Plain and Parochial Sermons Volume 4: Sermon 13 The Invisible World
“While we look not at the thing which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal,”—2 Cor. iv. 18
• There are two worlds the visible and the invisible
• The invisible world really exists even though we don’t see it
• There is a more wonderful, far reaching and close world all around us that we don’t see
• Our eyes can’t see this world, but faith can
• We are born into a world of senses. We experience things sensually and are aware that we experience them as such
• The invisible world likewise acts on us but we are not conscious of it
• The invisible world is, on the whole, a higher world than the visible
• God is in this invisible world and we haven’t and don’t perceive him sensually
• In the invisible world also, are the souls of the dead
• Angels are part of this world and they are active among us
• This invisible world exists now and is happening all around us
• “We are then in a world of spirits, as well as in a world of sense, and we hold communion with it, and take part in it, though we are not conscious of doing so.”
• This is not as absurd as it is may seem. We share this earth with animal species and we are oblivious to the myriad of events going on as we speak at different levels in the animal world all around us
• In human society, we have many different “worlds,” such as the scientific, literary, religious, etc, and sometimes these worlds overlap yet to those uninvolved are invisible to each other
• “The world of spirits then, though unseen, is present; present, not future, not distant. It is not above the sky, it is not beyond the grave; it is now and here; the kingdom of God is among us.”
• This is a practical truth which is to influence our conduct
• We also have a duty to contemplate this invisible world
• This invisible world will be revealed someday
• Humans think that they are lords of this earth and may do what they please, but are unaware that there are higher lords of this earth in the invisible world
• The spring season, the season of this sermon, is a powerful reminder of the life hidden in and around us that bursts forth in due season
• This material world will similarly burst forth into a new world of light and glory
• It is hard to conceive of the spring in the fall or winter, the vibrancy of spring is so absent then. But it does happen in due season
• So also is the season of eternal spring that we all await coming. That’s why we pray “Thy kingdom come.”
• This world, even at its most beautiful, does not satisfy us. It is, however, only a promise of that which is to come. We know that much more lies within it than we can see: the world of angels, glory and saints
• “What we see is the outward shell of an eternal kingdom; and on that kingdom we fix the eyes of our faith.”
• There is a blessing for those who believe yet do not see.
• Someday, we will see that world for what it is
• “All flesh is grass, and all the goodlines thereof is as the flower of the field. The grass withereth and the flower fadeth, because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it: surely the people is grass. The grass withereth, the flower fadeth; but the Word of our God shall stand for ever.”
Paul calls on us to walk by faith and not by sight. To do this we need to be become consciousness that there is an invisible kingdom of which we are a part. In that kingdom we are royal people, a holy nation, a kingdom of priests, called to make spiritual sacrifices. These responsibilities must influence our lives for the better. This is how we get to live our lives as children of God.
“While we look not at the thing which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal,”—2 Cor. iv. 18
• There are two worlds the visible and the invisible
• The invisible world really exists even though we don’t see it
• There is a more wonderful, far reaching and close world all around us that we don’t see
• Our eyes can’t see this world, but faith can
• We are born into a world of senses. We experience things sensually and are aware that we experience them as such
• The invisible world likewise acts on us but we are not conscious of it
• The invisible world is, on the whole, a higher world than the visible
• God is in this invisible world and we haven’t and don’t perceive him sensually
• In the invisible world also, are the souls of the dead
• Angels are part of this world and they are active among us
• This invisible world exists now and is happening all around us
• “We are then in a world of spirits, as well as in a world of sense, and we hold communion with it, and take part in it, though we are not conscious of doing so.”
• This is not as absurd as it is may seem. We share this earth with animal species and we are oblivious to the myriad of events going on as we speak at different levels in the animal world all around us
• In human society, we have many different “worlds,” such as the scientific, literary, religious, etc, and sometimes these worlds overlap yet to those uninvolved are invisible to each other
• “The world of spirits then, though unseen, is present; present, not future, not distant. It is not above the sky, it is not beyond the grave; it is now and here; the kingdom of God is among us.”
• This is a practical truth which is to influence our conduct
• We also have a duty to contemplate this invisible world
• This invisible world will be revealed someday
• Humans think that they are lords of this earth and may do what they please, but are unaware that there are higher lords of this earth in the invisible world
• The spring season, the season of this sermon, is a powerful reminder of the life hidden in and around us that bursts forth in due season
• This material world will similarly burst forth into a new world of light and glory
• It is hard to conceive of the spring in the fall or winter, the vibrancy of spring is so absent then. But it does happen in due season
• So also is the season of eternal spring that we all await coming. That’s why we pray “Thy kingdom come.”
• This world, even at its most beautiful, does not satisfy us. It is, however, only a promise of that which is to come. We know that much more lies within it than we can see: the world of angels, glory and saints
• “What we see is the outward shell of an eternal kingdom; and on that kingdom we fix the eyes of our faith.”
• There is a blessing for those who believe yet do not see.
• Someday, we will see that world for what it is
• “All flesh is grass, and all the goodlines thereof is as the flower of the field. The grass withereth and the flower fadeth, because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it: surely the people is grass. The grass withereth, the flower fadeth; but the Word of our God shall stand for ever.”
Paul calls on us to walk by faith and not by sight. To do this we need to be become consciousness that there is an invisible kingdom of which we are a part. In that kingdom we are royal people, a holy nation, a kingdom of priests, called to make spiritual sacrifices. These responsibilities must influence our lives for the better. This is how we get to live our lives as children of God.