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You are here: Home / Archives for Tuesday Tunings

July 2, 2019 by smattern Leave a Comment

The Strength to Keep Me

Walking and Talking

I am weak but Thou art strong;
Jesus, keep me from all wrong;
I’ll be satisfied as long
As I walk, let me walk close to Thee.

Just a Closer Walk with Thee
By: Anonymous

Listen as you read. This is a great old dixie jazz version. Don’t be startled when it picks up around 2:49.

Over the next seven weeks we are going to alternate between two different hymns, Just a Closer Walk with Thee, and Just a Little Talk with Jesus. We will explore these ideas of walking and talking with Jesus and how essential there are to our journey toward greater spiritual resonance. Learning to live with a greater awareness of God’s presence with us is what we at Resonant 7 want to help you do.

Along the way, we will also be welcoming a dear friend of mine to join us on that journey. Dr. Sherri Woods will begin contributing to Resonant 7 with a new series of blogs and companions under the heading Wednesday Wanderings beginning next week. I have experienced a taste of these offerings and I know you will be blessed as you spend time walking along with her as I have been. Welcome Sherri!

Weak/Strong

As we begin this part of the journey of walking along with Jesus, the writer starts with an interesting acknowledgement, our weakness and God’s strength. Both are important foundational concepts to our faith that few followers would deny, yet we too often live like the opposite is true on both counts. We act like we are stronger than we really are, and God is weaker than He actually is.

Weak/Strong

This acknowledgement allows us to begin our journey with a measure of honesty that will help us along the way. We are talking of course about a lot more than just physical strength, though even that is a part of it. I like this image because it represents how we often think of ourselves, with an overestimation of our strength. But I think it also can convey the reality that we can tap into a strength much greater than what it appears on the surface we may possess when we rely on the strength of God.

And we desperately need that strength as we consider the journey before us. Walking along with Jesus is not easy, as anyone who has done it for any length of time will be able to identify. Honestly, it would be impossible if it were not for the strength of Christ in us helping us at every single step in the road.

There is a marvelous song that addresses this truth. All I Have is Christ makes the statement that Jesus is everything. He is all I have, but it goes on to paint an incredible story of why that is a good thing. At the point of commitment and surrender the song says in the third stanza, “Now Lord I would be Yours alone, and live so all might see the strength to follow Your commands could never come from me.”

We do not begin this journey without the help of the Holy Spirit revealing to us our need for a Savior, and Christ’s willingness to be that, but we also can not even follow through with our commitment to live for Him unless He gives us the strength to do so. But praise His Name, He does so, and gladly!

Keep Me From All Wrong

There is a great movement implied in this. Not just let me stay safe in one place, but as I walk along keep me from all wrong. That which I might bring on myself as well as that which others might invite me to join. And I suppose there are two aspects of this prayer.

  1. Deliver me from evil
  2. Keep me from it in the first place
Keep Me From All Wrong

The first is an important prayer which Jesus taught His disciples to pray (Matthew 6:14). When we find ourselves in a wrong place, doing a wrong thing, we cry out to be delivered from that place and activity. But I like this prayer because it is proactive. Keep me from that wrong place and thing so I do not even go there.

It is a further acknowledgement of our weakness as well as this truth in James.

“each person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own desire. Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when it is fully grown brings forth death.” James 1:14-15

When we see it this plainly, making the choice for right which leads to life, seems simple, but it does not always present itself so clearly. That is then compounded by the fact that we are longing to be satisfied, and that pursuit sometimes leads us astray, but we will look into that on Thursday.

Think of it this way. We can make much better music, be more resonant, when we are in tune. We acknowledge we are weak, prone to get out of tune, and that we need to routinely tune our hearts. We come to the One who is strong, evidenced by the fact that He is always in tune. We ask Him to keep us in tune, from all wrongs, and that puts us in a position to allow His song to resonate in us. Here’s to getting, and staying, in tune.

Happy Tuning!

