THE 4 PHASES of THE WILDERNESS

THE 4 PHASES of THE WILDERNESS
by Anonymous

In this rather long article, I would like to show you that periods of
involuntary isolation are usually divided into 4 stages. It can be 
helpful to precisely identify them, so that we have hope and 
perspective of what we should feel and do.

Lets summarise at the beginning and again at the end.

1. In the first phase, we are progressively or suddenly  removed 
from our secure environment and role.

2. This leads us in the second phase in which we experience some 
"dark night of the soul" as we struggle to find God and our real 
identity through Him.

3. The third phase begins by a desperate seeking of God until we 
finally find surrender, peace and genuine intimacy with God.

3. In the final stage, we receive early on encouraging signs that the 
whole process of isolation will eventually finish.

Lets look at this in more detail. What does this actually look like? Feel like?

1) Stripping and breaking

For thou, O God, hast proved us:
thou hast tried us, as silver is tried.
 Thou broughtest us into the net;
thou laidst affliction upon our loins.
 Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads;
we went through fire and through water:
but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place
Psalm 66: 10-12

We are typically led into desert times by surprise, or by... 
progressive shocks that get us deeper and deeper down into what 
seems like "the valley of the shadow of death". Positions,
possessions or securities are usually lost in a way that we never 
expected, such that shame, anger and confusion are feelings 
which are not uncommon at this early stage. There can be various 
painful means that force us to enter desert times: a severe 
sickness... the loss of someone or a secure job, or even 
persecution...

One way that makes it particularly painful and confusing is after 
we did something righteous, we end up being treated unfairly. For 
instance we wanted to improve things within our church, our job or 
our family, and we end up being criticized, misunderstood or even 
rejected.  Moses, for example, tried to do something for God and 
he got "rewarded" with the unfair treatment of being led into a long 
desert time.  The same happened to Elijah after he spoke to Ahab, 
as well as Joseph when he shared his dream.

2) Struggling to find God and ourselves

The second phase determines whether we simply have a life crisis 
that will eventually pass, or we have entered a desert time.

The way to find out is through the following 3 signs:

1- The first one is that after spending enough time to forcefully 
change our situation, with every possible wisdom and discipline, 
we eventually realize that we are "stuck". Nothing has really 
changed, and we have absolutely no perspective of when it will 
ever finish. We have been put aside, isolated, most people cannot 
really relate to what is happening to us, and our professional
situation is definitively not what we had chosen. Worse, we start 
to have this nagging feeling that God Himself had a plan to bring 
us into this dry and isolate place where no one will want to join us
(isn't that what deserts are?). As it is written: "the Spirit led Jesus 
into the desert" (Matt. 4:1).

2- The second sign of a desert is that we are being tested in how 
we see ourselves. For instance, the three times that Jesus was 
tempted in the desert always had to do with his identity ("if you 
are truly the Son of God...."). The reason that we go through an 
identity crisis is that before we entered our desert time, our whole
person was tied and shaped by an environment and responsibility; 
once those have been removed, we have a hard time to know who we are.

3- The third and most evident characteristic that we have entered a 
desert time is the confusing feeling that God is somehow silent. 
He does not seem to hear our prayers, and worse, we cannot 
really recognize His familiar voice. In the worst cases, some 
Christians start to even battle with the emotions of loneliness, 
depression and "spiritual cynicism" that are so very precisely
described in the third chapter of Lamentations:

"I am the man who has seen affliction by the rod of his wrath. God 
has driven me away and made me walk in darkness rather than 
light; indeed, he has turned his hand against me again and again, 
all day long. He has made my skin and my flesh grow old and has 
broken my bones. He has besieged me and surrounded me with
bitterness and hardship. He has made me dwell in darkness like 
those long dead. He has walled me in so I cannot escape; he has 
weighed me down with chains. Even when I call out or cry for help, 
he shuts out my prayer. He has barred my way with blocks of 
stone; he has made my paths crooked. Like a bear lying in wait,
like a lion in hiding, he dragged me from the path and mangled me 
and left me without help. He drew his bow and made me the target 
for his arrows. He pierced my heart with arrows from his quiver. I 
became the laughingstock of all my people; they mock me in song 
all day long. He has filled me with bitter herbs and sated me with 
gall. He has broken my teeth with gravel; he has trampled me in 
the dust. I have been deprived of peace; I have forgotten what 
prosperity is. So I say, "My splendor is gone and all that I had 
hoped from the Lord." I remember my affliction and my wandering, 
the bitterness and the gall. I well remember them, and my soul is 
downcast within me."

Of course, the primary reason that we cannot HEAR God is that 
we cannot SEE ourselves clearly. Since we do not know any more 
who we really are, we cannot hear God in the same way as before, 
such that He seems to be silent. In other words, because our 
identity is being changed, so is the way in which we perceive God. 
During that confusing period, many Christians are forced to ask 
themselves: "What has God really created me for? Who am I now 
that no one recognizes me any more for what I used to be?" In 
essence, we struggle with the following question: "Who am I now
that I have no past and no future, and how much God means to 
me in all this?"

3) Finding genuine intimacy and peace with God

There comes a point when eventually our mourning and bitterness 
must cease. We can either keep on with the depressive feelings 
of the second phase, or we can cry out to God until we find 
enduring peace and real intimacy with Him. We cannot remove 
ourselves from the desert, but we can choose our attitude in it. 
This, in turn, determines how long we will stay in it.  For instance, 
most Israelites were meant to go through a short time of 
wilderness after Egypt, but because they chose idolatry, 
bitterness and unbelief, their desert became a long process of 40
years and most of them never entered the Promised Land. Deserts 
are not meant to kill us spiritually, but to prepare us for a better
stage in life. They cannot be shortened, but our attitude can make 
them longer.

