My wife found this story years ago, and before I published it I wanted to explain a couple of things. When I first read the story, it really made me madder than a wet hen. Because I saw a lot of myself, at that, time in this story. I saw a lot of the people that I was around the same way and well I got mad, okay, lol! So I post this with caution in hope that you will read the whole thing and just take it all as a teaching of where we can slip as the body of Christ if we are not cautious and do as God tells us in 1 John 4:1-6 and "test everything". It is a lengthy read and must of you probably wont read it but for you that do, I promise you will be blessed! Or maybe mad like I was but God taught me a lot from this! This isn't an "Escape from our Savior Jesus Christ". God Bless you all!
Numbers 22:24 "Then the Angel of the LORD stood in a narrow path between the vineyards, with a wall on this side and a wall on that side."
Numbers 22:24 "Then the Angel of the LORD stood in a narrow path between the vineyards, with a wall on this side and a wall on that side."
"Escape from Christendom"
"The Journey"  by Robert Burnell, 1980
As
 the sun sets beneath the hills, a city comes into view. Nearing it, the
 traveler sees what appears to be a large group of churches. Spires and 
crosses pierce the skyline. His pace quickens. Is this his destination? 
He passes an imposing structure, a neon sign flashing “Cathedral of the 
Future.” Farther on a floodlit stadium supports a billboard boasting 
that fifty thousand people crowd into evangelistic meetings there three 
nights a week. Beyond this, modest “New Testament” chapels and Hebrew 
Christian synagogues cluster together on the street front.
“Is this the City of God?” I hear the traveler ask a woman at the information booth in the central square.
“No this is Christian City, “she replies.
“But I thought this road led to the City of God!” He exclaims with great disappointment.
“That’s what we all thought when we arrived,” she answers, her tone sympathetic.
“This road continues up the mountain, doesn’t it?” He asks.
“I wouldn’t know, really,” she answers blankly.
I
 watched the man turn away from her and trudge on up the mountain in the
 gathering darkness. Reaching the top, he starts out into the blackness;
 it looks as though there is nothing, absolutely nothing, beyond. With a
 shudder he retraces his steps into Christian City an takes a room at a 
hotel.
Strangely unrefreshed, at dawn he arises and follows the 
road up the mountain again; in the brightening light of the sun he 
discovers that what seemed like a void the night before is actually a 
desert–dry, hot, rolling sand as far as the eye can see. The road 
narrows to a path which rises over a dune and disappears. “Can this 
trail lead to the City of God?” He wonders aloud. It appears to be quite
 deserted and rarely traveled.
Indecision slowing his steps, he 
again returns to Christian City and has lunch in a Christian restaurant.
 Over the music of a gospel record, I hear him ask a man at the next 
table, “That path up the mountain, where the desert begins, does it lead
 to the City of God?”
“Don’t be a fool!” his neighbor replies 
quickly. “Everyone who has ever taken that path has been lost… Swallowed
 up by the desert! If you want God, there are plenty of good churches in
 this town. You should pick one and settle down.”
After leaving 
the restaurant, looking weary and confused, the traveler finds a spot 
under a tree and sits down. An ancient man approaches and begins 
pleading with him in urgent tones, “If you stay here in Christian City, 
you’ll wither away. You must take the path. I belong to the desert you 
saw earlier. I was sent here to encourage you to press on. You’ll travel
 many miles. You’ll be hot and thirsty; but angels will walk with you, 
and there will be springs of water along the way. And at your journey’s 
end you will reach the City of God! You have never seen such beauty! And
 when you arrive the gates will open for you, for you are expected.”
“What
 you say sounds wonderful,” the traveler replies. “But I’m afraid I’d 
never survive that desert. I’m probably better off here in Christian 
City.”
The ancient one smiles. “Christian City is the place for 
those who want religion but don’t want to lose their lives. The desert 
is the territory of those whose hearts are so thirsty for God that they 
are willing to be lost in Him. My friend, when Peter brought his boat to
 land, forsook all and followed Jesus, he was being swallowed by the 
desert. When Matthew left his tax collecting and Paul his Pharisaism, 
they too were leaving a city much like this to pursue Jesus out over the
 dunes and be lost in God. So don’t be afraid. Many have gone before 
you.” …..
Then I see the traveler look away from the old man’s 
burning eyes to the bustle of Christian City. He sees busy people 
hurrying hither and yon with their Bibles and shiny attache cases, 
looking like men and women who know their destiny. But it is clear they 
lack something which the old man with eyes like a prophet possesses.
In
 my dream I imagine the traveler turning things over in his mind. “If I 
do go out there, how can I be sure that I will really be lost in God? In
 the Middle Ages Christians tried to lose themselves in God by putting 
the world behind them and entering a monastery. And how disappointed 
many of them were to find that the world was still there! And the people
 here in Christian City who are preparing to go to some jungle or a 
neglected slum, maybe they’re coming closer to what it means to be lost 
in God. But then, a person can travel to the ends of the earth and not 
lose himself.”
The traveler turns again to see the old person 
starting up the road for the narrow path down to the desert’s edge. 
Suddenly, his decision mobilizes him and leaps to his feet, chasing 
after him. When he catches up, they exchange no words. The ancient man 
makes an abrupt turn to the right and guides him up still another slope 
which steepens as it rises toward a peak shrouded in a luminous cloud. 
The climb upward is very difficult. The traveler appears dizzy and 
begins to stagger. His guide pauses and offers him a drink from a flask 
hanging over his shoulder. Panting, he drinks it in great gulps. “No 
water ever tasted sweeter than this,” he says with great feeling.
“Thank you.”
Now
 look there.” The old man points beyond them to a vista not nearly as 
monotonous and desolate as it had seemed earlier. The desert below has 
taken on many colors and gradation. In the far distance blazing light is
 throbbing and moving on the surface of the horizon like a living thing.
