“By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king: for he endured, as seeing him who is invisible.” (Heb 11:27 AV)
What a thought! Moses did not fear what Pharoah could do because God was more real to him that a king who wanted him dead. One might muse that if we would see a burning bush and hear the voice of God, perhaps we would respond in the same way. But we have the word of God and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Moses may have seen God. But we personally can dwell with Him. Endurance through the trials or challenges of life is directly tied to how real we think God is. The more real God is, the easier it is to endure. It is often assumed that Moses fled Egypt out of fear. Yet the author of Hebrews contradicts that idea. He did not flee because he feared Pharoah. He fled because he saw God as more real than the threat that existed in Egypt.
If you think of many of those whom God greatly used, they share this one event as a common experience. David met with God, and God called him a man after his own heart. Isaiah saw God. Elijah experienced the still, small voice. The disciples walked with the Son of God. And Paul saw Jesus on the road to Damascus. All of these people had a personal and life-changing experience with God. They met Him is a very special way that resulted in a deeper understanding of who and what He is. In short, those who endure can do so because God is not a mere belief. God is not an impersonal deity. God is not an idea. He is not a force. God is a person. He is real. He exists just as sure as all other things exist. He is eternal. His nature is spirit. His nature does not make Him less real than that which we can discern with our five natural senses. Just because God is invisible does not mean seeing Him is impossible. No, the LORD will not come in a vision. There is no need to. The word of God and the Spirit of God are more than adequate to testify of His reality. I’ll say it again. Those who endure do so because they see a God who cannot be seen.
Seeing the invisible is more than seeing His existence. Seeing the invisible God is also seeing what God is. He in all-knowing. He was from eternity. There is nothing we will ever experience that He doesn’t already know. He is all-powerful. There is nothing He cannot do that is consistent with His character. God is the master planner, and nothing will frustrate His purposes. God is all-present. There is nowhere that we will ever be where God is not already there. Seeing the invisible God is seeing what He is and not merely that He is. This is what Moses saw. BTW, he saw the reality of God before he fled. Seeing the invisible caused him to flee Egypt. If Moses did not see the invisible God prior to his flight, he would have seen the burning bush as nothing more than a burning bush. Once we see the invisible God, then it is much easier to see Him in the things that He does. Either God exists or He does not. Whether we perceive Him or not does not determine His existence or nature. Seeing the invisible is the power behind finishing our course well.