THE GLORY REALM
The Glory Realm
Ringing in my ears are the words of multiple prophets saying get ready, the world is going to change fast and so is the church. Some share it from a more positive standpoint, others less so. The first kind cause me to anticipate what is coming, the second make me nervous. I don’t always like to think or know what the future holds from a natural standpoint; particularly when its not pleasant and I can’t change it. What if I knew I would be in the middle of a disaster tomorrow? What would I do differently?
Who expected their kitchen, living room, bedrooms to be flooded in Nashville? If they had, how would they have responded? Would it have helped to know? What could they have done to prepare—pile up sandbags around their homes, move to a neighboring town or city? What about Haiti, Chile, China—nations whose people have experienced devastating earthquakes? Homes are sitting in a pile of rubble, hopes are dashed, devastation remains and corresponding disasters mount up.
Will you and I be immune? Will something strike the base, the security of our existence, our home, family, neighbors, friends, job—our future?
The other day I was reading Paul’s words to the Philippians. He said something very provoking. First of all he expressed that he was confident that God, who had begun to work in them would finish it, complete it, keep at it until it was done—until they were either dead or Jesus had returned. (Phil 1:6) I had not remembered that this confidence, this great encouragement was being sent to the people while he himself was imprisoned.
Paul went on to say: “It is right for me to feel this way about all of you, since I have you in my heart; for whether I am in chains or defending and confirming the gospel, all of you share in God’s grace with me. God can testify how I long for all of you with the affection of Christ Jesus.” (Phil 1:7-8)
Here is Paul in this seemingly God forsaken situation, yet he was filled with the very presence and heart of God, speaking encouragingly to the Philippians. He was in prison, there was the possibility he could die. Yet later on in that same chapter, Paul said, “Yes, and I will continue to rejoice, for I know that through your prayers and the help given by the Spirit of Jesus Christ, what has happened to me will turn out for my deliverance. I eagerly expect and hope that I will in no way be ashamed, but will have sufficient courage so that now as always Christ will be exalted in my body, whether by life or by death. For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain.” (Phil 1:18-21 NIV)
Paul wasn’t pontificating. We can only do that when we are not in the midst of a dark, dirty, bug and rat infested prison. I can get “carried away in grandeur” when I imagine how I would respond in such situations; yet in reality I am lying on a beach chair imagining such things while listening to the waves hypnotically wash up on the sand.
In reality, I have lived in the midst of devastating circumstances and I could only come to say what Paul said for two reasons.
The first is that I knew God and trusted Him. When you know someone, you either trust them or you don’t based on real life experience with them. Trust is built, it doesn’t suddenly appear. It is different than faith. Yet faith rests on trust.
In other words, I trusted that my situation was well known to God and it was His absolute best for me at that point in my history. I didn’t say it was like a vacation in Bali, or the Islands. It was God’s absolute best for me because of what He was working in me. I had that perspective because I trusted Him. There was purpose and intention in it. I was not a victim of the chance clashing of interplanetary astrological signs. My life and all of its details including each day are written in God’s scheduling book. He knew I was there, He knew before I got there I would be there.
Second, I knew God loved me. When I doubt someone loves me and my life experience with them becomes difficult, I begin to believe they do not have my best in mind. In fact I become suspicious that they may just not care at all and worse, are trying to do me in. Yet if I have confidence in their love for me, the way with them can get extremely difficult but I stick it out. I know that something greater is going to emerge out of the current challenge.
Paul was in prison, yet he was encouraging the Philippians. Someone fundamentally different determined Paul’s response. How can you do that when you are in the midst of a flood in Nashville, TN; or an oil spill on the Gulf Coast; or an earthquake or tornado aftermath? At the end of this book, Paul spells it out. He had learned to be content no matter what his circumstances were. Note that he didn’t say it was an impartation that suddenly he came into, it was something he learned.
Not that I was ever in need, for I have learned how to be content with whatever I have. I know how to live on almost nothing or with everything. I have learned the secret of living in every situation, whether it is with a full stomach or empty, with plenty or little. For I can do everything through Christ who gives me strength. (Phil 4:11-14 New Living Translation)
Learning is a process and involves a particular type of education that enhances our lives in some way. Here Paul is referring to spiritual understanding that comes through living a life of knowing God both in the highs of life and its lows. Paul KNEW God, he had intimate knowledge of and experience with Him that created an attitude of trust and confidence in being loved.
So Paul became consistent in his life, not believing one day and doubting the next depending on circumstances, but reliable, steady, dependable, constant, unswerving. Why? He had learned He could do anything, go through anything, survive anything that came His way because of Christ within Him giving Him strength.
