
Edited into digital media and released in 1997
(reformatted & contact info updated Feb.2003)
by Clyde C. PRICE, Jr.
The print-media booklet which was the source for this etext stated
"Reprint 1966" and claimed no copyright. It was published by
Christian Publications, Inc., Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17101 USA.
The editor claims no copyright to this edition, and encourages
wide dissemination of the "Plain Vanilla ASCII" etext, and freely
permits adaptation into other digital formats, and translations into
other languages, with the strong request --for purposes of
accountability-- that this digital-edition information be included in
all subsequent editions based upon this edition.
THE BLESSED LIFE
There is a Christian life which, on comparison with that
experienced by the majority of Christians, is as summer to winter,
or, as the mature fruitfulness of a golden autumn to the struggling
promise of a cold and late spring.
And the blessedness of this blessed life lies in this: that we
trust the Lord to do in us and for us what we could not do. And we
find that He does not belie His Word, but that, according to our
faith, so it is done to us. The weary spirit, which has vainly
sought to realize its ideal by its own strivings and efforts, now
gives itself over to the strong and tender hands of the Lord Jesus,
and He accepts the task, and at once begins to work in it to will and
to do of His own good pleasure, delivering it from the tyranny of
besetting sin, and fulfilling in it His own perfect ideal.
The BLESSED LIFE should be the normal life of every Christian --
in work and rest, in the building up of the inner life, and in the
working out of the life-plan. It is God's thought not for a few, but
for all His children. The youngest and weakest may lay claim to it
equally with the strongest and oldest. We should step into it at the
moment of conversion without wandering with blistered feet for forty
years in the desert, or lying for thirty-eight years, with
disappointed hopes, in the porch of the House of Mercy.
THE NEW BIRTH
The first chamber in the King's holy palace is the Chamber of
the New Birth.
By nature we are destitute of life -- dead in trespasses and
sins. We need, therefore, not a new creed, but a new life. The
prophet's staff is well enough where there is life, but it is useless
on the face of a dead babe. The first requisite is LIFE. This is
what the Holy Spirit gives us at the moment of conversion.
We may remember the day and place of our new birth, or we may be
as ignorant of them as of the circumstances of our natural birth. But
what does it matter that a man cannot recall his birthday, so long as
he knows that he is alive?
As an outstretched hand has two sides -- the upper, called the
back, the under, called the palm -- so there are two sides and names
for the act of entrance into the Chamber of the New Birth. Angels,
looking at it from the heaven side, call it BEING BORN AGAIN. Man,
looking at it from the earth side, calls it TRUSTING JESUS. Those
that believe in His name are born again; those that receive Him have
the right to become the sons of God (John 1:12,13). If you are born
again, you will trust. And if you are trusting Jesus, however many
your doubts and fears, you are certainly born again and have entered
the palace. If you go no further, you will be saved, but you will
miss untold blessedness.
Jesus Christ has bought us with His blood, but, alas, He has not
had His money's worth! He paid for all, and He has had but a
fragment of our energy, time and earnings. By an act of
consecration, let us ask Him to forgive the robbery of the past, and
let us profess our desire to be henceforth utterly and only for Him
-- His slaves, His chattels, owning no master other than Himself.
As soon as we say this He will test our sincerity, as He did the
young ruler's, by asking something of us. He will lay His finger on
something within us which He wants us to alter, obeying some command,
or abstaining from some indulgence. If we instantly give up our will
and way to Him, we pass the narrow doorway into the Chamber of
Surrender, which has a southern aspect and is ever warm and radiant
with His presence because obedience is the condition of manifested
love (John 14:23).
This doorway is very narrow, and entrance is only possible for
those who will lay aside weights as well as sins. A weight is
anything which, without being essentially wrong or hurtful to others,
is yet a hindrance to ourselves. We may always know a weight by three
signs: first, we are uneasy about it; second, we argue for it against
our conscience; third, we go about asking people's advice whether we
may not keep it without harm. All these things must be laid aside in
the strength which Jesus waits to give. Ask Him to deal with them
for you, that you may be set in joint in every good work to do His
will (Hebrews 13:21).
That consecration is the stepping stone to blessedness is
clearly established in the experience of God's children. For
instance, Frances Ridley Havergal has left us this record: "It was
on Advent Sunday, December, 1873, that I first saw clearly the
blessedness of true consecration. I saw it as a flash of electric
light, and what you see you can never unsee. There must be full
surrender before there can be full blessedness. God admits you by
the one into the other. First, I was shown that the blood of Jesus
Christ, His Son, cleanseth from all sin; and then it was made plain
to me that He who had thus cleansed me had power to keep me clean; so
I utterly yielded myself to Him and utterly trusted Him to keep me."
CONSECRATION
The act of consecration is recognizing Christ's ownership and
accepting it, saying to Him, with the whole heart, "Lord, I am Thine
by RIGHT, and I wish to be Thine by choice." Of old the mighty men
of Israel were willing to swim the flooded rivers to come to David,
their uncrowned, but God-appointed king. And when they met him, they
cried, "Thine are we, David, and on thy side, thou son of Jesse."
