One
of the main tenants of the Bible and the Christian faith is that we are to be
conformed to the image of the second Adam, and not to the first. We are to
divest ourselves of our sinful image and we are to take on the image of the
second Adam who is Christ. It is a much more beneficial to imitate Christ than
sinful Adam. For the sake of our salvation and having the Kingdom here now in
this lifetime we must bear the image of Christ in all we do, say, think and are
(1 Cor. 15:49).
1
Corinthians 15:49 ~ “…and just as we have borne the image of the earthly man,
so shall we bear the image of the heavenly man.”
The word above that means image in the
Greek is εἰκόν/eikon from which we get the modern word icon. It
is an image, an image of the heavenly things or a likeness of them. It is the
Greek equivalent of the word used in Genesis 1:26-27 (בְּצַלְמ֔וֹ/tselem) when
the Bible says that man was made in the image of God. It is a word that
literally means in its truest translation, a reproduced artistic representation
(as exact as possible) whether it be on a painting, statue or as a figure
stamped on a coin. It is an image as if one states face-to-face with a mirror.
So what we have in view here is an Artist’s masterpiece or a Self-portrait of
sorts. When used in the idea of making a coin it is the idea of painstakingly
etching an image, line by line into a hardened surface that is resistant to the
etcher’s tool. A coin that is a smooth faceless blank with no
character and no redeeming value until it has been shaped into something useful
in the hands of its Creator…something that has character or a character similar
to its Maker. The Artist signature on His work. Not only does an image imply a likeness, in the case of God and
man, it also implies a relationship based in dependency to an origin or original. If
truly made in God’s image we therefore should expect to be made in the image of
God’s eternity or forever-ness.
When remade in the image of God
at our conversion to Christ we are made of more durable stuff or more permanent
material. We are stamped and made immortal in the image of Christ. Even in our
first form when we were made in the image of God in Genesis we were left with
an indelible lingering mark of God in our very being. When God set his image
on the first Adam or what amounted to sinful man, it decayed and was lost by
the choice of men. It was through said choice and because of the rebellious and
damning influence of the devil. Man, like God has an ability to choose his own path. God is immutable and
unchanging but man is different. Man changes and is unpredictable. When man is
stamped in God’s image it was as if the image hadn’t quite set or solidified
like a molten metal hot from the forge or refiner’s crucible. It was a firm impression but
as yet incomplete object or an incomplete image. The general character,
constraints or outline for what man would become and what man could be was there but all
the little nuanced details had not been etched into the material. God left this
to man to make these fine-tuned decisions yet through His Spirit continues to
work to define or etch the final image.
Within this molten form is the
making of something glorious now incomplete. Within this persona is the
reflection of grace. It is in grace that we are forever united to Christ and
outside grace we are forever separated from Him. We will either be further solidified into the
image of Jesus or we will be forever returned to the scorching flame of
the furnace to never again bear the image of the Maker, we will only drift
amorphously in a cauldron...a fiery Hell.
The deeper into grace we go the
more indelible the image of grace is on us and the more permanent the image
remains. The farther into God’s grace we go the deeper into forever we reach
and the lower the probability that we will ever be altered again. As we move away
from sin into the image of Christ the more we move towards our eternal glory in
God.
Christ is the true image-bearer.
He is the mold into which we must flow and become a perfect reproduction of. We
must mold to His die, a die being the specialized shape or image used as a tool
to cut or shape material. The process of creating the image can be done through
force by pressing or using a press. The image could also be created when the
material is heated until it completely breaks down and melts perfectly into the
mold. Either way the image becomes like the die or in the case of the
Christian, the image becomes like the One that died.
This is also why we have the seal
of God stamped on us at our conversion through the Spirit of God as we read in
Ephesians 1:13-14
Ephesians
1:13-14 ~ “And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of
truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him
with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our
inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the
praise of his glory.
On Earth in the worldly realm, a
seal is the exact impression or copy of the signet ring of a King. In the
case of this text and in the spiritual realm the Seal being the exact image or
representation of Christ in the form of the Holy Spirit as Jesus Himself says
in the Gospel of John 16…
John 14:16-17 ~ “And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another advocate to help you and be with you forever - the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you.
John
16:7-11 ~ “But very truly I tell you, it is for your good that I am going away.
