During my most challenging moments, I’ve yearned to hear Jesus’s voice, feel His comforting touch, and see His forgiving, tender gaze. As a child, I imagined finding solace in His warm embrace, a place of love, care, and reassurance in the presence of our benevolent God. This deeply personal connection with Jesus, which I believe is available to all, brings me profound comfort and reassurance, and I hope it does the same for you, offering a sense of peace and security in His presence.
The Scriptures vividly depicts what it was like to meet Jesus in person. We can picture sharing a meal with Him or sitting at His feet and absorbing His teachings. In the Gospels, we encounter the stories of fortunate individuals whose lives were profoundly changed by His words and His tender, loving, accepting nature, instilling a sense of connectedness, inspiration, and hope in us.
This book offers a glimpse into a vast subject. The author’s aspiration is that as God’s Love and Light embraces us, we acknowledge and express gratitude for the constant presence of the one Triune God, made real in God’s son, Jesus Christ. The narratives of those who have shared their journey with God are brimming with hope, inspiration, encouragement, gratitude, peace, joy, and praise. The book’s personal faith stories uplift and motivate us in our spiritual journeys, filling our hearts with hope and our spirits with inspiration.
As a believer, I am convinced of the existence of miracles. God, in His grace, presents us with signs of His presence, but it is our responsibility to discern them. While I accept the miracles recorded in the Bible as truth, I acknowledge that I don’t fully comprehend them. My mind is too small. It is not for me to question or understand God’s ways, for nothing is impossible for Him, as the Scriptures repeatedly affirms. (Luke 1:37. Matt. 19:26. Mark 10:27, Jeremiah 32:17).
Our entire Christian experience is a miracle, a wondrous display of God’s power transcending natural understanding. Our minds, limited as they are, cannot fully comprehend the magnitude of His works, but we can stand in awe of His divine interventions, as many contributors to this book have done.
“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,”
declares the Lord.
As the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:8-9, NIV)
God’s power is evident in our daily lives and in the world around us. Consider the precision with which God has set the changes of seasons in motion, the regularity of the tides, or the timing of a sunrise. Yet, He also reaches out to touch the lives of His children in countless and diverse ways, if only we are attentive enough to discern these blessings. Yes, He tests us, but only to foster our spiritual growth. There are countless, praiseworthy miracles of God, unnoticed daily by even the most discerning of His children.
Must we expect God to prove Himself? Who are we to expect God to step outside His created order? God guides us through His Word (which never changes) and through His interactions and the miracles of our daily lives. If we fail to notice these, what more do we expect of God? We must consider God’s fixed order in the universe. Without this, how can we ever have any stability in our lives? Doesn’t God order the laws of gravity perfectly, or do we think we could do better? Can we humans control such laws in a better way than God does? Yet we count on those laws for our existence. How can we make any plans if God is not in them? Doesn’t God reveal His ways and stay consistent with them? Our faith in God’s ways is our anchor, providing us with reassurance and security in a world of uncertainty.
God is not capricious in His dealings with humankind. He has clearly established His ways, and He is faithful to them. God has revealed His ways, and we are to walk in them. The question is, how does God work through human responsibilities? Our role in God’s plan is not passive but active and integral. The natural order of the universe brings about His way. Somehow, He works through fallen humanity and a less-than-perfect church, orchestrating human affairs in such a way as to guarantee the outcome of the ages. What impresses me is His timing and diversity of His benevolent actions and not so much His miraculous interventions–though they are fascinating to observe.
Notice how Jesus responded to those who insisted on a sign: “An evil and adulterous generation craved for a sign: and yet no sign shall be given to it, but the sign of Jonah the prophet.” (Matthew, 12:39). Satan (the force of evil) wanted a sign too. He said, “If You are the Son of God, throw Yourself down.” (Matthew 4:6). Jesus responded, “Do not put the Lord your God to the test.” (Verse 7, NIV). We must use the Scriptures to guide and guard us against Satan’s temptation to force the Lord to prove Himself.
No, God does not owe us any more proof, for He gave us the most precious gift of all, His Son, to live God’s truth out on this earth in sacrificial love to save us (John 3:16). It is better to prove ourselves to God than demand He prove Himself to us. He continues to offer His guidance and presence daily by showing us big and little miracles as we discern His presence. He has proven Himself to us, once for all time, by coming into our midst as the Redeemer Saviour.
We likely will be tested, not to harm us, but by our benevolent Father, to strengthen us spiritually, to give us faith in who He is, and to make us aware of His purpose to reconcile and forgive fallen humanity. By turning from ungodly ways and diligently presenting ourselves approved as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, we demonstrate that we are correctly handling the Word of truth. (2 Timothy 2: 15).
Let us be conscientious in using the gifts God has bestowed upon us, for they are experiences that can only be attributed to Him. This book, Embraced by God’s Love and Light, is a testament to these gifts, as many contributors have testified. Let us not just expect signs and miracles, but let us be proactive and fruitful, using our God-given gifts for His kingdom in all we say and do. In this way, we will honour and praise Him.
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