WALK IN THE SPIRIT
If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit (Galatians 5:25).
Our normal life in Christianity is walking in the spirit. To walk in the spirit is to walk by faith (2 Corinthians 5:7). That means our eyes are always on what the Word says, not on circumstances or feelings; not what the senses tell us.
When man committed high treason in the Garden of Eden, his spirit became subject to his senses: in other words, his spirit fell. Hitherto, his knowledge was spiritual, but when he fell through his disobedience
to God, he became subject to his senses and this was what God warned him about: “But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die” (Genesis 2:17). This was spiritual death!
Man ate of the tree, and he died. He was separated from God instantly. Prior to that time, Adam loved to be in the presence of God, but after his disobedience, he hid himself from that same presence (Genesis 3:9-11). God is life; and once a man is separated from Him, he
can’t see the things that God sees anymore; he can’t see the glory of God. No wonder Adam saw himself naked afterwards.
When you’re walking in the spirit, you see the glory of God, His light, His beauty; you see the things that God sees; you see from His perspective. But when your spirit isn’t walking in the light of God, you’ll see what darkness shows you; you’ll see what the senses see. That’s what happened to Adam in the garden.
Romans 9:8 says, “…They which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God….” The children of the flesh are those who are ruled by their senses. But thanks be unto God! Your ties with the
first Adam have been severed completely and forever. You’re born after the Lord from heaven, and should walk accordingly—in and by the Spirit.
If you walk in the spirit, you’ll see that you’ve been put over the elements, failures, frustrations, darkness, and corruption in this physical world. You’ll see that you live in, and are from, another realm, a heavenly realm that’s greater than this world. Hallelujah!
PRAYER
Dear Father, I thank you for my faith is the victory that overcomes this world. I don’t judge situations or circumstances from the natural standpoint or from my five senses, but I see them from the perspective
of your Word. I’m not a victim in this world, but a victor in Christ. Hallelujah!
FURTHER STUDY:
Romans 8:3-8; 2 Corinthians 5:7; Galatians 5:16-18
1-YEAR BIBLE READING PLAN: Acts 11:1-18 & Ezra 9-10
2-YEAR BIBLE READING PLAN:2 Corinthians 8:9-17 & Isaiah 11-12
Hallelujah thank you Lord for I am not a victim of this world but a Victor in Christ Amen.
Glooooory. I walk in the Spirit hallelujah