What if Philip was simply asking: What is God like?
Philip said to him, “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.”
Philip asks a very human question. We have often given Philip a hard time about his petition: “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied” (John 14:8). What if we reframed Philip’s request? What if we found another way to ask this? What if Philip was simply asking: What is God like?
This passage is part of a series called the farewell addresses before the death of Jesus. Jesus knows that his time is coming and he begins to give his friends and followers his last words. He encourages his listeners that God is the architect of their forever home and he is going ahead to build this home. In fact, he tells them that he is the way, the truth, and the life.
In response, Philip asks a very human question. We have often given Philip a hard time about his petition: “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied” (John 14:8). What if we reframed Philip’s request? What if we found another way to ask this? What if Philip was simply asking: What is God like?
In a recently published children’s book, What is GOD Like?, Rachel Held Evans and Matthew Paul Turner touched my soul with their own various interpretations of what God could be like. Utilizing biblical imagery with tender grace, artistic creativity, and joyful imagination, they show us that the Father is not just one thing, but inhabits God’s very own creation through stories, images, metaphors, and analogies.
Here are some renditions of “What is God like?” that I believe would have definitely satisfied Philip’s curiosity:
God is like a river, constant and life-giving. When you grow near God, you’ll sprout up strong as a tree.
God is like the flame of a candle, warm and inviting. With God close by, you can look to the light and see through the darkest of nights.
God is like a shepherd, brave and good, a protector who loves her sheep so much that she watches over all of them and knows each of their names by heart.
God is like three dancers, graceful and precise. They move to the same music in very different ways, showcasing all of God’s elegance and rhythm in your life.
God is like a best friend, faithful and true, closer to you than even your brothers or sisters.
And because we know what God is like, we know that…
God is kind. God is forgiving. God is slow to get angry. God is quick to be glad.
God is happy when you tell the truth and sad when things are unfair.
May we, with childlike curiosity, continue to ask God to show us what God is like.
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