Dancing with the Invisible

Touch your nose or hold a friend’s hand. Run a blender or toast a slice of bread. Test the baby’s bathwater or hold her tight.

What we feel we know. That’s obvious. If we can reach out and touch it, then it is real. If we can’t, then we need to get a grip on reality. What we can’t touch is not real.

The world flies through space, yet it always circles the sun. Our tablets have no wires, yet we use them to watch TV. Our children live in another city, yet their absence breaks our heart.

What we feel we know, even if we can’t reach out and touch it. It doesn’t have to be something we see to affect how we feel and who we are.

We dance with the invisible every day.

Two wires look the same, yet one is filled with electricity. We make a phone call while driving down the road, and we speak with a friend halfway across the globe. We pray to God, and we feel reassured that he hears us.

We dance with the invisible every day.

We get a card, and we remember how much someone cares. We hold a hand, and we feel renewed. We watch our child sleeping, and love overwhelms us.

We dance with the invisible every day.

How can man say that there is no god, simply because we cannot see him? We dance with the invisible every day.

John 4:24 tells us that God is spirit, and we do not worship him in the flesh, but rather in the invisible; we dance with our invisible God every day.

When we trust in Jesus, we break all man’s rules, but in that trust, we reaffirm every single law of the invisible God.

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Excerpt of the Day

When Jesus comes to us, we must be ready to respond to him in the moment of his passing.

From Five Steps of Bethesda,  Posted 15 July 2015