Archive for the ‘disciples life’ Category


Has the Church been sold back to slavery?

by Russ Welch

We live in a day when slavery has surpassed any other generation along with that we are faced with imprisoning vices on all sides. Has the Church grown powerless or has it in a large part sold out to the customs of this world?

We must, as radical Christians realize that “Though worldly cultures and customs are apt to change with each generation the culture and customs of the Kingdom of God are eternal!

There appears to be a war within the very House of God, the lines have been drawn and the gulf is getting larger and larger. The liberal Christians [Those accustomed to feeding the flesh] have drawn a line called legalism and regretfully many good intentioned Christians have taking a stance that any social justice is outside of their calling.

For a number of generations the Church has remained silent on subjects that it should have released the roar of Heaven over. Today we see human trafficking happening right here in the USA and the Church to a large part remains silent

Why? Has the Church become ruled by a King other than our Christ? Has in it in its attempts to avoid taxes sold out its sovereignty to the Government of this land?  And in doing so has it sold its authority and power to that of the rule of mere men?

Immorality indorsed by national leaders!

When we see young ladies seated before the government of this world proclaiming a life of sexual immorality many are more outraged that people would question her life style rather than the fact that she is living a immoral life and expects others to pay for it.

We have the leader of this nation saying she should be proud. The very same leader who stated if his daughters had a “mistake”, he would not expect them to live with that mistake, rather that they should have an abortion! Since when is a creation of God labeled a “mistake?

This nation voted in the last presidential election with their first gripped about their wallets, while seated upon their morals and hide the Bible and any sense of Christian values in the closet. Saul this nation wanted, and Saul the Lord has giving this nation. And many Church leaders in this nation not only endorsed this mane, they proclaimed him as the hope of this nations future!!!

What has happened to America and especially the American Church (Maybe that is the problem ,it is the American Church and not Christ’s Church).

Idols of the American Church setting the stage for immorality.

Today sexual immorality has become a large scale erosion of the character of men and women within the Church it self along with greed and selfish ambition.

We have high profile pastors such as Paula White and Eddie Long who can divorce their husbands and wives and still be promoted as good, ethical, moral, holy and righteous Church leaders by the Main Stream Christian circles.  We have pastors committing horrendous sexual acts and paying off their accusers and the stories swept under the carper. We have high profile pastors being brought up on corruption and tax evasion charges, yet told this is part of the persecution of the saints!

What this is a corrupted generation of leadership at its best and they are trying to hide under the guise of holiness and proclamations of self induced persecution because they have not only broken the laws of the land, they have broken the very laws of a Holy God!!

We can see that 1Timothy 6 states a clear picture of our day;

A godly life brings huge profits to people who are content with what they have. We didn’t bring anything into the world, and we can’t take anything out of it. As long as we have food and clothes, we should be satisfied.

 But people who want to get rich keep falling into temptation. They are trapped by many stupid and harmful desires which drown them in destruction and ruin. Certainly, the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil. Some people who have set their hearts on getting rich have wandered away from the Christian faith and have caused themselves a lot of grief. (1 Tim 6:6-10)

Now Paul instructs Timothy how to battle such a plaque in verses 11-21;

But you, man of God, must avoid these things. Pursue what God approves of: a godly life, faith, love, endurance, and gentleness. Fight the good fight for the Christian faith. Take hold of everlasting life to which you were called and about which you made a good testimony in front of many witnesses.

 In the sight of God, who gives life to everything, and in the sight of Christ Jesus, who gave a good testimony in front of Pontius Pilate, I insist that, until our Lord Jesus Christ appears, you obey this command completely. Then you cannot be blamed for doing anything wrong. At the right time God will make this known. God is the blessed and only ruler. He is the King of kings and Lord of lords. He is the only one who cannot die. He lives in light that no one can come near. No one has seen him, nor can they see him. Honor and power belong to him forever! Amen.

 Tell those who have the riches of this world not to be arrogant and not to place their confidence in anything as uncertain as riches. Instead, they should place their confidence in God who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. Tell them to do good, to do a lot of good things, to be generous, and to share. By doing this they store up a treasure for themselves which is a good foundation for the future. In this way they take hold of what life really is.

 Timothy, guard the Good News which has been entrusted to you. Turn away from pointless discussions and the claims of false knowledge that people use to oppose the Christian faith. Although some claim to have knowledge, they have abandoned the faith. (1 Tim 6:11-21 GWT)

If we opened up the Bible to Romans Chapter 1, we would see that we are living in the very days described therein.

Has the Church taking a step backwards?

Sadly many in the Church today have taking on the Garden Mentality” in that they believe they question every aspect of God’s Word if it intrudes in their own life style and agenda not realizing that they are surrendering the very liberty that the Word brings to their lives.

Those of the grace, grace, grace movement who cry out “legalism” the loudest have birthed a generation of rebellious, anti –obedience people who have set them selves in the very seats of those whose name they label all who would disagree with them “Pharisees”. They claim to live a life filled with grace, yet they attitude towards those who are not holding to their doctrines is nothing short of that which John the Baptist called the Pharisees of his day “Brood of vipers” for they would eat their own if they disagreed with.

We must take a radical stand in our day and open the prison doors!!!

Unless the Church radically falls upon it’s face and repents and returns the sovereign rule of the House of God back to Jesus and out of the hands of men, this generation will not see the Glory of the Lord falling upon the earth.

We must wake up for the harvest fields are white before us, we must be willing to go on radical fasts, spend radical amounts of time engulfed in the Word of God & in prayer. We must radically raise our voices in the face of such rebellious acts against the Lord and His Word.

We must be a people who are radical in grace and mercy, who radically change our life styles of comfort in to that of servants. We must go into the highways and byways. We must not cower before the calls of social justice rather we must radically grab hold of these causes and impart the compassion, grace and mercy of our God into these situations.

We must radically change how we tithe and give of gifts. We must radically change our self-willed lives into that of Spirit lived lives.

Yet in all these things we must realize that we, in and of ourselves can not do it.

No, my friends, we must take that radical step towards the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Radically surrendering our wills and picking up our own crosses that have been dipped in His blood, baptized in His death and walk the life of obedient disciples, laying our lives down daily for the sake of the Kingdom of God, for the sake of the Gospel Message, for the sake of a lost and dying world, for the sake of seeing our lives break forth in such a way that His Glory is released throughout the world via broken and surrendered vessels such as we are called to be!!!

Let us step out of the prison of self indulgence today and into that of Radical Disciples of Jesus Christ for indeed we do serve an Awesome and Mighty God!!!!


By Russ Welch

If people could really read our lives like a book, what would the title of yours be? Better yet what would the story be……….A horror story?….A perverted story?….A book of lies?…..A sad and miserable story?……..A book of scandal, deception, gossip, slander and hate?

But we all see the glory of THE LORD JEHOVAH with unveiled faces, as in a mirror, and we are changed into the image from glory to glory, as from THE LORD JEHOVAH, THE SPIRIT.” (2 Cor 3:18 ABPE)

Now, as Christians who are to be transformed into His image here on earth (not in some distant future in some far off place) should our lives read as a book of life, hope, joy and peace? In Kingdom reality our lives should be a story of Love, obedience, sacrifice, righteousness and holiness.

And do not imitate this world, but be transformed by the renovation of your minds, and you shall distinguish what is the good, acceptable and perfect will of God.” ( Rom 12:2 ABPE)

So again if someone were to read your life as a book and looking at the page being written right now, what would they see? Maybe it’s time we stop trying to write our own stories and surrender to Holy Ghost that our stories be aligned to that which our Creator planned for us! Less of us and 100% of Him, that is the Spirit lived life.

We read in the Bible that we must not become so well-adjusted to our culture that we fit into it without even thinking.  Instead, we are to fix our attention on God.  By doing so we’ll find that we are being  changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from for each of us, and quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around us, always dragging us down to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of us, develops well-formed maturity in us.

Fellow disciples we must know and trust with all our hearts that God the Father has only good, pleasing, and perfect plans for His children. He wants each of us to be transformed people with renewed minds, living to honor and obey him. Because He wants only what is best for us, and because He gave His Son to make our new life possible, we should joyfully give ourselves as living sacrifices for His service.