They were his because God had given them to him, but they could not
rest content till they were his also by their glad choice. Why then
should we not say the same to Jesus Christ? "Lord Jesus, I am Thine
by right; forgive me that I have lived so long as if I were my own.
And now I gladly recognize that Thou hast a rightful claim on all I
have and am. I want to live as Thine from henceforth, and I do
solemnly at this hour give myself to Thee to be Thine in life and
death, Thine absolutely and forever."
Do not try to make a covenant with God, lest you should break it
and be discouraged. But quietly fall into your right attitude as one
who belongs to Christ. Take as your motto the noble confession,
"Whose I am and Whom I serve." Breathe the grand old simple lines:
Just as I am, Thy love unknown Has broken every barrier down,
Now to be Thine, yea, Thine alone, O Lamb of God, I come.
AN ACT OF THE WILL
Consecration is not the act of our feelings but of our WILL. Do
not try to feel anything; do not try to make yourself fit or good or
earnest enough for Christ. God is working in you to will, whether
you feel it or not. He is giving you power, at this moment, to will
and do His good pleasure. Believe this, act upon it at once, and
say, "Lord Jesus, I am willing to be Thine"; or, if you cannot say as
much as that, say, "Lord Jesus, I am willing to be made willing to be
Thine forevermore."
Consecration is only possible when we give up our will about
EVERYTHING. As soon as we come to the point of giving ourselves to
God, we are almost certain to become aware of the presence of one
thing, if not of more, out of harmony with His will. And while we
feel able to surrender ourselves in all other points, here we
exercise reserve. Every room and cupboard in the house, with the
exception of this, is thrown open to the new Occupant; every limb in
the body, but one, submitted to the practised hand of the Good
Physician. But that small reserve spoils the whole. To give
ninety-nine parts and to withhold the hundredth undoes the whole
transaction. Jesus will have all or none. And He is wise. Who would
live in a fever-stricken house, so long as one room was not exposed
to disinfectants, air and sun? Who would undertake a case so long as
the patient refused to submit one part of his body to examination?
Who would become responsible for a bankruptcy so long as one ledger
was kept back? The reason that so many fail to attain the BLESSED
LIFE is that there is some one point in which they hold back from
God, and concerning which they prefer to have their own way and will
rather than His. In this one thing they will not yield their will and
accept God's; and this one little thing mars the whole, robs them of
peace, and compels them to wander in the desert.
If you cannot GIVE all, ask the Lord Jesus to TAKE all, and
especially that which seems so hard to give. Many have been helped
by hearing it put thus. Tell them to GIVE, and they shake their heads
despondently. They are like the little child who told her mother
that she had been trying to give Jesus her heart, BUT IT WOULDN'T GO.
But ask them if they are willing for Him to come into their hearts
and TAKE all, and they will joyfully assent.
Tennyson says, "Our wills are ours to make them Thine." But
sometimes it seems impossible to shape them out so as to match every
corner and angle of the will of God. What a relief it is at such a
moment to hand the will over to Christ, telling Him that we are
willing to be made willing to have His will in all things, and asking
Him to melt our stubborn waywardness, to fashion our wills upon His
anvil, and to bring us into perfect accord with Himself.
AN ACT OF FAITH
When we are willing that the Lord Jesus should take all, we must
believe that He does take all. He does not wait for us to free
ourselves from evil habits, or to make ourselves good, or to feel
glad and happy. His one desire is that we should put our will on His
side in everything. When this is done, He instantly enters the
surrendered heart and begins His blessed work of renovation and
renewal. From the very moment of consecration, though it be done in
much feebleness and with slender appreciation of its entire meaning.
The spirit may begin to say with new emphasis, "I am His, Glory to
God, I am His!" As soon as the gift is laid on the altar, the fire
falls.
IT IS WELL to make the act of consecration a definite one in our
spiritual history. George Whitefield did it in the ordination
service. "I can call heaven and earth to witness that when the
Bishop laid his hand upon me, I gave myself up to be a martyr for Him
who hung upon the cross for me. Known unto Him are all the future
events and contingencies. I have thrown myself blind-folded and
without reserve into His almighty hands."
Christmas Evans did it as he was climbing a lonely and
mountainous road toward Cader Idris. "I was weary of a cold heart
toward Christ, and began to pray, and soon felt the fetters
loosening. Tears fell copiously, and I was constrained to cry out
for the gracious visits of God. Then I resigned myself to Christ,
body and soul, gifts and labors, all my life, every day and every
hour that remained to me; and all my cares I committed to Christ."
The visit of Messrs. Stanley Smith and Studd to Melbourne Hall
will always mark an epoch in my own life. Before then my Christian
life had been spasmodic and fitful, now flaming up with enthusiasm,
and then pacing weariedly over leagues of gray ashes and cold
cinders. I saw that these young men had something which I had not,
but which was within them a constant source of rest and strength and
joy. At seven a.m. on that gray November morning, daylight flickered
into the bedroom, paling the guttered candles which from a very early
hour had been lighting up the page of Scripture, and revealed the
figures of the devoted Bible students who wore the old cricketing or
boating costume of earlier days to render them less sensible of the
raw, damp climate. The talk we held then was one of the formative
influences of my life. Why should I not yield my whole nature to
God, working out day by day that which He would will and work within?
