“Then God said, ‘Let there be light’; and there was light. God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light ‘day,’ and the darkness He called ‘night.’ And there was evening and there was morning, one day.”
~ Genesis 1:3-5, NASB ~
Supporting Scripture: 1 John 1:5-7, 2 Corinthians 6:14
The first act of God upon the chaos of the soul is not to bring peace, but to bring Light. And the immediate result of Light is conflict. We often pray for peace, but God answers with Light, because there can be no true peace where darkness is allowed to mingle with the day.
Notice the sequence: God commands the Light, and immediately He performs a separation. “God separated the light from the darkness.” He did not blend them. He did not create a twilight zone where we can comfortably hold onto a little bit of our old habits while professing a new life. He divided them.
This is the crisis of genuine recovery and the covenantal life. We want the comfort of the Light—the relief of forgiveness, the clarity of a sober mind—but we resent the severity of the Separation. We want to be children of the day without entirely leaving the night. We try to negotiate a “gray area” where we can keep our pet sins, our resentments, and our small compromises, thinking they are harmless.
But God is the Great Divider. His Light is intrusive. It is penetrating. It reveals things we would rather keep hidden in the “formless and void” places of our hearts. When God speaks “Let there be light” into an addicted soul, He is declaring war on the shadows that have enslaved it.
It is often spoken of as the “crisis of the will.” This is that crisis. You cannot walk in the Light and have fellowship with the darkness (1 John 1:6). It is an impossibility. The moment you claim the Light, you must accept the Separation.
Read More »