We can read in the scriptures how Paul warned Christians: “Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world” that are usually selfish and often corrupting. Wise Christians decide that much worldly behavior is off-limits for them. Our refusal to conform to this world’s values, however, must go even deeper than just behavior and customs; it must be firmly planted in our mind: “Let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think.” It is possible to avoid most worldly customs and still be proud, covetous, selfish, stubborn, and arrogant. Only when the Holy Spirit renews, reeducates, and redirects our mind are we truly transformed.

With so many idols around us, including the self made idols of TV evangelism we must remain on guard as to which imagine we desire to become – that of men or that of the Son of man. We see almost daily scandals upon scandals happening in the Church and we need to beware. Marriage vows have been declared unbinding by the very leaders whose lives should shine with the Glory of marriage as the Father intended it to be. Unrighteousness has been rewarded from every denomination as the popularity of pleasing men has far outweighed that of pleasing God the Father.

We are in a day that has grown ever so dark and the world is desperate for the Light of  the Lord’s Bride to break-forth. Many may indeed be able to fool Church members who have grown dull in their spiritual gifts knowing nothing about discernment. Yet, with the many mask’s they wear the world has not be fooled, it has spotted and pointed out the hypocrisy of a backslidden generation who has put the treasures of this earth over the treasures of heaven.

Let us rise up in these days and seek after the face of our God and trade in being a bless me, bless me generation to one who shines with the Lord’s Glory reflecting off from our lives. Let the world know and let Hell shake as we are transformed into to a generation of “Let us Bless you God” true and radical disciples of the “THE LORD JEHOVAH”.

But again let us remember we can not simply will to be transformed as true spiritual transformation doesn’t come through human effort rather by the empowering grace of Father God through the work of Holy Ghost. Many, including this writer have tried with every fleshly once of might we could muster to change leading to frustration, self-rejection, guilt or the white knuckling works of the flesh. No, true spiritual transformation comes as a result of having your mind renewed daily by the Word of God. As you agree with God, believing that what He says is true, change automatically begins. You start to think differently, then talk differently and finally act differently. Be patient with yourself: it’s a process that develops in stages.

So again I ask you if someone were to read your life as a book and looking at the page being written right now, what would they see?


I have never seen anything like it. Pastor David Platt of The Church at Brook Hills in Birmingham, Alabama released his book Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream in May of this year. It already has 370,000 copies in print and is in its 18th printing. It has spread largely by word of mouth across the country. A neighbor came up to my wife recently and spontaneously asked, “Have you seen this great new book called Radical?” It has been as high as #18 on Amazon and has even caught the attention of columnist David Brooks of the New York Times. (See his column of September 6.)

Popularity is not usually an important thing to measure, but when a book with such great biblical content starts to catch on, we have to ask, “Is God doing something new in our day to awaken his Church?”“Is He calling His people to radical discipleship for the sake of God’s glory in all the earth?” I believe He is, and that the Church is in desperate need of the biblical message that David Platt presents in Radical.

David’s message has the potential to change the way we do both church and mission. It calls us to reorder our priorities to what God cares about. With a clarity and passion that is rare, David boldly lays out a vision of the Church’s mission in this world that is wholly biblical and God-centered. David writes,

“The message of biblical Christianity is ‘God loves me so that I might make Him—His ways, His salvation, His glory, and His greatness—known among all nations” (Radical, p. 70).

David calls the Church to a sacrificial commitment to reaching all of the un- reached peoples so that God’s glory is made known in all the earth. This needs to be the guiding vision and purpose for every church. Without it we are set adrift on the endless rolling sea of a self-centered gospel where the believer’s only destination on the horizon is his own blessing.

In addition to Radical, Floyd McClung has released his new book Follow: A Simple and Profound Call to Live Like Jesus. Both of these books are calling the church to “radical discipleship.” On top of this, the latest edition of Operation World, which helped lead David Platt to his mission vision, is now available.

Doing Church as Jesus Intended

How do we determine whether a church is successful or not? Is it the size of the church service on Sunday morning? Is it the size of the church budget or the number of activities for kids, young adults, women, etc.? There are many criteria that we could use, but the real question is whether we are doing what Jesus has called us to do. The only standard that counts is His. If we are not do- ing what Jesus has called us to do, then it does not matter how many people we can get into a building on any given day of the week.

Making Disciples

So what has Jesus called us to do? In Matthew 4:19, Jesus says to Peter and his brother Andrew, “Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” We are to be followers of Jesus who, with God’s power, make other people followers of Jesus too. We call this discipleship. Jesus confirms this calling for us all in Matthew 28:19, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations.” Paul clarifies this calling in 2 Timothy 2:2, “And the things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable men who will also be qualified to teach others.” This is what Jesus has called the Church to do—to make disciples who can make disciples. Everything we do as a church must be evaluated on the basis of whether it helps us accomplish the goal of making disciples who can make disciples, both within our own culture and cross-cul- turally in every people. That must be our standard for success as the Church.

So how are we doing overall? Are we effectively making disciples that are making disciples? As I reported in my editorial in the Sept.-Oct. 2009 issue, over half of our young people are walking away from the church in college. Josh McDowell says that unless something is done quickly to change this situation, the current adults will be “The Last Christian Generation.” According to George Barna, only a small minority of the people in our pews hold to sound biblical doctrine. Even fewer share their faith with others. The overall American church is not growing. At best it is barely hanging on against the onslaught from a hostile secular culture. Our common model for doing church is for people to “pray the prayer and sit in a chair”1 and listen to the pastor. It is not making disciples who can make disciples. The global missionary effort will never succeed if we simply bring this broken model of doing church to every tribe and tongue. But if we make disciples who make disciples, as God has designed His Kingdom to grow, the gates of Hell will not stand against the onslaught of Christ’s advancing Church.

 

by Rick Wood

A Call to Radical Disciple-making – (Pt 1)


A fresh intensifying move of God has begun in spots. However, it is coming down universally as a world-size sheet of God’s substance and glory. The spots are where it is being gladly received by God’s people. The fresh intensification move is not the same as the previous moves in recent history. It is going to another level. In brief, the new thing is a fire of purification of life bringing true Spirit-empowered holiness. Mixtures of seeking anything apart from or in addition to becoming one with God in intimate relationship, as a child of the Father and the Bride of Christ, are being cleansed. This intensifying spiritual work of God is the kingdom of heaven advancing on earth.

The intensification of love and power is exciting to say the least. It brings fresh hope and increasing faith. However, it is also severely and at times abruptly changing many of our lives. Relationships are changing as God is realigning connections in preparation for the awesome works of God coming in this new season.

There is greatly intensified freedom to worship and praise God full-out without reservation. There is also increased freedom to boldly move in the gifts of the Spirit that powerfully ministers to people. Prayer is becoming an intensified experience with powerful results. A resurgence of praying in the Spirit is producing strengthening of our spiritual lives and opening doors to increased powerful spiritual resources of God.

For reasons that perhaps only God knows, a spiritual veil remains upon the eyes of some that limits their vision of the fresh move.

The veil is lifting from those who are fully yielding their lives to the “Spirit of the LORD” to become filled with His life of freedom.

2 Cor 3:17-18:  Now the Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.

But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.

Freedom comes by the Spirit. Freedom is in the Spirit of the LORD becoming our lives.

“Kingdom Freedom” requires the total elimination of the restraining influences of fallen human flesh and religion that works through our souls to hinder or prevent the Spirit of the Lord from fully living and reigning in our hearts and being expressed outwardly in our lives. It is the total release of the Spirit of the Lord to have full authority to rule and reign in our hearts and lives.

Religious bondage involves the restraining of the Spirit of the Lord in us by our human souls that have been trained in the letter of law through understandings derived from interpretation of the Bible and through life experiences that were both filtered through a grid of imperfect human �wisdom.� Religious bondage relates to the pride of life and establishes a life of mandatory human control posing as God. It is an abomination standing as God in the temple (our bodies) where it ought not.

Worldly bondage has to do with the restraining of the life of the Spirit of the Lord in us caused by our seeking to meet human needs and desires of our flesh. Human desires drive the soul to devise repetitive actions to bring temporary satisfaction (pseudo peace) to our lives. The body and soul become dependent on the effects of the repetitive actions or substances for a false sense of “well being.”

