Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Limitations of Human Language in Contemplating the Eternal Reality of God
The ongoing discourse concerning the eternal and ineffable reality of God inevitably encounters limitations and shortcomings when confronted with the finite and fragile capacities of human speech and understanding. For whatsoever we articulate or predicate of the divine essence remains but a faint shadow or a dim reflection—an adumbration that, by its nature, cannot fully grasp or contain the boundless and infinite fullness of His being. Despite this, human language, though inherently impoverished and limited, persists as a sovereign and divine instrument whereby the Almighty condescends to reveal and inscribe His eternal purposes, His divine will, and His gracious plans upon the hearts and minds of His creatures at the appointed times and seasons.
Divine Transcendence and the Covenant Heritage of Human Identity
Recognizing this transcendent and mysterious truth compels us to contemplate the profound social and covenantal heritage that delineates and defines the authentic reality of our humanness, our identity, and our purpose within the divine economy. In this reflection, we acknowledge explicitly that God exists as wholly other—utterly transcendent, distinct from and beyond His creation—such that His divine nature remains fundamentally separate from and surpassing all that He has made. On our own, apart from divine initiative and gracious revelation, we dwell in impenetrable darkness, utterly incapable of comprehending the profound mysteries of His divine nature, His will, and His eternal decrees.
Scriptural Revelation and the Incomprehensibility of the Divine Essence
The Holy Scriptures serve as a competent, authoritative, and divinely inspired record that offers a faithful and reliable description of God’s nature, affirming His essential difference from us—affirming His incomprehensibility even as they reveal sufficient knowledge that enables faith and fosters godliness. As the prophet Isaiah declares, “His understanding no one can fathom” (Isaiah 40:28), and the classical tradition echoed in the Westminster Larger Catechism describes God as “incomprehensible,” emphasizing that His essence surpasses human grasp. To apprehend and know God truly and sufficiently, we must be made holy through the divine revealing of knowledge by the Holy Spirit; otherwise, we remain in spiritual darkness, unable to comprehend or perceive His divine mysteries, because “the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him” (1 Corinthians 2:14). Although God is not absolutely comparable to us in essence, we can discern faint traces and reflections of His glory by carefully examining and contemplating His divine works in creation, which declare and proclaim His divine handiwork and eternal power (Psalm 19:1). He subsists as a perfect and eternal unity of three Persons—in the blessed and undivided Trinity—whose divine life and activity express the fullest revelation of Himself, especially in the economy of redemption. This divine economy finds its most complete and perfect expression in the incarnation of the eternal Son, through whom the divine perfections are manifested most fully and visibly.
The Teleology of Creation: Glory, Pleasure, and the Threat of Meaninglessness
God has wrought divine goodness for the particular end of bringing Himself glory—glory that He manifests through the ethical display of His perfections, and through the pleasure He takes in the consummation and fulfillment of His creative and redemptive work. What if God were entirely unknown? Then the very purpose for which humans exist—the reason behind our creation—would dissolve into meaninglessness and despair. Yet, thanks be to divine grace, because God works in ways that remain shrouded in mystery for His own divine glory and goodness—working all things according to the counsel of His immutable and sovereign will (Ephesians 1:11)—we find in our lives a specific and meaningful purpose. This purpose is communicated to us through His divine intervention and guidance, which we receive by faith. Even amid our frequent lapses into unethical and sinful behaviors, God’s overarching purpose in faithfully performing all His divine decrees remains rooted in His own delight and pleasure. He communicates this divine pleasure to us, that we might partake vicariously in proper joy and satisfaction—joy rooted in Him, the wellspring of all true happiness.If we fail to submit ourselves humbly and obediently to God's will and authority, the universe itself would descend into chaos and contradiction, for His decretive will to work out all things for His glory cannot coexist peacefully with the notions of ultimate nothingness or autonomous human sovereignty—concepts that lie outside and oppose divine sovereignty in our finite understanding. Since God reliably ordains and governs the entire fabric of reality to manifest His divine glory, the perception and acknowledgment of His glory—His self-glorification through creation, providence, and redemption—remains an essential and foundational truth. Were God merely “different” from us in an equivocal sense—meaning that His nature were merely a different kind of existence—the possibility of genuinely observing ourselves reflected in His works would be undermined. Yet, because humans are fashioned in His divine image—imago Dei—a genuine and meaningful analogical correspondence exists between the Creator and His creatures.
