There is a reality in the life of the believer, in that many believers find it difficult to draw a distinction between experience, discernment and the revelation of God. The practical outworking of this is to know when the things we hold true are grounded in experience, and when they are rooted in revelation. It may also be that we would need to know when something is valid objectively. And while all real knowledge must in finality be grounded in experience, giving rise to intuition and discernment, there is a fine line between discernment, intuition and revelation of God. Moreover, experience itself is not to be made light of, because we must experience truth in our own lives, and not only hold to doctrines and teachings. If we do not experience truth, then we do not have truth at all, but merely knowledge. Moreover, knowledge itself is not the same as experience. As with most things in life, separating knowledge from experience is the point at which deliverance comes. If what we have is intimate knowledge derived from experience, and not real knowledge, given by revelation of God, then the result will be an obsession and not [a living] faith.
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