Par Lagerkvist's novel, The Sibyl...
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Par Lagerkvist's novel, The Sibyl, is a parable in which the Swedish author proposes that the only way in which we can know God is through God's wrath. Lagerkvist suggests that God's ways are mysterious, but all that people can discover about God is bad. God is vengeful and God destroys whatever little good people can find in life. The author hints that there may be other ways in which God reveals his intentions. If God does, why is he not more clear about it? Why cannot God's revelation be more clear and distinct that there be no uncertainty about the deity? The evidence, as Lagerkvist sees it, is that God is a God of wrath and that people are doomed to live with the consuming passion to uncover the riddle of God's behavior.
The Christian Gospel asserts otherwise. The Gospel contends that, while people live under the wrath of God and all must live under the judgment of God, they may also be set free from the judgment. God desires to be known in the expression of love. God has given ample witness to this love in creation and history. The clue to God's behavior towards us is in the revelation God has given in Jesus Christ, who is the key to understanding both history and creation.
The Christian Gospel asserts otherwise. The Gospel contends that, while people live under the wrath of God and all must live under the judgment of God, they may also be set free from the judgment. God desires to be known in the expression of love. God has given ample witness to this love in creation and history. The clue to God's behavior towards us is in the revelation God has given in Jesus Christ, who is the key to understanding both history and creation.