Recognize: God's Trying to Get Your Attention
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About this ebook
The truth is right in front of our eyes, and God is trying to get us to see it clearly. While the ways of the world sometimes distract us from experiencing the power of God and hinder us from walking in His purpose for our lives, the Lord has not given up on us. He still has a life-changing message for us! God desires for us, His chil
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Recognize - Ernest Almond
Introduction
There’s a reason that you’ve picked up this book. Maybe you know me and you’re just curious to see what I’m talking about here. Perhaps the title grabbed your attention, and the summary convinced you this is at least worth a browse. It doesn’t really matter why you came to this book, as much as why you will finish this book. If you are like me, you have had seasons in life where you’ve had profound clarity and other times where you have felt like you were in a fog. In each area of life, we encounter both of those experiences and everything in between. So, right now, you are hungry for more. More clarity, more understanding, more from God.
One of the reasons we stay hungry is that we’re missing out. Imagine that your mom gets inspired in the kitchen and invites everyone to the house for a Thanksgiving feast, on a random Tuesday in July. I don’t know about you, but I’d make that trip, even though it’s seven hours in a car for me! Imagine that you walk into the house, wanting to get a glimpse of all the glorious food you are about to inhale, and the only thing you see is the turkey. It’s a large turkey, but that’s it. You’re going to wonder, where’s the rest of the food? You know mom doesn’t play in the kitchen, so, you’d want to know, where is everything you promised me?
Many of us exist just like that in the spiritual realm. We get stuck on the first thing we see. It doesn’t matter that all the rest of the food has already been laid out in the next room. We’ll get upset because we didn’t see everything we wanted to see when we wanted to see it. We’ll get mad at a situation because our perspective is wrong. That’s just the world we live in.
There are things we want to see, and then there are the things that God wants us to see. Even the most faithful Christian gets it wrong sometimes. We all make mistakes, and most of us would like to do and be better. But, our starting point for changing our lives can’t be the newest diet program, workout craze or new age philosophy. If we’re going to be able to experience the fullness of the life God created us to experience, then there are some things we need to recognize about God, and there are some things we need to recognize about us. As you journey through this book, expect to be challenged, instructed and empowered. Most of all though, expect that reading this book will bring you a level of spiritual clarity that you’ve been needing.
CHAPTER 1
The Inconvenient Truth
You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see (Rev. 3:17-18, New International Version).
These verses come from the prophetic book written by the Apostle John, one of Jesus’ first 12 disciples. In this specific passage, Christ is speaking through John to the people of the church at Laodicea, a city in Asia Minor back in the 1st century AD. The Christians there believed their lives were great, so they treated the Lord like he was an unnecessary part of their lives. In essence, they thought their lives were cake, and they treated the Lord like He was icing on the cake! They failed to see that the truth is the reverse; the Lord is the cake, and everything else is icing. Toward the end of this passage though, the counsel is given to them that they should buy salve to put on your eyes so you can see.
God wanted them to see something that they were missing.
What is it that we need to see?
What is it that we need to recognize? The biblical text has been preserved for nearly 2,000 years. So, if these words are in the text, it is because there is a reason that we need to see. The Lord inspired John to write these letters to the churches because they each had spiritual blind spots, and the Lord desired that their vision be clear. He is speaking directly to those believers, and today’s Christians share their spiritual heritage. That means there is much for us in these words also.
The first truth God wants us to recognize can be a difficult pill for us to swallow, especially in America. We don’t like to see ourselves as anything other than at the top of the pyramid, but the very thing God wants us to recognize is our true condition. We’ve bought into our own hype for generations, because in the western world, we tend to believe we are better than we really are because we possess more wealth and resources than the people in other parts of the world do. The church at Laodicea was prosperous in the same way and Christ’s message to them was You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked.
Ouch! That’s an extremely tough word, and one that runs contrary to the way we typically think about ourselves.
If you look at all the popular books, movies and commentaries that deal with ideas of identity and self-esteem, you will see a lot of self-help, self-empowering, you can overcome this,
or you can do anything if you put your mind to it.
These are great feel good
messages. They are both positive and encouraging. The problem is that when we buy into these books that focus on our inner selves
, auras or the universe, we’re accepting ideas that disagree with what God is saying to us and about us. God loves us, but He does not want us getting full of ourselves. He wants us to be full of Him! So, when we allow our pride to boost us up to the point that we think we only need God in certain situations, we become lukewarm
in God’s sight. God sees the lukewarm person as one lacking passion for Him or conviction to live out His ways. We’re not really on fire for God, and we’re not really ice cold against Him, but still, God’s opinion of that perspective is I wish you were either one or the other
(Rev. 3:15)!
In this text, the Lord uses some harsh language to describe His children. After all, this is a group of believers, they are His followers and they are the church. Right? Well, the inconvenient truth is that fathers often use harsh