The Pursuit of God
by A. W. Tozer
Introduction
Here is a masterly study of the inner life by a heart
thirsting after God, eager to grasp at least the
outskirts of His ways, the abyss of His love for sinners,
and the height of His unapproachable majesty--and it was
written by a busy pastor in Chicago! Who could imagine
David writing the twenty-third Psalm on South Halsted
Street, or a medieval mystic finding inspiration in a
small study on the second floor of a frame house on the
vast, flat checkerboard of endless streets - Where cross
the crowded ways of life - Where sound the cries of race
and clan, In haunts of wretchedness and need, On shadowed
threshold dark with fears, And paths where hide the lures
of greed... But even as Dr. Frank Mason North, of New
York, says in his immortal poem, so Mr. Tozer says in
this book: `Above the noise of selfish strife we hear Thy
voice, O Son of Man.' My acquaintance with the author
is limited to brief visits and loving fellowship in his
church. There I discovered a self-made scholar, an
omnivorous reader with a remarkable library of
theological and devotional books, and one who seemed to
burn the midnight oil in pursuit of God. His book is the
result of long meditation and much prayer. It is not a
collection of sermons. It does not deal with the pulpit
and the pew but with the soul a thirst for God.
The chapters could be summarized in Moses' prayer,
`Show me thy glory,' or Paul's exclamation, `O
the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge
of God!' It is theology not of the head but of the
heart. There is deep insight, sobriety of style, and a
catholicity of outlook that is refreshing. The author has
few quotations but he knows the saints and mystics of the
centuries--Augustine, Nicholas of Cusa, Thomas à
Kempis, von Hagel, Finney, Wesley and many more. The ten
chapters are heart searching and the prayers at the close
of each are for the closet, not pulpit. I felt the
nearness of God while reading them. Here is a book for
every pastor, missionary, and devouted Christian. It
deals with the deep things of God and the riches of His
grace. Above all, it has the keynote of sincerity and
humility.
Samuel M. Zwemer
New York City
Preface
In this hour of all-but-universal darkness one cheering
gleam appears: within the fold of conservative
Christianity there are to be found increasing numbers of
persons whose religious lives are marked by a growing
hunger after God Himself. They are eager for spiritual
realities and will not be put off with words, nor will
they be content with correct `interpretations' of
truth. They are athirst for God, and they will not be
satisfied till they have drunk deep at the Fountain of
Living Water. This is the only real harbinger of revival
which I have been able to detect anywhere on the
religious horizon. It may be the cloud the size of a
man's hand for which a few saints here and there have
been looking. It can result in a resurrection of life for
many souls and a recapture of that radiant wonder which
should accompany faith in Christ, that wonder which has
all but fled the Church of God in our day. But this
hunger must be recognized by our religious leaders.
Current evangelicalism has (to change the figure) laid
the altar and divided the sacrifice into parts, but now
seems satisfied to count the stones and rearrange the
pieces with never a care that there is not a sign of fire
upon the top of lofty Carmel. [See 1 Kings 18 for the
allusions.-ccp] But God be thanked that there are a few
who care. They are those who, while they love the altar
and delight in the sacrifice, are yet unable to reconcile
themselves to the continued absence of fire. They desire
God above all. They are athirst to taste for themselves
the `piercing sweetness' of the love of Christ about
Whom all the holy prophets did write and the psalmists
did sing.
There is today no lack of Bible teachers to set forth
correctly the principles of the doctrines of Christ, but
too many of these seem satisfied to teach the
fundamentals oft he faith year after year, strangely
unaware that there is in their ministry no manifest
Presence, nor anything unusual in their personal lives.
They minister constantly to believers who feel within
their breasts a longing which their teaching simply does
not satisfy. I trust I speak in charity, but the lack in
our pulpits is real. Milton's terrible sentence
applies to our day as accurately as it did to his: `The
hungry sheep look up, and are not fed.'
It is a solemn thing, and no small scandal in the
Kingdom, to see God's children starving while
actually seated at the Father's table. The truth of
Wesley's words is established before our eyes:
`Orthodoxy, or right opinion, is, at best, a very slender
part of religion. Though right tempers cannot subsist
without right opinions,yet right opinions may subsist
without right tempers. There may be a right opinion of
God without either love or one right temper toward Him.
Satan is proof of this.'
Thanks to our splendid Bible societies and to other
effective agencies for the dissemination of the Word,
there are today many millions of people who hold `right
opinions,' probably more than ever before in the
history of the Church.Yet I wonder if there was ever a
time when true spiritual worship was ever a time when
true spiritual worship was at a lower ebb. To great
sections of the Church the art of worship has been lost
entirely, and in its place has come that strange and
foreign thing called the `program.' This word has
been borrowed from the stage and applied with sad wisdom
to the type of public service which now passes for
worship among us.
Sound Bible exposition is an imperative must in the
Church of the living God. Without it no church can be a
New Testament church in any strict meaning of that term.
But exposition may be carried on in such way as to leave
the hearers devoid of any true spiritual nourishment
whatever. For it is not mere words that nourish the soul,
but God Himself, and unless and until the hearers find
God in personal experience, they are not the better for
having heard the truth. The Bible is not an end in
itself, but a means to bring men to an intimate and
satisfying knowledge of God, that they may enter into
Him, that they may delight in His Presence, may taste and
know the inner sweetness of the very God Himself in the
core and center of their hearts.
This book is a modest attempt to aid God's hungry
children so to find Him. Nothing here is new except in
the sense that it is a discovery which my own heart has
made of spiritual realities most delightful and wonderful
to me. Others before me have gone much farther into these
holy mysteries than I have done, but if my fire is not
large it is yet real, and there may be those who can
light their candle at its flame.
W. Tozer Chicago, Ill. June 16, 1948.
Chapter 1: Following hard after God
My soul followeth hard after thee: thy right hand
upholdeth me.
Ps. 63:8
Christian theology teaches the doctrine of prevenient
grace, which briefly stated means this, that before a man
can seek God, God must first have sought the man. Before
a sinful man can think a right thought of God, there must
have been a work of enlightenment done within him;
imperfect it may be, but a true work nonetheless, and the
secret cause of all desiring and seeking and praying
which may follow.
We pursue God because, and only because, He has first
put an urge within us that spurs us to the pursuit. `No
man can come to me,' said our Lord, `except the
Father which hath sent me draw him,' and it is by
this very prevenient drawing that God takes from us every
vestige of credit for he act of coming. The impulse to
pursue God originates with God, but the outworking of
that impulse is our following hard after Him; and all the
time we are pursuing Him we are already in His hand: `Thy
right hand upholdeth me.' In this divine
`upholding' and human `following' there is no
contradiction. All is of God, for as von Hugel teaches,
God is always previous.
In practice, however, (that is, where God's previous
working meets man's present response) man must pursue
God. On our part there must be positive reciprocation if
this secret drawing of God is to eventuate in
identifiable experience of the Divine. In the warm
language of personal feeling this is stated in the
Forty-second Psalm: `As the hart panteth after the
waterbrooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. My
soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I
come and appear before God?' This is deep calling
unto deep, and the longing heart will understand it.
The doctrine of justification by faith--a Biblical
truth, and a blessed relief from sterile legalism and
unavailing self-effort--has in our time fallen into evil
company and been interpreted by many in such manner as
actually to bar men from the knowledge of God. The whole
transaction of religious conversion has been made
mechanical and spiritless. Faith may now be exercised
without a jar to the moral life and without embarrassment
to the Adamic ego. Christ may be `received' without
creating any special love for Him in the soul of the
receiver. The man is `saved,' but he is not hungry
nor thirsty after God. In fact he is specifically taught
to be satisfied and encouraged to be content with
little.
The modern scientist has lost God amid the wonders of
His world; we Christians are in real danger of losing God
amid the wonders of His Word. We have almost forgotten
that God is a Person and, as such, can be cultivated as
any person can. It is inherent in personality to be able
to know other personalities, but full knowledge of one
personality by another cannot be achieved in one
encounter. It is only after long and loving mental
intercourse that the full possibilities of both can be
explored.
All social intercourse between human beings is a
response of personality to personality, grading upward
from the most casual brush between man and man to the
fullest, most intimate communion of which the human soul
is capable. Religion, so far as it is genuine, is in
essence the response of created personalities to the
Creating Personality, God. `This is life eternal, that
they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus
Christ, whom thou hast sent.' (John 17:3)
God is a Person, and in the deep of His mighty nature He
thinks, wills, enjoys feels, loves, desires and suffers
as any other person may. In making Himself known to us He
stays by the familiar pattern of personality. He
communicates with us through the avenues of our minds,
our wills and our emotions. The continuous and
unembarrassed interchange of love and thought between God
and the soul of the redeemed man is the throbbing heart
of New Testament religion.
This intercourse between God and the soul is known to us
in conscious personal awareness. It is personal: that is,
it does not come through the body of believers, as such,
but is known to the individual, and to the body through
the individuals which compose it. And it is conscious:
that is, it does not stay below the threshold of
consciousness and work there unknown to the soul (as, for
instance, infant baptism is thought by some to do), but
comes within the field of awareness where the man can
`know' it as he knows any other fact of
experience.
You and I are in little (our sins excepted) what God is
in large. Being made in His image we have within us the
capacity to know Him. In our sins we lack only the power.
The moment the Spirit has quickened us to life in
regeneration our whole being senses its kinship to God
and leaps up in joyous recognition. That is the heavenly
birth without which we cannot see the Kingdom of God. It
is, however, not an end but an inception, for now begins
the glorious pursuit, the heart's happy exploration
of the infinite riches of the Godhead. That is where we
begin, I say, but where we stop no man has yet
discovered, for there is in the awful and mysterious
depths of the Triune God neither limit nor end.
Shoreless Ocean, who can sound Thee?
Thine own eternity is round Thee,
Majesty divine!
To have found God and still to pursue Him is the
soul's paradox of love, scorned indeed by the
too-easily- satisfied religionist, but justified in happy
experience by the children of the burning heart. St.
Bernard stated this holy paradox in a musical quatrain
that will be instantly understood by every worshipping
soul:
We taste Thee, O Thou Living Bread,
And long to feast upon Thee still:
We drink of Thee, the Fountainhead
And thirst our souls from Thee to fill.
come near to the holy men and women of the past and you
will soon feel the heat of their desire after God. They
mourned for Him, they prayed and wrestled and sought for
Him day and night, in season and out, and when they had
found Him the finding was all the sweeter for the long
seeking. Moses used the fact that he knew God as an
argument for knowing Him better. `Now, therefore, I pray
thee, if I have found grace in thy sight, show me now thy
way, that I may know thee, that I may find grace in thy
sight'; and from there he rose to make the daring
request, `I beseech thee, show me thy glory.' God was
frankly pleased by this display of ardour, and the next
day called Moses into the mount, and there in solemn
procession made all His glory pass before him.