Jesus, I am weak. Though I would rather not admit that at times, I revel in it here and now as I simultaneously declare You are not. On the contrary, You are strong. Your strength can keep me from all wrong, and so I ask You right now to do just that, all to the glory of Your name, that I may walk closer to You today. In Jesus name. Amen.

Like what you finding here? Fill out the form to the right to get an email with each fresh post and updates of new tools to help you be Resonant.

Please comment below and share if you have found this helpful in your journey of being more resonant.

Below is content available only to Subscribers. Want to learn more about accessing all the additional material in the Subscriber Content Library, click here, or the Free Member Content Library with some examples of the Subscribers content, click here.

Subscribers enjoy this podcast! Everyone else, the transcript below.

Video 7.1 Transcript

Welcome to Tuesday Tunings at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s tune our hearts.

I am weak but Thou art strong;
Jesus, keep me from all wrong;
I’ll be satisfied as long
As I walk, let me walk close to Thee.

This is a great place to begin, acknowledging our weakness and His strength. Are you familiar with your weakness. That’s a start? Admit it to God, then thank Him for His strength.

Here is the ancient prayer Jesus taught His disciples, “Deliver us from evil.” In addition to the wrong without, this is also a prayer that we would be kept from the wrong within. Ask Jesus to keep you from all wrong.

Satisfaction. So elusive. Think of one thing that you want today. You imagine you will be satisfied when you receive it, but if you have longed for anything before and received it, you know our longing often turns to the next thing. Ask God to show you what you are longing for today, then surrender it?

When we long for God, instead of trying to satisfy that longing with something else, we can be truly satisfied. Why? Because He is the One for whom we were created to long. When we learn how to walk along daily close to Jesus we find the secret to satisfaction. Ask the Holy Spirit to teach you how to walk with Jesus.

Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has surfaced in your heart, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then we will sing once more.

Sing

Take the awareness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.

Image Attributions
Walking and Talking - https://pixabay.com/photos/human-friends-men-portrait-forest-3729591/
Weak/Strong - https://pixabay.com/photos/man-board-drawing-muscles-strong-2037255/
Keep Me From All Wrong - https://pixabay.com/photos/ethics-right-wrong-ethical-moral-2991600/

Filed Under: Tuesday Tunings

June 25, 2019 by smattern Leave a Comment

Angelic Adoration, An Aspiration

Angels Love

Teach me to love Thee as Thine angels love,
One holy passion filling all my frame;
The kindling of the heav’n-descended Dove,
My heart an altar, and Thy love the flame.

Spirit of God, Descend Upon My Heart
By: George Croly, 1780-1860

Listen as you read. This is a very simple flute and harp version.

This final stanza calls the Holy Spirit to teach us two more images, equally powerful and compelling, and beyond our grasp. Today we will consider the holy passion of the angels who ever circle the throne praising God. Thursday we will think about a very powerful image of God’s love as a fire. We need the Spirit to understand and practice each of them so let’s ask Him to teach us this week. Let’s tune our hearts.

As Angels Love

Now there is a tall order. We will definitely need the Holy Spirit to teach us this one for it is eternal and other-worldly. To love as angels love requires us to consider who they are and how they love.

Angels are God’s messengers. They represent Him some times and speak for Him at other times. Scripture tells us a lot about them and yet there is a great deal of mystery regarding these heavenly beings.

Isaiah 6:2-3

One of the powerful passages illustrating angels and their relationship to God is the beginning of Isaiah 6, particularly 6:1-3. Their adoration is

  1. relational
  2. continual, and
  3. hallowed

Relational

They are together somehow standing “above” God. Not sure exactly what that means, but I imagine they are circling the throne. I love how Isaiah records that they call one to another. They all know He is holy, but they keep declaring it to each other. There is some communal dimension to their affection.

Continual

They never stop. Over and over again. I have said for years of our worship that we should not grow so easily weary of declaring to one another things that are true of God, particularly because we need to be reminded, unlike the seraphim who are ever in His presence.

