The Knowledge of the Holy: God Incomprehensible
[Editor’s Note: This is a 23-Day Series exploring different aspects of God’s nature and personality, using Tozer’s “The Knowledge of the Holy” as a discussion starter. You can read the introduction of the series here.]
How can men understand God? More specifically, how can a man who is finite fully understand an infinite God? How can the thimble sized container of man’s understanding hope to contain the ocean of God’s being? Ultimately, we can’t. This is the question with which we have to wrestle with Tozer in this chapter. The struggle is so real, that Tozer points to how men of the Bible continually said God was like something, because they had nothing else they could compare Him to. Human words were to weak to capture what God was really in Himself. We can at best understand what God is like. Tozer finally concedes that we cannot answer what God is in His totality. But we can understand what God has made clear to us about Himself and it’s in this sense we can know God.
Tozer takes the sum of the Bible’s message about knowing God and presents it to us: God is infinite. He will always be greater than your ability to understand Him. If He ever wasn’t, He would cease to be God. But God wants to be known and because of that, He stoops down and shows us what we can handle. So the man who is smug in his knowledge of God is deceived. But the man who humbly confesses what God has clearly shown while simultaneously acknowledging he is only an infant in his understanding, has received wisdom.
This, I think, is what turns off so many unbelievers. They’ve found Christians entirely too comfortable with a God they barely know. They’ve found followers of Jesus who aren’t in awe of who He is and what He’s done. I’ve met some believers who in their pursuit of the knowledge of God, act as if they have become a god themselves. But believers should be in awe of God. They should realize they stand gazing into the things which “many prophets and righteous people longed to see…but they didn’t see it,” (Matthew 13:17). We have access, not just to understand part of God through His word, but an invitation to have a relationship with Him through His Spirit. We cannot live dull to these promises.
At the same time, to the unbelievers who think God can never be known, Tozer says that God has stooped down to reveal Himself to humanity. Not all of him, not most of him, but enough of Him. Enough so that we can understand what we need to have a relationship, enough to enjoy Him, enough to be transformed. The fact that God is too big for us to understand is Good News. We don’t worship someone so weak that we can totally understand Him. It shouldn’t promote hopelessness about the divine, rather, it should produce a seeking heart that longs to know what it can.
And this is the journey we are on. We don’t seek to be built up in the pride of knowledge, but to stare wonderingly at the great truths God has communicated to us about Himself. And in so doing, draw close to His heart.
That’s my take for the day. What’s yours? Leave a comment so we can journey together!
The Knowledge of the Holy Series
Coming April 1: A Journey In The Knowledge of the Holy
[Editor’s Note: While I would have loved for you to join us, we have officially finished our journey. But you can still read the different posts from this journey. At the end of this post I have listed links to all 23 days in our series. Feel free to pick up a copy of the book and work through it at your own pace.]
I’ve been thinking a lot about knowing God lately. I’m convinced that in Christianity its easy to work for Jesus but not actually understand who He is. I know this has been true for me lately. And as I’ve talked to Jesus about this, He’s continued to show me that I need to know Him like I would know a friend, not just a historical figure that I’ve memorized facts about.
In that process, I feel like the Lord has invited me to read The Knowledge of the Holy. The Knowledge of the Holy isn’t an old book, it was written in 1961. But despite it’s young age, it is regarded as one of the Christian classics. It’s a short little primer on why we must press on to know God and then a number of chapters that describe different aspects of God’s character. The first couple of chapters are worth the price of the whole book.
My journey with this book began in the late 90’s. I was at a meeting in Kansas City and a leader I respected a lot held up the book. He said all of their interns had read “The Knowledge of the Holy” as part of their internship. I immediately picked up a copy and delved deeply into the book. A few years later as I was transitioning out of college ministry and leaving behind a team of folks we raised up, I used it as a discussion starter to get us talking about really knowing God and the importance that had in ministry.
If you hadn’t noticed yet, I’m a big fan of the book. Part of the reason is that knowing who God is is critical to our growth and perseverance in Jesus. The beauty of this book is that its both deep and accessible. In all my time of reading Christian books, this has been one of the most helpful in getting people out of knowing facts about God and helping them to know who He is.
All that said, I’ve felt stirred both to jump back in this book and to invite you, my readers, to join in with me. So, starting April 1st, I’m going to be reading one chapter of “The Knowledge of the Holy” a day and then reflect on it here. If you’d like to join along, pick up a copy now and join me back here April 1st to start this journey. Join me, not just in reading this book, but pursuing a knowledge of God that fuels our hearts.
Have you read “The Knowledge of the Holy?” What are your thoughts?
Day 1: Why We Must Think Rightly About God
Day 3: A Divine Attribute: Something True About God
Day 5: The Self Existence of God
Day 6: The Self Sufficiency of God
Day 9: The Immutability of God
Day 10: The Divine Omniscience
Day 12: The Omnipotence of God
Day 13: The Divine Transcendence
Day 15: The Faithfulness of God
The Nature of Jesus, The Knowledge of God, and The Call of the Church
Each of the phrases in the title of this blog could be a whole series of blogs that I continually blog about. However, tonight, it’s late and I just have one thing to say about all three subjects: They are all deeply related.
Having said that, this was the subject of a message I just shared with our house church here in Cedar Rapids. I believe we’re beginning to cross into some areas we’ve never been in before. I had something else on my heart to share, but the Lord wouldn’t let me share about it until I took the time to lay a foundation for a real culture of repentance in our church. I’m finding that one thing that is sorely missing in our churches is a true, non-religious culture of repentance.
All of that has to start with a thorough understanding of God, His nature, His thoughts about us as we live our lives as sinful human beings, and how all of those traits of God need to be reflected in the church. If I’ve piqued your interest (or you’re one of the three people that read this blog to keep tabs on our house church–yeah I know about you guys) you can check out some of the stuff we talked about by clicking here.