David's life was a torrent of spiritual desire, and
his psalms ring with the cry of the seeker and the glad
shout oft he finder. Paul confessed the mainspring of his
life to be his burning desire after Christ. `That I may
know Him,' was the goal of his heart, and to this he
sacrificed everything. `Yea doubtless, and I count all
things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss
of all things, and do count them but refuse, that I may
win Christ' (Phil 3:8).
Hymnody is sweet with the longing after God, the God
whom, while the singer seeks, he knows he has already
found. `His track I see and I'll pursue,' sang
our fathers only a short generation ago, but that song is
heard no more in the great congregation. How tragic that
we in this dark day have had our seeking done for us by
our teachers. Everything is made to center upon the
initial act of `accepting' Christ (a term,
incidentally, which is not found in the Bible) and we are
not expected thereafter to crave any further revelation
of God to our souls. We have been snared in the coils of
a spurious logic which insists that if we have found Him
we need no more seek Him. This is set before us as the
last word in orthodoxy, and it is taken for granted that
no Bible-taught Christian ever believed otherwise. Thus
the whole testimony of the worshipping, seeking, singing
Church on that subject is crisply set aside. The
experiential heart- theology of a grand army of fragrant
saints is rejected in favor of a smug interpretation of
Scripture which would certainly have sounded strange to
an Augustine, a Rutherford or a Branierd.
In the midst of this great chill there are some, I
rejoice to acknowledge, who will not be content with
shallow logic. They will admit the force of the argument,
and then turn away with tears to hunt some lonely place
and pray, `O God, show me thy glory.' They want to
taste, to touch with their hearts, to see with their
inner eyes the wonder that is God.
I want deliberately to encourage this mighty longing
after God. The lack of it has brought us to our present
low estate. The stiff and wooden quality about our
religious lives is a result of our lack of holy desire.
Complacency is a deadly foe of all spiritual growth.
Acute desire must be present or there will be no
manifestation of Christ to His people. He waits to be
wanted. Too bad that with many of us He waits so long, so
very long, in vain.
Every age has its own characteristics. Right now we are
in an age of religious complexity. The simplicity which
is in Christ is rarely found among us. In its stead are
programs, methods, organizations and a world of nervous
activities which occupy time and attention but can never
satisfy the longing of the heart. The shallowness of our
inner experience, the hollowness of our worship, and the
servile imitation of the world which marks our
promotional methods all testify that we, in this day,
know God only imperfectly, and the peace of God scarcely
at all.
If we would find God amid all the religious externals we
must first determine to find Him, and then proceed in the
way of simplicity. Now as always God discovers Himself to
`babes' and hides Himself in thick darkness from the
wise and the prudent. We must simplify our approach to
Him. We must strip down to essentials (and they will be
found to be blessedly few). We must put away all effort
to impress, and come with the guileless candor of
childhood. If we do this, without doubt God will quickly
respond.
When religion has said its last word, there is little
that we need other than God Himself. The evil habit of
seeking God-and effectively prevents us from finding God
in full revelation. In the `and' lies our great woe.
If we omit the `and', we shall soon find God, and in
Him we shall find that for which we have all our lives
been secretly longing.
We need not fear that in seeking God only we may narrow
our lives or restrict the motions of our expanding
hearts. The opposite is true. We can well afford to make
God our All, to concentrate, to sacrifice the many for
the One.
The author of the quaint old English classic, The Cloud
of Unknowing, teaches us how to do this. `Lift up thine
heart unto God with a meek stirring of love; and mean
Himself, and none of His goods. And thereto, look thee
loath to think on aught but God Himself. So that nought
work in thy wit, nor in thy will, but only God Himself.
This is the work of the soul that most pleaseth
God.'
Again, he recommends that in prayer we practice a
further stripping down of everything, even of our
theology. `For it sufficeth enough, a naked intent direct
unto God without any other cause than Himself.' Yet
underneath all his thinking lay the broad foundation of
New Testament truth, for he explains that by
`Himself' he means `God that made thee, and bought
thee, and that graciously called thee to thy degree.'
And he is all for simplicity: If we would have religion
`lapped and folden in one word, for that thou shouldst
have better hold thereupon, take thee but a little word
of one syllable: for so it is better than of two, for
even the shorter it is the better it accordeth with the
work of the Spirit. And such a word is this word God or
this word love.'
When the Lord divided Canaan among the tribes of Israel,
Levi received no share of the land. God said to him
simply, `I am thy part and thine inheritance,' and by
those words made him richer than all his brethren, richer
than all the kings and rajas who have ever lived in the
world. And there is a spiritual principle here, a
principle still valid for every priest of the Most High
God.
The man who has God for his treasure has all things in
One. Many ordinary treasures may be denied him, or if he
is allowed to have them, the enjoyment of them will be so
tempered that they will never be necessary to his
happiness. Or if he must see them go, one after one, he
will scarcely feel a sense of loss, for having the Source
of all things he has in One all satisfaction, all
pleasure, all delight. Whatever he may lose he has
actually lost nothing, for he now has it all in One, and
he has it purely, legitimately and forever.
O God, I have tasted Thy goodness, and it has both
satisfied me and made me thirsty for more. I am painfully
conscious of my need of further grace. I am ashamed of my
lack of desire. O God, the Triune God, I want to want
Thee; I long to be filled with longing; I thirst to be
made more thirsty still. Show me Thy glory, I pray Thee,
that so I may know Thee indeed. Begin in mercy a new work
of love within me. Say to my soul, `Rise up, my love, my
fair one, and come away.' Then give me grace to rise
and follow Thee up from this misty lowland where I have
wandered so long. In Jesus' name, Amen.
Chapter 2 : The Blessedness of Posessing Nothing
Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven.
Matt. 5:3
Before the Lord God made man upon the earth He first
prepared for him by creating a world of useful and
pleasant things for his sustenance and delight. In the
Genesis account of the creation these are called simply
`things.' They were made for man's uses, but they
were meant always to be external to the man and
subservient to him. In the deep heart of the man was a
shrine where none but God was worthy to come. Within him
was God; without, a thousand gifts which God had showered
upon him.
But sin has introduced complications and has made those
very gifts of God a potential source of ruin to the
soul.
Our woes began when God was forced out of His central
shrine and `things' were allowed to enter. Within the
human heart `things' have taken over. Men have now by
nature no peace within their hearts, for God is crowned
there no longer, but there in the moral dusk stubborn and
aggressive usurpers fight among themselves for first
place on the throne.
This is not a mere metaphor, but an accurate analysis of
our real spiritual trouble. There is within the human
heart a tough fibrous root of fallen life whose nature is
to possess, always to possess. It covets `things'
with a deep and fierce passion. The pronouns `my' and
`mine' look innocent enough in print, but their
constant and universal use is significant. They express
the real nature of the old Adamic man better than a
thousand volumes of theology could do. They are verbal
symptoms of our deep disease. The roots of our hearts
have grown down into things, and we dare not pull up one
rootlet lest we die. Things have become necessary to us,
a development never originally intended. God's gifts
now take the place of God, and the whole course of nature
is upset by the monstrous substitution.
Our Lord referred to this tyranny of things when He said
to His disciples, `If any man will come after me, let him
deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. For
whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever
shall lose his life for my sake shall find it.'
(Matt. 16:24-25).
Breaking this truth into fragments for our better
understanding, it would seem that there is within each of
us an enemy which we tolerate at our peril. Jesus called
it `life' and `self,' or as we would say, the
self-life. Its chief characteristic is its
possessiveness: the words `gain' and `profit'
suggest this. To allow this enemy to live is in the end
to lose everything. To repudiate it and give up all for
Christ's sake is to lose nothing at last, but to
preserve everything unto life eternal. And possibly also
a hint is given here as to the only effective way to
destroy this foe: it is by the Cross: `Let him take up
his cross and follow me.'
The way to deeper knowledge of God is through the lonely
valleys of soul poverty and abnegation of all things. The
blessed ones who possess the Kingdom are they who have
repudiated every external thing and have rooted from
their hearts all sense of possessing. They are `poor in
spirit.' They have reached an inward state
paralleling the outward circumstances of the common
beggar in the streets of Jerusalem; that is what the word
`poor' as Christ used it actually means. These
blessed poor are no longer slaves to the tyranny of
things. They have broken the yoke of the oppressor; and
this they have done not by fighting but by surrendering.
Though free from all sense of possessing, they yet
possess all things. `Theirs is the kingdom of
heaven.'
Let me exhort you to take this seriously. It is not to
be understood as mere Bible teaching to be stored away in
the mind along with an inert mass of other doctrines. It
is a marker on the road to greener pastures, a path
chiseled against the steep sides of the mount of God. We
dare not try to by-pass it if we would follow on in this
holy pursuit. We must ascend a step at a time. If we
refuse one step we bring our progress to an end.
As is frequently true, this New Testament principle of
spiritual life finds its best illustration in the Old
Testament. In the story of Abraham and Isaac we have a
dramatic picture of the surrendered life as well as an
excellent commentary on the first Beatitude.
Abraham was old when Isaac was born, old enough indeed
to have been his grandfather, and the child became at
once the delight and idol of his heart. From that moment
when he first stooped to take the tiny form awkwardly in
his arms he was an eager love slave of his son. God went
out of His way to comment on the strength of this
affection. And it is not hard to understand. The baby
represented everything sacred to his father's heart:
the promises of God, the covenants, the hopes of the
years and the long messianic dream. As he watched him
grow from babyhood to young manhood the heart of the old
man was knit closer and closer with the life of his son,
till at last the relationship bordered upon the perilous.
It was then that God stepped in to save both father and
son from the consequences of an uncleansed love.
`Take now thy son,' said God to Abraham, `thine only
son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land
of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt-offering upon
one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.' (Gen
22:2) The sacred writer spares us a close-up of the agony
that night on the slopes near Beersheba when the aged man
had it out with his God, but respectful imagination may
view in awe the bent form and convulsive wrestling alone
under the stars. Possibly not again until a Greater than
Abraham wrestled in the Garden of Gethsemane did such
mortal pain visit a human soul. If only the man himself
might have been allowed to die. That would have been
easier a thousand times, for he was old now, and to die
would have been no great ordeal for one who had walked so
long with God. Besides, it would have been a last sweet
pleasure to let his dimming vision rest upon the figure
of his stalwart son who would live to carry on the
Abrahamic line and fulfill in himself the promises of God
made long before in Ur of the Chaldees.
How should he slay the lad! Even if he could get the
consent of his wounded and protesting heart, how could he
reconcile the act with the promise, `In Isaac shall thy
seed be called'? This was Abraham's trial by
fire, and he did not fail in the crucible. While the
stars still shone like sharp white points above the tent
where the sleeping Isaac lay, and long before the gray
dawn had begun to lighten the east, the old saint had
made up his mind. He would offer his son as God had
directed him to do, and then trust God to raise him from
the dead. This, says the writer to the Hebrews, was the
solution his aching heart found sometime in the dark
night, and he rose `early in the morning' to carry
out the plan. It is beautiful to see that, while he erred
as to God's method, he had correctly sensed the
secret of His great heart. And the solution accords well
with the New Testament Scripture, `Whosoever will lose...
for my sake shall find...'
