Knowing God
Today, I get to make my own contribution to the Desiderata Project. I got to reserve my favorite section for myself.
Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive Him to be.
I’m a Baptist married to a Catholic. I’m cool with both methods of worship. Automatically, that puts me in a bit of a different category than most people of faith. So many people that I’ve encountered believe that there is only one way to know God. Only one version of God… and they are the only one who can truly tell you about Him. They are the only one who knows the special trick you have to do in order to have access to God. Listen to me, they say, and I will introduce you to God.
My image of God is influenced by the fact that I spent my formative years in a Baptist church. My parents and grandparents were sort of “charter members” of a church that formed in my hometown, and I spent a lot of time there. The soundtrack of my preschool years is made up of traditional hymns and Southern Gospel music. Blessed Assurance, Just As I Am, Oh How I Love Jesus? So how I “conceive Him to be” is in the image of Jesus, knocking at the door to my heart.
I’m an Evangelical Christian, though I shudder at the connotations that label has in our country today. I want people to know God, and I am active through my church in trying to introduce people to God through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I want people to know that God that I know… the one who loves me enough to forgive me for all of the stupid stuff that I do and wants to help me be more like Him.
“For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.” (John 3:17) The God that I know is more interested in saving people than condemning them. But again, I seem to be a little bit different than other folks in my particular faith tradition. A lot of those people spend more time putting little “Marriage = Man + Woman” bumper stickers on their car and the like. That’s not for me. My faith tends to focus on what I can do to be a better person and to make life better for other people. I don’t spend a lot of time trying to condemn other people in God’s name. I just don’t think that’s my job.
It’s amazing that we can all have such a different impression of God. I won’t even get into different religions today, beyond just to say that I am happy when people connect to God in any way that works for them. If a person connects with God as a Muslim, Buddhist, or Wiccan… I am cool with that. I just want everyone to encounter God, to touch Him, to be close to Him, no matter what path they choose to take.
I believe that God is big enough to be experienced in a variety of ways. I think maybe that’s why we all see Him so differently. Maybe we’re all just discovering different aspects of Him that He’s choosing to reveal to us. It sort of reminds me of the story of The Blind Men and the Elephant. We only know God through what we’ve actually felt in our lives.
If it’s been a while since you’ve felt God’s presence in your life, I hope you’ll take some time to look for Him. Then maybe you can tell me and others how you “conceive Him to be.” That way, we can all come to know Him more fully.
Image from The Visual Church Blog









It’s true. We all only know God through what we experience him to be. My view of him has changed much over the years. I actually read an interesting article from an atheist on why there is no God. The nice part is that the article didn’t condemn believers, but instead stated that atheists do nice things for others because they believe there is no being to “save them” or others, and they must be the peace, kindness and joy they want to see in the world.
I believe God is loving and kind. Any religion that focuses on love, hope, generosity, kindness and joy is a good one to me. I am happy when people of any faith come together in friendship and support each other in times of hardship. That is a beautiful thing.
Hi Bob,
I like your point of view. Live and let live, but please take the time to make the world a better place through your own beliefs and actions. Nice concept. I wish more people would take their blinders off long enough to examine a novel approach to creating a loving and peaceful world.
Chris Melton
http://www.soupornuts.com
http://www.therotater.com
This is what I write about and talk about in one way or the other, all the time. No one has a lock on God; none of us are even close. Only in community with others can we begin to know something and even then we will “fall short of the glory.”
The notion that we can know, or do know, is the great Separator, the real historical scourge of every civilization since the Iron Age. As a pastor, I have no problem at all in saying ‘I hate religion.’ And I am having less and less of a problem saying ‘I despise Christianity.’ But I cannot overstate the wonder and the freedom of the Way (directly behind Jesus!)
Some great phrases and thoughts in both your post and the comments so far, Bob: “No one’s got a lock on God”; the Blind Men and the Elephant.
It’s a great thought that you lead us to: that no one has the monopoly on a definition of God. In my earlier years, I knew him as Jesus, my friend and leader. Then it was the Holy Spirit my partner and advisor. And now it is Father, Commander and Mentor.