techstepgenr8tion wrote:
AngelRho wrote:
JetLag wrote:
I think that "made in God's image" means that God has endued within mankind elements that reflect His own nature, His attributes. For instance, like God, mankind has intellect, moral reasoning, emotion, and volition. To be made in God's image also means that people are creative and spiritual. But because God is spirit, not flesh and bones, I believe that "made in God's image" does not refer to mankind "looking" like God physically.
I concur.
Same. I was just wondering if people actually had any biblical standing to a more literalistic end than that, wondered if I was maybe missing something...
I'm not sure I can do this in any satisfactory way, but I'll take a stab at it.
Genesis 1:26-27--Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness. They will rule the fish of the sea, the birds of the sky, the livestock, all the earth, and the creatures that crawl on the earth." So God created man in His own image; He created him in the image of God; He created them male and female.
Note the words "likeness" and "image." The way those words are used here are as synonyms. On the one hand you want to say that means we look like or are modeled after a physical God, literally exactly as God appears. This doesn't work, though, because God is revealed as a SPIRIT being. The words "image" and "likeness" are also used to describe the physical appearance of something that is not materialistic, like a spirit. So we aren't "spirit" exactly in the same sense that God is, we're just the physical manifestation in which the spirit resides. We are NOT God, but as physical manifestations of the spirit, or THE "Spirit," we represent God, and as such are expected by God to be stewards (caretakers) of the rest of the physical world. As such, one of the most important things in this world is human life. In the OT, murder--that is, the deliberate, unwarranted destruction of human life and inherently the destruction of an image of God--is one of a very few crimes in the OT for which there was no equivalent punishment or repayment other than life itself (the death penalty). Making an image of God or of "gods" is expressly forbidden, because God is spirit and man-made "gods" cannot be worshiped in the same sense and lead people away from worshipping God in the Spirit. In Luke 24:39, Jesus explains that a spirit "does not have flesh and bones." Isaiah 31:3--Egyptians are men, not God; their horses are flesh, not spirit. John 1:18--No one has ever seen God. The One and Only Son--the One who is at the Father's side--He has revealed Him. This passage shows the invisible nature of God, as do Romans 1:20, Collossians 1:15, and 1 Timothy 1:17.
So by saying we can't make an "image" of God is to say that God wishes to maintain His invisible nature and that we are to worship Him, not some man-made toy made out of natural materials--worshiping the creation and not the Creator. We ourselves ARE the physical manifestation of the invisible and as such are the exclusive property and dominion of God.
I've never had to really think about that before, to be honest. It really exposes the irony of the Fall of Man in Eden. The serpent tempted Eve with the knowledge of good and evil in order to become like God, but Adam and Eve were already in the "image" and "likeness" of God. Knowing good and evil was seeking to improve on perfection, fixin' what ain't broke, and hence introducing the imperfection of man's imperfect knowledge into his own nature and spoiling what had been a perfect image of God. We remain in God's image, just not a perfect image because of our sinful nature.
Anyway, that's my attempt. Maybe there are some good theologians on here that can give a better answer?