Hallowed

I wanted to use an unusual word for this last one to represent just how different the love of angel’s is from ours. Our love can be relational, expressed in the company of others. It is not continual, in some measure because we have to stop to sleep, but even still our waking moments are commandiered by other intentions. These least of these by far is this last one though. Their worship is hallowed or sacred, regarded as holy because it is an all-consuming passion.

Holiness at its core means integrated, or the opposite of disintegrated or undone, which Isaiah confessed was his state in the presence of the integrated, whole, or holy One. The love of the seraphim reflects the holiness of the One they adore. Only the Holy Spirit can give un insight into this reality, and any hope at all of approximating it, even at our best moments.

One Holy Passion

It is this kind of integration that is our aspiration.

One Holy Passion

The seraphim could use all six wings to fly, but they do not. I have heard different explanations but I like this the best. Two cover their eyes acknowledging they can not look directly at God. Two cover their feet acknowledging they are not worthy to be fully seen by God. Two are used for their assumed purpose, flight, moving them to love.

Might we learn something from them? We must use all of our capacities to express love to God, but maybe not as we might think. One-third used to make less of us and more of Him. One-third used to acknowledge our unworthiness and extol His worth. One-third used according to their assumed purpose. These thirds working together in seamless tandem as an integrated, sacred compelling desire. One holy passion filling all my frame.

The seraphim seem consumed. Look at the image. All wings? All bent to one purpose.

Integrated Tuning!

Spirit of God, teach me to love as the seraphim love. One holy passion filling all my frame. When parts of me get out of sync with it, help me to identify it and adjust accordingly so I can maintain that consuming desire. Thank You for the imagery of the angelic adoration. Help me reflect it today. In Jesus name. Amen.

Like what you finding here? Fill out the form to the right to get an email with each fresh post and updates of new tools to help you be Resonant.

Please comment below and share if you have found this helpful in your journey of being more resonant.

Below is content available only to Subscribers. Want to learn more about accessing all the additional material in the Subscriber Content Library, click here, or the Free Member Content Library with some examples of the Subscribers content, click here.

Subscribers enjoy this podcast! Everyone else, the transcript below.

Video 6.5 Transcript

Welcome to Tuesday Tunings at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s tune our hearts.

Teach me to love Thee as Thine angels love,
One holy passion filling all my frame;
The kindling of the heav’n-descended Dove,
My heart an altar, and Thy love the flame.

This stanza uses some beautiful imagery. Oh, to love God as His heavenly messengers do. And how is that? Continually. They never stop their “Holy, holy, holy”, constantly offering praise to God. Consider the example of those who are ever circling His throne.

A singular, holy and intense desire and enthusiasm for our Lord. An all-consuming fire that burns within our entire souls. Ask the Holy Spirit to fill you with such a passion.

In this imagery, the material that burns is the very presence of the Holy Spirit, the heaven-descended Dove. He is the kindling that gets that fire burning. Welcome Him to come and be that quickening fire-starter in you.

Our hearts are the place where fire burns. God’s love is the flame. My heart the altar, the Holy Spirit the kindling, the love of God the flame. Oh Spirit light that fire within me and teach me how to care for it.

Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has surfaced in your heart, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then we will sing once more.

Sing

Take the awareness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.

Image Attributions
Angels love - Image by Karin Henseler from Pixabay https://pixabay.com/illustrations/heart-angel-wing-love-mourning-669552/
Isaiah 6 - https://lindasbiblestudy.wordpress.com/2016/11/16/seraphim/
Seraphim - https://revivenations.org/blog/2015/04/15/worshiping-god-like-the-seraphim/

Filed Under: Tuesday Tunings

June 18, 2019 by smattern Leave a Comment

Dark Night of the Soul

Thou Art Always Nigh

Teach me to feel that Thou art always nigh;
Teach me the struggles of the soul to bear,
To check the rising doubt, the rebel sigh;
Teach me the patience of unanswered prayer.

Spirit of God, Descend Upon My Heart
By: George Croly, 1780-1860

Listen as you read. This is a nice string quartet version.

