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The Full Blessing of Pentecost:
The One Thing Needful
Rev. Andrew Murray, D.D.
Wellington, South Africa
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Links to the Audio Format for Listening
are located at the head of Each Chapter
Edited by Rev.
Bill Versteeg
contents
Preface..................................................................................................................................................2
Introduction..........................................................................................................................................3
Ch 01 It is to be taught
.........................................................................................................................5
Ch 02 How Glorious it
is......................................................................................................................9
Ch 03 In How it was Bestowed from
heaven......................................................................................14
Ch 04 How little it is
Enjoyed.............................................................................................................18
Ch 05 How the Blessing is
Hindered...................................................................................................22
Ch 06 How it is Obtained by
Us..........................................................................................................26
Ch 07 How it May Be
Kept.................................................................................................................30
Ch 08 How it may be
Increased...........................................................................................................35
Ch 09 How it comes to its full
Manifestation......................................................................................39
Ch 10 How Fully it is Assured to Us By
God.....................................................................................44
Ch 11 How it is to be Found by All
....................................................................................................48
Ch 12 How Everything must be Given Up for
it.................................................................................52
"He that believeth on Me, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living
water "
JAMES NISBET & CO. LIMITED
22 BERBERS STREET, W
1908
TRANSLATED FROM THE DUTCH
BY REV. J. P. LILLEY, M.A., D.D.
ARBROATH
105-600 /
Printed by MORRISON & GIBE LIMITED, Edinburgh
Preface
(Listen
to the Preface)
THE Dutch Reformed Church of South Africa has, during the past forty
years, been in the
habit of observing the ten days between Ascension and Whitsunday as days
of prayer. The custom
had its origin during the revival that passed over this country between
1860 and 1862 in the
suggestion of the minister of a parish which at that time had received
special blessing. The
observance has in many cases been accompanied with blessing. The
opportunity it gives for training
Christians in the knowledge of what God s Word teaches concerning the
Spirit, to the practice and
the faith to which it calls, to prayer and fellowship and special
efforts in behalf of the careless, has
often been of the greatest value. Each year subjects for meditation and
discourse have been
published.
It was when I was about to proceed to England in 1895 that I was led
to write and publish a
little book with the title, The Full Pentecostal Blessing. I never had
any thoughts of translating it into
English, as about that time there had been various books published on
the subject. A request has
lately come to me from Holland urging that it should appear in English
too, specially for the sake of
some English friends with whom those in Holland had been in close
intercourse. Though I was in
doubt about the need, I gladly gave my consent.
I venture just one remark. In all our study of the work of the
blessed Spirit, and in all our
pursuit of a life in His fullness, we shall ever find the sum of Christ
s teaching in those wonderful
words : " He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of
his belly shall flow rivers of
living water." It is as we are convicted of the defectiveness of our
faith in Christ, and what He has
promised to do in saving and keeping us from sin, and as we understand
that believing in Him means
a yielding up of the whole heart and life and will, to let Him rule and
live within us, that we can
confidently count upon receiving all that we need of the Holy Spirit’s
power and presence. It is as
Christ becomes to us all that God has made Him to be, that the Holy
Spirit can flow from Him and
do His blessed work of leading us back to know Him better and to believe
in Him more completely.
My attention has lately again been directed by a brother to the Epistle
to the Hebrews, and to
the way it speaks of Christ in His heavenly glory and power as the
object of our faith. In my book,
The Holiest of All, I have tried to point out how the Holy Spirit
reveals the way into the Holiest as
opened by the blood of Christ, and invites us by faith in Christ to have
our life there. It is as we yield
our hearts to the leading of the Spirit to know Christ and look at Him,
and believe in what is
revealed, that the Spirit can take possession of us. The Spirit is given
to reveal Christ, and every
revelation of Christ fully accepted gives the Spirit room to dwell and
work within us.
This is the sure way in which the promise will be fulfilled : " He that
believeth on Me, rivers
of living water shall flow out of him." May God lead us to this simple
and full faith in Christ, our
great High Priest and King in the heavens, and so into a life in the
fulness of the Spirit.
ANDREW MURRAY.
WELLINGTON,
6th November 1907.
Introduction.
(Listen to the Introduction)
The message which this little book brings is simple but most solemn.
It is to the effect that
the one thing needful for the Church, and the thing which, above all
others, men ought everywhere to
seek for with one accord and with their whole heart, is to be filled
with the Spirit of God.
