Does anyone have a wilderness testimony? Or maybe I should say "Promised Land" testimony?
Please share. I could really use the encouragement as I am in the last stages (I hope) of a wilderness now. This past week has been hard, but I'll keep at it.
I am glad you started this too, because today I really needed to hear some testimonies. For me I am becoming more aware of the fact that God sends me warnings through dreams yet I woke up the other morning totally frustrated because I had another one that I knew was a message and my reaction was "when will it end". I've been going through stuff after stuff especially with people. I truly believe in forgiving others but I even told God that I am tempted not to forgive. I just want a chance to give them a piece of my mind that they have yet to see but are slandering me about. But God speaks. On the morning of me voicing my frustration, I opened my bible to a verse assuring me of the good in having my faith tried and He took me back to the proverbs that advices not to 'recompence evil' but wait on the Lord and He shall save you. Also I've been hearing messages by Pastors I don't even know, that truly speaks to my situation. One was saying that we must look out for the period of frustration when we are exercising faith. That is the place a lot of us fall yet it is most times just before we recieve the good we have been waiting for.
Then a few times after prayer I felt led to Numbers 14. It is the account of when the Isrealite spies brought back the bad report (except the 2) and discouraged the people from entering the promised land. That resulted in another 40 years wandering. I don't want that to be my lot. It seems as a spin off to this I keep hearing messages against murmering and complaining. I'm memorizing Philipians 2:14-15, because I am guilty of that habit when things get tough. I pray God help us all. I'm expecting a period of great 'Promise land' testimonies from this forum in the future, because many of us seem to be going through with a spirit that refuses to give up.
Ladies, thanks for sharing your testimonies. I just wanted to know how you all distinguished the wilderness from a normal test/trial. (I sincerely want to know.) Does knowing which one you're dealing with change how you handle it?
Ladies, thanks for sharing your testimonies. I just wanted to know how you all distinguished the wilderness from a normal test/trial. (I sincerely want to know.) Does knowing which one you're dealing with change how you handle it?
This is a good question.
I believe the wilderness is a LONG period where you are forced to trust in God wholeheartedly. This "forcing" may follow the stripping of "a comfort zone" (e.g., relationships, residence, money, etc.). All of a sudden, it seems like it's just you and Him.
Test/trials exist during a wilderness but the big test that lasts throughout the period is whether you can trust and follow the Lord's instructions.
The difference between that and normal test/trials? My belief is that normal test/trials come to all Christians alike, to strengthen and refine them. The wilderness, however, is a major strengthening or refining. It comes when one either:
1) seriously questions God's instruction (e.g., Israel questioning the conquering of Canaan) and/or
2) needs preparation for a major mission one is about to enter (e.g., Jesus and the wilderness temptations)
I'd like to hear others' responses as well. Just going by what I feel. Help me out, ladies.
Ladies, thanks for sharing your testimonies. I just wanted to know how you all distinguished the wilderness from a normal test/trial. (I sincerely want to know.) Does knowing which one you're dealing with change how you handle it?
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Your faith will be tested over and over, relentlessly, almost without a break. I remember reading Job and just being blown away at how many tragedies happened to him in one day. His wealth gone, his children dead, messengers kept coming up to him with more and more bad news. At first you may hold on to your faith, but it gets hard to tell God "yet will I trust you" when it seems you've done nothing to deserve the onslaught. Job was upright, but that didn't shield him from tragedy. I felt this way too. It was one thing right after the other. Just as soon as I forgave and began trusting again, I got slapped across the face again with another attack. I couldn't even get my bearings. Very difficult experience to endure. However, I believe this relentless discipline is necessary because the Promised Land will be so wonderful that it may be easy to get comfortable and forget that it was GOD who brought you there. We need to be reminded over and over that no matter how many trials come against us, GOD can and WILL deliver us from them all. And when we reach that land, we should want to serve him even more fervently in gratitude for His miraculous deliverance.
^^^so similarily the way we entered into his place is the way that we leave it? Not exactly but in a manner that could be in the same compared to it's entrance
Wow sorry I really just said that twice
This is a good question.
I believe the wilderness is a LONG period where you are forced to trust in God wholeheartedly. This "forcing" may follow the stripping of "a comfort zone" (e.g., relationships, residence, money, etc.). All of a sudden, it seems like it's just you and Him.
Test/trials exist during a wilderness but the big test that lasts throughout the period is whether you can trust and follow the Lord's instructions.
The difference between that and normal test/trials? My belief is that normal test/trials come to all Christians alike, to strengthen and refine them. The wilderness, however, is a major strengthening or refining. It comes when one either:
1) seriously questions God's instruction (e.g., Israel questioning the conquering of Canaan) and/or
2) needs preparation for a major mission one is about to enter (e.g., Jesus and the wilderness temptations)
I'd like to hear others' responses as well. Just going by what I feel. Help me out, ladies.
This IS a good question, and I agree with loolalooh's explanation. Here are my other thoughts as well:
These are my thoughts. I'm sure there are more, and I will come back and edit when I find them.
