Beholding Christ
Today’s blog post just says it all for me about beholding Christ. I wanted to share it here in its entirety. It is by
Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote, “Beauty is the battlefield where God and Satan contend for the hearts of men.” Beauty is powerful and persuasive. When it touches the heart, it brings perspective—it can even inspire the heart to courage. King David, when speaking of the pressures, the persecutions, and death threats he faced, said that despite it all, his heart was filled with confidence and courage. David’s courage was found in living a life of discovering and exploring the beauty of God (Psalm 27:1–4). That aim became the single greatest focus in David’s life, which was to know, see, and experience the glory of the beautiful God.
We live in a time of increasing tumult in the world. We see acts of terror, hear of rumors of wars, witness moral confusion in and outside the church as well as flash points of racial conflicts and anti-Semitism. There is also the distortion of God’s grace and false unity among monotheistic faiths. In many ways, we are living in similar days as the year of King Uzziah’s death (Isaiah 6:1). Uzziah’s death meant that Israel became vulnerable to military attack, economic decline, and moral confusion. Isaiah wrote that in that season he saw a vision of Jesus’ glory high and lifted up with angels around His throne declaring to each other the majestic splendor of His beauty (John 12:41). This is where we want to find ourselves in this hour—beholding Jesus’ beauty.
The Holy Spirit’s primary agenda is to establish the first commandment in the first place by revealing in us the beauty of Christ Jesus. The enemy’s strategy is to cause God’s people to grow sluggish (Hebrews 6:11–12). The greatest temptation under the growing spiritual, political, and moral pressure is the temptation to quit our wholehearted pursuit of Christ Jesus. The knowledge of God in Christ is the Father’s primary strategy to establishing the first commandment in the first place (John 17:26).
In the midst of the growing crisis, connecting our hearts with the beauty of Christ is essential. Because the revelation of Christ, intimacy with God is the Holy Spirit’s onramp to that which invigorates and exhilarates our spirit to grow in love for God. The knowledge of God releases might in our inner being that we might endure pressure. As the people of God, when our hearts are connected with the beauty of Christ, they will burn with a love that no waters or floods of socio-political, moral, or spiritual pressure could snuff out (Song of Solomon 8:7; Luke 24:32).
Christ is so remarkable, He is indescribable. It is the Father’s good pleasure to reveal His Son in us (Galatians 1:15–16). The Father greatly delights to speak in us and through us about His Son (Isaiah 42:1, Matthew 3:17). The Father is filled with infinite delight towards His Son. When we open our heart to God and His written Word and God the Father, through God the Spirit, reveals in us God the Son, I believe that this is a sure way to experience spiritual delights. Jesus is the Father’s final decree. The revelation of God’s beauty is our portion in this life. In the generation of the Lord’s return, the world will witness the greatest display of Jesus’ beauty, proclaimed by the Church, as He administrates the purposes of His Father in the world (Isaiah 4:2; 33:17).
The discovery of God’s beauty requires an intentional response to God’s beckoning. Paul told the church of Philippi that it involved forgetting the past—a daily reaching by saying yes to God’s ways and pressing onward in the midst of the mundane and pressures of life. This was Paul’s number one priority: to know the excellency of Christ (Philippians 3:8, 13). The beauty of God refers to the understanding of God’s personality (attributes), God’s power, and God’s purpose as found in the Word of God. We discover Jesus’ beauty through long and loving meditation on God’s Word. It will require an intentional setting of the heart and life to go after this. David said it was the overriding issue in his life. He declared:
One thing [primary thing] I have desired [strongly want] of the Lord, that will I seek [the effort to discover]: that I may dwell [lifestyle] in the house of the Lord all the days of my life [lifelong], to behold [meditate, worship] the beauty of the Lord [knowledge of God], and to inquire [search out] in His temple. (Psalm 27:4)
Our primary destiny in this life is to, in some measure, live exhilarated in the wonder of who Christ is as well as in fullness in the ages to come (Ephesians 2:7). Thomas Dubay wrote:
One step further, a long step beyond even the inexpressible heights of mystical prayer on earth: the beatific vision in glory. This direct seeing of the endlessly lovely Trinity face to face, and without any mediating concept or idea whatever, is eternally, absolutely unending. We shall never exhaust the wonder, the dazzlingly enthralling drinking of limitless Beauty. Indeed, “eye has not seen, nor ear heard nor can we even imagine what God has prepared for those who love him” (1 Corinthians 2:9). The reason is that he has prepared Himself, endless enthrallment. Heaven is eternal ecstasy. (The Evidential Power of Beauty [Ignatius Press, 1999], 44)
Stuart Greaves, Vice President, Global Prayer Division, IHOPKC
At the International House of Prayer, Stuart serves on the senior leadership team and gives oversight to the prayer division, which serves the Global Prayer Room (GPR). For 16 years, he has served on the NightWatch, the hours from midnight to 6am in the GPR. With a vision to see Christ revealed by the Holy Spirit to the depths of peoples’ hearts, Stuart travels nationally and internationally, teaching on the forerunner message, intercession, and the knowledge of God. He is married to Esther, his wife of 19 years, and resides in Kansas City.