This week our stanza calls on the role of the Holy Spirit as our Teacher. Every line asks for Him to teach us different things, including even the third one which carries over from line 2. In our Tuning today we will focus on the first two lines, saving the last two for our Thoughts on Thursday. Let’s tune our hearts.

You Are Near

Some stanzas tell a story, using all four lines to slowly craft a single poetic thought or illustrate a solitary image. While others build to a climax as they develop, increasing in intensity as the lines build one on another. Some stanzas are a list of things about a singular topic, like two weeks ago, but not this one. It is a list of sorts of things we want to be taught but I actually think they are all taught within the context of the first one, an awareness of God’s presence.

While we will take some time to consider each of these requests, overcoming soul struggles, doubt, rebellion, while acquiring patience, when we are confident that God is with us, ever nearer than we can even perceive, we are able to handle all the other ones. This is one of the most basic doctrinal truths, and a foundational one as well. God is omnipresent, or present everywhere at the same time.

“Am I a God at hand, declares the Lord, and not a God far away? Can a man hide himself in secret places so that I cannot see him? declares the Lord. Do I not fill heaven and earth? declares the Lord. Jeremiah 23:23-24 ESV

I love it when God asks a rhetorical question. Whether close at hand or far away, God is there, seeing us even in what we think are secret places. He fills heaven and earth. When we embrace this fundamental reality of God’s presence it alters our ability to deal with everything we face, and even has the effect of keeping us out of behaviors that create problems for us. So why would we not long for this more?

I dare say it is because there are things we would rather God did not know were true about us. Why else would the man of the verse above attempt to hide himself in a “secret place”? What things about your thinking, speaking and doing would you rather hide? If you are willing to sincerely ask for God to teach you He is always near, you are effectively asking Him to shine His light into even the darkest recesses of you soul. Which, by the way, is a great idea, and simultaneously a wonderful segue to the next prayer.

Soul Struggles

Dark Night of the Soul

We all have them. Times when our soul feels a weight that is difficult for words to express. Sometimes these are of our our doing, and sometimes the doing of others. Sometimes they pass, and other times they linger for long periods.

In those especially long seasons we experience what Saint John of the Cross termed the “dark night of the soul”. That feeling that it is 3 o’clock in the morning all the time, inescapable darkness. We know the darkness will not last, for the sun always rises, but even so they are painful seasons. As it says in Psalm 30:5b, “Weeping may tarry for the night, but joy comes with the morning.” The darkness is always darkest before the dawn.

What weight is your soul struggling with today? I figure you probably do not have to think very hard about that. Have you asked the Holy Spirit to help you with that struggle in particular? Have you named it before the Lord and asked Him to help you bear it?

We often ask first for the struggle to be removed and find ourselves quickly discouraged when it is not. Maybe God has another purpose for your struggle than just to remind you of your need for Him. Maybe He wants to use it to develop something in you.

Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him. James 1:12 ESV

The Spirit is waiting to give us the power we need to bear the weight of every struggle our soul will face. If this test has the purpose of developing your spiritual strength, will you ask the Holy Spirit to help you demonstrate your love for God by remaining resolutely firm and unwavering in the midst of it?

Crown of Life

Crown of Life

Now while I did not counsel you to ask for a crown of life, I am sure you noticed that promise in the midst of that verse. And what an amazing one! As if the strength to remain steadfast were not a treasure enough, when we use it to show our faithful love to God in the trial He promises a crown of life.

While rightly viewed as the promise of life after death, there is also another promise here. It is the promise of life as God intended here and now, an intimate and personal relationship with God in love, a product of the development of fortitude through repeated victory in every test. Only the Holy Spirit can accomplish this in the life of even the most resolute follower of Jesus, but His teaching is available to all who will ask. So ask today!

Resolute Tuning!

Spirit of God, be my Teacher. Teach me to feel God’s presence always near, for it makes the difference in every circumstance. Flowing from that confidence teach me how to develop the fortitude to bear the struggle of every trial of my soul, that I may gain a more intimate relationship with my Savior, the crown of life. In Jesus name. Amen.

