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How
to Know God
God’s Knowability
A farmer repeatedly invited a friend
into his apple orchard to taste the fruit and make some fresh cider. But, just
as often, the friend said, “No, I would rather not.”
Finally,
the farmer said, “I guess you are prejudiced against my apples.”
“Well,
to tell the truth, “ his friend said, “I have tasted a few of them and they are
very sour.”
The
farmer then asked which apples his friend had eaten. “Why, those apples which
fell along the road over your fence,” he replied.
“Ah,
yes,” said the farmer, “they are sour. I planted them to fool the boys who live
around here. But, if you will come into the middle of my orchard, you will find
a different taste.”
On
the edges of Christianity are some very sour apples—conviction, self-denial,
and purity of life—which keep off hypocrites and mere professors. But in the
middle of the orchard are delicious fruits, sweet and desirable. The nearer to
God, the sweeter the joy. ── Michael P. Green《Illustrations for Biblical Preaching》
God’s Knowability
Trying to explain God is like trying
to explain a kiss. You can check the dictionary definition: “A caress with the
lips; a gentle touch or contact.”
But
does that really capture the essence of what a kiss is? Dues that describe what
a mother does when she tenderly places her lips on the forehead of her newborn
child? Is that what the young lover does when he says good-night to his girl?
Just
as words cannot completely capture all that is involved in what we know by
experience and attempt to describe as a “kiss,” we also cannot fully
comprehend, explain, or define “God.” We can, however, know him through
experiencing his revelation of himself to us in his Word and in the person of
Jesus Christ.──
Michael P. Green《Illustrations for Biblical Preaching》
God’s Knowability
The pagan world was always haunted by
the unknowability of God. At best, men could but grope after his mystery. “It
is hard,” said Plato, “to investigate and to find the framer and the father of
the universe. And, if one did find him, it would be impossible to express him
in terms which all could understand.” Aristotle spoke of God as the supreme
cause, by all men dreamed of and by no man known. The ancient world did not
doubt that there was a God or gods, but it believed that such gods as there
might be were quite unknowable and only occasionally interested in mankind. In
a world without Christ, God was a mystery and power, desirable but never known.
──
Michael P. Green《Illustrations for Biblical Preaching》