Over the past year or so, we have been exploring "night seasons" - what they
are, why God allows them, and what we are to do to get through them.
One of the important things that a "night season" does is highlight the
glibness of "religion." It reveals its hollowness and its emptiness.
A "dark night" causes the breakdown of order and schemes. In the darkness,
there are no guidelines and no maps to follow. No religious experience
will ever get us through this time. If we want all of Jesus, then we must
be prepared to let all of our "religious" thoughts and traditions go.
Most religions concentrate on our souls or our outward man. Very few
religious systems deal with the inward man or our spirit. Christianity is
the one exception. Jesus tells us that the kingdom of God is within us -
in our inward man. (Luke 17:21) Therefore, the further inward we turn
towards God in our spirit, not only are we moving towards intimacy with Him, we
are also moving away from soulish things or outward things.
Man's spirit was once "head" over the whole man. But because of Adam's
fall, our soul and spirit became intermingled, with our soul being the dominant
force. Thus, when our soul becomes defiled because of our emotional
choices, it also defiles our spirit and causes all communication, leading and
guiding from the Holy Spirit to be stopped. (1 Thessalonians 5:19)
All communication with God occurs in our spirit, because this is the place
where "He meets with us," and this is the place where He dwells. (John
14:23) Thus, when our spirit is cleansed and purified, we are able to
communicate and fellowship directly with Him.
God's will is that we glorify Him, not only outwardly in our bodies, but also
inwardly in our spirit. (1 Corinthians 6:20) In order for this to occur,
however, we must first understand what our spirit is, how it can be freed from
the domination of our soul and what we can do to help speed up this process.
What Is Our Spirit?
Romans 8:16 tells us very clearly that we do have a human spirit. "The
Spirit Itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of
God." Therefore, as the "children of God," God's Spirit will always lead
us and guide us through our human spirit.
Our spirit is like the power source, the energy source or the light source of
our lives. It's analogous to a generator or the electric power facility in
a huge building. Without its energy and power, nothing in the
building will work. There will be no light. It's the same with our
spirit. Our spirit is the life-giving power that makes us alive, that
quickens and gives us life. (Ezekiel 37:5) It's removal means death.
(Psalm 104:29)
God gave us a body to interact and be conscious of the world and others
around us; He gave us a soul that we might be conscious of ourselves, our own
thoughts, emotions and desires; and He gave us a spirit so we could communicate
and fellowship with God and be conscious of His will. In other words, our
spirit is our "link" to God.
What Happened at Our New Birth?
When we ask Jesus Christ to come into our lives and become our Savior and
Lord, God gives us the gift of the Holy Spirit. In Acts 2:38, He says,
"Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the Name of Jesus Christ for the
remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."
This is the time that God's Spirit unites with our human spirit and becomes a
brand-new spirit (alive, quickened and regenerated). In other words, the
electricity is "turned on" by the Master Transformer. God's Spirit uses
our human spirit like a carrier or a transport to help implement the process of
sanctification and to restore spiritual communication in our lives.
The process of sanctification is simply the process of restoring our spirit
to its rightful place, as director of our souls. This restoration is
crucially important because until our soul is completely submitted to our
spirit, our communication with the Lord will be hindered.
Our biggest difficulty, then, is that our spirit needs to be untangled from
our soul and enabled to break free from its influence and rule. God's will is
that our regenerate spirit becomes stronger and stronger, so that it can work
alongside of God's Spirit to control and govern our soul. Then, the tables
will be turned and our spirit can, once again, become the uniting factor between
our souls and our bodies. Our spirit will be able to operate outwardly
through our soul and communicate with the world, and it will be able to operate
inwardly towards God and commune with Him.
In order for our spirit to freely lead and guide us, however, the sensory
part of our soul must be weakened, crucified and annihilated. In other
words, our soul needs to be brought through the death of its own ability; i.e.,
a night season.
Thus, a true spiritual Christian is one in whom the spirit rules, not the
soul; whereas, a carnal Christian is one who chooses to follow his own will and
desires (his flesh) over what God is trying to say through his spirit.
What Are the Functions of Our Spirit?
Our spirit - the place where we communicate with God - has three main
functions or operations: our conscience, our intuition, and our communion.
Briefly, our conscience is the place where God teaches us and speaks to
us. This is where He lets us know what is right and what is wrong and what
His individual will is. Our intuition is where God leads and guides us,
where we can develop true intimate knowledge of Him and where we experience His
revelation and His anointing. The third function of our spirit is where we
fellowship and commune with God. This is where we worship the Lord in
spirit and truth. (John 4:23)
Let's explore these functions of our spirit in detail.
Conscience
All three functions of our spirit are very closely related, so each one
builds upon the other. A pure conscience leads to an undefiled intuition
and ultimately to open communion and fellowship with God.
Our conscience is like the inner voice of God. This is where God
corrects and protects us. (John 8:9) This is also where the Holy Spirit
reveals God's will to us. Our conscience is like God's inward
monitor or teacher. It renders us uneasy when we don't choose to
follow His will and gives us peace when we do.
Our conscience reprimands us, reproves us, corrects us and approves us.
It is designed to govern our lives and, by doing so, constantly show us what
God's will is.
Someone once said, "It's more important to be afraid of one reproach from our
conscience than it is from all the condemnation of men in the world."
I do not believe it's God's will, however, to make some sort of a "blanket"
or "general" confession by acknowledging all of our sins and all of our
self-centered ways in some vague manner, only to return to these same ways
shortly thereafter. This is not what cleanses our conscience.
We need to let the Holy Spirit daily, moment by moment, reprove and convict
us of specific things that are "not of faith," and then be ready to
confess and repent of these very things.