- As loolalooh said, this is an EXTENDED trial. It won't be a quick lesson. Some things take time to learn. It may not be years and years, but it won't be a quick one day test either.
- You will be alone or feel alone. When Jesus was in the wilderness to fast and pray, no other human was around Him. You may have friends in your life, but they won't be enough to fill the void in you. Or you may be totally friendless, which can lead to despair. But when Jesus was in the wilderness, it was a time to draw close to the Father without any other distractions. And the closer You get to Him.....
- Almost everything that is comfortable to you will be stripped away, one by one. Sometimes things that are comfortable are very bad for you, or prevent you from moving to the Promised Land. Look at the Israelites - they got so frustrated and lost faith so badly that they actually wanted to go back to Egypt - a place of bondage! Wilderness experiences will be so different, so unsettling, that you may actually long for the old land that you just escaped from, just to have familiarity again.
- You will not be able to cheat. Sometimes in regular tests and trials, you may get away with stumbling over and over, repenting each time, but going right back to your mess (like a baby who keeps messing her diaper) - and even knowing in the back of your head while you repent that you will do it again. When you aren't spiritually mature, God may tolerate this behavior for a season. But when you are heading to the wilderness....
- To survive spiritually and emotionally, you will literally have to make a choice - trust God and watch Him provide your daily bread, or go back in bondage and forsake Him. I know that sounds extreme, but I NEVER questioned my faith more than I did during my Red Sea experience. I struggled mightily with anger at God for He allowing so many things to happen to me - years of bondage, depression and disappointment, and then obstacle after obstacle when I finally began to trust Him to deliver me. I cried hard tears to see others who don't even believe in God seem to get the things I LONG for without even trying. I kept asking God "what did I do to deserve this?" You know what I have wanted ever since I was a child, why can't I have it? God even set it up that the Israelites had to trust Him EVERY DAY. He provided manna from heaven, but it was only good for that day. If they tried to store it up (or create a "back up plan" just in case God didn't come through), it would turn to worms. God gave them just enough to get them through the day, so they would have to keep trusting Him day by day for provision. God doesn't want us creating back up plans just in case He doesn't come through. That shows a lack of faith.
- Your faith will be tested over and over, relentlessly, almost without a break. I remember reading Job and just being blown away at how many tragedies happened to him in one day. His wealth gone, his children dead, messengers kept coming up to him with more and more bad news. At first you may hold on to your faith, but it gets hard to tell God "yet will I trust you" when it seems you've done nothing to deserve the onslaught. Job was upright, but that didn't shield him from tragedy. I felt this way too. It was one thing right after the other. Just as soon as I forgave and began trusting again, I got slapped across the face again with another attack. I couldn't even get my bearings. Very difficult experience to endure. However, I believe this relentless discipline is necessary because the Promised Land will be so wonderful that it may be easy to get comfortable and forget that it was GOD who brought you there. We need to be reminded over and over that no matter how many trials come against us, GOD can and WILL deliver us from them all. And when we reach that land, we should want to serve him even more fervently in gratitude for His miraculous deliverance.
- If you believe God, He WILL come through for you. Time and time again God provided for His children - water when they were thirsty, bread when they were hungry. He was their cloud by day and fire at night. I reached a place where I began to declare the victory, even though I couldn't see it. Some of what I declared has come to pass, but all of it did not. I had a huge setback when one of the biggest things I believed God for did not happen, after I had stepped out on faith more than ever before in my life. I was devastated then furious, and pouted for several days until I dusted myself off, told God I was done with my tantrum and back to trusting Him. There are still at least 3 huge miracles that I am believing God for, but he has ALREADY delivered me mightily. And I believe that He is NOT DONE YET!!!
- A miracle got you to the wilderness (the parting of your Red Sea or deliverance from bondage) - so look for another one to get you to the Promised Land. Consider these verses in Joshua Ch 3 that describe the children of Israel crossing the Jordan river:
1 Early in the morning Joshua and all the Israelites set out from ****tim and went to the Jordan, where they camped before crossing over. 2 After three days the officers went throughout the camp, 3 giving orders to the people: "When you see the ark of the covenant of the LORD your God, and the priests, who are Levites, carrying it, you are to move out from your positions and follow it. 4 Then you will know which way to go, since you have never been this way before. But keep a distance of about a thousand yards [a] between you and the ark; do not go near it."
5 Joshua told the people, "Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do amazing things among you."
Note - they had to follow the ark because they were going to a NEW land, in a way that they never had gone before! Reading on....
14 So when the people broke camp to cross the Jordan, the priests carrying the ark of the covenant went ahead of them. 15 Now the Jordan is at flood stage all during harvest. Yet as soon as the priests who carried the ark reached the Jordan and their feet touched the water's edge, 16 the water from upstream stopped flowing. It piled up in a heap a great distance away, at a town called Adam in the vicinity of Zarethan, while the water flowing down to the Sea of the Arabah (the Salt Sea ) was completely cut off. So the people crossed over opposite Jericho. 17 The priests who carried the ark of the covenant of the LORD stood firm on dry ground in the middle of the Jordan, while all Israel passed by until the whole nation had completed the crossing on dry ground.