 “There is the City of God! But before you reach it, you will have to 
pass through those four wildernesses you see. Directly below us is the 
Wilderness of Forgiveness.” The traveler notices small, dim figures 
making their way slowly in the direction of the city, separated from 
each other by many miles.
“How can they survive the loneliness?” Asks the traveler. “Wouldn’t they benefit from traveling together?”
“Well,
 they aren’t really alone. Each one of them is accompanied by the 
forgiveness of God. They are being swallowed by the desert of the Lord 
God’s vast mercy. The Holy Spirit is saying to them as they travel, 
‘Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!’ They are 
made whole as they travel.”
Just beyond there is an expanse of blue. “Is it sea?” Inquires the traveler.
“It
 looks like water, but it’s a sea of sand. That’s the Wilderness of 
Worship. Here, look through these glasses and you will see that people 
are walking there, too. Notice how they begin to group themselves here. 
They are having their first taste of the joy of the City–worship. They 
are discovering how they were made for the worship of God. It is 
becoming their life, the white-hot source of everything they do.”
“But don’t people also worship back in Christian City? What’s so special about that wilderness?”
“Worship,
 that is true worship, can begin only when a life has been utterly 
abandoned to the desert of God’s presence. Out there the heart begins to
 worship the Father in spirit and truth.”
Looking beyond the blue 
wilderness to where the desert rises in red and fiery mountains, the old
 man explains to the traveler that among those reddish mountains is the 
Wilderness of Prayer.
“Passing through that wilderness travelers 
find it necessary to turn away from every distraction and concentrate on
 prayer. They quickly learn that there is no possible way for them to 
survive but by crying out to God continuously. By the time they reach 
the outer extremes of that wilderness, prayer is their consuming passion
 and their supreme joy. It appears at first that the City of God is just
 beyond the Wilderness of Prayer. But there is one more wilderness 
hidden by those mountains, which you will pass through before you reach 
your destination. It is simply called the Harvest. You’ll know it when 
you reach it. And beyond the Harvest is the City itself. Your name is 
known there. Your arrival is awaited with eagerness. Come, let’s begin 
our journey.”
“Nightfall doesn’t seem to be a particularly propitious time to begin a journey like this,” he says.
“Don’t go back to Christian City,” the old man exhorts, gazing at him earnestly.”
“Not
 even at this hour? That way I could get a good night’s sleep and start 
first thing in the morning,” the traveler adds hopefully.
“But 
your rest is out there,” he urges. “Walk on now into the desert. The 
Holy Spirit will help you. Don’t be afraid to be lost in God. You’ll 
find your life nowhere else.”
The Wilderness of Forgiveness 
The
 old man has left the traveler standing alone at the edge of the desert 
as darkness falls. The lights of Christian City beckon from beyond him. I
 can imagine him thinking of the warmth of a friendly conversation over a
 warm meal and of going to sleep in a comfortable bed. But then his 
expression becomes resolute and he murmurs, “This is doubtless the road I
 have to take. I will find my life only by losing it, that’s a 
certainty. But how can I know that if I take this path into the desert I
 will assuredly be lost in God and not merely lost? I can remember many 
people who took a solitary path which led them not to the City of God 
but into such unreal thoughts and spurious experiences that their minds 
and lives were destroyed. Surely the danger of settling for less than 
life in Christian City has to be weighed against the possibility of 
losing it in a wilderness of spiritual delusion. I’m sure that the 
darkness beyond contains not only the path to the City of God but also 
countless trap doors to hell, where one can be lost in lonely vanity. 
How can I be sure of distinguishing the true path?” What I first think 
in my dreams to be a star hanging low over the horizon now take the 
shape of a cross hanging directly above the path in front of the 
traveler. He looks up and notices it, his face showing recognition. He 
whispers quietly, “Forgiveness.” And then with deep reverence quotes: 
“‘So Jesus also suffered outside the gate in order to sanctify the 
people through his own blood. Therefore, let us go forth to him outside 
the camp, bearing abuse for Him. For here we have no lasting city, but 
we seek the city which is to come..’ Yes, I will go on!”
The traveler says exultantly, taking his first steps into the desert.
As
 dawn breaks he sees nothing but sand and sky and a path which can be 
distinguished from all the others by the cross which hovers where the 
trail meets the horizon. As the day wears on it is obvious that the 
traveler is weary, thirsty, sick with heat. Just when it appears he 
cannot trudge another step, a stranger appears at his side.
“Over the next hill you will find a spring,” she says. “Keep going, you are almost there,” she encourages him.
He is soon lying by a spring, drinking water and eating food which the helpful stranger provides.
“This
 is the Wilderness of Forgiveness,” she explains to the traveler. 
“People often expect God’s forgiveness to be like a beautiful park with 
fountains and rivers and green grass. They cannot understand why it 
should be a desert. Yet one has to learn that God’s forgiveness is 
everything–everything! And this is possible only in a desert, where a 
Christian comes to see nothing, appreciate nothing, hope in nothing but 
the cross of Jesus.” She quotes several passages from Galatians to the 
traveler:
But far be it from me to glory except in the cross 
of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, 
and I to the world. For neither circumcision counts for anything, nor 
uncircumcision, but a new creation. Peace and mercy be upon all who walk
 by this rule, upon the Israel of God…
I have been 
crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives 
in me; and the life I now live in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son 
of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. I do not nullify the grace
 of God; for if justification were through the law, then Christ died to 
no purpose. 
“Do you think the apostle Paul traveled this Wilderness?” Asks the traveler.
“Yes,
 he did. For years Paul had worked very hard in the City of Religion, to
 be a religious man. Still he found no peace for his spirit. Then Paul 
met Jesus; and from the start, Jesus meant one thing to Paul: 
forgiveness. He was overwhelmed with it. The forgiveness of the cross 
was the theme of his life from then on. But Paul’s first experience of 
the Kingdom of God as a reality in his life was right in this 
wilderness.”