Why should not I be a vessel, though only of earthenware, meet for
the Master's use, because purged and sanctified?
There was nothing new in what they told me. They said that a man
must not only believe in Christ for final salvation, but must trust
Him for victory over every sin and for deliverance from every care.
They said that the Lord Jesus was willing to abide in the heart which
was wholly yielded up to Him. They said that if there were some
things in our lives that made it difficult for us to surrender our
whole nature to Christ, yet if we were willing to be made willing to
surrender them, He would make us not only willing but glad. They said
that as soon as we give or attempt to give ourselves to Him, He takes
us. All this was simple enough; I could have said it myself. But
they urged me to take the definite step and I shall be forever
thankful that they did.
Very memorable was the night when I came to close quarters with
God. The Angel that wrestled with Jacob had found me, eager to make
me a prince. There were things in my heart and life which I felt were
questionable, if not worse. I knew that God had a controversy with
respect to them. I saw that my very dislike to probe or touch them
was a clear indication that there was mischief lurking beneath. It
is the diseased joint that shrinks from the touch, the tender eye
that shudders at the light. At the same time, I did not feel willing
to give these things up. It was a long struggle. At last I said
feebly, "Lord, I am willing to be made willing. I am desirous that
Thy will should be done in me and through me as thoroughly as it is
done in heaven. Come and take me and break me and make me."
That was the hour of crisis; and when it had passed, I felt able
at once to add, "And now I give myself to Thee: body, soul and
spirit; in sorrow or in joy; in the dark or in the light; in life or
in death; to be Thine only, wholly, and forever. Make the most of me
that can be made for Thy glory."
No rapture or rush of joy came to assure me that the gift was
accepted. I left the place with almost a heavy heart. I simply
assured myself that He must have taken that which I had given, and at
the moment of my giving it. And to that belief I clung in all the
days that followed, constantly repeating to myself the words, "I am
His." And thus at last the joy and rest, victory and freedom from
burdening care, entered my heart, and I found that He was molding my
will and making it easy to do what I thought impossible. I felt that
He was leading me into the paths of righteousness for His name's
sake, but so gently as to be almost imperceptible to my weak sight.
OUT of my own experience, I would suggest these seven rules to fellow
Christians.
1. Make a definite consecration of yourselves to God.
Dr. Doddridge has left in his diary a very beautiful form of
self- consecration. But you need not wait for anything so elaborate
or minute as that. With most it would be sufficient to write out Miss
Havergal's hymn, "Take my life, and let it be," and to sign your name
at the foot. But in any case it is well to write down some record of
the act to keep for future reference. Of course, when we have really
given ourselves once, we cannot give ourselves a second time. We may
renew the consecration vows; we may review the deed or gift; we may
insert any new clauses we like. And if we have gone astray, we may
ask the Lord to forgive the foul wrong and robbery which we have done
Him, and to restore our souls into the position from which we have
fallen. Oh, how sweet the promise, "He restoreth my soul"! Dear
Christian reader, seek some quiet spot, some still hour, and yield
yourself to God.
2. Tell God that you are willing to be made willing about all.
A lady was once in great difficulties about certain things which
she felt eager to keep under her own control. Her friend, wishful to
press her into the better life of consecration, placed before her a
blank sheet of paper, and pressed her to write her name at the foot
and then to lay it before God in prayer. Are you willing to do this?
Are you prepared to sign your name to a blank sheet of paper and then
hand it over to God for Him to fill in as He pleases? If not, ask Him
to make you willing and able to do this and all things else. You
never will be happy until you let the Lord Jesus keep the house of
your nature, closely scrutinizing every visitor and admitting only
His friends. He must reign. He must have all or none. He must have
the key of every closet, of every cupboard, and of every room. Do
not try to make them fit for Him. Simply give Him the key, and He
will cleanse and renovate and make beautiful.
3. Reckon on Christ to do His part perfectly.
As you give, He takes. As you open the door, He enters. As you
roll back the floodgates, He pours in a glorious tide of fullness --
fullness of wealth, of power, of joy. The clay has only to be
plastic in the hand of a Palissy; the marble has only to be pliant to
the chisel of a Michelangelo; the organ has only to be responsive to
the slightest touch of a Handel; and there will be no failure in
results. Oh, to be equally susceptible to the molding influences of
Christ! We shall not fail in realizing the highest ideal of which we
are capable if only we will let Him do His work unhindered.
4. Confess sin instantly.
If you allow acid to drop and remain on your steel fenders, it
will corrode them; and if you allow sin to remain on your heart
unconfessed, it will eat out all peace and rest. Do not wait for the
evening to come, or until you can get alone, but THERE in the midst
of the crowd, in the very rush of life, with the footprints of sin
still fresh, lift up your heart to your merciful and ever-present
Savior, and say, "Lord Jesus, wash me now from that sin, in Thy
precious blood, and I shall be whiter than snow." The blood of Jesus
is ever at work, cleansing us from unconscious sin; but it is our
part to apply for it to cleanse from conscious and known sins as soon
as we are aware of their presence in our lives.
