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"God is a spirit; and they that worship Him must worship
Him in spirit and in truth." John 4:24
The truth that Jesus speaks to the Samaritan woman is the
truth embodied in the Second
Commandment, "Thou shalt not make unto thyself any graven image,
nor the likeness of any thing that is in
heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the water under the
earth." The reason for this prohibition is
that God is spiritual and invisible. this commandment has
to do with the right worship of the only true God.
We are not to represent God with images, nor worship Him in any
way other than He has commanded in His
Word. We are not to use images of God in the churches, for
then we would be pretending to be wiser than
God Who would have His people taught, not by dumb images, but by
the lively preaching of His Word.
That God is spirit means on the one hand that He is immaterial
and invisible, while on the other
hand that God is pure being and the ground of the creature's being
as well. We ought to face some
questions at this point. What do you think about when you
think of God? Do you try to visualize God? Do
you form some sort of mental picture of Him? What about our
children and their conception of God?
Further, what are we to think of Scripture's telling us that God
has a heart, hands, hearing, and smelling?
the importance of our subject for all prayer and worship cannot
be over emphasized!
The spirituality of God is not the easiest virtue of God
to write about or to comprehend. We know
that God is spirit, but this does not mean that we fully comprehend
everything that is implied in this brief
statement of Jesus at Jacob's well in Samaria. First of all,
let us rid ourselves of several possible
misconceptions. Our subject does not have to do directly with
the Third Person of the Trinity, the Holy
Spirit. The Third Person is called the Spirit because He is
the energy or breath that proceeds from Father to
Son and from Son to Father within the Trinity. but here we
are to understand that Father, Son and Holy
Spirit, the entire Godhead, is spirit! Nor is God spirit in
the sense that angels are spiritual beings, but angels
are creatures brought forth by the Word of God in the beginning.
Angels are invisible but they can be made
to appear, and they have their ground of existence in God.
they are spiritual creatures while God is
uncreated, spiritual being. This implies that the properties
of matter are not true of God. All matter has
weight, occupies space, can be touched, weighed and measured, and
undergoes change. Not so with God!
Moses told the children of Israel, "And the Lord spake unto you
out of the midst of the fire; ye heard the
voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a
voice." (Deut. 4:12) And Jesus said, "Ye have
neither heard His voice at any time, nor seen His shape," for God
has no form or shape. What are we to
think, then, of those passages of the Bible which speak of God in
terms of hands, eyes, ears, mouth, and son
on? In the light of the above, we must certainly understand
such revelation of God to us as figures of
speech (anthropomorphisms) in which God speaks of Himself in terms
of human description in order that
we might better conceive of Him. But this does not mean that
we may form images of God! Who could
ever sculpt a Hand that touches everything or paint an Eye that
sees all things constantly, even the hearts of
men? In God, heart, hand, eye, etc., are present in the ultimate
sense, and what man possesses is but a
creaturely reflection of what is perfectly present in God.
But none of the properties of matter pertain to
God; He is immaterial or noncopereal. God is spirit!
It is striking that it is easier to say what God's spirituality
is not than to say what God's spirituality
is!! God is pure essence. He is pure life and energy.
God is the Father of spirits, and the Father Creator of
all things visible as well. All that is material or substance
is composed; it is made up of smaller entities or
parts. Being pure spirit, God is simple and uncomposed.
God is indivisible. For one thing, this implies
that God does not only have virtues or attributes, but He is His
virtues or attributes. God is spirit. God is
love.
Because God is spirit, God is invisible. God is not
seen, cannot be seen, and will never be seen.
We want Scriptural proof for these assertations, don't we?
In John chapter one, the beloved apostle states,
"No man hath seen God at any time." Perhaps we think that
Adam or Moses or Abraham saw God at some
point. But John instructs us to the contrary. The apostle
wants us to understand that we do not some to
know and enjoy God because we see Him, but only because, "the only
begotten Son, which is in the bosom
of the Father, he hath declared Him." the Son has come forth
from the very bosom of God (this speaks of
the intimate knowledge and understanding the Son has of the deep
things of God) to reveal God to His
people! When the apostle Paul writes the young pastor Timothy,
he exclaims, "Who only hath immortality,
dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto, whom no man
hath seen, nor can see ..." Paul goes
further than John. he agrees with John that no man has ever
seen God in the past; he goes on to assert that
no man shall ever see God in the future. It's impossible!