“So I’m walking where the apostles walked.” The traveler’s voice is full of awe.
“Remember
 when Peter lowered the net at the command of Jesus and brought it up 
loaded with fish? His immediate response was, ‘Leave me Lord, I’m a 
sinner!’ Jesus answered, ‘Don’t be afraid; from now on you will be 
catching men.’ Implied in Jesus’ answer was, ‘I will take care of your 
sin.’ And when they brought their boats to land, they left everything 
and followed Jesus–followed Him here into this Wilderness of Forgiveness
 in pursuit of a cross. After Jesus had died for Peter’s sins and risen 
for his justification and was about to fill Peter with the Holy Spirit, 
He said to this man who had denied Him three times, ‘Simon, son of 
Jonas, Do you love me?… Feed My sheep.’ And with this thrice-repeated 
question and command, Peter’s life was healed with the forgiveness of 
his Lord.”
“For years,” the traveler tells her, “I’ve been trying 
to get beyond theoretical, doctrinal forgiveness, most probably what is 
taught in Christian City, in order to know forgiveness itself. I’ve 
wanted to be immersed, baptized, LOST, in it. I have longed to hear 
Jesus say to me personally, ‘Take heart, brother, your sins are 
forgiven.’ I’ve wanted to have the blood of the cross flow into my heart
 and purify it.”
“You have come to the right place. Before you 
reach the other side of this Wilderness, you will experience the relief 
of having that load of guilt, which still, in fact, weighs you down like
 a rock, rolled away. You will begin to walk before God without shame. 
Just as you were once obsessed with the need to build yourself up, you 
will soon be obsessed with the forgiveness of God.”
“Obsessed with the forgiveness of God?”
“You
 will become so obsessed with God’s mercy that you will be free, for the
 first time in your life, of other people’s opinions.”
“Ha! Not me.” His response is immediate.
“The
 woman who washed Jesus’ feet with her tears was obsessed with His 
forgiveness to the point where she was heedless of the jeers and 
opinions of others. Or the cleaned leper–he joyfully fell at Jesus’ feet
 giving thanks for more than the cleansing of his body; he had received 
the inner healing of forgiveness. When Zachaeus climbed a tree to see 
Jesus, he was watching his own forgiveness walking toward him down the 
road. So obsessed was he with the forgiveness which visited his life 
that day the chains of covetousness broke from his heart. You have come 
to the place where it will happen to you.”
The traveler resumes 
his journey, his mysterious companion walking silently by his side for 
an hour or two then suddenly disappearing.
“What joy I feel!” The 
traveler exclaims aloud. “This must be what the disciples felt as they 
returned to Jerusalem after the ascension of Jesus.”
In the 
cross-shaped light, the traveler makes out the figure of another woman 
rising over the crest of the next dune and walking slowly down the slope
 toward him. He appears to recognize her. From his expression I gather 
that this person has wronged him. Her eyes are fixed on the traveler as 
she comes up to him.
“Will you forgive me?” She asks.
The 
traveler stops still. The woman draws closer, asking a second time, 
“Will you forgive me?” They are face to face when she asks for the third
 time, “Will you forgive me?” The traveler’s mysterious companion is 
again at his side, quietly instructing him, “This Wilderness of 
Forgiveness is not only a place for receiving forgiveness, but also for 
giving it. This woman is but the first of a procession of people from 
your past whom you have never really forgiven. The supernatural 
forbearance which has flooded your being all day is being challenged by 
the bitterness buried in your soul for all these years. You have to make
 a choice. The sterile, shallow, lip service forgiveness of your past 
life is powerless even to be polite to this woman. But the forgiveness 
of God which has been flowing in to the point of becoming an obsession 
can flow out now if you will allow it to.”
The traveler reaches out, takes the woman by the hand, looks into her eyes and replies, “Of course I forgive you!”
She weeps. And just as she forms the words, “Thank you,” she is gone.
Then
 the man who called the traveler a fool in the restaurant back in 
Christian City comes running and panting toward him. Mopping his face 
with his handkerchief, the troubled man begins to beg forgiveness.
“Of course, of course,” the traveler replies heartily. “It’s nothing. Don’t think another thing about it.”
“Please don’t take this matter so lightly. I NEED your forgiveness. Will you REALLY forgive me, from the bottom of your heart?”
“But
 I already have,” returns the traveler. His companion illuminates the 
situation for him: “He needs your FORGIVENESS. Not courtesy, but active,
 genuine forgiveness. He needs your LOVE.”
“My friend, you are forgiven,” the traveler tells him earnestly with respect in his voice.
With
 visible relief the man sighs, “Thank you!” And disappears into the 
desert air. His companion reminds him of the verse in Matthew 18 which 
reads:
Then Peter came up and said to Him, “Lord, how often 
shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven 
times, but seventy times seven.”
The Wilderness of Worship 
“Water!
 Who would have thought that in the middle of this desert there would be
 a sea!” The traveler is exclaiming to himself when next I see him in my
 dream.
From the brow of a mammoth dune he looks down into an 
expanse of blue stretching to the horizon. “But no, it isn’t water,” he 
remembers. “The old man on the mountain pointed to this as the beginning
 of the second wilderness.” As he descends the hill to its edge, the 
strange sea of sand is not as flat as it seemed from above. There are 
waves of blue extending into the distance like a frozen ocean. “Perhaps 
there is a relationship between this and ‘the sea of glass’ before the 
throne of God. Perhaps the waves will flatten out as I approach the City
 of God.”
Suddenly a person of unearthly beauty is standing a few 
feet away from the traveler. “Greetings,” the being says. “It’s a long 
way across this stretch. Many have perished trying to make it on foot. I
 offer you a better way.”
