis 1:28)

After Eve, none of the women for the next several chapters of the Bible are named, but God reiterated His point about valuing both genders equally in chapter 5.  He created them male and female, and blessed them and called them Mankind in the day they were created. (Genesis 5:2)

Men are not a rough draft of God’s image which God perfected in women.  Women are not an afterthought built only to make men’s lives easier.    Male and female were both part of God’s intended Creative plan, which is why God declared that “it is not good that man [male] should be alone” (Genesis 2:18).    We love, provide, birth, show mercy, build, organize, communicate, and do justice for other people.  We most perfectly reflect the imago dei in community.  We need each other to fully realize our God-given purposes.


Dominion vs. Domination
God said to THEM, “Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion…”
God gave animals and people the same basic blessing, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill” the earth (Genesis 1:22, 28).  But for people, the Lord added the command to subdue and have dominion.  Humans and animals share a primal drive to consume resources so we can perpetuate our genetic material, fill the earth with our offspring.  When we fail at dominion, all we have is that primal drive, and we become like animals.
Dominion, as commanded in Genesis 1:28, was assigned to THEM, not to him. Dominion is cooperative, self-less, and focused on the Biblically-defined good of all (persons, places, and things) under human authority.  The God-ordained dominion of humanity over the planet is fulfilled when the god-ness of women works together with the god-ness of men by for the glory of God. Since Genesis 1, time and sin have skewed our course from dominion to domination.

Domination is the selfish, self-seeking pursuit of profit for the benefit of the few most dominant humans, regardless of the consequences on persons, places, and things under their sway. Predation, pollution, misogyny, misandry (look it up), corruption, hoarding, and the diverse and creative menu of systemic injustices are all acts of domination.  Domination makes us look like animals, which makes God look like less than who He is.

That’s not the look God was going for on the 6th day.  We’ve painted a counterfeit imago dei and sold it to ourselves.

We need to be re-painted.  In 2 Corinthians 3:15-18, Paul lays out the Artist’s process in 2 Corinthians 3: 15-18:
But even to this day, when Moses is read, a veil lies on their heart. Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away. Now the Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. 18 But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.

We go back to the studio and turn to the Jesus so He can remove the screen of domination. Then, being led by the Holy Spirit, we read the Creation with clear eyes, and “unveiled face.”  We look into the mirror of God’s Word and see ourselves as we are, a marred portrait overlayed with the image of God which we are meant to be.  We sit for a new portrait, not as the subject, but as the canvas.  It may take a while, but the God who curated all of Creation into a 6 day exhibit will “transform [us] into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.”

Then we’ll be, as the original picture was, “very good.”

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064