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Who's
Afraid of the
Schizophrenic God?
By Neil Earle
Imagine a courtroom scene. It’s you who are convicted, facing charges. Problem
is, you know you are guilty. But as you walk in, you notice the judge gives you
a reassuring nod of recognition, as if he had known you all your life.
He summons
you to the bench. “Don’t worry about a thing,” he tells you with a warm fatherly
smile. “I know all about this case. In fact, I’m going to be your defense
attorney.” The late theologian Shirley C. Guthrie would explain that this is the
way we should picture what the Bible calls the Judgment. “Must we talk about the
wrath of God?” Guthrie asked. “Yes,” he answers. “But God’s wrath is not like
that of the gods. It is the wrath of the God who was in Christ reconciling the
world to God’s self” (Christian Doctrine, pages 261-262).
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Through Jesus Christ, the disconnect between the world and
God has been removed once and for all. |

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Theological strait-jackets
Unfortunately, instead of allowing Jesus’ love, compassion and kindness to shape
their understanding of God, many Christians gravitate toward what we might call
a “forensic” model of salvation. The word “forensic” seems like a penal or legal
term, which it is. This forensic model sees God the Father as stern and
vengeful, a frightening God from whom we need Jesus to save us. It assumes that
the starting place for understanding God is not Jesus Christ, but “the law,” by
which is meant the Old Testament legal system. This model sees the law as so
important that even God is subject to it. Since God is concerned first about the
penalty demands of his law and only secondly about the well-being of humans, he
will punish them for lawbreaking in the same way that the State and human courts
and legal systems do—through a straightforward proving of guilt followed by a
guilty verdict.
Front and
center in the forensic model is God’s anger against sinning humanity. God is
offended, and someone must pay. Jesus steps forward and takes the full force of
God’s wrath against human sin. That means we have had our penalty paid for us,
but it does nothing for a restored relationship of love and trust. This
“offended deity” picture forgets that first and foremost, God is love (1 John
4:16), that God is joyously working to bring “many sons to glory,” and that our
salvation was in his mind “before the foundation of the world” (Revelation 13:8,
King James Version).
This
forensic model also forgets something even more basic—that Jesus Christ and the
Father along with the Holy Spirit are the three Persons of the one God, and that
the Son or Word made Incarnate in Jesus was the perfect revelation of the Father
in human form. The Father is not some angry, vengeful deity that we need
protection from; he is just like Jesus. Jesus, remember, is “the exact
representation” of the being of God (Hebrews 1:3). The Father is full of
compassion and mercy, a God who “desires mercy and not sacrifice,” just like
Jesus. Jesus is the starting place for understanding God; the law is not.
God is not
schizophrenic. He does not have a split personality. There is not one “good
God,” Jesus, and one “bad God,” the Father. There is one God—Father, Son and
Spirit—who loves us unconditionally and has in Jesus made full provision not
only for our sins to be forgiven and removed, but also for our full inclusion in
the love relationship that the Son has shared with the Father from eternity.
Adoption
God is not
in the business of training obedient valets, but in building a family. The
apostle Paul used the word “adoption” in describing the kind of relationship
that God has created for humanity in Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1:4-5). Through the
Incarnation of the Son—by Jesus becoming one of us and taking up our cause as
his own—God has drawn us into and made us part of the intimate relationship that
Jesus has with the Father.
We see the
power of this intimate love that God has for humanity in the parable of the
Prodigal Son. The repentant son is welcomed home by the Father and restored to
full rights of sonship (Luke 15:11-24). This depicts the God who was in Christ
reconciling the world to himself (2 Corinthians 5:19). The death of Christ was
not a vindictive act of divine child abuse, as some hostile critics of
Christianity have charged. It was a divine rescue springing from God’s love for
us (John 3:16), an intervention designed to restore a purpose of which we were
oblivious in our ignorance and darkness (verses 19-20).
Set against
this majestic purpose, God’s wrath can be seen for what it is—his anger—not at
the humanity he sent Jesus to save, but at sin, that which destroys the
relationship he has always intended for us in Christ. God is not some resentful,
selfish parent in an emotional stew because we have not played by his rules. God
is Father, Son and Spirit, loving, faithful and unconditionally committed to
bringing humanity into the joy of knowing him for who he really is.
Mercy vs. judgment
God,
however, will never be at peace with sin. The great human tragedy is that we
have been totally unaware of the pardon and reconciliation the Father has
brought about through Jesus Christ. We have loved darkness rather than light and
have chosen to ignore what the Father offers us through the Son.
Through
Christ, the disconnect between the world and God has been removed once and for
all. The great majority of unbelievers are simply those who through weakness or
ignorance are resisting the influence of the life-giving Holy Spirit of Christ,
the Person of the Godhead who beckons to us to abandon our addiction to darkness
and sin—who testifies in our hearts to God’s saving, atoning and reconciling
work in Jesus on our behalf (John 14:25-27; 15:26).
Jesus did not just bring good news, he was good news. The
overwhelming emphasis of his teaching was mercy, not vengeance. His hallmark
sayings reflect the God who is love, in whose mind mercy rejoices against
judgment (James 2:13). Thus, what was hinted at in parts of the Old Testament
becomes the major theme in the Gospels—“I will have mercy and not sacrifice.”
Jesus’ word pictures show us a forgiving father, a Good Samaritan, seeking
shepherds and splendidly generous employers, healings, exorcisms, a Great
Physician who pleaded “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I
will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).
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