Teaching - Valuing God's Presence
There are others who teach this better than I do. Here, I defer. The teaching is hyperlinked below.
Fascinated with Jesus: The Superior Pleasure of Knowing God (Mike Bickle, Fascinated: The Superior Pleasure of Knowing God 2011)
"I don't just want to believe for God's presence; I want to believe in God's presence. I want to see it, taste it, hear it, smell it and feel it. I want meetings in which without anyone doing anything, no one can stay standing. I have been privileged to be in meetings where rain has fallen inside the building. Where the power of God is so thick that you worship for hours, and the last sound you hear is an exhausted drummer falling through his kit. I've been in meetings where oil has covered everyone's foreheads. Where people have been healed even though no one prayed for them. Where lights have appeared and danced around the room. Meetings where hundreds of people heard the voice of God, and no one spoke. Where money appeared in people's pockets, and no one knew how it got there. Poor people walking out of a service wealthy" (Graham Cooke, The Language of Love)
Fascinated with Jesus: The Superior Pleasure of Knowing God (Mike Bickle, Fascinated: The Superior Pleasure of Knowing God 2011)
"I don't just want to believe for God's presence; I want to believe in God's presence. I want to see it, taste it, hear it, smell it and feel it. I want meetings in which without anyone doing anything, no one can stay standing. I have been privileged to be in meetings where rain has fallen inside the building. Where the power of God is so thick that you worship for hours, and the last sound you hear is an exhausted drummer falling through his kit. I've been in meetings where oil has covered everyone's foreheads. Where people have been healed even though no one prayed for them. Where lights have appeared and danced around the room. Meetings where hundreds of people heard the voice of God, and no one spoke. Where money appeared in people's pockets, and no one knew how it got there. Poor people walking out of a service wealthy" (Graham Cooke, The Language of Love)