YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE ASKING FOR

The Voice, the Years, and What God Showed Me

By B.V. Thomas

The Hermeneutical Quill

The Garden

It was late evening. The outside had grown dark, and the house was quiet in the way that only evenings can be — that particular stillness where the noise of the day has finally run out of things to say.

I was strolling and praying, as I often did in those days. And as I prayed, there was one thing on my lips — the same thing that had been on my lips for years. Anoint me, Lord. Anoint me, Lord. Simple words. Earnest words. The kind of words that come not from the mind but from somewhere deeper — from a hunger you cannot fully explain and cannot silence, no matter how long it goes unanswered.

I had been asking for a long time.

Then it came.

The only way I can describe it is this: it was as though the entire atmosphere was about to crash upon me. Like a bolt driven straight into the spine. It was not a voice audible to anyone else in the room — it was not that kind of sound. It was the kind that bypasses the ears entirely and goes straight to the core of your being, to the deepest recesses of who you are, the place where no human voice has ever reached. And in that place, it spoke with unmistakable clarity:

“You don’t know what you are asking for.”

I froze. It took me some time to come off that experience. My flesh was shaken — there is no other word for it. Anything that proceeds from God lands on the flesh like terra-strike. The spirit-man receives it immediately and understands — but the flesh must process the impact, and that processing takes time.

I want to say something about that voice, because I believe it will help someone reading this. I have come to understand, through years of walking with God, that the Father speaks differently than the Son. When Jesus speaks, He speaks with a tenderness that is unlike anything else — gentle, piercing in its own way, but tender. The Father possesses a uniqueness that many are not accustomed to — a weight, a thunder, a depth that can feel terrifying to the flesh even when it is, at its core, the loving reproof of a Father. Hebrews 12:5 speaks of this — the Lord’s discipline, the reproof He gives to those He loves. My flesh, in those early days, would respond to correction with anger and offense. But now I know how to receive it. And I thank God for every correction, because without them I would not have come far enough to speak of any of this.

That evening, what I received was not a rebuke in the punishing sense. It was a redirection. A loving Father saying to His child — not yet. And not like that. You do not yet understand what you are reaching for.

What I Was Really Asking For

I must be honest about the environment that shaped my asking — because I do not think my hunger was unusual. I think it was the natural hunger of a sincere believer shaped by a church culture that had, perhaps unknowingly, narrowed the anointing into something it was never meant to be.

From the time of my regeneration, I had been surrounded by a world in which the anointing was something you could see — it was on the platform, it was in the title, it was in the atmosphere that gathered around certain ministers. And I wanted it. Not from a wrong motive — at least not entirely. There was a genuine call of God embedded within my spirit, a deep longing that I could not explain and could not satisfy with anything the established church offered me. My colleagues had settled — into pastorates, into prophetic ministries, into the familiar structures of institutional church life. And I could not settle. Something within me refused to be satisfied with what was on offer. I had to sever myself from those environments to pursue an inner hunger and thirst that they could not recognise, let alone feed. To them, I must have appeared as a disquieted, dissatisfied individual seeking something that did not exist — or that lay beyond the boundaries of what one was supposed to pursue.

But here is what I did not yet understand in those years of asking: I was asking for something I had already partly received — and asking for it in a form shaped more by what I had seen in church culture than by what the Scriptures actually teach.

There was, for instance, the matter of tongues. From the very early days of my regeneration, I had felt strange syllables surfacing to my lips. I could not explain it. I was part of a Pentecostal environment and had heard others speak in tongues — but I reasoned away what was happening within me, rather than yielding to it like a child. My logic and my pride kept me from receiving what the Spirit was already giving. It was only much later in life that I understood — I had possessed the gift of speaking in tongues for my personal edification all along. My own ignorance had kept me asking God for something He had already given me.

This is precisely what the Father was addressing in that single sentence spoken into my spine on that dark evening. You don’t know what you are asking for. Not because the asking was evil — but because the one doing the asking did not yet understand what he already possessed, nor the true nature of what he was reaching toward.

