Reaching for the Invisible God Study Guide
By Philip Yancey and Brenda Quinn
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About this ebook
"How do I relate to a God who is invisible when I’m never quite sure he’s there?"--Philip Yancey Life with God doesn’t always work like we thought. High expectations slam against the reality of personal weaknesses and unwelcome surprises. And the God who we’ve been told longs for our company may seem remote, emotionally unavailable. Is God playing games? What can we count on him for? This relationship with a God we can’t see, hear, or touch--how does it really work? The Reaching for the Invisible God Study Guide gives you a path in your personal quest for answers. Dovetailing with Philip Yancey’s book Reaching for the Invisible God, the twelve sessions are your opportunity to journey toward insights that affirm and dignify your most pressing questions--even the ones you may have found it hard to ask. Get ready to experience the challenges and rewards of relating to God as he is, not as you’ve thought he is. Yancey shifts your focus from questions to the One who offers himself in answer: the God who invites you to reach for him--and find. Includes: * Bible readings * Discussion questions * Personal reflections and applications * Tips for group leaders * Summary excerpts from Reaching for the Invisible God
Philip Yancey
Philip Yancey previously served as editor-at-large for Christianity Today magazine. He has written thirteen Gold Medallion Award-winning books and won two ECPA Book of the Year awards, for What's So Amazing About Grace? and The Jesus I Never Knew. Four of his books have sold over one million copies. He lives with his wife in Colorado. Learn more at philipyancey.com.
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Reaching for the Invisible God Study Guide - Philip Yancey
WEEK 1
CHAPTERS 1 – 2
THIRST — A LONGING FOR GOD
sergThe excerpt below is from Reaching for the Invisible God.
How do you sustain a relationship with God, a being so different from any other, imperceptible by the five senses? I hear from an inordinate number of people struggling with questions like this—their letters prompted, I suppose, by books I’ve written with titles like Where Is God When It Hurts?and Disappointment with God.
I have lived most of my life in the evangelical Protestant tradition, which emphasizes personal relationship, and I finally decided to write this book because I want to identify for myself how a relationship with God truly works, not how it is supposed to work.
In carving my path I am following a map laid out by many others, the great cloud of witnesses
who have preceded me. My struggles with faith have at least this in their favor: they come from a long, distinguished line. I find kindred expressions of doubt and confusion in the Bible itself. Sigmund Freud accused the church of teaching only questions that it can answer. Some churches may do that, but God surely does not. In books like Job, Ecclesiastes, and Habakkuk, the Bible poses blunt questions that have no answers.
As I began this book, I went to friends whom I respect as Christians. I asked this question: If a seeking person came to you and asked how your life as a Christian differs from hers as a moral non-Christian, what would you tell her?
Perhaps the most poignant response came from a friend whose name is well known in Christian circles. He thought for some time before responding, and then said this:
I have no trouble believing God is good. My question is more, What good is he? I heard awhile back that Billy Graham’s daughter was undergoing marriage problems, so the Grahams and the in-laws all flew to Europe to meet with them and pray for the couple. They ended up getting divorced anyway. If Billy Graham’s prayers don’t get answered, what’s the use of my praying? I look at my life—the health problems, my own daughter’s struggles, my marriage. I cry out to God for help, and it’s hard to know just how he answers. Really, what can we count on God for?
That final question struck me like a bullet and has stayed lodged inside me. I know theologians who would snort at such a phrase as one more mark of self-centered faith. Yet I believe it lies at the heart of much disillusionment with God. In all our personal relationships—with parents, children, store clerks, gas station attendants, pastors, neighbors— we have some idea what to expect. What about God? What can we count on from a personal relationship with him?
serbChristians claim there are times, though perhaps less frequent than we would lead others to believe, when we do make personal contact with the Creator of the universe. I have seen things that make all my writings seem like straw,
wrote Thomas Aquinas about one such encounter.
I too have felt the tug at times, a tug strong enough to jerk me out of cynicism and rebellion, strong enough to wrench my life in a new direction. Yet for long stretches, achingly long stretches, I have also sat with my headphones on (as did Jodie Foster in the movie Contact), desperate for some message from the other world, yearning for reassuring contact, and heard only static.
How can something as fundamental as a God who created us to know and love him become so tenuous? If God, as Paul told a sophisticated crowd of skeptics in Athens, did this,
meaning all creation, in order that we might reach out and find him, why not make himself more obvious?
Writers of the Bible lived in the Holy Land,
where bushes burst into flame, where rocks and volcanoes gushed sacred metaphors and the stars bespoke God’s grandeur. No longer. The supernatural world has seemingly gone into hiding, leaving us alone with the visible. The thirst for God, though, for contactwith the unseen, the hunger for love from a cosmic Parent who can somehow fashion meaning from this scrambled world, defiantly persists.