5. Hand over to Christ every temptation and care.
When you feel temptation approaching you, as a bird by some
quick instinct is aware that the hawk is hovering near, then
instantly lift your heart to Christ for deliverance. He cannot
rebuff or fail you. He will gather you under His feathers, and under
His wings shall you trust. And when any petty annoyance or heavier
worry threatens to mar your peace, in the flash of a moment, hand it
over to Jesus, saying, "Lord, I am oppressed; undertake this for me."
"Ah," you sigh, "I wish indeed I could live like this, but in the
moment of need I forget to look." Then do this. Trust in Christ to
keep you trusting. Look to Him so to abide in you as to keep your
abiding. In the early morning entrust to Him the keeping of your
soul, and then, as hour succeeds hour, expect Him to keep that which
you have committed unto Him.
6. Keep in touch with Christ.
Avoid the spirit of fault-finding, criticism, uncharitableness,
and anything inconsistent with His perfect love. Go where He is most
likely to be found, either where two or three of His children are
gathered, or where the lost sheep is straying. Ask Him to wake you
morning by morning for communion and Bible study. Make other times in
the day, especially in the still hour of evening twilight, between
the work of the day and the avocations of the evening, when you shall
get alone with Him, telling Him all things, and reviewing the past
under the gentle light which streams from His eyes.
7. Expect the Holy Ghost to work in, with, and for you.
When a man is right with God, God will freely use him. There
will rise up within him impulses, inspirations, strong strivings,
strange resolves. These must be tested by Scripture and prayer; and
if evidently of God, they must be obeyed. But there is this
perennial source of comfort: God's commands are His enablings. He
will never give us a work to do without showing exactly how and when
to do it, or without giving us the precise strength and wisdom we
need. Do not dread to enter this life because you fear that God will
ask you to do something you cannot do. He will never do that. If He
lays anything on your heart, He will do so irresistibly; and as you
pray about it, the impression will continue to grow, so that
presently, as you look up to know what He wills you to say or do, the
way will suddenly open, and you will probably have said the word or
done the deed almost unconsciously. Rely on the Holy Ghost to go
before you, to make the crooked places straight and the rough places
smooth. Do not bring the legal spirit of "must" into God's free
service. "Consider the lilies of the field, how they GROW." Let
your life be as effortless as theirs, because your faith shall
constantly hand over all difficulties and responsibilities to your
ever-present Lord. There is no effort to the branch in putting forth
the swelling clusters of grapes; the effort would be to keep them
back.
SOMEONE says, "I have tried to live a consistent Christian life, and
yet I am not what I wish."
Perhaps you live too much in your feelings, too little in your
will. We have no direct control over our feelings, but we have over
our will. God does not hold us responsible for what we feel, but for
what we will. Let us, therefore, not live in the summer house of
emotion, but in the central citadel of the will, wholly yielded and
devoted to the will of God.
At the table of the Lord the soul is often suffused with holy
emotion; the tides rise high; the tumultuous torrents of joy knock
loudly against the floodgates as if to beat them down, and every
element in the nature joins in the choral hymn of rapturous praise.
But the morrow comes and life has to be faced in the grim office, the
dingy shop, the noisy factory, the godless workroom; and as the soul
compares the joy of yesterday with the difficulty experienced in
walking humbly with the Lord, it is inclined to question whether it
is quite so devoted and consecrated as it was. But at such a time,
how fair a thing it is to remark that the will has not altered its
position by a hair's breadth, and to look up and say, "My God, the
springtide of emotion has passed away like a summer brook; but in my
heart of hearts, in my will, Thou knowest I am as devoted, as loyal,
as desirous to be only for Thee as in the blessed moment of unbroken
retirement at Thy feet." This is an offering with which God is well
pleased. And thus we may live a calm, peaceful life.
DISOBEDIENCE
Perhaps you have disobeyed some clear command. Sometimes a soul
comes to its spiritual adviser, speaking thus:
"I have no conscious joy, and have had but little for years."
"Did you once have it?"
"Yes, for some time after my conversion to God."
"Are you conscious of having refused obedience to some distinct
command which came into your life, but from which you shrank?"
Then the face is cast down, and the eyes film with tears, and
the answer comes with difficulty.
"Yes, years ago I used to think that God required a certain
thing of me; but I felt I could not do what He wished. I was uneasy
for some time about it, but after a while it seemed to fade from my
mind, and now it does not often trouble me."
"Ah, soul, that is where you have gone wrong, and you will never
get right till you go right back through the weary years to the point
where you dropped the thread of obedience, and perform that one thing
which God demanded of you so long ago, but on account of which you
did leave the narrow track of implicit obedience."
Is not this the cause of depression to thousands of Christian
people? They are God's children, but they are disobedient children.
The Bible rings with one long demand for obedience. The keyword of
the book of Deuteronomy is OBSERVE AND DO. The burden of the
Farewell Discourse is, IF YE LOVE ME, KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS. We must
not question or reply or excuse ourselves. We must not pick and
choose our way. We must not take some commands and reject others. We
must not think that obedience in other directions will compensate for
disobedience in some one particular. God gives one command at a time,
borne in upon us, not in one way only, but in many. By this He tests
us. If we obey in this, He will flood our souls with blessing and
lead us forward into new paths and pastures. But if we refuse in
this, we shall remain stagnant and waterlogged, we shall make no
progress in Christian experience, and we shall lack both power and
joy.