The creature can never see that which is pure
spirit. Just as our eyes cannot look directly at the sun on
a clear day without damage, so man cannot look at
the glorious being of God and live.
We ought to recall the words of Jesus, "He that hath seen
Me hath seen the Father." Let that
suffice us. All the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily
in Christ. Wonder of wonders, God has made
Himself visible, fully and richly, in the incarnate Son! For
this reason Jesus can say, "No one cometh unto
the Father but by me", and "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father."
(John 14:6,7) Perhaps you have
one of the beatitudes of Matthew five running through your mind:
"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they
shall see God." We can understand the first part, for without
holiness no one shall ever see the thrice holy
God: but what can the last part mean? the saints, who
are the pure in heart, shall never look upon the being
or essence of God for that is impossible for the creature;
and in heaven we shall still be creatures. But we
shall see God as He is fully revealed in the exalted Head of the
Church, Jesus Christ! And seeing God in
Christ, we shall be satisfied!
All this means that our worship of God must be a careful,
spiritual worship. the worship of God is
the main point of Jesus conversation with the Samaritan woman.
Man must worship, but will man decide of
himself how to worship the God whom he has never seen? This
often times is done, with results that are
nauseating to God and perilous to man. (See for example Isaiah 1:12-15
and Romans 1:21-23) Nowadays
people twist the words of Jesus in John 4:21 to make them say that
they don't have to go to church to
worship God; they can do that at home or at the beach or in the
mountains. Just so you're sincere! Or there
is all manner of experimentation in the worship services:
movies, plays, liturgical dances. This is the
direction men take if they presume to decide the matter of the right
worship of God, and we would blunder
just as badly if we should take this matter into our hands.
God must be worshipped as He has commanded us in His word,
and here the Word says, " . . . in
spirit and in truth." When Jesus says that the "Father seeketh
such to worship Him', Jesus is not saying that
God weakly or vainly looks for these worshippers, but He confidently
asserts that the Father seeks, finds,
and equips worshippers of Himself. true worship is the fruit
of the work of God in the hearts of His people,
it is the God-worked response to the Holy Gospel, and thus it is
found pleasing to God!
Secondly, worshipping God "in spirit" does not mean in or
by the Holy Spirit. We do not deny, of
course, that the Holy Spirit must be present in a man before he
can even desire to worship God, much more
perform such worship. But here the word "spirit" stands opposed
to all that is fleshy, carnal, and outward.
Not by outward observance, not by wearing of sackcloth and ashes,
not by the mere appearance of a man in
church, will God be worshipped. But from within, from the
heart, with a lowly and contrite spirit that
understands the sinfulness of one's sins. The posture of the
body is not the key thing; the posture of the
soul is! God is properly worshipped only when He is worshipped
in truth, that is, according as He truly is
and according as we truly are! Thus, worship requires faith
in the Lord Jesus Christ, Who is the Mediator
of God and men.
Thirdly, the true worship of God must rest upon God's Word.
There He tells us Who He is and
who we are, and there He reveals how he will be revered by the saints.
Briefly this includes that we worship
Him with our offerings, with prayer, with singing, in the peace
of the communion of saints, and most
importantly of all, with a quiet, reverent attention to the preaching
of the Gospel. the preaching is the heart
of the worship service; may it ever remain so in the church
of Jesus Christ. preaching of the full counsel of
God, preaching that is authoritative, preaching that is lively,
preaching that expounds and applies, preaching
of the doctrines of grace so that God is magnified and every human
resource debased!
And finally, in "spirit and in truth" certainly means that
we worship the great God of our salvation
actively and sincerely. Whenever the word "spirit" is used,
it connotes the idea of energy and activity! Is
that the way we worship God? Do we sing out, from the heart?
Do we pray along with the minister, really
making his thoughts and petitions our own? Do we follow closely
the unfolding of the sermon, comparing
it with the Word of God and asking ourselves what this means for
our lives of gratitude to God? Are we
present in God's house because we love that God Whom we have never
seen, and fervently desire that all
things glorify Him for such a great salvation?
"May the words of our mouth, and the meditations of our heats,
be acceptable in Thy sight, O
Lord, our Strength and our Redeemer."
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