Mary, a virgin when Jesus
was conceived and born, knew that God was His Father, but it was too
much to understand. He nursed at her breast, grew as a child, and at
night His rhythmic breathing mingled with that of the other sleeping
children to whom Mary gave birth by Joseph (Mt 12:47; 13:55; Mk 3:32; Lk
8:20). So "normal" was He as a child that Mary lapsed by habit
into calling Joseph His father "thy father and I have sought thee
sorrowing." When Jesus gently reproved her"wist ye not that I
must be about my Father's business" she and Joseph
"understood not" what He meant. Mary pondered this mystery
"in her heart" (Lk 2:19,48-51).
Jesus was not popularly
acclaimed in Nazareth. He was unrecognized and even hated "without
a cause" (Jn 15:18,25)! Here was God himself, the Creator, walking
among His creatures and they despised Him! How deep was the alienation
between God and man! Few were those who could say, "And the Word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory
as of the only begotten of the Father), full of grace and truth"
(Jn 1:14).
The careful language of
Scripture calls Christ "the second man" (1 Cor 15:47).
From Adam until this One, there was never a man who deserved to be truly
called "man" in the fullness God purposed. As Adam was created
by God, so Christ's body was created in the womb of a virgin: "A
body hast thou prepared me" (Heb 10:5). Here was man once again as
God had intended him to be. Here, too, was God as man: "He that
hath seen me hath seen the Father" (Jn 14:9).
As the progenitor of a new
race of those who have been born again, Christ is also called the last
Adam (1 Cor 15;45). Those redeemed by His blood (Eph 1:7; Col 1:14), to
whom He has given eternal life as a free gift of His grace, will
"never perish" (Jn 10:28). Never will there be a third
Adam or a fourth. How incredible it is that God became a man; and
how wonderful are the implications for us for eternity! God had
to become a man to pay the penalty which His infinite justice required
of man for sin: "Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin" (Rom 5:12), so it had to be that "by
man came also the resurrection of the dead" (1 Cor 15:21).
The God of the Bible
created the universe out of nothing. The universe is not God nor an
extension of Him, nor is He part of it. Therefore, to speak of God as
"She" or to refer to "Mother Earth" or "Mother
Nature" or even "Mother/Father God" promotes a grave
heresy. A woman nurtures her offspring within her womb and gives birth
out of herself, precisely what God does not do. Nor is man, though in
God's image (Gn 1:26-27), an extension of God or part of God but a
separate being entirely.
Obviously, being made
"in the image of God" has nothing to do with man's physical
form, for "God is a Spirit" (Jn 4:24). Man was made in the
spiritual and moral image of God. God made man's body from the
"dust of the ground." Man's soul and spirit, however,
are nonphysical: "And the Lord God...breathed into his [Adam's]
nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul" (Gn
2:7). Reflecting the triune nature of God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit),
man is also a triune being: body, soul and spirit. Paul wrote, "I
pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved
blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Thes 5:23). And
God's Word causes a "dividing asunder of soul and spirit" (Heb
4:12). Having made man a triune being in His image, God could become a
man in order to redeem His creatures.
At first, the Spirit of
God indwelt the spirits of Adam and Eve. Their focus was toward God. The
enjoyment of bodily pleasures and sense of their own identities was more
wonderful than we can imagine because it was all to the glory of God
rather than for self-gratification. When they sinned, the Spirit of God
departed from their spirits and their orientation turned from God to
self. Thus we, their descendants, are by nature sensual, selfish and
materialistic. Instead of the joy of fellowship with God, man finds his
joy in this world's "lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes,
and the pride of life" (1 Jn 2:16).
These three lusts are all
that Satan and the world have to offer. We see them in Eve's sin: the
forbidden fruit's delicious taste, its enticing visual appeal, and the
wisdom with which it would endow her. We see them in Satan's tempting of
Christ: to turn stones into bread to satisfy his bodily hunger; to
succumb to the appealing panorama of "all the kingdoms of the
world, and the glory of them"; to cast himself from the pinnacle of
the temple, causing the angels to catch Him in midair and the watching
Jews to worship Him (Mt 4:1-11). Unlike the first man and first Adam,
the Second Man and Last Adam refused Satan's offer.
In everyone else except
Christ, the unique God-man, the battle rages between man's flesh and
God's Spirit: "For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the
Spirit against the flesh" (Gal 5:17). Even Paul acknowledged,
"For the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would
not, that I do" (Rom 7:18-19). Man's spirit has become a slave to
his soul and body. He can never be righteven his morality and
uprightness can never be anything but the "filthy rags" (Is
64:6) of self-righteousness until the Spirit of God indwells and rules
in man's spirit once again. Only Christ, in Whose person God and man
have been united, can bring this reconciliation within man's heart.
Paul, who said, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me
from the body of this death?", declared in triumph, "I thank
God [that there is deliverance] through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom
7:24-25)!
David exulted, "I am
fearfully and wonderfully made" (Ps 139:14)! Materialism has
trivialized man. Materialistic science has denied the nonphysical spirit
and soul of man and turned him into a stimulus-response mechanism. It
alleges that man's thoughts, ambitions, likes, dislikes, even his sense
of right and wrong and the experience of love and compassion, can all be
explained in terms of electrical and chemical impulses in his brain and
nervous system. Such folly was the basis for Sigmund Freud's theories
and is still behind the treatment of mental disorders with drugs.
Yes, the brain may be like
a computer, but no computer can think on its own. Someone must tell it
what to do. What folly to imagine that thoughts originate in the brain!
