“We were born to live in the realm of the supernatural – the realm of healings, prophetic utterances, angelic encounters, and the gifts of the Spirit. It should be the most natural thing for a Christian to live a supernatural lifestyle. If you feel dissatisfied with your Christian walk, it may be because you are missing this all-important element. Jesus didn’t only invite Peter to walk on the water (see Matt. 14-22-33). By inviting him to risk walking on the water, Jesus was inviting Peter into the realm He lived in all the time – the realm of the supernatural. And He welcomes us to live there as well. Jesus is looking at you just as He looked at Peter and He is saying, ‘Come.’ He is inviting you to live a supernatural lifestyle. Can you hear him calling?” (Banning Liebscher, Walking in the Supernatural, p.237).
Why do you think God wrote the biographies of so many men and women in scripture who had supernatural encounters with God, angels, the demonic, etc.? Think about it. The great majority of those who were walking in fellowship with God experienced dreams and visions, miraculous provision, miraculous deliverance from armies, fire, lions, and enemies of every sort. They experienced divine favor, divine encounters, prophetic words, unnatural boldness, supernatural strength, and angelic encounters. Just scan the Old and New Testaments and you will find these things in nearly every life that was attuned to God from Genesis to Revelation.
Children read those things and imagine themselves taking on Goliath, routing armies, healing blind men, blowing trumpets while the walls of a great city crumble, walking on water, and stilling the mouths of lions. It is not until we encounter adults that we discover that God put all those stories in scripture to show us what he would never do through us or for us but only to show us a multitude of exceptions to the rule rather than the rule. It seems that God put all those accounts of supernatural encounters in scripture to show us what we could never experience by faith rather than to show us the kinds of things that faith could draw from heaven in our own lives. It seems that God had men pen thousands of scriptures telling us how he used to interact with his people rather than telling how he wants to interact with us today.
I served in churches for 25 years that taught that God did all those things once upon a time, but doesn’t do them anymore. I’ve never met a person who had simply read the Bible, including the New Testament, who came to the conclusion that God used to do all that cool stuff but stopped doing it 2000 years ago. They simply assumed that since God did all that cool stuff throughout the pages of the Bible he must still do those things. We have to be taught that God doesn’t move in the supernatural because we would never conclude that from the natural reading of scripture.
However, I learned that God doesn’t move in the miraculous in our day so well that when I saw the supernatural works of God I didn’t recognize them. If I did see something out of the ordinary I discounted it or found a naturalistic explanation for it. If you think about that borders on blasphemy of the Spirit that Jesus spoke of when the Pharisees witnessed an undeniable miracle but then attributed the miracle to the work of Satan.
When we declare that God used to move in mighty and powerful ways on the earth on behalf of his people but that he no longer does so, the whole story begins to sound like a myth or a fairly tale – once upon a time a great and powerful king used to. No wonder people doubt the inspiration of scripture. However, those who grow up seeing and experiencing the supernatural moves of God have no problem believing biblical accounts. Satan has little fear of a God who no longer acts on behalf of his people through miracles and certainly has no fear of a church that only functions in the natural rather than living in the supernatural. “Christ” comes from the Greek word that means the “anointed one of God.” Jesus said that the Spirit of the sovereign Lord was upon him because he had anointed him to preach good news. To be anointed means to carry the Spirit of God and the supernatural power of God as well. Someone once pointed out that Satan released a spirit of anti-Christ not a spirit of anti-Jesus. He released a spirit of anti-anointing in a sense. Not anointing, no power; no power, no danger to the supernatural forces of darkness.
However, if you have the Holy Spirit living in you, you are anointed to live and move in the supernatural just as Christ did. You are invited to walk on water, still the storms, heal the sick and send demons fleeing. I am convinced that God gave us all the accounts of supernatural encounters in scripture because that is to be the rule for those who follow God, not the exception. To seek after a supernatural lifestyle is not a pursuit of sensationalism but rather the pursuit of the normal Christian life. It is high time that the church got after it. Be blessed today and ask Jesus to work in you and through you in supernatural ways. It is where he wants you to live.
Good word, Tom. The Last words in the Bible are not “The End!” Rather John tells us, “Revelation 22:21 The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all. Amen.” Many blessings!