KNOWN EVIL
Perhaps you are permitting some known evil. When water is left
to stand, the particles of silt betray themselves as they fall one by
one to the bottom. So if you are quiet, you may become aware of the
presence in your soul of permitted evil. Dare to consider it. Do not
avoid the sight as the bankrupt man avoids his telltale ledgers, or
as the consumptive patient the stethoscope. Compel yourself to
consider quietly whatever evil the Spirit of God discovers in your
soul. It may have lurked in the cupboards and cloisters of your being
for years, suspected but unjudged. But whatever it be, whatever its
history, be sure that it has brought the shadow over your life which
is your daily sorrow.
Does your will refuse to relinquish a practice or habit which is
alien to the will of God? Do you permit some secret sin to have its
unhindered way in the house of your life? Do your affections roam
unrestrained after forbidden objects? Do you cherish any resentment
or hatred toward another, to whom you refuse to be reconciled? Is
there some injustice which you refuse to forgive, some charge which
you refuse to pay, some wrong which you refuse to confess? Are you
allowing something in yourself which you would be the first to
condemn in others, but which you argue may be permitted in your own
case because of certain reasons with which you attempt to smother the
remonstrances of conscience?
WEIGHTS
In some cases the hindrance to the conscious blessedness lies
not in sins, but in weights which hang around the soul. Sin is that
which is always and everywhere wrong, but a weight is anything which
may hinder or impede the Christian life without being positively sin.
And thus a thing may be a weight to one which is not so to another.
Each must be fully persuaded in his own mind. And wherever the soul
is aware of its life being hindered by the presence of any one thing,
then, however harmless in itself, and however innocently permitted by
others, there can be no alternative; it must be cast aside.
Perhaps you are unwilling to take some public step that may be
necessary. It is not enough to confess to God; you must also confess
to man, supposing that you have sinned against him. Leave your gift
at the altar and go to be reconciled to your brother. If you have
done him a wrong, go and tell him so. If you have defrauded him,
whether he knows it or not, send him the amount you have taken or
kept back and add to it something to compensate him for his loss.
Under the Levitical law it was enacted that the delinquent should
restore that which he took violently away, or that about which he had
dealt falsely, and should add one-fifth part thereto, and only then
might he come with his trespass offering to the priest and be
forgiven. This principle holds good today. You never will be happy
till you have made restitution. Write the letter or make the call at
once; and if the one whom you defrauded is no longer alive, then make
the debt right with his heirs and representatives. You must roll
away this stone from the grave, or the dead joy can never arise,
however loudly you may call it to come forth. I do not believe in a
repentance which is not noble enough to make amends for the past, so
far as they may lie within your reach.
SELF-SCRUTINY
Perhaps you look too much inwards on self, instead of outwards
on the Lord Jesus. The healthiest people do not think about their
health; the weak induce disease by morbid introspection. If you begin
to count your heartbeats, you will disturb the rhythmic action of the
heart. If you continually imagine a pain anywhere, you will produce
it. And there are some true children of God who induce their own
darkness by morbid self-scrutiny. They are always going back on
themselves, analyzing their motives, reconsidering past acts of
consecration, comparing themselves with themselves. In one form or
another self is the pivot of their life, albeit that is undoubtedly a
religious life. What but darkness can result from such a course?
There are certainly times in our lives when we must look within and
judge ourselves, that we be not judged. But this is only done that
we may turn with fuller purpose of heart to the Lord. And when once
done, it needs not to be repeated. Leaving "those things which are
behind" is the only safe motto. The question is, not whether we did
as well as we might, but whether we did as well as we could at the
time.
We must not spend all our lives in cleaning our windows or in
considering whether they are clean, but in sunning ourselves in God's
blessed light. That light will soon show us what still needs to be
cleansed away, and will enable us to cleanse it with unerring
accuracy. Our Lord Jesus is a perfect reservoir of everything the
soul of man requires for a blessed and holy life. To make much of
Him, to abide in Him, to draw from Him, to receive each moment from
His fullness is therefore the only condition of soul health. But to
be more concerned with self than with Him is like spending much time
and thought over the senses of the body and never using them for the
purpose of receiving impressions from the world outside. Look off
unto Jesus. "Delight thyself also in the Lord." "My soul, wait
thou only upon God."
LACK OF COMMUNION
Perhaps you spend too little time in communion with God through
His Word. It is not necessary to make long prayers, but it is
essential to be much alone with God, waiting at His door, hearkening
for His voice, lingering in the garden of Scripture for the coming of
the Lord God in the dawn or cool of the day. No number of meetings,
no fellowship with Christian friends, no amount of Christian activity
can compensate for the neglect of the still hour.
When you feel least inclined for it, there is most need to make
for your closet with the shut door. Do for duty's sake what you
cannot do as a pleasure, and you will find it become delightful. You
can better thrive without nourishment than become happy or strong in
the Christian life without fellowship with God.
