Knowing God
By: David F. Reagan
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Luke 10:22 – “All
things are delivered to me of my Father: and no man knoweth who
the Son is, but the Father; and who the Father is, but the Son,
and he to whom the Son will reveal him.”
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Philippians
3:10 – “That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection,
and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable
unto his death;”
We
who are Bible-believers stress the importance of Bible knowledge and
Bible doctrine—as well we should. But I sense that we fear an
experiential knowledge of God. The idea frightens us. We
have heard the conversations of the charismatic at our workplace who hears
God in dreams and voices. And we shudder to think that someone
would consider us extreme in this matter.
As
a result, we approach knowing God on an intellectual level only. To
know God is to have a correct understanding of the doctrine of God. Perhaps
it also means to know that we have truly trusted in God. But
to expect God to be real to us on an experiential level? How
presumptuous! How dangerous! Is it even allowed?
Even
when we collide with scriptures which speak of this personal knowledge
of God, we have the answers. Those were miraculous times with
signs and wonders. The scriptures were not yet complete. And so on.
But
I am not talking about being stuck down with a bright light and audibly
hearing the voice of the Saviour giving directions. A completed
Bible does not mean that we are forbidden to experience the presence
of God in our lives. It does not keep us from knowing His guidance—whether
by taking us to a verse, or sending one with the advice we need, or
through a providential working of events. Neither does it mean
that we cannot sense His glory or His love in a time of prayer.
Watchman
Nee in What Shall This Man Do? (p.105) states, “It is first-hand
knowledge that counts in the hour of testing.” To hear or read
of the knowledge of others may encourage us or guide us. But
we need to have first-hand knowledge of God in order to face the extreme
trials of life. I cannot live off of someone else’s knowledge
of God. I must know Him for myself.
Yet,
I fear that many of us are trying to live off of second-hand knowledge. God
may not be real in our lives, but we have read the stories of how He
helped others. But Gideon was not satisfied with a God of the
storybooks. He cried, “where be all his miracles which our fathers
told us of, saying, Did not the LORD bring us up from Egypt?” (Judges
6:13). He wanted to know God first-hand.
Through
Jeremiah, God tells a man to glory only in the fact “that he understandeth
and knoweth me” (9:24). Paul probably knew God as few men in
history. He even had revelations that are not for us today. But
he still cried out, “That I may know him” (Philippians 3:10). May
we have this heart for God in our own lives.
God
does not want us to seek emotional experiences so we can glory in our
experiences. True knowledge of God creates a desire to glory
in God; not in the experience. However, the Son is willing to
reveal the Father to us (Luke 10:22). He wants you to know Him
in ways you have yet to experience. The question is, Do
you want to know Him?
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