As we prepare for the 6:30pm Prayer Encounter at NRN this evening - my heart was drawn to this devotional from My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers:
Is Your Imagination Of God Starved?
Lift up your eyes on high, and behold who hath
created these things. — Isaiah 40:26
The people of God in Isaiah’s day had starved their
imagination by looking on the face of idols, and Isaiah made them look up at
the heavens, that is, he made them begin to use their imagination aright.
Nature to a saint is sacramental. If we are children of God, we have a
tremendous treasure in Nature. In every wind that blows, in every night and day
of the year, in every sign of the sky, in every blossoming and in every
withering of the earth, there is a real coming of God to us if we will simply
use our starved imagination to realize it.
The test of spiritual concentration is bringing the
imagination into captivity. Is your imagination looking on the face of an idol?
Is the idol yourself? Your work? Your conception of what a worker should be?
Your experience of salvation and sanctification? Then your imagination of God
is starved, and when you are up against difficulties you have no power, you can
only endure in darkness. If your imagination is starved, do not look back to
your own experience; it is God Whom you need. Go right out of yourself, away
from the face of your idols, away from everything that has been starving your
imagination. Rouse yourself, take the gibe that Isaiah gave the people, and
deliberately turn your imagination to God.
One of the reasons of stultification in prayer is that there
is no imagination, no power of putting ourselves deliberately before God. We
have to learn how to be broken bread and poured out wine on the line of
intercession more than on the line of personal contact. Imagination is the
power God gives a saint to posit himself out of himself into relationships he
never was in.
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