Both religious bondage and worldly bondage are forms of spiritual harlotry. Both are seeking from other sources, other gods, what the Spirit of the Lord has provided for us. Religious bondage relates mostly to the soul and could be called bondage or control from the soul. Worldly bondage relates mostly to the flesh or needs of the flesh (lusts) and could be called fleshly bondage or control from the flesh.

Both of these bondages are strong hindrances to living and walking in the Spirit of the Lord, the kingdom of God lifestyle.

Experiencing Kingdom Freedom

Kingdom freedom involves the death of worldly fleshly drives or dependencies. It also involves the destruction of all religious controls, beliefs, and practices that were not planted in us by God. This has to do with the cross we are to take up daily, the death by crucifixion with Christ Jesus of our fleshly living, and the willing destruction or removal of our religious rocks.

The fullness of the resurrection life of Christ Jesus cannot live in us and through us until there has been death of our natural soul-controlled past lives. Resurrection life can only come after there has been a death.

THIS IS NOT OUR WORK. It is God who works in us by the Spirit of the Lord. HOWEVER, IT IS OUR WILLINGNESS and OUR DECISION TO UNRESERVEDLY YIELD OUR LIVES TO HIS COMPLETE CONTROL. It is our willingness to come to Him and lose control of our lives and our control over the lives of those around us. This seems like a death process to our souls. In reality, it is only the transition from our souls controlling our lives to the Spirit of the Lord guiding and empowering our lives. It is the transformation from self or soul control to Spirit of the Lord control of our lives.

God provides the power for this transformation through death unto resurrection life by the Life of Christ in us by the Spirit. The Spirit of the Lord, the crucified resurrected ascended and returned Spirit of Christ Jesus, is the only power capable of ending our past lives and filling our bodies, souls, and spirits with HIS LIFE, HIS SPIRIT.

His love, righteousness, power, wisdom, peace, and joy fill our lives where once lived our controlling, striving, judgmental, spiritually weak lives that were masked with a pretension of godliness. Shouts of joy emerge from our set-free hearts filled with His abundant life. The rule and reign of God fills our hearts and overflows outward in explosive bursts of His glorious light and rivers of living water. Pure waters of the Spirit of the Lord flow out to the dry thirsty land of the waiting people who are seeking more of God.

God is again calling, “you who thirst, come to the waters, come to the mighty river of the pure Holy Spirit of the Lord.”

Isa 55:1: “Ho! Everyone who thirsts, Come to the waters; And you who have no money, Come, buy and eat. Yes, come, buy wine and milk Without money and without price.”     

Deep Rumblings

In the past we have experienced revivals, spiritual awakenings, and renewals that called to us to come to receive from God and to give our lives fully into His loving hands. Now, in this day, in this season, there is a powerful spiritual roar of deep rumblings, as if it were deep within the earth about to explode like a volcano of fire shaking the earth and changing forever the landscape of life.

Can you feel the spiritual rumblings deep in your being shaking your insides; bringing tears flooding your eyes from a rush of unexplainable awe of anticipation ” of joy unspeakable and awe-filled worshipful fear of All Mighty God ” anticipation of Heaven come to earth in power and indescribable glory? The awe-filled reverent FEAR of God is returning. Men’ hearts will fail in anticipation of the awesome works of God.

Multitudes are going to come running to the mercy seat of God seeking the place of cleansing by the blood of Christ Jesus and the rivers of living water washing and filling their lives with the pure holiness of the liquid fire of God’s love.

God is preparing an army of able ministers of the Spirit to help prepare the way for the Spirit of the Lord to fill the trembling multitudes that will come by the miraculous works of God. Spiritual gifts are increasing explosively among those who have faith to minister supernaturally to the thirsty people of the land. Build yourselves up in the Spirit by praying profusely in the Spirit and expect supernatural support from Holy Angels to bring forth the mighty works of God to bring freedom to a world in bondage.

Who also made us sufficient as ministers of the new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life. (2 Cor 3:6)

So the last will be first, and the first last. For many are called, but few chosen.”  (Mat 20:16)

Keep on pursuing Love. Love never fails
and His kingdom never ends.

Ron McGatlin

www.openheaven.com
basileia@earthlink.net


Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me…..He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him (John 14:6, 21)

What, is Jesus teaching legalism here?  This is what the greasy grace crowd would contend especially when Jesus states that we must obey His commands in order to show that we love Him and in return not only will the Father love us, they (Jesus and the Father) will manifest in our lives.

So the salvation message that says we simply state that Jesus is Lord, shall get us saved is not quite the whole truth- In Fact the Word says that the only way to Heaven is thru Christ Jesus our Lord, and the Word proclaims in John 1 That :

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

So the way to Heaven is not through a proclamation alone, but the highway to Heaven is through the Word of God…which leads us to the full revelation that Christ is indeed our Lord God and in such, our lives are laid down as though dead, all rights surrendered, that He the True Life may raise us up, born anew in Him.

The reality is that a message that is not completely true, but contains error, in fact is no truth at all!!!!

So, looking at the passages in John we see that Jesus’ command here, ones profession of faith, which leads us unto salvation is not based upon words alone, but the fruit of such revelation is shown in our obedient walk.

Yes, we may well slip here and there, but it is the active desire to walk in obedience to all He has commanded us. This is where true grace comes in, not the grace of which the prosperity crowd or the loose grace crowd preaches, but that grace of the true Gospel which over takes us and empowers us to lives lives obedience in direct contrast to the sinful nature and desires of our flesh.

So much for the greasy grace gospel (false gospel) which has over taken much of the Church.

Written by Russ Welch


You might have been spending nights crying out to the Father and it seems as though your tears have been a waste of time..Feeling as though God desires to speak to everyone but you..that others appear to know what God desires for them yet you have no clue…..And you set there day in and day out wondering why you can’t hear from the Lord yourself..You feel as though there is some spiritual force that is blocking you from your blessing,

There may well be and in all truth it might be so close to you that you have been blinded by it.

Look around and see everything that you believe you can not do without.

Friends, family, possessions, material things, job, pets, ambitions, dreams….

These are the very things that may be blocking you from hearing the Lord’s voice clearly…they may even be blocking you from stepping into your true destiny.

It’s is not the person or things that are evil…..it is our own hearts when we place anything or anyone above Jesus…….The Lord God said that we shall have no idols, we shall bow down to no other image. (Ex 20:3-6)

When Jesus told the young rich ruler to go an sell all he had and follow Him it was not because the Lord hates money….it is because He detests anything that we would put above Him in our lives…Jesus saw that this young man found his value in what he possessed. (Mark 10:17-27)

What a lesson for us today!

Why do we allow worldly things to control our perspective of how we are valued?

If we would but for a moment look to the Lord Jesus Christ upon the cross we would see we are valued in the Fathers eyes above anything else in this world!

We will never be able to experience the benefits of God’s Kingdom if we choose to keep one foot in the World!!!!

We must be radical in our hunger for His voice, for His wisdom, for the things of the Kingdom. So radical that we are willing to surrender all that we may but serve our King Jesus, that there is no other higher purpose in our life than that which the Lord God bids us to do,  bowing before His Throne alone

What idol(s) are blocking your blessing today?

Pray and ask Holy Spirit help point out and  grant you the empowering Grace to pull down any idol, any high thing in your life exalted above the Name of Jesus.

For we do serve an Awesome God!

~Russ Welch


By George Davis and Michael Clark

The physical or natural creation is a mirror image of spiritual things. The physical body with its many members serves as the supreme example of this. Of all the members of the body, the most significant and representative of spiritual priorities is the organ of sight, the eye. Jesus often used the eye as a parable of spiritual things, calling it “the lamp of the body.” Sight is a light and darkness issue. When your eye is sound, your whole body is full of light; but when it is unsound, the body is full of darkness (Luke 11:34).

EyeThis also is true of the church, the body of Christ. The body that lacks spiritual sight is full of darkness, but the spiritually sighted body is full of light. Everything is relative to sight or the lack of it. Christ often used sight as a synonym for wisdom and understanding, referring to those religious leaders who lacked it as blind guides leading the blind. The eye is the chief channel of information for man. Of all the five senses, sight is the most highly valued. Sight is the key to knowledge. What you cannot conceptualize, you cannot understand. Both in the natural life and in the spiritual life, seeing precedes knowledge.

