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December 7, 2018 at 7:38 am #12433Ron McGatlinKeymaster“It’s Time to Reawaken Wonder”Lyn Packer, Tauranga, New Zealand
Sometimes God speaks to prophets through unusual things. Recently I was reading a Facebook post when God interrupted it by speaking to me as I read. The post was about a man who was holding a conversation with the person seated next to him on a plane. As he asked the person about his life story, he was amazed at how interesting the man’s life had been. He kept asking the man questions because as they talked, the man seemed to just gloss over parts of his story that, to the listener, were fascinating. During the conversation he realized that this person who had an amazing life story, had somehow lost the wonder of how amazing his life was. He had surrendered the sense of wonder in his life story to familiarity.
As I read, I felt the Lord say to me, “It’s time for My children to reawaken and rediscover their sense of wonder. It’s time to replace familiarity with wonder and to be astonished again by life and by Me.”
“Allowing a state of wonder to lead you to curiosity and questioning is a vital part of wonder. It is critical for creativity and problem solving.“ As I talked more with the Lord about wonder and the reasons that we need it in our lives, I felt a familiar stirring again of the questions that lead to discovery. Here’s some of what the Lord showed me as I processed this word through with Him.
Why Wonder?
Wonder is obviously important, otherwise the Lord wouldn’t have created us as beings who sense wonder. So why is that? What makes wonder important? Wonder operates on three levels in our lives – the sensory, the cognitive and the spiritual.
• Wonder is sensory – in moments of wonder our senses are heightened and engaged, often causing a momentary intake of breath and widened eyes as we take in the wonder we’re presented with. It causes a release of feel-good chemicals and hormones into our body and brain.
• Wonder is cognitive – it causes us to wonder, to be curious, to think about things that are beyond our current understanding.
• Wonder is spiritual – wonder is an encounter with something that touches us on a spiritual level. It goes beyond the mere physical senses and emotions, beyond cognitive reasoning. It goes to our spirit and heart being engaged in a way that causes us to experience reverence and awe, both for the creation and the Creator (both man and God). Wonder was given us to point us to the ultimate Creator and His part in our lives and our world.
The ability to sense wonder is hardwired into us as a part of being human and is an essential part of our humanity. Part of the reason for this is that we were created to be “fed” or “ministered to” by wonder and beauty. Wonder works in our lives in wonderful ways – it ignites our sensory, cognitive and spiritual senses, releasing essential energy to us; it sparks gratitude and feel-good chemicals and hormones. Wonder is a critical part of curiosity, creativity and problem-solving. It sparks our curiosity, and is often a doorway which leads us to a pathway of exploration, discovery and sometimes invention.
Areas Where We May Have Lost Our Wonder
We must have wonder in our lives; without it our soul and spirit become jaded and we enter a place of depleted energy; we lose joy, and sometimes even become depressed. If having a healthy sense of wonder is this important then we need to value, nurture and protect it. Some of the areas we may have lost our wonder in are:
• The wonder of God being a part of our lives, our journeys, our stories. The amazing, almighty God has chosen to have a personal relationship with us. How awesome is that? Yet sadly, it’s easy for us to lose our sense of wonder about this. Or maybe we still have some sense of wonder about the relationship, but it’s dimmed. If either of these are true of us, then it doesn’t have to stay like that. Our sense of wonder in our relationship with the Lord can be restored. It’s important that we keep that sense of wonder because the story of God in our lives is our testimony. If we lose the sense of wonder at His involvement in our lives, it will affect our testimony; it will affect the way others see our relationship with the Lord.
• The wonder of love. It is very easy to slide from wonder into a place of familiarity with those we love – our family and our friends, and even our workmates. Remember the times when you were in wonder at this incredible person in front of you – the feeling of wonder and love that welled up in you when you looked at them or spoke to them? Time and familiarity can dampen that sense of wonder, but it can be restored.
• The wonder at the complexity and beauty of the natural world. How often do we see the colors of a sunset and say, “That’s a nice sky tonight.” then move straight back to what we were doing? (Photo via Pixabay)
• The wonder of discovery. When was the last time you were stopped in your tracks by a discovery you made – that moment of discovery when you realized something momentous or important; that breakthrough in thinking that led to a problem being solved or the discovery of learning how to do something?
