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Zone of Glory
Rev Albert Kang
Zone
of Glory
We should never mistake the glory of God for a mere
touch. Today, God wants to come and build a habitation in our lives and not just
for a mere visitation. God is hurt when we live as though we are still in the
time of the Old Testament. In those days, the Spirit of the Lord only came upon
God’s appointed leaders and particularly related to the nation of Israel. The
reason is that God was establishing a nation as a platform for Him to send His
Son, Jesus Christ. After the Book of Acts, we know that God has given us His
Holy Spirit. Today, we have the fullness of the Holy Spirit and we should live
and behave accordingly. We are no longer without the divine authority and
therefore we should apply this in our daily walk.
The Lord wants us to remain in His zone of glory.
That is where the Shekinah glory of God resides. When we sin against the
Lord, we have moved out of that zone of glory. Sin is acting independently of
God. Therefore we are no longer under God’s jurisdiction and we become fair
game to the devil. Whenever we do not sense the Shepherd then it is we who have
gone astray. When we cry to God, “Where are you?” God will ask, “Who move
out of my zone of glory?” We stray easily and so it is vital to keep a sharp
lookout and see where the Shepherd is walking. We should remind ourselves that
if we unwittingly sinned or made terrible mistakes, we should consciously return
to the zone of glory.
In Romans 12:1-2: “Therefore, I urge you, brothers,
in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and
pleasing to God--this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not
conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will
is--his good, pleasing and perfect will.” We are to offer ourselves as
sacrifices at God’s altar. Why? Because it is our “spiritual act of
worship”!
The presence of the Lord at the altar is different
from His regular presence. The presence is especially manifest and focus at the
altar. Where is this altar? It is our heart! You are the only person who can
establish your own personal altar within you. We no longer depend upon the
external altar at a physical temple for we have become the temple of the Holy
Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19). The temple cannot be without an altar. We build the
altar within and the Lord will come to dwell. An altar is not an altar until
there are sacrifices. Even though the great sacrifice was the Lord Jesus, the
word of God still insists that we offer our whole beings as living sacrifices.
When Elijah cast his cloak over the shoulders of
Elisha, it was not a mere divine touch but a divine claim (1 Kings 19). Elisha
was no longer his own master, doing his own tasks and running his own life. He
was to give up his oxen, his farm and perform the spiritual work of a prophet.
Embodied within the cloak was the manifest presence of the Lord and thus Elisha
could part the water of the River Jordan with it (2 Kings 2:8). The Lord
sometimes chooses to attach his manifestation to a person or object.