When Eve rocked the Garden of Eden in the image of God do
you think she ever worried about the way she looked? Did she fix her hair,
check her complexion, or try to hide her tummy? Was self-concern even a
thought?
Could it be that confidence was once natural to the image of
God in woman, because self-absorption was not?
Wasn't the lure of the original sin in Genesis 3 to consider
self? All the enemy had to do was make the woman contemplate herself and feel
inadequate. “…you will be like God…” Genesis 3:4b. Don’t you think she
wondered, “You mean, I’m not? What am I like then?” Eve doubted her created image, and in her
doubt she reached for worth apart from God, and in so doing fell.
I’m glad there are no visuals for what the first woman
looked like. In spite of her sin legacy, she would have become an idol of the
flawless woman. However, while Eve cannot be imitated, idols of external beauty
reign. Don’t they?
We are obsessed with the outward appearance. God-like is
always reaching for the external. Our hair, skin, nails, clothes, careers, our children,
and our homes: these are the things that matter most when we estimate a woman
in our neighborhood or in the mirror.
We are no less guilty than Eve. We have bought into the lie
that we are inadequate, and because we believe The Liar, we reach for the stuff
of this world to make us feel complete. Nothing that we reach for apart from God will ever complete
the image of God in woman, because God’s image in us is Spirit.
I will never forget my idol of beauty. I never knew her name
or her life, I only knew her image, and to me it was perfection. The longer I
stared at her the more I hated myself. While I lamented to my husband, “Why
didn’t God make me like her,” I knew it was to God I had to go with my broken
heart. So when I was alone I cried to my Creator, “God, why did you let me see
that I am ugly?” And over my sobs and through the ancient garden blew a tender
whisper meant just for me, “Who told you that you were naked?”
I was silenced. Consider the source of doubt.
Doubt in my created image is always because of my sin, and
there could be nothing uglier or more pathetic. Strength in my created image
only grows as I discipline myself to look away from what I doubt in me to
simply love someone else. Is that hard to do? Absolutely. Forgetting about my
own insecurities requires the power of God in me to turn my head toward the one
He has placed before me. Changing my mind about what I’m not and who He is in
me demands strong intention. And opening my eyes to see the heart that is in
front of me, without comparing her to myself, requires the healing touch that
comes through the Word of God. Again, and again I pray, “God help me see her
and not me.” And you know what? He does.
Our self-perception, like Eve’s, has been broken. We see
inadequacy and perfection through a distorted lens. Only by looking at
ourselves and others through His grace will true beauty be evident.
“Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your
hearts on things above where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. Set
your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life
is now hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your life, appears, then
you also will appear with him in glory.” Colossians 3:1-4
We long for the image of God on the earth. If it truly is
beauty that we long for, will not find it – past lipstick and shoes - to the
soul of a woman created by God to be His image on the earth?
“Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not
appeared as yet what we shall be. We know that, when he appears, we shall be
like Him, because we shall see Him just as He is.” I John 3:2
We are children of God. Tell me something. Where is the flaw
in that?