When you cannot pray for yourself, begin to pray for others.
when your desires wane, take the Bible in hand and begin to turn each
text into petition; or take up the tale of your mercies and begin to
translate each of them into praise. When the Bible itself becomes
irksome, inquire if you have not been spoiling your appetite by
sweetmeats, and renounce them; and believe that the Word of God is
the wire along which the voice of God will certainly come to you if
the heart is hushed and the attention fixed. I will hear what God
the Lord shall speak.
More Christians than we can count are suffering from a lack of
prayer and Bible study, and no revival is more to be desired than
that of systematic private Bible study. There is no short and easy
method of godliness which can dispense with this.
LACK OF YIELDEDNESS
Perhaps you have never given yourself over entirely to the
Mastership of the Lord Jesus. We are His by many ties and rights.
But too few of us recognize His lordship. We are willing enough to
take Him as Savior; we hesitate to make Him King. We forget that God
has exalted Him to be Prince as well as Savior. And the divine order
is irreversible. Those who ignore the Lordship of Jesus cannot build
up a strong or happy life.
Put the sun in its central throne, and all the motions of the
planets assume a beautiful order. Put Jesus on the throne of life,
and all things fall into harmony and peace. Seek first the kingdom of
God, and all things are yours. Consecration is the indispensable
condition of blessedness.
So shall light break on thy path such as has not shone there for
many days. Yea, "thy sun shall no more go down; neither shall thy
moon withdraw itself; for the Lord shall be thine everlasting light,
and the days of thy mourning shall be ended."
THE WHOLE of Christian living, in my opinion, hinges on the way in
which Christian people read the Bible for themselves. All sermons
and addresses, all Bible readings and classes, all religious
magazines and books, can never take the place of our own quiet study
of God's precious Word. We may measure our growth in grace by the
growth of our love for private Bible study. And we may be sure there
is something seriously wrong when we lose our appetite for the Bread
of Life. Perhaps we have been eating too many sweets, or taking too
little exercise, or breathing too briefly in the bracing air, which
sweeps over the uplands of spiritual communion with God.
There are a few simple rules which may help many more to acquire
this holy art, and I venture to note them down. May the Holy Spirit
Himself own and use them!
1. Make time for Bible study.
The Divine Teacher must have fixed and uninterrupted hours for
meeting His scholars. His Word must have our freshest and brightest
thoughts. We must give Him our best, the first fruits of our days.
Hence there is no time for Bible study like the early morning, for we
cannot give such undivided attention to the holy thoughts that
glisten like diamonds on its pages after we have opened our letters,
glanced through the paper, and joined in the prattle of the breakfast
table. The manna had to be gathered before the dew was off and the
sun up; otherwise it melted.
We ought, therefore, to aim at securing at least half an hour
before breakfast for the leisurely and loving study of the Bible. To
some this may seem a long time in comparison with what they now give.
But it will soon seem all too short. The more you read the Bible,
the more you will want to read it. It is an appetite which grows as
it is fed. And you will be well repaid. The Bible seldom speaks, and
certainly never its deepest, sweetest words, to those who always read
in a hurry.
2. Look up for the teaching of the Holy Spirit.
No one can so well explain the meaning of his words as he who
wrote them. If, then, you want to read the Bible as you should, make
much of the Holy Ghost, Who inspired it through holy men. As you
open the Book, lift up your heart and say, "Open thou mine eyes, that
I may behold wondrous things out of thy law." "Speak, Lord, for Thy
servant heareth."
3. Read the Bible methodically.
On the whole, there is probably no better way than to read the
Bible through once every year.
4. Read your Bible with your pen in your hand.
Writing of Frances R. Havergal, her sister says: "She read her
Bible by the study table by seven o'clock in the summer, and eight
o'clock in winter. Sometimes, on bitterly cold mornings, I begged
that she would read with her feet comfortably to the fire, and
received the reply: 'But then, Marie, I can't rule my lines neatly;
just see what a find I've got!' If only one searches, there are such
extraordinary things in the Bible. She resolutely refrained from
late hours and frittering talks at night in place of Bible searchings
and holy communings. Early rising and early studying were her rule
through life."
None, in my judgment, have learned the secret of enjoying the
Bible until they have commenced to mark it, neatly -- underlining and
dating special verses which have cast a light upon their path on
special days, drawing railway connections across the page between
verses which repeat the same message or ring with the same note,
jotting down new references of the catchwords of helpful thoughts.
All these methods find plenty of employment for the pen, and fix our
treasures for us permanently. Our Bible, then, becomes the precious
memento of bygone hours, and records the history of our inner life.
5. Seek eagerly your personal profit.
Do not read the Bible for others, for class or congregation, but
for yourself. Bring all its rays to a focus on your own heart. While
you are reading, often ask that some verse or verses may start out
from the printed page as God's message to yourself. And never close
the Book until you feel that you are carrying away your portion of
meat from that Hand which satisfies the desire of every living thing.
It is well, sometimes, to stop reading, and seriously ask, What does
the Holy Spirit mean ME to learn by this? What bearing should this
have on MY life? How can I work this into the fabric of MY
character?