It is not exceptional for a child to see. In fact, within six to eight weeks of birth a baby sees clearly. Anything less than this is abnormal. First children see, and then they learn about what they have seen. They see before they can sit up, crawl, or say their first word. Before any of these things, their little eyes are intently searching, assimilating, and discerning the grandeur of their new surroundings. One of the little joys of parenthood is seeing that gleam of recognition in the eyes of our children as they learn to identify the people and things around them. Soon Junior is talking and walking freely about the house. Then something happens that catches the uninitiated parent completely off guard–the child becomes a two-year-old. At this stage of the child’s life, only things that are out of sight and out of mind are safe. The discerning parent knows that it is not out of orneriness that the two-year-old gleefully runs from thing to thing, touching, pulling, pushing and twisting everything that catches his eye. Everything is new and exciting! The world is a wonderland, full of mysterious and wonderful things, thanks to the miracle of sight. Everywhere he looks there is some new attraction, begging for his attention.

Nothing is sacred or safe. You turn on the stereo only to discover that every knob has been tweaked, the volume is at maximum and you have blown one of your prized 200-watt woofers. While you are grieving over this horrendous loss, you turn to discover that Junior has opened the lower kitchen cupboards and has scattered the contents all over the floor. Scrambling to clean up the mess, you again sense that unholy calm that always occurs when Junior discovers some new delight. The recurrent question comes to mind, “Where is Junior?” Then you turn to find this darling of your womb looking for hazardous waste underneath the bathroom sink, and as usual, attempting to stick these newfound objects in his mouth! At the day’s end, when Junior is tucked safely into his bed and finally goes to sleep, a quiet and secret two-fold rejoicing ensues. One, that the day is over, and two, that somehow Junior has miraculously survived it. Slumping listlessly into the living room sofa in a near catatonic state, the haggard parents regroup for another day. All this because of sight! Regardless of all the maintenance required to monitor little sight-inspired creatures, I have never heard parents wish that their child had been born blind. Everyone knows that with sight and increasing maturity come understanding, maximum mobility and ultimate effectiveness in life. Perhaps this helps us understand how essential spiritual sight is to the growth and maturity of believers.

“Unless one is born anew, he cannot see”

In both the natural and the spiritual, you must be born before you can see. An infant born into the natural realm sees with natural eyes, and one born of the Spirit sees with spiritual eyes. Paul put it this way, “While we look not at the things, which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:18). How do we look at things that are not seen? What kind of ambiguous language is this? Spiritual sight is necessary for spiritual understanding.

A Pharisees named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews, came to Jesus by night. Nicodemus was an extremely educated man, a learned Master of Israel. He greeted Jesus in a posture and attitude of deference, saying, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher come from God: for no man can do the miracles that you do, except God be with him.” Nicodemus came yielding to Christ in the same manner in that all students of his day yielded to senior mentors, acknowledging their superior knowledge.

Today we measure knowledge by titles of mastery, such as A.S., A.A., B.A., M.A., PhD., D.D., etc. What you know determines where you fit in the greater academic scheme of things as well as the social pecking order. The goal is to reach that enviable place of mastery where you are acknowledged as the authority on such matters.

In Christ’s day, there was a very similar system of academia, a strict hierarchy of knowledge, where degrees of knowledge were measured by honorific titles such as Rabbi, Master and Father. Jesus was not impressed and warned His disciples to avoid this elitist system, explaining the antagonism between it and the brotherhood of believers.

“But don’t you be called ‘Rabbi,’ for one is your teacher, the Christ, and all of you are brothers. Call no man on the earth your father, for one is your Father, he who is in heaven. Neither be called masters, for one is your master, the Christ. But he who is greatest among you will be your servant. Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” (Matthew 23:8-12 WEB)

This helps us understand Nicodemus’ attitude when he approached Jesus. Jesus had upstaged the entire rabbinical college, so Nicodemus came in the traditional, master-to-pupil mindset that was all he had ever known. To Nicodemus, if you wanted to learn, this is how you did it. You found a master and submitted yourself to him, and then he taught you out of his extensive pool of knowledge. Nicodemus came yielding to Jesus as Rabbi, desiring to learn about the kingdom. Seeing this, Christ begins His lesson with, “Most assuredly, I tell you, unless one is born anew, he can’t see the Kingdom of God” (John 3:3 WEB).

Nicodemus came to learn from Jesus and his first lesson was that he was blind to spiritual things. Before you can know you must first see and that seeing comes through a spiritual birth. A few months later Jesus told some of Nicodemus’ contentious, scholarly peers, “If you were blind, you would have no sin; but now you say, ‘We see.’ Therefore your sin remains.” There is seeing, and then there is seeing! Nicodemus wanted to learn with his natural mind but Jesus wanted him to see. There is an unbridgeable gap between spiritual knowledge and the fleshly human mind, yet Christians today still try to approach God through scholarship and scholasticism. It is said that if you want to loose your faith in Christ, go to seminary. Paul put it this way, “If any man thinks he knows something, let him know this; he knows nothing as he ought to know.”

Still attempting to understand with his natural faculties, Nicodemus went on to prove Christ’s point. “How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter the second time into his mother’s womb, and be born?” Like Mr. Spock of Star Trek, Nicodemus was saying, “This is not logical!” This is the point exactly. Spiritual truth is often not logical to the human mind. Apostle Paul, who was a graduate of the best schooling that the Jewish system had to offer, wrote, “The natural man doesn’t receive the things of God’s Spirit, for they are foolishness to him, and he can’t know them, because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Corinthians 2:14). Until you become alive to spiritual things by a spiritual birth, you cannot see the kingdom of God and you most certainly cannot enter.

Jesus answered Nicodemus, “Most assuredly I tell you, unless one is born of water and spirit, he can’t enter into the Kingdom of God! That which is born of the flesh is flesh. That which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Don’t marvel that I said to you, ‘You must be born anew'” (John 3:5-8 WEB). It is a basic law of creation that each being must reproduce after its own kind (See Genesis 1:24 and 25). It takes divine intervention for a man to be born of the Spirit and no amount of learning can make this happen. It is a sovereign act of God.

When Jesus asked His disciples, “Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?” They answered Him, “Some say John the Baptizer, some, Elijah, and others, Jeremiah, or one of the prophets.” Jesus responded, “But who do you say that I am?” Simon Peter answered, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” Jesus answered him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 16:14-18 WEB). Flesh and blood can never know or reveal Christ. Human intelligence can never comprehend him. The Spirit of God, working in us mightily, enables us to “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 (we) may be filled with all the fullness of God” (Ephesians 3:18-19 NKJV). We cannot learn Christ from other learned men. The Spirit takes what belongs to Christ and reveals it to men on a spiritual level (see John 16:14).

Spiritual sight precedes the recognition and comprehension of spiritual things without previous study. Intellectual potential is of no avail. The prodigy is on no better footing than the mentally challenged. In fact, Jesus said that you must become as a child to enter the kingdom of heaven. The Master, Rabbi or the Doctor in theology must go through a much greater stripping before he can enter the kingdom of God. Nicodemus came expecting to be taught about the kingdom in a scholastic way, as one would be taught in the synagogue, setting at the feet of a Master. Nothing was as he expected. The words of Jesus offended the theological mind of this Master of Israel and left him totally puzzled. Jesus replied, “Are you the teacher of Israel, and don’t understand these things?” (John 3:10 WEB). Christ was sharing the most rudimentary spiritual truths and Nicodemus, one of the sharpest minds among the Jews, knew nothing about them. Many in Christendom today are still ignorant about the reality of the new birth. What a humbling experience this must have been for that old Jewish scholar.

Mr. B. E. Hutchinson, Vice President of Chrysler Corporation, observed,

“Holy Writ is a record of what the prophets [seers] and not what the Sanhedrin [scholars] had to say.” (Parenthetical emphasis added).

Mr. Hutchinson makes a very valid point here, which we should carefully consider. In collecting the canon of scripture, great care was taken to determine whether each letter or book was divinely inspired. This criterion demanded that the author of each book had seen the things that he wrote about. This stringent requirement does not hold true with theology. Theology (the study of God) concerns itself with the study of things that others have seen, trying to determine scholastically what the prophets and apostles saw in the Spirit.