Like what you finding here? Fill out the form to the right to get an email with each fresh post and updates of new tools to help you be Resonant.

Please comment below and share if you have found this helpful in your journey of being more resonant.

Below is content available only to Subscribers. Want to learn more about accessing all the additional material in the Subscriber Content Library, click here, or the Free Member Content Library with some examples of the Subscribers content, click here.

Subscribers enjoy this podcast! Everyone else, the transcript below.

Video 6.4

Welcome to Tuesday Tunings at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s tune our hearts.

Teach me to feel that Thou art always nigh;
Teach me the struggles of the soul to bear,
To check the rising doubt, the rebel sigh;
Teach me the patience of unanswered prayer.

Though God is always near, I dare say closer than our breath, we often fail to live with an ongoing awareness of such. Ask the Holy Spirit to teach you how to live with a constant sensitivity to His presence.

Is your soul struggling today? If not, you can probably recall a season not long ago when it was. Either way, it is only a matter of time before it does again. Ask the Holy Spirit for the strength to bear those soul struggles.

When we face difficulties, our minds find doubt rising. When we are reminded of God’s ways, our rebellious flesh balks. Ask the Holy Spirit to check, to stop or slow the progress of these attitudes.

On first glance this last line seems like a prayer for the patience required to wait until God answers prayer. With more careful examination, I think it may be a request for the same patience God exhibits between our prayer and His eventual answer. Ask the Holy Spirit for that patience.

Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has surfaced in your heart, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then we will sing once more.

Sing

Take the awareness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.

Image Attributions
God is Near - https://wilshireave.com/sermons/god-is-near/#
Dark Night of the Soul - https://billmuehlenberg.com/2015/09/20/the-dark-night-of-the-soul/
Crown of LIfe - https://pixabay.com/illustrations/watercolour-watercolor-paint-ink-1768925/

Filed Under: Tuesday Tunings

June 11, 2019 by smattern Leave a Comment

There’s a Bid in Abide

Bid

Hast Thou not bid me love Thee, God and King?
All, all Thine own, soul, heart and strength and mind.
I see Thy cross; there teach my heart to cling:
Oh, let me seek Thee, and, oh, let me find!

Spirit of God, Descend Upon My Heart
By: George Croly, 1780-1860

Listen as you read. This is a lovely piano solo version.

As we endeavor to be more resonant today we will spend some time cultivating our response to God’s love. On Thursday we will turn our attention to the cross, the greatest expression of God’s love, but for today we are going to consider His love for us and the response it should evoke it us. We want to be more resonant, allowing His purposes to echo freely in our lives, and considering His love is one of the best ways to nurture that. Will you come with us on the journey today?

Bid

As we walk along through the ideas created by these hymn texts, often we have to stop and consider what a particular word means so as to ascertain the meaning. Bid here is a wonderful example of such consideration. Wonderful and complex.

The image above portrays the most common usage of bid today. To make an offer in hopes of winning an auction. eBay has made this an exhilarating addiction for some, but this has nothing to do with what the hymn is saying.

The most accurate usage is one that essentially means to beseech or entreat, but unfortunately those words only clear things up a little for they are pretty uncommon today as well. This is essentially what God is doing, asking us urgently and fervently to love Him. But not because He needs it. One the contrary, because of the effect He knows loving Him has on us. Loving Him opens the door to living a life of love. Abiding.

So we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us. God is love, and whoever abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him. 1 John 4:16 ESV

For this reason, I think two other definitions may even be more emphatic. One is invite and the other is tell. I think these are all true. God certainly invites us to love Him, and He also commands it.

So it begs the question. Are we learning to abide in His love, in Him?

Abide

Abide

And just what does that mean. Abide means to continue in a place, so to abide in love, in God, means to continue in love, in God. Abiding is life-giving, love-nurturing. Consider this image.

When Jesus taught about abiding He used the image of a vine and it’s branches. (See John 15:1-17) This is beautiful concept. If we remain in Christ, continue in Christ, He will remain in us. So you see, there is a “bid” in “abide”. There is an invitation in the continuation.