“A better way?” Asks the traveler. “Yes,
 I have the power to cross this wilderness in a split second. And if you
 will let me, I can take you with me. I can have you safe on the other 
side directly.”
“What must I do?”
“All I require is a token 
act. If you will merely kneel to pay me homage, I will lift you across 
this wilderness with the speed of light..”
“But that would be to worship you, wouldn’t it?”
“Why
 do you find that strange? People do it every day. You did it yourself 
long before you came to this wilderness. The citizens often worship me 
in Christian City. Some there worship money–serve it like slaves. Their 
eyes light up at the thought of it. But the love of money is only a 
symbol of my reality.”
“You aren’t reaching me with your talk of 
money. It’s never been a problem in My life,” the traveler retorts. “How
 about romance? What could be more beautiful or innocent than being in 
love? But when the state of being in love becomes a goal and dominates 
the mind, there is idolatry involved. And it is ‘yours truly’ behind 
that idol,” he says triumphantly. “But the most personally satisfying 
worship I receive comes from men and women who are pursuing religious 
successes.”
“Well,” the traveler cuts his boasting short, “If I 
have to worship you in exchange for quick trip across this wilderness, 
I’ll gladly walk, if it takes forever!”
At this, the bewitching creature vanishes in defeat.
I soon hear the traveler reasoning with himself again:
“In
 Christian City it is possible to go through all the surface motions of 
faith in God while one’s real worship, the thing which obsesses the mind
 day and night, is idolatry. Now that I have left there I can survive 
only if I’m lost in the worship of God.
God has said: ‘Behold,
 I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I
 will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. The wild 
beasts will honor me, the jackals and the ostriches; for I give water in
 the wilderness, rivers in the desert, to give drink to my chosen 
people, the people whom I formed for myself that they might declare my 
praise.’” 
“Perhaps such worship can be formed only in this desert, with its dryness and pounding heat, searing light and eerie silence.”
These
 reflections are interrupted by a sudden crescendo of indescribable 
music, singing of unearthly beauty. Voices seem to be everywhere. Yet no
 one is visible. From the top of a blue wave, the traveler sees seven 
people standing in a hollow with their hands raised heavenward, uttering
 the praises to God. In the midst of this music, his mysterious 
companion returns. Filled with joy, the traveler tells her, “Do you 
notice how the seven worshipers are really surrounded by a multitude of 
magnificent beings whose voices blend with theirs? I feel that out here 
in the desert I have, in a mystery, already entered the outskirts of the
 City of God.”
“But you have come to Mount Zion and to the 
city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable 
angels in festal gatherings, and to the assembly of the firstborn who 
are enrolled in heaven, and to a judge who is God of all, and to the 
spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new 
covenant, and to sprinkled blood that speaks more graciously than the 
blood of Abel… Therefore, let us be grateful for receiving a kingdom 
that cannot be shaken, and thus let us offer to God acceptable worship, 
with reverence and awe; for our God is a consuming fire.” 
After
 some time the song ceases. Everything becomes still. No one is in sight
 but the seven worshipers, who bid the traveler God’s peace and file 
over the dune, leaving him alone with his companion. She leads him to a 
rushing steam and provides him another meal.
“So this is the Wilderness of Worship,” exclaims the traveler, still in awe from his experience.
“Yes,
 here Christians learn to worship God the Father in spirit and truth. 
You might call it the outer court of the City of God; for as you have 
seen, the inhabitants of that City are all around you. Back in the 
Wilderness of Forgiveness you began to experience the power of Jesus’ 
blood cleansing your inmost heart. Here in the Wilderness of Worship you
 receive His Holy Spirit. God baptizes you with power and from on high 
in order for you to worship Him with a worship which, in the 
wildernesses beyond, will take the shape of deeds. Joel 2 tells us: ‘And
 it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit on all 
flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall 
dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions. Even upon the 
menservants and maidservants in those days, I will pour out my spirit.’”
“I
 have never experienced such worship as this. But will it last?” Asks 
the traveler. “Will I still be able to worship the living God with such 
grace in the deserts beyond?”
“Changes are taking place in you 
which, if you let them, will last forever. Your heart is being opened by
 the outpoured Spirit. Your mouth is being opened to speak as God gives 
you utterance–’Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy.’ And your 
eyes are being opened to see visions and dream dreams. You are receiving
 eyes which see God”
“But don’t these same things happen back in 
Christian City? I am told that this sort of thing goes on in the 
Apostolic Church of the Future every Sunday night.”
“The 
difference, brother, is that here you do not merely taste worship or 
dabble in worship. Here in the desert you are lost in the worship of God
 so that all your praise and thanksgiving goes to Him. Everything you do
 is done for Him.”
“But isn’t there a danger of fanaticism?”
“Fanatics
 worship principles, ideas, human personalities and even demons, but 
never God. Consuming worship of God is the doorway, not to fanaticism, 
but to liberty such as you have never known. When you are lost in the 
worship of God, you no longer worship such things as money, romance, or 
success. You have found the one true object of worship, and as you 
worship Him you are fulfilled.”
With these words his companion departs. Once again the traveler is alone on a sea of blue sand, lost in the worship of God.
The Wilderness of Prayer 
Now
 the sea of sand comes to an abrupt end in the foothills of a fiery 
mountain range. There is no vegetation, only walls of dry, hard, burning
 rock. Bones cluttering the sand at the base of the rocky barrier are 
mute testimony to the dangers of this desolate land. The traveler fixes 
his gaze on the cross-shaped star as he walks, and recites to himself:
“Enter
 by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way easy, that leads 
to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is 
narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it 
are few.” 
