... more
than a cartoon strip devised by Kim Casali and drawn by Bill Asprey.
But before I
go any further, let me introduce a much-loved little girl, my friend Bethany. She is just a few weeks short of her first
birthday, and she already has a personality that makes her quite recognisable
when seen apart from her mum or dad.
When I visited her mother a couple of months after her birth, her
grandma was there to lend a hand, as grandmothers are often wont to do. This was the only time that I had seen that
lady, but a few weeks later I was chatting to the proud parents in church when a
particular angle of Bethany’s head and her facial expression gave me an instant
of recollection of her grandma’s features.
It was a ‘spitting image’ moment.
When was your
last spitting image experience? Or when
did someone last observe that you were the very image of your parent? The answer to these questions may depend on
your own age and circumstances, but it’s commonly recognised that our inherited
genes include a physical dimension. That’s
an idea that has Biblical precedent too.
Jesus
claimed resemblance to his Heavenly Father. “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father,”
He said (John 14:9); and one manifestation of this was the way He showed His
Father’s love to those around him. He
healed people left, right and centre, raised some from death, and he wept with love
along with Mary and the others over Lazarus’ death (John 11:33-36.) This was how Jesus wanted his followers to
behave, too. In that remarkable
illustration of the vine and its branches, He said, “Love each other, as I have
loved you. Greater love has no one than
this, that he lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:12-13.) And that was, literally, what Jesus did of
course, as Paul reported and explained (Rom. 5:6-8.)
As well as
his narration of these matters, John was also so impressed by Jesus’ love that
he seems to have filled his pastoral letters with it. In one example, he says that we should show
that we’re Jesus’ followers by walking as He did (I John 2:6.) In effect, he’s reminding us of Jesus’ very
words, to pass on to others the love that we have received; and if you are
uncertain just what that involves and need Paul’s blueprint, you’ll find it at
Romans 12:9-21
So, let’s
think back to those ‘spitting images.’
It’s not just the genes that are passed down from one generation to the
next that cause them to resemble their parents and grandparents. If you saw Bethany with her mum and dad, you
would instantly realise what a loving and happy family they are. They enjoy love in their lives, from each
other and from their parents and friends; but also from the church where we all
worship. We are privileged to be part of
a loving community where Jesus’ command to love one another is fulfilled widely
and often. How about you? Is there someone to whom you should be
showing God’s love – to whom you should appear the spitting image of your
heavenly Father?
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