Distorted Reflections: Humanity’s Fall from Divine Image and the Path to Authentic Faith
Acts 17:24-25
"The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything."
When it comes to the practice of your faith, what's your emphasis? What are your "ought to do's?
Church funding? Sola scriptura, physical temples, seeking the Lord just purly on a maybe basis?
"Maybe God will be merciful and spare us."
Paul in Acts 17 is reminding us that God’s provision undergirds all things, for "In him we live and move and have our being". God provides everything, so we ought to seek, repent, and reflect Him in our lives. We can pray for his protection against demonic influencers that seek to bind our blessings, but He's always hedging our souls with angelic power. We can pray for His mercy and grace, for our families, but He's always showing mercy and grace to all His people. We can call upon The Lord for provision and our daily bread, but He always provides, He always provides everything we need.
So, this passage, part of Paul’s Areopagus speech, presents God as the self-sufficient Creator who sustains everything, flipping pagan, and frankly some modern Christian notions of a needy deity. It shifts our focus from external rituals to internal response, gratitude, and transformation. The core emphasis here is on God’s absolute sovereignty and our utter dependence, not on human efforts to "prop up" or contain Him. God "gives to all mankind life and breath and everything" (v. 25), so our faith isn’t about fulfilling His divine needs but living in awe of His provision and promises. This is why when I pray I say, "Lord, thank you for all you have done, all you are doing, and all you will do."
Our existence itself is enveloped in God. This undergirds a practice that’s relational, humble, and active: seeking Him amid life’s design (vv. 26-27), repenting from our ignorance (v. 30), and anticipating righteous judgment through the resurrected Christ (v. 31). It’s less about rigid rules and more about responsive living, where worship transcends physical or material confines. Since He already has orchestrated history, people "should seek God, and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him" (v. 27), we ought to pursue Him through reflection, prayer, and openness to His nearness ("he is actually not far from each one of us," v. 27). This isn’t a passive expression; it’s an active "groping", striving even in our uncertainty.
We "ought" to turn from equating God with human inventions (like idols or self-made magisterium, v. 29) and heed the call to repent (v. 30), preparing for judgment.
As God’s "offspring" (v. 28-29), we "ought" to honor Him by our ethical choices, sharing the gospel truth (like Paul does), and depending on His sustenance rather than self-reliance. Sharing the hope of Jesus’ resurrection as proof of His coming justice (v. 31), motivating our holy living without fear.
We are dependent on Him, we exist in Him, our sustainment is from Him. Therefore we "ought" not to be thinking God is our offspring. God made man in His likeness. But man has fallen from that. God made us into spiritual beings, to live after the Spirit, but man fell from that. Man followed after his flesh, he became ruled by it. And being a body conscious being, mankind looked around himself and began to identify with the animals. Finding his reflection in the evolution of the species. And then worshipping those creatures. All the animals think about is eating and exploiting its surroundings. And so mankind emulated and emphasized these things. These sons of God fell away from God's image and lifted up the animal from within themselves and began to worship himself. He carved marble statues of himself and these man/animal images, and began his paganism and the worship of self. He made himself god with his own hands.
All of this is the heart of biblical anthropology, how humanity, created in God’s image, has distorted that divine imprint through sin, leading to a cascade of idolatry that Paul confronts head-on in Acts 17. This "image" God created in men (Hebrew tselem, Greek eikōn) isn’t about physical resemblance but moral, spiritual, and relational capacity; humans are created as vice-regents reflecting God’s character, dominion, and communion. This elevates humanity above creation, designed to live "after the Spirit" in harmony with the Creator. Like it or not, depending on your political views, you are created to live as something more significant in relation to God and to the animal kingdom.
