11-7-13 - God of the Living

“Now he is God not of the dead, but of the living; for to him all of them are alive.'"

That’s how Jesus ends his discourse with the Sadducees. More of a conversation starter for me. My first question is, “What do you mean, he’s not the God of the dead? What about the people we love, no longer in this life?” And I guess Jesus’ answer might be: “Read the whole thing. They’re alive. From the moment they accepted my life in them, they were alive with a life that physical death could not end.”

To say that God is God of the living, not of the dead, also makes me wonder about things, even people, that truly are dead in this world. I’ve written a lot this week about sending God’s life and power into the things and people that seem dead, hopeless, lifeless. But are there also things that we should not seek to revive, because they have no life in them? (Don't worry - I'm not going to start talking about zombies… even if everyone else is...)

Death is where life is no longer. But what about where there never was life? Situations of terror and profound injustice? Genocide, slavery, oppression, distortion, manipulation? Child abuse, sex trafficking, pornography? Such things were never God-intended; they were not good things that went astray. They simply should never have been. God is God of the people affected by those situations, but not of the situations themselves.
God is the God of addicts, for instance - but God is not the God of addiction.

To say that God is God of the living is also to affirm the life in the weakest creatures and people. It is a way of affirming God’s action in those things or people. We can say, “God is God of that. Yeah!” or “God is God of her, of him, of you.” It is a way of articulating God’s choosing and claiming of us.

What can you think of that is utterly lacking in life, where life never was? 

Are there things in your life or in the world that you believe God is not God of?
If they are things that have any hold on you, can you renounce them today? That can be a good discipline.

And are there things or people, or parts of yourself even, over which you want to proclaim, “God is God of that!” Make a list; do some proclaiming.

God is God of all that is alive in you and around you.
God is Life. And where there is life, God is.

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