God let the suffering old man go through with it up to
the point where He knew there would be no retreat, and
then forbade him to lay a hand upon the boy. To the
wondering patriarch He now says in effect, `It's all
right, Abraham. I never intended that you should actually
slay the lad. I only wanted to remove him from the temple
of your heart that I might reign unchallenged there. I
wanted to correct the perversion that existed in your
love. Now you may have the boy, sound and well. Take him
and go back to your tent. Now I know that thou fearest
God, seeing that thou hast not withheld thy son, thine
only son, from me.'
Then heaven opened and a voice was heard saying to him,
`By myself I have sworn, saith the Lord, for because thou
hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son,
thine only son: that in blessing I will bless thee, and
in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars of
the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the sea shore;
and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies; and
in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be
blessed; because thou hast obeyed my voice.'
The old man of God lifted his head to respond to the
Voice, and stood there on the mount strong and pure and
grand, a man marked out by the Lord for special
treatment, a friend and favorite of the Most High. Now he
was a man wholly surrendered, a man utterly obedient, a
man who possessed nothing. He had concentrated his all in
the person of his dear son, and God had taken it from
him. God could have begun out on the margin of
Abraham's life and worked inward to the center; He
chose rather to cut quickly to the heart and have it over
in one sharp act of separation. In dealing thus He
practiced an economy of means and time. It hurt cruelly,
but it was effective.
I have said that Abraham possessed nothing. Yet was not
this poor man rich? Everything he had owned before was
still his to enjoy: sheep, camels, herds, and goods of
every sort. He had also his wife and his friends, and
best of all he had his son Isaac safe by his side. He had
everything, but he possessed nothing. There is the
spiritual secret. There is the sweet theology of the
heart which can be learned only in the school of
renunciation. The books on systematic theology overlook
this, but the wise will understand.
After that bitter and blessed experience I think the
words `my' and `mine' never had again the same
meaning for Abraham. The sense of possession which they
connote was gone from his heart. things had been cast out
forever.They had now become external to the man. His
inner heart was free from them. The world said, `Abraham
is rich,' but the aged patriarch only smiled. He
could not explain it to them, but he knew that he owned
nothing, that his real treasures were inward and
eternal.
There can be no doubt that this possessive clinging to
things is one of the most harmful habits in the life.
Because it is so natural it is rarely recognized for the
evil that it is; but its outworkings are tragic. We are
often hindered from giving up our treasures to the Lord
out of fear for their safety; this is especially true
when those treasures are loved relatives and friends. But
we need have no such fears. Our Lord came not to destroy
but to save. Everything is safe which we commit to Him,
and nothing is really safe which is not so committed.
Our gifts and talents should also be turned over to Him.
They should be recognized for what they are, God's
loan to us, and should never be considered in any sense
our own. We have no more right to claim credit for
special abilities than for blue eyes or strong muscles.
`For who maketh thee to differ from another? and what
hast thou that thou didst not receive?'
The Christian who is alive enough to know himself even
slightly will recognize the symptoms of this possession
malady, and will grieve to find them in his own heart. If
the longing after God is strong enough within him he will
want to do something about the matter. Now, what should
he do?
First of all he should put away all defense and make no
attempt to excuse himself either in his own eyes or
before the Lord. Whoever defends himself will have
himself for his defense, and he will have no other; but
let him come defenseless before the Lord and he will have
for his defender no less than God Himself. Let the
inquiring Christian trample under foot every slippery
trick of his deceitful heart and insist upon frank and
open relations with the Lord.
Then he should remember that this is holy business. No
careless or casual dealings will suffice. Let him come to
God in full determination to be heard. Let him insist
that God accept his all, that He take things out of his
heart and Himself reign there in power. It may be he will
need to become specific, to name things and people by
their names one by one. If he will become drastic enough
he can shorten the time of his travail from years to
minutes and enter the good land long before his slower
brethren who coddle their feelings and insist upon
caution in their dealings with God.
Let us never forget that such a truth as this cannot be
learned by rote as one would learn the facts of physical
science. They must be experienced before we can really
know them. We must in our hearts live through
Abraham's harsh and bitter experiences if we would
know the blessedness which follows them. The ancient
curse will not go out painlessly; the tough old miser
within us will not lie down and die obedient to our
command. He must be torn out of our heart like a plant
from the soil; he must be extracted in agony and blood
like a tooth from the jaw. He must be expelled from our
soul by violence as Christ expelled the money changers
from the temple. And we shall need to steel ourselves
against his piteous begging, and to recognize it as
springing out of self-pity, one of the most reprehensible
sins of the human heart.
If we would indeed know God in growing intimacy we must
go this way of renunciation. And if we are set upon the
pursuit of God He will sooner or later bring us to this
test. Abraham's testing was, at the time, not known
to him as such, yet if he had taken some course other
than the one he did, the whole history of the Old
Testament would have been different. God would have found
His man, no doubt, but the loss to Abraham would have
been tragic beyond the telling. So we will be brought one
by one to the testing place, and we may never know when
we are there. At that testing place there will be no
dozen possible choices for us; just one and an
alternative, but our whole future will be conditioned by
the choice we make.
Father, I want to know Thee, but my coward heart fears
to give up its toys. I cannot part with them without
inward bleeding, and I do not try to hide from Thee the
terror of the parting. I come trembling, but I do come.
Please root from my heart all Those things which I have
cherished so long and which have become a very part of my
living self, so that Thou mayest enter and dwell there
without a rival. Then shalt Thou make the place of Thy
feet glorious. Then shall my heart have no need of the
sun to shine in it, for Thyself wilt be the light of it,
and there shall be no night there. In Jesus' name,
Amen.
Chapter 3: Removing the Veil
Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus.
Heb. 10:19
Among the famous sayings of the Church fathers none is
better know than Augustine's `Thou hast formed us for
Thyself, and our hearts are restless till they find rest
in Thee.'
The great saint states here in few words the origin and
interior history of the human race. God made us for
Himself: that is the only explanation that satisfies the
heart of a thinking man, whatever his wild reason may
say. Should faulty education and perverse reasoning lead
a man to conclude otherwise, there is little that any
Christian can do for him. For such a man I have no
message. My appeal is addressed to those who have been
previously taught in secret by the wisdom of God; I speak
to thirsty hearts whose longings have been wakened by the
touch of God within them,and such as they need no
reasoned proof. Their restless hearts furnish all the
proof they need.
God formed us for Himself. The shorter catechism,
`Agreed upon by the Reverend Assembly of Divines at
Westminister,' as the old New-England Primer has it,
asks the ancient questions what and why and answers them
in one short sentence hardly matched in any uninspired
work. `Question: What is the chief End of Man? Answer:
Man's chief End is to glorify God and enjoy Him
forever.' With this agree the four and twenty elders
who fall on their faces to worship Him that liveth for
ever and ever, saying, `Thou art worthy, O Lord, to
receive glory and honour and power: for thou hast created
all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were
created.' (Rev 4:11)
God formed us for His pleasure, and so formed us that we
as well as He can in divine communion enjoy the sweet and
mysterious mingling of kindred personalities. He meant us
to see Him and live with Him and draw our life from His
smile. But we have been guilty of that `foul revolt'
of which Milton speaks when describing the rebellion of
Satan and his hosts. We have broken with God. We have
ceased to obey Him or love Him and in guilt and fear have
fled as far as possible from His Presence.
Yet who can flee from His Presence when the heaven of
heavens cannot contain Him? when as the wisdom of Solomon
testifies, `the Spirit of the Lord filleth the
world'? The omnipresence of the Lord is one thing,
and is a solemn fact necessary to His perfection; the
manifest Presence is another thing altogether, and from
that Presence we have fled, like Adam, to hide among the
trees of the garden, or like Peter to shrink away crying,
`Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.' So
the life of man upon the earth is a life away from the
Presence, wrenched loose from that `blissful center'
which is our right and proper dwelling place, our first
state which we kept not, the loss of which is the cause
of our unceasing restlessness.
The whole work of God in redemption is to undo the
tragic effects of that foul revolt, and to bring us back
again into right and eternal relationship with
Himself.This required that our sins be disposed of
satisfactorily, that a full reconciliation be effected
and the way opened for us to return again into conscious
communion with God and to live again in the Presence as
before. Then by His prevenient working within us He moves
us to return. This first comes to our notice when our
restless hearts feel a yearning for the Presence of God
and we say within ourselves, `I will arise and go to my
Father.' That is the first step, and as the Chinese
sage Lao-tze has said, `The journey of a thousand miles
begins with a first step.'
The interior journey of the soul from the wilds of sin
into the enjoyed Presence of God is beautifully
illustrated in the Old Testament tabernacle. The
returning sinner first entered the outer court where he
offered a blood sacrifice on the brazen altar and washed
himself in the laver that stood near it. Then through a
veil he passed into the holy place where no natural light
could come, but the golden candlestick which spoke of
Jesus the Light of the World threw its soft glow over
all. There also was the shew bread to tell of Jesus, the
Bread of Life, and the altar of incense, a figure of
unceasing prayer.
Though the worshipper had enjoyed so much, still he had
not yet entered the Presence of God. Another veil
separated from the Holy of Holies where above the mercy
seat dwelt the very God Himself in awful and glorious
manifestation. While the tabernacle stood, only the high
priest could enter there, and that but once a year, with
blood which he offered for his sins and the sins of the
people. It was this last veil which was rent when our
Lord gave up the ghost on Calvary, and the sacred writer
explains that this rending of the veil opened the way for
every worshipper in the world to come by the new and
living way straight into the divine Presence.
Everything in the New Testament accords with this Old
Testament picture. Ransomed men need no longer pause in
fear to enter the Holy of Holies. God wills that we
should push on into His Presence and live our whole life
there. This is to be known to us in conscious experience.
It is more than a doctrine to be held, it is a life to be
enjoyed every moment of every day. This Flame of the
Presence was the beating heart of the Levitical order.
Without it all the appointments of the tabernacle were
characters of some unknown language; they had no meaning
for Israel or for us. The greatest fact of the tabernacle
was that Jehovah was there; a Presence was waiting within
the veil. Similarly the Presence of God is the central
fact of Christianity. At the heart of the Christian
message is God Himself waiting for His redeemed children
to push in to conscious awareness of His Presence. That
type of Christianity which happens now to be the vogue
knows this Presence only in theory. It fails to stress
the Christian's privilege of present realization.
