Moses said to God, “Suppose I go to the Israelites and say to them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you,’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ Then what shall I tell them?” God said to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM. This is what you are to say to the Israelites: ‘I AM has sent me to you.'” God also said to Moses, “Say to the Israelites,’The Lord, the God of your fathers–the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob–has sent me to you.'” Exodus 3: 13-15
Most people when asked who they are use descriptors like ‘I’m so and so’s wife,’ ‘I’m their mom.’ Sometimes we say, ‘I’m an accountant with whatever firm,’ or ‘I’m a doctor with this practice.’ After the I am comes the description. We can often put into a few short words a pretty complete synopsis of who we are and what our lives make up and are made up of.
God isn’t like that.
He is so much there isn’t anything He wouldn’t have to list behind the ‘I am.’ He is infinite and perfect, He is all-knowing and eternal, He is Creator and King, He is, He is, He is. Those words which might clarify who He is are literally innumerable, there is nothing that ever was or will be that wouldn’t need to be listed. In an effort to convey this reality to mankind, He came to call Himself the I AM. No other words needed.
Here’s the humbling part: while He is all that, while there is any title of greatness that He might rightly claim, notice the title He chooses: I AM (which is enough) the God of Abraham. I AM the God of Jana. I AM the God of Joseph, the God of Kate, the God of you.
Christ called Himself the Son of Man more than any other name. Son, capital, all God, Divine. Man, lowly, subservient, temporal.
He chooses to give Himself titles that forever hitch His wagon to mine.
This God who needs nothing asks much of me. This God who has everything wants all of me. This God who is eternal before me and everlasting beyond chooses to call Himself…
Her Father. His Counselor. Their Friend.
Like a proud parent with countless accolades under his belt showing up at the little league field and introducing himself only as ‘number 4’s dad,’ we see what titles might mean the most to him. And my God chooses to interweave who He is with who I am in Him. Amazing.
I’d think little number 4 might strut along the bases a bit. I’d think he’d be pretty proud to be that guys son. I’d think he’d play pretty hard and want to do his best to make that daddy proud. Love like that will move you.
“I AM __________’s Dad. She’s the apple of my eye, worth every sacrifice to make her mine.”