If so, we would be prisoners of our brains, helplessly dragged along as
its chemical/electrical processes determined our thoughts and even our
morals and emotions. In fact, thought is initiated by the soul and
spirit, which use the brain to operate the body and to interface with
this physical world of sensual experience in which our bodies function.
There are more cells in
the brain than stars in the universe, and these cells make up hundreds
of billions of neurons and trillions of synapses in perfect balance.
Moreover, the mysterious link between the spirit of man, made in God's
image, and his brain and body is forever beyond the grasp of science.
Yet that connection is being tampered with by drugs in order to adjust
man's behavior behavior which was meant to reflect God's perfect purity,
but instead reflects man's rebellion and sin as a child of Satan:
"ye are of your father, the devil" (Jn 8:44). There are no chemical
solutions to spiritual problems. Yet millions take drugs such as Prozac,
Effexor, Valium, Ritalin, Zoloft, Paxil, etc. to deal with spiritual
problems.
The Bible declares that
man's inner turmoil, insecurity, lust, anger, his conflict with himself
and others and any other "emotional problems" which beset him
are spiritual at their root (2 Cor 7:1; Gal 5:16; Col 1:21). They result
from man's rebellion against God and the wrenching separation from God
which that rebellion effected in the depths of his being. Therefore, the
solution to man's emotional and spiritual problems is reconciliation to
God. Tragically, that solution is being set aside in favor of correcting
a "chemical imbalance" in the brain with drugs.
There is no doubt that
much can go wrong with the brain as a physical instrument.
However, even secular psychiatrists admit that the brain is far too
complex to be precisely "adjusted" with drugs. Although we
don't endorse all of his views, Peter R. Breggin, M.D., is one of the
world's leading experts on psychoactive drugs. He reminds us, "the
biochemical activities that run the brain remain almost wholly shrouded
in mystery. If depression...has a biological or genetic basis, it has
not been demonstrated scientifically....Biopsychiatric theory remains
pure speculation and runs counter to a great deal of research and
clinical experience, as well as common sense...."1
Breggin continues,
The biochemical imbalance
theory is merely the latest biopsychiatric speculation, presented to the
public as a scientific truth. [T]he ironic truth is this: The only known
biochemical imbalances in the brains of nearly all psychiatric patients
are those caused by the treatments....Curiously, in light of so much
psychiatric concern about the dangers of biochemical imbalances, all
known psychiatric drugs produce widespread chemical imbalances in the
brain.... (Emphasis added)
It seems foolhardy to
imagine that blocking one of the brain's biochemical functions [which
all psychiatric drugs are designed to do] would somehow improve the
brain and mind. At the root lies a dangerous assumption that it is safe
and effective to tamper with the most complex organ in the universe!2
The awesome implications
of tampering with the brain are not generally recognized by those
relying upon chemical solutions. Nor are Christian psychologists
acknowledging the even more serious consequences of tampering with the
brain's response to the soul and spirit of man, so "fearfully and
wonderfully" made in the image of God!
A word of caution:
We are not advocating that anyone now taking medication should stop
abruptly. Psychiatric drugs can be addictive, and to stop suddenly could
have serious consequences. Any change in medication should be only
under the supervision of a physician. We are simply pointing out that no
one really knows how drugs work or the full range of their effects. Many
drugs prescribed by physicians for years have only later been found to have
such devastating effects that they have been removed from the market.
The connection between the
spirit and the brain and body is known only to God. The moral and
spiritual consequences of tampering with the brain and nervous
system through drugs could be far worse than the physical
dangers. Consider depression, for example. Drugs too often mask the real
need and hinder one from turning to Christ for the spiritual solution
that can only be found in Him. In pursuing a chemical solution,
science ignores (because it cannot deal with it) what ought to be the
first priority: getting right with God through the redemption which is
in the Lord Jesus Christ alone. His incarnation united God and man in
His own person; and He brings that reconciliation and union within the
human spirit when He is received as Savior and invited to dwell there.
Christianity (unlike Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, etc.) is not a set of
rules for one to follow in one's own strength. Only Christ can live the
Christian life, and He will live it in and through those who believe in
Him. Note the wonder of what Paul said: "[I]t pleased God...to
reveal his Son in me" (Gal 1:15-16). He wants to reveal His Son in
us as well. That's what Christianity is!
The indwelling of Christ
within the human spirit is as great a mystery as the incarnation itself.
To those who trust Him and obey His Word, He becomes their very life:
"I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but
Christ liveth in me" (Gal 2:20); "ye are dead, and your life
is hid with Christ in God" (Col 3:3). Obviously, the Spirit of
Christ within needs no help from psychotherapy or drugs. What we need
above all is to trust, obey and rejoice in Him. Nor does Christ promise
an easy path. The Christian life is beset by trials and temptations and
conflicts between the flesh and the Spirit, allowed by God to test us to
see whether or not we will really trust and obey Him. As He told Israel,
And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee
these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee,
to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his
commandments, or no. And he humbled thee, and suffered thee to
hunger,...that he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread
only, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord
doth man live (Dt 8:2-3).
Without the Incarnation,
mankind was doomed eternally. "[A]ll have sinned and come short of
the glory of God" (Rom 3:23); and "[T]he wages of sin is
death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord" (Rom 6:23). We believe in Christ as our Savior from the penalty
of sin. Let us also trust Him fully as the One who indwells us and will overcome
sin in our lives. May we rejoice in "the riches of the glory of
this mystery...Christ in you, the hope of glory" (Col 1:27)! TBC
Endnotes
1
Peter R. Breggin, M.D., Talking
Back to Prozac: What Doctors Aren't Telling You About Today's Most
Controversial Drug (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 1994), 34, 39.
2 Ibid, 34, 37, 38-40.