I remember the day Metallica came to church.
It was late Saturday night when I got the call from a representative of Warner Music. âLars Ulrich [the bandâs drummer] heard about your upcoming worship service. Heâs intrigued that youâre not slamming the band and wondered if he could send a camera crew to record the event. Would that be OK?â she asked. âHeâd come himself, but heâs just left town on tour.â
âAh . . . sure,â I stammered, âeveryoneâs welcome at our church.â
Sure enough, the next morning the crew arrived, along with 200 first-time visitors, heavy-metal fans whoâd heard about the service on an âupcoming concerts segmentâ of the local rock radio stationâs news.
The gospel as newsâwhat a concept!
And that Sunday morning it was preached via the graphically raw lives and lyrics of a monster metal band. Through the parable of Metallica, God spoke.
God spoke?
Yes, God spoke.
Who else could have created these musically gifted image-bearers? Whose Spirit would have inspired them to cry out against the injustices of religious manipulation, deceptive consumerism, and relational brokenness? And whose love is now graciously guiding and keeping them as they slowly realize that they canât drink, drug, or scream their anger away, that they need to forgive instead?
To whom does Metallica belong, anyway?
Yeah, theyâre sinnersâjust like you and meâbut that doesnât squelch the Spirit, does it? The Holy Spirit is sovereign and blows wherever it wills, inside and outside the church, through sinful preachers as well as errant heavy-metal band members.
John Calvin once wrote, âIf we regard the Spirit of God as the sole fountain of all truth, we shall neither reject the truth itself, nor despise wherever it shall appear, unless we wish to dishonor the Spirit of God. For by holding the gifts of the Spirit in slight esteem, we contemn [show contempt for] and reproach the Spirit himselfâ (Institutes II.ii.15).
Struggling with the very honest question of the source of the profound truths he was encountering in the writings of his non-Christian contemporaries, Calvin had no option but to name and claim that truth as Godâs. Who else can author truth?
Augustine, too, saw that truth potential everywhere. He noted that there âcannot be a nature in which there is no goodâ (quoted by Niebuhr, Christ and Culture, p. 211).
Think about that. Everything, no matter how twisted and perverted by sin, still has some of Godâs original goodness in it. So if all truth really is Godâs and everything has some of Godâs good truth still in it, how do we treat that truth when we encounter it in our lives, movies, sports, science, and songs?
Do we see it as even faintly authoritative or revelatory?
Perhaps weâre standing on holier ground than we think.
From Van Gogh to U2
The work of the Spirit is not an abstract, inanimate theological concept. Itâs real, personal, alive today. It proceeds from the heart of the Father, emanates from the mind of his Son. Right now Christâs Spirit is personally holding all of creation together (Col. 1:15-17).
And if he authored it all and now holds it all and isâeven as we readâmaking it all new, is that not something we should be able to perceive?
Yes, thereâs mystery in all of this, âfor now we see though a glass darklyâ (1 Cor. 13:12), but why wouldnât the movements of Godâs Spirit be perceivable? Wearing the glasses of faith, why shouldnât we expect to see and know God more in every moment, on every street corner, in all spheres of his creation?
In architecture we discover that itâs Godâs spacious goodness that we experience in that âjust rightâ physical place. Itâs Godâs grace in that perfectly designed environmentâa reminder of a garden we once knew and a foreshadowing of a flawless future city.
An oil-industry entrepreneur describes, with a sense of co-creative pride, aerial photographs of a recent billion-dollar idea. Reflecting the image of his Maker, itâs almost as though heâs created something out of nothing, putting things together in a way no one could have imagined, saving huge amounts of energy and reducing environmental degradation.
Contemplate in a Van Gogh painting the vibrant beauty and creativity of God in both artwork and artist. Vincent himself wrote that when he painted the color yellow he was painting the presence of the Divine, and that when he painted the sun he was painting Christ. The color yellow! Itâs all around you.
Consider physicist-theologian John Polkinghorneâs assertion that a scientist, in undertaking her nature-altering experimentation, is one of the best arguments for the possibility of a God who providentially intervenes in our naturally ordered world.
Stunned by the profoundly mysterious spirit animating a honey-bee hive, 20th-century entomologist Maurice Maeterlinck likened it to the Holy Spirit holding all things, keeping all things. And Jan Swammerdam, a 17th-century scientist, once wrote, âI present you the omnipotent finger of God in the anatomy of the louse.â
God speaking via the glory of a Super Bowl victory, the unrelenting pursuit of beauty and perfection in the world of fashion, the prophetically piercing lesson of a global current event, or the latest U2 songâcould it really be?
What if all creation is meant to be seen as an icon, not so much looked at but looked through?
Perhaps God always intended for us to know him via both world and Word, two revelatory books meant to be read in concert. They illumine one another, protecting us from the extremes of bibliolatry and nature worship, synergistically revealing more than either book could alone.
Creation, after all, teaches me things the Bible canât (a firsthand view of Godâs infinite, omnipotent power). And the Bible teaches me things creation canât (especially in relation to Christ and the gospel). But together we find the fullest picture of who God is.
Learn to Discern
So how do we do it then? How do we learn to discern the Spiritâs movements in our daily lives?
We begin by letting our theologyâprovidence, common grace, and a huge view of Godâs sovereigntyânot only give us permission to look but the imperative to.
Consider the state of your heart as well. Kierkegaard, in his commentary on Paulâs phrase âLove believes all things,â talks of a knowing that only a heart filled with love can know. Itâs the kind of love a parent has for her child, that God has for his creationâa love that is able to see the greater good, a larger truth, in spite of an ever-present sinful frailty, a love that doesnât lose sight of the beauty of an earlier, pre-Fall time.
And ponder the fact that God created you with a prophetic imagination. We are âmade in the image of the imagination of Godâ (George MacDonald). To know God in all of his creation seems almost unfathomable. Yet if we have the faith to see, to trust Godâs Spirit, weâll realize heâs speaking all over the place.
Before the incarnate Jesus left his distraught followers, he made a promise: âUnless I go away, the Counselor will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you. . . . When he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to comeâ (John 16:7, 13).
Or as Cormac McCarthy pens it via a conversation between a dying father and his young son in his poignant book on filial love, The Road:
âYou said you wouldnât ever leave me.â
âI know. Iâm sorry. You have my whole heart. You always did. Youâre the best guy. You always were. If Iâm not here you can still talk to me. You can talk to me and Iâll talk to you. Youâll see.â
âWill I hear you?â
âYes, you will. You have to make it like talk that you imagine. And youâll hear me. You have to practice. Just donât give up. Okay?â
âO°ě˛š˛â.â
âO°ě˛š˛â.â
for discussion
- Where do you see signs of the Holy Spirit leading us into Godâs truth in your everyday life and in the world today?
- What are your criteria for rightly discerning the signs of the Spirit?
- What thought in Van Slotenâs article spoke to your own faith experience?
- Is there anything you question in Van Slotenâs article? If so, what?
- What gives you comfort and hope as you live your faith in our rapidly changing world?
About the Author
John Van Sloten is a Calgary-based CRC pastor, teacher and writer. His latest book is Every Job a Parable; What Walmart Greeters, Nurses and Astronauts tell us about God (Navpress USA, Hodder & Stoughton UK).