How did I get on the Little Watchman mailing list? I
have no more idea than I have of who Little Watchman is. He sends me occasional
emails with his short online sermons. The last one, which came into my inbox at
just the right time he says ironically, is entitled ‘Is God Angry With You?’ The answer is very emphatically Yes, God is incandescently angry, and rightly.
He’s told us what he wants of us, and we don’t do it. So, rage. But it’s all right,
because Jesus (who Little Watchman insists on calling Yeshua) is the offering
that makes God calm down. This is just how the writer puts it. Now, Substitutionary Atonement is no more than a
standard, though to my thinking only partial, explanation of how the sacrifice
of Christ changes our relationship with God, and there is a lot in Christianity
that doesn’t quite make sense no matter how you describe it. But boil Substitutionary
Atonement down this brutally, and what you end up isn’t a statement that includes
the odd logical lacuna, but something that reads as so sick and insane you can understand
why people go nowhere near a religion that promotes it.
Leaving aside most of the many questions or issues one
could ask, how much sense does it make to think of God as angry? This is
slightly separate from the Biblical language of the wrath of God, which strikes
me as a description of a status rather than an emotion God might have: the estrangement
the whole Creation, and most especially human beings, exists in as a result of
the Fall, however one might characterise that event. A status in which all
things find themselves, or, indeed, an experience humans, who are conscious of
it as the mute creation is not, might have; but not something God feels. But anger
is certainly ascribed to God in the Scriptures. Is it really anything like
ours?
Our primary icon of what God is like is Jesus. He
clearly experiences anger, just as he does sorrow, grief, joy, and even scorn.
But because he is human, he experiences them in the way we do, with the exception
that for him there is no admixture of sin in them; he is limited by time and
space, so he goes through these feelings in sequence and not concurrently. Like
us, he doesn’t seem to feel different things at once, even when his feelings
are conflicted (as they are in Gethsemane). This is only what we would expect. But
in his divine nature, God is interacting with the whole of creation, all the
time, not just in the contemporary moment but eternally. This is nothing like
the emotions we experience: it is so far from the emotions we experience that we
ought be cautious about how we describe or think of it. The emotional life of
God is perhaps as mysterious to us as the mechanics of the Trinity.
You might question why I am so keen to defuse this
bomb of God being angry. I think it is probably because I draw my image of anger
from the human anger I have experienced (and I don’t mean I have always been on
the receiving end of it, either): contorted faces, shouting, raised hands. The
suspicion is that the emotion is almost always tied up with that individual’s
view of themselves and the effect their desires should have, and the physical
effects of anger come from deep within our evolutionary history: they are
designed to intimidate, to try to get our own way. Angry though he may have
been from time to time, I can’t imagine Jesus in any of those states.
We might contrast anger with love. The Biblical imagery
of God’s love – aside from the life of Christ – includes similes such as the
sun shining and the rain falling. There are very human images, too, the mother
with the child at her breast, the parent giving good gifts, and so on, but it’s
clear that God’s love relates to those images metaphorically: it isn’t a complete
parallel. The imagery of God’s anger should be taken the same way. To imagine
God as an angry human, snarling and screaming because his will isn’t obeyed
(rather than ‘a righteous judge, provoked all the day’ as Psalm 7 puts it) –
even if that will is perfectly just and right – doesn’t help anyone.
I see little sense in continuing with my
unaccountable subscription to Little Watchman.