According to its teachings we are in the Presence of God
positionally, and nothing is said about the need to
experience that Presence actually. The fiery urge that
drove men like McCheyne is wholly missing. And the
present generation of Christians measures itself by this
imperfect rule. Ignoble contentment takes the place of
burning zeal. We are satisfied to rest in our JUDICIAL
possessions and for the most part we bother ourselves
very little about the absence of personal experience.
Who is this within the veil who dwells in fiery
manifestations? It is none other than God Himself, `One
God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and
of all things visible and invisible,' and `One Lord
Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God; begotten of
His Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light,
Very God of Very God; begotten, not made; being of one
substance with the Father,' and `the Holy Ghost, the
Lord and Giver of life, Who proceedeth from the Father
and the Son, Who with the Father and the Son together is
worshipped and glorified.' Yet this holy Trinity is
One God, for `we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity
in Unity; neither confounding the Persons, nor dividing
the Substance. For there is one Person of the Father,
another of the Son, and another of the Holy Ghost. But
the Godhead of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost, is all one: the glory equal and the majesty co-
eternal.' So in part run the ancient creeds, and so
the inspired Word declares. Behind the veil is God, that
God after Whom the world, with strange inconsistency, has
felt, `if haply they might find Him.' He has
discovered Himself to some extent in nature, but more
perfectly in the Incarnation; now He waits to show
Himself in ravishing fullness to the humble of soul and
the pure in heart.
The world is perishing for lack of the knowledge of God
and the Church is famishing for want of His Presence. The
instant cure of most of our religious ills would be to
enter the Presence in spiritual experience, to become
suddenly aware that we are in God and that God is in us.
This would lift us out of our pitiful narrowness and
cause our hearts to be enlarged. This would burn away the
impurities from our lives as the bugs and fungi were
burned away by the fire that dwelt in the bush.
What a broad world to roam in, what a sea to swim in is
this God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. He is
eternal, which means that He antedates time and is wholly
independent of it. Time began in Him and will end in Him.
To it He pays no tribute and from it He suffers no
change.
He is immutable, which means that He has never changed
and can never change in any smallest measure. To change
He would need to go from better to worse or from worse to
better. He cannot do either, for being perfect He cannot
become more perfect, and if He were to become less
perfect He would be less than God.
He is omniscient, which means that He knows in one free
and effortless act all matter, all spirit, all
relationships, all events. He has no past and He has no
future. He is, and none of the limiting and qualifying
terms used of creatures can apply to Him.
love and mercy and rightousness are His, and holiness so
ineffable that no comparisons or figures will avail to
express it. Only fire can give even a remote conception
of it. In fire He appeared at the burning bush; in the
pillar of fire He dwelt through all the long wilderness
journey. The fire that glowed between the wings of the
cherubim int he holy place was called the `shekinah,'
the Presence, through the years of Israel's glory,
and when the Old had given place to the New, He came at
Pentecost as a fiery flame and rested upon each
disciple.
Spinoza wrote of the intellectual love of God, and he
had a measure of truth there; but the highest love of God
is not intellectual, it is spiritual. God is spirit and
only the spirit of man can know Him really. In the deep
spirit of a man the fire must glow or his love is not the
true love of God. The great of the Kingdom have been
those who loved God more than others did. We all know who
they have been and gladly pay tribute to the depths and
sincerity of their devotion. We have but to pause for a
moment and their names come trooping past us smelling of
myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palaces.
Fredrick Faber was one whose soul panted after God as
the roe pants after the water brook, and the measure in
which God revealed Himself to his seeking heart set the
good man's whole life afire with a burning adoration
rivaling that of the seraphim before the throne. His love
for God extended to the three Persons of the Godhead
equally, yet he seemed to feel for each One a special
kind of love reserved for Him alone. Of God the Father he
sings:
Only to sit and think of God,
Oh what a joy it is!
To think the thought, to breathe the Name;
Earth has no higher bliss.
Father of Jesus, love's reward!
What rapture will it be,
Prostrate before Thy throne to lie,
And gaze and gaze on Thee!
His love for the Person of Christ was so intense that it
threatened to consume him; it burned within him as a
sweet and holy madness and flowed from his lips like
molten gold. In one of his sermons he says, `Wherever we
turn in the church of God, there is Jesus. He is the
beginning, middle and end of everything to us. ...There
is nothing good, nothing holy, nothing beautiful, nothing
joyous which He is not to His servants. No one need be
poor, because, if he chooses, he can have Jesus for his
own property and possession. No one need be downcast, for
Jesus is the joy of heaven, and it is His joy to enter
into sorrowful hearts. We can exaggerate about many
things; but we can never exaggerate our obligation to
Jesus, or the compassionate abundance of the love of
Jesus to us. All our lives long we might talk of Jesus,
and yet we should never come to an end of the sweet
things that might be said of Him. Eternity will not be
long enough to learn all He is, or to praise Him for all
He has done, but then, that matters not; for we shall be
always with Him, and we desire nothing more.'
And addressing our Lord directly he says to Him:
I love Thee so, I know not how
My transports to control;
Thy love is like a burning
fire Within my very soul.
Faber's blazing love extended also to the Holy
Spirit. Not only in his theology did he acknowledge His
deity and full equality with the Father and the Son, but
he celebrated it constantly in his songs and in his
prayers. He literally pressed his forehead to the ground
in his eager fervid worship of the Third Person of the
Godhead. In one of his great hymns to the Holy Spirit he
sums up his burning devotion thus:
O Spirit, beautiful and dread!
My heart is fit to break
With love of all Thy tenderness
For us poor sinners' sake.
I have risked the tedium of quotation that I might show
by pointed example what I have set out to say, viz., that
God is so vastly wonderful, so utterly and completely
delightful that He can, without anything other than
Himself, meet and overflow the deepest demands of our
total nature, mysterious and deep as that nature is. Such
worship as Faber knew (and he is but one of a great
company which no man can number) can never come from a
mere doctrinal knowledge of God.
Hearts that are `fit to break' with love for the
Godhead are those who have been in the Presence and have
looked with opened eye upon the majesty of Deity. Men of
the breaking hearts had a quality about them not known or
understood by common men. They habitually spoke with
spiritual authority. They had been in the Presence of God
and they reported what they saw there. They were
prophets, not scribes, for the scribe tells us what he
has read, and the prophet tells us what he has seen.
The distinction is not an imaginary one. Between the
scribe who has read and the prophet who has seen there is
a difference as wide as the sea. We are today overrun
with orthodox scribes, but the prophets, where are they?
The hard voice of the scribe sounds over evangelicalism,
but the Church waits for the tender voice of the saint
who has penetrated the veil and has gazed with inward eye
upon the Wonder that is God. And yet, thus to penetrate,
to push in sensitive living experience into the holy
Presence, is a privilege open to every child of God.
With the veil removed by the rending of Jesus'
flesh, with nothing on God's side to prevent us from
entering, why do we tarry without? Why do we consent to
abide all our days just outside the Holy of Holies and
never enter at all to look upon God? We hear the
Bridegroom say, `Let me see thy countenance, let me hear
thy voice; for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is
comely.' (Song of Sol 2:14) We sense that the call is
for us, but still we fail to draw near, and the years
pass and we grow old and tired in the outer courts of the
tabernacle. What doth hinder us?
The answer usually given, simply that we are `cold,'
will not explain all the facts. There is something more
serious than coldness of heart, something that may be
back of that coldness and be the cause of its existence.
What is it? What but the presence of a veil in out
hearts? a veil not taken away as the first veil was, but
which remains there still shutting out the light and
hiding the face of God from us. It is the veil of our
fleshly fallen nature living on, unjudged within us,
uncrucified and unrepudiated. It is the close- woven veil
of the self-life which we have never truly acknowledged,
of which we have been secretly ashamed, and which for
these reasons we have never brought to the judgment of
the cross. It is not too mysterious, this opaque veil,
nor is it hard to identify. We have but to look in our
own hearts and we shall see it there, sewn and patched
and repaired it may be, but there nevertheless, an enemy
to our lives and an effective block to our spiritual
progress.
This veil is not a beautiful thing and it is not a thing
about which we commonly care to talk, but I am addressing
the thirsting souls who are determined to follow God, and
I know they will not turn back because the way leads
temporarily through the blackened hills. The urge of God
within them will assure their continuing the pursuit.
They will face the facts however unpleasant and endure
the cross for the joy set before them. So I am bold to
mane the threads out of which this inner veil is woven.
It is woven of the fine threads of the self-life, the
hyphenated sins of the human spirit. They are not
something we do, they are something we are, and therein
lies both their subtlety and their power.
To be specific, the self-sins are these:
self-righteousness, self-pity, self-confidence,
self-sufficiency, self-admiration, self-love and a host
of others like them. They dwell too deep within us and
are too much a part of our natures to come to our
attention till the light of God is focused upon them. The
grosser manifestations of these sins, egotism,
exhibitionism, self-promotion, are strangely tolerated in
Christian leaders even in circles of impeccable
orthodoxy. They are so much in evidence as actually, form
any people, to become identified with the gospel. I trust
it is not a cynical observation to say that they appear
these days to be a requisite for popularity in some
sections of the Church visible. Promoting self under the
guise of promoting Christ is currently so common as to
excite little notice.
One should suppose that proper instruction in the
doctrines of man's depravity and the necessity for
justification through the righteousness of Christ alone
would deliver us from the power of the self-sins; but it
does not work out that way. Self can live unrebuked at
the very altar. It can watch the bleeding Victim die and
not be in the least affected by what it sees. It can
fight for the faith of the Reformers and preach
eloquently the creed of salvation by grace, and gain
strength by its efforts. To tell all the truth, it seems
actually to feed upon orthodoxy and is more at home in a
Bible Conference than in a tavern. Our very state of
longing after God may afford it an excellent condition
under which to thrive and grow.
Self is the opaque veil that hides the Face of God from
us. It can be removed only in spiritual experience, never
by mere instruction. As well try to instruct leprosy out
of our system. There must be a work of God in destruction
before we are free. We must invite the cross to do its
deadly work within us. We must bring our self-sins to the
cross for judgment. We must prepare ourselves for an
ordeal of suffering in some measure like that through
which our Saviour passed when He suffered under Pontius
Pilate.
Let us remember: when we talk of the rending of the veil
we are speaking in a figure, and the thought of it is
poetical, almost pleasant; but in actuality there is
nothing pleasant about it. In human experience that veil
is made of living spiritual tissue; it is composed of the
sentient, quivering stuff of which our whole beings
consist, and to touch it is to touch us where we feel
pain. To tear it away is to injure us, to hurt us and
make us bleed. To say otherwise is to make the cross no
cross and death no death at all. It is never fun to die.
To rip through the dear and tender stuff of which life is
made can never be anything but deeply painful. Yet that
is what the cross did to Jesus and it is what the cross
would do to every man to set him free.
