Daily Devotional for Small Group Discussion: The Elusive Presence
Discussion Questions:
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The author writes in today’s devotional, “I am more of a Paul guy than a James guy.” Do you think different parts of scripture speak more directly to different people? And perhaps different parts of scripture speak more directly to us at different times in our lives? Which parts of scripture speak to you?
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Who are the writers and poets who have inspired you the most about the reality and presence of God?
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What are the limits to our knowledge of God? Can we ever fully know God? Do you believe God “fully knows you?”
The Elusive Presence
“Draw near to God, and God will draw near to you.” – James 4:8
James makes knowing God sound easy, but I’ve never found it so. When I was a young man, and had outgrown my Sunday school faith, I hungered to know God, not just as an idea, but as a living relationship.
I sought out people who knew God. They seemed so sure, so certain. I wanted to be like that. In time I found mentors and teachers who helped me along the way.
I also sought out writers who inspired me with their sense of the everyday presence of God. Many were from other traditions and faiths: the Trappist monk, Tomas Merton; the Jewish philosopher Abraham Joshua Heschel; the Roman Catholic poet Gerard Manly Hopkins; and the writer Annie Dillard. The list could go on and on.
The written words of these God lovers were incandescent with the light of divine fire. The world they wrote about was “charged with the grandeur of God” to employ a phrase from one of Hopkins’ luminous poems.
In the end I never climbed the mystical ladder to constant intimacy with the living God. God remains a real but elusive presence in my life. It is the human face of God in Jesus Christ that persists as my most accessible experience of the divine.
The truth is, I am more of a Paul guy than a James guy. James wants us to work at “drawing near” to God, whereas Paul invites us to accept God’s love as free gift, pure grace. I resonate with Paul’s words about being known fully by God, even if not knowing God fully (yet!). “For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then we will see face to face. Now I know only in part; then I will know fully, even as I have been fully known” (1 Corinthians 13:12). I’m good with that. It’s something to look forward to.
Prayer
Draw near to us, O Elusive Presence, that we may know you and love you, through Jesus Christ our Savior.