Tuesday, February 2, 2010

e*b 2010 Week 3 Discussion Question and Answer

For: The Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.


QUESTION:


Fully Human - What Does It Mean To Be A Human Being?


We're a quirky bunch, we human beings. In the whole of the created order (at least on planet earth) we uniquely bear the imago Dei, the image of God, expressing God's benevolent kingship in the world through governing, loving, stewarding, relating and tending to this world and one another.


Begin to define what it means to be human. In a sense, we're exploring who it is that we lead into worship. Use words, phrases and ideas from Simply Christian, and the vids and media in your piece. In other words, present a brief theological + anthropological (meaning "focused on humans) reflection that articulates what human beings are all about. Feel free to integrate ideas about the Garden, the Fall of humankind, etc., but you will spending more time on those ideas in the next weeks.



ANSWER:


We are a bunch of stumbling ragamuffins, prone to making mistakes and sin, however, even the most Godless still carry His image. That is why we can find God everywhere, even in what’s coming out of Hollywood and other “unsuspecting” places (1). We are drawn to the story because the echos speak, even when we don’t understand Who’s voice we are hearing.


We are creative beings, no matter how left-brained, or how stifled we may be. When we create, we bring glory to Father God. As we humans do with our own children’s creativity, He takes pleasure in what we create and hangs it on His refrigerator door. (2)


We carry His image as a reminder of His rule and reign. We are to steward the earth and care for it. We are to be carriers of His Shalom declaring that God is putting things to right. This brings the Kingdom to earth.


We are not meant to journey alone. We are called to live in “right-relatedness,” with each other (3). When we do, we demonstrate the Kingdom.


We are carriers of hope to a lost and dying world. Man is desperate to be part of something bigger than himself. It is our job to draw people toward their destiny. Just before he denied Him, Jesus called Peter “The Rock” on which He would build His church (4). Jesus was speaking to the man Peter would become. We reflect His image when we do the same.


Being fully human is not a bad thing, for it is not about embracing our fallenness, it is about embracing God’s image that lies inherently within.



1. Dan Wilt, Southeast Regional Worship Conference, Summer 2007

2. Manuel Luz, Imagine That: Discovering Your Unique Role as a Christian Artist, Moody Publishers, Chicago, 2009 p.37

3. Ed Gentry and Dan Wilt, Two Brothers on Righteousness, audio.

4. Matthew 16:18

No comments:

Post a Comment