Sometimes Falling Down On the Job, Is Not Necessarily Bad For a Believer.

01/02/2024 38 min Temporada 7 Episodio 2
Sometimes Falling Down On the Job, Is Not Necessarily Bad For a Believer.

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Episode Synopsis

Greetings, if you would like to support Free Gospel Church and our ministries, you can make a donation at FreeGospelAssembly.com.  Thank you for listening. If this message has blessed you please share it, that others may hear! God bless you.Revelation 1:9-18; Luke 5:7-8Genesis 17:1-3: Abraham Fell Face DownExodus 33:18-21 Moses Can’t See God’s FaceEzekiel 1:28 Ezekiel fell face downIt's all about the experience of “Awe” in the presence of God. Spiritmanifestations like “being slain in the Spirit” or any other manifestations, should not only produce spiritual giddiness, laughter or even happiness, but at times “awe” or fear and reverence for the Lord. Scripture tells us about the “Fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom or knowledge but the foolish despise or reject such impartations (Proverbs 1:7)”The above people of God, prophets in their own right, all experienced this fear,reverence or “awe.” “Awe” defined by our biblical examples goes beyond just “toadmire” but a feeling of being in the presence of someone so vast that it transcends ourunderstanding or capacity to bear!So many of them fell forward in awe. What’s necessary in our personalexperience with God is both to know that He is love and also that He is “awesome”: toexperience His unconditional love and His fearful majesty. Otherwise we don’t get thefull picture as both Peter in Luke 5:7-8, and John in Revelation 1 ( our main text) andothers who experienced His miraculous presence: again that He is both loving andawesome. If God is just lovey dovey then we might get the idea that as His children wecan get away with anything and He won’t mind. No! Note what Ananias and Saphiralearned the hard way, that God’s person is not to be taken lightly even lied to (Acts1-11). We need to sit on his lap, as daddy and kneel at His feet as King. Let’s exploreJohn’s experience in Revelation 1:9-18.A) What John saw and how He reacteda) What he saw and heard.i) He was in the Spirit on the Lord’s dayii) He heard a loud voice like a trumpet blast behind him (Shock,surprise!)iii) He was commanded to write down what he hears and sees forseven churches (There is a message; not just a shockingexperience)iv) The vision and message is in Apocalyptic language borrowed fromO.T. passages like, Daniel 7:9-13; 10:6; (See also Revelation19:13). Among the lampstands stood someone like the son of manbut how he was dressed, looked and spoke did not resemble thegentle shepherd Jesus presented in the Gospels: read verses13-16B) How he reacted, 1:17 and how Jesus responded.He saw and heard and physically and emotionally reacted by fear andawe: Message: This is some serious business, now listen up! But the revelationdoesn’t end here. Note again the latter part of verse 7: Jesus' consolation: Hephysically placed His right hand on him and said stop being afraid(awe) etc.Verse 18. What started as awe, fear and reverence ends in consolation, and acrucial message about the Kingdom.C) Out of it all comes an awesome Revelation and mission. And because of theexperience John had with the Risen Christ and the ensuing awe, he got right to it.This happened while he was still imprisoned in Patmos.a) The Manifestation that the Lord gave John produced the experience ofawe that propelled him to write the message in spite of his prison situation(Compare him with Jeremiah). He felt down awestruck at His presenceand got up fearless in His calling.Read 1 Peter 6:6-9Amen