• The wonder of creativity and learned skills. Maybe we need to reestablish wonder in the area of our own or others’ creativity or learned skills. I am often blown-away at others’ creative genius, or their ability to do things that I cannot. Take a moment to wonder at the creativity and brilliance of that sculptor, inventor, marketing genius, accountant, chef, mother, teacher and carpenter when you encounter them through their work.
It’s Our Responsibility
God shared with me that maintaining and nurturing our sense of wonder is our responsibility. In the midst of this exchange, the Lord led me to the following quote by Candace Pert, who pioneered the research into endorphins. She said this about our participation in how we feel: “You’re a very active participant in how good you feel; it’s a scientific fact. Our physiology is perfectly designed for bliss and this perfection is dynamic, so taking responsibility for your own health is important.”
“Wonder operates on three levels in our lives – the sensory, the cognitive and the spiritual.“ Even though the responsibility for re-awakening our sense of wonder is ours, the Lord is amazingly good, kind and generous. He has provided ahead of time and has equipped us already with all we need to reawaken and nurture our sense of wonder, and He will work with us in doing so. He will provide opportunities for wonder, and He will be with us in those wonder moments as we experience them with Him. He will encourage us to follow our curiosity, knowing what we will discover, and celebrating those discoveries with us. He will cheer us on every step of the way as we discover again the delight of childlike wonder.
How Do We Reestablish and Cultivate Wonder in Our Lives?
1. Recognize that we have lost it. This is the first step to regaining our wonder. Wonder is something that we need to value and nurture. Maybe your sense of wonder has become jaded, dulled by life’s pressures, busyness or familiarity. Our sense of wonder can be regained and re-established with some work on our part, and of course it will take ongoing nurturing of it to keep us from losing it again.
2. Repent for allowing it to become jaded and determine to nurture and develop it again. Come into agreement with Him about how amazing and essential a sense of wonder is in your life and determine that you will treasure and nurture it.
3. Recognize the stirrings of wonder and give them attention. We need to place value on our feelings of wonder and give them our attention. Those feelings of wonder are there for a reason, they are alerting us to something that we need to pay attention to. There are many times in our days when wonder knocks quietly at our hearts and waits to be noticed. Usually we make a barely noticed and often split-second decision to brush the feeling aside because we are concentrating on something else. Wonder isn’t pushy; it will give way to other things if we don’t recognize it and give it our attention.
4. Choose to stop and be present in in the moment. That means giving our attention to that moment, recognizing the feelings of wonder and allowing ourselves to fully feel them. Most of the things we’re doing won’t suffer unduly if we take a minute or so to be really present in our wonder. When we do, it will reconnect us to this incredible life that we get to live in ways that will enrich us and feed our soul and spirit.
5. Allow time for wonder. Wonder is cultivated by “allowing time” for wonder. Make time to think about the things that have caused a feeling of wonder to emerge in you. Making time to wonder is important as it can take you on a journey that may start at a certain point of wonder and lead you to other wonders, to gratitude and to discovery, which then leads to your next point. (Photo via Unsplash)
6. Allow your curiosity to be reawakened. Wonder makes you wonder; it arouses curiosity which leads to questions, some of which may be answerable and some not. Allowing a state of wonder to lead you to curiosity and questioning is a vital part of wonder. It is critical for creativity and problem solving. That reason alone is a good one for nurturing and protecting our sense of wonder.
It’s time for wonder to be reawakened and reestablished in our lives. If your wonder has become jaded or seems to be lost, I pray that the Lord will help you to rise up and begin to establish a sense of wonder afresh in your life, and that it would become a wellspring of life and joy to you and to those around you!
Lyn Packer
XP Ministries New Zealand
Email: nz@xpmedia.com
Website: http://www.nzpropheticnetwork.com and http://www.robandlyn.org
Lyn Packer and Rob are itinerant ministers with XP Ministries in New Zealand, and minister throughout the South Pacific and Asia. They carry a catalytic revelatory anointing that brings breakthroughs and shifts to both individual lives and churches as they minister. They are a part of the Prophetic Round Table in New Zealand and are widely respected as prophetic ministers for their ability to hear and declare what God is doing in the nation. As a couple, Rob and Lyn minister in many ways. The different facets of their ministry – worship, music, teaching, the prophetic, dance, art, poetry, storytelling, healing, and restoration – are a powerful combination of giftings enabling them to minister with sensitivity and passion in any situation.
Source: http://elijahlist.com/
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