In order to secure attention to this message and attract the hearts of
my readers to the
blessing of which it speaks, I have laid particular emphasis on certain
main points. These I briefly
state here.
1. It is the will of God that every one of His children should live
entirely and unceasingly
under the control of the Holy Spirit.
2. Without being filled with the Spirit, it is utterly impossible that
an individual Christian
or a church can ever live or work as God desires,
3. Everywhere and in everything we see the proofs, in the life and
experience of
Christians, that this blessing is but little enjoyed in the Church, and,
alas! is but little sought for.
4. This blessing is prepared for us and God waits to bestow it. Our
faith may expect it
with the greatest confidence.
5. The great hindrance in the way is that the self-life, and the world,
which it uses for its
own service and pleasure, usurp the place that Christ ought to occupy.
6. We cannot be filled with the Spirit until we are prepared to yield
ourselves to be led by
the Lord Jesus to forsake and sacrifice everything for this pearl of
great price.
I feel very deeply the imperfection that attaches to this little
volume. Yet I am not without
the hope that the Lord will make it a blessing to His people. We have
such a feeble conception of the
unspiritual and sinful state which prevails in the Church, that, unless
we take time to devote our
heart and our thoughts to the real facts of the case, the promise of God
can make no deep impression
upon us. I hope that the attempt I have made to exhibit the subject in
various aspects will help to
prepare the way for the conviction that this blessing is in truth the
one thing needful, and that to get
possession of this one thing we ought to bid farewell to everything else
we hold dear. I frankly invite
Christian disciples into whose hands the book may fall to peruse it
carefully more than once. Owing
to the prevailing lack of the presence and operation of the Spirit, it
takes a long time ere these
spiritual truths concerning the need, and the fulness, and the reality
of the Spirit’s power can obtain
entire mastery over us. It is only by the exercise of self-sacrifice and
persisting in keeping our minds
occupied with these thoughts, that we can ever obtain what might
otherwise come to us at once.
On reviewing what I have written, I am inclined to think that there
is one point on which I
ought to have spoken more definitely. I refer to the place which
persevering prayer must occupy in
connection with this blessing. This little book was not exclusively
written for prayer at the season of
Pentecost. Every day ought to be a Pentecostal season in the Church of
Christ. For just as little as a
man can remain in sound health without the fresh air of heaven, can
Christians or the Church live
according to the will of God without this blessing. The book is designed
to point to what must
prevail throughout all the year; and it seems to me now that, perhaps
under the impression that in the
season of Pentecost prayer for the blessing is practically unanimous, I
have not strongly enough
exhorted my readers to ceaseless calling upon God in the confidence that
He will answer. Let me
advert again to this point in a few sentences. When we read the Book of
the Acts, we see that the
filling with the Spirit and His mighty operation was always obtained by
prayer. Recall, for example,
what took place at Antioch. It was when the Christians there were
engaged in fasting and prayer that
God regarded them as prepared to receive the revelation that they must
separate Barnabas and Saul;
and it was only after they had once more fasted and prayed that these
two men went forth, sent by
the Holy Spirit. 1 These servants of God felt that the boon they needed
must come only from above.
To obtain the blessing we so much need, from heaven and out of the
hands of the living God
Himself, we in like manner, even with fasting, must liberate ourselves
as far as possible from the
demands of the earthly life, even in that which otherwise appears quite
lawful; and no less must we
betake ourselves wholly to God in prayer. Let us therefore never become
weary or dispirited, but in
union with God’s own elect, who call upon Him day and night, entreat Him
and even weary Him by
our incessant entreaties that the Holy Spirit may again assume His
rightful place and exercise full
dominion in ourselves and the Church as a whole: yea, more, that He may
again have His true place
in the Church, be held in honour by all, and in everything reveal the
glory of our Lord Jesus. To the
soul that in sincerity prays according to His Word, God’s answer will
surely come. There is nothing
so fitted to search and to cleanse the heart as true prayer. It teaches
one to put to himself such
questions as these: Do I really desire what above everything I pray for?
Am I willing to cast out
everything to make room for what God is prepared to give me? Is the
prayer of my lips really the
prayer of my life? Do I really continue in intercourse with God, waiting
upon Him, in quiet trust,
until He gives me this great, heavenly, super natural gift, His own
Spirit, to be my spirit, the spirit of
my life every hour?