An Example: Toni
I co-hosted several seminars with a woman speaker who lived a very
self-centered life. She treated others very badly; she never read her
Bible or prayed, except when she was going to give a speech, be on the radio or
do a TV show. Just before these events, she would publicly pray and very
generally confess all her sins. Right after she spoke, however, she
immediately went back to her old hedonistic and self-oriented life-style.
This used to really bother me because I knew it wasn't right and it always
struck me as being so phony. I'm not so uptight about it anymore, however,
because I realized that "God is never mocked." He knows exactly what is
going on. He knows our "hearts" behind our words. Consequently, I
believe, in His timing and in His way, the truth will come out.
But how many of us do the very same thing? We go as long as we can
without confronting our sin and our self, but when we really need God, we
quickly confess and repent of all the things we can think of, get what we want
from God, and then go right back to the same old life-style. God's will is
that we daily and specifically confess and repent of our sins and
self-centeredness, and truly turn around from doing these things again.
Then, we can enjoy the intimacy that God has prepared for us and receive even
more illumination from Him.
Our conscience is like the window to our soul. If we allow Him to,
God's light will shine brightly through this window, exposing our faults.
If we heed what He shows us, that light will shine even brighter next
time. If we don't obey God, our conscience will be corrupted and our
window clouded. After quenching His Spirit over and over again, pretty
soon we won't be able to see God's heavenly light at all.
Thus, maturity in Christ can simply be measured by our responsiveness to our
conscience. A good conscience enables us to receive God's promises, walk
by His Spirit and enter His presence. An evil conscience leads us to a
lack of faith, being guilt-ridden and walking by the flesh.
Intuition
The next function of our spirit is our intuition. Intuition is the
attaining of direct knowledge, perception or conviction beyond the means of
reason alone. Our intuition and our conscience work closely
together. A pure conscience leads to a keen intuition. In other
words, we can't have discernment if we have a defiled conscience.
Intuition is simply "spiritual sensing" or spiritual discernment. This
is very different from following our own natural instinct or our soulish
emotional feelings. Spiritual intuition is adhering to what the voice of
the Spirit is saying, as this is how we receive God's instructions. (1
Corinthians 2:11)
An Example: Trish
A precious friend of mine was a missionary in New Zealand (8000 miles
away). One morning two summers ago while she was in church, God impressed
upon her that I was in "great need." She immediately wrote me a letter
expressing her concern:
"So, sister, what is going on in your life? Seems like the Lord has
given me a heavy burden on my heart for you. I know these are not my own
thoughts. When the Lord spoke to me this morning, I heard three words: lonely,
hurting and uplifted. I wrote them on my pad during the sermon. I
truly was trying to listen, but it seems the Holy Spirit was having His own
agenda with me.
"Even though we are 8000 miles apart, I feel very close to you right now and
I am writing this letter from my heart, not my head. I know how we can be
in the midst of millions of people and yet, still hurt. I know you know
all this, but I just want you to picture Jesus always being there with you and
holding your hand. I don't know what is wrong, but I know you are hurting,
and I just want to uplift you...."
Our son Chip had died that very day.
Trish had no way of knowing this by natural means! Yet, she wrote to me
"as an extension of God's Love" almost to the very hour of his death.
Many Christians do not have this intuitive knowledge because they don't know
how to discern God's voice, and thus they don't know how to "walk after the
spirit." If we don't heed our spiritual intuition, then we'll
naturally go back to walking after the flesh and adhering to our own soulish
thoughts and emotions. To live and walk by the Spirit means to live and
walk according to our intuition.
A pure spirit will disclose an unmistakable discernment (Mark 2:8) and this
discernment is critical when fighting the enemy. The enemy can attack us
only through our outward man (our soul and body), through the motions of our
flesh. Therefore, if we are not sensitive and discerning of this vulnerability,
he will always find a "hole" to keep us his prisoners. Those who adhere to
the Spirit's leading, via their intuition, will be preserved from being deceived
in times of confusion.
God's discernment is absolutely crucial in everything we do.
Communion and Fellowship
In review then, our conscience is where God teaches us what His will is; our
intuition is where God leads and guides us and gives us supernatural discernment
and revelation. The third function of our spirit, however, our communion
and fellowship with God, is unique.
This operation of our spirit requires our participation. Teaching and
guiding (the first two functions of our spirit) are aspects of God's
communication to us; whereas, communion and fellowship (the last function of our
spirit) require our communication with God. In other words, there is a
response needed from us. Communion is a two-way relationship!
Communion is our fellowship and our communication with God.
In order to do this, however, we must possess a similar nature as the Lord, a
spiritual nature. Scripture tells us that God is Spirit and the only way
we can have intimacy and be able to fellowship with Him is through our
sanctified and purified spirit. Therefore, if our spirit has been quenched
because of sin or self, we won't be able to hear Him clearly and He certainly
won't be able to hear us. Lamentations 3:44 validates this, "Thou hast
covered Thyself with a cloud, that our prayer[s] should not pass through."
All of us attempt to communicate with God in a wide variety of ways.
Unfortunately, we often give our soulish thoughts and emotions first place
and overlook the most important way to fellowship with God, which is
through our spirit.
A truly spiritual man is one who has a cleansed and sprinkled conscience, a
sensitive and responsive intuition, and is continually praying and
fellowshipping with the Lord in the Spirit. Our conscience tells us what
is right and wrong, and our intuition leads and guides us - both of which lead
us to communion and fellowship with God.
Knowledge of God's will, followed by spiritual understanding and discernment
and a two-way fellowship, is a life that is both pleasing to God and one that
will bear much fruit.
* * *
To be continued next month: The Sanctification
of our Spirit. This article has been excerpted from Chuck and Nan's
Faith in the Night Seasons.