This is when we must choose to seek God with a different attitude. 
This is the kind of situation where we have absolutely no other 
choice. Either God is nowhere, or God is now here! We 
desperately need God, and a quick fix through Him will not do it. 
However long it may take, we must press on through surrender, 
prayer, worship, fasting or whatever "breakthrough" that works for 
us, until we finally start to perceive His voice and find real peace. 
Now, it is very important that if we are going to seek God, we 
seek him with the right motivations. Often, even unconsciously, 
we pursue Him for the following 2 wrong reasons:

1 - The first wrong motivation is to seek Him so that He gives us a 
precise plan of action of what to do for Him. The reason is that 
unconsciously we want to do something so at to redefine our lost 
identity. In itself there is nothing wrong to build our self-esteem 
through some activity, but there is a danger that we miss the 
whole point of the desert. During such times God wants us to slow 
down, take a lot of time in prayer and discover who we really are 
as we discover who He really is. At this point in our lives, our 
being matters more than all our doing. God wants to transform the 
way we see ourselves through Him. He does this by revealing all
the prideful and egocentric motivations we had in our "former life", 
to show us that He does not see us through our jobs, our positions 
or even through all the people we loved. In the desert, God does not
see us as "the prince of Egypt", as "the preferred son of Jacob", 
or as "the prophet of Israel". He sees us as we really are - sinners 
who do not need to prove ourselves to Him or to others.

At the same time, we are not just sinners, but dearly beloved 
children of His, who have a priceless value to Him. The more we 
understand this paradox of our identity, the deeper we are being 
transformed. It is precisely because in desert we have nothing to 
show for ourselves that we can understand our true value before 
God. It is a time when our self-esteem cannot be defined by our
accomplishments, and therefore we must find it in our intimacy with God.

2 - The second wrong motivation we have in seeking God may be 
the fact that we seek more temporal and earthly answers than 
God Himself. Unconsciously, we seek Him to get back the job, 
the house, the mate, the ministry or the situation that we have lost. 
Now, there is nothing wrong with seeking such blessings, but 
there is always a danger that they become more important than 
God Himself. Idolatry is never a danger with bad things, but with 
good ones. We get so much blessed by God that we forget Him 
and become self-centered and self-deceived. Desert times are 
meant to bring us back to seek God just for Himself, beyond all 
that He can give us: the Giver is more important than all His gifts.
When a human being has reached the point that God's presence 
matters more than all other blessings, pleasure and securities in
this life, then such a person is truly blessed. This is why 
Christians who have endured long times of prison with God usually 
come out with an authority, a peace and a love that cannot be 
explained in human terms. This is why God allows even his best 
people to be thrown in prisons. From time to time the reset button 
of isolation-desert times needs to be pushed, so that we see life 
through the Giver rather than through His gifts.

The most obvious sign that we are "successfully" going through 
the third stage is the sense of peace and surrender that 
characterizes us. If we can genuinely say to God: "however long
you want me to stay in that unchangeable situation, I trust you 
and praise you for this, because your presence matters more than
anything else in my life", than peace will certainly rule in our hearts.

Another sign is that we become transparent and humble. We do 
not have any more to prove ourselves to anyone.

Another encouraging sign is the miraculous favor of God for our 
physical needs as we learn to supernaturally depend on God. For 
instance, Jesus was served by the angels and Elijah was fed by the ravens.

Directly related to this is the ability to walk in the supernatural.
Joseph became an expert at giving interpretation of dreams, 
Moses had his burning bush experience and miraculous signs, 
and Elijah was raising the dead and multiplying flour and oil.

4) Seeing the light at the end of the tunnel and patiently exiting.

At the beginning of this final stage, God usually gives us some 
signs in advance that our situation will end, in order to encourage 
us. It can be a supernatural revelation, a dream or an intuition that 
shows us that things will take a different turn, or it can be through 
people or conditions that give us a clear confirmation of what is 
already in our hearts. Usually, if we have fully surrendered and not
put false hopes in people or circumstances (as we used to do in 
the early stages of our desert times), then we can recognize 
God's voice for ourselves. It is very important in this final phase 
that we keep on with the same attitude of trust and peace that we 
had in the third stage, by not forcing out the final outcome. Often,
when we see the light at the end of the tunnel, we can be tempted 
to speed up the final process, instead of having the patience to
wait on God. He has the perfect timing, and sometimes this final 
stage of the whole process may take longer than we hoped.

The reason we do not have to speed up things is that desert times 
usually finish with dramatic turn-around: After 14 years the slave 
Joseph becomes prime minister overnight; after 40 years the long 
forgotten Moses suddenly comes back and within days two 
nations are completely shaken; after 3-4 years Elijah radically 
revolutionizes everything in one day at Mt Carmel; after 30 years, 
Jesus, who is not known before, ends up his desert and starts his 
ministry with a spectacular demonstration of miraculous power. 
God may keep us a long time in the waiting, but when He moves, 
it is fast and with power!

The way I described each sequence may not be as "extreme" for 
some of us, but they still include the following characteristics:


Summary of the 4 phases:

In the first phase, we are progressively or suddenly being removed 
from our secure environment and role.

This leads us in the second phase in which we experience some 
"dark night of the soul" as we struggle to find God and our real 
identity through Him.

The third phase begins by a desperate seeking of God until we 
finally find surrender, peace and genuine intimacy with God.

In the final stage, we receive early on encouraging signs that the 
whole process of isolation will eventually finish.


But now thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob,
and he that formed thee, O Israel,
Fear not: for I have redeemed thee,
I have called thee by thy name; thou art mine.
 When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee;
and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee:
when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned;
neither shall the flame kindle upon thee


Isaiah 43: 1,2

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