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Crosfigell

His Face One Day

One day we will see Him face-to-face. But we may see Him today, as well.

Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.

  - 1 John 3.2

For if the eminence of the Divine Essence surpasses the purest power of angelic contemplation, how will the happiness of human nature be able to contemplate the Divine Essence?

  - Eriugena, Periphyseon, Irish, 9th century[1]

How indeed? Eriugena was asking a most important question, especially in the light of what John promises.

We remember that Moses desired to see the face of God, but God warned him, that was neither possible nor safe (Ex. 3.18-20). In the Old Testament, when people were confronted by an angel, they generally fell face first on the ground, so overwhelming was the radiance of the glory of even an angel.

So how is it that we’ll be able to see Jesus “as He is”?

And is it possible even today to glimpse that glorious visage?

The Apostle Paul said that the glory of God may be known in the face of Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 4.6). How can we access the face of Jesus Christ? Scripture provides descriptions of Jesus’ face, notably in Revelation 1, and we must learn to contemplate the glory we see there.

We cannot see the actual face of Jesus now, because we could not bear to see it. The beauty, grandeur, power, and brilliance of the glory-filled face of Jesus would wilt us, so sinful are we in so many ways. Even one so holy and close to Jesus as the Apostle John fell to his face before the radiance and might of the face of Jesus.

By contemplating Jesus as He is revealed in the Psalms, in certain of the prophets, and in Revelation and the gospels, we can begin to assemble a picture of the face of Jesus, albeit incomplete, that can fill our souls with hope, boldness, assurance, rejoicing, thanksgiving, and love.

Because glory fills the face of Jesus, the glory that is being revealed in the creation around us must give us some insight to His face as well (Ps. 19.1-4). Even today, creation flashes and oozes the glory that is Jesus, inviting us to consider the true nature of beauty, wisdom, goodness, power, and love. If we can learn to observe the glory of God in creation, we can glimpse the face of the Lord.

Yet even that will be nothing more than a glimpse.

But a day is coming, John reminds us, when we will see Him as He is, see Him face to face, and not have to fear annihilation, because we shall be like Him. We cannot bear to look on Him now because He is too glorious, but a day is coming when we shall be with Him in glory, and then we may look on Him without fear.

Indeed, in that day He will be the light of all creation, and we will dwell forever in that light, full of joy and praise.

So, although we may not look directly upon Him now, let it suffice for us to turn the eye of faith on our exalted Lord and King, being guided by His Word to as true a contemplation as we can know in this life, one which will prepare us with great joy and anticipation for our face-to-face meeting with Jesus one day soon.

Will you contemplate the face of Jesus today?

Psalm 17.6, 7, 15 (Park Street: “All You that Fear Jehovah’s Name”)
When I have called, You answered me, Lord; hear now my fervent, seeking word!
Let kindness flow at Your command. Keep and preserve me by Your right hand,
Keep and preserve me by Your right hand.

But as for me, Lord, save and bless! Let me behold Your righteousness.
Your face in glory I would see, and thus forever blessed be,
And thus forever blessed be.

Teach me how, O Lord, to look upon You with the eye of faith. Make me willing to take the time and make the effort to see you now, and to long for the day when I will see you perfectly.

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T. M. Moore, Principal
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All Psalms for singing from The Ailbe Psalter. Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.



[1]Eriugena, p 31.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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