Let us " pray always and not faint," setting ourselves before God
with supplications and
strong crying as His priests and the representatives of His Church. We
may reckon upon it that He
will hear us.
" In my distress I called upon the Lord, And cried unto my God:
He heard my voice out of His
temple, And my cry before Him came into His ears.
He delivered me from my strong enemy,
He brought me forth also into a large place." 1
Brother, you know that the Lord is a God that often hideth Himself.
He desires to be trusted.
He is oftentimes very near to us without our knowing it. He is a God who
knows His own time. Yet,
" though He tarry, wait for Him. He will surely come. He will not tarry
" 2
1 Ps. xviii. 6, 17, 19 (K.V.). 2 Hab. ii. 3.
Chapter #1
(Listen
to Chapter 1)
How it is to be taught.
“And it came to pass that Paul came to Ephesus and found certain
disciples: and he said
unto them, Did ye receive the Holy Spirit when ye believed? " ACTS xix.
1-2.
IT was about twenty years after the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
that the incident which is
referred to in the beginning of this chapter of the Acts took place. In
the course of his journey Paul
came to Ephesus, and found in the Christian church there some disciples
in whom he observed that
there was something lacking in their belief or experience. Accordingly
he put to them the question: "
Did ye receive the Holy Spirit when ye believed?" Their reply was that
they had not yet heard of the
Holy Spirit. They had been baptized by disciples of John the Baptist
with the baptism of repentance
with a view to faith in Jesus as One who was to come; but with the great
event of the outpouring of
the Spirit or the significance of it they were still un acquainted. They
came from a region of the
country into which the full Pentecostal preaching of the exalted Savior
had not yet penetrated.
Accordingly, Paul took them at once under his care, made them conversant
with the full gospel of
the glorified Lord, who had received the Spirit from the Father and had
sent Him down to this world,
that every one of His believing disciples might also receive Him.
Hearing this glad tidings and
consenting to it, they were baptized into the name of this Savior, who
baptizes with the Holy Spirit.
Thereupon Paul prayed for them and laid his hands upon them, and they
received the Holy Spirit;
and then, in token of the fact that this whole transaction was a
heavenly reality, they obtained a share
in the Pentecostal miracle, and spake " with other tongues."
In these chapters it is my desire to bring to the children of God the
message that there is a
twofold Christian life. The one is that in which we experience something
of the operations of the
Holy Spirit, just as many did under the old covenant, but do not yet
receive Him as the Pentecostal
Spirit, as the personal indwelling Guest, concerning whom we know that
He has come to abide
permanently in the heart. On the other hand, there is a more abundant
life, in which the indwelling
just referred to is known and the full joy and power of redemption are
facts of personal experience. It
will be only when Christians come to understand fully the distinction
betwixt these two conditions,
and discern that the second of these is in very deed the will of God
concerning them, and therefore a
possible experience for each believer; when with shame and confusion of
face they shall confess the
sinful and inconsistent elements that still mark their life: that we
shall dare to hope that the Christian
community will once more be restored to its Pentecostal power. It is
with our eye fixed on this
distinction that we desire to ponder the lessons presented to us in the
record of this incident at
Ephesus.
For a healthful Christian life, it is indispensable that we should be
fully conscious that we
have received the Holy Spirit to dwell in us. Had it been otherwise,
Paul would never have put the
question: " Did ye receive the Holy Spirit when ye believed? " These
disciples were recognized as
believers. This position, however, was not enough for them. The
disciples who walked with the Lord
Jesus on earth were also true believers, yet He commanded them not to
rest satisfied until they had
received the Holy Spirit from Himself in heaven. Paul too had seen the
Lord in His heavenly glory
and was by that vision led to conversion; yet even in his case the
spiritual work he required to have
done in him was not thereby completed. Ananias had to go to him and lay
his hands upon him that
he might receive the Holy Spirit. Only then could he become a witness
for Christ. All these facts
teach us that there are two ways in which the Holy Spirit works in us.
The first is the preparatory
operation in which He simply acts on us but does not yet take up His
abode within us, though
leading us to conversion and faith and ever urging us to all that is
good and holy.
The second is the higher and more advanced phase of His working when
we receive Him as
an abiding gift, as an indwelling Person, concerning whom we know that
He assumes responsibility
for our whole inner being, working in it both to will and to do. This is
the ideal of the full Christian
life.