God is personal. The Bible, both Old Testament and New, portrays a God who affects us and is affected by us. For the Lord takes delight in his people,
says the psalmist (149:4); at times God also takes great exception to his people, say the prophets. The personality of God leaps out of almost every page of the Bible. God is love,
says the apostle John. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in him.
It would be difficult to get more personal.
Why, then, do we find it so difficult to relate personally to this God?At various times people tended to pray to local saints, who seemed more accessible and less scary. Protestant Reformers and Catholic mystics, though, challenged us to relate to God directly, without intermediaries. And modern evangelicalism summons us to know God, to talk to God in conversational language, to love God as one might love a friend. Listen to the praise songs
in modern churches, which sound exactly like love songs played on pop radio, with God or Jesus substituted as the lover.
Do we, like billboards for Pepsi, fan a thirst we cannot quench? Just last week my church sang: I want to know you more / I want to touch you / I want to see your face.
Nowhere in the Bible do I find a promise that we will touch God, or see his face, not in this life at least.
Modern American religion speaks in friendly
terms with God even though, as C. S. Lewis points out in The Four Loves,friendship is the form of love that least accurately describes the truth of a creature’s encounter with the Creator. How, then, can we have a personal relationship
with a God who is invisible, when we’re never quite sure he’s there?
ENCOUNTERING GOD THROUGH THOSE IN THE BIBLE (3 – 5 MINUTES)
Read Psalm 42:1–11. If you are reading in a group, choose two readers to alternate as follows, representing each part of the psalmist’s self.
Reader 1: verses 1–4
Reader 2: verses 5–6a
Reader 1: verses 6b–7
Reader 2: verse 8
Reader 1: verses 9–10
Reader 2: verse 11
REACHING FOR GOD WITH OTHERS (20 MINUTES)
If you are in a large group, break into groups of four to six for this discussion time. Introduce yourselves to each other. Tell the others briefly about yourself. Are you single? Married? Do you have children? Do you work outside the home?
1. When you think of the invisibility of God, how do you feel?
• Crazy. My senses are very important to me. I really struggle in relating to a God I can’t see, hear, or touch.
• Frustrated. I can accept that God is Spirit, but often I can’t seem to scale the hurdle of how to get to know this Spirit.
• Doubtful. God is so vague to me that sometimes I’m not convinced he’s really there.
• Grateful. I struggle at times, but the material world hasn’t filled me up. I get more from God as a Spirit than I do from anyone or anything else, despite the challenges.
• Other:_______
2. Briefly discuss with the group your response to the writer of Psalm 42. Can you readily identify (now or in your past) with Reader 1, the part of the self that longs for God but has trouble finding him? Can you identify with Reader 2, the side of the self that insists on hoping in God, believing he cares?
3. Turn to page 14 in the book, and as you review the paragraphs about Philip’s college reunion, tell the group how long you have identified yourself as a Christian. Can you relate to the experience of disillusionment when the heady concepts of Christianity bump up against the realities of daily living? When in your life has this kind of bump occurred? If you are still exploring Christianity and considering where your beliefs lie, have you experienced any similar disillusionment?
4. Consider the following lines from a letter Philip wrote to God a decade ago (pp. 17–18 in the book).
Occasionally I get caught up in your world, and love you, and I’ve learned to cope OK in this world, but how do I bring the two together? That’s my prayer, I guess: to believe in the possibility of change. Living inside myself, change is hard to observe… . How do I let you change me in my essence, in my nature, to make me more like you? Or is that even possible?
Do you, like Philip, struggle with finding a continuous unity with God and seeing him change you within? Or do you struggle more often with understanding what you see God doing or not doing in the world around you?
5. Philip, on page 19, tells of three respected Christians from past and present who met difficulties in relating to God. Saint Augustine struggled to place absolute trust in an invisible God and an imperfect church. Author Hannah Whitall Smith (The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life)experienced distress because of an unfaithful husband and children who left the faith. Author Eugene Peterson, as an adolescent, observed Spirit-filled
hypocritical Christians. How do you feel as you read about the struggles of these spiritual leaders?
• Surprised. I thought there were some people who just believed God and never doubted.
• Unsettled. I have so far to go in my walk with God. If these spiritual giants couldn’t arrive,
I don’t think there’s any hope for me.
• Tentative. I feel Yancey is bending their stories to fit his theme. These leaders struggled, but it was through their struggles that they gained the wisdom and perspective to impact many.
• Relieved. These stories are a reminder to me that I can keep progressing in my relationship with God despite my doubts.
• Other:_______
6. Review the story of the Russian Orthodox priest on pages 25–27 in the book. Brother Bonifato performed a series of time-consuming formalities in a Russian prison chapel in order to offer a prayer, requested spontaneously, for the prisoners. Some complain that in Russia God seems far away and unapproachable to the individual, due to these formalities. Yet Thomas Merton said, If you find God with great ease, perhaps it is not God that you have found.
