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Daze Of Our Lives

Coconut

Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2005
Messages
4,663
Daze Of Our Lives

(I totally love this!)

God’s saints accomplish great things while staggering around in dazed bewilderment.

‘By faith,’ says Scripture, ‘Abraham, . . . went out, not knowing whither he went.’ (Hebrews 11:8)

‘I go bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem,’ said Paul, ‘not knowing the things that shall befall me there.’ (Acts 20:22)

The disciples were frequently stunned or mystified by Christ’s words and behavior.

The psalmists were forever asking, ‘Why?’ (E.g.. Psalm 10:1; 22:1; 42:9; 43:2; 44:23; 74:1; 88:14) And in the midst of his suffering, Job didn’t have a clue what was going on.

The curtains are often drawn in God’s waiting room.

It’s exciting to gaze ahead, but faith grows best in the dark. Life in the sunshine is so exhilarating that we seldom notice our faith beginning to droop. It’s when things are dim, that spiritual life mushrooms.

Dark mysteries bring great blessings. At the close of the year that saw the death of his newborn son and then the death of his wife and then assaults on his own health, Hudson Taylor wrote, ‘This was the most sorrowful and most blessed year of my life.’

When it’s sunny we want to run off and play. It’s when it’s darkest that we hold Father’s hand the tightest.

In the gloom, qualities like faith, grit, and dedication, are stretched to limits we have never before reached. Yet life seems so oppressive we are oblivious to our triumphs.

In pristine conditions eyes of faith can see forever. When storms close in, it is a mammoth task for those same eyes to even slightly pierce the swirling murk. It is the conditions, not you, that have deteriorated. Contrary to every feeling, you are not regressing.

Though offered with the best intentions, much sentimental waffle is sometimes uttered about returning to one’s ‘first love’, as if the starry-eyed euphoria of new Christians is greater than the mature depths of your average older Christian. Poppycock! Most spiritual honeymooners are radiant primarily because they think they have entered a blissful world of near-perfect Christians, instant answers to selfish prayers and a life forever free from pain, heartache and trials. Theirs is most likely mere puppy love, relative to the ardor moving you to tough it out.

Never confuse devotion with emotion.


By way of illustration, consider the dangers inherent in the most intimate human relationship. Though in a romance, love and physical desire can be intertwined, heartache and tragedy looms for anyone who fails to recognize them as separate entities. What if a person’s marriage plans are swayed by an inability to distinguish between love and sexual appetite? What if in marriage a loss of sexual function is viewed as a decline in love? Such a misconception could threaten the whole relationship. Similarly, in the spiritual realm a failure to distinguish between feelings and love for God has serious implications.

Though I’m all for emotional exuberance, [God] measures love, not in tingles per second, but in putting one’s life on the line. (1 John 3:16-18) It’s pain endured in the valley, not gooey feelings in the afterglow of mountaintop ecstasy, that validates love. By all means, passionately seek the face of God, but don’t assume that emotional deadness – a normal phase of anyone’s spiritual life – implies spiritual deadness.

We march by faith, not by warm fuzzies.

An athlete, in the midst of a record-breaking run, has never in his life been so fit and strong. Yet his pain-racked body may have never felt so weak. Likewise, in the midst of a spiritual trial, it is not uncommon to be stronger and yet feel weaker than ever before. And to fellow Christians you might seem hopeless. An ultra-marathon champion staggering up the final hill looks pathetic. A child could do better. Anyone not understanding what this man has gone through would shrink from him in disgust. Only someone with all the facts would be awed by his stamina as he stumbles on.

You’ve hit so many brick walls, it’s no wonder your nose is out of joint. Life seems hopeless. Every day it feels you’ve slumped another notch. A ministry seems beyond belief. To maintain even a glimmer of faith in such darkness is a spectacular victory. It may take everything you’ve got just to hold on. But do it. You are pumping spiritual iron.

If your blossom is dying, it’s so that the fruit can grow.

Remember the cripple at the temple gate: he hoped for alms and got legs. (Acts 3:1-3) Creator God loves surprises. And he loves you.

Earth sees us flattened on the wrestling ring canvas in faith’s fight. Heaven sees us forming on the canvas of the Great Artist.

Half-completed works of art look ugly. All that matters, however, is the finished masterpiece. Forget appearances. Yield to the Artist. The result will be breath-taking.

Chapter 8: Basking In Infinite Love
 
Footnote (my own)

We live in a church age that demands everything we say and do have clearly defined lines, and that we provide proof for everything, solid evidence that we can see and touch.

The cry is, know what you want, know where you are going, and know how to get there! Also make sure that whatever your "who, what, when, where, and why is" just be sure it parks itself in a pew on Sunday morning, praise God, that is FAITH!

The missionary will say I have heard the call, I know where I am going, and I know how I am going to live after I get there, because I will raise the funds before hand. (not to disparage the missionary way)

But

‘By faith,’Abraham, . . . went out, not knowing where he went.’

The prosperity preacher will shout, 'tell God where you want to go, how you are going to get there, and how you want to live after you have arrived, and by faith you will get it.' (" it" meaning getting your own way of course)

Pardon me sirs but you got the cart before the horse there...I`ll go one step further and say you got the cart, but you aint got no horse!

I read Netburst because Grantley Morris` writings are messages I can relate to...and I especially love this one, because here I am, not having a clue where I`m supposed to be going, even less of a clue of how I`m supposed to get there, and not the faintest idea of how I`m going to live...tomorrow...let alone next year. I plod along, day in and day out...and can oft be heard saying, 'Father knows what He is doing...but I sure don`t!'

ah... ‘By faith, Coconut, . . . went out, not knowing where she went.’

Dazed and often confused, but trusting Father...and yes He and I are both well aware I need all the help I can get...no need to inform Him of that when you talk to Him about me
 
I really like this article and thread Coconut. It brought to mind something I have learned in my own walk with Jesus as well as revelation from HolySpirit and time spent with Father.

Paul said "For we see, as yet, through a dim window [obscurely], but then face to face. As yet I gain knowledge [in part], but then shall I fully know even as I was also fully known." 1 Cor. 13:12 REB

We should keep this in mind especially when trying to understand the scriptures. While some things may have the appearance of lasting forever but may indeed come to an end, and in the same manner some things we may see as limited may turn out to be endless, all because it is simply beyond the horizon of our scope of vision.

May HolySpirit put us in a daze and help us the same as He did Paul and abandon our own knowledge of the scriptures, leaving behind a virtual walk like Christ and enter into a journey of faith, intimately walking with Christ, our hand in His.
 
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May HolySpirit put us in a daze...

I know the prayer of a good man is powerful and effective, but you really did it this time...

I have only one question...

Can you pray the daze to go the other way now? :confused:

 
The horse (Jesus Christ) that pulls the cart (the church).

God's power is perfected in our weakness (dazed).


But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”
Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may
rest on me.
(2 Corinthians 12:9)

For this reason I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
from whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named,
that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be
strengthened with might through His Spirit in the inner man,

that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith
;
that you,
being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with
all the saints what is the width and length and depth and height;
to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge;
that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
(Ephesians 3:14-19)
 
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