S
Semp2pts
Guest
“Look how much you were worth to God” is THE statement about our worth. It asks the onlooker, you or me, to form some measure of self-worth based on the act of Christ on the cross.Saying, “look how much you were worth to God” is a statement about God’s love for us, not about our goodness.
Rather than you or I understanding that EVEN in our unworthiness, or unprofitability (to use the word St. Paul used when he quoted isaiah), God chose to redeem us.
The line that makes it even better is, “Even if you were the only human alive, Jesus still would have died for you”. Of course He would of - He’s that kind of God: Merciful and loving. And yet, despite that, people get hazy eyed and misty about their own reflection because of it. He would of died just for me! I sure am special.
Needing God isn’t a bad thing and somewhere along the lines I think a lot of people have ceased to need God because He’s the greatest need. They need God as an echo of their own goodness - a self-esteem hit courtesy of a God that would die for them. It ceases to be about a God that is glorified by satisfying our souls and becomes about visions of heaven where THINGS satisfy us (long lost loved ones, endless feasts, etc etc).
Are we ontologically good? Yep. Was I ever arguing that? Nope. But some how, through pride and whatever else, this had bled into our faith so that…when you think about it…we don’t actually need God…we don’t need the cross… I’m going to live to edicts of my conscience. I wont do harm. In fact! I might do some good. That’s enough. Pfft…What’d that guy die for anyway. I’m all good.
Is it such a bad thing to place us in a position where we are in such dire need for God that, heaven forbid, we might live like we need Him?