
Some of us have a hard time relating to God the
Father.
We sing to the Son, pray to the Son, and ask
ourselves, “What would Jesus do?” But when Jesus talks
about His Father, He touches issues that may be
affecting us more than we realize.
Maybe our problem is that His Father doesn’t answer
our prayers as we want Him to. Or we think of Him in
terms of the human fathers we have known. Many of us
have never even heard our biological father say, “I love
you.” Some have inherited a legacy of abandonment,
addiction, and even abuse.
Even the best of fathers fail us in life and leave us
in death. In one way or another, all of us have been
affected by what the Bible calls “the sins of the
fathers.”
Sins of the Fathers
The same Bible that tells us to honor our fathers
also documents the moral failures of patriarchs like
Adam, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, David, and Solomon.
Even the New Testament acknowledges the tendency of
fathers to provoke their children to anger (Ephesians
6:4). Another passage makes a distinction between the
fathers who discipline us as they see best and the
Father in heaven who always knows how to correct us for
our own good (Hebrews 12:9-10).
In a day when so many of us long for a return to
family values, it is disappointing to discover that a
good dad is hard to find in the Bible.
But maybe this is a disappointment that can work in
our favor.
A Different Kind of Father
A woman I know told me that she turned to the Father
in heaven looking for a parent who was different from
her biological father. She echoed the hope of the
songwriter David, who wrote, “When my father and my
mother forsake me, then the Lord will take care of me”
(Psalm 27:10).
David repeated the idea that God is a “Father to the
fatherless” in another song (Psalm 68:5), but it was
Jesus who gave us the most personal understanding of the
Father in heaven.
The Father of Jesus
Scripture doesn’t tell us much about the relationship
between Jesus and Joseph, the man who married Jesus’
mother and raised Jesus as his son.
Instead, even at the age of 12, Jesus is found
relating to His eternal Father. After staying behind in
Jerusalem following the Feast of the Passover, Jesus
said to Mary and Joseph, “Why did you seek Me? Did you
not know that I must be about My Father’s business?”
(Luke 2:49).
Years later when Jesus went public at about the age
of 30, He talked a lot about the Father. He told His
disciples that He had come to bring them to His Father
who was speaking and working through Him (John 14:8-11).
When one of them asked Him to show them the Father, He
said, “He who has seen Me has seen the Father” (v.9).
Then, as He was about to complete the work that He said
His Father had given Him to do, Jesus told His friends
that He was leaving to prepare a place for them in His
Father’s house (John 14:2). He said, “I am going to the
Father, for My Father is greater than I” (John 14:28).
From all that Jesus says about His Father, it’s clear
that He wants us to love and trust His Father as He
does.
A Father of Biblical Proportions
Many of us, however, have not found the help we are
looking for in an invisible Father. We are troubled when
our Father in heaven doesn’t answer our prayers in the
time and ways we hoped He would. We’re quite sure that
if our own dads, imperfect as they are, had 10,000
angels to help them, they would give us help that our
Father in heaven has withheld. Too often we find
ourselves echoing the familiar words of the psalmist and
Jesus, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?”
(Psalm 22:1; Matthew 27:46).
But where did we get the idea that our Father in
heaven should follow the script we write for Him? If
Jesus was like His Father, then both are as
unpredictable in action as They are unchanging in
character. Jesus didn’t tell His disciples what they
wanted to hear. He didn’t use His strength to do
everything they wanted Him to do. He had plans they
couldn’t understand. Yet, in the end, in spite of all of
this unpredictability, Jesus revealed a Father who gave
them more than they could have hoped for.
In hindsight, Jesus’ friends could see how faithful
He had been to them. When they thought they were going
to die in a storm (Mark 4:37-38), when it seemed as if
He didn’t care (John 11:1-6, 32), and when all hope
seemed lost, Jesus had surprised them by showing them
His Father’s ability to still a storm, raise the dead,
and replace despair with hope.
This Father who revealed Himself through Jesus is not
like the dads who let us feel their biceps, lifted us to
their shoulders, and showed up to support us at school
events. But He is also not the problem and mystery some
of us think He is. Jesus is just like Him, and He is
just like Jesus.
In heart and personality, Jesus is exactly like the
Father, who “so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son” for us (John 3:16).
This is different than thinking that Jesus came to
protect us from His Father. When we see Jesus dying for
us, interceding for us, and allowing us to use His name
to approach the Father, it’s not because the Son is more
merciful than the Father. It is because the Father and
Son are in perfect agreement about Their love for us.
And so we pray: Father in heaven, we need to get
past the issues with our own fathers that have clouded
our trust in You. While there is so much about You that
we don’t understand, please help us to see all that You
want us to see about Yourself in the walk and in the
words of Your Son. –Mart De Haan
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