Creation in the Image of God: Dignity, Capacity, and Renewed Potential
The reason we are able to apprehend and understand anything about God is because He has graciously conferred upon us the capacity and the inherent ability, rooted in our creation in His image, to know and relate to Him. Had we not borne this divine imprint, this creative likeness, God could not have spoken Himself forth in clear, categorical terms for the purpose of His own glorification. We have been naturally created and endowed in His image, so that every accountable man and woman possesses intrinsic dignity, worth, and value. We are endowed with rational minds, free wills, and genuine emotions—capacities that enable us to love, to choose rightly, and to seek understanding of divine truth (Genesis 1:26–27). Our imaginative and creative potential, which reflects His own divine creativity, is continually being renewed, restored, and uplifted by God as He actively and proactively works out all things according to His divine counsel and purpose. Were we to demonstrate no capacity to faithfully observe and respond to God, the very purpose for which He created us—the manifestation of His glory through our obedience and worship—would be rendered incomplete and inadequate, thereby undermining the divine teleology and purpose of creation.
Divine Revelation as Breath of Life and the Struggle Against Indwelling Sin
Nevertheless, God has graciously provided clear and perspicuous descriptions of Himself within the sacred Scriptures—intended precisely to reinforce and strengthen our trust, hope, and confidence as we meditate upon these everlasting truths. These divine revelations serve as a divine anchor for our souls, guiding us toward the knowledge of His divine character, His eternal purposes, His righteous ways, and His gracious promises, so that we may walk in faith and obedience, trusting in His unchanging and everlasting nature. What He has revealed is a profound breath of life, a divine awakening that stirs the soul and illuminates the pathway to genuine belief. Without this divine engraftment—woven through the everlasting reality of divine illumination by the Holy Spirit—our hearts cannot truly abide in authentic faith for long. We find ourselves engaged in an ongoing battle against the indwelling presence of sin, a persistent struggle that reveals our fallen state. From our corrupted perspective, marred by sin and blindness, we often perceive ourselves as lacking the unwavering faith needed to see beyond the distorted lenses imposed by our fallen nature, which clouds our vision and hampers our spiritual perception. Our natural disposition resists this spiritual warfare, manifesting a hardness of heart that dulls our sensitivity to divine truths; our imagination and prophetic faculties—those inward faculties meant to reveal divine realities—fall far short of how God Himself beholds and perceives reality in its fullness and glory.
The Process of Spiritual Vivification: Setting Affections on Things Above
What we desperately require is to embark upon the ongoing process of spiritual vivification—an active, continual engagement in establishing these everlasting realities as the habitual framework of our thinking and perceiving. We must intentionally set our affections, or more precisely, our minds, on things above—treasuring heavenly realities rather than being consumed by the fleeting and transient concerns of this earthly realm (Colossians 3:2). Because the work of God in us is principally discerned within the spiritual realm, it requires an eternal mindset—an outlook that looks beyond the visible and temporal—and a renewal of spiritual eyes granted by divine grace. We come to perceive God's divine purposes and plans as we walk by faith and not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7), trusting in His promises even when they are unseen. Yet, in our natural inclination to cling more readily to our own ways, our own understanding, and our self-reliance, we find ourselves in a state of perpetual turmoil—an inner conflict that prevents us from fully resting upon Him, from experiencing the peace that surpasses all understanding.
Assurance, Lament, and Access to the Throne of Grace
Therefore, what we need is a deeper, more comprehensive understanding of who God is—His character, His promises, His faithfulness—so that we may walk continually in faithfulness and obedience. This understanding is cultivated as God speaks to us through His Holy Word, illuminating our minds and hearts with sacred promises that serve as anchors of hope and assurance amid life's storms. Because our assurance fluctuates and is often fragile, we must make deliberate efforts to periodically renew and strengthen our confidence in God's promises. These efforts can sometimes lead us into the depths of despair, as we grapple with doubts and fears, and we may find ourselves reduced to a state of desperate crying and heartfelt weeping before our loving Father. Yet, even in these low moments, we are reminded that God's throne of grace is ever accessible—a place where we can approach boldly to find mercy and grace to help in our time of need (Hebrews 4:16). The Psalms vividly illustrate this raw, honest expression of spiritual distress, serving as a model for the church in how even profound lamentation and anguish can drive the believer into deeper communion with God. For instance, the psalmist's cry, “Out of the depths I cry to you, O LORD!” (Psalm 130:1), demonstrates how genuine sorrow and spiritual distress are not barriers but gateways into a more intimate relationship with God.
