SPIRITUAL REALITY SERIES LESSON 7
Spiritual
Reality
A Three Dimensional
Perspective
The Scriptures tell us that the Lord created both things that are visible, physical reality, and things that are invisible, spiritual reality1. Since our natural habitat or living environment is physical reality, we have little knowledge or understanding of spiritual reality. The new birth and being filled with the Holy Spirit thrusts us into a spiritual environment for which we are not prepared. This series of lessons has addressed different aspects of our learning curve as we progress in the Spirit. This lesson is vital to us if we are to mature in our calling and purpose for which we were created.
We should understand that we live in a
space-time continuum, created by God for His own purposes. This is
our physical reality. Everything, according to Einstein, is
relatively related in our universe, including time. This simply
provides mathematical validation of the fact that time, itself, was
created as a part of our physical reality.
However, time does not extend into
spiritual reality, which functions relative to Eternity. Time, as we
know it, only functions relative to our universe. That means that as
we experience spiritual reality, we must translate or interpret our
experiences into things that we can understand relative to time,
which is linear—past, present, future.
Spiritual reality, which exists in Eternity, must relate to us in time since the purposes of God are being worked out in time even though they are completed in Eternity. All that God has done relates to us in one or more of the three dimensions of spiritual reality—past, present, future. This is made clear to us in Revelation.
John to the seven
churches that are in Asia: Grace to you and peace, from Him who is
and who was and who is to come, and from the seven Spirits who
are before His throne, (Revelation 1:4 NASB)
"I am the Alpha and the Omega,"
says the Lord God, "who is and who was
and who is to come, the Almighty." (Revelation
1:8 NASB)
The
Lord describes Himself as the Beginning and the End. All of time is
already encompassed in the Lord. However, the Lord is expressed in
time as “who is, and who was, and who is to come”--the
past, present and future.
The writer of Hebrews said it this way:
Jesus Christ is
the same yesterday and today and forever. (Hebrews
13:8 NASB)
In
other words, Jesus is not affected by time: He is always the
same—past, present, and future.
It
requires the work of the Holy Spirit in us to experience all three
dimensions of spiritual reality, that is, prophetic revelation is
necessary. This is what it means in Revelation when it says that
“the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy”2.
The prophetic spirit testifies to what Jesus has done (past), is
doing (present), and will do (future). We could label these as
hindsight, insight, and foresight.
He who was and what He has done = hindsight.
He who is and what He does = insight.
He
who is to come and what He will do = foresight.
We
experience the full three dimensions when we realize that Jesus has
done something for us (past) in order to do something in us
(present) so that He might do something through us (future).
Growing
in the spiritual realm as we mature in God requires that we begin
with the past and what the Lord has done for us (hindsight).
"Listen to me,
you who pursue righteousness, Who seek the LORD: Look to the rock
from which you were hewn And to the quarry from which you were dug.
(Isaiah 51:1 NASB)
We who seek the Lord and pursue righteousness need to look at two things:
the quarry from which we were dug (the past, hindsight), and
the rock from which we were hewn (the present, insight).
The
rock that was dug up is now being cleaned and shaped up. The present
work of the Lord is a perfecting work. The future holds what will be
done with it when the perfecting work is complete. The stones are
dug up and shaped in order to be built up into a spiritual
habitation, a dwelling place for the Spirit of God.3
Jesus referred to Himself in the
Gospels as both the Son of Man and as the Son of God.
This is the historical Jesus that is the foundation or seed of
everything else that follows. It is hindsight that reveals
the life of Jesus as the Son of Man to us. However, it is insight
that reveals Him as the Son of God. We see into the mystery of the
incarnation—that “God was in Christ, reconciling the
world to Himself”.4
The insight of the Spirit is revelation, illumination, and spiritual
experience.
As we apply the work of the Lord to our
lives, we realize that we are embracing a process of redemptive
change. We are becoming more like Him—being changed from glory
to glory.5
As we progress in spiritual reality, the Spirit engenders hope
concerning the future that we actually have a purpose, a call, a work
to be done when the preparation and perfecting work is completed.
We mature into our purpose in God. We
are a new creature in Christ that is revealed in time by the
transforming process of our personality. As the Spirit brings
foresight, we begin to understand what God intends to do,
where He intends to do it, and why He desires to do it
there.
We develop in the areas where we focus
our attention. Those who focus on the past without receiving
hindsight from the Spirit only see the historical Jesus.
Without the hindsight of the Spirit, they fail to have any
insight into the mystery of His person, the importance of His
redemptive act, the establishment of a living temple, and the
priesthood of the believer.
Then, there are those who only focus on
the current application of the Word. Their constant search for
insight with relevant application without proper hindsight
or foresight distorts God's overall purpose in our lives.
They become confused and frustrated by limiting themselves to a one
or two dimensional view of spiritual reality.
Those who only focus on the past or the
present are usually those that have no direction. They are not going
anywhere because they are spiritually sated with the present or past
Word and have no room left for a foresight word. As parents,
we don't let our children eat a bunch of snack food just prior to
mealtime because we don't want them to be full when the meal is
ready. Why? Because the children need the balanced nutrition that
comes from the meal and not just the empty calories that come from
the snacks. This is true spiritually also. Look at how the
Scriptures describe this condition.
