By Janelle Aijian
The Scriptorium
If God’s glory falls in the middle of the cosmos, and no one’s there to hear it, does it make a sound?
This was the question I used this week to begin discussions on
Jonathan Edward’s The End for Which God Created the World. Scripture is
full of discussions of God’s glory. It is God’s glory that motivates his
action to redeem and save (Is 48:11), as well as to punish and exile
(Ez 28:22). It is the glory of God that is always forefront in Christ’s
actions and motivation (Jn 7:18), and it is the end of redemption (Eph
1:6-14). Everything God does, he does for his glory.
But what exactly does it mean for God to act for the sake of his
glory? Think about a perfect gem, the most beautiful diamond imaginable,
and imagine it sitting in a cave for all eternity, beautiful and
perfect and never beheld by a single soul. It is certainly great, but is
it glorious?
Or,
as one of my students aptly suggested, think of Dash from Pixar’s The
Incredibles. Now, Dash is fast.
That’s his superpower, that’s the thing
that makes him who he is. But what if Dash existed in a world with
nothing to run on? Of course, that wouldn’t stop Dash from being fast,
but it might stop him from acting fast.
All this is to say, glory is a thing that we can talk about in three
ways. We can talk about the intrinsic glory of a thing in itself, we can
talk about glory as the manifestation of the greatness of a thing, and
we can talk about glory as the recognition other beings give to the
glory of the manifestation.
When we think of a culture that is invested in glory (some place like
Homer’s Greece), glory is all about the revelation, manifestation and
appreciation of greatness. Achilles gets glory by going out and doing
mighty acts of war. He is capable of greatness even while he’s sitting
in time-out on the shore, but he only gets glory once he goes out and
does what he’s capable of. And it is intrinsic to Achilles’ glory that
his glorious acts are perceived and appreciated by his fellow soldiers.
Edwards argues that the end for which God created the world was his
own glory. God always had greatness, but the creation of the world
allowed him to manifest that greatness for the sake of his glory. Let’s
go back to Dash for a moment. What if, in the world where Dash is fast
but has nowhere to run, Dash creates a track so that he can be, or act
on, the thing that he is? The track is an avenue for manifesting
fastness, and Dash makes it so that he can do the fast acts he’s capable
of. (Now, of course, this analogy is limited. If we think of running
fast as the analogy for greatness, then it sounds like God isn’t great
if he’s not “running”, but as long as we keep thinking about running as
God manifesting his greatness in a particular context, I think we stay
with Edwards.)
Now, what if that track became self-aware (go with me on this), and
started thinking about its relationship to Dash? It might be that the
track would start thinking to itself, “Dash needs me to be fast.” Or
even, “I’m the reason Dash is fast.” Of course, the track would have it
all wrong. The track exists for Dash’s speed, but Dash doesn’t need the
track to be fast. He doesn’t even need this particular track in order to
act fast. The track’s only reason for existing is to be a place where
Dash can be fast, but the track doesn’t add a whit to what Dash is or
what he is capable of.
This is the problem with the way some people think about the
question, “Why did God create the world?” Well, it must be because he
needed us, or because we add something to his existence. But Edwards
argues that God created the world only because it is good for him to
display his goodness.
And, of course, it’s good for us, too. Not only do we exist because
God is displaying his goodness, but we are also drawn by his goodness
towards him. Edwards ends his work with a beautiful image in which each
of us is like a shooting star ascending continually towards greater joy
and union with God. The world isn’t created for us, God created us for
himself, to manifest his glory and appreciate his glory and to
participate in his goodness more and more throughout all eternity. In
the end, the world isn’t for us, both we and it are for God. And that’s a
good thing.