Lord who shall abide in thy tabernacle

In Psalms, chapter fifteen, verse one, the psalm answers, “What sort of person experiences the intimate presence and fellowship of God?” It implies that we can cause God to withdraw His presence from our lives through our acts of unrighteousness, deceit, slander, or selfishness. Therefore, we should examine our actions daily, confess our sins, turn from them, and constantly seek through Christ to present ourselves to God as those approved, as in Second Timothy two, verse fifteen, and realize that to lose communion with God is to lose everything, as in First John one, verses six through seven, chapter two, verses three to six, and chapter three, verses twenty-one to twenty-four, respectively.
Anyone who desires to commit themselves to God can experience His presence. The salvation is the means through Jesus Christ as our personal Lord and Savior to have the possible access to this privilege. Then there is the daily reading of the Word of God, which is where the communication of God speaks to us frequently and through His servants who are Bible-based believers who live a godly life and are obedient to His Holy Word—finally, praying to the Almighty God daily at any time whether morning, noon, or night. All of the above steps are extremely important. However, apart from the godly necessities, the other requirement to remember is that potential believers must live right before God where acts of unrighteousness, deceit, slander, or selfishness are not a part of our daily living, which is sin. Sin will stop anyone from abiding in the Tabernacle of God because He is holy. Sin is darkness, dirty, and filthy, while the Almighty is the opposite, which is light, clean, and pure. Light and darkness do not mix. There is no dim switch: the person must choose between being on or off.

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