The Price of the Lonely Road

There is a price to pursuing the deep things of God that no one adequately prepares you for.

It is not merely the sacrifice of comfort or reputation, though those are real. It is the loneliness. The specific, singular loneliness of a person who has heard something others have not heard, seen something others have not seen, and cannot un-hear or un-see it. You find yourself on a road that is genuinely narrow — not narrow in the sense of moral respectability, which many travel, but narrow in the sense that very few are walking it with you, and some of the fiercest opposition comes from within the church itself.

What shocked me was the opposition. The amount of resistance that arose from within traditional church structures — for not remaining within their established boundaries of thought and doctrine — was astounding to me. I had not known that the pursuit of truth could make you enemies of people who claimed to love the same God. Walking through that season was, in ways I will not detail here, a walk through fire. I survived it only because the Lord preserved me.

But I want to say this plainly, for the sake of the person reading who is in their own version of that fire: the purging is not punishment. It is preparation. The Lord was doing in me, through those years of opposition, loss, and pruning, what He needed to do before He could entrust me with what I had been asking for. He was not withholding — He was building the vessel. New wine requires a new bottle — Mark 2:22. My flesh, with all its wounds and offenses and ungoverned reactions, was not yet a vessel fit to carry what He intended to pour.

Offense, I came to understand, is the single greatest opponent of the anointing. Not persecution from outside. Not the devil’s direct assault. Offense — that internal wound that hardens the heart, that turns the attention inward, that makes the vessel brittle and prone to fracture. The Lord, in His mercy, removed me from the environment that was feeding the offense and led me to a lonelier place to purge what needed to be purged — so that when He anointed me again, the vessel would hold.

That road cost me more than I can put into words here. I will only say that the losses according to the flesh were real and grievous. But as Paul said — all things I count as loss, as dung, compared to what I have gained: the knowledge of Christ my Lord, and the knowing of my Heavenly Father. I am only here, speaking of these things, by the sheer grace of God.

What the Lord Gave Instead

The shift, when it came, was not sudden. It was progressive and consistent — the slow, steady work of a Spirit who never wastes a yielded heart.

I cannot tell you exactly when it began. But I can tell you the conditions under which it came: total availability. A soul that had finally stopped bargaining and simply said — here I am. All of me. Whatever You want to do. I had been through enough fire by then to have no remaining ambition for anything other than God Himself. And it was in that place of full surrender that the Spirit began to move.

There were specific moments of breakthrough that I will carry for the rest of my life. Moments when I could literally feel the anointing flowing through me — not as an emotion, not as a worked-up religious feeling, but as a tangible, weighty reality. I remember when I first felt a spirit of the world leave me — the lightness that followed, the clarity, the sense that something that had been occupying space within me for years had finally vacated. You would have to experience it to understand the weight of what I am saying. The natural mind cannot process these things — 1 Corinthians 2:14. They belong to a different order of knowing.

And then came the fruit. People were drawn. Hands laid in the Spirit led to deliverances. Miracles followed. The reality of what I had been asking for all those years was beginning to manifest — not as I had imagined it, not on a platform with all eyes watching, but in the quiet, intimate, sovereign moments that God orchestrates when a vessel is finally ready.

But even then, the journey was not finished. There were setbacks. Moments where the flesh rose up and the grace was grieved. I share this not to discourage but to be honest — because the testimony that only presents the victories and omits the stumbles is not a testimony at all. It is a performance.

And performances do not set people free.

The Lord is patient. He does not discard a vessel because it cracked in the fire. He repairs it and puts it back in. And the second time around, having passed through more refining than the first, the vessel holds more.

What I Learned About Spiritual Hunger

One of the most important things this long journey taught me is this: spiritual hunger is not a natural appetite. It is cultivated. And it deepens precisely as you feed it.