Christian writings are classified into two main categories. First there are the “pre-scholastic” writings, referring to the eye witness accounts of the apostles and those who received their witness. These were authoritative witnesses because they were eye witnesses, declaring those things that they had seen and heard (1 John 1: 1-3). Even our legal system recognizes that an eyewitness is the only reliable and therefore credible witness. When the witness starts to speculate on things he did not see, his testimony is stricken from the record as mere supposition. On the other hand there are the “scholastic writings” that are essentially man’s attempt to comprehend, articulate and enter in with his mind of flesh to things that he has not seen.

Paul warned, “Let no one fraudulently deprive you of your prize, doing his own will in humility and worship of angels, entering into (searching into or scrutinizing) things which he has not seen, vainly puffed up by the mind of his flesh” (Colossians 2:18 Darby).

Because of their lack of physical sight, blind people find it difficult to enter in or participate, and many activities are closed to them. When you scrutinize divine things, never having seen them by revelation, the end-result is always arrogance, pride and eventual misconception. This kind of knowledge always puffs up. This is the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, the fruit that fallen man continues to eat in his quest to be all-knowing and self-governing like God.

In 1609, a man named Galileo invented the telescope. Using his invention, he discovered that the earth and other planets revolve around the sun, contrary to the popular belief that the universe was geocentric, revolving around the earth. Galileo’s discoveries eventually brought him into conflict with the Catholic Church, which governed all scientific and religious matters at that time. Galileo was warned that he should no longer discuss or defend his theories. In 1633 he was called to Rome to face the Inquisition.

Galileo: “Look into my telescope and you’ll see what I’m seeing.”

Grand Inquisitor: “We will not look into the telescope because we cannot see what is not there.”

We laugh at such “flat-earth” mindedness without thinking that future generations might judge us just as harshly. Will they judge us as we now judge the Pharisees? They judged the spiritual blindness of their forefathers by saying, “If we had been in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers with them [of the blood of the prophets]” (Matthew 23:30). Will we allow the light of God to shine into our darkness and heal the blindness within us, or will we do as every generation before us and fill up the measure of our fathers?

It requires humility to admit that we see in part. “For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know just as I also am known” (1 Corinthians 13:12 NKJV). How can those who see in part give a total accounting of the truth of our infinite God, let alone write it down as systematic theology? Religious men are driven to do this very thing and are saying by their actions, “We do not see in part, but we see the whole. We need no further revelation.” They are like the man who Jesus started to heal of blindness. When Jesus ask him what he saw he said, “I see men as trees walking.” A further healing was still needed.

Have we successfully inflicted blindness on our eyes and closed ourselves off from further truth through the arrogant belief that what is not codified within our belief-system is not “orthodox” and therefore not true? Are we delusional enough to believe that what we do not affirm is not real? In claiming to see, have we become blind? Jesus told the disciples that the Pharisees were blind guides leading the blind, yet we give way to scholarship like theirs before we will listen to the Holy Spirit of God. It was such blindness that Jesus came into the world to judge–that those who see might become blind and those that are blind might see.

In John 9 we read the story of how Jesus met a man that had been blind from birth. The rabbinical college of that day taught that such impairments were the consequence of sin. Being curious, Christ’s disciples asked Him, “Teacher, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” Jesus’ answer is very telling. “Neither did this man sin, nor his parents; but, that the works of God might be revealed in him” (John 9:4-5). This man had been born blind so that God could reveal specific things in him. He was a walking parable of the spiritual blindness of the religious leaders of Israel. God used him to expose just how blind they were.

Jesus spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva, anointed the blind man’s eyes with the mud, and commanded him to go and wash in the pool of Siloam. He went, washed, and came back seeing. This created quite a stir throughout the region. According to the traditions of the Pharisees, Jesus broke the law by healing this blind man on the Sabbath day. To them this was no small transgression and made Jesus a rank sinner in their eyes. On the other hand, they had to admit that this miracle was a sign (Greek semeion), a mark of divine approval and authority. Yet this healing had been done on the Sabbath, so how could God honor a sinner in this way?

The solution to the dilemma was to discredit Christ under the pretence of an open-minded pursuit of the truth. When the theology of man conflicts with the Truth, man often chooses to preserve his theology at truth’s expense. You do not have to hang around organized religion very long to find out that the traditions of men make void the commandments of God that are revealed in the scriptures.

What would win the day–the truth or the traditions of men? Before this pseudo pursuit of the “truth” was over, the Pharisees concluded that Christ was indeed a sinner and that the man who was born blind was deceived. They completely ignored the sign, the evidence of Christ’s authority from God, and they threw the healed man out of the synagogue. They couldn’t have him hanging around as a reminder of their own impotence, challenging their judgment and authority. They had come together to judge this matter, but little did they know that another judgment was taking place in the courts of heaven where they, not Jesus, were on trial. They were passing judgment on themselves by their actions.

After the Jewish leaders had cast him out of the synagogue, Jesus found the man who could now see and revealed the reason for his many years of blindness. “I came into this world for judgment, that those who don’t see may see; and that those who see may become blind.” Some nearby Pharisees overheard Jesus and understood exactly what He meant. They said, “Are we also blind?” Jesus answered them, “If you were blind, you would have no sin; but now you say, ‘We see.’ Therefore your sin remains” (John 9: 41).

The healing of this blind man had a twofold purpose. One was to reveal the miracle working power of God in him. It was also a parable or object lesson. Jesus did not come into the world to judge the world or the sinner (John 3:17), but to judge religious arrogance, calling it by its rightful name–blindness. When you consider the meaning of judgment as putting things in right order, these words of His make much more sense: “I came into this world for judgment, that those who don’t see may see; and that those who see may become blind.”

“Blind Guides of the Blind”

Jesus spoke rather harshly to the religious leaders of His day, calling them such things as snakes, vipers, children of the devil and tombs full of dead men’s bones. In today’s politically correct environment such speech would be considered “hate speech.” Jesus stood in the authority of heaven and openly exposed the pious ones of the religious world, with little regard for their feelings.

Some people have difficulty harmonizing this severity of our Lord with the “Spirit of Love.” All things considered, this was the most loving thing that Jesus could say to the Pharisees. He could not affirm them in their blindness. A Christianity that lives by a “no-speak” rule that allows darkness and blindness to continue for the sake of peace and unity sees this as harsh and even cruel language indeed. If Jesus were physically here today, what would He say to the venerated leaders of Christendom? Would He tell them the same thing that He told the religious leaders in the days of His flesh? Would he say to them, “You have made the commandment of God void because of your traditions. You hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy of you, saying, ‘These people draw near to me with their mouth, and honor me with their lips; but their heart is far from me. And in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrine rules made by men'”?

This statement troubled Christ’s disciples greatly, and they asked Him, “Do you know that the Pharisees were offended, when they heard this saying?” To this Jesus replied, “Every plant which my heavenly Father didn’t plant will be uprooted. Leave them alone. They are blind guides of the blind. If the blind guide the blind, both will fall into a pit” (See Matthew 15:6-14).

It is interesting to note that Jesus said to “leave them alone. . .both will fall into the pit.” Pits have a purpose in the kingdom of God. When blind people have blind leaders they trust to keep them out of spiritual pits and they still end up in one, they have a chance to see and forsake such leadership. Many of us fell into our spiritual pit before we would finally surrender to God, admit our spiritual blindness and be healed. Many a failed attempt has finally led us to a place where we put our trust in God alone to guide us.

The words of Christ ought to serve as a profound warning to us all! Every plant that the Father does not plant will be rooted up. What plant was Jesus talking about here? Jesus was telling the Pharisees that they were not the planting of the Lord, neither were their traditions that He called “rules made by men.”

The Pharisees fancied themselves as guides of the blind. No one ever loved them enough to call them blind guides before. The term blind guides was extremely offensive but true none the less. It’s easy for us to point fingers at the Pharisees but we had better be careful here, least we succumb to the same pride. Do we dare be honest enough to allow God to expose our religious blindness? Know this! According to Jesus, our blindness is the greatest when we say we see. “If anyone thinks that he knows anything, he knows nothing yet as he ought to know” (1 Corinthians 8:2).

