By Fred Sanders
The Scriptorium
I’ve been reading about the doctrine of God the Father, a doctrine
which has no handy name. Following the model of christology (the
doctrine about Jesus Christ) and pneumatology (the doctrine about the
Holy Spirit), we ought to call it patrology, but that word is already in
use, and refers to the study of the church fathers.
Though it
lacks a handy technical name, though, the doctrine about the first
person of the Trinity, God the Father, is a distinct and important area
of theology. He’s not God-in-general, and he’s not God the Son nor God
the Spirit. He is the Father. What specific content does the doctrine of
God the Father have?
Most of what should be said in a doctrine of
God the Father is positive. There is a large amount of biblical
revelation about him, if you approach Scripture with an open mind and a
few of the right questions. As John Owen points out in the first part of
his great book of evangelical trinitarian spirituality, Communion with God,
when you search through the New Testament to gather up the concepts
that are associated with the first person of the Trinity, one key idea
stands out as the most frequently occurring: love. Owen says that love
is the thing “wherein peculiarly and eminently the saints have communion
with the Father… free, undeserved, and eternal love.” This is what
Christians should think of first when they think of the Father, “this
they are immediately to eye in him.” (Read Owen on this subject in this short section of Communion with God.)
God
the Father is the one who loves us. Notice that the key idea is not
wrath or justice, not even discipline or provision, though these are the
associations that spring to mind for many of us. Those associations are
present in Scripture, but towering above them is the main message about
the Father that the New Testament teaches: that it is God the Father
who takes the lead in loving his people. This is a far cry from the
angry-Father-friendly-Jesus caricature.
Once you pick up the trail of this New Testament doctrine of God the Father, you’ll start to see it everywhere. It can improve your approach to prayer immediately if you draw together some of the key passages about the Father, meditate on them, and make them your own.
But
in addition to the wonderful, positive task of developing a doctrine of
God the Father, there is also some important negative work to be done.
What I mean is that there are misunderstandings of the doctrine already
playing in our minds and in popular understanding, and these need to be
confronted and corrected. Our main problem in the doctrine of the Father
is the problem of neglect and under-development of the biblical
resources, but we also have a problem of entrenched misunderstandings
and false teachings.
A perennial false teaching in this field is
the supposition that God is the universal father of all people, or that
his status as creator of all constitutes him as father of all. The
falseness of the notion of God’s universal fatherhood can be
demonstrated several ways, including verse-to-verse combat and the
stacking up of evidence.
But a more elegant proof is to focus on
the doctrine of salvation as adoption. The logic of adoption is that you
go from not being a child of God, to being a child of God. If believers
are now adopted sons of God, then they must not have been God’s sons
before; they must not have had God the Father as their father.
Believers are sons of God because they are included in Christ, the
eternal Son who become the incarnate Son and carried away the burden of
sin of those whom he was not ashamed to call brothers, so that he could
become the firstborn among many brothers.
That redemptive adoption
makes God our Father. It puts us in Christ, and makes his Father our
Father. That’s what salvation is about: in the gospel, we have God as
our Father.
Unless we keep this fact about salvation in mind, we
tend to let the phrase “God the Father” be filled in by other ideas. The
other idea that has often intruded itself here is an idea about
creation. All things come from God; God is the universal creator of all.
There is some sense in which, coming from God and deriving their
origin from him, all creatures can be said to have God as a sort of
source or ancestor or parent. That would be a metaphorical way of
talking about the creator-creation relationship, as if I said that I
fathered this blog post or that every paragraph is one of my babies. You
would immediately see that I was not speaking literally (or in that
case even very seriously), but that I was indulging in some metaphorical
stretching.
The Bible knows all about it. In fact, Paul even says “we are all his offspring,”
talking to Athenian pagans and quoting one of their own poets
approvingly. If this is not a declaration of God’s universal fatherhood,
what is it?
It’s a metaphorical extension of the fact that God is
the source of everybody. Every creature stands in a sort of father-like
relationship to their creator. That’s a great point of contact when
talking with non-Christians, but it’s vastly different from recognizing
the saving Fatherhood of God.
And look at the word Paul uses:
“offspring.” It’s not “sons” or “children” or anything familial like
that, but a word you might use for people groups. What if I told you I
had two wonderful offspring? Two offspring who sprung off me. You’d
think I was weird father.
Now think about what somebody is saying
if they want to claim that God is the father of everybody. They are
willing to accept this creator-creature relationship, apply the name of
fatherhood to it by metaphorical extension, and settle for that as
having God for their father.
But a source is not a father. A
source is a progenitor, a cause of my existence. That’s not a father.
Let me put this delicately. All of us have male progenitors. Some of you
may have never met your male progenitor. He may have contributed his
genetic bit to your production, but be absent from your life as a
personal reality of household existence. That is not what fatherhood
means in the New Testament; that is absolutely not what the theological
notion of God as Father is pointing to. When we have the Father of Jesus
Christ as our Father, when we are adopted to be his sons and daughters
because of the propitiation in Christ, we are brought into an
interpersonal relationship of intimacy, trust, commitment, covenant,
provision… he is our Father and we are his beloved children, chosen in
Christ to be holy and blameless before him, to take on the family
likeness, to be sons in the Son. That’s the good news of the saving
Fatherhood of God.
Don’t settle for God as a progenitor. Take him
as your Father, by taking Jesus Christ as your Savior. Too many people
with half-Christian presuppositions reject the personal intimacy of
having God as their Father, and want to settle for God as progenitor.
Too many people reject the personal presence of the true Holy Spirit who
is the lord and giver of life, and settle for a cosmic force they call
the spirit, which they think makes them spiritual. Too many people
reject Jesus as savior while still acknowledging him as a role model,
settling for a pattern. Settling for less in these three ways is the
same, single problem: dodging the salvation that is fellowship with the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.