Even so, the scriptures portray sin as degrading humans toward beastly instincts. Psalm 49:12 likens the godless agnostic (ignorant people) to "beasts that perish," and Ecclesiastes 3:18-19 observes our shared mortality with animals, underscoring fallen equality without divine purpose. In Romans 1:18-25, Paul expands on this: Humanity "exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things" (v. 23), worshiping creation instead of the Creator. This isn’t just ancient paganism; it’s a timeless pattern where suppressing truth leads to futile thinking and darkened hearts (v. 21). It’s all mankind's original sin, and a beastly ethic is the result. Exploiting their superiority and cultivating contempt for God's creation.
You see, it isn't that being made in the image of God, in the way man was created, has therefore produced his arrogance and inhumanity. No, its mankind's fall from that line and taking upon himself the image of the animal, the creation, the worldly things; these things are what have polluted him and the earth.
Our fallen human condition, our corrupted nature is behind it all. Our constitution was changed radically in that fall. It's expressed in the New Testament as our "sarx", flesh and spirit. This New Testament dichotomy isn’t merely poetic but a diagnostic of our corrupted nature, stemming from original sin’s ripple effects. This internal war reflects how sin doesn’t just taint actions but reorients our entire being toward rebellion, self-gratification, and opposition to God’s will. Humanity, was crafted by God for spiritual dominion and communion, yet he succumbs to fleshly autonomy, corrupting the imago Dei into a state of enmity. This isn’t a superficial flaw but a systemic perversion, where the "flesh" emerges as the locus of sin’s dominion. He's exchanged kingdoms, he's forsaken God's kingdom for the animal kingdom.
Matthew 26:41
"The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak"
His sinful rebellion is not inherent to God's creation but activated through man's animal sin, leading to his selfishness, jealousy, and power struggles. By suppressing truth, hearts darken, and we exchange God’s glory for creaturely images, fostering a beastly ethic of exploitation. The human constitution changes from spirit-led harmony to flesh-ruled conflict, where even the willing spirit contends with sarx’s pull. We're all just a bunch of filthy animals. And we battle with this until the day we pass on into God's glory.
Galatians 5:17
"For the desires of the flesh are against the Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh"
Some might argue that sarx isn’t the body per se but the fallen visible world influencing it, including mortal impulses that war against spiritual life. An internal conflict consuming man from within. The enemy within that cannot be reformed but must be crucified. I don't disagree with that idea. We certainly shouldn't be embracing it and dressing up in it.
Galatians 5:24
"And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires."
The Fall pollutes through sarx’s dominance, but redemption restores: Believers receive the Holy Spirit to counteract the corrupted spirit, denying the flesh while awaiting new bodies (Romans 8:9-11; John 3:30). This flesh-spirit tension explains the "beastly ethic": Sarx fosters exploitation, as fallen humanity emulates creation’s base drives rather than ruling in God’s image. Paul’s remedy in Acts 17 and Romans calls us to repent, crucify sarx through Christ, and walk in the Spirit (Galatians 5:16), reclaiming our vice-regent role without fear or confusion.
Religion isn't the answer. Paul himself dismantles that in his Areopagus speech: God doesn’t dwell in temples or need our service (Acts 17:24-25), flipping the script on Athenian idolatry and any notion of a "needy" deity. Instead, Paul focuses in on a transformative relationship with God, seeking Him amid our fallen condition, repenting from distorted images, and living in dependence on His provision ("In him we live and move and have our being," v. 28). And therefore, if religion isn’t it, Scripture points to redemption through Christ as the remedy for our corrupted nature.
This doesn’t negate all religious structure, organization matters for a faith community; but this idea prioritizes the relational over the ritualistic. It’s the personal encounter with the Creator that satisfies, wins hearts and minds, and makes disciples. The church "ought" to be focused on that.
Prayer:
Lord, Creator who sustains all life and breath, grant us honest hearts to confront our fallen distortions, the flesh that wars against Your Spirit. Help us reject empty rituals and idols of self, seeking You with integrity and humility. Restore our true image in Christ, that we may live authentically, repenting sincerely and worshiping in spirit and truth. Amen.