In a miracle similar to the parting of the Red Sea, the Israelites were able to pass through the river bed on dry ground.
Smokie Norful, I Understand: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0skD7d3usw
I had to come back to this post this morning to say this is not only thought-provoking but there is so much truth in it. I do understand what you mean by "forcing" here, lest it be misconstrued... Like with Jonah, God will get our attention to do what we're called to do.
The other night, I'd watched a show called "I Was Dead" which gives real-life accounts of people going through near-death experiences. One woman's account stood out for me and I'd like to share it, after reading this post.
This woman was a 43-year-old counselor who worked with terminally ill people. When the dying person would ask her "Did you see them, did you see them?" She said she'd never look up or around but just tell them "no" because she was a skeptic. Later, she was exercising and suffered a hemmoraghing of the brain; surgery was the only hope for her. While she was on the table, she didn't flatline, like the others, but she said she did experience walking into a great light and feeling this warmth that was felt like pure, unconditional Love. She said her senses where heightened so much so that when she "heard" God speak to her, it wasn't through her ears but through her body. She told Him she wanted to stay, He told her she couldn't but that He wanted her to go back and love people the way she experienced his love.
All those people who "came back" had changed...none of them had wanted to come back to earth. One man said his heart was hardened and he always judged people and was changed. He said it's sad for him that it took a near-death experience for God to get his attention, but he was a better person for it. Another said he had a bad temper, but not any more. He was sent back because he had "work to do".
I just wanted to share this with you ladies in this thread. Your testimonies not only are encouraging but they glorify God, and I believe this is how God uses us to bless others.
I first heard that song at a critical point few months ago. Someone in this forum had a list of songs I didn’t even know but my intuition sent me to check out that one. It matched the verses that I was focusing on that week.
Psalms 94:9-10 He that planted the ear shall He not hear? He that formed the eye, shall He not see?
He that chastiseth the heathen, shall not He correct? He that teacheth man knowledge shall not He know?
The whole chapter was encouraging. Sometimes in the wilderness you start wondering (and I dare say wandering ) if God doesn’t see or hear your cry for help. But He knows everything.
Some things I’ve learned from some wilderness experiences in the bible and other people’s messages:
In all and whatever the paths through the wilderness, GOD IS FAITHFUL
- Sometimes it may seem like we drive our own self into the wilderness, like Moses after He killed the Egyptian. At the end he was so comfortable in the wilderness he didn’t want to go back when God said it was time.
- Sometimes the wilderness is a place of refuge from bondage, like the Israelites getting out of slavery. I think the major lesson for me in their going through experience was they somehow thought it would have been a “trial free” journey and kept limiting and angering God with their murmurings and complaining, griping and groaning. When time for them to get out they felt the enemies were stronger and themselves too small. Totally ignored their Great God. I don’t want this to be my lot.
- Sometimes you are led to the wilderness by the Spirit, like Jesus. My take away is He had angels ministering to Him and was with wild animals. Sometimes I am convinced I am among “wild animals” with the things I’ve been going though with other people, but Gods sends help, a word, a song, LHCF, those are like my ministering angels. The biggest things is as He was coming out He was tested. That gives us a glimpse into the enemy’s strategy, we must keep that in mind. I guess it was like the river Jordan before promise land. The priests had to step in this time BEFORE the parting, I’m certain this was a test to their obedience.
Ladies, thanks for sharing your testimonies. I just wanted to know how you all distinguished the wilderness from a normal test/trial. (I sincerely want to know.) Does knowing which one you're dealing with change how you handle it?[/QUOTE]
I knew I was in the wilderness b/c of the fact that I waited 5 years to move into my new home. Then came the "naysayers" . However, when the Lord tells you in Psalms 46:10-11 "Be still and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth! The Lord of hosts is with us; The God of Jacob is our refuge. Selah"
Just keep your eyes on the Lord get a song that will carry/help you through the storm. ** I am crying as I am typing this". Also, trusting the Lord with the Impossible so that He can do the Impossible. See what I am telling you is that I believed by Faith and just kept my eyes on the Lord. Staying in the Lord's word.
To answer your second question yes. In this experience I tell people that I had a Father Abraham experience where Abraham and Sarah had a promise from God for a son, even though they went their own way God still granted them their son.
I said "Lord, I do not want to take another house, I am going to stand on the home you promised me". Which I did. I had another neighbor who went through the same thing as me same builder however, she said No, HF8 I did not have that I had a Job experience erplexed look on my face. I stayed on Abraham until we moved into our new home. Then I started studying Job and now I am I see why so choose job for her experience. Now, I understand the Book of Job so much clearer now.
Now, I am going through some personal things in my life however, I am applying what I went through for 5 years and now I am so laying my burdens on the Lord and allowing The Lord to handle them. It all about Trusting and standing on God's word. which is so, Good. God is so Good!