Jesus also taught in the Greatest Commandment that we should love all of God with everything we have. Here is the telling part of the bidding. He said it like this.

And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ Mark 12:30 ESV

Questions

So I just want to ask a couple questions to finish today. Is there anything prohibiting you from staying in that place of love? Are you harboring any unforgiveness, resentment or jealousy? No. Good for you. But that is not enough.

If we are continuing in a place of love, we must bear the fruit of that continuing. We must love. Love is not only an idea and feeling, it is an action. What have you done today to love others? Are you being diligent to demonstrate love? And here’s the tough one. How have you demonstrated love to someone who is unloving, or unable to return the love?

Not sure how to advance the cause of love today? Watching the video below will provide you with a few minutes to cultivate a life of love. Please take advantage of this one which is available to everyone, not only subscribers. If you can not watch it now, come back later today when you have 5:53. It will be time well spent.

Honest Tuning!

Spirit of God, thank You for not only inviting me, but also telling me to love God. And then helping me to do it. I need you every day to abide in love. Help me Spirit to do so with all my heart, soul, mind and strength. In Jesus name. Amen.

Like what you finding here? Fill out the form to the right to get an email with each fresh post and updates of new tools to help you be Resonant.

Please comment below and share if you have found this helpful in your journey of being more resonant.

Below is content normally available only to Subscribers. Want to learn more about accessing all the additional material in the Subscriber Content Library, click here, or the Free Member Content Library with some examples of the Subscribers content, click here.

Everyone, please enjoy this video log! And the transcript below!

Video 6.3 Transcript

Welcome to Tuesday Tunings at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s tune our hearts.

Hast Thou not bid me love Thee, God and King?
All, all Thine own, soul, heart and strength and mind.
I see Thy cross; there teach my heart to cling:
Oh, let me seek Thee, and, oh, let me find!

We start with a rhetorical question. Yes, God has urgently pleaded with us to love Him, not because He needs our love, but because He knows that affection inclines us to things that are good for us. Thank Him for bidding you to love Him.

And then the repeated word, ALL. When a writer repeats something it is important. How should we love? By giving God all our prayers, passion, energy and intelligence. Ask the Holy Spirit to help you love Him with everything you are.

The cross teaches us to deny ourselves. If we are to love God with everything, we must learn self-denial. Ask Jesus to teach you how to hold fast to the cross.

Deuteronomy 4:29 says “You will find [God] when you seek Him with all your heart and all your soul.” The hymn writer offers a simple prayer. Echo that prayer, “God, let me seek You.”

Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has surfaced in your heart, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then we will sing once more.

Sing

Take the awareness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.

Image Attributions
Bid - https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/indl-goods/svs/steel/numetal-restructured-to-become-eligible-to-bid-for-essar-steel-coc/articleshow/65958320.cms
Abide - http://handmeanotherbrick.com/2017/03/09/spiritual-service-and-abiding/
Questions - https://giphy.com/gifs/book-library-literacy-l0HlRnAWXxn0MhKLK

Filed Under: Tuesday Tunings

June 4, 2019 by smattern Leave a Comment

What NOT To Ask For?

No Dream

I ask no dream, no prophet ecstasies,
No sudden rending of the veil of clay,
No angel visitant, no opening skies,
But take the dimness of my soul away.

Spirit of God, Descend Upon My Heart
By: George Croly, 1780-1860

Listen as you read. This is a nice string quartet version.

So our stanza this week takes through a list of things we at first might be inclined to seek, but instead offers us a better alternative when considering the work and presence of the the Holy Spirit. There are some interesting images conjured through the list and we will consider each as we tune and think. Won’t you come along as we continue to consider how we might welcome the work of the Heaven-Descended Dove?

No Dream

Look at the little one sleeping peacefully. All snuggled up and ready for a night of rest. Maybe there are visions of sugar plums dancing in her head…maybe not. What’s wrong with asking for a dream?