The word of God is not a book you read — it is a seed you sow into your spirit. Every time you sit with the Scriptures in genuine seeking, you are not merely accumulating information; you are investing in a harvest. The returns do not always come immediately. But they come. They that sow in tears shall reap in joy — Psalm 126:5. The years of groaning, of asking without receiving, of wrestling without resolution — they were not years of emptiness. They were years of sowing. And the harvest of understanding that has come since those years is worth every tear that preceded it.

Do not despise the season of asking. Do not despise the silence. Do not mistake the Father’s redirection for His rejection. The voice that told me you don’t know what you are asking for was not a door closing. It was a map being redrawn. He was not saying — you cannot have this. He was saying — you do not yet understand what this is. And until you understand what it is, you cannot steward what it demands.

That is the grace beneath the rebuke. That is the love inside the thunder.

What This Means for You

I have shared these things not to draw attention to my own journey but because I know there is someone reading this who is in the middle of their own version of it. The long season of asking. The silence that feels like rejection. The road that grows lonelier the further you walk it. The opposition you never expected from the directions it came from.

You are not forgotten. You are not failing. You are being formed.

The anointing you are reaching for — if your hunger is genuine and your heart is surrendered — is not being withheld from you. It is being prepared for you. And more than that, it is being prepared in you. God does not pour His fullness into an unready vessel. Not because He is reluctant, but because He loves you too much to waste what He intends to give.

Keep eating the word. Keep yielding to the fire. Keep your heart soft toward correction — especially when correction comes in thunder. The Father’s reproof is among the most precious gifts He gives. Only a fool receives it lightly. And only a fool rejects it entirely.

The road is lonely. But it is not empty. He is on it with you. And what He has ahead for the yielded, purged, and sanctified heart is worth every step of the journey that preceded it.

You don’t know what you are asking for. No. Not yet. But you will.

A Note to the Reader

This article is the second in a trilogy. It follows “The Anointing Belongs to You: Unveiling the True Significance of Anointing and Baptism with the Holy Ghost” and is completed by “Two and Yet One: Understanding the Distinction Between the Holy Ghost and the Holy Spirit.” Each article can be read independently, but together they form a complete exploration of the anointing, the Holy Ghost, and the full spiritual inheritance available to every believer in Christ.

 

© B.V. Thomas  |  The Hermeneutical Quill

“Unlocking Insights, One Quill Stroke at a Time.”

 

The Blessed LONGING: Seeking the FULLNESS of GOD in a World of Deficiency

There is a deep, innate longing within the human soul—a vacuum, an ache that many of us cannot name but can feel. It is a longing for more, for something beyond what we can see, touch, or fully comprehend. For the true seeker, this longing is the desire to experience God in His fullness, to be fully filled with His Spirit, to walk in the tangible presence of His glory. And yet, for many of us, this fullness often feels out of reach.

We find ourselves in the tension of yearning for God’s presence while living in a world of apparent insufficiency. We long to see Him, to experience the touch of His Spirit in tangible ways—yet we often face seasons where we feel distant, where the vacuum of longing seems unfulfilled.

But could it be that this vacuum, this very emptiness, is not a sign of God’s absence but of His divine invitation to seek Him? Could it be that this longing within us is a reflection of what was lost in the Garden of Eden—and yet a promise of what will one day be restored in Christ? Indeed, the fullness of God is something we must seek, and in seeking, we draw closer to the very heart of God.

Jesus said, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed” (John 20:29), pointing to a faith that transcends physical sight. This blessed longing is not just about the desire to see or experience God tangibly but is about the faith that believes without seeing. It is this kind of faith, rooted in trust rather than sight, that deepens our relationship with Him, even in our seasons of longing. The vacuum of longing becomes a divine invitation to embrace faith without sight, a call to trust in God’s promises even when we cannot physically experience His fullness.

The Vacuum as a Divine Invitation

The vacuum within us, this longing for more of God, is a deliberate and profound part of God’s design. If God did not want us to experience His fullness, He would not have created within us such a divine yearning—a longing for something beyond ourselves. It’s a reflection of the spiritual void that humanity faces since the Fall of Adam, when we were originally created to walk in perfect fellowship with God. The ache we feel is both a result of the Fall and a sign of what will be restored in Christ.

