In The Paths Of Revelation – 2
Apostle Grace Lubega
Matthew 13:52(KJV); Then said he unto them, Therefore every scribe which is instructed unto the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old.”
In the life of the spirit, no truth is new, however, revelation is.
What this means is that God has a way of getting the oldest truths and bringing out the newest revelations.
I have heard people who boast that they have read the Bible several times over and have combed it line for line, verse by verse and precept upon precept.
To them, that defines the extent of their knowledge of God and gives them the satisfaction that no more truth can be revealed from the Word.
But that ought not to be so, child of God.
Even a scripture that you have read a hundred times over is still capable of astounding you with the freshest revelation.
God wants to give you a 360-degree angle of every scripture.
When you think you have seen it from angle x, He wants to show it to you from angle y. When you think you have seen it from angle y, He wants to show it to you from angle z.
Read and study the Word in the expectation that God is eager to show you deeper perspectives, deeper insights and deeper revelations.
His great name be praised!
FURTHER STUDY: Ephesians 1:17-18, 1 Corinthians 2:10-11
GOLDEN NUGGET:
In the life of the spirit, no truth is new, however, revelation is.
PRAYER: My loving father, I thank you for your Word. I know that it is bottomless and I read and study it in this understanding. I humble myself to deeper teaching and instruction from the scriptures. I see what no man has seen and hear what no ear has heard because my spirit is yielded to the newness of revelation. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
Posted in: Phaneroo Devotion
Leave a Comment (0) →
Christians that are bold in spirit are men and women of the Presence.
A man perfected in the love of God is bold regardless of the circumstance he finds himself in.
You are the work of God.
Love does not dwell on the past.
The Greek Word for judgment in our theme scripture, ‘Krisis’ is translated to mean among other things, ‘condemnation.’
When you walk out of love, you will die.
Love begins with God.
In John 21:15-17, our Lord twice asked Peter whether Peter loved him. The word for love that the master used was ‘agapé.’ For each of those times, Peter said he loved him.
Throughout the gospel of John, the apostle calls himself, “the disciple whom Jesus loved.”
The Greek language has four different ways in which the word love is used: agapé, éros, phileo and storgé.
The world has several ideas about who Jesus Christ is. Some call Him a good man, a saint, a distant father they cannot embrace or a mystery.