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Pulling Back the Curtain: God As He Longs For You to See Him

  • Chip Ingram
  • Published Jun 14, 2006
Pulling Back the Curtain: God As He Longs For You to See Him

“What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.”  —A. W. Tozer

I was frustrated, but I wasn’t quite sure why. I had taught God’s Word for over 20 years on college campuses, at schools, and in local churches, and I had never had this problem before. My mind simply wasn’t “clicking.”

The thoughts weren’t coming like they used to. I found myself stopping to reread my notes silently to get back into the flow of my message. My pregnant pauses were no longer to give my listeners time to reflect; they were to give me time to look at my notes and make my point.

Had I lost my gift? Was I in the beginning stages of a mental disease? I anxiously pondered all the possibilities.

Months later, while preaching on a very technical passage, I was quoting an old commentary written in extremely small print. I took my reading glasses to the pulpit with me so I could read the selection. After quoting the commentary, I glanced down at my notes. Eureka! My problem was nothing more than an inability to see my own notes clearly.

I had no idea how bad my vision was until I saw my notes clearly through my reading glasses. My mental lapses came because I was busy trying to see, not having difficulty thinking.

That’s what happens to all of us in our perception of God. When we don’t see Him with 20/20 vision, it distorts every other area of our lives. The problem is that we usually don’t know how bad our eyesight is until we see how good it can be.

Everything in our life consciously or unconsciously comes back to one thing: who do we visualize God to be in our heart? That’s the most foundational aspect of discipleship. That determines who we are and what we become.

God longs for the distance between us and Him to be bridged with intimacy. He already sees us clearly; He wants us to see Him clearly too. Throughout the Bible, God sought this kind of relationship with His people passionately.

Can we really see God just as He is?
Can we really pull back the curtain and the shroud of mystery and say, “I’ve seen all of God?” Yes and no.  Yes, we can know God truly; but no, we cannot know Him exhaustively. Let me explain.

The “no” part is easy to demonstrate. In Exodus 33:18-20, Moses said: “Now show me your glory.” Translation? “Lord, I want to see all that you are.” Notice God’s response to Moses’ request : “And the LORD said, ‘I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the LORD, in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion. But,’ he said, ‘you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live.’ ”

So can you see all of God exhaustively? Not if you want to stay alive. You can, however, see Him to the degree He reveals Himself to you, which is as much as any of us can handle. You can receive genuine, compelling, and accurate knowledge of God.

God deeply longs for us to see Him. John 4:24 tells us that the Father is actually seeking and pursuing people to be His worshipers.

Much of the dialogue from the Last Supper in John 14 has to do with the way God has revealed Himself in Jesus. Philip finally asked Jesus point-blank, “Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us” (John 14:8). You can sense Jesus’ frustration as He answered: “Don’t you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you for such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’?” (John 14:9).

His answer is clear. You can know God. Jesus is the fullness of deity in bodily form. What you know of Him can be 100 percent accurate. Because of who He is, you can never know all of Him. But all you need to know of Him is in the person of Christ.

What must we do to see God?
How does someone see God? The transformation that occurs in salvation is where it starts, but it doesn’t end there. The best answer to the “what must I do” question is two words: seek Him. God promised through Jeremiah: “You will seek me and find me [and be able to see me],” says God, “when you seek me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13).

Seeing God is not a laid-back spectator sport. It will require everything in your being, your heart, and your emotions. Your life must say to God, “I want to see you. I long to know you.” But God promises you will find Him if you seek Him. He also promises to give you the Spirit you need in order to know Him, if you ask.

So are you asking? Are you seeking? Are you knocking? Are you praying, “God, I really want to know you?”

No one can take for you the steps you’ll need to take to see God more clearly. You will discover Him because you dug and you cried out. True knowledge of God only comes firsthand. Another person’s best description of God will never compare to knowing Him personally in all His grace and glory. And the amazing fact is that God longs for you to see Him exactly that way.

I’d like to ask you to stop for three minutes, shut your eyes, and think about who God is and what He’s like. Give your heart, soul, and mind an opportunity to consider who made you, who loves you, and who yearns to be seen clearly by you. At the end of the time, talk to Him. Ask Him to reveal Himself to you like never before.


Continue exploring the attributes of God individually or as a group with God As He Longs for You to See Him available by clicking here.

Chip Ingram is President of Walk Thru the Bible in Atlanta, GA.  Walk Thru the Bible (www.walkthru.org) provides you with practical, insightful and topical Biblical resources.  We help you to apply God’s Word to your life and equip you to grow spiritually providing local, national and international catalyst events, the Living on the Edge radio ministry, as well as small group curriculum, devotional magazines, books and Bibles.