Friday, February 13, 2015

What is possible?

Reflections on Matthew 21:21-22. (From my journal entry of 2/13/15).  The proof of what is possible is in the pudding. The fig tree withered at Jesus' word. So is God's power rooted in His ability to speak without doubt? Don't we do that in the earthly realm? We speak and act in dozens of ways daily with the expectation that what we say will come to pass because we understand the mechanism and since we do understand, we do not doubt. "Clicking" is a relatively new term. So when I click my mouse, which I have done several times this morning, and tell what I click on to do something, I don't doubt it will happen. I just clicked on a picture of an album of songs and the songs started playing. I had no doubt they would. But in this case, even though I did not doubt it, the "click" wouldn't know anything about it if I were skeptical, and wouldn't care. Why? Because it is mechanical. That was the way it was engineered.
 
But withering a fig tree is not, in this case, mechanical. The operation on it supersedes natural means. I could probably spray some chemical on a tree and wither it rather quickly, but just speaking to it would have no effect. But, is that because I just don't believe it will have an effect, and therefore I doubt? There is no apparent relationship between speaking a word and the result. This fact produces doubt. Jesus tapped into a supernatural mechanism that we humans cannot understand. No engineer can create it. No scientist can discover it because it is not of this world.
 
But is Jesus saying that one function of faith, which is essential to our relationship with Him, is to throw mountains into the sea? It is like these icons on my computer that I never click on because I do not understand what they do. So I am afraid what might happen. They are there and they will do something if I click on them, but not until. It is so difficult to grasp miracles, and how a common man can initiate one.
 
One thing seems to be clear in Jesus' words, i.e. there is much more possible to us as followers of the Son of God than we often see in our experience. It is either because we have not cultivated "faith without doubt" or God simply does not need us to do all that is possible, and limits us for practical reasons. Think of the chaos if we were randomly throwing mountains into the sea!

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