I have to admit that the phrase from the Lord’s Prayer, “Our Father who art in heaven”, bothered me for a long time. As a child I remember watching a sci-fi movie where the leading character is able to see into the depths of space, to the end of the universe. It began simply, with being able to see through walls, but as his vision increased, he peered into space. My childhood take was that if he looked far enough, he would finally see God, watching from the distance of billions of light years away.
So where is God? So far away that I can not even begin to comprehend it – that is how things came together in my childish mind. And as I grew, I’m not sure I put away childish things very quickly. Others don't either -- as a pastor I have people tell me that their prayers don’t make it up to God, that at times they don’t even make it past the ceiling. They see God as one who is up there and out there, so far removed that we may have to speak up for Him to hear us, or speak long to get His attention.
In the last blog I spoke with great gratitude about Jesus directing us to call God “Father.” That phrase speaks of such intimacy, closeness, and love. A tremendous privilege, to call God "Father." Is Jesus now trying to correct our misunderstanding – “Yes, God does want you to think of Him as Father, but don’t jump to conclusions – He is so far from you that you can’t even comprehend it” – have we misinterpreted what Jesus was getting at?
No, not at all – in fact, Jesus is helping us understand what kind of Father God is.
For one thing, He is our heavenly Father. Whatever our relationship with our earthly fathers might be, God is so far beyond that. I can use this example – my Dad was almost completely deaf. From my earliest recollections I had to yell to get his attention, and I became increasingly aware of the fact that his hearing aid did very little good. He mostly read lips. Carrying on a conversation with Dad was extremely difficult. When I was in college Dad had a device which was suppose to enable him to hear me on the phone. I would call home and try to talk to him – and you could hear the sadness in his voice when he would say, “I’m sorry Robert, I can’t hear what you are saying – here’s your mother.”
My earthly father had trouble hearing me and carried on very few conversations throughout our times together – our Heavenly Father has no such problem. He hears our shouts and our whispers, and He is always eager to carry on a conversation night or day.
Our Father in heaven – if I think of that phrase in distance terms, I don’t think of God being far removed but of God having an exceptional vantage point from which to see. My daughter says there is a mountain you can climb in Arizona and see the whole city of Phoenix laid out before you. We are so near-sighted in the living of our lives, but our Father in heaven has the vantage point of expanded vision. He misses nothing. He takes it all in. We are never lost from His sight. He doesn’t go around scratching His head wondering what’s going to happen next. To say God is in heaven is to say He sees all. Everyone of us. Personally.
Our Father in heaven – I believe that also emphasizes His closeness. Scholar N. T. Wright emphasizes that earth is our sphere of life and God is hidden from us for the time being in the spiritual sphere of life. He is not distant – He is closer than we can imagine. I think of the scene in 2 Kings 6 when Elisha and his servant were surrounded by the enemy. The servant was terrified, but Elisha prayed that his servant’s eyes would be opened. When they were, he suddenly saw the hills full of chariots of fire, the army of God. They were there all the time – Elisha knew it, but his servant didn’t.
When I dwell on the opening phrase of the Lord’s Prayer, using it as a pattern and a starter for my own prayer, my heart and soul goes in these kinds of directions. I spend time with the Father knowing that He hears. I relax in His superior vantage point, knowing that He knows what is going on and will direct me as I trust in Him. And I ask Him to help me live with the awareness that I am never separated from His presence, that I don’t have to worry about my prayers making it beyond the ceiling. I pray that I might have eyes to see His presence with me always through His Son Jesus.
Our Father in heaven.
Great insights - Father in heaven as about a great vantage point. Nice. True. Thanks.
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