Saturday, January 14, 2017

 

Unexplainable


I can just see them: spellbound, wide-eyed, mouths gaping and minds whirring.  People of varying occupations, ages, races and socioeconomic backgrounds who had one thing in common - they had never heard anything like they were hearing from the unkempt, long-haired mountain man who was leaning back in his chair, gazing into space, describing a remote mountain scene he claimed to have seen with his own eyes.  He told of a place where the mud bubbled, the air smelled like rotten eggs, deep blue-green pools of water nearly boiled and streams of water unpredictably jetted higher than the trees - and all this smack dab in the middle of frozen patches of ice and snow. At first his audience was amazed, even mesmerized, but soon many became skeptical.  Why? Because they had never seen anything of the sort.  It didn't seem plausible. It was unexplainable. 



Turns out old John Colter was telling the truth.  His contemporaries inability to believe the explorer's tales  in 1806, did not make the geothermal features that would eventually become a hallmark of Yellowstone National Park non-existent. Colter couldn't explain it at the time, but he could certainly tell the world about it. Believers who have had personal experiences with God can relate. It is real, but unexplainable.



Some things I, as a believer, can not explain:


Some might argue that such questions are evidence that God is a fictional character. Because they can't explain, they can't believe.  But most people see how that flies in the face of reason.  That would be like declaring that space shuttles do not exist just because there are people who have never seen a shuttle and cannot fathom a machine that can circumvent the globe and travel at speeds in excess of 17,000 miles per hour. The evidence is everywhere:


For believers, those unexplainable statements simply stand as evidence that God is bigger than our minds can concieve.  That is extremely comforting when coupled with the Good News that He loves us in spite of our limited knowledge and imperfect behavior.  To be honest, I would not want a God who was explainable.  A God we can figure out is probably a god of our own making. The greatest attribute of the Creator-God who became our Savior is that He is unexplainable!





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