What do you think? Talk about your own church. Does it seem formal or casual to you? Is God approachable? Is contact with God tooeasy?
7. C. S. Lewis wrote, "There comes a moment when the children who have been playing at burglars hush suddenly: was that a realfootstep in the hall? There comes a moment when people who have been dabbling in religion … suddenly draw back. Supposing we really found Him? We never meant it to come to that!Worse still, supposing He had found us? (p. 28). Can you tell about a time when you felt what Philip calls a
tug" from God?
Philip writes, Nowhere in the Bible do I find a promise that we will touch God, or see his face, not in this life at least.
Quoting C. S. Lewis, Philip adds, Friendship is the form of love that least accurately describes the truth of a creature’s encounter with the Creator
(pp. 32–33). Considering the times you have felt a tug from God, how do you respond to these statements?
GRASPING FOR UNDERSTANDING OF MYSELF, MY GOD (10 – 20 MINUTES OR MORE)
As we explore the seeming gulf between ourselves and God, it is helpful to know that each of us will experience unique struggles due to our life experiences, personality, spiritual growth, expectations, and other characteristics that make us who we are. In seeking greater peace and depth in our relationship with God, it helps to look at various aspects of ourselves and of God, just as we would do with another person in a troubled marriage or friendship. This examination of underlying perspectives will help us gain a true picture of spiritual life and will change how we relate to God.
You may choose to reflect on the following questions either together as a small group during this session or in personal time at home during the coming week. It’s very helpful, if time permits, to share about these experiences with others in the group. As we listen to one another, we realize that our struggles and differing perspectives are impacted greatly by our unique life circumstances. In gaining new understanding of one another, we can gain new understanding of God.
In this session we will consider the overall life experiences that have brought us to where we stand today with God. Reflect on these questions:
• How would you describe the spiritual atmosphere in which you grew up?
• What was it that drew you to God?
• What have been the outstanding times of trial in your life?
• In what ways did God seem present or absent in your trials?
CLINGING TO GOD DESPITE THE DISTANCE (5 – 10 MINUTES)
In this section of each study, we will take a few minutes to be silent together before God and open ourselves to meaningful contact with him. This time may include prayer, meditation on a verse of Scripture or a meaningful quotation about God, or writing thoughts or prayers in a journal. Consider bringing a notebook or journal to each session, or you can write in the space provided. You may not be accustomed to spending time in silence before God, or you may not have experienced doing this in the presence of a group. Try to push through any level of discomfort you may feel. The discomfort will recede in time, and you will find this to be an important part of your time together and with God.
Today let’s spend a few minutes meditating on, or quietly thinking about, the following prayer of Anselm of Canterbury.
I do desire to understand a little of your Truth which my heart already believes and loves. I do not seek to understand so that I may believe, but I do believe so that I may understand; and what is more, I believe that unless I do believe I shall not understand.
As you sit before God, close your eyes or simply bow your head. Your prayer may be that of Anselm. Or you may need to pray, as did one New Testament follower of Jesus (and many since), I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!
(Mark 9:24).
LONGING FOR GOD IN THE WEEK AHEAD (OPTIONAL)
You can integrate this study into your life throughout the week by using the following suggestions and readings.
• Consider gathering together as a group sometime this week and watching the movie Contactwith Jodie Foster. After the movie, discuss: What parallels do you find between Foster’s pursuit of life from another world and our pursuit of God? What parallels or differences do you find in the outcome of Foster’s search and the outcome of your own?
• Reflect on these psalms in the week ahead as your time allows. Day 1: Psalm 13
Day 2: Psalm 61
Day 3: Psalm 63
Day 4: Psalm 77
Day 5: Psalm 143
WEEK 2
CHAPTERS 3 – 4
DOUBT AND DIFFICULTIES
sergThe excerpt below is from Reaching for the Invisible God.
I must exercise faith simply to believe that God exists, a basic requirement for any relationship. And yet when I wish to explore how faith works, I usually sneak in by the back door of doubt, for I best learn about my own need for faith during its absence. God’s invisibility guarantees I will experience times of doubt.
Everyone dangles on a pendulum that swings from belief to unbelief, back to belief, and ends—where? Some never find faith. Others have faith, then lose it.
I feel kinship with those who find it impossible to believe or find it impossible to keep on believing in the face of apparent betrayal. I have been in a similar place at times, and I marvel that God bestowed on me an unexpected gift of faith. Examining my own periods of faithlessness, I see in them all manner of unbelief. Sometimes I shy away for lack of evidence, sometimes I slink away in hurt or disillusionment, and sometimes I turn aside in willful disobedience.