What’s the Difference Between God and Jesus?

Ever since I was a young boy, there has always been a kind of disconnect between the concept of God, the concept of Jesus, and the difference between the two.

When I was little, I knew God and I knew Jesus, but they weren’t the same. In fact, it seemed like they were in competition with each another. 

I grew up going to a Methodist church where there was little, if any, mention of Jesus. I don’t remember any real teaching from the pulpit about who Jesus is.

I do remember hearing the crucifixion story in my Sunday School class, but that was about it.

Hung on the back wall of the sanctuary just behind the choir loft, there was a painting of a man wearing a robe.

One Sunday when I was probably about 4 or 5, my family and I were waiting for the service to start. I pointed to the image and asked my mom, “Who is that — God or Jesus?”

She told me it was Jesus.

From that time on, I always thought of God and Jesus as separate and not equal. 

In fact, I began to see Jesus as in competition with God. 

God is the One we worship. Who is Jesus to come along and try to take His place?

A few years later, when I was about 10, a group of boys spontaneously shared the gospel with me in the middle of the street where I had been riding my bicycle.

I believe it was the first time I ever heard that I needed to accept Jesus as my savior in order to go to Heaven. 

I had always been led to believe that I, along with all the other “good” people, would just end up there when we died.

Thinking about Jesus in this way was different than I had ever looked at Him before. It didn’t really sit well with me, because it felt like an “addition” to the religion I had been taught. 

There is only one God. His name is God. We worship Him and Him alone. Why do we need Jesus? It all seemed unnecessary and sacrilegious — even though I didn’t really understand that concept yet. 

Even though I dismissed the need for Jesus that day, the encounter stuck with me for years. 

What if those boys were right and we do need Jesus to get to Heaven? But what about God? Would I be cheating on Him if I added Jesus into my life?

It was all very confusing to my young, developing, but inquisitive mind.

There’s God on the one hand and Jesus on the other. How does it all work together? 

After my mom and I started attending the Baptist church in our little town, where Jesus was mentioned a whole lot more often, I began to think more seriously about my eternal destiny. 

Eventually, when I was 15, I accepted Christ into my life. I had finally come to terms with how the Father sent Him to die for my sins on the cross.

Fast forward 40-plus years. 

To this day, there still seems to be a sort of disconnect between God and Jesus. 

Of course, I believe that Jesus is God and that He and the Father are separate Persons of the trinity, along with the Holy Spirit.

However, I don’t truly understand the role of Jesus in my everyday life as a believer. 

I mean, should I pray to Him or to the Father? Do I rely on Jesus’s strength, the Father’s strength, or just the strength of God in general?

Admittedly, when I think of a divine being, the first image that comes to mind is of a man in the sky wearing a white flowing robe and controlling the universe at will.

I don’t usually picture a triune God, or even just Jesus and the Father. I think of that one Person in the sky. 

And that is my version of God most of the time.

However, I know that Jesus should be a vital part of the believer’s life. After all, we are called Christians after His name.

I’m just not sure how to incorporate Him into my life.

To a degree — more than I’d like to admit really — it still feels like cheating when I talk to Jesus or think of Him as my Lord. 

After all, what about God? Is he going to be upset that I’m not giving Him the honor He is due?

You would think that having been a Christian for four decades I wouldn’t struggle with these kinds of fundamental questions.

Honestly, it’s embarrassing to still struggle with my faith in this way. I should be more mature in my beliefs and move onto bigger theological challenges.

That’s where I’m at, however. 

I often have to remind myself that while God is God, He is also the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. 

If we want the Father, we have to go through the Son, and the Holy Spirit draws us to Him.

That’s the truth.

Memories of a Wonderful Old Building

The huge doors creaked as if squealing for mercy every time they swung open. Once passing through the old doors into the dim foyer, the darkness seemed almost comforting. How many times did I cross that threshold? I could probably do some quick calculations and come up with an answer, but it doesn’t really matter. What does matter is that the old Methodist church was a significant part of my childhood, playing host for many wonderful experiences of the first 15 years of my life. These memories will remain with me the rest of my life.

I don’t know with certainty how old that building really is, however, I believe it dates back to the late 1800’s. It always was dark and musty-smelling, especially in the basement. The familiar “chonk” every time the old basement door from the outside would open or close still rings fresh in my memory.

When I was very young, maybe four or five years old, the church sometimes held potluck dinners in the basement. Specific memories of the food have faded over the years, but I do remember having a great deal of fun playing with my friend Dana. In fact, at that time she and I were the only kids our age who attended the church. While the adults were gathered in the fellowship hall, we would sequester ourselves in one of the Sunday school rooms down a short hallway. We alternated eating and playing with the assortment of toys stashed in a toy box.

