Awake, O Sleeper — Rise, and Christ Will Shine on You.
It was one of those quiet, heavy moments that come after months—perhaps years—of steady, unseen labor. Day after day, I poured myself into writing truths that burned in my heart, truths I believed were from God. Yet no one seemed to notice. No encouragement came. No shares, no messages, no sign that anyone understood or even cared.
In the monotony and loneliness, doubt crept in like frost.
Why am I doing this?
Who is actually being helped?
Am I just wasting my time, shouting into an empty void?
It was in that place of weariness that the Lord met me with a vision.
I saw myself in a vast, snow-covered landscape under a pale sky. All around me, people were walking slowly, casually, as if enjoying a winter stroll. But I knew something they did not: they were dying. Their bodies were losing heat faster than they could produce it. Hypothermia was setting in.
I ran from person to person, shaking them, calling out, “Wake up! Move! You’re freezing to death!”

But most did not resist me with anger. They barely responded at all. Some smiled sleepily. Others mumbled, “I’m fine… it feels warm now,” before drifting back into stillness. A few even lay down in the snow, folding their hands peacefully, eyes closing in what looked like rest.
Then I understood: this was not early-stage hypothermia with violent shivering and panic. This was the advanced stage—the most dangerous one. The body’s defenses had failed. Blood vessels dilated, a false warmth flooded in, and a deceptive calm descended. Drowsiness felt like peace. Movement seemed unnecessary. The victims no longer recognized the danger because the cold had numbed their judgment, alertness, and discernment. In that false comfort, they were moments from death.
The vision shifted, and the Holy Spirit spoke without words:
This is the spiritual condition of many in this hour. They are not fighting you because they feel threatened by the truth. They are indifferent because they feel comfortable. The slumber itself is the danger—and it feels good to them.
The Deceptive Calm of Spiritual Hypothermia
In severe hypothermia, the paradox is cruel: just before death, victims often feel warm and content. They may even remove clothing, hastening their end, because their body tricks them into believing all is well. Survival demands movement, friction, external heat—but the drowsiness convinces them to rest.
So it is spiritually. Many today are not raging against God. They are not openly rebellious. They are simply… asleep.
A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest (Proverbs 6:10).
It feels harmless. It feels peaceful. Entertainment, comfort, distraction, compromise—all offer a soft blanket in the snow. And in that deceptive ease, core temperature drops. Discernment fades. Urgency vanishes. The soul drifts toward eternal separation while feeling, paradoxically, at peace.
The Scriptures Cry the Same Alarm
God’s Word has been sounding this warning across centuries:
“And do this, understanding the present time: The hour has already come for you to wake up from your slumber, because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed. The night is nearly over; the day is almost here.”
— Romans 13:11–12 (NIV)
Salvation is nearer today—than it was yesterday. Time is shorter. The cold is deeper. Yet many sleep on.
“This is why it is said: ‘Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.’”
— Ephesians 5:14 (NIV)
Notice the tenderness and the terror in this verse. It is a quotation—possibly an early hymn—spoken as if Christ Himself is leaning over the drowsy soul, shaking gently: “Wake up. Rise. I will give you light.” But the sleeper must respond. The light does not shine automatically on those who persist in choosing the darkness of slumber.
“How long will you lie there, you sluggard? When will you get up from your sleep? A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest—and poverty will come on you like a thief and scarcity like an armed man.”
— Proverbs 6:9–11 (NIV)
Spiritual poverty. Scarcity of truth, of life, of God Himself. It does not come with trumpets. It comes quietly, like a thief, while we rest.
The Answer to My Doubt
In the vision, as I stood exhausted and questioning the point of it all, the Lord reframed everything.
Waking the sleepers is never wasted effort.
Even if most turn over and close their eyes again, the act of calling—“Awake! Move! Live!”—is itself obedience. It is love. It is mercy in a moment when time is short.
Rescue workers in blizzards do not stop shaking victims just because many do not respond. Every life that stirs, shivers, and stumbles toward warmth justifies the labor. And even for those who do not awaken, the call was still the right thing—the loving thing—to do.
So it is with us who labor to speak truth in a drowsy generation. Our measure of success is not visible response. It is faithfulness.
A Call to the Sleepers and to the Watchmen
To the sleeper reading this:
If a quiet unease stirs in you as you read these words—if something in your spirit says, “I’ve been too comfortable, too long”—do not dismiss it as discomfort to be soothed. That stirring may be the Holy Spirit shaking you before the false peace becomes irreversible.
Wake up. Rise. Move toward Christ. His light is ready to shine on you the moment you open your eyes.
To the watchman—the one who feels alone in the cold, sounding an alarm no one seems to hear:
Take heart. Your labor is seen. The grace that sustains you is divine. Keep calling. Keep writing. Keep shaking.
You are not wasting your time.
You are rescuing the perishing, one shaken soul at a time.
And your Father sees every effort.
The hour has come to wake up from slumber.
Salvation is nearer now than when we first believed.
Awake, sleeper.
Rise.
And Christ will shine on you.
