Blue Jay said:
Questions:
Paul seems to be bragging about his spiritual experiences. You seem to be saying that to be a Christian we have to do the same.
I guess that means if we brag about our spiritual experiences and credit God for the words we speak, that is the spiritual reality you are talking about. I don't understand. It doesn't sound ethical to me. What am I missing?
BJ
There is a difference between bragging (e.g. I got something you don't got...), and sharing something one truly feels is special (and hopes others can feel the same way too). That is Paul's message.
I'm gonna tell you a story: At my kid brother's wedding, certain people in the wedding party are expected to speak, to offer advice, or roast, joke or what ever is supposed to be inspiring. Well all the groom's men got up, and did their thing, but for the strangest reason, I can't fathom to this day, everyone of them were somber even sob sessions (lamenting after the fact that the last kid was hitched, and really bringing the crowd down...at a wedding!?).
So, the oldest sibling (me), is the last to speak. What a miserable audience there was before me, and I'm not the jocular kind of guy normally. As I walked up to the microphone, I asked God quietly, to put His words and thoughts into my "speech"...
I looked around and suddenly got the idea of poking fun at myself (specifically, my own married life, all three of them). I started with an "Hmmm, well, me, giving you two advice...on marriage?...now that's an oxymoron..."
The entire hall fell out their chairs, busting a gut in laughter...and the one liners kept coming - from where, I have no clue.
For 30 minutes this kept going. Then as if on que (time's up), I stopped, and said "Congratulations". And that was it.
Our other brother, who is usually the comedian came up and asked me, "where did you learn to do that?" I looked him dead in the eyes and said simply, "It wasn't me, Patrick..."
His jaw dropped and he said "wow". He knew exactly what I meant. (my whole family is into God, if you know what I mean).
My point is that "spiritual experience isn't a feeling persee, but rather a "trust" that God will come through when we don't know what to say or do. That requires one to harbor no expectations on how or what or why things happen next, only that they are in God's hands (because we deliberately place it there), and what ever happens, the "trust", that it is for God's own glory, and the good of all concerned.
We become the willing "clay" for "The Potter" to mold and fashion...and once made, we carry out the "function", of what ever it is He's formed us for...
Anyway, that's my take.
v/r
Q