Communion in Affliction and the Conforming Work of the Holy Spirit
What God has done for us in His divine mercy is to ordain the proper manner in which we are to commune with Him concerning our afflictions—grounded firmly upon what He has declared in His holy Word. Our hearts, which were formed by Him, are fully known to Him; He understands precisely what will best strengthen our trust and dependence on Him as we navigate our trials. Even when we sink into despair and struggle with our weaknesses, His aid remains present; He is intimately aware of what we are experiencing vicariously through our suffering. Our Father operates within the unseen realm—beyond the scope of our limited, unaided rational capacity—and His work in us is often hidden from our immediate understanding. The manner in which we entered this world, along with our acknowledged personal weaknesses, reveals what He is to us amid every struggle, every trial, and every moment of weakness. All our reflections and meditations on these matters are themselves the work of God's Spirit within us—designed to bear us up and draw us closer to Him in proportion to the intensity of our trials.What He truly desires from us is that we speak to Him with sincerity and depth—expressing the affections of our hearts and demonstrating the sincerity of our love and trust. The illnesses, afflictions, and hardships we endure become instruments in His hands, used to stir our hearts to utter sacred words and labor diligently for His will. If we examine carefully our attachment to His promises and prioritize fervent prayer, we will find ourselves lifted above the chaos of anxieties, gaining a clearer apprehension of the everlasting salvation that is ours in Christ. It is this divine illumination—experienced through the κοινωνία (koinonia) of the Spirit— that compels us to hasten to Him for comfort and renewal, awakening a fervent hope rooted in His promises. Our natural state, often overwhelmed by trials, awakens within us an innate longing to flee to Him—to seek refuge and reassurance in His loving presence. Oh, that we would be renewed with divine strength to stand firm amid the storms of life, unwavering in faith and hope.
Conclusion: Conformity to Christ and the Triumph of Divine Speech
In this ongoing process, the believer is gradually conformed into the likeness of Christ—walking not by the dim light of human reason alone but by the illuminating grace of the Holy Spirit, who takes the things of Christ and reveals them to us (John 16:14). Though our language about God will always fall short of His infinite majesty and glory, the sovereign God—who spoke the worlds into existence—continues to speak life into His people through His Spirit, sustaining them amid the tensions and trials of a fallen world. Until that glorious day when faith gives way to sight, and we come to know as we are known, His divine life and power will uphold us. To Him alone be all glory, honor, and praise, both now and forevermore. Amen.These section titles provide logical structure and scholarly flow without disrupting the essay’s elaborate, theologically rich prose. They reflect key doctrinal movements: from divine transcendence and revelation, through the imago Dei and sin’s effects, to spiritual renewal, lament, and final conformity to Christ.
The Psalmist’s Cry of Total Dependence: Hiding in God as the Posture of Faith
The psalmist’s heartfelt plea—“Rescue me from my enemies, O Lord, for I hide myself in you” (Psalm 143:9)—coupled with subsequent supplications to be instructed by God’s will, guided by the good Spirit on level ground, preserved for the sake of divine honor, and delivered through unwavering love (Psalm 143:10–12)—embodies the profound dependence of the creature upon the Creator that underpins the entire life of a believer. Every cry for rescue, instruction, preservation, and victory is not rooted in self-reliance or a moral inventory of personal deeds but emerges from a posture of complete surrender to the sovereign God, who alone silences enemies and defeats adversaries.
The Futility of Pragmatic Checklists: Legalism’s Cycle of Doubt and the Rejection of Temporal Validation
Within this divine economy of grace, the works performed by the redeemed are never intended to serve as a means for temporal validation or self-justification. Instead, they are the fruit of a Spirit-wrought transformation, which resists the false notion that human effort can earn or secure divine favor. This misconception—often driven by a desire for pragmatic achievement—tends to trap the soul in an endless cycle of legalistic performance, continually postponing true assurance and reducing the believer to a performer on a checklist that promises superficial success but ultimately offers no genuine joy or relational intimacy.
Reformation Critique of Works-Based Assurance: Calvin and Luther on the Unreliability of Self-Examination
From a theological standpoint, especially reflecting the insights of the Reformation, this reductionist view is recognized as a subtle resurgence of legalism that diminishes the sufficiency of Christ’s perfect satisfaction on the cross. John Calvin, in his seminal work Institutes of the Christian Religion—particularly in Book III—warns that faith wavers when it shifts its focus toward works as a basis for assurance. Even the holiest of saints find no reliable footing in their own deeds; assurance must instead rest solely upon the objective promise of God in Christ. Personal works, according to Calvin, cannot serve as a foundation for confidence because they are inherently unreliable and prone to failure. Similarly, Martin Luther emphasized that the pursuit of certainty through personal performance leads only to despair, because the law reveals universal human failure, while the gospel proclaims forgiveness entirely apart from works. To demand that works “prove” salvation imposes a flawed, lower standard of justice—an evidentiary test that contradicts the perfect forensic declaration of righteousness achieved by Christ. Such a dual system fractures divine equity into incompatible parts: one based on grace through faith, and the other on human merit, leaving the believer perpetually unsettled and unable to rest fully in Christ alone.