Unless I go away, the Advocate will not come to you; but if I go, I will send
him to you. When he comes, he will prove the world to be in the wrong about sin
and righteousness and judgment: about sin, because people do not believe in me;
about righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no
longer; and about judgment, because the prince of this world now stands
condemned.
If Jesus, who is the perfect
image of what we are to be, does not go away like a mold or die moving away from the
image it stamps, the beholders of the image cannot see the image the mold has
stamped in to the raw material and left behind. It is this image left behind in
others that helps draw people to the faith, like fruit draws people to a tree
to eat it. What Jesus therefore leaves behind is a perfect image or another
just like Him that bears the same image. He stamps this on the hearts of the
people why? Because the stamp inside pushes out the other thing that dwells
inside the believer…which is sin. God puts the very thing we need (the Holy
Spirit) to battle our internal sin (Romans 7) in the very place it needs to be
to give us victory (our hearts).
Yes, in our sinful fallen nature
we can deface the coin but even a defaced coin retains its face value…why? Because the real value is not in the coin
itself but in the backing of value it receives from the Maker. The coin will
retain its original value as it is eventually will be redeemed by the One who
created it and gave it its value to begin with. The coins worth is gauged by
the one that makes it and gives it inherent value. It is as valuable as the
Maker wants it to be. If priceless to the Maker it is priceless to others. Often times the value might be stamped right on its face
for all to see, other times there could be hidden value that it acquires the older
it becomes. The trick to retaining the value of an older coin is to not allow
the world to wear it down. To smooth over the etchings put into it by its
Maker. It needs to be pulled out of circulation for special use or to be kept
from the abuses of the world (evil/sin). Even the most defaced coins can retain
their original value as long as they are identifiable has having come from a
certain Maker.
The stamped image on the souls of
men are everlasting. Once we are God’s currency with the world we remain His currency unless he takes us
back. Unless the silver or gold is refined
into something else it is an image with value. When we convert we are
re-stamped. Grace is firmly set in our nature in Christ through the Spirit.
Like the brethren in Christ that we all are, we will all bear a similar image
of Christ. We will not bear similar markings as the world wears us down and
scars us in its own unique way. These markings build and shape our character
until no two coins are exactly alike unless they are proofed or perfected in Christ. Every perfected coin shines gloriously like the day it was
originally printed with a perfect impression of its original mold…and it is an
image create by and of the Maker Himself.
So how do we know whether we have
the image of Christ stamped on us? The real question that we then need to ask
is how are changed into His likeness? How will our thinking be changed that
will affect our actions that are seen by the world. Jesus’ objective was to please
his Father in all things Our objective should be to please the Father in all things. Our will
must be exclusively for Heaven and the Kingdom of God. On the Day of Judgment Christ will know His
own. If he does not see His image stamped upon us it will spell doom for the
person that does not have it. God cannot look upon that which is sinful without judgment. If
He does not see the mark or blood of His Son upon us we will be passed over and
relegated to condemnation and eternal punishment. That which is Caesar’s will
be given to Caesar and that which is Christ’s will be given to Christ (i.e.:
Mark 12).
If we do not take on the image of
the Lord we will inevitably take on the stamp of the world. We will be
transformed into the likeness of the world (1 John 2:15-17). We will be cast
into the mold of the time and the culture which always passes away and we will
pass away with it.
What’s
more is that when we are conformed to Jesus, we were predestined to be conformed
to Jesus. He is the first among many brethren (Rom. 8:29). We being in His image are therefore predestined to
salvation. It is only fitting that we should bear His exact image as He is the
head of the Church. It is ironic and interesting that God will make those
obedient to Him the head and not the tail in Deuteronomy 28:13. Ironically this
passage speaks of money and lending. If one obeys the Lord they will become so
prosperous that they will become the lender (the head), not the tail (the
borrower). If we apply this figurative analogy of the coin to this verse we see
that we will be indeed like the Head who is Jesus Christ…
Deuteronomy
28:13 “The Lord
will make you the head, not the tail. If you pay attention to the commands of
the Lord your God that I give you this day and
carefully follow them, you will always be at the top, never at the bottom.
…so it is not surprising that Jesus
Christ would be the head on our figurative coin. So which will it be? The head or the tail?
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