Let us beware of tinkering with our inner life in hope
ourselves to rend the veil. God must do everything for
us. Our part is to yield and trust. We must confess,
forsake, repudiate the self-life, and then reckon it
crucified. But we must be careful to distinguish lazy
`acceptance' from the real work of God. We must
insist upon the work being done. We dare not rest content
with a neat doctrine of self-crucifixion. That is to
imitate Saul and spare the best of the sheep and the
oxen.
Insist that the work be done in very truth and it will
be done. The cross is rough, and it is deadly, but it is
effective. It does not keep its victim hanging there
forever. There comes a moment when its work is finished
and the suffering victim dies. After that is resurrection
glory and power, and the pain is forgotten for joy that
the veil is taken away and we have entered in actual
spiritual experience the Presence of the living God.
Lord, how excellent are Thy ways, and how devious and
dark are the ways of man. Show us how to die, that we may
rise again to newness of life. Rend the veil of our
self-life from the top down as Thou didst rend the veil
of the Temple. We would draw near in full assurance of
faith. We would dwell with Thee in daily experience here
on this earth so that we may be accustomed to the glory
when we enter Thy heaven to dwell with Thee there. In
Jesus' name, Amen.
Chapter 4 : Apprehending God
O taste and see.
Ps. 34:8
It was Canon Holmes, of India, who more than twenty-five
years ago called attention to the inferential character
of the average man's faith in God. To most people God
is an inference, not a reality. He is a deduction from
evidence which they consider adequate; but He remains
personally unknown to the individual. `He must be,'
they say, `therefore we believe He is.' Others do not
go even so far as this; they know of Him only by hearsay.
They have never bothered to think the matter out for
themselves, but have heard about Him from others, and
have put belief in Him into the back of their minds along
with the various odds and ends that make up their total
creed. To many others God is but an ideal, another name
for goodness, or beauty, or truth; or He is law, or life,
or the creative impulse back of the phenomena of
existence. These notions about God are many and varied,
but they who hold them have one thing in common: they do
not know God in personal experience. The possibility of
intimate acquaintance with Him has not entered their
minds. While admitting His existence they do not think of
Him as knowable in the sense that we know things or
people.
Christians, to be sure, go further than this, at least
in theory. Their creed requires them to believe in the
personality of God, and they have been taught to pray,
`Our Father, which art in heaven.' Now personality
and fatherhood carry with them the idea of the
possibility of personal acquaintance. This is admitted, I
say, in theory, but for millions of Christians,
nevertheless, God is no more real than He is to the
non-Christian. They go through life trying to love an
ideal and be loyal to a mere principle.
Over against all this cloudy vagueness stands the clear
scriptural doctrine that God can be known in personal
experience. A loving Personality dominates the Bible,
walking among the trees of the garden and breathing
fragrance over every scene. Always a living Person is
present, speaking, pleading, loving, working, and
manifesting Himself whenever and wherever His people have
the receptivity necessary to receive the
manifestation.
The Bible assumes as a self-evident fact that men can
know God with at least the same degree of immediacy as
they know any other person or thing that comes within the
field of their experience. The same terms are used to
express the knowledge of God as are used to express
knowledge of physical things. `O taste and see that the
Lord is good.' (Ps 34:8) `All thy garments smellof
myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory
palaces.' (Ps 45:8) `My sheep hear my voice.' (Jn
10:27) `Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God.' (Mt 5:8) These are but four of countless such
passages from the Word of God. And more important than
any proof text is the fact that the whole import of the
Scripture is toward this belief.
What can all this mean except that we have in our hearts
organs by means of which we can know God as certainly as
we know material things through our familiar five senses?
We apprehend the physical world by exercising the
faculties given us for the purpose, and we possess
spiritual faculties by means of which we can know God and
the spiritual world if we will obey the Spirit's urge
and begin to use them. That a saving work must first be
done in the heart is taken for granted here. The
spiritual faculties of the unregenerate man lie asleep in
his nature, unused and for every purpose dead; that is
the stroke which has fallen upon us by sin. They may be
quickened to active life again by the operation of the
Holy Spirit in regeneration; that is one of the
immeasurable benefits which come to us through
Christ's atoning work on the cross.
But the very ransomed children of God themselves: why do
they know so little of that habitual conscious communion
with God which the Scriptures seem to offer? The answer
is our chronic unbelief. Faith enables our spiritual
sense to function. Where faith is defective the result
will be inward insensibility and numbness toward
spiritual things. This is the condition of vast numbers
of Christians today. No proof is necessary to support
that statement. We have but to converse with the first
Christian we meet or enter the first church we find open
to acquire all the proof we need.
A spiritual kingdom lies all about us, enclosing us,
embracing us, altogether within reach of our inner
selves, waiting for us to recognize it. God Himself is
here waiting our response to His Presence. This eternal
world will come alive to us the moment we begin to reckon
upon its reality.
I have just now used two words which demand definition;
or if definition is impossible, I must at least make
clear what I mean when I use them. They are `reckon'
and `reality.' What do I mean by reality? I mean that
which has existence apart from any idea any mind may have
of it, and which would exist if there were no mine
anywhere to entertain a thought of it. That which is real
has being in itself. It does not depend upon the observer
for its validity.
I am aware that there are those who love to poke fun at
the plain man's idea of reality. They are the
idealists who spin endless proofs that nothing is real
outside of the mind. They are the relativists who like to
show that there are no fixed points in the universe from
which we can measure anything. They smile down upon us
from their lofty intellectual peaks and settle us to
their own satisfaction by fastening upon us the
reproachful term `absolutist.' The Christian is not
put out of countenance by this show of contempt. He can
smile right back at them, for he knows that there is only
One who is Absolute, that is God. But he knows also that
the Absolute One has made this world for man's uses,
and, while there is nothing fixed or real in the last
meaning of the words (the meaning as applied to God) for
every purpose of human life we are permitted to act as if
there were. And every man does act thus except the
mentally sick. These unfortunates also have trouble with
reality, but they are consistent; they insist upon living
in accordance with their ideas of things. They are
honest, and it is their very honesty that constitutes
them a social problem.
The idealists and relativists are not mentally sick.
They prove their soundness by living their lives
according to the very notions of reality which they in
theory repudiate and by counting upon the very fixed
points which they prove are not there. They could earn a
lot more respect for their notions if they were willing
to live by them; but this they are careful not to do.
Their ideas are brain-deep, not life- deep. Wherever life
touches them they repudiate their theories and live like
other men.
The Christian is too sincere to play with ideas for
their own sake. He takes no pleasure in the mere spinning
of gossamer webs for display. All his beliefs are
practical. They are geared into his life. By them he
lives or dies, stands or falls for this world and for all
time to come. From the insincere man he turns away.
The sincere plain man knows that the world is real. He
finds it here when he wakes to consciousness, and he
knows that he did not think it into being. It was here
waiting for him when he came, and he knows that when he
prepares to leave this earthly scene it will be here
still to bid him good-bye as he departs. By the deep
wisdom of life he is wiser than a thousand men who doubt.
He stands upon the earth and feels the wind and rain in
his face and he knows that they are real. He sees the sun
by day and the stars by night.
He sees the hot lightning play out of the dark
thundercloud. He hears the sounds of nature and the cries
of human joy and pain. These he knows are real. He lies
down on the cool earth at night and has no fear that it
will prove illusory or fail him while he sleeps. In the
morning the firm ground will be under him, the blue sky
above him and the rocks and trees around him as when he
closed his eyes the night before. So he lives and
rejoices in a world of reality. With his five senses he
engages this real world. All things necessary to his
physical existence he apprehends by the faculties with
which he has been equipped by the God who created him and
placed him in such a world as this.
Now by our definition also God is real. He is real in
the absolute and final sense that nothing else is. All
other reality is contingent upon His. The great Reality
is God who is the Author of that lower and dependent
reality which makes up the sum of created things,
including ourselves. God has objective existence
independent of and apart from any notions which we may
have concerning Him.The worshipping heart does not create
its Object. It finds Him here when it wakes from its
moral slumber in the morning of its regeneration.
Another word that must be cleared up is the word reckon.
This does not mean to visualize or imagine. Imagination
is not faith. The two are not only different from, but
stand in sharp opposition to, each other. Imagination
projects unreal images out of the mind and seeks to
attach reality to them. Faith creates nothing; it simply
reckons upon that which is already there. God and the
spiritual world are real. We can reckon upon them with as
much assurance as we reckon upon the familiar world
around us. Spiritual things are there (or rather we
should say here) inviting our attention and challenging
our trust.
Our trouble is that we have established bad thought
habits. We habitually think of the visible world as real
and doubt the reality of any other. We do not deny the
existence of the spiritual world but we doubt that it is
real in the accepted meaning of the word. The world of
sense intrudes upon our attention day and night for the
whole of our lifetime. It is clamorous, insistent and
self- demonstrating. It does not appeal to our faith; it
is here, assaulting our five senses, demanding to be
accepted as real and final. But sin has so clouded the
lenses of our hearts that we cannot see that other
reality, the City of God, shining around us. The world of
sense triumphs. The visible becomes the enemy of the
invisible; the temporal, of the eternal. That is the
curse inherited by every member of Adam's tragic
race.
At the root of the Christian life lies belief in the
invisible. The object of the Christian's faith is
unseen reality. Our uncorrected thinking, influenced by
the blindness of our natural hearts and the intrusive
ubiquity of visible things, tends to draw a contrast
between the spiritual and the real; but actually no such
contrast exists. The antithesis lies elsewhere: between
the real and the imaginary, between the spiritual and the
material, between the temporal and the eternal; but
between the spiritual and the real.
The spiritual is real. If we would rise into that region
of light and power plainly beckoning us through the
Scriptures of truth we must break the evil habit of
ignoring the spiritual. We must shift our interest from
the seen to the unseen. For the great unseen Reality is
God. `He that cometh to God must believe that he is, and
that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek
him.' (Hebr 11:6) This is basic in the life of faith.
From there we can rise to unlimited heights. `Ye believe
in God,' said our Lord Jesus Christ, `believe also in
me.' (John 14:1) Without the first there can be no
second.
If we truly want to follow God we must seek to be
other-worldly. This I say knowing well that that word has
been used with scorn by the sons of this world and
applied to the Christian as a badge of reproach. So be
it. Everyman must choose his world. If we who follow
Christ, with all the facts before us and knowing what we
are about, deliberately choose the Kingdom of God as our
sphere of interest I see no reason why anyone should
object. If we lose by it, the loss is our own; if we gain
we rob no one by so doing.
The `other world,' which is the object of this
world's disdain and the subject of the drunkard's
mocking song, is our carefully chosen goal and the object
of our holiest longing. But we must avoid the common
fault of pushing the `other world' into the future.