This is an interesting stanza, left out of many occurrences of the hymn. It is a litany of things we do not want which builds to a crescendo culminating in the thing we do truly need. In lieu of what we really need, God give us no nightly visions, or prophetic thrills. What makes it interesting is that dreams, visions and prophesies are actually promised by God when He pours out HIs Spirit in the last days.

“‘And in the last days it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams; Acts 2:17 ESV

Though they are promised, we will not ask for them. Why? Because there is something better in the estimation of the writer. What is that something? Well, interestingly it is something that seems far less dramatic than all the things this stanza commits to NOT ask for.

No Prophet Ecstasies

And prophet ecstasies, those can be pretty dramatic. Even though they should always line up with Scripture and point us to Christ and His cross, this faith we have has a prophetic side to it. Take for instance the Apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:2 when he mentions knowing a man who was taken up to the third heaven. Say what?That sounds like a pretty incredible journey, yet we are invited to ask the Lord NOT to give us these kinds of ecstatic, prophetic experiences. Why? Because there is something even better we can ask for according to the writer. What is that something? Well, let’s keep going.

Veil of Clay

First, clay does not make a very good veil, unless of course you want to see nothing at all through it. Second, that is exactly what the stanza is referencing, but obviously there is no actual clay involved in the imagery created. We are the clay, or more specifically our flesh.

No Sudden Rending

Our flesh is a great weakness. It seems it would have helped if when sin was defeated, our flesh would have been eradicated, or at least torn to pieces, but God had other designs. He chose to put something of inestimable value, the light of the Gospel, in these jars of clay that are our bodies, as in says in 2 Corinthians 4:7. To that end, it seems like tearing the curtain of or flesh so that the Gospel can be put on full display would be a great idea.

And then there is the other perspective. Not only does our flesh keep others from seeing the Gospel, it keeps us from seeing clearly the things of the Spirit. It mars our perspective and limits our clarity. Though it often keeps us from seeing him clearly, ask God to help you trust His better way and better time to address it the veil of clay that is your flesh. Do NOT ask Him to shred it so you can simply see more clearly, though you long for that day.

For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when the perfect comes, the partial will pass away…For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known. 1 Corinthians 13:9-10-12 ESV

Submit your life to the Potter’s Hands again today (Isaiah 64:8), and ask for something better. What? We will think about that on Thursday after we consider a couple more things NOT to ask for.

Happy Tuning!

 

Spirit of God, I choose to forego asking for dreams and visions, so I can simply know the power of Your presence. I choose to trust you to work through this earthen vessel, though I would love to be free of its clouding weaknesses. Teach me what to ask for today. Jesus name. Amen.

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Video 6.2 Transcript

Welcome to Tuesday Tunings at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s tune our hearts.

I ask no dream, no prophet ecstasies,
No sudden rending of the veil of clay,
No angel visitant, no opening skies,
But take the dimness of my soul away.

This is an interesting stanza, left out of many occurrences of the hymn. It is a litany of things we do not want which builds to a crescendo culminating in the thing we do. In lieu of what we really want, give us no nightly visions, or prophetic thrills.

Our flesh is a great weakness. It seems it would have helped if when sin was defeated, the flesh would have been eradicated, or at least torn to pieces, but God had other designs. Though it often keeps us from seeing him clearly, ask God to help you trust His better way to address it.

Maybe if an angel visited us, or God would pull the heavenly curtain back so we could see His glory, that would solve our problem. Still the hymn writer believes there is a better remedy. Will you wait for God to work His plan?

And finally here it is. The problem is not external, but internal. God reveals Himself in a myriad of ways. Our soul simply often fails to be aware enough to grasp it. Ask the Holy Spirit to sharpen the aptitude of your soul.

Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has surfaced in your heart, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then we will sing once more.

Sing

Take the awareness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.

Image Attributions
No Dream - Image by stine moe engelsrud from Pixabay
No Prophet Ecstasies - Image by congerdesign from Pixabay
No Sudden Rending - https://gfycat.com/alertfirsticeblueredtopzebra

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