6. Above all, turn from the printed page to prayer.
If a cluster of heavenly fruit hangs within reach, gather it. If
a promise lies upon the page as a blank check, cash it. If a prayer
is recorded, appropriate it, launch it as a feathered arrow from the
bow of your desire. If an example of holiness gleams before you, ask
God to do as much for you. If a truth is revealed in all its
intrinsic splendor, entreat that its brilliance may ever irradiate
the hemisphere of your life like a star. Entwine the climbing
creepers of holy desire about the lattice work of Scripture. So shall
you come to say with the Psalmist: "O how I love thy law! it is my
meditation all the day."
The longer I live and learn the experience of most Christian
people, the more I long to help them and unfold glimpses of this life
of peace and power and victory over sin which our heavenly Father has
made possible for us. There are blessed secrets in the Bible, hidden
from the wise and prudent, but revealed to babes; things which eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, or the heart of man conceived, but
which God reveals by His Spirit to them that love Him; and if these
were once understood and accepted, they would wipe away many a tear
and shed sunshine on many a darkened pathway.
The bitterest experience with most believers is the presence and
power of sin. They long to walk through this grimy world with pure
hearts and stainless garments. But when they would do good, evil is
present with them. They consent to God's law that it is good; they
approve it; they even delight in it after the inner man; they
endeavor to keep it; but, notwithstanding all, they seem as helpless
to perform it as a man whose brain has been smitten with paralysis to
walk straight. What rivers of briny tears have fallen upon the open
pages of the Penitent's Psalm (51), shed by those who could repeat it
every word from the heart! And what regiments of weary feet have
trodden the Bridge of Sighs, if we may so call Romans seven, which
sets forth, in vivid force, the experience of a man who has not
learned God's secret.
Surely our God must have provided for all this. It would not
have been like Him to fill us with hatred to sin and longings for
holiness if there were no escape from the tyranny of the one and no
possibility of attaining the other. It would be a small matter to
save us from sinning on the other side of the pearly gate; we want to
be saved from sinning now, and in this dark world. We want it for
the sake of the world, that it may be attracted and convinced. We
want it for our own peace, which cannot be perfected while we groan
under a worse than Egyptian bondage. We want it for the glory of
God, which would be then reflected from us with undimming brightness,
as sunshine from burnished metal.
WE MUST NOT EXPECT TO BE FREE FROM TEMPTATION. Our adversary,
the devil, is always going about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he
may devour. He tempted our Lord, and he will tempt us. He will
entice us to do wrong by every avenue of sense, and will pour his
evil suggestions through eye, ear, touch, mouth, and mind. If he does
not attack us himself, he can set on us any one of his myriad agents,
who will get behind us and whisperingly suggest many grievous
blasphemies, which we shall think have proceeded from our own mind.
But temptation is not sin. A man may ask me to share with him
the spoils of a burglary, but no one can accuse me of receiving
stolen property if I indignantly refuse and keep my doors tightly
shut against him. Our Lord was tempted in all points as we are, yet
without sin. You might go through Hell itself, teeming with all
manner of awful suggestions, and yet not sin. God would not allow
Satan to tempt us if temptation necessarily led to sin. But
temptation does not do so. There is no sin so long as the will
refuses to consent to the solicitation or catch at the bait.
Temptation may even be a blessing to a man when it reveals to
him his weakness and drives him to the almighty Savior. Do not be
surprised, then, dear child of God, if you are tempted at every step
of your earthly journey, and almost beyond endurance; but you will
not be tempted beyond what you are able to bear, and with every
temptation there will be a way of escape.
WE MUST NOT EXPECT TO LOSE OUR SINFUL NATURE. When we are born
again, a new life -- the life of God -- is put into us by the Holy
Spirit. But the old self-life, which is called in Scripture THE
FLESH, is not taken away. The two may co-exist in the same heart.
"The flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the
flesh." (Galatians 5:17) The presence of this old self-life within
our heart may be detected by its risings, rufflings, chafings, and
movings towards sin when temptation calls to it from without. It may
be still as death before the increasing power of the new life, but it
will still be present in the depths of our nature, as a Samson in the
dark dungeons of Philistia, and there will always be a possibility
and a fear of its strength growing again to our shame and our hurt.
WE MUST NOT EXPECT TO BE FREE FROM LIABILITY TO SIN. What is
sin? It is the Yes of the will to temptation. It is very difficult to
express the delicate workings of our hearts, but does not something
like this happen to us when we are tempted? A temptation is suddenly
presented to us and makes a strong appeal. Immediately there may be
a tremulous movement of the old nature, as the strings of a violin or
piano vibrate in answer to any sounds that may be thrilling the air
around. Some do not feel this tremulous response; others do, though
I believe it will get fainter and fainter as they treat it with
continued respect, so that at last, in the matured saint, it will
become almost inaudible. This response indicates the presence of the
evil nature within, which is in itself hateful in the sight of our
Holy God, and should be bemoaned and confessed, and ever needs the
presence of the Blood of Jesus to counteract and atone. But that
tremulous movement has not, as yet, developed into a natural overt
sin, for which we are responsible, and of which we need to repent.
