The whole purpose of the "dark night of the soul and spirit" is to bring us
to an intimacy with our Lord that we have never before experienced.
Many wonder if it's even possible to intimately know the God of the universe.
They say, "Can we truly fellowship with Him moment by moment? Can we
really experience His presence?"
Well, the Bible says we can. And we must. Isaiah 5:13 tells us
that God's people will "go into captivity" if they don't know Him
intimately. "Captivity" simply means bondage. It means that the
soulish things in our lives will keep us captive and prevent us from
experiencing the full union with Christ that God desires. Hosea 4:6 goes
even further and warns us that if there is no intimacy, "we will be
destroyed."
If we're really honest with ourselves, many of us would have to admit that we
have no idea what it means to know God intimately. We have become
"born again," we know we are "positionally" united with Him and we have even
borne some fruit, but very few of us really have any clue as to what "intimate
knowledge of God" means. Very few of us really understand what it means to
dwell in His presence, or to experience the ecstasy of seeing Him.
Listen to what Alan Redpath says in his book Victorious Christian
Faith:
"I had known, believed and preached (about Christ) for many years... but I
had become more concerned about knowledge of faith than about knowledge of
God. To me God had become more of a theoretical and doctrinal figure, than
a saving, experiential companion."
And Ezekiel 33:31 states, "...they come unto Thee...they sit before Thee as
My people, and they hear Thy words, but they will not do them: for with
their mouth they show much love, but their heart goeth after their
covetousness."
We do the same. We talk about "intimacy" and many of us pray earnestly
for it and exhort others to it, but how many of us really have that daily,
personal, intimate union with God that the Bible talks about? How many of
us are willing to be stretched to that degree? How many of us are willing
to "off load" the baggage that prevents our knowing God to such a
degree?
Most of us know God by what we have read about Him and by what we have
been told about Him, but still it's an intellectual knowledge, and it lacks
spiritual experience. The Lord is not the most important thing in our
lives - our spouses, our children, our families, our relationships, our homes,
our jobs, our goals and our aspirations are! And this is the reason we are
faltering, failing and getting destroyed when our faith is tested to the
max. This is why we are crumbling in our night seasons.
As I look at the Church as a whole today, I grieve because most believers are
only experiencing a fraction of the fulness of God that the Bible
speaks about. As Oswald Chambers laments in his book Abandoned to
God (speaking about the Christians he knew at the time):
I knew no one who had what I wanted...but I [also] knew that if what I had
was all the Christianity there was, [then] the thing was a
fraud.
And he is so right. So many churches strive not for
intimacy with God, but rather for experience, power, prophecy and miracles; for
rituals and methods; for debates over doctrine; for the business of church
building and all the other soulish endeavors of intellectualism and
impressive preaching. These are some of the substitutes that we have
entangled ourselves in that have replaced our own personal, intimate
relationship with God. Consequently, many of us know about Christ and we
possess His Name (we have "beginning knowledge" of Him), but very few of us
really intimately know Him.
Therefore, because God loves us so much, He often takes matters into His own
hands and begins to allow situations in our lives that will put us on the
journey towards "intimacy" and towards experiencing His fulness. God
desires to commune and fellowship with us in the innermost part of our being
where He now dwells (John 14:23; Ephesians 3:17-19). He doesn't save us
only to show us how much He loves us; He saves us so that we can get to know Him
intimately and begin to return that love (Philippians 3:10).
Experiential Oneness with God
This deeper experiential merging of our spirit with God's is what the dark
night of the spirit is all about. Oneness with God in our spirit is the
climax of our relationship with Him. At this point, we not only have
positionally become one, but experientially become one (even if it's
just for a moment). This is the completion, the perfection and the fulness
of God that He has designed for every one of us. Everything on the
inside and on the outside has finally become Christ's.
As John 17 expresses it, "...That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, art
in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us...Father, I will
that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am, that
they may behold My glory, which Thou hast given Me... (verses 21, 24)."
An Example: Madame Guyon
Few people in history have attained the high degree of intimacy with the Lord
that Madame Guyon managed to reach and write about. This Godly lady,
who lived in the 1600s, was persecuted every step of her life and her
career. She was forsaken by all her friends and acquaintances, betrayed by
her family and even deserted by the Church. She was born and reared in the
Roman Catholic Church, yet she was tormented, afflicted, maltreated, abused and
imprisoned for years by the same. Her sole crime was that of supreme
devotion and unmeasured attachment to Christ. She loved Him with her whole
being.
