Our Divine Parent: A Biblical Theology of the Family of God
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Joshua Joel Spoelstra
Joshua Joel Spoelstra is lead teaching pastor of Downtown Community Fellowship in Clemson, South Carolina, and Affiliate Faculty of Religion at Southern Wesleyan University in Central South Carolina. He is the author of God’s Love Story: A Canonical Telling (Wipf & Stock, 2020).
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Our Divine Parent - Joshua Joel Spoelstra
Our Divine Parent
Our Divine Parent
A Biblical Theology of the Family of God
Joshua Joel Spoelstra
OUR DIVINE PARENT
A Biblical Theology of the Family of God
Copyright © 2020 Joshua Joel Spoelstra. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Wipf & Stock
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
paperback isbn: 978-1-7252-6762-6
hardcover isbn: 978-1-7252-6761-9
ebook isbn: 978-1-7252-6763-3
Manufactured in the U.S.A. July 24, 2020
Dedication
To Rosalind, Anastasia, and Lily Mae
children are a gift from the LORD;
the fruit of the womb is a divine reward.
(Psalm 127:3, CEB)
Table of Contents
Title Page
Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1: God as Father
Chapter 2: God as Mother
Chapter 3: God as Parent of a Son
Chapter 4: God as Parent of a Daughter
Chapter 5: God as Adopter of Children
Chapter 6: Parenting as Discipleship
Conclusion
Bibliography
Abbreviations
ABD David Noel Freedman, ed. Anchor Bible Dictionary. 6 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1992.
BCE before Common Era
BDAG Danker, Frederick William, et al., eds. A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature. 3rd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000.
BDB Brown, Francis, et al. Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament with an Appendix Containing the Biblical Aramaic. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2006.
CE Common Era
Gk. Greek
Heb. Hebrew
HALOT Koehler, Ludwig, and Walter Baumgartner. The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament, 2 vols. London: Brill, 2001.
IBD Douglas, J.D. and N. Hillyer, eds. The Illustrated Bible Dictionary. 3 vols. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1980.
TDNT Gerhard Kittel, ed. Theological Dictionary of the New Testament. 10 vols. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964.
USB4 United Bible Society. The Greek New Testament. 4th rev. ed. Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2001.
Introduction
Topic, Thesis, and Scope
Aristotle and Plato once philosophized that the abolition of families, as well as implementing other changes, would give way to create the ideal society.
¹
Now, over twenty-three centuries later, the family unit is still a vital institution in most, if not all, societies around the world. Nevertheless, the family unit has witnessed many different configurations over time, which seems to attest to its significance and resilience.
The contemporary familial landscape includes traditional expressions of family units; also, there are mixed/blended/joint families, multiracial families, and transnational families. Parents may be comprised of opposite-sex or same-sex spouses, the single parent or the guardian(s). Children of a family may be biological, adopted, or fosterlings. The family-by-choice option may comprise distant relatives and/or nonbiological persons, such as friends or partners. A nuclear and/or extended family may feel broken or whole, fractured or nurturing, estranging or accepting; indeed, family can be a prison or a haven, or any experience in-between.
Another layer of familial relationality, moreover, is the phenomenon of spiritual family, whether this is understood generally as fellow adherents of a religion/faith or cognized in more specific filial terms; further, spiritual family may or may not overlay or intersect with biological family. In Christianity, the entire Bible portrays the metaphorical story of the family of God as a present reality and a progressive revelation. This book encapsulates a fresh approach to the broad subject of the family of God, according to Scripture’s mosaic, which saliently elucidates the intentions of God for relationship and belonging, purpose and fulfillment for humankind.
To be sure, there are many literary works whose scope focuses on one aspect or a complex of issues related to the family of God. For instance, there is a growing body of literature committed to gender and sexuality and God in theological scholarship;
²
some treatises even construct God as a father
³
or mother.
⁴
Additionally, child/children studies is a rising socio-scientific interest emerging in the field of biblical studies.
⁵
There are also numerous volumes concerning one particular function of the family of God, as viewed in the Bible, such as adoption.
⁶
The current work, alternatively, integrates many elements encompassing each entity of the divine family unit; it incorporates the major functions and important ancillary aspects of the family of God. Occasionally, an integrative presentation is put forth; yet, it is usually within the limited scope of a biblical book (e.g., Isaiah, John) or corpus (e.g., Pauline Epistles, Prophets).
⁷
In spite of this, a holistic treatment of the biblical metaphor of the family of God spanning the whole Christian Bible is necessitous.
In short, the trajectory of integrated entities and aspects of the family of God are as follows. God is a Divine Parent; God, in the Bible, is not only portrayed in terms and quality both as a father but also as a mother. The Divine Parent, also, has progeny. Israel is portrayed (collectively) as a son and, alternatively, also as a daughter; moreover, Jesus as the very child of God exhibits, and is the template for, perfect relationship with the Divine Parent. Thus, a family unity exists with the Divine Parent and child(ren) of God—and this is the family of God. Furthermore, God loves orphans and engages in adoption; through the adoption price of Jesus’ life and the security deposit of the Holy Spirit, God purchases (redeems) estranged/orphaned children for God’s eternal/divine family through regeneration by the Holy Spirit upon faith in Jesus the Christ. As siblings of and co-heirs with Christ Jesus, discipleship into the fullness of Jesus Christ is illustrated as spiritual parenting (disciple-makers) and maturing spiritual children (those being discipled). In the end, God’s loved children are to grow up into Christ, the true elder brother, and emulate the Divine Parent in all things and in all ways.
