In the early 1990s a factory worker in Indiana purchased a painting at a thrift store for a mere $30. The painting was of a Magnolia flower and bought to cover a hole in his wall. Several years later the person was playing an art-themed board game called Masterpiece – a Parker Brothers game from the 1970s in which players compete to bid on potentially valuable paintings, negotiate to trade these works of art, including forgeries, build a portfolio, amass money, and win the game. Anyway, while playing the game the factory worker noticed a similar painting on one of the game cards and recognized its resemblance to the piece hanging on his wall. This sparked his curiosity, leading to research and the realization that he possessed an authentic work by American artist Martin Johnson Heade (1819-1904). This “lost” painting later sold for an astonishing $1.25 million. Friends, I’ll cut to the chase, I’m talking about you. That true story is my parable about you. You are the factory worker. You are Magnolias on Gold Velvet. Heck, you might even be the hole in the wall. And hopefully Genesis 1 will be that Masterpiece game card that helps you recognize that your worth is far greater than 30 bucks. You are a masterpiece.
Today’s sermon can be summarized in a sentence that I want us to say together: “A good God made us (very) good for all things.” Let’s say it again. And we’re going to break this up into three parts: 1) A good God made us . . . 2) . . .(very) good . . . 3) . . . for all things.
1. A good God made us . . .
God is good / all the time. All the time / God is good. And that means that goodness made us in its image.
This is not the story that I was told. I was told a story of “total depravity” – that we are utterly and irrevocably sinful at our core. But sin is not our origin story and does not undo the image – doesn’t make us worthless or something other than a masterpiece. To undo the image would make us not human. We’re going to talk about the story of sin – next week – and discover that we must rethink much of the story that we were given because it falsely wishes to say that sin is more powerful than the good God who made us. And friends, nothing is more powerful than a good God.
Your worth was determined long before you said or did anything of worth. The story of Genesis 1 means that God’s goodness precedes you before you were born. In other words, your worth, your value, God’s blessing are all intimately connected to the One who made you – being always precedes doing, love always precedes worthiness, goodness always exists before brokenness.
The ancient theologian Augustine once wondered: “Why is it we have no problem gasping at a sunset, standing silent, awestruck at a cascade of mountains, or the infinite stretch of the ocean and yet feel awkward, embarrassed, maybe even disgusted, when we consider ourselves as God’s beautiful creation?”
The inherent goodness of creation, including the inherent goodness of human nature, springs from creation’s origin in the goodness of the Word of God, Jesus, Paul tells us in Colossians, who speaks all things into being, who sustains all things in movement and life by the Spirit (Col. 1:15-17).
So the human story doesn’t begin or end in sin or even with Adam, it begins and ends in the God, who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and who only speaks into existence the good, who makes us in the image of his goodness, and who comes as our image, dies and rises again, to redeem us because his goodness will never abandon his good creation.
My mother and grandmother hand-sewed this stoll for me. It is my most prized possession. It’s not entirely symmetrical, doesn’t always sit just right, but I love it. No amount of money could ever be offered for me to sell it. It’s beautiful because it connects to a genesis, a beginning, a relationship, an origin with two women whose love and prayers made me and shaped me. Friends, “A good God made us . . .”. So say it with me: “I am good / All the time. All the time / I am good.”
2. . . . (very) good . . .”
Our story begins with a good God who made us good – first – before we do or say anything because of whose we are. But God doesn’t intend for goodness to simply remain about us but to be “very good” by being “for” creation and sharing with all things. We are, in other words, called to be like this good God by being good to all that God has created. We are told in the NIV translation that our goodness is to “rule over” the other creatures and to “subdue the earth [land]”. This doesn’t mean abusive power. It means that we are granted the weighty honor and responsibility of representing God’s own activity in the world, of standing up for God’s interests. It is to be a God-informed and Godly imagined-activity NOT a self-interested one. Our rule, in other words, is exercised on behalf of God and must look like Jesus who took the very nature of a servant.
The Genesis truth of this position is best expressed in a verse that falls outside of Genesis 1 and comes from Genesis 2. In that part, the ‘adam, “humankind,” is created to “work the earth and keep it.” That word “keep” in Hebrew is shamar and directly connects with the activity of God. It’s what God does. In Numbers 6, we are given the famous blessing: “The Lord bless you and keep you.” That’s what God does for us and what we, in turn, are to do for all the earth. Does God “rule” over us with exploitation, greed, malice, and bullying? Of course not. Our relationship to the planet should be no different. The only way we will ever experience “very good” is when we are redeemed to act like Jesus, become love, keep others and all of creation, and be “for” all things.
3. “ . . . for all things.”
So you are good – before you do anything – because God is good and God made you. And God made you good to be good, to become like Jesus, and that requires a “for.” The phrase “very good” refers to the end of the sixth-day. So far, in Genesis the repeated refrain was: “And God saw that it was good.” Now at the end of the sixth day, we’re told: “God saw all that he had made, and it was very good” (1:31a). That superlative “very good” doesn’t just mean “human beings” but is meant to encompass a web of mutually caring relationships. So “very good,” isn’t a claim about our being, though we are beautifully and exquisitely made by God, but refers to the action of care for all of creation. All of creation in harmony is what God wants for us all of our relationships- male and female, humans and plants, plants and animals, oceans and land. All of creation connecting generously, caringly, with itself is what God intends for a very good life. “Very good” is an ecosystem of love and care where we know we are loved and out of that redeemed awareness – give it freely away for all things that are made by God.
The image is “very good” when it’s recognized as a relationship. In Gen. 1:25-28, God is an “us” who makes “them,” humankind, and God says, in “our” image God made “them.” There is a critical plurality here. Without you, my image of God would be way too small and look too much like me. Without you, I might be tempted to believe that a single reading of scripture is adequate, or a single view of history complete. I might go on thinking my view is a normal one, that my skin is a neutral color, that I don’t need to see race, gender, class, or religion.
Listen – you will always be loved – always. But a “very good” life is about our keeping of all things, making a home in the garden with others, naming the animals, eating green things and taking responsibility for all living things that also have the living breath of God which means that the spirituality of “us” goes beyond humans to plants, animals, oceans and forests – all of it in mutual harmony – “very good” (Gen. 7:15, 22). Creation is symphony of harmony in which “a good God made us to be very good for all things.”
I’ve been trying to take you on a spiritual journey from being love to becoming love for all things. Perhaps I failed – too intellectual and buttoned up to wildly dance with abandonment and invite you, you beautiful masterpiece, to join in. So I’ll turn to the master beloved, Mary Oliver, and let her say it so much more beautifully what I have been trying to say. This is her poem, To Begin With, the Sweet Grass. I will only read stanzas 6 and 7
6.
Let me ask you this.
Do you also think that beauty exists for some fabulous reason?
And if you have not been enchanted by this
adventure—your life—
what would do for you?
7.
What I loved in the beginning, I think, was mostly myself.
Never mind that I had to, since somebody had to.
That was many years ago.
Since then I have gone out from my confinements, though with difficulty
I mean the ones that are thought to rule my heart.
I cast them out, I put them on the ush pile.
They will be nourishment somehow (everything is nourishment somehow or
another).
And I have become the child of the clouds, and of
hope.
I have become the friend of the enemy, whoever that is.
I have become older and, cherishing what I have learned,
I have become younger.
And what do I risk to tell you this, which is all I
know?
Love yourself. Then forget it. Then, love the world