|   Fine Art
 
“…in our image and after our likeness…….” Gen. 1:26 
 W hat kind of paint is required for such a thing? What stone, what block of 
	wood is employed to make anything in the “likeness” of God? For God to make 
	man in His image and after His "likeness” is a fantastic thing, if it can be 
	called a “thing” at all. Whatever it will be, it cannot be fashioned out of 
	clay, not even Eden’s. This work is too wonderful for a potter’s wheel. In 
	this “Let us…” is the commissioning of a divine portrait of God’s own 
	likeness in pigments too precious to be found on any Rembrandt’s pallet. 
	This commission was to be God’s finest work of art. This “idea,” this little 
	“logos,” is no afterthought, it was glory. What is the likeness of the 
	invisible God? It is not the flesh and blood of which Adam was made. It was 
	not the flesh, for beasts have enough of that. Nor was it spirit or the 
	spark of life, for that is seen in doves and angels ascending and 
	descending. This “image” was to be put on a certain kind of canvas called 
	the living soul. But like any canvas it merely holds the likeness and the 
	image. The likeness is the image of the essence. Adam without 
	the essence is but a frame left behind after the art itself has been stolen. We 
	have been admiring the empty frames ever since and pretending to understand and 
	appreciate fine art.
 
 The image was lost (or stolen) one day. What is the image, or the likeness? 
	What was there one minute, and gone the next? It was a godliness or what some call holiness. What was 
	striped leaving only the empty frame? God's light and likeness. Yes, and how unlike God we 
	are without it. “Be ye holy, for I am holy.” Holy means "set apart" for God's use. To be holy simply means to be His. Jesus, the visible image of the 
	invisible God came to redeem and to restore us. Like a masterpiece hidden 
	beneath the brush strokes of some imposter’s paints, God's original work of art is covered with the grime and 
	dirt of centuries. It must be recovered, it must be found, it must be restored. Salvation is a 
	delicate work. First the spirit, now the soul, then the body. When Jesus 
	asked the crippled man, “wilt thou be made whole?” He was speaking of more than 
	flesh and bones. No one is whole without being holy and His. "Wilt thou be made whole?" It is wanting to be 
	like Jesus. The Psalmist said "He restoreth my Soul." God is still working on me. -id
 
 
 
                                                                                                          
  
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