I Wish God Would Just Appear to Me

by Joe Leavell

Photo by Raphael Brasileiro from Pexels

Many people that I’ve talked to and counseled with through the years have struggled with their faith in a God that they cannot see with their own eyes. They have often expressed their desire for God to physically appear to them. They believe that obedience would be so much easier if they could see Him. When their faith is made sight, that would make holiness much easier.

I understand that unbelievers also use the desire for God to appear to them as an excuse for unbelief. As long as they can cast doubt upon God’s existence, they do not believe they owe Him any worship or allegiance. To unbelievers, let me just say that God is not simply interested in showing up on your doorstep to satisfy the question of His existence. He knows He exists and He knows that you inherently recognize it in your heart of hearts as well. He owes us nothing and is not interested in proving a moot point. He is interested in you turning from your sin to faith in Christ, so that you can be reconciled to God. 

He is not as interested in satisfying your curiosity as He is in satisfying your soul.

Why Can’t I See Him?

Consider a thought with me for a moment. Because of our rebellion, no one can see God in all of His glory and live. It’s kind of like how staring at the sun will kill your eyes. It’s not that there’s anything wrong with the Sun, it’s just that our eyes are not able to handle its brilliance.

God expressed this to Moses in Exodus 33 when he asked to see God’s glory. God allowed him to see even just a shadow of His glory and the reflection shined so radiantly on Moses’ face that he had to wear a veil to keep from scaring all the people who saw him. To bask in His glory would mean instant death to our mortal bodies.

In this way, if you think about it, not being able to bear the presence of our Holy God is a consequence of our sin, but also an act of His mercy. Humanity’s sinfulness separates us from Him. He knows the power of His glory, and in His mercy does not want to destroy us by revealing Himself to us in a way that would destroy us.

This is one of several reasons why you cannot see God. It is not that He is being cruel to demand faith in someone we cannot see. The reality is that we cannot experience His glorious presence because of our fall. 

Though He is Spirit, Scripture says God Himself once walked side by side with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. Because of man’s sin, that companionship was shattered, and God could no longer reveal Himself to us in the same way that was once enjoyed. The beautiful fellowship man once shared with God was utterly broken in the Garden of Eden.

However, even in our fallen state, God has been gracious to us in revealing His existence to us. For one, Romans 1:20 tells us that even His eternal Godhood is easily seen through His creation. Through ancient history, God also revealed Himself to us through prophets who wrote the Scriptures. But His revelation of Himself to us was not complete. For us to be reunited with Him in the presence of His glory, He would have to veil His splendor by taking on human flesh and dying for our sin.

God Did Appear…and we crucified Him

In taking on human flesh, Jesus veiled His own deity and glory so that we could experience His presence. In sacrificing that body on the cross, and then rising again from the dead, Jesus rescued those who believe in Him from their rebellious sinfulness and gave peace and fellowship with God. 

Through Christ, one day believers will be made incorruptible and will able to kneel before Him in all of His majesty and splendor and not be consumed. 

Scripture teaches that the only way for us to have access to the God of eternal glory is through His Son, Jesus Christ.

I Still Really Want To See Him

I get it. I want to see God too. I desire more than anything else to physically worship at the feet of Jesus. Frankly, I totally get how much simpler it would be to obey and to have faith in someone whose glory you can verify with your senses. I want to see the scars on His hands and His feet, and forever praise Him for redeeming me from my sin. Today would sure be nice!

Beyond even our obedience, I really do think it is right to have that yearning to see our God face to face. There is a difference between simply satisfying our curiosity and longing for the One we love! For the believer who has a taste of His goodness and mercy, there really is a longing in our hearts to enjoy His glorious presence forever.

That longing is a yearning for the fellowship with God for which we were created in the first place. That is a very good thing. But please understand, dear believer, that God is not being mean to those who have placed their trust in Him by not physically revealing Himself to us. It is that we cannot stand before His glory in these mortal bodies that are tainted by sin.

We Will See Him Soon

Jesus will come again, but that day has not yet come to pass. One of the primary reasons why He has not yet returned is because of His grace to the lost. His desire is for them to come to Christ and He is being very patient, and so must we be as well (2 Peter 3:9).

While we wait for His coming, He did not leave us on our own but rather God has poured out His Spirit on all believers. He takes up His residence within us, which Jesus said is even better for us at this moment than His physical presence (John 16:7). He has also given us God’s Word, which reveals Himself and His will to us. He has also given us other believers to encourage us and teach us. These are God’s gifts to those of us who have faith in Christ. This, Peter says in 2 Peter 1:3, is sufficient for us to live the God honoring lives that He desires us to live.

We are Seen

Whether we can sense it or not, it is an act of faith to believe what Scripture teaches us. Even though we cannot see Him, God is always present, and He is always near.

In this way, Jesus told Thomas who insisted on seeing Jesus alive before believing, that there is actually a blessing for those of us who believe without seeing (John 20:29).

Did you catch that?

Even though we cannot see God, believers can be confident that He sees us. There is never a day when He is not near, where we are unseen, unknown, or unloved.

Do you believe it?

We really will see Jesus face to face! 

The day is coming, dear believer! Whether it is upon the closing of our eyes in death, or at His return to earth as King of Kings, we will physically see our King of Kings and spend eternity  praising Him for who He is and what He has done for us.

While we wait:

Trust Him.

Love Him.

Obey Him.

Rest in Him.

Patiently wait for Him.

Groan for Him.

He is coming soon.

 
Previous
Previous

Secure in God’s Love

Next
Next

God’s Steadfast Love Endures Forever (A Meditation on Psalm 136)