What a Seer Sees That Others Cannot
What a Seer Sees That Others Cannot is a sobering prophetic book written from a seer’s perspective, revealing how the presence of God—the kavod, the weight of His glory—can leave silently while religious activity continues. Using the visions of Ezekiel and the warning of Ichabod, this book shows that God often speaks loudest through His silence. When His glory lifts, worship may still happen, leaders may still lead, and services may still continue—but heaven is no longer present.
This book walks carefully through Ezekiel chapters 8 through 11, explaining in clear and simple language why God’s glory left His own house. It reveals how compromise in leadership, hidden sin, emotional worship without obedience, and divided loyalty caused God to move step by step away from the sanctuary. From a Hebrew understanding, God does not abandon suddenly. He pauses. He warns. He reveals. Then He withdraws when repentance does not come.
Written through the eyes of a seer, this book explains what others often miss. Seers are shown what is happening beneath the surface—what is taking place in the heart, behind the altar, and inside leadership. While many only see crowds, noise, and activity, the seer discerns whether the weight of God is still present. This book explains that the most dangerous moment is not when God judges, but when He grows quiet.
This is not a book about revival strategies or church growth. It is a book about departure. It explains how God’s jealousy—qin’ah—is not anger, but grief, and why He refuses to share His dwelling place with idols, whether visible or hidden. It shows how churches can be full while the glory is gone, how emotion can replace obedience, and how leaders can stand in the house of God while facing the world.
Yet this book is not written to condemn. It is written to awaken. Ezekiel saw that when the glory left the temple, it did not disappear—it rested on the mountain. This shows mercy. God withdrew from defilement, but He remained near, waiting for repentance and return. The same God who leaves quietly is the God who returns when hearts realign with the altar.
This book is for leaders, prophets, seers, intercessors, watchmen, and believers who sense that something is missing but cannot explain it. It is for those who feel the absence of weight in worship, who recognize that activity is not the same as presence, and who want to understand what God is saying when He becomes silent.
The warning is quiet.
The departure is real.
And only those with eyes to see will recognize when the glory has moved.