A Story of God in Three
Scriptures
Told for the Children
We Love
In
the beginning there is only God. Unknown, unseen, before space, before
time, unlike anything, source of everything. Our story begins here, long
before there is anyone to tell any story. With a big bang heard by no
one, the universe begins.
Over billions of years stars form,
light the heavens, and are pulled into galaxies like our Milky Way.
Around our star, the sun, planets take shape. On earth, life begins.
Plants grow in water and on dry ground. Animals swim in the seas and
walk on land. And after more than three billion years of life on earth,
the human story begins. Over many generations, living apart, people
become different colors, eat different foods, speak different languages,
and tell different stories about themselves, their world, the universe,
and God.
Three thousand years ago one
people, the Israelites, begin to tell a story of God creating the
universe from nothing in seven days, and making the first man and woman,
Adam and Eve, in God's image, free to choose right and wrong, and to
love. In this story the descendants of Adam and Eve have children and
grandchildren, and these people fill the earth.
But God is unhappy, the story
tells us, because people are being mean to each other. So God tells
Noah, a just man, to build an ark for his family and two of every kind
of animal. And God makes rain fall until a great flood kills all life on
earth. Then God feels bad about causing such suffering and promises
never to be so angry again. The rainbow, the story says, is a sign of
God's promise.
After
people once more fill the land, in this story, God tells an old man
named Abraham that he will have as many descendants as the stars in the
sky, if he lives a righteous life. His servant, Hagar, gives birth to
Ishmael, who becomes the father of the Arab peoples. And Abraham's wife,
Sarah, bears Isaac, who is the father of Jacob. After Jacob wrestles
with God, he is blessed and named Israel, which is why all his
descendants are called Israelites.
Of his twelve sons Jacob favors
Joseph, but Joseph's brothers are jealous so they sell him into slavery
and tell Jacob that Joseph is dead. As a slave in Egypt, after Joseph
interprets Pharaoh's dream about a coming famine, he is given power to
store grain. When the famine drives his brothers to Egypt seeking food,
Joseph is thankful to God for making him a slave so he could save his
family. He forgives his brothers for being mean to him, and all his
family move to Egypt.
After many generations, the story
says, Joseph is forgotten and Jacob's descendants are enslaved. So, God
calls Moses and his brother
Aaron to tell Pharaoh to let the people go. God helps the people escape,
gives them the Ten Commandments, and promises a place to live in peace,
if they are faithful. The people wander in the wilderness for forty
years before fighting their way into the land of Canaan. And after many
years a young warrior named David unites the twelve Israelite tribes,
defeats their enemies, and makes the city of Jerusalem the capital of
their new nation.
But the people of this story do
what's wrong. David takes another man's wife, Bathsheba, and has her
husband killed. After David's death their son, Solomon, kills his older
brother to make himself king, and then enslaves his own people to build
a temple for God in Jerusalem. And after Solomon dies, the Israelite
tribes fight with each other and remain divided for the next two hundred
years.
So, the story tells us, God calls
a few brave men to tell the people to change their ways. These prophets
say God wants the Israelites to be faithful, to forgive each other, and
to set a good example for other nations. In the words of the prophet
Micah, God only requires that the people do justice, love mercy, and
live their faith humbly.
Yet, the people continue to live
selfish lives. Then foreign armies invade. Soldiers burn their cities,
kill many of the people, and take much of the land. After years of
fighting, troops enter Jerusalem, destroy the temple built by Solomon,
and take captives from their
homes far away into exile. Now, the people remember the warnings of the
prophets and wonder if God is punishing them.
Fifty years later new rulers come
to power and allow the people to return home, and those who do rebuild
the temple. Known now as Jews, whether living in Jerusalem or other
cities around the Mediterranean Sea, the Jewish people suffer under
harsh rulers for the next five hundred years.