It is not future, but present. It parallels our familiar
physical world, and the doors between the two worlds are
open. `Ye are come,' says the writer to the Hebrews
(and the tense is plainly present), `unto Mount Zion, and
unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem,
and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general
assembly and church of the firstborn, which are written
in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the
spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the
mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of
sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of
Abel' (Hebr 12:22-24) All these things are contrasted
with `the mount that might be touched' and `the sound
of a trumpet and the voice of words' that might be
heard. May we not safely conclude that, as the realities
of Mount Sinai were apprehended by the senses, so the
realities of Mount Zion are to be grasped by the soul?
And this not by any trick of the imagination, but in
downright actuality. The soul has eyes with which to see
and ears with which to hear. Feeble they may be from long
disuse, but by the life-giving touch of Christ alive now
and capable of sharpest sight and most sensitive
hearing.
As we begin to focus upon God the things of the spirit
will take shape before our inner eyes. Obedience to the
word of Christ will bring an inward revelation of the
Godhead (John 14:21-23). It will give acute perception
enabling us to see God even as is promised to the pure in
heart. A new God-consciousness will seize upon us and we
shall begin to taste and hear and inwardly feel the God
who is our life and our all. There will be seen the
constant shining of the light that lighteth every man
that cometh into the world. (John 1:9) More and more, as
our faculties grow sharper and more sure, God will become
to us the great All, and His Presence the glory and
wonder of our lives. O God, quicken to life every power
within me, that I may lay hold on eternal things. Open my
eyes that I may see; give me acute spiritual perception;
enable me to taste Thee and know that Thou art good. Make
heaven more real to me than any earthly thing has ever
been. Amen.
Chapter 5 : The Universal Presence
Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I
flee from thy presence?
Ps. 139:7
In all Christian teaching certain basic truths are
found, hidden at times, and rather assumed than asserted,
but necessary to all truth as the primary colors are
found inane necessary to the finished painting. Such a
truth is the divine immanence.
God dwells in His creation and is everywhere indivisibly
present in all His works. This is boldly taught by
prophet and apostle and is accepted by Christian theology
generally. That is, it appears in the books, but for some
reason it has not sunk into the average Christian's
heart so as to become a part of his believing self.
Christian teachers shy away from its full implications,
and, if they mention it at all, mute it down till it has
little meaning. I would guess the reason for this to be
the fear of being charged with pantheism; but the
doctrine of the divine Presence is definitely not
pantheism. Pantheism's error is too palpable to
deceive anyone. It is that God is the sum of all created
things. Nature and God are one, so that whoever touches a
leaf or a stone touches God. That is of course to degrade
the glory of the incorruptible Deity and, in an effort to
make all things divine, banish all divinity from the
world entirely. The truth is that while God dwells in His
world He is separated from it by a gulf forever
impassable. However closely He may be identified with the
work of His hands They are and must eternally be other
than He, and He is and must be antecedent to and
independent of them. He is transcendent above all His
works even while He is immanent within them.
What now does the divine immanence mean in direct
Christian experience? It means simply that God is here.
Wherever we are, God is here. There is no place, there
can be no place, where He is not. Ten million
intelligences standing at as many points in space and
separated by incomprehensible distances can each one say
with equal truth, God is here. No point is nearer to God
than any other point. It is exactly as near to God from
any place as it is from any other place. No one is in
mere distance any further from or any nearer to God than
any other person is.
These are truths believed by every instructed Christian.
It remains for us to think on them and pray over them
until they begin to glow within us. `In the beginning
God.' (Gen 1:1) Not matter, for matter is not
self-causing. It requires an antecedent cause, and God is
that Cause. Not law, for law is but a name for the course
which all creation follows. That course had to be
planned,and the Planner is God. Not mind, for mind also
is a created thing and must have a Creator back of it. In
the beginning God, the uncaused Cause of matter, mind and
law. There we must begin.
Adam sinned and, in his panic, frantically tried to do
the impossible: he tried to hide from the Presence of
God. David also must have had wild thoughts of trying to
escape from the Presence, for he wrote, `Whither shall I
go from thy Spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy
presence?' (Ps 139:7) Then he proceeded through one
of his most beautiful psalms to celebrate the glory of
the divine immanence. `If I ascend up into heaven, thou
art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art
there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in
the uttermost parts of the sea; even there shall thy hand
lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me.' (Ps
139:8-10) And he knew that God's being and God's
seeing are the same, that the seeing Presence had been
with him even before he was born, watching the mystery of
unfolding life. Solomon exclaimed, `But will God indeed
dwell on the earth? behold the heaven and the heaven of
heavens cannot contain thee: how much less this house
which I have builded.' (1 Kings 8:27) Paul assured
the Athenians that `God is not far from any one of us:
for in him we live, and move, and have our being.'
(Acts 17:27-28)
If God is present at every point in space, if we cannot
go where He is not, cannot even conceive of a place where
He is not, why then has not that Presence become the one
universally celebrated fact of the world? The patriarch
Jacob, `in the waste howling wilderness,' gave the
answer to that question. He saw a vision of God and cried
out in wonder, `Surely the Lord is in this place; and I
knew it not.' (Gen 28:16) Jacob had never been for
one small division of a moment outside the circle of that
all-pervading Presence. But he knew it not. That was his
trouble, and it is ours. Men do not know that God is
here. What a difference it would make if they knew.
The Presence and the manifestation of the Presence are
not the same. There can be the one without the other. God
is here when we are wholly unaware of it. He is manifest
only when and as we are aware of His Presence. On our
part there must be surrender to the Spirit of God, for
His work it is to show us the Father and the Son. If we
co-operate with Him in loving obedience God will manifest
Himself to us, and that manifestation will be the
difference between a nominal Christian life and a life
radiant with the light of His face.
Always, everywhere God is present, and always He seeks
to discover [uncover] Himself. To each one he would
reveal not only that He is, but what He is as well. He
did not have to be persuaded to discover Himself to
Moses. `And the Lord descended in the cloud, and stood
with him there, and proclaimed the name of the Lord.'
He not only made a verbal proclamation of His nature but
He revealed His very Self to Moses so that the skin of
Moses' face shone with the supernatural light. It
will be a great moment for some of us when we begin to
believe that God's promise of self-revelation is
literally true: that He promised much, but promised no
more than He intends to fulfill.
Our pursuit of God is successful just because He is
forever seeking to manifest Himself to us. the revelation
of God to any man is not God coming from a distance upon
a time to pay a brief and momentous visit to the
man's soul. Thus to think of it is to misunderstand
it all. The approach of God to the soul or of the soul to
God is not to be thought of in spatial terms at all.
There is no idea of physical distance involved in the
concept. It is not a matter of miles but of
experience.
To speak of being near to or far from God is to use
language in a sense always understood when applied to our
ordinary human relationships. A man may say, `I feel that
my son is coming nearer to me as he gets older,' and
yet that son has lived by his father's side since he
was born and has never been away from home more than a
day or so in his entire life. What then can the father
mean? Obviously he is speaking of experiece. He means
that the boy is coming to know him more intimately and
with deeper understanding, that the barriers of thought
and feeling between the two are disappearing, that father
and son are becoming more closely united in mind and
heart.
So when we sing, `Draw me nearer, nearer, blessed
Lord,' we are not thinking of the nearness of place,
but of the nearness of relationship. It is for increasing
degrees of awareness that we pray, for a more perfect
consciousness of the divine Presence. We need never shout
across the spaces to an absent God. He is nearer than our
own soul, closer than our most secret thoughts.
Why do some persons `find' God in a way that others
do not? Why does God manifest His Presence to some and
let multitudes of others struggle along in the half-light
of imperfect Christian experience? Of course the will of
God is the same for all. He has no favorites within His
household. All He has ever done for any of His children
He will do for all of His children. The difference lies
not with God but with us.
Pick at random a score of great saints whose lives and
testimonies are widely known. Let them be Bible
characters or well known Christians of post-Biblical
times. You will be struck instantly with the fact that
the saints were not alike. Sometimes the unlikenesses
were so great as to be positively glaring. How different
for example was Moses from Isaiah; how different was
Elijah from David; how unlike each other were John and
Paul, St. Francis and Luther, Finney and Thomas à
Kempis. The differences are as wide as human life itself:
differences of race, nationality, education, temperament,
habit and personal qualities. Yet they all walked, each
in his day, upon a high road of spiritual living far
above the common way. Their differences must have been
incidental and in the eyes of God of no significance. In
some vital quality they must have been alike. What was
it?
I venture to suggest that the one vital quality which
they had in common was spirital receptivity. Something in
them was open to heaven, something which urged them
Godward. Without attempting anything like a profound
analysis I shall say simply that they had spiritual
awareness and that they went on to cultivate it until it
became the biggest thing in their lives. They differed
from the average person in that when they felt the inward
longing they did something about it. They acquired the
lifelong habit of spiritual response. They were not
disobedient to the heavenly vision. As David put it
neatly, `When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said
unto thee, Thy face, Lord, will I seek.' (Ps
27:8)
As with everything good in human life, back of this
receptivity is God. The sovereignty of God is here, and
is felt even by those who have not placed particular
stress upon it theologically. The pious Michael Angelo
confessed this in a sonnet:
My unassisted heart is barren clay,
That of its native self can nothing feed
Of good and pious works Thou art the seed,
That quickens only where Thou sayest it may:
Unless Thou show to us Thine own true way
No man can find it: Father! Thou must lead.
These words will repay study as the deep and serious
testimony of a great Christian. Important as it is that
we recognize God working in us, I would yet warn against
a too-great preoccupation with the thought. It is a sure
road to sterile passivity. God will not hold us
responsible to understand the mysteries of election,
predestination and the divine sovereignty. The best and
safest way to deal with these truths is to raise our eyes
to God and in deepest reverence say, `O Lord, Thou
knowest.' Those things belong to the deep and
mysterious Profound of God's omniscience. Prying into
them may make theologians, but it will never make
saints.
Receptivity is not a single thing; it is a compound
rather, a blending of several elements within the soul.
It is an affinity for, a bent toward, a sympathetic
response to, a desire to have. From this it may be
gathered that it can be present in degrees, that we may
have little or more or less, depending upon the
individual. It may be increased by exercise or destroyed
by neglect. It is not a sovereign and irresistible force
which comes upon us as a seizure from above. It is a gift
of God, indeed, but one which must be recognized and
cultivated as any other gift if it is to realize the
purpose for which it was given. Failure to see this is
the cause of a very serious breakdown in modern
evangelicalism. The idea of cultivation and exercise, so
dear to the saints of old, has now no place in our total
religious picture. It is too slow, too common. We now
demand glamour and fast flowing dramatic action.
A generation of Christians reared among push buttons and
automatic machines is impatient of slower and less direct
methods of reaching their goals. We have been trying to
apply machine-age methods to our relations with God. We
read our chapter, have our short devotions and rush away,
hoping to make up for our deep inward bankruptcy by
attending another gospel meeting or listening to another
thrilling story told by a religious adventurer lately
returned from afar.