In the Garden, Adam and Eve experienced perfect communion with God. Their sin broke that fellowship, and in its wake, humanity has been left with a longing for that original relationship. This vacuum, this thirst for more of God, drives us to seek Him more fully. And yet, as we see, this very absence is also a divine invitation. God could have chosen to fill this gap immediately, but He has chosen instead to call us into deeper pursuit. We are meant to search for Him with all our hearts (Jeremiah 29:13), knowing that in the seeking, we are drawn closer to Him.

Romans 8:22-23 adds a profound layer to this understanding of longing, not just as a personal experience but as part of a broader cosmic reality. Paul writes, “We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies.”

In this passage, Paul links our individual longing for redemption to the groaning of all creation. Just as we feel the ache of unfulfilled desires for God’s presence, creation itself longs for the ultimate fulfilment of God’s promises—the restoration of all things. This longing is not merely an individual experience but part of a larger, divine narrative of redemption that encompasses the whole world.

The tension we feel between the “already” of our salvation and the “not yet” of the fullness of God’s Kingdom is reflected in creation itself. We, as human beings, are caught in the overlap of the two ages—living in a fallen world while also being recipients of God’s firstfruits through the Holy Spirit. Our personal longing is, therefore, a small but significant part of a cosmic groaning that looks forward to the redemption of our bodies and the restoration of all creation. This connection between personal longing and cosmic redemption ties our individual experiences of yearning directly to God’s ultimate plan to restore and redeem not only humanity but all of creation.

The Paradox of Seeking and Longing 

In this pursuit, there is a paradox: the more we seek God’s fullness, the more we become aware of our lack. Yet, this lack serves to refine and perfect our faith. It’s not that God does not want to meet us in our longing, but that He desires to test and refine our faith as we wait. The absence of immediate fulfilment is the very thing that causes our faith to grow stronger, just as gold is refined by fire. Our longing is not a sign of failure or spiritual deficiency but part of a divine process that deepens our trust in God.

This paradox is not just a personal experience but reflects the very nature of the Kingdom of God. Jesus taught that the Kingdom is both “already” present and “not yet” fully realised. In Luke 17:21, He declares, “The kingdom of God is in your midst” (or “within you”). This present reality of the Kingdom, which is already here in the person and work of Jesus, is experienced through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and the life of the Church. We experience the “already” of God’s Kingdom in the sense that we have received the first fruits of the Spirit, a taste of His Kingdom to come, and have been transferred from the kingdom of darkness to the Kingdom of His Son (Colossians 1:13).

However, while we experience the “already,” we also live in the tension of the “not yet.” The fullness of God’s Kingdom is still to come—the complete restoration of all things, the new heavens and new earth, and the final victory over sin and death. In this “already-not-yet” time, we feel the tension of longing for what has been promised but has not yet been fully realised.

This tension manifests in our spiritual journey as we experience both God’s presence and the absence of its fullness. Ephesians 1:13-14 speaks of the Holy Spirit as a “seal” and a “guarantee” of our inheritance, yet we still long for the final redemption of our bodies and the complete fulfilment of God’s promises. The Spirit’s indwelling presence is a foretaste, a deposit, of the fullness that is to come. And so, we experience a paradox: the Kingdom is “already” here, but not yet fully realised, and our longing for God reflects this in-between time.

In this sense, our longing is not a sign of spiritual failure but a vital part of the Christian journey. It reflects the heart of the “already-not-yet” tension we live in. As we wait for the final fulfilment of God’s promises, we long for more of His presence. This yearning for the “not yet” helps deepen our intimacy with God in the “already,” teaching us to rely on His Spirit and trust in the hope of future glory. Just as Romans 8:23 reminds us, “We ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies,” we live in a state of longing, even as we experience the “firstfruits” of the Kingdom today.