As a solitary woman, it's amazing to see how she subverted all the machinery
of the kings, laughed to scorn the papal inquisition and silenced and confounded
the more learned religious establishment of the day. While she was
enjoying oneness with Christ, they were floundering in darkness. The only
dignitary that opened his heart to her and extended a hand was Archbishop
Fenelon. Over his objections, the Church imprisoned her for ten
years. Her punishment was to write out her view of Christianity.
They had intended to try her in court on these records. God,
however, had another plan. He used her writings to preserve her thoughts
and deeper experiences with Christ for posterity. Her writings were
subsequently put into many books - Experiencing the Depths of Jesus
Christ, Union with God, Final Steps in Christian
Maturity, and Song of the Bride, just to mention a few.
It was in Jeanne Guyon's books and St. John of the Cross's books that I first
heard the term "the dark night of the soul." Although I am neither a
Catholic nor a mystic, God used these precious saints to let me know that I was
not alone in what I was experiencing. Others before me had endured such a
"night season" and had come out even stronger and closer to the Lord because of
it.
Thus, whenever I think of someone who truly knew what it meant to be "one"
with Him and experience His fulness, Jeanne Guyon is the one who comes to my
mind. She shows us that no matter what our circumstances are, no matter
how we feel or what we think, we can still experience intimacy with Him.
An Analogy: The Act of Love
A perfect analogy of this oneness might be "the act of love" in a
marriage. In a marriage, women can make love with their husbands, enjoy it
and even bear children without ever having experienced the fulness, the
intimacy and the ecstasy of complete union with their loved one.
Positionally, yes, they are one with their husbands, but experientially they
don't have the slightest clue as to what it means to really become "one."
As I travel and teach across the country, I am constantly amazed at how many
wives come up to me and share this very thing. They love their husbands,
they are happy in their marriages and they have children, but they never
have really known the indescribable euphoria that occurs when two people
truly become one, not just physically, but also spiritually and
emotionally. All other thoughts, worries, pressures, circumstances are,
for a moment, set aside as two people are completed - body, soul and
spirit. God has designed the marriage act as a little bit of heaven here
on earth.
In like manner, with our union with Christ, we can be born again and possess
Christ's Life and His Spirit in our hearts, but not until we fully abandon
ourselves to Him will we ever experience the ecstasy that goes along
with full and complete union of our spirits. This kind of intimacy is what
real love is all about!
Throughout Scripture, marriage is used to symbolically represent our union
with God. This is one of God's "word pictures." It's a piece of life
that we can all understand and relate to. I believe God designed the
euphoria of the climax of the marriage act to be exactly what He desires our
intimacy with Him to be like. Only when we experience the union of our
spirit with God's, will our spiritual marriage with Him be completed or
perfected so that we are able to really know and understand the fulness of
Christ.
As Ephesians and Colossians exhorts us: "...know the Love of Christ, which
passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fulness of God
(Ephesians 3:19)." And that, "Christ [may be] all, and in all (Colossians
3:11)." At this point, we are united, fused and intermingled - just like a
piece of wood in a fire (John 17:21-26). We have become enveloped and
possessed by Him. Now, please don't misunderstand me. We never
experience this complete union of our spirits permanently. There will
always be more sin and self for us to deal with. Only Jesus could enjoy
permanent union with the Father because He was God. Full, eternal and
incorruptible union happens only when we reach heaven. But we can
begin to experience, in an ever-increasing depth, the completeness and the
fulness of Christ that Scripture talks about. If we deal with the
sin and self that God daily shows us, then we'll be able to experience His
presence more and more. Jesus tells us that this oneness, completion and
perfection (Hebrews 6:1) is the goal of our instruction.
Knowing God Intimately
In the Bible, there are two Greek words for the word "to know." They
are ginosko, which means "beginning knowledge," and oida,
which means "intimate, experiential knowledge." Intimacy means a constant,
continuous communion and fellowship with the Holy Spirit. It's
experiencing His leading, His guiding and His anointing continually.
Intimate knowledge of God is dwelling in His presence, no matter what our
circumstances and experiencing a peace and a joy that passes all human
understanding (Psalm 16:11).
Like Madame Guyon, once we have
come to experience the ecstasy and the euphoria that surrounds us when we abide
in the presence of Jesus, the God of the universe, nothing else matters in
life. As the Psalmist says, "His loving-kindness [becomes] better
than life (Ps 63:3)." Intimacy with God is truly the climax of our Christian
walk.
We are the ones, however, who determine the degree of
intimacy we will have with God. We can be as close to Him as we
choose to be. If we want intimacy, the question becomes, are we
willing to pay the price for it?
* * *
This article has been excerpted in part from
Chuck and Nan's
Faith
in the Night Seasons.