The tragic results of this spirit are all about us.
Shallow lives, hollow religious philosophies, the
preponderance of the element of fun in gospel meetings,
the glorification of men, trust in religious
externalities, quasi-religious fellowships, salesmanship
methods, the mistaking of dynamic personality for the
power of the Spirit: these and such as these are the
symptoms of an evil disease, a deep and serious malady of
the soul.
For this great sickness that is upon us no one person is
responsible, and no Christian is wholly free from
blame.We have all contributed, directly or indirectly, to
this sad state of affairs. We have been too blind to see,
or too timid to speak out, or too self-satisfied to
desire anything better than the poor average diet with
which others appear satisfied. To put it differently, we
have accepted one another's notions, copied one
another's lives and made one another's
experiences the model for our own. And for a generation
the trend has been downward. Now we have reached a low
place of sand and burnt wire grass and, worst of all, we
have made the Word of Truth conform to our experience and
accepted this low plane as the very pasture of the
blessed.
It will require a determined heart and more than a
little courage to wrench ourselves loose from the grip of
our times and return to Biblical ways. But it can be
done. Every now and then in the past Christians have had
to do it. History has recorded several large- scale
returns led by such men as St. Francis, Martin Luther and
George Fox. Unfortunately there seems to be no Luther or
Fox on the horizon at present. Whether or not another
such return maybe expected before the coming of Christ is
a question upon which Christians are not fully agreed,
but that is not of too great importance to us now.
What God in His sovereignty may yet do on a world-scale
I do not claim to know: but what He will do for the plain
man or woman who seeks His face I believe I do know and
can tell others. Let any man turn to God in earnest, let
him begin to exercise himself unto godliness, let him
seek to develop his powers of spiritual receptivity by
trust and obedience and humility, and the results will
exceed anything he may have hoped in his leaner and
weaker days. Any man who by repentance and a sincere
return to God will break himself out of the mold in which
he has been held, and will go to the Bible itself for his
spiritual standards, will be delighted with what he finds
there.
Let us say it again: The Universal Presence is a fact.
God is here. The whole universe is alive with His life.
And He is no strange or foreign God, but the familiar
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ whose love has for these
thousands of years enfolded the sinful race of men. And
always He is trying to get our attention, to reveal
Himself to us, to communicate with us. We have within us
the ability to know Him if we will but respond to His
overtures. (And this we call pursuing God!) We will know
Him in increasing degree as our receptivity becomes more
perfect by faith and love and practice. O God and Father,
I repent of my sinful preoccupation with visible things.
The world has been too much with me. Thou hast been here
and I knew it not. I have been blind to Thy Presence.
Open my eyes that I may behold Thee in and around me. For
Christ's sake. Amen.
Chapter 6 : The Speaking Voice
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God.
John 1:1
An intelligent plain man, untaught in the truths of
Christianity, coming upon this text, would likely
conclude that John meant to teach that it is the nature
of God to speak, to communicate His thoughts to others.
And he would be right. A word is a medium by which
thoughts are expressed, and the application of the term
to the Eternal Son leads us to believe that
self-expression is inherent in the Godhead, that God is
forever seeking to speak Himself out to His creation. The
whole Bible supports the idea. God is speaking. Not God
spoke, but God is speaking. He is by His nature
continuously articulate. He fills the world with His
speaking Voice.
One of the great realities with which we have to deal is
the Voice of God in His world. The briefest and only
satisfying cosmogony is this: `He spake and it was
done.' The why of natural law is the living Voice of
God immanent in His creation. And this word of God which
brought all worlds into being cannot be understood to
mean the Bible, for it is not a written or printed word
at all, but the expression of the will of God spoken into
the structure of all things. This word of God is the
breath of God filling the world with living potentiality.
The Voice of God is the most powerful force in nature,
indeed the only force in nature, for all energy is here
only because the power-filled Word is being spoken.
The Bible is the written word of God, and because it is
written it is confined and limited by the necessities of
ink and paper and leather. The Voice of God, however, is
alive and free as the sovereign God is free. `The words
that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are
life.' The life is in the speaking words. God's
word in the Bible can have power only because it
corresponds to God's word in the universe. It is the
present Voice which makes the written Word all- powerful.
Otherwise it would lie locked in slumber within the
covers of a book.
We take a low and primitive view of things when we
conceive of God at the creation coming into physical
contact with things, shaping and fitting and building
like a carpenter. The Bible teaches otherwise: `By the
word of the Lord were the heavens made; and all the host
of them by the breath of his mouth. ...For he spake, and
it was done; he commanded, and it stood fast.' (Ps
33:6,9) `Through faith we understand that the worlds were
framed by the word of God.' (Heb 11:3) Again we must
remember that God is referring ere not to His written
Word, but to His speaking Voice. His world-filling Voice
is meant, that Voice which antedates the Bible by
uncounted centuries, that Voice which has not been silent
since the dawn of creation, but is sounding still
throughout the full far reaches of the universe.
The Word of God is quick and powerful. In the beginning
He spoke to nothing, and it became something. Chaos heard
it and became order, darkness heard it and became light.
`And God said - - and it was so.' (Gen 1:9) These
twin phrases, as cause and effect, occur throughout the
Genesis story of the creation. The said accounts for the
so. The so is the said put into the continuous present.
That God is here and that He is speaking--these truths
are back of all other Bible truths; without them there
could be no revelation at all. God did not write a book
and send it by messenger to be read at a distance by
unaided minds. He spoke a Book and lives in His spoken
words, constantly speaking His words and causing the
power of them to persist across the years. God breathed
on clay and it became a man; He breathes on men and they
become clay. `Return ye children of men,' (Ps 90:3)
was the word spoken at the Fall by which God decreed the
death of every man, and no added word has He needed to
speak. The sad procession of mankind across the face of
the earth from birth to the grave is proof that His
original Word was enough.
We have not given sufficient attention to that deep
utterance in the Book of John, `That was the true Light,
which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.'
(John 1:9) Shift the punctuation around as we will and
the truth is still there: the Word of God affects the
hearts of all men as light in the soul. In the hearts of
all men the light shines, the Word sounds, and there is
no escaping them. Something like this would of necessity
be so if God is alive and in His world. And John says
that it is so. Even those persons who have never heard of
the Bible have still been preached to with sufficient
clarity to remove every excuse from their hearts forever.
`Which show the work of the law written in their hearts,
their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts
the mean while either accusing or else excusing one
another.' (Rom 2:15) `For the invisible things of him
from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being
understood by the things that are made, even his eternal
power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse.'
(Rom 1:20)
This universal Voice of God was by the ancient Hebrews
often called Wisdom, and was said to be everywhere
sounding and searching throughout the earth, seeking some
response from the sons of men. The eighth chapter of the
Book of Proverbs begins, `Doth not wisdom cry? and
understanding put forth her voice?' The writer then
pictures wisdom as a beautiful woman standing `in the top
of the high places, by the way in the places of the
paths.' She sounds her voice from every quarter so
that no one may miss hearing it. `Unto you, O men, I
call; and my voice is to the sons of men.' Then she
pleads for the simple and the foolish to give ear to her
words. It is spiritual response for which this Wisdom of
God is pleading, a response which she has always sought
and is but rarely able to secure. The tragedy is that our
eternal welfare depends upon our hearing, and we have
trained our ears not to hear.
This universal Voice has ever sounded, and it has often
troubled men even when they did not understand the source
of their fears. Could it be that this Voice distilling
like a living mist upon the hearts of men has been the
undiscovered cause of the troubled conscience and the
longing for immortality confessed by millions since the
dawn of recorded history? We need not fear to face up to
this. The speaking Voice is a fact. How men have reacted
to it is for any observer to note.
When God spoke out of heaven to our Lord, self-centered
men who heard it explained it by natural causes: they
said, `It thundered.' This habit of explaining the
Voice by appeals to natural law is at the very root of
modern science. In the living breathing cosmos there is a
mysterious Something, too wonderful, too awful [i.e.
`awesome'] for any mind to understand. The believing
man does not claim to understand. He falls to his knees
and whispers, `God.' The man of earth kneels also,
but not to worship. He kneels to examine, to search, to
find the cause and the how of things. Just now we happen
to be living in a secular age. Our thought habits are
those of the scientist, not those of the worshipper. We
are more likely to explain than to adore. `It
thundered,' we exclaim, and go our earthly way. But
still the Voice sounds and searches. The order and life
of the world depend upon that Voice, but men are mostly
too busy or too stubborn to give attention.
Everyone of us has had experiences which we have not
been able to explain: a sudden sense of loneliness, or a
feeling of wonder or awe in the face of the universal
vastness. Or we have had a fleeting visitation of light
like an illumination from some other sun, giving us in a
quick flash an assurance that we are from another world,
that our origins are divine. What we saw there, or felt,
or heard, may have been contrary to all that we had been
taught in the schools and at wide variance with all our
former beliefs and opinions. We were forced to suspend
our acquired doubts while, for a moment, the clouds were
rolled back and we saw and heard for ourselves. Explain
such things as we will, I think we have not been fair to
the facts until we allow at least the possibility that
such experiences may arise from the Presence of God in
the world and His persistent effort to communicate with
mankind. Let us not dismiss such an hypothesis too
flippantly.
It is my own belief (and here I shall not feel bad if no
one follows me) that every good and beautiful thing which
man has produced in the world has been the result of his
faulty and sin-blocked response to the creative Voice
sounding over the earth. The moral philosophers who
dreamed their high dreams of virtue, the religious
thinkers who speculated about God and immortality, the
poets and artists who created out of common stuff pure
and lasting beauty: how can we explain them? It is not
enough to say simply, `It was genius.' What then is
genius? Could it be that a genius is a man haunted by the
speaking Voice, laboring and striving like one possessed
to achieve ends which he only vaguely understands? That
the great man may have missed God in his labors, that he
may even have spoken or written against God does not
destroy the idea I am advancing. God's redemptive
revelation in the Holy Scriptures is necessary to saving
faith and peace with God. Faith in a risen Saviour is
necessary if the vague stirrings toward immortality are
to bring us to restful and satisfying communion with God.
To me this is a plausible explanation of all that is best
outside of Christ. But you can be a good Christian and
not accept my thesis.
The Voice of God is a friendly Voice. No one need fear
to listen to it unless he has already made up his mind to
resist it. The blood of Jesus has covered not only the
human race but all creation as well. `And having made
peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile
all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be
things in earth, or things in heaven.' (Col 1:20) We
may safely preach a friendly Heaven. The heavens as well
as the earth are filled with the good will of Him that
dwelt in the bush (Ex. 3). The perfect blood of atonement
secures this forever.