Hearing voices in the distance, the traveler 
follows the path at the foot of the mountain toward them. There the path
 abruptly turns into a gash in the mountain. Entering the opening, he 
listens as a voice echoes and resounds with such intensity that no words
 can be distinguished. Moving deep into this rock pass, the traveler 
nears a huge wrought iron arch under which a man is addressing an 
assembly of men and women. “This is the way, believe me,” pleads the 
man, his words now distinct. “This narrow gate to my left is so rusty it
 will hardly swing. Who in his right mind would want to follow that 
steep path, when this well-paved, well-traveled way is open and ready? 
Come through this gate and you will be out of the wilderness before the 
day is over. Good food and a clean bed await you at the other end. There
 are prayer meetings arranged at the rest stops every hour along the 
way.”
Without hesitation the traveler passes under the wrought 
iron arch and proceeds down the road. Others join him. The route on 
which he now walks is smooth and pleasant in contrast to the blue sand 
he had just plodded through. A sign repeats the information that there 
are rest stops every hour, consisting of a prayer meeting and a light 
lunch.
At the first such stop he talks with a pleasant hostess: “I’ve come a long way. Please tell me where this path is taking us.”
She smiles and replies, “You will be beautifully housed and well taken care of. Your journey will be over by nightfall.”
“The
 traveler walks on, increasingly perplexed. Just as darkness begins to 
fall after a scenic journey through the rocks and trees, he finds 
himself on the brow of a hill looking down on a city.
“Welcome!” Exclaims a man standing beneath a wrought iron arch identical to the arch through which he had passed earlier.
“Thank you,” replies the traveler. “But where am I?”
“Why, this is Christian City!”
Without
 another word the traveler turns and runs back the same way he came. 
With Christian City out of sight, he slows to a walk but doesn’t stop 
until he’s reached the other arch, the end of the false path. He cries 
out, “I have only one desire: to find that narrow gate and enter it 
before I take a single rest. How could I have been so blind? Of course 
the narrow gate had been almost obliterated by weeds and vines.
Daybreak
 finds him on a narrow path winding up through scarlet rocks. There is a
 hum in the air as of a wind through trees, but neither wind nor trees 
are found here. The hum grows louder and finally can be distinguished as
 a chant of many voices. Now the traveler sees the people on the path 
ahead. He has become part of a procession of people all moving toward 
the City of God. As they walk they are each talking to someone unseen. 
Some of them are crying. Some seem exuberant. Some are mentioning 
people’s names and asking good things for them. Some ask their neighbors
 ahead or behind for help, but their main concern is with their unseen 
listener.
The traveler’s mysterious companion now returns and 
addresses him. “Here in the Wilderness of Prayer the contrast with 
Christian City is extreme, you know. There, they do have prayer meetings
 and people pray before they go to bed. When life becomes difficult, 
their prayer becomes intense, until the crisis passes. But in the 
Wilderness of Prayer, prayer becomes one’s way of life–the source of 
one’s whole existence. The time has come for YOU to be lost in a life of
 prayer. Meditate on these passages in the Gospel of Luke,” she adds, 
handing him a sheet of paper on which is written:
Now when
 all the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and
 was Praying, the heavens opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon Him
 in bodily form, as a dove, and a voice came from heaven, “Thou are my 
beloved Son; with thee I am will pleased” (Luke 3:21-22)
But
 so much the more the report went abroad concerning him; and great 
multitudes gathered to hear and to be healed of their infirmities. But 
he withdrew to the wilderness and Prayed. (Luke 5:15-16)
In
 those days he went out into the hills to Pray; and all night he 
continued in prayer to God. And when it was day, he called his 
disciples, and chose from them twelve, whom he named apostles…(Luke 6:12-13)
Now
 about eight days after these sayings he took with him Peter and John 
and James, and went up on the mountains to Pray. And when He was 
Praying, the appearance of his countenance was altered, and his raiment 
became dazzling white. (Luke 9:28-29)
He was 
Praying in a certain place, and when he ceased, one of his disciples 
said to him, “Lord, teach us to Pray, as John taught his disciples” (Luke 11:1)
And
 he came out, and went, as his custom, to the Mount of Olives; and the 
disciples followed him. And when he came to the place he said to them, 
“pray that you may not enter into temptation.” And he withdrew from them
 about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and Prayed. (Luke 22:39-41)
And
 when they came to the place which is called The Skull, there they 
crucified him, and the criminals, one on the right and one of the left. 
And Jesus said. “Father forgive them; for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:33-34 ).
“A
 prayer life is something we engage in alone, yet it brings us into 
fellowship with God and man as nothing else will,” his companion tells 
him when he has finished reading. “Prayer is going to God, to the 
Father’s door, and asking for bread so that you can give it to your 
needy brother. When you knock and keep knocking, it always opens. 
Always. Out of that communion with God comes something you share with 
others. And as you share what God gives you, you have a communion with 
them. A person will have this communion even if he’s shy or clumsy. For 
this life of prayer delivers one from the fear of other people’s 
opinions and the fear of one’s own blunders.”
“But does it take these eerie mountains, these cliffs, this continuous danger to learn to pray?” Asks the traveler.
“Well,
 in the past you cried to God in your occasional emergencies. Here you 
are learning to see your life as a continuous crisis, driving you to 
call on God day and night. “Shall not God vindicate his elect who cry to
 him day and night?’ The clearer our vision of what happens in the 
world–how close to the edge of chaos the nations are–the more we 
understand that the only way to know life is to come close to God the 
Father in prayer, to cry to Him day and night. We pray without ceasing 
because the crisis in earthly life is never over.”
“But why does 
it all have to be so hard? It looks to me as though the climb through 
these mountains is the toughest part of the journey yet.”
“Because
 prayer is our main work. It takes thought, concentration, an active 
will and the best of one’s strength to pray for the hallowing of God’s 
name, the coming of God’s kingdom, to pray for laborers in the harvest, 
or to pray for specific people and their needs. You have barely begun to
 scratch the surface of the awesome things that wait to be done in 
answer to your prayers, if you will keep going.”
“That’s it, though! To keep going. I’m getting so tired.”
