He who is not loving knew not God, for God is love
First Epistle of John 4: 8, Concordant New Testament
How many of us grew up in a church where God was someone to be feared and not loved intimately? That God was a hairs breath away from bringing down His judgement on those who behaved against His will. The other day I chuckled at a comment given by a friend of mine in his podcast, that God was somehow "Cranky." Today I do not see Him as such, but during my days in the mainstream church I definitely looked upon God as some cranky, cantankerous being who was waiting for that day where His judgement would be brought upon my sinners arse. This is the version of God that I was raised on, and it is the version of God which the powers that be within the church continue to chirp to their congregations to this day. Needless to say, this is a lie, but I'll get into that in a bit. Imagine growing up living in fear of a loving God who created you in His own likeness {Genesis 1:27}. Imagine living in fear of a God whose very nature...is to love {First Epistle of John 4:8}. So, is He a cranky God? Well, many well meaning Christians would have us believe that. Since it is almost impossible to have an intimate relationship with One Who is angry or cranky, I never knew that close relationship with the Father until I spent time away from the church and their false teachings. I know and understand now that God is neither angry nor cranky against us. How do I know this? Well, I know the truth of how it is that God looks upon His creation. Not with anger or animosity, but with love. It is through His love for us that Jesus was dispatched to bear that sin burden for us {Paul to the Corinthians (2) 5:21}. Do these sound like the actions of a God Who is angry with us? All of the scriptural evidence, in my opinion, leads us into the understanding that God is not set upon condemnation, but on reconciliation {Paul to the Corinthians (2) 5:18-19}. The truth of the matter is, God does not speak of His condemnation for us, but those within the church. This is the environment which I grew up in.
One of the most iconic scriptures we know speaks to the truth of Gods love and mercy towards us. That God loved us so much that He has given us His only Son, that through Him we would NOT be judged, but that all the world would be saved through Him {Johns Account 3:16-17}. So, Jesus has not come to judge, but to save. To redeem. Again, does this sound like the actions of an angry God? If I knew then what I know today I never would have fallen for the false claims of those speaking the lies of the church. The apostle speaks that God so LOVED the world, not that He judged the world. But many Christians will counter with the claim, what about Gods anger in the old testament? What about it? Realize that this was before Jesus was dispatched unto this world. That the entire scripture, from the old testament forward, lays the foundation for the coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus. This was not dome out of anger or punishment, but of love. Anger will never produce reconciliation. Nor will it ever produce trust and faith. What anger does produce is hostility and fear. While I have never felt openly hostile towards God, I definitely was afraid of Him. Those in the church will counter and tell us, but that's righteous fear, which is somehow allowed in Christianity. The truth is, fear is fear no matter how you look at it. We're also told that the Father has not given us that spirit of fear, but of power and love and sanity {Paul to Timothy (2) 1:7}. So, if we have that fear of the Father, is it from Him? I would say not to that nonsense. But those within the church seem to embrace that fear of the Father and what He ultimately will do to us. The fires of hell burn brightly in the back of our minds whenever we think of how He looks upon us. But this is not the truth of how God sees His creation. God has chosen love over anger and fear. It is those within the Christian religion who continue to stoke the fires of Gods anger among any and all who will listen.
For thus God loves the world, so that He gives His only-begotten Son, that everyone who is believing in Him should not be perishing, but may be having life eonian. For God does not dispatch His Son into the world that He should be judging the world, but that the world may be saved through Him
Johns Account 3: 16-17, Concordant New Testament
~Scott~