In this hard time they tell a
story of Job, a good man who suffers unjustly, but is finally saved by
God. They tell of the brave and beautiful Esther, who tricks her king
and saves her people, and of the courage and faith of Daniel, who is
thrown into a den of lions. They also tell stories of the end of time,
when God will judge the nations and save all those who have done what is
right.
Stories about God told by the Jews
are written down in books known as the Torah, the Prophets, and the
Writings. And ever since
Jews have read these stories as scripture, as the story of God.
Two thousand years ago a poor Jew
named Jesus is inspired by this story of God. So, he teaches that God's
rule is like planting seeds, which grow and bear beautiful flowers and
good things to eat. And he proclaims that God's rule is like the love of
a mother and a father, who forgive their children for the wrongs they
have done.
Jesus is killed by the Roman
governor of Jerusalem, because the Roman Emperor claims to rule as God.
But stories about Jesus and his followers are added to stories about his
ancestors and collected in the Bible story that Christians have read as
scripture ever since.
The
Bible tells of John, born to Elizabeth and to Zechariah, who prepares
the way for Jesus by proclaiming God will forgive all those sorry for
the wrong they have done. The Bible tells of the angel Gabriel coming to
Mary and of the birth of Jesus in a stable in Bethlehem. The Bible also
tells stories of the disciples of Jesus, of the women who follow and
care for him, including his mother, Mary, of his brother James, the
leader of the first church in Jerusalem, and of Mary Magdalene, the
close friend of Jesus, who watches him die and sees him after his death.
In the Bible story the death of
Jesus reveals the power of God, for Jesus lives on in the life of the
church to help Christians resist the temptations of Satan, an angel who
has turned against God. Yet, church leaders unfairly blame Jews for the
death of Jesus, and use violence to enforce their rule.
About
five hundred years after the church begins a descendant of Ishmael in
Arabia is wondering why Christians are so mean to Jews and other
Christians, and is worrying about his own people, who are quarrelling
over their many gods. Alone, praying in a mountain cave, pondering the
stories of God told by Jews and Christians, an astounding answer comes
to him. There is only one God!
Muhammad, peace be upon him,
believes the angel Gabriel has revealed this to him. He returns home to
the city of Mecca and proclaims there will be peace, if everyone
worships the one God. But his teachings threaten the money made from
selling goods to those who come to Mecca to worship their gods, so his
people try to kill him. He escapes to the city of Medina, and ten years
later returns to Mecca with thousands of believers. Then he removes all
the images of the gods from the city, and unites the peoples of Arabia
in the worship of the one God.
After his death, his messages are
written down in a new story of God called the Qur'an. The Qur'an blesses
all God's messengers to the Jews and Christians. Adam, Noah, Abraham and
his sons, Ishmael
and Isaac, Joseph, Moses and Aaron, David and Solomon, and Job are all
praised for serving the one God. And the Qur'an says that John and his
father, Zechariah, and Mary and her son, Jesus, have spoken the truth
about God to their people.
In the Qur'an God is called Allah,
which is not a name but the Arabic word meaning "the one and only
God." And those who read the Qur'an as scripture are known as
Muslims, which means they have given themselves to God.
Like the Jewish and Christian
stories, the Qur'an teaches each person is free to turn to God. As in
the Bible, the Qur'an warns that Satan may lead us astray. Like the
stories of God told by Jews and Christians, the story of God told by
Muslims offers forgiveness to all who are truly sorry for any wrong they
have done.
But many of those who read these
stories of God ignore their call to do justice and love mercy. The
stories all say the end of time will bring God's judgment, but Jews,
Christians and
Muslims disagree about who will be saved. And the anger and violence of
Jews, Christians and Muslims lead many to believe that God is an angry
and a violent God.
What matters, however, is how we
live our lives now. These stories all tell us that God will forgive
everyone who is sorry for hurting others, because God is like a mother
or father waiting with open arms to welcome home a lost child.
At the end of our story, God will
be alone again. The sun and stars will burn out, and the universe will
be no more. But God will remember every one of us, and the love we have
shared. And in this unending love, we, too, may live forever.
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