Our pride in our knowledge is proof enough that we know nothing yet as we ought to know. Pride stops us from learning any more. Often thinking we know keeps us from fully knowing. Approaching the things of God on a head level misses what can only be known experientially and internalized. The secret to knowing the things of God is to know that no one knows the things of God except the Spirit of God. Truth is resident within the Spirit of Truth and nowhere else. It is never ours to toy with intellectually.

When Paul encountered the resurrected Christ on the road to Damascus, the first words out of this humbled Jew were, “Who are you Lord?” Paul admitted to Jesus that he did not really know God as he though he did. This very question should never stop being our own. We should pray, “Lord, I knew you yesterday, but I know that there is so much more of yourself that you want to reveal to me. Who are you today?” Of the increase of His kingdom, there will be no end. Our knowledge of our Creator should be equally expanding day by day and it will if we humble ourselves before Him and admit that we really know nothing as we ought to know.

Jesus told a parable that clearly sets out the principle.

Two men went up into the temple to pray; one was a Pharisee, and the other was a tax collector. The Pharisee stood and prayed to himself like this: “God, I thank you, that I am not like the rest of men, extortioners, unrighteous, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week. I give tithes of all that I get.” But the tax collector, standing far away, wouldn’t even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner!” I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted. (Luke 18:10-14).

The Pharisee saw himself as set apart and different from all other men. He saw extortioners all around him but failed to see his own dishonest heart. This is blindness indeed! He claimed to see, so his sin remained. On the other hand, the tax collector saw his true condition, asked forgiveness and went down to his house justified.

The prayer of the Pharisee can still be heard reverberating through the hallowed halls of Christendom. “God, I thank you that I am not like other people!” Have you ever sat in a church service and said to yourself, “I sure hope so and so is listening to this sermon. He sure needs to hear it.” Or have you ever attended a prayer meeting and aimed a prayer at another person there? “Lord, I just pray right now for those among us who are still smoking, blah, blah, blah.”

In looking around and comparing ourselves among ourselves, we fail to see the Pharisee in us. We are like the Laodicean Church, dressed in her fineries, saying, “I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing.” Remember that Jesus views us as we really are, wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked (Revelation 3:17). Hear these words of our Savior! “I counsel you to buy from me gold refined by fire, that you may become rich; and white garments, that you may clothe yourself, and that the shame of your nakedness may not be revealed; and eye salve to anoint your eyes, that you may see” (Revelation 3:18).

Spiritual Sight and Saving Faith

Let’s return to Jesus’ conversation with Nicodemus to further comprehend the principle of Spiritual Sight and its effect on every area of our Christian lives. After telling Nicodemus that he could neither see nor enter the kingdom without spiritual birth and spiritual sight, Jesus directed his attention to the entrance of the kingdom. “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:14-15).

The Son of Man must be lifted up in the same manner as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness. In Numbers 21:6-9, we read how God sent fiery serpents into the camp of Israel because of their rebellion. Many were bitten and died. Israel repented and asked Moses to pray to Yahweh to remove the serpents. Moses prayed and God answered, “Make you a fiery serpent, and set it on a standard: and it shall happen, that everyone, who is bitten, when he sees it, shall live (21:8) Moses did as the Lord commanded him. He “made a bronze serpent, and put it on a pole; and so it was, if a serpent had bitten anyone, when he looked at the bronze serpent, he lived” (Numbers 21:9 NKJV).

In comparing John 3:14-15 with Numbers 21:6-9, we see that looking and believing are the same thing. The act of looking at the Old Testament bronze serpent prefigured New Covenant belief in Christ. In this instance, seeing is believing. Brilliantly assessing the problem healed no one. A different seeing was required, the kind of seeing that the Lord spoke of when He said, “They shall look upon me whom they have pierced . . .” (Zechariah 12:10).

How critical is this seeing?

Paul wrote to the Galatian believers who were returning to the bondage of law-keeping, “Foolish Galatians, who has bewitched you not to obey the truth, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was openly set forth among you as crucified?” (Galatians 3:1). The New Living Translation reads, “You used to see the meaning of Jesus Christ’s death as clearly as though I had shown you a signboard with a picture of Christ dying on the cross.” The Galatian believers had lost sight of the lifted up Christ. They used to see but now they had lost faith and were returning to blind legalism.

We cannot be drawn unto Christ and made whole unless He is lifted up and seen. When I, George, was growing up as a child I heard the story of Jesus every Sunday, but I did not truly see Him. He was little more than a cutout on a flannel graph or a story in an old leather-bound book. This Sunday school knowledge of Him did not keep me from setting out on a life of alcohol, drugs and every other vice imaginable. One day the Father revealed His Son to me by His Spirit! I saw my true condition upon the backdrop of His glory. I felt like Isaiah must have felt after seeing the Lord high and lifted up, “Woe is me! For I am undone, because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.” Why this new perspective? “My eyes have seen the King.” (Isaiah 6: 1-5). When he saw who Jesus really was, that rough fisherman Peter responded, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, Lord” (Luke 5:8).

Religious people made sure I knew I was a sinner. That didn’t bring the grace I needed to change. Nothing short of seeing Jesus lifted up, by the Spirit, could reprove me of sin and nothing but being drawn to Him by that same Spirit could deliver me from sin’s dominion. Everyone who truly looks on Him will be drawn to Him. He is himself the transforming power, or as one brother so graphically put it, “Jesus is the Change Agent.” He is the resurrection and the Life! Christ has been made unto us redemption but He has also been made our sanctification ( 1 Corinthians 1:30). We are changed, from glory to glory as we with open faces continue to behold His glory (2 Corinthians 3:18). Both the forgiveness of sins and the power to live righteously begin with spiritual sight.

The Visible Standard of Righteousness

Toward the end of Christ’s earthly ministry he turned His attention more and more toward His disciples. He seemed to look forward to those times away from the crowds, when He could draw them to Himself and prepare them for His departure. He wanted them to understand that a time of transition was nearing, a time when He must go to the Father. His speech was mysterious and ambiguous to the natural mind. “A little while, and you will not see me. Again a little while, and you will see me . . . the world will see Me no more, but you will see Me.”

How is it that the world will no longer see Jesus but His disciples will? Jesus continues, “I will pray to the Father, and he will give you another Counselor, that he may be with you forever, the Spirit of truth, whom the world can’t receive; for it doesn’t see Him. You know Him, for He lives with you, and will be in you. I will not leave you orphans. I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world will see Me no more, but you will see Me. Because I live, you will live also . . . A little while, and you will not see me. Again a little while, and you will see Me” (John 14:15-19, 16:16 WEB).

The world cannot believe what it can’t see with the natural eye. The world could see the physical Christ but Jesus spoke of a time when only those with spiritual eyes could see Him.

Jesus said, that He would ask the Father to give “another (allos) Comforter.” The Greek word that is translated another is allos, meaning another of the same kind or identical. How does Jesus come to us and abide with us? How is He made visible to us and not to the world? He comes to us through the Comforter, the one who is (allos) identical to Jesus. Jesus said of His coming, “I will come to you.” Christ has come to us through the Holy Spirit and the promise is kept, “I will never leave you or forsake you.” Although Christ has ascended to the right hand of the Father, He has never left us alone. He has come! The world can’t see Him but we see Him. To the sinner, the lifted-up-Christ is the reproof of sin but to the saints, who see Him by the Spirit, He is still the visual standard of righteousness.

Christ spoke of this standard in John 16:8-11. “And when he (the Holy Spirit) is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness. . .Of sin, because they believe not on me; Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and you see me no more.”

Two different groups of people are spoken of here–they and you–the world and the believer. When the world sees Christ, they are reproved of sin. When the believer sees Christ, he takes on the likeness of what he sees, and the righteousness that results belongs to Jesus alone.

While He was in the world, Jesus was the light of men. Then the physical Christ served as the visible standard of righteousness on the earth and the judgment on those who rejected His words and deeds was severe. Jesus had to go away before the Holy Spirit could come. He said of this great transition, “I am going to my Father, and you won’t see me any more.” The Standard would no longer be seen with physical eyes, but by spiritual sight.

