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Fear of God --- Its meaning
The term "fear of God". It is often used in the Bible. What
does it mean? I would say it has the following meaning: A man
who fears God is a man who takes God seriously; who takes his
words and commandments seriously; who listens to what he has to
say with seriousness and respect. He is a man who believes
God's commandments are supposed to be kept and that breaking
them is dangerous. He is a man who is afraid to go against
God, afraid to disobey him, afraid to disregard any of his
commandments or take them lightly. He is a man who is afraid
of God in this sense. It is all like a young boy who has a
righteous, good father for whom he has the greatest respect.
The father demands obedience and the boy is afraid to disobey.
The boy knows that his father expects to be taken seriously.
And he is afraid not to do so. Thus he fears his father in
this sense. However, although he fears his father, he also
loves him. He knows that his father is righteous, just, and
good and that what his father says is true and for his own
benefit. He knows that although his father requires respect
and obedience his father loves him; and, indeed, it is just
because his father does love him so much that he requires this
respect and obedience.
Thus we see that fear does not prevent love. Because we fear
God, that doesn't mean we can't love him. In fact, the respect
for God and reverence for his commandments that constitutes our
fear of him are the very basis for our love. Respect must come
before love. We love him for his goodness, for what he is, we
love him because we can respect him. We love him because we
love Goodness and Righteousness.
Note this too: The man who fears God also "believes" in him;
he also "has faith"; and he also obeys and follows his
commandments. So is the man who fears God saved by virtue of
his belief? Or by virtue of his faith? Or by virtue of his
works (i.e. by virtue of his righteousness, goodness, etc.)?
It is a useless, academic, sophistical question from a
practical standpoint. In one place the Bible says one is saved
by belief, in another that he is saved by faith, and in another
that he is saved "by doing the will of the Father". So by
which of these is he saved? Why worry about it? Why not just
believe and do and forget it? Yet it is the question that has
produced great division, strife, anger, and prejudice for
centuries among denominations and religious people.
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