Presuppositions and Hypotheses
Two main presuppositions must be registered which undergird the thesis that God is a Divine Parent of the family of God, comprising human children. One hypothesis involves the image of God as an interpretive crux; inherent to humankind, the imago Dei conjoins God and people in some meaningful way. Also, observing that most verbiage regarding the Divine Parent
or the child of God
is present in poetic sections of the Hebrew Bible, the second hypothesis submitted is that the New Testament makes typological use of Old Testament metaphors. Each presupposition shall be elaborated.
Image of God: The Interpretive Crux for God as Parent and Humankind as Children
The image of God (Gen 1:27) is the crux of interpretation for the hermeneutical foundation of God as parent and humanity as children, for it is the first and most instructive instance which informs this framework. Indeed, the imago Dei reveals the gendered diversity of humankind and its relational and procreative capacities. Thus, Genesis 1:26–28 is paradigmatic for the conception of God as Divine Parent (father and mother); and God’s children are males and females (literal of humanity), sons and daughters (metaphorical of personified Israel).
In Genesis 1, near the end of all the creative works of God, God creates humankind. God prefaces this creation with the following purpose and intention. ‘Let us make humanity in our image to resemble us . . . ’ [So] God created humanity in God’s own image, in the divine image God created them, male and female God created them
(Gen 1:26–27, CEB). Germane for our purposes is the correspondence between the plurality yet singularity of God (triunity)
⁸
and the plurality yet singularity of humanity (male and female),
⁹
and its implications for the human species.
¹⁰
By virtue of humankind sharing in God’s image and likeness, maleness and femaleness both resemble God to some extent. Implicit in this passage is the concept that God transcends gender (cf. Isa 55:9), yet somehow also encompasses gender;
¹¹
therefore, something of God is revealed in/through human gender. Furthermore, the [biblical] text’s presentation of the plurality of humanity in terms of sexual diversity in some manner reflects something of the unity in the plurality of God.
¹²
Indeed, even humanity’s sexuality is a reflection or expression of the image of God, ostensibly; for, as the triune God creates, so similarly does humanity procreate.
¹³
It is precisely when the original humans procreate, in fact, where the verbiage of one being in the image and likeness of another is registered next in the Bible. The filial dimension of the image of God comes into focus bi-optically when Genesis 1:26–27 is viewed together with Genesis 5:1–3.
When God created humankind, he made them in the likeness of God. Male and female he created them, and he blessed them and named them ‘Humankind’ when they were created. When Adam had lived one hundred thirty years, he became the father of a son in his likeness, according to his image, and named him Seth. (Gen
5
:
1
–
3,
NRSV)
Image (Heb. ṣelem) and likeness (Heb. dəmût) are utilized in both Genesis 1 and 5 to convey: As Adam is Seth’s father, so too God is the parent of humanity.
¹⁴
In this context,
in other words, it is explicit that the resemblance between God and humanity is analogous to the resemblance between a parent and child.
¹⁵
In fact, Deuteronomy 32:6 and Malachi 2:10 both refer to God as creator and father, which mirrors the language of Genesis 1. Consequently, Genesis 1:27 and 5:1–3 is paradigmatic to speak of humankind as the children of God, and God as Divine Parent.
¹⁶
God is often depicted in Scripture in anthropomorphic terms, and this is done so that humans might better understand God.
¹⁷
However, if humankind is created in the image of God, then it seems more appropriate to speak of humans in theomorphic terms—as image bearers of God.
¹⁸
Stated differently, God is not made according to human form, but humans (anthro-) are made according to the form (morph-) of God (theo-). So rather than (merely) focusing on language which portrays God with human body parts or mental faculties, etc., it is sage to interpret the social, physical, emotional, and spiritual capacities, etc. of humans, as resonances and reflections of God in/through humanity.
¹⁹
Moreover, it is when the genders live in harmony and equity that God is most accurately represented,
²⁰
for God—who is (three in) one—lives in perfect community with Godself.
Poetic Biblical Literature: The Vehicle for Familial Terms and Its Subsidiary Relationships
Another exegetical phenomenon which undergirds the presupposition of constructing a biblical portrait of a Divine Parent who forms the family of God is the fact that most of the complex terms and images derive from biblical literature whose genre is poetic. More accentuated than the nonfigurative style of narrative, poetry is the vehicle for figurative language, including metaphor. Throughout the Old Testament’s poetic sections, chiefly, God is depicted as a parent of a child.
God as a father is a metaphor found in Psalms and Proverbs, which are part of the Wisdom Literature marked by its poetic language in prayers and aphorisms. Also, the father pseudonym is present in the Song of Moses (Deut 32). Even the dialogues and diatribes