“Experiencing the Word” by Garris Elkins

by | Mar 27, 2012 | Church, Healing, Kingdom of God, Leadership, Revival, Word | 0 comments

Recently, I heard someone say how sad it was that some
Christians were seeking an experience from God instead of focusing solely on Scripture.  When I heard those words something didn’t set
right with me.  

This morning, as I read through 2 Peter, I came across that
section of chapter one where Peter said in 16, “We saw his majestic splendor with our own eyes.” Peter was
describing his experience on the Mount of Transfiguration. Peter went on to say,
“The voice from the majestic glory of God
said to him, ‘This is my dearly loved Son, who brings me great joy.’ We
ourselves heard that voice from heaven when we were with him on the holy
mountain.”

Many times we stop reading a sentence at the end of a
paragraph, like the one above, but Peter’s thought continues on into the next
paragraph with verse 19, “Because of that
experience, we have even greater confidence in the message proclaimed by the
prophets.”
  In other words, the
experience Peter had with a supernatural God on the Mount of Transfiguration released
a greater confidence in the message of God.

I have taught the Word a lot over the last 31 years.  Just doing some simple math, I have taught in
public church services a minimum of two times a week for those 31 years – that
works out to be well over 3,000 messages. 
This does not include all the extra times between the weekly church
services where I taught in other venues, like training seminars or conferences.  The final number could easily be over
4,000.  That’s a lot of speaking.

All the public teaching that takes place in the ministry
schedule of an average pastor may be part of what has created a suspicion in
some people’s minds about “experiences”. At times I think we forget what Paul
said in Ephesians 4 about equipping the saints to “do” the work of the ministry.  Doing is always experiential.

A friend of mine, who spent years ministering in Africa,
described to me what is called, “The God-Line.” In Western culture, where we
place a high value on our intellect and on our ability to understand and define
all that takes place around us, the God-Line is just below our head.  If we can’t understand it with our mind it is
suspect and must remain below the line. 
In the African culture, and most of the world not dominated by a Greek
way of thinking, the God-Line is above their heads.  In other words, all of life is
spiritual.  There is no separation
between teaching and experience.

When Jesus sent out The Seventy in Luke 10, He empowered
them to do the experiential part of life with Jesus.  He said to them, Heal the sick, and tell them, ‘The Kingdom of God is near you now.’”  These first disciples not only shared God’s
Word, but they expected some kind of experience with God to follow their
sharing.  An experience with God is where
people would see God’s Word come alive in their lives.

On the Day of Pentecost the Church was empowered to do
supernatural works that would end up being processed as an experience with God.
The early disciples got into a lot of trouble when they released these
supernatural experiences in the cities across the Middle East.  If what they believed had not become such
culturally disturbing experiences most of them would have died as old men and
women without experiencing the pain of martyrdom. An experience with God that
flows from the Word of God is both powerful and dangerous.

In the western world we have become really good in our
presentation of God’s Word.  We have
become skilled presenters. I am happy for that, but I think that in some cases we
might have driven our religious car out onto the theological highway and simply
parked it in the fast lane short of the destination called, “Experience.”  The Word without experience or encounter is
only a lecture.

When God created the heavens and the earth the elements had
an experience with God’s Word and became terra firma.  The formless, empty and dark places were
joined together and became something tangible, emerging as physical by-products
of God’s voice. When God uttered the words, “Let there be light”, some very
powerful interactions took place – and this was just with natural elements. Imagine
what happens when the Word of God is released into a human being?

Whether God’s Word is preached from a pulpit, or spoken
prophetically on a street corner, the very evidence that we are alive and human
is our response – we should have an experience when the Word enters our life.

Over the years, I have realized that God will expose some of
us to experiences that we might find uncomfortable  – experiences that are
outside our comfort zone or tradition. 
Have you ever wondered why this happens? 
I think I have part of the answer. 
God allows this to take place so He can work on the gate of our heart.

The heart-gate is that place within us that can hinder or
release our ability to experience more of God. 
Gates can swing open or shut. As the writer of Proverbs said in 4:23, “Guard
your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life.”

It is so easy to shut ourselves off from experiences because
we saw someone do something that put us off. 
We close the gate to our heart and then retreat into only what we can
manage with our intellect – above the God-Line. 
In the end, we begin to lessen in our impact in the world around us
because the experience of the Word is absent from the presentation of the Word.

When Peter was describing what he saw and experienced on the
Mount of Transfiguration that experience deepened his confidence in the message
that Jesus, and all who went before Him, had proclaimed.

As we study God’s Word, it is good to walk in the kind of
faith and obedience that will release those supernatural experiences that
affirm what we have studied. In the end, we will begin to walk in a balanced confidence
in His Word and with those experiences that confirm His Word.

Peter said something about “experiences” at the start of his
ministry, 30 years before he wrote his two epistles.  In Acts 2:22, as Peter was trying to explain
what had just happened on the Day of Pentecost, he said, “People of Israel, listen! God publicly endorsed Jesus the Nazarene by
doing powerful miracles, wonders and signs through him, as you well know.”
   Peter
was saying that, Jesus, the Word incarnate, was endorsed by God through the
release of supernatural experiences. I am thinking He wants to do the same
thing today.

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