The Holy Spirit takes the standard, (Jesus) the Logos, and convinces the believer of righteousness. But it does not stop there. He is much, much more. Christ has not only been made to us righteousness, but also sanctification and redemption (1 Corinthians 1:30). He is all and in all. He is the full meal deal as we partake of Him. He does not just save from having to pay for our sins. God had much more in mind when He sent His only begotten Son. True discipleship has little to do with general intelligence but is utterly dependent on spiritual sight. A true learner is a seer.

Spiritual Sight and truly being Christ’s Disciple

Jesus said to some Jews that believed on him, “If you remain (continue) in my word, then you are truly my disciples. You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” Consider what Jesus is saying here. Although these Jews believed on Christ, they were not yet truly His disciples. The Greek word for disciple means learner. The amazing thing about Christ is that He always knew just what to say to expose the bondage in the hearts of men that kept them from following Him. To the rich young ruler who was bound by his wealth, Jesus said, “One thing you lack. Go, sell whatever you have, and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me, taking up the cross” (Mark 10:21). Jesus asked him to give up his wealth and prestige for a cross!

These Jews were under an even greater bondage to their pride and traditions, which kept them from truly being Christ’s disciples and fully knowing the truth and the freedom that it brings. They depended on the righteousness of Moses and were still under the law. They proved this when they said, “We are disciples of Moses.” But in the economy of God, you cannot coast into heaven on anther man’s righteousness. You cannot be another man’s disciple and fulfill the plan of God. You must be a disciple of Christ. Jesus cut strait to the chase. In saying to them, “you will know the truth,” He was implying that though they knew the law, they didn’t know the truth. By saying, “the truth will make you free,” He was telling them that they were in bondage. They got the message and it offended them. “We are Abraham’s seed,” they boastfully retorted, “and have never been in bondage to anyone. How do you say, ‘You will be made free?'” (John 8:31-33). Talk about blindness!

They were in bondage to the Roman Empire, but more than that, they were in bondage to the law and the traditions of the elders even as they spoke. Jesus revealed the truth about their captivity. “I say the things which I have seen with my Father; and you also do the things which you have seen with your father” (John 8:39). “Our father is Abraham,” they answered. Jesus said to them, “If you were Abraham’s children, you would do the works of Abraham. But now you seek to kill me, a man who has told you the truth, which I heard from God. Abraham didn’t do this . . . You are of your Father, the devil . . . ” Wait a minute! Weren’t these believing Jews? How could they believe on Jesus and yet have Satan as their father? They may have believed, but they certainly weren’t teachable and so had not yet been taught the truth. Truth has to be assimilated or it remains fiction to the hearer. As one unknown sage put it, “When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken, or cease to be honest.”

The term Father was a title of respect given to teachers who shaped the minds or thoughts of men. This is why Alexander the Great claimed Aristotle, the principal shaper of western rationalism, as his father. These Jews were not truly learners or Disciples of Christ, but defenders of the teachings of their father, who had enslaved them through the traditions of men. Their position was based on what they had seen with their father, the father of lies. They were clearly not Christ’s disciples yet. To be a disciple of Christ requires a new heart that manifests itself in obedience and love for Him. How could they learn of Christ while arguing with Him? Jesus ended the debate when he said, “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day: and he saw it, and was glad” (See John 8:38-56).

Thousands of years before Christ, Abraham saw Christ and was glad? This is clearly one of the best definitions of faith in the entire Bible. Abraham looked, through spiritual eyes, at those things that are not seen. If these Jews who were beginning to believe on Christ were truly Abraham’s seed they would have possessed Abraham’s spiritual sight. They would have seen what Abraham saw. They would rejoice in what Abraham rejoiced in. But no, they lacked the family resemblance. The absence of Abraham’s vision and faith was clear evidence that they were not the seed of Abraham. Instead of seeing Christ’s day and rejoicing, they tried to kill Him. They couldn’t help but do the things that they had seen with their father.

Abraham looked at those unseen eternal things, beyond the temporal realm. He saw Christ and rejoiced. He saw “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1). He saw Christ! This is the secret of Abraham’s faith. He saw Christ! God has no grandkids. This seeing heart that Abraham had could not be passed even to Isaac, the next generation, much less hundreds of generations later to these Jews. The kingdom of heaven is not entered by fleshly birthright. Paul observed, “flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; nor does corruption inherit incorruption.” Later he added to this thought and wrote, “While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:18).

Abraham did not see himself in a Cadillac, sporting a $3,000 suit, diamond ring and a Rolex watch like the hedonistic, “name it and claim it” faith-teachers of our day. No! He saw Christ’s day and rejoiced. His faith was based on sacrifice and hope. He refused the wealth of Sodom, the security of its city walls and dwelt by faith in tents, awaiting a better hope, looking for that city whose Builder and Maker is God. This is faith. Faith is seeing beyond the temporal to the eternal–looking at those things that are not seen. It is not a means of gaining wealth. In fact, Paul exhorts us to withdraw from men of corrupt minds who suppose that gain is godliness (1 Timothy 6:5)

True faith is Christ-centered. Faith works by love. Love takes no thought for itself (1 Corinthians 13:5). True faith is not driven by private ambition but requires sacrifice. Moses by faith saw beyond the carnal and temporal world of need and desire, want and lust and “chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasure of sin for a season . . . Esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt” (Hebrews 11:25-26). This is the kind of faith that Abraham had, a faith based upon spiritual sight. The blessing of Abraham that is given to all true believers is the Spirit, who gave Abraham such clarity of vision, the very Spirit that led him out of the luxury and earthly security of Babylon to dwell in a humble tent in an unknown land.

Jesus died to take away the veil that obscures spiritual sight. The Jews to this day still have eyes that cannot see because they have not appropriated the sight of their Savior by faith. We can be just as blind as we cling to our own traditions and refuse to follow His Spirit. We get letters from hundreds of saints who are learning to be sons of God and this is a great blessing, but there are still many that cannot hear or see Him for themselves. The best they can do is pass on some tidbit from the vision of others that caught their fancy. It makes us sad to know of such a great inheritance we have in Christ, spiritual sight, and see it sold so short. Dare to open your hearts to Him this day and pray that He opens the eyes of your understanding as you read the scriptures. Pray that He speaks to you through other sources as well. The One who is called The Word has never quit speaking. Be watchful. Perfect wisdom comes forth out of the mouths of babes for of such is the kingdom of heaven. Remember that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called. Don’t look to others for spiritual sight. See with your own eyes. He still rewards those who diligently seek Him.

 

Spritual Sight by George Davis and Michael Clark

http://awildernessvoice.com/SpiritualSight.html



The profound declaration in Daniel 2:22, “[The Lord] reveals the deep and secret things: He knows what is in the darkness, and the light dwells with Him,” resonates powerfully throughout the Book of Daniel and encapsulates the essence of faith in times of adversity.

As I revisited the text, I was struck by the significance of the remnant—four young Jewish boys, Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah—who were set apart to uphold the Kingdom of God amidst the oppressive darkness of Babylon.

Their story is not just one of survival but of steadfastness, embodying the hope that even in the face of compromise and despair, one can maintain a testimony that honors God. The narrative of Daniel reveals a crucial lesson about the relentless nature of spiritual warfare.

The spirit of Hell seeks to pollute what it cannot destroy and to destroy what it cannot pollute. This theme echoes throughout Scripture, illustrating the ongoing struggle between light and darkness. In a world where Israel has succumbed to the pressures of surrounding cultures, these four friends stand resolutely against the tide of moral decay.

They represent the overcomers—those who cling to their faith and refuse to compromise their beliefs despite overwhelming opposition. This struggle is not unlike the challenges faced by believers today. As we navigate our own wilderness experiences, we must recognize that the enemy will use various tactics to try to undermine our faith.

Yet, just as Daniel and his companions demonstrated, every attempt to disrupt their faith ultimately served to reinforce their resolve. The remnant is strengthened through trials, and the darkness only serves to illuminate the light that dwells within them.

In Revelation 12:11, we find another layer of this testimony: “They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony; they did not love their lives so much as to shrink from death.” This verse emphasizes that overcoming is not merely about verbal confession but is rooted in the demonstration of faith through action.

In our contemporary understanding, “testimony” often connotes a public declaration of faith; however, in the biblical context, it encapsulates the lived experience of truth under pressure. This distinction is vital—our faith is a living testimony that must be demonstrated in the face of adversity.

