Summary. When Christians have a hard time recognizing revealed glory, they should evaluate their sight and work on development.
God's divinity and power, his glory, is proclaimed by what he has made. This is the baseline. For those who trust Christ, there is more. The Spirit gives insight into the meaning revealed in creation and Scripture, and he increases our understanding of this meaning. Engaging Nature and Scripture in partnership with the Spirit hones our capacity to recognize and understand reflections of God's glory.
Living amidst this clarified revelation, the more the more we engage the reflections of glory the more we know God. And the more we know God, the more we develop our perception of his revelation. Even with this clarity, though, reflections of God's glory can be difficult to discern. His glory is not always flashy. Sometimes it is subtle. There are, of course, instances of God's blinding brilliance, but these are rare. If we are only looking for magnificence and grandeur, we will entirely miss the understated beauty of God.
God shines his splendid, unmistakable goodness all over: it is the space in which we live and move and have our being. It is our task to develop eyes to see, for missing his evident glory is a problem of perception not revelation. If a believer has a difficult time perceiving reflections of glory in creation, she must evaluate her capacity to see and take steps to develop the theistic assumptions that properly underpin such perception. Engaging more deeply with God's creation and Word in community can form these assumptions develop our spiritual eyesight.
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