“This
 is because your prayers are becoming engaged in the Real Battle. Prayer
 is the ground where we overcome evil with good. In these mountains you 
will learn to pray for your enemies. The life of overcoming evil with 
good starts with asking that good will come to those who have done evil 
to us.”
The narrow path leads to a lookout where the traveler and 
his companion share a meal. Afterwards they walk to the edge of the 
lookout where she points to the path winding down through the mountains 
which diminish in size until somewhere near the horizon they appear to 
reach their end.
“You see, there begins the Harvest,” the 
travelers companion says, pointing to a view beyond them, “Remember 
these words which Jesus said:
‘Do you not say, there are yet 
four months, then comes the harvest? I tell you, lift up your eyes, and 
see how the fields are already white for harvest. He who reaps receives 
wages, and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that sower and reaper may 
rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, “One sows and another 
reaps.” I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor; others have
 labored, and you will have entered into their labor.’”
The traveler look into the distance while his companion explains further:
“In
 Christian City, remember there is a fine, wide street called Missionary
 boulevard, lined with spacious well-kept buildings and adorned with 
fountains and lawns and lovely shrubs. Those buildings house every 
missionary enterprise known in the Christian world. There are 
headquarters for literature outreach, editorial offices for elaborate 
missionary magazines, and smaller facilities that provide a prayer 
letter service for the lesser known laborers. There are studios that 
produce world literature telethons and video tapes for missionary 
appeals. There are institutions that offer refresher courses for 
missionaries on furlough, and a computerized itinerary service for 
missionaries who need to broaden their financial base. There are 
recruiting centers, rest facilities for retired missionaries and even a 
budding record company. But lately Missionary Boulevard has been thrown 
into a panic by some disturbing news. Word has been received that large 
numbers of missionaries have committed the unpardonable breach of 
missionary etiquette: instead of taking as their mission field the 
approved territory of the known world, missionaries have plunged in to 
the desert toward the City of God.
“But what kind of mission field
 is this desert?” The traveler asks. “Whose soul are you going to save 
in the Wilderness of Forgiveness except your own? And when you get to 
the Wilderness of Worship, everyone there is already alive with God’s 
glory. In the Wilderness of Prayer there is wonderful communion with 
other travelers, and I’m learning to intercede. But there aren’t any 
lost souls…”
The Harvest 
Reaching the 
outer extremity of the Wilderness of Prayer, the traveler in my dream is
 taking in his first clear view of his destination. In the far distance,
 radiant with a holy splendor, is the City of God. Visibly overcome with
 emotion, his step quickens. Suddenly he encounters a terrible stench of
 smoke and echoing bodies. Now there are corpses everywhere. Forms with 
life left are moaning for help.
A woman doubled up with pain begs the traveler, “Please, please do something for me. I can’t tolerate this pain anymore!”
“I’m powerless,” he tells her. “What do you think I could do for you?”
“A little water is all I need. Please bring me some water!”
“Where am I going to find water in the desert?”
“How long do you think YOU’LL last,” she replies, “unless you find water for yourself? Please find some and bring it to me.”
As
 the traveler scans the desert in bewilderment, his mysterious companion
 returns and guides him to a spring surrounded by thousands of empty 
flasks.
“Drink some yourself,” she suggests, “and then fill a flask for the woman.
After
 drinking this water, the traveler is immediately strengthened and 
brings some to the woman. By the time she has finished drinking her 
health is restored. Immediately she takes the flask, runs to the spring 
and begins helping her neighbors. There are men with deep wounds, 
children lying on their backs with faint, rapid breathing, and elderly 
people with dirty bandages around their worn faces. Some victims are 
screaming with pain and others are weeping silently to themselves. Some 
are revived with a single flask of water. Others need much more. I see 
other travellers engaged in this same effort. As victims are healed, 
they too participate in the labor of raising up others. As they carry 
water from the spring, the traveler shares this passage from the Gospel 
of John with another man:
“Meanwhile the disciples besought him 
saying, “Rabbi, eat.” But He said to them, “I have food to eat of which 
you do not know. So the disciples said to one another, “Has anyone 
brought Him food?” Jesus said to them, “My food is to do the will of Him
 who sent me, and to accomplish His word.”
“I guess we’re learning what this means,” added the traveler.
He
 spends many days in that place involved in the work of revival. One 
evening as he rests by the spring his companion returns and sits down 
beside him.
“I don’t suppose we’ll be able to go on to the City of God until we’ve finished here?” The traveler asks her.
“That is true,” she replies.
“But will they wait for us?”
“Don’t
 worry. Just keep reviving these people until they’re all on their feet.
 Then the gates of the City of God will be open and the inhabitants will
 come out and escort you in. Bear this in mind:
‘Do not say, 
There are yet four months, then comes the harvest. I tell you, lift up 
your eyes, and see the fields are white for harvest. He who reaps 
receives wages, and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that sower and 
reaper may rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, “One sows 
and another reaps.” I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor;
 others have labored and you have entered into their labor.’”
“But
 these needs are so staggering that I am beginning to feel overwhelmed. 
The joy of seeing restoration take place before my eyes is offset to 
some degree by the vastness of this sea of despair. Is there an end to 
it?”
“Brother,” replies his companion, “just as you had to lose 
yourself in God’s forgiveness, and in worship and prayer, you are now 
losing yourself in the harvest. It is one thing to dabble in the 
harvest. It’s quite another to be lost in it.”
“But will I have the strength to keep on working among people with such great needs?”
“Isn’t that what Jesus did?”
And
 as He sat at the table in the house, behold, many tax collectors and 
sinners came and sat down with Jesus and His disciples. And when the 
Pharisees saw this, they said to His disciples, “Why does your teacher 
eat with tax collectors and sinners?” But when He heard it, He said, 
“Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick.
 Go and learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy and not sacrifice.’ For I
 came not to call the righteous, but the sinners.”