Whoever will listen will hear the speaking Heaven. This
is definitely not the hour when men take kindly to an
exhortation to listen, for listening is not today a part
of popular religion. We are at the opposite end of the
pole from there. Religion has accepted the monstrous
heresy that noise, size, activity and bluster make a man
dear to God. But we may take heart. To a people caught in
the tempest of the last great conflict God says, `Be
still, and know that I am God,' (Ps 46:10) and still
He says it, as if He means to tell us that our strength
and safety lie not in noise but in silence.
It is important that we get still to wait on God. And it
is best that we get alone, preferably with our Bible
outspread before us. Then if we will we may draw near to
God and begin to hear Him speak to us in our hearts. I
think for the average person the progression will be
something like this: First a sound as of a Presence
walking in the garden. Then a voice, more intelligible,
but still far from clear. Then the happy moment when the
Spirit begins to illuminate the Scriptures, and that
which had been only a sound, or at best a voice, now
becomes an intelligible word, warm and intimate and clear
as the word of a dear friend. Then will come life and
light, and best of all, ability to see and rest in and
embrace Jesus Christ as Saviour and Lord and All.
The Bible will never be a living Book to us until we are
convinced that God is articulate in His universe. To jump
from a dead, impersonal world to a dogmatic Bible is too
much for most people. They may admit that they should
accept the Bible as the Word of God, and they may try to
think of it as such, but they find it impossible to
believe that the words there on the page are actually for
them. Aman may say, `These words are addressed to
me,' and yet in his heart not feel and know that they
are. He is the victim of a divided psychology. He tries
to think of God as mute everywhere else and vocal only in
a book.
I believe that much of our religious unbelief is due to
a wrong conception of and a wrong feeling for the
Scriptures of Truth. A silent God suddenly began to speak
in a book and when the book was finished lapsed back into
silence again forever. Now we read the book as the record
of what God said when He was for a brief time in a
speaking mood. With notions like that in our heads how
can we believe? The facts are that God is not silent, has
never been silent. It is the nature of God to speak. The
second Person of the Holy Trinity is called the word. The
Bible is the inevitable outcome of God's continuous
speech. It is the infallible declaration of His mind for
us put into our familiar human words.
I think a new world will arise out of the religious
mists when we approach our Bible with the idea that it is
not only a book which was once spoken, but a book which
is now speaking. The prophets habitually said, `Thus
saith the Lord.' They meant their hearers to
understand that God's speaking is in the continuous
present. We may use the past tense properly to indicate
that at a certain time a certain word of God was spoken,
but a word of God once spoken continues to be spoken, as
a child once born continues to be alive, or a world once
created continues to exist. And those are but imperfect
illustrations, for children die and worlds burn out, but
the Word of our God endureth forever.
If you would follow on to know the Lord, come at once to
the open Bible expecting it to speak to you. Do not come
with the notion that it is a thing which you may push
around at your convenience. It is more than a thing, it
is a voice, a word, the very Word of the living God.
Lord, teach me to listen. The times are noisy and my ears
are weary with the thousand raucous sounds which
continuously assault them. Give me the spirit of the boy
Samuel when he said to Thee, `Speak, for thy servant
heareth.' Let me hear Thee speaking in my heart. Let
me get used to the sound of Thy Voice, that its tones may
be familiar when the sounds of earth die away and the
only sound will be the music of Thy speaking Voice.
Amen.
Chapter 7 : The Gaze of the Soul
Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our
faith.
Heb.12:2
Let us think of our intelligent plain man mentioned in
chapter six coming for the first time to the reading of
the Scriptures. He approaches the Bible without any
previous knowledge of what it contains. He is wholly
without prejudice; he has nothing to prove and nothing to
defend.
Such a man will not have read long until his mind begins
to observe certain truths standing out from the page.
They are the spiritual principles behind the record of
God's dealings with men, and woven into the writings
of holy men as they `were moved by the Holy Ghost.'
As he reads on he might want to number these truths as
they become clear to him and make a brief summary under
each number. These summaries will be the tenets of his
Biblical creed. Further reading will not affect these
points except to enlarge and strengthen them. Our man is
finding out what the Bible actually teaches. High up on
the list of things which the Bible teaches will be the
doctrine of faith.
The place of weighty importance which the Bible gives to
faith will be too plain for him to miss. He will very
likely conclude: Faith is all- important in the life of
the soul. Without faith it is impossible to please God
(Heb 11:6). Faith will get me anything, take me anywhere
in the Kingdom of God, but without faith there can be no
approach to God, no forgiveness, no deliverance, no
salvation, no communion, no spiritual life at all.
By the time our friend has reached the eleventh chapter
of Hebrews the eloquent encomium which is there
pronounced upon faith will not seem strange to him. He
will have read Paul's powerful defense of faith in
his Roman and Galatian epistles. Later if he goes on to
study church history he will understand the amazing power
in the teachings of the Reformers as they showed the
central place of faith in the Christian religion.
Now if faith is so vitally important, if it is an
indispensable must in our pursuit of God, it is perfectly
natural that we should be deeply concerned over whether
or not we possess this most precious gift. And our minds
being what they are, it is inevitable that sooner or
later we should get around to inquiring after the nature
of faith. What is faith? would lie close to the question,
Do I have faith? and would demand an answer if it were
anywhere to be found. Almost all who preach or write on
the subject of faith have much the same things to say
concerning it. They tell us that it is believing a
promise, that it is taking God at His word, that it is
reckoning the Bible to be true and stepping out upon it.
The rest of the book or sermon is usually taken up with
stories of persons who have had their prayers answered as
a result of their faith. These answers are mostly direct
gifts of a practical and temporal nature such as health,
money, physical protection or success in business. Or if
the teacher is of a philosophic turn of mind he may take
another course and lose us in a welter of metaphysics or
snow us under with psychological jargon as he defines and
re-defines, paring the slender hair of faith thinner and
thinner till it disappears in gossamer shavings at last.
When he is finished we get up disappointed and go out `by
that same door where in we went.' Surely there must
be something better than this.
In the Scriptures there is practically no effort made to
define faith. Outside of a brief fourteen-word definition
in Hebrews 11:1, I know of no Biblical definition, and
even there faith is defined functionally, not
philosophically; that is, it is a statement of what faith
is in operation, not what it is in essence. It assumes
the presence of faith and shows what it results in,
rather than what it is. We will be wise to go just that
far and attempt to go no further. We are told from whence
it comes and by what means: `Faith is a gift of God,'
(Eph 2:8) and `Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God.' (Rom 10:17) This much is clear,
and, to paraphrase Thomas à Kempis, `I had rather
exercise faith than know the definition thereof.'
From here on, when the words `faith is' or their
equivalent occur in this chapter I ask that they be
understood to refer to what faith is in operation as
exercised by a believing man. Right here we drop the
notion of definition and think about faith as it may be
experienced in action. The complexion of our thoughts
will be practical, not theoretical.
In a dramatic story in the Book of Numbers faith is seen
in action. Israel became discouraged and spoke against
God, and the Lord sent fiery serpents among them. `And
they bit the people; and much people of Israel died.'
Then Moses sought the Lord for them and He heard and gave
them a remedy against the bite of the serpents. He
commanded Moses to make a serpent of brass and put it
upon a pole in sight of all the people, `and it shall
come to pass, that everyone that is bitten, when he
looketh upon it, shall live.' Moses obeyed, `and it
came to pass, that if a serpent had bitten any man, when
he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived'
(Num.21:4-9)
In the New Testament this important bit of history is
interpreted for us by no less an authority than our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself. He is explaining to His hearers how
they may be saved. He tells them that it is by believing.
Then to make it clear He refers to this incident in the
Book of Numbers. `As Moses lifted up the serpent in the
wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have eternal life' (John 3:14-15).
Our plain man in reading this would make an important
discovery. He would notice that `look' and
`believe' were synonymous terms. `Looking' on the
Old Testament serpent is identical with `believing'
on the New Testament Christ. That is, the looking and the
believing are the same thing. And he would understand
that while Israel looked with their external eyes,
believing is done with the heart. I think he would
conclude that faith is the gaze of a soul upon a saving
God.
When he had seen this he would remember passages he had
read before, and their meaning would come flooding over
him. `They looked unto him, and were lightened: and their
faces were not ashamed' (Ps.34:5). `Unto thee lift I
up mine eyes, O thou that dwellest in the heavens.
Behold, as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of
their masters, and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand
of her mistress; so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God,
until that he have mercy upon us' (Ps.123:1-2). Here
the man seeking mercy looks straight at the God of mercy
and never takes his eyes away from Him till mercy is
granted. And our Lord Himself looked always at God.
`Looking up to heaven, he blessed, and brake, and gave
the bread to his disciples' (Matt.14:19).Indeed Jesus
taught that He wrought His works by always keeping His
inward eyes upon His Father. His power lay in His
continuous look at God (John 5:19-21).
In full accord with the few texts we have quoted is the
whole tenor of the inspired Word. It is summed up for us
in the Hebrew epistle when we are instructed to run
life's race `looking unto Jesus the author and
finisher of our faith.' (Hebr 12:2) From all this we
learn that faith is not a once-done act, but a continuous
gaze of the heart at the Triune God.
Believing, then, is directing the heart's attention
to Jesus. It is lifting the mind to `behold the Lamb of
God,' and never ceasing that beholding for the rest
of our lives. At first this may be difficult, but it
becomes easier as we look steadily at His wondrous
Person, quietly and without strain. Distractions may
hinder, but once the heart is committed to Him, after
each brief excursion away from Him the attention will
return again and rest upon Him like a wandering bird
coming back to its window.
I would emphasize this one committal, this one great
volitional act which establishes the heart's
intention to gaze forever upon Jesus. God takes this
intention for our choice and makes what allowances He
must for the thousand distractions which beset us in this
evil world. He knows that we have set the direction of
our hearts toward Jesus, and we can know it too, and
comfort ourselves with the knowledge that a habit of soul
is forming which will become after a while a sort of
spiritual reflex requiring no more conscious effort on
our part.
Faith is the least self-regarding of the virtues. It is
by its very nature scarcely conscious of its own
existence. Like the eye which sees everything in front of
it and never sees itself, faith is occupied with the
Object upon which it rests and pays no attention to
itself at all. While we are looking at God we do not see
ourselves--blessed riddance. The man who has struggled to
purify himself and has had nothing but repeated failures
will experience real relief when he stops tinkering with
his soul and looks away to the perfect One. While he
looks at Christ the very things he has so long been
trying to do will be getting done within him. It will be
God working in him to will and to do.
Faith is not in itself a meritorious act; the merit is
in the One toward Whom it is directed. Faith is a
redirecting of our sight, a getting out of the focus of
our own vision and getting God into focus. Sin has
twisted our vision inward and made it self-regarding.
Unbelief has put self where God should be, and is
perilously close to the sin of Lucifer who said, `I will
set my throne above the throne of God.' Faith looks
out instead of in and the whole life falls into line.
All this may seem too simple. But we have no apology to
make. To those who would seek to climb into heaven after