Which is why I've said things like, I believe this is what happened, and, "in my opinion". I'm open to correction. But it needs to be Biblical, not someone's opinion formed out of disbelief.OK, so you are not a fit judge as to whether the flesh was put away for five weeks
I know better than to consider myself convinced I lived without sinning in that time, but I can faithfully say I was not aware of any such moment, it seemed seamless to me. And it was the slightest flicker of the flesh, at first, that was noticeable when it had ended, but the difference was astounding. And indelible in my mind.
I'd even begun to wonder if it was in fact going to end. I had actually become dissatisfied, because I have some people whom I love very very much who have similar issues as I do, cPTSD, various mental health things, and, well, there was simply nothing I could say to them!!
I was suffering, they are suffering, "Hey, God touched me and it went away . . . I hope He touches you too!" That felt like nothing to offer! I prayed, and asked God that He would enable me to be able to share this with others. Not long after that prayer, it ended.
Since then I've been learning, studying, praying, testing, how exactly do we walk in the Spirit?
Here's what I've concluded so far.
We trust in Jesus that we are completely and fully reconciled to God, and that since it's based in Him and what He did, not us, our bad behavior does not change these amazing truth. The fact is that God is in the business of transforming us to be the way He wants.
Our concerns are very simply addressed in passages such as this one:
1 John 3:2-3 KJV
2) Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.
3) And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure.
If you are in fact a child of God now, when He appears, you will become like Him. This belief . . . "every man that has this hope" . . . causes us to purify ourselves, just like Jesus is pure. Isn't that what we want? To be pure as Jesus is pure? This is how we do that. We have the hope, which Biblically speaking, is the certain expectation that is the outcome of our faith.
We believe Jesus, and Jesus promised to raise us from the dead, so we expect that after we have died, that Jesus will raise us up from the dead. Our hope is the resurrection.
In this passage, our hope - what we expect to happen because we believe Jesus, and God's promise - is that we will in fact be like Him when He appears, meaning, we will actually be with Him when He appears. Our fear of being disqualifed from salvation is put to rest. We trust His promise, we trust that He will make sure, when He comes, we are transformed to be fully like Him. And knowing this, we live more pure lives now.
Much love!