This paradox is further illustrated by the life of the Apostle Paul, who spoke of his deep yearning to know Christ more fully, even if that meant experiencing suffering. He desired the fullness of God but understood that true fellowship with God involves both the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings (Philippians 3:10). Paul’s longing was not disconnected from the “already-not-yet” tension but was a reflection of it. As he sought God’s fullness, he recognised that the trials and suffering he endured were part of the refining process that deepened his relationship with Christ. Just as gold is refined by fire, so too, through suffering and longing, our faith is strengthened.

In this pursuit of God, through trials, perseverance, and longing, we grow spiritually. The “already” reality of God’s presence gives us strength to endure the “not yet” fulfilment, knowing that as we press on, we are being transformed into Christ’s image. This tension between the now and the not yet is a central theme in the Christian walk, teaching us to rely not on what we can see or touch, but on the promises of God that we trust by faith.

The Role of Trials and Waiting in Sanctification

This theme of longing for God’s fullness while enduring the absence—the gap between what we know to be true about God and what we feel in the moment—is a crucial aspect of the sanctification process. Trials test our faith, and it is precisely in the midst of waiting for the fullness of God that our faith is refined. It’s a process that demands perseverance and trust. James 1:2-4 makes this clear, stating that the testing of our faith produces perseverance, leading to spiritual maturity. The absence, the seeming vacuum of God’s presence, is not only a trial but also a tool for transformation.

In the wilderness of waiting, we are given an opportunity to press in further, to cultivate deeper faith, and to trust that God is at work even when we cannot perceive His presence. It is in this tension between what we seek and what we experience that our faith is refined, tested, and purified.

Yet this process goes beyond mere endurance—it leads to something even greater. Romans 5:3-4 reminds us that “Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” This verse deepens our understanding of the sanctification process. It’s not just about enduring trials but about how those trials produce a greater hope. As we endure suffering and waiting, our perseverance is tested, and from this perseverance, our character is shaped. But the ultimate outcome is hope—a hope that does not disappoint because it is anchored in the promises of God.

The “vacuum” of God’s presence, while painful, is not without purpose. In fact, it becomes a furnace in which our character is refined. The deeper our longing, the stronger our perseverance; the stronger our perseverance, the more our character reflects the likeness of Christ. Through this process, we develop an unshakeable hope, a hope that empowers us to keep pressing forward, knowing that the fullness we long for will one day be realised.

The Blessed Fellowship of the Spirit in the Present

While only a few will enter into the deepest fellowship with the Spirit in this present age, that does not mean that God is withholding His presence from His children. The Holy Spirit has been given to all believers as a guarantee of the fullness to come. Even now, God is at work in our lives, transforming us, renewing us, and filling us with His presence, though not always in the dramatic or tangible ways that we might desire.

Ephesians 1:13-14 speaks of the Holy Spirit as a seal of our inheritance, saying, “When you believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession.” The Holy Spirit, though He does not always manifest Himself in powerful ways, is still at work within us, and He is the down payment of the fullness we will one day experience in eternity.

In the meantime, we press on in faith, knowing that the longing we feel is not wasted. Our faith, though it may feel weak at times, is precious in God’s sight. It is through our longing, our waiting, and our seeking that we grow deeper into the fullness of Christ. This is where faith without sight shines—through the Holy Spirit, we experience God’s presence even when we cannot see or touch Him directly.

However, the fruit of the Spirit offers us a powerful reminder that God’s presence is still at work within us, even in times of longing and waiting. In Galatians 5:22-23, Paul outlines the evidence of the Spirit’s work: “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.” These qualities are tangible signs of God’s ongoing presence, even in the absence of dramatic spiritual experiences. While we may long for a greater revelation of God or a more tangible encounter with the Holy Spirit, the fruit of the Spirit assures us that He is still moving within us.

In our waiting, the Holy Spirit cultivates these virtues in us—love when we feel alone, joy in the midst of sorrow, peace when turmoil surrounds us, and patience when it feels like fulfilment is delayed. These fruits of the Spirit are not simply abstract ideals; they are evidence of God’s work, a quiet but profound testimony to His ongoing presence and transformative power.