“It must have become discouraging for Him, though”
“Jesus
 wept over religious Jerusalem for its hardness of heart. Obviously, His
 greatest encouragement on the human side came from these repenting 
singers. Of these He never tired. You can confidently abandon yourself 
to this harvest without danger of being engulfed by it, provided you 
keep your vision of the City, and provided you do your work here with a 
whole heart. The Spirit of the Lord will sustain you if you will be 
careful to listen to these people as Jesus listened to the woman at the 
well, to the lepers, the lame, the blind, the father of the 
demon-possessed boy.
Don’t be in a hurry. Take time to listen and 
ask the right questions. Find out where people really hurt, what they 
really need. Also, you must tell them about Jesus as you go about with 
your flask. The water in the flask and this message of yours are 
identical. These dying people are thirsting for Jesus, not theories 
about Jesus, but Jesus Himself. The message of Jesus is a drink of 
refreshing water which brings them back to life. Remember the verse, ‘Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons. You received without pay, give without pay.’ 
Don’t be satisfied until the mercy of God has raised them ALL to their feet.”
“Yes. Think about this passage in Revelation;
“And
 I saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God,
 prepared as a bride adorned for her husband; and I heard a great voice 
from the throne saying, ‘Behold, the dwelling of God is with men. He 
will dwell with them, and they shall be His people, and God himself will
 be with them; He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death 
shall be no more, for the former things have passed away.’” 
“As
 you first experience the labor of the harvest and discover you are 
actually able to raise these perishing ones to their feet by giving them
 living water from the divine spring, Jesus, you have tremendous joy. 
The wilderness experiences of forgiveness, worship of god and prayer 
have issued in the power to heal the sick in the name of Jesus.”
“‘He who believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these will he do, because I go to the Father.’ The challenge is to endure.”
The Vision 
When
 I next see the traveler in my dream, he has begun to complain, “How 
long is this gong to go on? I would have thought that by now the work 
would be finished and we could go on.
I’m sorry, but I’m tired. I’m going over by that boulder to rest in the shade for a couple of days.”
Later
 another traveler passes the boulder and finds him lying there almost 
dead. Running to the spring he fills two flasks, returns and pours the 
precious water down his throat.
“Drink, brother, drink!”
“Thank
 you! Oh, thank you! I was almost done for,” says the traveler between 
gulps. “But how did I come to this? What went wrong?”
His mysterious companion joins him again. “Brother,” she says, “you lost your strength because you lost your vision.
The
 City of God over there is still your destination. It is your home, the 
dwelling place of our God. While you work, be sure to take time daily, 
hourly, to pause and look at the City of God. If you fail to look up in 
the midst of your labors and see the City of God, fail to stop and hear 
its music, neglect to breathe the atmosphere it sends forth to you, or 
to drink from that steam which flows out from beneath its gates, you 
will be exhausted. You must remember that sustaining power comes from 
the City.”
“The traveler resumes his work in the Harvest with 
fresh vigor. But at nightfall overcome by weariness. He goes to the 
spring; approaching it is a woman who looks to be quite elderly, yet 
doesn’t appear the least bit tired.
“What is your secret?” Asks the traveler. “You look so youthful and vigorous while I have no strength left.”
“I
 have taken my cue from Daniel,” she tells him. “Daniel must have been a
 busy man, yet in the midst of the daily pressures he continued to 
return to his upper chamber where the windows opened westward. There 
looking toward Jerusalem hundreds of miles away, he prayed and gave 
thanks to God. Even though it meant the lions’ den, Daniel refused to 
neglect his prayers. Daniel keeps his vision alive by making the City of
 God his focus. Ad that’s what I do. The more problems I have to contend
 with here in the Harvest, the more time seems to press in on me, the 
more firmly I fix my eye on the City of God. I make sure to keep looking
 up. Every time I eat bread and drink wine I do so in anticipation as 
well as in remembrance. This is the food of the City, you know. It keeps
 my eyes AND my heart there.”
When the traveler left the old woman, he seemed to be consciously attempting to keep his vision before him.
In low voice he was singing the words of Revelation: “And
 I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God,
 prepared as a bride adorned for her husband; and I heard a great voice 
from the throne saying, ‘Behold, the dwelling of God is with men. He 
will dwell with them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself will
 with them; He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death 
shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain 
anymore, for the former things have passed away!” 
When I 
last see the traveler, his mysterious companion had returned with a 
final admonition for him: “KEEP looking to that City and remember who 
waits for you there. He has prepared a place for you and will soon be 
coming for you. Meanwhile, as you look to the City, He will renew 
your strength so that you will mount up on wings as the eagles, you will
 run and not be weary, you will walk and not faint.”
Two Revivals 
At
 this point I was swept away from the scene of the traveler’s journey to
 the top of a high cliff. I found there a stone tablet inscribed with 
these words from Revelation 19:
“Then I saw heaven opened, and
 behold a white horse! He who sat upon it is called Faithful and True, 
and in righteousness He judges and makes war. His eyes are like a flame 
of fire, and on His head are many diadems; and He has a name inscribed 
with no one knows but Himself. He is clad in a robe dipped in blood, and
 the name by which He is called is the The Word of God. And the armies 
of heaven arrayed in fine linen, white and pure, followed Him on white 
horses. From His mouth issues a sharp sword with which to smite the 
nations and He will rule them with a rod of iron; He will tread the wine
 press of the fury of the wrath of God the Almighty. On His robe and on 
His thigh He has a name inscribed, King of Kings and Lord of Lords.” 
Looking
 up from the tablet, I saw beneath me two revivals simultaneously in 
progress. Christian City was experiencing a revival which manifested 
itself in a massive and rapid growth. Within a very short amount of time
 the population had increased tenfold. Building was going on everywhere.