The Supernatural Operation of the Holy Spirit: Gifts, Adoption, and Resurrection Power
Nevertheless, the biblical testimony affirms with clarity that the works emerging in the life of a believer are not merely human efforts or moral duties performed in the flesh. They are supernatural operations energized by the indwelling Holy Spirit, who grants spiritual gifts that build up the church and manifest the reality of divine adoption. Romans 8:16 states, “The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children,” not through our own exertions but through the internal witness of the Spirit. This divine testimony assures believers of their status as heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ—an inheritance guaranteed to those who share in Christ’s sufferings so as to also partake in His glory (Romans 8:17). The same Spirit, who raised Jesus from the dead, promises to give life to mortal bodies through His indwelling presence (Romans 8:11), empowering believers to perform supernatural works that transcend any checklist of commands or moral efforts. The Apostle Paul emphasizes that believers are “controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you” (Romans 8:9), indicating that authentic obedience flows from being led by the Spirit on level ground (Psalm 143:10). Such obedience is not rooted in self-directed moral striving, which inevitably fails to silence opposition or sustain life amid trouble.
Total Surrender and the New Covenant Ministry: Dying to Self in the Psalmist’s Example
The psalmist repeatedly models this attitude of dying to self—confessing that deliverance comes not from human strength but from the Lord’s righteousness and unfailing love—a posture of total surrender that God desires above superficial works or external rituals. In all human relationships, including marriage and friendships, true fruitfulness arises not from rigid adherence to rules designed to produce pragmatic results but from the Spirit’s gifts, which produce acts that evoke genuine pride and delight in others because they originate from divine enablement rather than fleshly effort. These acts are eternal, not fleeting achievements on a worldly “bucket list,” and they overflow into worship. As Romans 15:13 declares, the believer is filled “with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.”
The Spirit’s Deep Work: Wisdom, Life, and Edification Through Spiritual Gifts
The Holy Spirit’s role is profound; He searches even the deepest things of God (1 Corinthians 2:10), granting wisdom through the Scriptures and the Psalms that constitute a living dialogue with the Father. This divine wisdom fills the believer with supernatural life rather than mere letter that kills (2 Corinthians 3:6). The Spirit makes believers competent ministers of a new covenant—one based not on the letter but on the Spirit—because “the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life” (2 Corinthians 3:6). Consequently, believers are called to offer their bodies as living sacrifices—holy and pleasing to God—as acts of spiritual worship (Romans 12:1). They are to exercise spiritual gifts eagerly, seeking to excel in those that build up the church (1 Corinthians 14:12), for the common good and the edification of the entire body of Christ (1 Corinthians 12:7; Ephesians 4:12). These spiritual works are not mere temporal checklists but eternal expressions of the Spirit’s control—igniting the fire of grace within the community and demonstrating living examples of obedience empowered by divine grace.
Igniting the Fire of the Spirit: Eternal Purpose and Unshakeable Assurance
Within this framework, the petitions of the psalmist—asking to be taught by God and led by the Spirit—represent ongoing acts of spiritual surrender and the exercise of spiritual gifts that flow from such surrender. The believer’s nourishment comes from the Word, and gratitude is expressed for every whisper of guidance and provision from God. This participation in divine purposes involves sharing in Christ’s sufferings and subsequent glory, all under the sovereign guidance of the Spirit who accomplishes what no human effort or pragmatic scheme could achieve. Augustine’s doctrine of prevenient and operative grace, combined with the Reformers’ emphasis that true faith is never alone but also never based on works for assurance, confirms that the Christian life is energized with supernatural vitality when the soul hides in God, cries out for rescue, and yields completely to the Spirit’s leading—walking on level ground, trusting wholly in divine grace.Thus, saints are called to continually manifest the fire ignited by the Holy Spirit—not through self-reliant lists that lead to doubt but through Spirit-wrought gifts that edify the church, overflow in worship, and serve as witnesses to divine adoption as children and co-heirs with Christ. In such total dependence, the believer discovers genuine joy, authentic relational depth, and unshakeable assurance, for it is the Spirit who works within us both to will and to act according to His good pleasure (Philippians 2:13). This divine activity preserves life for the sake of the divine name and silences every foe through unfailing love, demonstrating that grace reigns supreme from the initial cry for rescue to the final sharing in glory. Every work, therefore, becomes a grateful echo of the Spirit’s supernatural activity—an act of divine grace rather than a burdensome proof of worthiness—highlighting the unmerited favor that sustains and transforms the believer from first to last.