New to the Space
Alignment Before Fire
DAY 2 — THE PROBLEM WITH A VISIBLE JESUS
Acts records the moment this way:
“And when he had said these things, as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight.”
Acts 1:9
It feels like departure.
But listen to what Jesus had already told them:
“I tell you the truth: it is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you.”
John 16:7
“To your advantage.”
If Jesus remained visible in Jerusalem, access would be geographical.
By ascending, His presence becomes personal.
Calvin said, “Christ ascended that His power might be present everywhere.”
External visibility can impress. Internal presence transforms.
1. What “external visibility” does
When something is visible and undeniable, it produces impact.
- Miracles impress.
- Spectacle commands attention.
- A visible authority compels compliance.
If Jesus had remained physically in Jerusalem:
- Crowds would gather.
- Opponents would be silenced.
- Doubt would decrease.
- Visibility would increase influence.
External visibility produces reaction.
It can create:
- Awe
- Agreement
- Conformity
- Momentum
But reaction is not the same thing as transformation.
The Israelites saw the Red Sea part — and still grumbled in the wilderness.
Crowds saw Jesus multiply bread — and still walked away in John 6.
Visibility can overwhelm the senses while leaving the heart unchanged.
Impression is not the same as renovation.
2. What “internal presence” does
When Jesus ascends, He promises the Spirit.
“It is to your advantage that I go away… for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you.” (John 16:7)
External presence limits access. Internal presence multiplies transformation.
The Spirit does what visibility cannot:
- Convicts from within.
- Changes desires.
- Softens resistance.
- Forms character.
- Produces courage.
- Sustains obedience in private.
External visibility modifies behavior under observation.
Internal presence reshapes identity when no one is watching.
One produces performance.
The other produces regeneration.
3. Why this matters for Acts 1
If Jesus had remained visible: Faith would remain proximity-based.
“If I can see Him, I’ll obey.”
But Acts shifts the axis of faith:
- Now, obedience must flow from trust.
- Now, allegiance is anchored in conviction.
- Now, authority is internalized.
Instead of following a visible Rabbi in Galilee, they now carry the reigning Christ within them into hostile environments.
That is a deeper faith. That is durable transformation.
Disruptive statement:
What do you desire more: external clarity or internal transformation? Certainty or Surrender?
Concrete step:
Sit in silence today and repeat slowly: “You reign.”
About our Author
READ MORE
Day 11: Families & Children
21 Days of Prayerby Rev James M. Armpriester, Jr Families & Children (Deuteronomy 6:4–7; Proverbs 22:6) Welcome to Day 11 of 21 Days of Prayer We are reaching Day 11, bringing our focus to the very foundation of the church and our community: Families and...
Day 10: Youth & the Next Generation
21 Days of Prayer by Rev James M. Armpriester, Jr Youth & the Next Generation (Joel 2:28–29; 1 Timothy 4:12) Welcome to Day 10 of 21 Days of Prayer We have spent the last couple of days praying for identity, power, fruit, and unity. Today, we turn our focus...
Day 9: Church Unity & Multicultural Harmony
21 Days of Prayer by Rev James M. Armpriester, Jr Church Unity & Multicultural Harmony (Ephesians 4:1–6; 1 Corinthians 12) Welcome to Day 9 of 21 Days of Prayer We continue our corporate focus today, praying for unity—true, deep unity—in a church filled with...