Paul also said, “Christ in us the hope of glory!” Our lives are about more than miracles, than flashes in the plan. Your life, my life is about a glory being released in us and through us. It’s about the glory realm. In the Greek it means dignity, honor, praise, worship; its root word is to be of reputation. We are people who because Christ indwells us, lives in us; others are led to someone to something greater than us. There is a reputation of someone that is being heralded through our lives. It is as Paul said Christ Himself, that we become the very fragrance of Christ.
It’s in the midst of trouble that people find out who you and I really are. It’s in the midst of trouble that His glory is manifested. If not, then it is the next step in our educational process, learning a new lesson about who God really is when the chips are down. He will then work a new glory in us. At the end of the “new day,” I believe the bottom line is the manifestation of His glory in and through us. What are people saying about you and I? Do they see “the glory?”


While going through more and more difficult stuff as the months go by, the reality of God finishing the work He’s begun in us seems to be changing. What we expected that work to be is really for such a greater purpose. As we walk out this continual purging process, both in the natural and spiritual realms, then the glory has more room to reside. Our lives take on a deeper significance for a Kingdom purpose, as He takes us from glory to glory. You just have to wonder where it’s all going.
My dear Barbara my brother went to heaven January 12 and I went to the cementery and I was so sad he was a great man of God and I look to the sky and pray the Lord and I saw my brother there and He was with other person sitting over some clouds and he smiles at me with a sweet smile and I saw a clock that had 11:59 and I hear a voice that told me that the comming of Jesus is very soon and that we need to be prepared and the vision finish, so last week my mother had a dream and she saw my brother and he told her that we need to be ready because to my country is comming something terrible but God is going to protect us and also for the whole world so this confirm the Word that the Lord gave you we are in a season of changes and the church needs to wake up and be ready for Jesus comming, thank you Barbara for sharing with us all the blessings from our Lord Jesus Christ.
You wrote about how God’s miracles and healing is just as valid living in the day to day in God’s glory. Know what I think? – the catastrophic &/or traumatic events of life are experienced with His glory or without it. Without it, there is extreme anxiety which prevents us from trusting and having faith in what we know is true, congnitively. It is a belief system based on past anxiety/trauma that hasn’t been understood or worked THROUGH our system and has become stuck -being made something habitual which intercepts what we know is true thus creating a knee jerk reaction life and vision. It is fear.
Coping mechanisms can make or break us. True, miraculous, healing coping mindsets are based on Him that allows us to live day by day within His glory, whether the world is flooding, shaking, melting or rejoicing in riches, beauty and health. Isn’t this how we can be content with whatever we have; isn’t this the learning and education part you mentioned above? How can we be content and trust and have faith in God when even our physical bodies react in shaking and tremors of what we hear and see and experience; when we are needing money or have to be dependent on drugs or whatever to make it through? I don’t say this as a judgment! I am for whatever helps us, but the miraculous comes from being set free physically and emotionally of needing these things after awhile as the spirit part of us becomes the strongest. The miracle is that the stabilizing force of life is that we breath Whom we know. Doesn’t our physical and cognitive mind need to learn to cope by submitting to the spirit of man within us that is born unto Christ?
I am in such agreement with what you said! At this period of the world’s timetable, to me, miraculous signs would be us walking as Paul did, day by day, able to stay the course with and in and through the glory of God because our spirit man is ruling over our physical/soul being. Isn’t this what we are learning to do? ISN’T THIS THE GREATEST MIRACLE?
May our mindsets be healed from trauma and anxiety of the past and present by diminishing it’s message to us; by not allowing those thoughts to have prominent high places within us. May we speak the positive – the greatness of Who God is and who we are in Him. May we be able to say that we are healed from this addiction of anxious thought processes of traumatic experiences that steals our trust and faith in the One Who is able and willing to do all things through us. May we all be set free from the root of fear. May we then be able to walk in His glory and let the true miracle arise.
Thanks you for this good word! As i finished reading it a short vision playout in my mind. I saw that as people go through trials (fire) it creats pressure. As the fire increases, His fragrance is released as our flesh is crucified (burnt) from the fire. As we came out of the fire and the smoke cleared i saw that only the ones that had the spirit of God inside and trusted him, were left shining as pure gold. The others who went through the fire and didn’t have God were burnt up and nothing was left but ashes. So i hope that as we go through the fire that our gold shines so bright that it can be seen from afar! That’s what draws others to the kingdom! Are we really glowing with His glory? Thank you Father God, for i know it to be so. Glow-ry!!!!!!!! Help us to glow with your glow-ry!!!! Hallelujah!
Most people I know seem to think of “glory” as a bad word… As in, you don’t want to get caught up in that “glory” movement, do you? I think it’s the only thing worth getting caught up in. I guess, if I live, I live to the Lord, and if I die, I die to the Lord…. Hallelujah!
Amen to what Ben said-was thinking similar thoughts after skimming the post.