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I never experienced complete darkness until I was a teenager. I took part in a tour of a potash mine near my home. After we descended several hundred feet into the ground, the tour guide showed us the machinery used in mining the potash as well as the layout of the mine. Then, at one point, he stopped the vehicle we were in and shut all the lights off. There, at that moment, I experienced total darkness. There was absolutely no light. Someone could hold their hand an inch away from my face and I wouldn't know it.
When Paul talks about the Ephesians at one time being "darkness" (v. 8), I think back to that experience in the potash mine. Before Christ, I was blind, not seeing that I was leading myself to destruction. In that mine, if I had started walking, I could have walked right into a wall or fell into a hole and I wouldn't have known it until it happened. I wouldn't have seen any dangers around me. Yet, when the lights returned, I could see the road ahead of me, and I could have seen any potential dangers around me. When the light of Christ comes into our lives, his light shines in our lives, and as Paul said, "When anything is exposed by the light, it becomes visible, for anything that becomes visible is light" (vv. 13-14).
When Paul talks about the Ephesians at one time being "darkness" (v. 8), I think back to that experience in the potash mine. Before Christ, I was blind, not seeing that I was leading myself to destruction. In that mine, if I had started walking, I could have walked right into a wall or fell into a hole and I wouldn't have known it until it happened. I wouldn't have seen any dangers around me. Yet, when the lights returned, I could see the road ahead of me, and I could have seen any potential dangers around me. When the light of Christ comes into our lives, his light shines in our lives, and as Paul said, "When anything is exposed by the light, it becomes visible, for anything that becomes visible is light" (vv. 13-14).