For many, truth is relegated to a theoretical concept, a set of beliefs to be recited rather than a reality to be lived out. The Book of Daniel challenges us to reconsider our own understanding of truth. It invites us to engage with our faith actively, allowing it to transform us in the crucible of life’s challenges.

As we meditate on the trials faced by Daniel and his friends, let us reflect on how these experiences can inform our own journeys as believers. The powerful message woven throughout the Book of Daniel is that the remnant is positioned for victory.

Each trial faced becomes an opportunity for growth and strength. The enemy may scheme and plot, but ultimately, it is through these very struggles that God’s greatness is revealed. The encouragement is clear: do not lose heart in the trials you face.

Instead, stand firm, for you are on the verge of significant breakthroughs and revelations. Like Daniel, we can emerge from our trials fortified in faith and equipped to testify to God’s power. In our current age, many believers are drawn to the vibrant stories of the Book of Acts, and rightly so.

However, I urge you to also delve into the Book of Daniel. There, amid the narratives of courage and faithfulness, lies the blueprint for overcoming in our own lives.

The testimony of the Remnant—both in the Old Testament and in the early church—reveals a consistent theme: faith in God’s promises and an unwavering commitment to His truth can and will prevail against all odds.

Holy Spirit has set a message that is burning in my spirit; “Without compromising the Remnant must stand strong in this hour”. And I am holy convicted that as we allow Holy Spirit to position us in unity, as the Lord’s Ecclesia, holding on with spiritual steadfastness, we too can join the ranks of the overcomers, shining as lights in a world that often seeks to snuff out our faith.

~Pastor Russ Welch, Mighty Arm Ministries Jacksonville Florida


Could you imagine being poor on the street’s ? You are left to fend for yourself, eating food that others have discarded, clothes that have been thrown away and sleeping any place you can find?

Now imagine how insane it would be if such a person were adopted and taking into a beautiful home by a loving couple and told that every in the house belonged to them as well.

Yet year after year this child does not get the reality of the blessing they have received. They continue to look through the garbage for food even though there is meal after meal prepared for them and set on the table. They continue to wear ragged old clothes, though the closet in the room this loving couple has provided for them is filled with new clothes. In fact night after night, this couple has to go out and search around the outside of the house to find this person because they continue to seek shelter even though they have a room of their own.

Now to most this would sound silly, because you know that if you were left to living on the street and someone took you into their home and said to you that all that is theirs belongs to you as well you would enjoy it and hopefully be grateful.

Yet many Christians today are no different than this person, because they have inherited a Kingdom yet they continue in the mindset that they must earn the rights of the world.

I wonder how many Christians are going to walk into eternity, never knowing the awesome blessings the Father has bestowed on them. Salvation is indeed free and all the blessings of God come from His mercy – yet like a Car, unless you put the key in the ignition and start it up, you will never enjoy the beautiful ride the car can give you.

In the same manner so many are falsely taught about “works” that they remove themselves from the works and fruits of the Kingdom. Shall works get me into heaven? By now means for the Word is clear that we are saved through Faith in Christ Jesus, and that Jesus Christ is the only way to heaven. Yet if we simply lie back and continue to live the life we lived before we accepted Jesus as Lord and Savior and never take part in walking in obedience to His authority, His Word and His dominion we shall never experience the benefits of all that we have inherited as children of the Lord God.

It is work to study His word, it is work to help another, it is work to conform to His Word and Kingdom rule. It is work to stay at the cross, allowing its bondage smashing power to flow through our lives. It is indeed hard labor at times to love people who do not want to be loved. It is hard work to dismiss the insults, emotional wounding s and possible physical pain by others simply because one is a Christian (For those of us in the western world who have not experienced this – it wont be long before such persecution come to this land) . One must admit it is a conscious struggle (work) to walk in the overcoming power of His holiness to see that sin no longer controls us. I have yet to meet anyone that God has magic waned and they no longer are at war against the flesh.

Yes we are indeed saved by His gracious mercy – and if we will bow low to Him, His Grace shall empower of us to live as true adopted Children, walking in the abundance of His Kingdom.

For we indeed serve and awesome God – Now let us live the life of adoption rather than outcast living outside the Kingdom!!!


When Solomon had finished building the temple of the LORD and the royal palace, and had achieved all he had desired to do, the LORD appeared to him a second time, as he had appeared to him at Gibeon. The LORD said to him: ‘I have heard the prayer and plea you have made before me; I have consecrated this temple, which you have built, by putting my Name there forever. My eyes and my heart will always be there. (1 Kings 9:1-3)

 

Wow, this should be the goal of our lives, that we live them in such a pleasing way unto the Lord that He consecrates our lives and we carry His Name above ours. In essence this is what the Lord Jesus Christ has already done for us. The moment He allowed the temple guards to take Him, He started on the road to purchase us this reward from the Father.

 

Yet the question must be asked “Is our life worthy of this ”

 

In other words, for the born-again believer does our life reflect a position of gratitude towards the Lord was the price He has paid that NOW the Father look’s down upon us with a smile of favor?

 

Think about it for a moment, about what Jesus had to endure that we could be covered with His righteousness. The beating, the humiliation, the shame and the cross. And He had to do all this not because of what He had done , no for He was an innocent man. He had to endure it all for the price of “our sins” called for it as the only lawful sentence in the Kingdom hall’s of justice. For the penalty of sin is death and eternal separation from the Lord God.

 

He was indeed the King of kings, the glorious One, the only begotten Son of God. He knew Heaven as His Home, and He maintained the balance of the world spinning around the sun. At any moment He could but open His mouth and Heaven would have emptied of Angelic Armies to come forth to His rescue. He could of given one comment and His accusers and all the Roman soldiers around Him would have turned to dust. Yet out His GREAT LOVE for us, He willingly endured it all, as a lamb going to slaughter.

 

Picture for a moment (those of you who watched the “Passion of Christ” movie will remember the scene) as the Roman guards stood about Him, taunting Him, humiliating Him, shaming Him, and they get the grand idea that if He truly is the King of Jew’s He need’s to be crowned. So they fashioned a crown out of thorn’s, the very creation of the Lord Himself, and they did not merely set it on His head. No, they pushed it with great force upon the precious head of the Savior of man-kind, past His beautiful head of hair, through the flesh til they felt it hit the bone of His skull. And He said not a word – Oh’ the amazing love and compassion does our Lord have that He would endure such pain on our behalf. Such love and the patience does our God in Heaven have, that He could endure watching what His creation was doing to His Only Begotten Son.

 

Now, having pictured the guards doing this, something rises up in us. Some would say that if they were there they would have stopped the guards, others that they should have been brought to justice for their crimes against an innocent man. Yet the truth is, we in our own sinful lives, placed those thorn’s upon the Lord’s head. Each and every time we sin, it is as though we are but adding a thorn to the crown our King did wear.

 

Have we ever stopped for a moment to realize that Jesus endured it all for us? That every blow, every snap of the whip taring flesh off from His body, every thorn on that crown was because of “our sins”

 

We must ask the question daily – Am I re crowning the King of kings today with a crown of thorns? Or am I brightening the Glory of His eternal crown with my life, lived according to His Will.

 

Can the Lord look at our lives today and say that He has heard our prayers and that He is consecrating our bodies, these earthen temples for which He has filled with His Holy Spirit?

 

Do we glory over the Lord’s eyes and heart being upon us? Or are there moment when we wish He would turn His head because of the shame in our lives.

 

Ask Holy Spirit to search your life today, to see if there be anything that would once again place that crown of thorns upon the Masters head. If the light of His Holiness point’s to something, repent of it and turn away from, He will give you the grace to over-come what ever sin you may be struggling with. But you must first desire to walk away from it.

 

Our God is the greatest example of love in all the universe, there is none like our God. The lover of our soul’s, the guardian of our eternal destiny, to victor of our salvation, He who not only destroyed the power of sin over our lives, but He who paid the penalty of such sin with the surrender of His right’s, with the humiliation, shame, beating, whipping ,and the nailing of His precious flesh to the cross.

 

Let us today and every day forward awake with the commitment that today we shall not re-crown of King with the thorns of our sin’s! Ask for the abundance of His Grace to flow into our lives empowering us to live lives free of sin!

 

For our God is an Awesome God!!!!!!

~Russ Welch