 New homes sprawled up an down the surrounding hills. But the most 
dramatic aspect of this growth in Christian City was the appearance of 
magnificent new church structures towering over the country side. One 
cathedral was being completed which had a spire seventy stories high, 
housing the world’s most powerful transmitter. Another church was taking
 shape in the form of a giant glass dome with revolving stage and 
wrap-around sound systems. The most unusual one looked like an upright 
cross with fifteen elevators taking people up to the sanctuary housed in
 the south arm and a Christian restaurant housed in the north arm. There
 were Christian educational facilities for every age group from 
pre-kindergarten to graduate school; this group sponsored scenic retreat
 centers in the style of Swiss chalets with vast seminar halls.
There was a feeling in Christian City that this growth was a sign of the world’s last days.
Books
 on the end of the age were up near the top of the Christian best seller
 lists, second only to the Christian sex manuals. Reporters came from 
all over the world to do articles on the booming conditions there. The 
inhabitants of Christian City were claiming that when the End came, they
 would be caught away to the City of God, before the chaos erupted.
At
 the same time, I saw across the desert far distant from Christian City a
 very different revival taking place with none of the accouterments of 
successful religion.
Dying men and women were being raised to 
their feet like the dry bones Ezekiel saw. They were being delivered 
from their diseases, their sins, and their spiritual prisons, merely by 
drinking the living, life-giving water and shared it with others, 
bringing healing to them. As by a spreading fire or a surging flood, the
 sick ones were being swept to their feet. Laborers there, who’d spent 
years seeing limited results, found that now it was taking no more than a
 single drop of water on a parched tongue to raise the dying to life. 
And each day the process was accelerating.
Finally I saw the last prone body raised to life.
What
 one appeared a battlefield of defeat had become the camp of a mighty 
army. Suddenly an earthquake shook the ground beneath my feet. The Sky 
darkened and a sound of war rolled in from the east.
Then I saw Christian City being invaded and destroyed. 
The
 magnificent cathedrals, the world’s largest cross, retreat centers and 
seminar halls were splintered apart and flattened by deafening 
explosions. Dead bodies of the inhabitants who had thought they would 
escape this holocaust filled the streets. The armies of destruction now 
pressed on into the desert toward the scene of the second revival. Soon 
this seemingly indestructible horde was engulfing the Wilderness of 
forgiveness, the Wilderness Worship and the Wilderness of Prayer. When 
the City of God came into its view, a single roar like that of a wounded
 beast filled the air. The horde drove on toward its goal, appearing 
about to storm the City of God.
But near the wall of the City, the army of revived ones waited poised and ready.
 When the enemy came within range, the gates of the City burst open. Out
 marched the Army of Light led by a King of such splendor that the enemy
 horde had to shield its eyes. The revived ones merged with the Army of 
Light and joined battle with the enemy.
Three-and-a half days later the war was over.
The
 enemy was destroyed and the triumphant ones entered the City of God for
 which they had been chosen before the foundation of the world.
Again I was swept away to read another large tablet engraved with further words from Revelation:
“Then
 I saw an angel standing in the sun, and with a loud voice he called to 
all the birds that fly in midheaven, ‘Come, gather for the great supper 
of God, to eat the flesh of kings, the flesh of captains, the flesh of 
mighty men, the flesh of horses and their riders, and the flesh of all 
men, both free and slave, both small and great.’ And I saw the beast and
 the kings of earth with their armies gathered to make war against Him 
who sits upon the horse and against his army. And the beast was 
captured, and with it the false prophet who in its presence had worked 
the signs by which he deceived those who had received the mark of the 
beast and whose who worshiped its image. These two were thrown alive 
into the lake of fire that burns with brimstone. And the rest were slain
 by the sword of Him who sits upon the horse, the sword that issues from
 His mouth; and all the birds were gorged with their flesh.
“Then
 I saw an angel coming down from heaven, holding in his hand the key of 
the bottomless pit and a great chain. And he seized the dragon, that 
ancient serpent, who is the Devil and Satan, and bound him for a 
thousand years, and threw him into the pit, and shut it and sealed it 
over him, that he could deceive the nations no more, till the thousand 
years were ended. After that he must be loosed for a little while. Then I
 saw thrones, and seated on them were those to whom judgment was 
committed. Also I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded for their
 testimony to Jesus and for the word of God, and who had not worshiped 
the beast or its image and had not received its mark of their foreheads 
or their hands. They came to life, and reigned with Christ for a 
thousand years.” 
When I had finished reading this, as 
abruptly as my dream had come to me it ended, leaving me with a deep 
sense of awe, a new awareness of the undercurrents in my own life, and a
 renewed desire to seek to know God in spirit and truth.
Never has it been more clear to me that two revivals are in progress on the earth. 
One
 is the revival of the Spirit of God by which dead men and women are 
freed from their sins by the blood of the Lamb and raised to a life 
which is the life of the sons of God, a life which bears God’s nature, 
manifests God’s mercy.
The other revival is the revival of 
religious flesh, a revival which is so appealing and gathers such 
multitudes and wields such power in this world because it offers all the
 comfort of religion while allowing you to keep your ego and all rights 
to yourself.
Surely each of us has to decide which revival he is going to be part of.
Am
 I going to invest my life in some enterprise of booming Christian City?
 Or am I going to lose my life in the pursuit of God’s will of mercy? Am
 I going to concentrate on building something that will cause the 
citizens of Christian City to sit up and take notice? Or am I going to 
spend my life bringing the poor and the maimed and the halt and the 
blind to the Master’s table?
Originally Published by Bethany House Publishers in 1980

Thanks for sharing this story, Clint. I linked to this from my blog -- I hope that's ok! Here is the direct link if you are curious: http://www.hefillsmycup.blogspot.com/2012/10/real-worship.html#.ULzpDoM8CSo
ReplyDeleteThat is fine, glad you stopped in!
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