SPIRITUAL AWAKENINGS

 

TExt:


To have understanding in the visions of God

( 2 Chron 26:5 )

Moses and the Burning Bush

A spiritual awakening is to be awakened as if from a deep sleep to see to feel, to hear and to experience the love and grace of God and, in that context, to know the truth about oneself, the truth about the human condition, and the truth about God and His will for our lives and the universe within which we live.


The greatest part of mankind, nay of Christians, may be said to be asleep; and that particular way of life, which takes up each man's mind, thoughts, and actions, may be very well called his particular dream. 
This degree of vanity is equally visible in every form and order of life. The learned and the ignorant, the rich and the poor, are all in the same state of slumber, only passing away a short life in a different kind of dream. But why so? 
It is because man has an eternity within him, is born into this world, not for the sake of living here, not for any thing this world can give him, but only to have time and place, to become either an eternal partaker of a divine life with God, or to have an hellish eternity among fallen Angels: 
And therefore, every man who has not his eye, his heart, and his hands, continually governed by this twofold Eternity, may justly be said to be fast asleep, to have no awakened sensibility of himself. 
And a life devoted to the interests and enjoyments of this world, spent and wasted in the slavery of earthly desires, may be truly called a dream; as having all the shortness, vanity, and delusion of a dream; only with this great difference, that when a dream is over, nothing is lost but fictions and fancies; but when the Dream of Life is ended only by death, all that Eternity is lost for which we were brought into being. 
Now there is no misery in this world, nothing that makes either the life or death of man to be full of calamity, but this blindness and insensibility of his state, into which he so willingly, nay obstinately plunges himself. Every thing that has the nature of evil and distress in it takes its rise from hence. 
Do but suppose a man to know himself, that he comes into this world on no other errand, but to rise out of the vanity of time into the riches of eternity; do but suppose him to govern his inward thoughts and outward actions by this view of himself, and then to him every Day has lost all its evil; prosperity and adversity have no difference, because he receives and uses them both in the same spirit;life and death are equally welcome, because equally parts of his way to eternity. 
For poor and miserable as this life is, we have all of us free access to all that is great, and good, and happy, and carry within ourselves a key to all the treasures that heaven has to bestow upon us.— We starve in the midst of plenty, groan under infirmities, with the remedy in our own hand; live and die without knowing and feeling any thing of the One, only Good, whilst we have it in our power to know and enjoy it in as great a reality, as we know and feel the power of this world over us: 
For heaven is as near to our souls, as this world is to our bodies; and we are created, we are redeemed, to have our conversation in it. God, the only good of all intelligent natures, is not an absent or distant God, but is more present in and to our souls, than our own bodies; and we are strangers to heaven, and without God in the world, for this only reason, because we are void of that spirit of prayer, which alone can, and never fails to unite us with the One, only Good, and to open heaven and the Kingdom of God within us. 
A root set in the finest soil, in the best climate, and blessed with all that sun, and Air, and rain can do for it, is not in so sure a way of its growth to perfection, as every man may be, whose spirit aspires after all that, which God is ready and infinitely desirous to give him. For the Sun meets not the springing bud that stretches towards him with half that certainty, as God, the Source of all Good, communicates himself to the Soul that longs to partake of Him.

A ‘spiritual awakening ‘ is also akin to what George Patterson calls the ‘Paradise Factor’ which is at the core of the  revelation of Jesus Christ as the Son of God.


“ The ‘Paradise Factor’ according to Paul of Tarsus, is the process by which an individual, who has been enslaved by sin in a variety of spiritually destructive practices, is delivered from the malevolent bondage by following Christ into an acceptance of death to self; and through resurrection and regeneration is raised into a new and triumphant life.


The ‘Paradise Factor’ is being delivered from alienation from God in the kingdom of darkness, and being transformed into communion with God in the Kingdom of Light. The ‘Paradise Factor’ for Paul was the experience ‘...caught up to the third heaven,.


Whether it was in the body or out of the body I do not know - God knows. And I know this man... was caught up to Paradise.’”


George and Meg Patterson, The Paradise Factor: Healing and Addicted Society, page 23

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