Sin is the act of the will, and is only possible when the will
assents to some unholy influence. The tempter, presenting his
temptations through the sense and emotions, makes an appeal to the
will, which is our real self. If that will instantly shudders, as
chicks when the hawk is hovering in the sky above them, and cries,
"How can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?" and looks
at once to Jesus, there are, so far as I can understand, no sins.
If, on the other hand, the will begins to falter with temptation, to
dally with it and yield to it, then we have stepped out of the light
into the dark; we have broken God's laws, splashed our white robes,
and brought ourselves into condemnation. To this we are liable as
long as we are in this world. We may live a godly, righteous, sober
life for years; but if we look away from God for only a moment, our
will may be suddenly mastered, and we may, like David, be hurried
into a sin which will blast our peace and blacken our character for
all coming time.
RECKON YOURSELF DEAD TO THE APPEALS OF SIN. Sin has no power
over a dead man. Dress it in its most bewitching guise, yet it stirs
him not. Tears and smiles and words and blows alike fail to awaken a
response from that cold corpse. No appeal will stir it now until it
hears the voice of the Son of God. This is our position in respect
to the appeals of sin. God looks on us as having been crucified with
Christ and being dead with Him. In Him we have passed out of the
world of sin and death into the world of resurrection glory. This is
our position in the mind of God; it is for us to take it up and make
it real by faith. We may not feel any great difference, but we must
believe that there is; we must act as if there were. Our children
sometimes play at make believe. We, too, are to make believe, and we
shall soon come to feel as we believe. When, then, a temptation
solicits you, say, "I am dead to thee; spend not thine energies on
one that is oblivious to thy spells and callous to thy charms. Thou
hast no more power over me than over my Lord and Head." "Reckon ye
also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God
through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Romans 6:11).
AS SOON AS YOU ARE AWARE OF TEMPTATION, LOOK INSTANTLY TO JESUS.
Flee to Him quicker than a chick runs beneath the shelter of its
mother's wing when the falcon is in the air. In the morning, before
you leave your room, put yourself definitely into His hands,
persuaded that He is able to keep that which you commit unto Him. Go
from your room with the assurance that He will cover you with His
feathers, and under His wings shall you trust. And when the tempter
comes, look instantly up and say, "Jesus, I am trusting Thee to keep
me." This is what the apostle Paul calls using the shield of faith.
The upward glance of faith puts Jesus as a Shield between the tempter
and yourself. You may go through life, saying a hundred times a day,
"Jesus saves me," and He will never let those that trust in Him be
ashamed. He is able even to guard you from stumbling (Jude 24 RV).
There is something better even than that. It was first taught
me by a grey-haired clergyman, in the study of the Deanery at
Southampton. Once, when tempted to feel great irritation, he told us
that he looked up and claimed the patience and gentleness of Christ,
and since then it had become the practice of his life to claim from
Him the virtue of which he felt the deficiency in himself. In hours
of unrest, Thy peace, Lord. In hours of irritation, Thy patience,
Lord. In hours of temptation, Thy purity, Lord. In hours of
weakness, Thy strength, Lord. It was to me a message straight from
the throne. Till then I had been content with ridding myself of
burdens; now I began to reach forth to positive blessing, making each
temptation the occasion for a new acquisition of gold leaf.
All that we have to do is to maintain this attitude of full
surrender, by the grace of the Holy Spirit. Remember that Jesus
Christ offered Himself to God, THROUGH THE ETERNAL SPIRIT, and He
waits to do as much for you. Ask Him to maintain in you this
attitude. Use regularly the means of meditation, private prayer, and
Bible study. Seek forgiveness for any failure as soon as you are
conscious of it, and ask to be restored. Practice the holy habit of
the constant recollection of God. Do not be eager to work for God,
but let God work through you. Accept everything that happens to you
as being permitted, and therefore sent by the will of Him Who loves
you infinitely. And there will roll in upon you wave on wave, tide on
tide, ocean on ocean of an experience fitly called THE BLESSED LIFE,
because it is full of the happiness of the ever-blessed God Himself.
Dear reader, will you not take this step? There will be no
further difficulty about money, dress, amusements, or similar
questions which perplex some. Your heart will be filled and
satisfied with the true riches. As the willing slave of Jesus
Christ, you will only seek to do the will of your great and gentle
Master -- to spend every coin as He directs, to act as His steward,
to dress so as to give Him pleasure, to spend the time only as He may
approve, to do His will on earth as it is in heaven. All this will
become easy and delightful.
You are, perhaps, far from this at present. But it is all
within your reach. Do not be afraid of Christ. He wants to take
nothing from you except that which you would give up at once if you
could see, as clearly as He does, the harm it is inflicting. He will
ask of you nothing inconsistent with the most perfect fitness and
tenderness. He will give you grace enough to perform every duty He
may demand. His "yoke is easy," His "burden is light."
Blessed Spirit of God, by Whom alone human words can be made to
speak to the heart, deign to use these, to point many a longing soul
the first step into THE BLESSED LIFE, for the exceeding glory of the
Lord Jesus, and for the sake of a dying world.
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