We previously looked briefly at the second concept and in particular what harvest could teach us about God, but this week I watched a YouTube video that made me think about Psalm 19:1 in a different way.
The channel was by Nate Morgan Locke who calls himself a 'Reformed Mythologist' and makes videos about “How the stories we love point to the greatest story of all.” In this particular conversation he was talking to the Revd Dr Paul Blackham, who has a podcast snappily titled “The Christ Centred Cosmic Civilisation”. One of the things that Blackham talked about was how the Bible often refers to the 'heavens' in the plural, it's there in Psalm 19:1 and indeed it's there in the very first verse of the Bible (Genesis 1:1). He then links it to Paul's statement in 2 Corinthians 12:2 about the man (probably Paul himself) who “was caught up to the third heaven”.
The Biblical worldview has three 'heavens': the first is what we call the sky or the atmosphere; the second is space or the universe; and the third is where God has his throne. So what is this teaching us? Well just as being in the first heaven (at the top of a tall building or mountain, or in a plane) makes us awestruck at the vastness and grandeur of it, so when we 'zoom out' into the second heaven we realise that our awe at the first heaven is nothing compared to our awe at the vastness and grandeur of the second heaven. Then, 'zooming out' again we can imagine that the vastness and grandeur of the second heaven is nothing when compared with the third heaven. And so we start to grasp how mind-blowing the glory of God is (if that's not a contradiction!)
When faced with this scale, Blackham goes on to say, it might be easy to think that us tiny humans with our tiny lifespans are utterly unimportant and irrelevant. But the Bible doesn't want us to do that, instead Psalm 8:3-4 says “When I consider your heavens...[what are] human beings that you care for them?” The God who dwells in that mind-blowing third heaven cares so much for humanity, cares so much for you, that he came down to Earth in Jesus to save us (Philippians 2:6-8). No wonder the whole creation praises God!
The Biblical worldview has three 'heavens': the first is what we call the sky or the atmosphere; the second is space or the universe; and the third is where God has his throne. So what is this teaching us? Well just as being in the first heaven (at the top of a tall building or mountain, or in a plane) makes us awestruck at the vastness and grandeur of it, so when we 'zoom out' into the second heaven we realise that our awe at the first heaven is nothing compared to our awe at the vastness and grandeur of the second heaven. Then, 'zooming out' again we can imagine that the vastness and grandeur of the second heaven is nothing when compared with the third heaven. And so we start to grasp how mind-blowing the glory of God is (if that's not a contradiction!)
When faced with this scale, Blackham goes on to say, it might be easy to think that us tiny humans with our tiny lifespans are utterly unimportant and irrelevant. But the Bible doesn't want us to do that, instead Psalm 8:3-4 says “When I consider your heavens...[what are] human beings that you care for them?” The God who dwells in that mind-blowing third heaven cares so much for humanity, cares so much for you, that he came down to Earth in Jesus to save us (Philippians 2:6-8). No wonder the whole creation praises God!
Photo by Mohammad Alizade from www.freelyphotos.com/Collections/Biblical-Imagery/i-vdVrGmz/A
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