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Got the Picture?

Back in the “olden days” we used cameras that required film. And one year at a Lutheran summer camp in Vermont, I learned how to develop that film.

Camera with film canisters

A crucial element in this process involved keeping an eye on the clock–because timing was everything.

The film itself revealed “the negatives.”  No one spent time studying or appreciating the negatives because they were not accurate representations of the picture’s subject.

Negatives made people look abnormal or even sinister. The point was to transfer and invert that negative image onto a special paper that then revealed the “positive” photograph, the realistic image made visible and permanent.

Film development, including the time involved, mirrors reasonably well what happened between the Old and New Testaments, resulting in the inversion of our understanding of God’s nature. It took Jesus’s lifetime–including everything He taught and all He accomplished in His crucifixion and resurrection—before anyone could “see” what God looked like.

Historically, many of God’s representatives, including Moses (by striking the rock in anger instead of speaking to it in faith) had erroneously portrayed God as primarily wrathful, solely concerned with rules and obedience. 

In this pre-resurrection “negative,” God appeared spiteful, fearsome, legalistic.

But the underlying current cunningly hidden in obscure or unexpected verses of the Old Testament, the point that virtually all the Jews missed, was that God’s grace and compassion far outweigh His righteous indignation.

In Jesus’s first message in Mark 1:14-15 He declared,

 “The time is fulfulled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.”

What time? The time of Jews having to live under the curse of the Law and impending judgment.

Old Fashioned Alarm Clock with Roman Numerals

The time had come to reveal the true nature of God.

Few in Jesus’s generation understood what this meant. Jesus came with a revolutionary message: God was about to eradicate the sin problem, the cause of all conflict between Himself and His creation, for every person who would believe, for all time.

In other words,

Jesus came to develop and invert the Old Testament “negative” into the New Testament “positive.”Old Camera with Black and White Photos

 And to see an accurate picture of God, the Jews only needed to do two things:

  1. Turn from their sin, including mistaken beliefs about God (repent) and
  2. Accept what He was about to do on their behalf (believe).

Before Jesus the best the Jews could do was try to keep the 613 laws of Moses, and then pay for any they broke.

But James 2:13 declares that mercy triumphs over judgment.

In Jesus, God developed the correct and exact image of Himself, making His true nature visible and permanent (Hebrews 1:3).

  • a God of forgiveness, compassion, and love;
  • a God who personally paid the penalty of the whole world’s sin; and
  • a God who fulfilled the entire Jewish Law Himself.

Trusting this accurate picture, all are invited to believe in Christ’s atonement on their behalf, and then enjoy eternal life.

Only through Jesus are we able to see God for who He truly is.

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