Hearing
God to See Him
.
by Sam Williamson
Thirty-three
years ago I took a woman to a Gilbert and
Sullivan play as a first date. Before
the evening of our get-together, I had a
collection of facts about her: she was a
farmer’s daughter, she was a Social Worker,
and she was cute. After the evening
of our get-together, I told my parents that I
had just met the woman I would marry.
What happened during those few, short hours?
I had known she wanted to be a missionary, but
over a glass of wine, she told me of her
longing to help internationals. And I fell in
love. I didn’t get new information; somehow,
something I already knew became real.
She breathed life into the facts I already
possessed. A personal connection trumped my
data.
Western nations—Americans in particular—are
information junkies. The Self-Improvement
market guzzles ten billion dollars a year as
we gather more info on health, personal
finances, and relational well-being. Yet we
remain over-weight, under-saved, and
highly-divorced.
Christians likewise are data collectors. We
download hundreds of sermons, stockpile
libraries of books, frequent retreats, and
memorize verses. Yet we remain anxious, timid,
and lonely.
We don’t need more information; we need what
we already know to become real.
We’re hoping in the
wrong solutions
Our biggest problem—at this moment—is that
God is not real to us. We think our greatest
need is for good advice or different
circumstances: “What must I do to achieve a
healthy marriage?” or “If only I had a better
boss”. But more data or better jobs won’t heal
our aches.
Jesus said the Bible is written so we can
meet God personally; not just know about
him but know him; not just encounter cold
facts but encounter a warm person; not just to
change our settings but to be transformed by a
relationship:
You search the
Scriptures because you think you will find
rich life in them; yet they are talking about
me. You refuse to come to me that you may have
life. (John 5:39-40)
Our single greatest need in all the world
right now is for God to become more real to
us.
So … how do we do that?
When we read the Bible, we see … but do
not see, and we hear but do not understand. We
read Scripture to find guidance (a change of
circumstances) or to affirm what we already
know (one more data point to collect). Jesus
says we should come to meet him.
One day a piano tuner told me that if I sang
the right note into a piano, the corresponding
string would vibrate. She struck the middle
“A” so I could get the right pitch, dampened
it, and I then sang “Ahhh” into the piano. And
the string reverberated. Though it took me a
couple tries.
When we read Scripture, we have the “A”
strings of information, like that God loves us
enough to call us his children. But it isn’t
enough. We are seeing without seeing. We need
something more. We need the resonance of God’s
Spirit.
That’s why Paul tells us that “The Spirit
himself bears witness with our spirit that we
are children of God” (Rom. 8:16). God begins
to sing his word into our hearts and soon the
information we have begins to resonate.
Information about God is trumped by God
himself.
It’s really all we need
The book of Job overflows with Job seeking
God for information (“Why, God, are you doing
this?”) or a change in circumstances (“God,
let me die”). Instead, God simply reveals
himself.
When Job meets God, he responds, “I had heard
of you with my ears, but now my eyes see you”
(Job 42:5). And he is completely satisfied.
Notice: God has not told Job why all this is
happening, nor has God changed the
circumstances. Yet Job says he got all that he
really wanted.
Scripture says that no one “knows a person’s
thoughts except the spirit of that person,
which is in him. So also no one comprehends
the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God”
(1 Corinthian 2:11). Our need is for the
Spirit of God to speak his words into our
lives—to hear the living God himself—and we’ll
be satisfied.
Instead of asking God for new data, let’s
just ask God for a date; and let our
knowledge of him resonate as he sings his
song into our hearts.
Sam
© Copyright 2015, Beliefs
of
the Heart, Ltd. All rights reserved.
Sam
Williamson grew up in Detroit, Michigan,
USA. He is the son of a Presbyterian pastor
and grandson of
missionaries to China. He moved to Ann
Arbor, Michigan in 1975. He worked in London
England from 1979 to 1982, helping to
establish Antioch,
a member community of the Sword of the
Spirit. After about twenty-five years as an
executive at a software company in Ann Arbor
he sensed God call him to something new. He
left the software company in 2008 and now
speaks at men’s retreats, churches, and
campus outreaches. His is married to Carla
Williamson and they have four grown children
and a grandson. He has a blog site, www.beliefsoftheheart.com,
and can be reached at
Sam@BeliefsoftheHeart.com.
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