My son, eat honey,
for it is good, Yes, the honey from the comb is sweet to your taste;
(Proverbs 24:13 NASB)
Have you found
honey? Eat only
what you need, That you not have it in excess and vomit it.
(Proverbs 25:16 NASB)
A sated man
loathes honey, But to a famished man any bitter thing is sweet.
(Proverbs 27:7 NASB)
In my case, I can substitute “Blue
Bell Ice Cream” for “honey” in these proverbs and
they make a big impact. I can't live my life with only ice cream to
eat, even though I love the stuff. At some point, I have eaten all
that I can eat, any more would result in vomiting. Of course, by
this point, I don't want anything else to eat either. I am
sated on ice cream.
Spiritually this can happen to both
individuals and congregations. They become sated and overly
satisfied with teachings that focus on hindsight and insight
and have no desire for any words that bring any foresight.
The resulting problem is a lack of direction.
Because God's Word is Eternal and
spiritual reality is Eternal, the Word is equally applicable to us in
the past, present, and the future. Our understanding of the Word
proceeds from hindsight though insight and into
foresight for full expression. It is foresight that
brings the proceeding word that gives direction. We
desperately need marching orders, a proceeding word.
The moment that we receive direction
from a proceeding word, there comes dissension, conflict, division,
and differences of opinion. Our previous sated state provided unity,
cohesion, financial stability, and a good reputation with others.
However, a proceeding word requires change and nobody likes that.
We become very frustrated and
dissatisfied without a proceeding word. We don't know where we are
going nor what we are doing. We can't seem to “get a word”.
The Scriptures tell us that there are occasions where “And
word from the LORD [direction] was rare in those days, visions were
infrequent.”6
Many quote the verse, “Where there is no vision, the people
are unrestrained [perish]”7,
but what they mean by this is “where we have no project, the
people have no desire to give”. Every pastor knows that he has
to keep something continually before the congregation in order to
maintain the finances and commitments of the people. This may be a
bigger building, new fellowship hall, a change in decor, another
church program, or something similar. But, are any of these a
“proceeding word from the Lord”?
We have many real apostles and prophets
wandering through the Body of Christ and bringing forth a true
proceeding word. We also have many false apostles and prophets
traveling with false words that derail God's plans for individuals
and congregations. The Scriptures tell us that the sons of Issachar
were “men who understood the times, with knowledge of what
Israel should do”.8
Men with foresight are rare. We need them and we need to hear and
implement their proceeding word.
Biblical Christianity is linear; it has
a beginning, a middle and proceeds to a known end. Christianity is
linear because God also is linear, proceeding toward His stated
purpose or intention. All foresight oriented prophets stand in the
middle of the same prophetic stream in which all previous prophets
stood, because the word in Eternity is the same and is progressively
expressed in time. Any prophetically spoken foresight word that is
in conflict with hindsight and insight becomes suspicious and needs
to be evaluated carefully.
Hindsight is clearly understood through
historical events, which have already been accomplished. It is a
fact that Jesus was the Son of God, born of a virgin, led a sinless
human life of obedience, died a vicarious death on the cross, and was
resurrected on the third day. That all of this was done for us
is insight or revelation. It is the Lord's intended purpose that
each believer experience insight to discover and fulfill His plan for
him. Without insight, it is possible to miss the Lord's plan and
purpose for our lives. We will perish individually and corporately
if we do not have a proceeding word in our hearts.
Many of the current proceeding words
coming forth in the Body deal with the Kingdom of God. Some of these
are clearer than others. Some have been refined and purified. Some
are false, manipulative and deceptive. We need insight into
these words and hindsight into their scriptural roots.
Insight is important because the
Kingdom of God and the Church are not the same thing. The Kingdom is
the “Father's business” and Kingdom work relates to the
Father's stated purposes and intentions as revealed by Jesus Christ.
The Church is “Jesus' business” and Church work relates
to the chores of maintaining the family of God.
So then you are no
longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the
saints, and are of God's household, (Ephesians
2:19 NASB)
This verse describes our dual
status—citizens and family members. A “citizen's”
responsibility toward society is different than a family member's
responsibility toward his family. We learn to be good citizens by
being good family members.
The Gospel that we should be preaching
is the Gospel of the Kingdom, not the gospel of the Church.9
Signs and wonders follow the word of the Kingdom not the Church. We
need proceeding words in this area! Have we become so sated
on the Church word that we are not hungry for the Kingdom word? We
need to repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand.
Now after John had been taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and saying, "The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel." (Mark 1:14-15 NASB)
FOOTNOTES
1Colossians 1:16
2Revelation 19:10
3Ephesians 2:21-22
4II Corinthians 5:19
5II Corinthians 3:18
6I Samuel 3:1
7Proverbs 29:18
8I Chronicles 12:32
9Matthew 4:23, 9:35, 24:14; Luke 16:16
© 2006 Art Nelson www.lifestreamteaching.com