If, Then


I’ve written before that math has never been my thing.

That’s why I was shocked when I was sitting in a college math class and it dawned on me that I was actually enjoying what I was learning.

It was a feeling I never experienced in my 12-year academic career. I was well acquainted with dread, confusion, apathy, and frustration. Joy? It felt…wrong.

But that’s exactly what I felt sitting in that lecture hall in late October one fall semester. I’m pretty sure it was called “Introduction to Mathematics” or something. It was probably the lowest level course I was allowed to take. All I know is as a communication major, I only was required to take one math course. One! It was bliss. So, I chose the most basic course hoping it would be a glorified curriculum of addition and subtraction.

Somehow, someway the little old man professor who boasted a sub 1-star RateMyProfessor score won my attention and for the first time in my life, math made sense. I remember thinking “if I had only taken this class in kindergarten…”

Rather than math itself, we discussed the why of math. Logic. It was super interesting and something I realized wasn’t just observable in a textbook or on a whiteboard, but in my life. Perhaps more astonishingly, I began to see math in the Bible.

Conditional statements, or “if, then” statements aren’t something on which we spend a whole lot of time. It’s one of the building of logic. Effects have a cause, and a cause has effects. We understand this every time we make decisions. Our decisions are causes that have effects, some intentional and others unintentional. It’s a simple truth of our existence.

It should be no surprise then that the Bible, authored by supreme Creator God, is chock full of “if, then” statements. One of my favorite questions when reading the Bible is to ask, “what’s the ‘therefore’ there for?’ It’s a great question because there are a LOT of uses of the word “therefore” or it’s variations in scripture. It also aims to go deeper and gain a whole picture of the causal relationship being described.

The apostle Paul knew logic well. The content in his letters compound like interest. His premise leads to an implication which then points to another truth which then reveals a deep fact of life to his audience. The identity of God is almost always his cause.

The same goes for the Old Testament. I’ve been particularly struck by the book of Ezekiel when God uses the phrase “that they may know that I am the LORD” almost every single chapter. The word “that” naturally points to a cause as knowing God to be the LORD or, YAHWEH – the name of God Most High.

Tragically, the context of Ezekiel and this discovery of who God is comes through an outpouring of punishment of sin. Israel had been entrenched in wicked behavior for centuries and continued to rebel against God’s gracious calls to return to Him, their first love, their bride. Yet the people continued in wickedness, choosing to construct material alternatives to the unseen God who revealed Himself to them daily in creation, provision, and protection.

So, where God previously announced that His chosen people would know who He was through blessing and miraculous displays of His power on their behalf – like parting the Red Sea- He now spoke through Ezekiel, and others, that the people would know who He was because of their destruction. They were to discover who really holds the power when their semblance of control was stripped from them and their world fell apart.

And that’s exactly what happened. Famine broke out and the people starved. Swords were unsheathed as God rose up nations like Assyria and Babylon to destroy Israel. Pestilence filled the land and drove a desperate people to long for death to bring a release.

As I continue to read through the prophets, I sense God asking His people – “What’s it gonna take? What’s it gonna take for you to wake up and smell the roses – or should I say decaying bodies? When are you stubborn people going to realize who I am and come back to me?” Thankfully, God is much more gentle and more gracious than I.

So often, the misplaced questions we present to God could be effortlessly flipped back on us. We say to Him “if only you did this, then I would believe.” A simple cause, effect relationship, right? Wrong. Turns out logic can be observed in nature, but our arrogance leads us down a dangerously illogical path.

One of my favorite examples of this is when a group of people who likely had just witnessed Jesus feed thousands of people with two fish and five loaves of bread have the audacity to ask Jesus, “what sign do you do that we may see and believe you?” It’s ludicrous when reading through in context. I mean, what is it going to take if they see that happen and still don’t believe?

There are signs a plenty for us to know God. He has revealed Himself in creation, His Word, and His people just to name a few things. As we see in Ezekiel, God does things that we may know that He is who He says He is.

Perhaps the ultimate example of this is the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ. Jesus was the only sinless one to ever live yet was crushed on the cross with the weight of the sins of the world. After being dead three days, He walked out of His grave and appeared to His disciples and hundreds of others. He then ascended into Heaven, and His angels explained He would return in the same way that he left.  

Prior to these events, Jesus gave us the most important “if, then” statement. He says that the one who believes in Him will live, even though they die. What does this mean? He again says that he who believes in Him, has eternal life. That is, the required payment for our sin is death, yet Christ paid that debt. So, when one believes in Jesus, they agree with Him about their sin and need for Him. They accept what He did on the cross for them, and they’ll be with Him for all eternity because of what He did.

To know who God is because of mercy and not judgement is a gift of grace open to all who read this today! May the hard-heartedness of previous generations not continue in us. May we know that He is the LORD and place all our trust in Jesus!

Scripture References:

Ezekiel 6:7 – One of many examples of  “and you shall know that I am the LORD.”

Exodus 14 – The parting of the Red Sea

John 6:30 – “What sign do you do, that we may see and believe you?”

Matthew 27 & 28 – The crucifixion & resurrection of Jesus

Acts 1:11 – “Jesus…will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”

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