God Most High (El Elyon)

26/07/2025 55 min

Listen "God Most High (El Elyon)"

Episode Synopsis

Deep Dive into God as El Elyon"El Elyon," meaning "God Most High," represents God's absolute transcendence, supreme elevation, and cosmic sovereignty. It is the granite foundation of Reformed theology and piety. From its initial appearance in Genesis 14, where Melchizedek blesses Abram, El Elyon is portrayed as the "Possessor of heaven and earth," demonstrating that God's cosmic authority is intrinsically linked to His covenant grace. This theme extends throughout the Bible, culminating in the New Testament with Jesus identified as the "Son of the Most High," revealing divine transcendence in the incarnation.Reformed theology, codified in the Westminster Standards, integrates this concept deeply. God is described as "most absolute," signifying His self-existence (aseity) and unchangeable nature, which offers profound pastoral comfort and assurance. His eternal decree unchangeably ordains all events, encompassing everything for His covenant purposes. God's providential government ensures His continuous direction of all creation. John Frame's lordship triad—Authority, Control, Presence—systematically highlights God's comprehensive rule.Historically, the doctrine of divine supremacy has been consistently upheld by early church fathers, medieval theologians, and Reformers. Figures like Irenaeus, Athanasius, Anselm, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin each emphasized God's exaltation as crucial for understanding sin and grace.The practical implications are extensive: it recalibrates worship towards vertical adoration based on the regulative principle, cultivates humility in personal sanctification, and provides unshakable assurance. It fosters church unity by promoting a shared reverence for God and equips the church for public witness by relativizing earthly powers and confronting idols. Ultimately, it guards spirituality from sensation-seeking, emphasizing God's presence in ordinary means of grace. Exalting God as El Elyon restores the church’s strength and the believer’s joy, leading to Soli Deo Gloria.Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologianhttps://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730