Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Living in God's Presence

Have you ever known an older gentleman who drove a thirty year old car, not because he couldn’t afford a new one, but because it helped him relive his past?  The car brought back memories of happier days when it was the coolest thing on the road, when life was adventurous and exciting, and that car was the envy of all his friends.  Or what about that woman over forty that acts and dresses like a teenager in hopes of reviving former days when life was care free and filled with anticipation and excitement.  I’m sure we can all think of someone like that and maybe it was even one of us.

The same scenario can play out in the life of a Christian.  Some dwell on days gone by when God’s presence was so thick and wonderful they refer to it as the high water mark in their experience with God.  It may have been fifteen or twenty years ago when they were captivated with the presence of God and so overwhelmed that it defies definition.  A past experience like that can lead us to believe anything less is not God.  Longing for the former days tends to draw one’s attention away from the present.  Just as those mentioned above who strive to live in the past, we as believers can easily get drawn to a past experience in hopes of living it again. 

Please don’t misunderstand I am not suggesting a desire to have awesome experiences with God is somehow wrong.  The problem is we can only experience God’s presence in the present.  Though yesterday may have been wonderful, a time to honor and speak fondly of, we must not let it detour us from what God is doing now.  There are many good things that can distract us from the present, not only a former experience in the glory of God but even dreaming of His glorious return.  We must live in the present to experience His presence.  God’s desire is to take us to higher levels, from faith to faith and from glory to glory, but what we think is higher or greater may be different from God’s point of view.    

For some it may not be the former days of glory that draw them to the past but times of defeat and loss.  Remembering the injustices of our past and the emotions connected to them are often enough to reactivate the pain that draws us away from the present.  I can personally identify with loosing the sense of God’s presence just by allowing my meditations to drift and to become swallowed up by a painful past experience.  These are enemy tactics to interrupt our awareness of God’s presence and distort our vision. 

 God is at work in the present tense, He is not the “I was” or the “I will be” but the ever present great “I Am”.  When God called Moses into Egypt to deliver the Israelites from the hand of Pharaoh, Moses asked “who shall I say has sent me?”  God said; “Say ‘I Am’ has sent you.”   Moses also made excuses why he was not qualified to speak on behalf of God saying; “I am not an eloquent speaker.”  At that point he had his eyes on the wrong “I am.”   We can easily do the same if we look through the lens of our past failures and limitations but the scripture says with Christ we can do all things. 

Jesus lived out of the present.  He only did what He saw His Father doing, and only said what He heard His Father saying.  He also said that man cannot live by bread alone but by every word that proceeds (present) out of the mouth of God.  Yesterday’s experience though it may have been glorious, will not meet the needs of today.  Jesus was and is the bread of life that came down from heaven.  The Israelites ate of that bread in the form of manna in the wilderness but it could not be stored for use the next day but had to be collected fresh every morning.  What was good yesterday is spoiled today, in a sense it becomes a petrified stone good only as a marker of remembrance. 

 Have you noticed the present tense element of faith and the ministry of Jesus?  The power of the Lord was present to heal.  See Luke 5:17.   Today is the day of salvation now is the accepted time.  See 2 Corinthians 6:2.  Now faith is the substance of things hoped for.  See Hebrews 11:1.  Glory and honor are in His presence even strength and gladness are with Him.  See 1 Chronicles 16:27.  Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty or freedom.  See 2 Corinthians  3:17.  

Thus far I haven’t said much about the future but it can also be a distraction from the present presence of God.  Jesus taught that we should not worry about having enough for tomorrow, be it food, clothing or shelter, but to seek first the Kingdom and His righteousness which includes everything needed for this life.  The Kingdom of God is at hand, it is present within us here and now though there is much more to come.  He implies being overly concerned about tomorrow is a diversion from seeking the present Kingdom. 

Jesus’ own disciples expected Him to restore the Kingdom to Israel at that time by overthrowing existing earthly kings but Jesus knew the battle was not against flesh and blood.  God’s agenda was to first overthrow spiritual thrones and dominions to take back the keys from our enemy.  The disciples had the right idea but the wrong enemy in mind as well as wrong timing.      Though there will be a future manifestation of the Kingdom different than today’s we can’t afford to allow wrong theology to prevent us from entering into present Kingdom activity.  We can neither allow what happened in the past nor what we expect in the future to distract us from what God is doing now. 

Knowing how to study and apply end time prophesy is critical to remaining in the present. Some years ago I received a mental picture of people studying the bible looking through binoculars.  I understood the binoculars signified they were looking to the distant future studying the end times along with the charts and time lines developed by well known bible teachers.  The charts were developed to help the students determine their position in the unfolding of God's plan and usually pointed to Christ's imminent return.  Others I noticed in this picture were viewing the scripture through microscopes doing in depth word studies.  Both of these are good and valid methods of study but the thought occurred to me that you would never want to go about your daily activities looking through either one of those lenses.  It would greatly distort your perception of the path in front of you.

The Pharisees were great students of the scripture, but totally missed the very One they pointed to.  Though they were very familiar with God’s word they didn’t recognize His presence when He came into their midst but thought Him to be an imposter.  Study of the scripture is very important and all methods of learning, preaching and teaching have their place but we must walk out our lives in the present while peering through the lens of His presence.  Our knowledge of what was and what is to come can only be properly applied if we see clearly what God is doing in the present.     

Though the disciples were present in the boat with Jesus they were not really in His presence.  To say it another way, His presence was not inside of them.  When the storm blew in Jesus was not alarmed but continued at rest.  Fear came upon the others and caused them to think He didn’t care if they all sank to the bottom.  As they cried out fear was released into the atmosphere making matters even worse, but Jesus released peace from within Himself calming the atmosphere around them.  For greater is He that is within us than he that is in the world.  From within His presence we will see things differently.  When the lens of fear is replaced with faith and trust the substance of faith within us has power to change the atmosphere around us.    

We all carry what this world really needs now more than anything else, His peace, presence and glory.  I like what Bill Johnson says, “We owe everyone we meet an encounter with God.”  It is important that we not portray Him as the God of wrath and vengeance from either the past or the future, but as a savior who desires to draw all men unto Himself, and as a father running to cover the shame of those sons and daughters returning home.    If someone is to encounter God through my life I must walk in an awareness of what He is doing in the present.  If my mind is captivated with the past or the future be it my own stuff or an overemphasis on the end time events, I loose awareness of His present desires and will likely misrepresent Him.

In His presence is fullness of joy not anger.  It is the goodness of God that leads us to repentance.  God’s present agenda is revealed as we have heavens perspective.  As we see through the lens of His presence we will see what He is presently doing and properly apply our knowledge of both the past as well as the future. 

 John Scheda

 

            

No comments:

Born of Women or Born of God?

Among all who were born of women there's not one greater than John the Baptist, but he who is least in God's Kingdom is greater than...