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Friday, June 6 2008

"And Moses said unto the people, Fear not, stand still, and see the salvation of the LORD, which he will show to you today: for the Egyptians whom you have seen today, you shall see them again no more forever." Ex 14:13

One must escape the paralysis of fear and learn to be still so you can see the salvation or deliverance God has. Nothing calms fears quite like being in right relationship with God. When we sin, it is not God who turns away from us, but rather it is we who turn away from Him. We feel shame, unworthiness, etc. because our heart condemns us (and so do many of our brothers and sisters), but John says, "If our heart condemns us, God is greater than our hearts. If our heart does not condemn us, then we have confidence towards God." When you sin, run toward God. That in itself is an act of repentance, and He will not condemn you. Rather, He will restore you. When you are "still" in His presence, it is the same as "waiting on the Lord," and it is in that process, you experience the restorative process and find strength again. (Psalm 27:14)

Do you really believe there is a spiritual dimension, a heavenly realm that is a higher dimension than our earthly existence? Remember how Elisha answered his servant who was terrified by the armies surrounding the city? 2 Kings 6:16 records his response, "Fear not: for they that be with us are more than they that be with them." How did he know that? Is it possible he had trained his eye to see? Is it possible that his walk with God had attuned him to see in that realm? And more to the point, is it possible that we might also learn to see like that?

Elisha prayed for his servant who had never seen in that dimension, "LORD, I pray you, open his eyes, that he may see." And the Lord opened his eyes and the servant saw the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire. If God would answer that prayer for Elisha, do you think God might open our eyes to see? I am going to suggest that we can learn to see in ways we may never have seen before, whether with the eyes of our understanding (Eph 1:18), our spiritual senses (Heb 5:14) or through spiritual giftings (1 Cor 12). And that “seeing” in that realm is as much of an advantage as natural eyesight is an advantage in life over those who cannot see. Even though we see through a glass darkly, "in the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king."

In many ways we are sight deprived and we don't care because everyone we know is also similarly afflicted. But when a man or woman with spiritual vision comes along, we discover there is a higher way of life. In the next several weeks, we are going to explore what it means to see in that realm and I will be calling upon you to share your experiences of receiving sight and seeing the salvation of the Lord!

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