St. SteVen
Well-Known Member
I was getting an internal prompt to respond to this post. I needed to go find it again. - LOLMy experience (note the irony) is that Utley is correct on this one. God doesn't always hand out those mountain-top experiences, and I have known Christians who have lived long fruitful lives without one, just trusting God. Needing those experiences is and not receiving them can be as devasting as, well, realizing that the Bible isn't perfect.
Mostly because I was left with a nagging thought that I needed to respond in some way.
I agree with what you are saying. Some may never have a "mountain-top experience" and perhaps
feel shorted in some way when they hear others testify to such. And there is danger, I would say, in seeking
such things with such fervor that a person is driven to create something in their own mind.
There also seems to be a range of attitude toward these things. Some are very open to them and some are very closed.
A person could literally walk right past a potential mountain-top experience and head down a path to the valley below.
If a person cloisters themselves with individuals who haven't had a mountain-top experience, they will likely
not find one themselves. Not to say that a mountain-top experience cannot come and find you, they can.
Most importantly, these mountain-top experiences are not a basis for a living faith, they should be viewed
as a personal affirmation, and when shared with others, as an encouragement to them.
From my perspective, everyone finds God in their own way, and God tends to
meet us in the middle when we are ready, if not sooner.
At one point I wrote down some of my experiences, because I was forgetting about them as I
moved forward in my faith. Documenting these things, and writing in general is good.
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