Even when we feel the vacuum of longing or the weight of waiting, the Holy Spirit is shaping our character to reflect the likeness of Christ. These qualities become not only the markers of spiritual growth but also the proof of God’s faithfulness. Through them, we experience the kingdom “already” present in us, as they bring glimpses of the future fulfilment when we will experience God’s presence fully and without restraint.

The Ultimate Fulfilment: Glory to Come

Ultimately, the fullness of God that we long for will only be fully realised in the age to come. In 1 John 3:2, we are reminded that “when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.” The fullness we seek will be perfectly fulfilled when we are glorified, when our bodies and souls are transformed to be like Christ, and when we are fully united with Him. In that day, the vacuum will be no more. We will experience the fullness of God in ways that we can scarcely imagine.

Revelation 21:3-4 gives us a glorious picture of this future hope:

“And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.’”

In that day, all tears will be wiped away, and the deficiency of our current experience of God will be forever gone. We will be one with Him, seeing Him face to face, experiencing the fullness of His glory and presence. This is the hope that fuels us as we continue on the journey of faith. Until that day comes, the vacuum within us reminds us to seek, to believe without seeing, and to trust that God will fill us with Himself in ways we cannot yet fully understand.

In addition to this glorious promise, Isaiah 25:8 provides a powerful image of God’s ultimate victory over suffering and death, enriching the eschatological picture of our future hope:

“He will swallow up death forever. The Sovereign Lord will wipe away the tears from all faces.” (Isaiah 25:8)

This verse expands on the hope given in Revelation, showing that death and sorrow will be completely vanquished. Not only will God be present with His people, but He will also defeat the very forces of suffering and death that have plagued humanity since the fall. In that day, there will be no more mourning, no more separation, and no more fear of death. God’s final victory over death is a promise that strengthens our longing for the future fulfilment, reminding us that our current longing is not in vain but is a preparation for the eternal joy that awaits us.

Until that day, the vacuum of longing within us is a reminder to seek Him with greater anticipation. It draws us forward, reminding us that the suffering and separation we experience now will be replaced by eternal communion and fulfilment with God. This longing, though painful, stirs in us a hope that transcends the present moment and fuels our perseverance, knowing that our future with God will be far more glorious than we can even comprehend.

Conclusion: The Blessed Longing

The vacuum within us is not a curse but a blessed longing—an invitation from God to enter into deeper communion with Him. This longing reflects both the loss of perfect fellowship with God in the Garden of Eden and the promise of restoration through Christ. As we long for God’s fullness, we are reminded that though it will not be fully realised until we are glorified, this longing is not a sign of abandonment but an active, divine invitation to seek Him with all our hearts.

This longing, though it can be painful, is a key part of our spiritual journey. It is through our yearning for His presence that we are drawn into a deeper knowledge of God and a fuller experience of His Holy Spirit. It is also through longing that we are shaped and transformed, as our faith is tested and refined through waiting and trials. The journey is not easy, but it is a journey that produces perseverance, hope, and spiritual maturity, leading us closer to the ultimate fulfilment we will experience when Christ returns.

As we press forward in faith, we cling to the hope of the “already-not-yet” Kingdom, where the Holy Spirit gives us a foretaste of the glory to come. Our longing reflects our pilgrim status in this world—it is a longing that fuels our perseverance as we await the future redemption of our bodies and the fulfilment of all things. Ultimately, we long for a day when the vacuum of longing will be filled with the fullness of God’s glory—a day when suffering and death are swallowed up forever, and we are fully united with Christ in eternal joy.

May we continue to seek Him in the midst of this blessed longing, knowing that He is faithful to fill the hearts of those who truly desire Him. In the waiting, in the longing, and in the seeking, we are being transformed into His image, and one day, we will see Him face to face in the fullness of His glory—and we shall be like Him (1 John 3:2).