It
is one of the lines in the Bible that I’ve read rather lightly over, never
stopping to consider what it might mean. Perhaps it’s easy to overlook because
I want to get to where the story really begins. Or it’s so well known that I
simply skip over it.
The
line is in the book of Genesis, chapter 1, right at the very beginning in
verses 1 and 2: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the
earth was formless and void, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the
waters (NIV; emphasis added). The King James Version, always more poetic,
says the Spirit was moving over the face of
the waters.
Well,
of course the Sprit of God was hovering; this is the creation story, and where
else would the Spirit of God be?
I
never stopped to ask the rather obvious, what is meant by “hovering”?
One
approach, the Life
Application Bible, says that the image suggested by the words in the
original Hebrew “is similar to a mother bird caring for and protecting its
young.”
This
isn’t a simple movement of the Spirit, or a pausing over the waters. This is something
active, implying caring and protecting, as a mother – any mother – would be
protective toward her children.
It
implies even more. It implies that the Holy Spirit has personality.
Have
you ever thought of the Holy Spirit as having personality? My image of the
Spirit has always been that rushing wind and those tongues of fire in Acts 2,
when the Spirit comes upon the disciples and they begin to speak in foreign
languages.
But
personality?
And
there’s more, says Francis Chan in Forgotten
God: The Tragic Neglect of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is a
person, he says; “He is not an indistinct ‘power’ or thing.” He is a person,
with personality, and we are called to relationship with Him, just as we are
called to relationship with the Father and the Son. It’s a three-for-one deal.
It’s not relationship with two and being come upon or empowered by the third.
Chan
goes on to list the key elements of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. He is a
person. He is God. He is holy and eternal. He has his own mind and he prays for
us (consider the image of a mother and father praying for their children). He has
emotions; the Bible clearly says the spirit can be grieved. He has his own
desires and will. And the Spirit is all-powerful, all-present, and all-knowing.
My
surprise at the idea of the Spirit having personality is evidence for the point
that Chan is making in this book – we Christians, and perhaps especially we
American Christians, have neglected the Spirit. In our focus on having a “personal
relationship with Jesus Christ” and our prayers to the Father, we have
forgotten the Spirit, the “power source” for our Christian lives.
And
the Spirit is hovering over us. Caring. Protective. Feeding. And being grieved.
As
the Life Application Bible says, “God’s Spirit was actively involved in the
creation of the world. God’s care and protection are still active.”
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading Forgotten God. To see more posts on this chapter, “Theology of the
Holy Spirit 101,” please visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
Photograph by Brunhilde Reinig via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
5 comments:
Howard Thurman writes of the "brooding tenderness" of God, an image I find to be so rich and compelling.
Powerful, personal. Thanks for this Glynn. I think the first time it hit home that God has a personality, God has feelings was when I read a familiar two letter word: so.
For God so loved the world...not just loved but sooooooo loved.
it's ever so hard to wrap our human minds around all that the trinity is -- father, son and spirit -- one in the same, yet separate.
and in the armor of God, the spirit is the active, wielding weapon…
as always, thanks glynn, for your truth-tainted insight.
blessings.
Glynn,
This is a very interesting view that helps me in seeing more about relationship in God and in myself.
It also has me wondering about the water.
Such a distinct difference, isn't it? He is a person who feels, with a personality. We don't often talk of a relationship with the Holy Spirit, but what a key to living the life He made us to live. Great thoughts, Glynn. Thank you.
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