One dinner in particular never fails to give me a chuckle every time I think about it. Dana and I were playing with a fire station with a crank handle on top that produced a very loud fire engine noise. It was my favorite of all the toys. I loved grabbing hold and spinning it for all I was worth. During this particular dinner I chose to do just that during the pastor’s prayer to bless the food. I’ll never forget the almost total quiet of the building, all except for the pastor’s gentle voice, being broken by the wail of the fire engine. I couldn’t help but start giggling. I’m sure Dana was laughing as well, although she at least attempted to shush me so that we wouldn’t get into trouble. I don’t remember if any adults came in to scold us, but it would have been worth it just imagining the startled reactions on their faces as their quiet thanksgiving was interrupted by a shrieking siren from the next room over.

When you’re not even 10 years old, it is difficult to imagine that whatever environment you find yourself in is not only typical of its kind, but is actually the best there is. This was the case with that dank old church. It was a tiny congregation; we had maybe 20 or 30 people on any given Sunday morning service. The attendees took up but a fraction of the huge sanctuary upstairs.  We tended to spread out over the rear half of it. For me, it was as natural as anything to have three or four empty rows of pews between you and the next person.

For all its dark mustiness, both in the basement and up in the sanctuary, it was a beautiful old building. The high ceiling of the upstairs foyer supported a large chandelier that helped light the otherwise dim entryway. Rows of large, colorful stained glass windows adorned both sides of the sanctuary, filling the room with the natural light of each Sunday morning.

Image

Two gently sloping aisles led down to the front of the sanctuary to a table with a candelabra in the center. Just as worship service would begin, two people would slowly walk simultaneously down either aisle with brass candle lighters in hand to light its two candles. At the end of the service, the same two individuals were responsible for extinguishing the candles. Dana and I had this privilege on a number of occasions.

Behind the pulpit and the choir loft, in the very front of the sanctuary, hung a picture of a long-haired man in a white robe. I remember one of his hands was lifted slightly as if making a point. One Sunday I asked my mother, as only a small child can do, if that was a picture of God, or of Jesus. I guess she told me Jesus, because from then on it was clear to me that Jesus looked like any other man.

Two sets of creaky stairs, mirror images of each other,  ascended from the basement to either side of the foyer. When going upstairs for the worship service, I usually chose the set on the left, the ones just past the only restrooms in the church. They felt more homey, more like they were “mine”. Maybe this was become they emerged nearest the side of the sanctuary that my family always sat on. Dana and her family generally used the stairs on the right, which were situated over the top of a storage room. As one might guess, her family sat on the opposite side of the sanctuary, almost directly across from us. I suppose we’re all creatures of habit; I seldom used the stairs on the right. Even at that young age, something about it just didn’t seem right. Those stairs were foreign to me in a way, not comfortable like “mine” were.

Image

A balcony sat above the rearmost part of the sanctuary. From my earliest memories of the church, I recall that my older brothers played in the band that perched themselves in the balcony during worship. One brother played the trombone, while the other played the trumpet. One of Dana’s older brothers was also in the band, as were a few of the other older kids in the church. My sister often played the organ downstairs in the front, behind the pulpit. I guess after a while interest in the band waned, because in later years, the only instruments we had were the piano and organ. Sometimes I would take the stairs leading up to the balcony, just to see what treasure I might discover up there. The only things I ever remember seeing were a few stands to hold sheet music, and maybe various other odds and ends. No treasure was to be found anywhere.

About 13 years ago, when my wife and I were visiting my mom, I borrowed a key to the church so I could reminisce for a while. Everything seemed smaller than I had remembered it, but much was still the same: the beautiful stained glass, the old Sunday school rooms, and of course, that old musty smell. One Sunday school room looked like it was being used as a catch-all for whatever didn’t have a place. In it I discovered a few of the old toys I remembered playing with (alas, the fire station was nowhere to be found); that truly took me back to preschool days. Then I glanced up at a cork bulletin board hanging on the wall. On it was scrawled my name just as I had written it long ago, and judging by the way it looked, not long after learning to write in cursive. I ran my fingers across the letters, amazed that it was still there.

All these elements of the old Methodist church– the Sunday school rooms, the stairways, the sanctuary, the balcony, as well as the members of the congregation — still make regular appearances in my dreams. Of course, the dreams don’t recreate the exact church experience as it was back then. The time frame is almost always in the present, often with people or elements from my adult life overlaid on those old childhood memories inside the church. What does this say about me as an adult? Is my subconscious brain hopelessly nested in the distant past?

I was sad when my sister told me recently that the church is closing its doors. I guess as members of the small congregation aged and died, without many (if any) new members coming in, it just became a matter of economics. I wonder what will become of the old building now.