There are disciples of Christ who know little or nothing of this
conscious indwelling of the
Holy Spirit. It is of the utmost importance to understand and hold fast
this statement. The more fully
we come under the conviction of its truth, the better shall we
understand the condition of the Church
in our times and be at last enabled to discover where we ourselves
really stand. The condition I refer
to becomes very plain to us when we consider what took place at Samaria.
Philip the evangelist had
preached there; many had been led to believe in Jesus and were baptized
into His name; and there
was great joy in that city. When the apostles heard this news, they sent
down Peter and John, who,
when they came to Samaria, prayed that these new converts might receive
the Holy Spirit. 1 This
gift was thus something quite different from the working of the Spirit
that led them to conversion
and faith and joy in Jesus as a Savior. It was something higher: for now
from heaven, and by the
glorified Lord Himself, the Holy Spirit was imparted in power with His
abiding indwelling, to
consecrate and fill their hearts.
If this new experience had not been bestowed, the Samaritan disciples
would still indeed
have been Christians, but they would have remained weak, defective, and
sickly; and thus it is that
in our own days there is still many a Christian life that knows nothing
of this bestowment of the
Holy Spirit. Amidst much that is good and amiable, with even much
earnestness and zeal, the life of
such Christians is still hampered by weakness and stumbling and
disappointment, simply because it
has never been brought into vitalizing contact with power from on high,
because such souls have not
received the Holy Spirit as the Pentecostal gift, to be possessed, and
kept, and filled by Him. 1 Acts
viii. 16, 17.
It is the great work of the gospel ministry to lead believers to the
Holy Spirit. Was it not the
great aim of the Lord Jesus, after He had educated and trained His
disciples for three years by His
intercourse with them, to lead them up to the point of waiting for the
promise of the Father and
receiving the Holy Spirit sent down from heaven? Was not this the chief
object of Peter on the day of
Pentecost, when, after summoning those who were pricked in their hearts
to repent and be baptized
for the forgiveness of sins, he assured them that they should then
receive the Holy Spirit? Was it not
this also that Paul aimed at when in his Epistles he asked his fellow-
Christians if they did not know
that they were each one " a temple of the Holy Spirit," or reminded them
that they had to be " filled
with the Holy Spirit"?
Yes: the supreme need of the Christian life is to receive the Holy
Spirit, and when we have it,
to be conscious of the fact and live in harmony with it. An evangelical
minister must not merely
preach about the Holy Spirit from time to time or even often times, but
also direct all his efforts
towards teaching his congregation that there can be no true worship save
through the indwelling and
unceasing operation of the Holy Spirit.
To lead believers to the Holy Spirit, the great lack in their life
must be pointed out to them.
This was manifestly the intention in Paul’s question: " Did ye receive
the Holy Spirit when ye
believed? " Just as only those that are thirsty will drink water with
eagerness and only those that are
sick will desire a physician, so it is only when believers are prepared
to acknowledge the defective
and sinful character of their spiritual condition, that the preaching of
the full blessing of Pentecost
will find an entrance into their hearts. So long as Christians imagine
that the only thing lacking in
their life is more earnestness, or more importunity, or more strength,
and that if they only obtain
these benefits they themselves will become all they ought to be, the
preaching of a full salvation will
be of little avail. It is only when the discovery is made that they are
not standing in a right attitude
towards the Holy Spirit, that they have only His preparatory operations,
but do not yet know and
honour Him in His indwelling, that the way to something higher will ever
be open or even be
desired. For this discovery, it is indispensable that the question
should be put to each, man by man,
as pointedly and as personally as may be: " Did ye receive the Holy
Spirit when ye believed? "
When the answer shall take the shape of a deeply felt and utterly
sincere Alas! the time of revival is
not far off.
Believers must receive help to appropriate this Missing in faith. In
the Acts of the Apostles
we read often about laying on of hands and prayer. Even a man like Paul
whose conversion was due
to the direct interposition of the Lord, and was there fore so effectual
had to receive the Spirit
through laying on of hands and prayer on the part of Ananias. (Acts ix.
17) This implies that there
must be amongst ministers of the gospel and believers generally a power
of the Spirit which makes
them the channel of faith and courage to others. Those who are weak must
be helped to appropriate
the blessing for themselves. But those who have and bring this blessing,
as well as those who desire
to have it, must realize and acknowledge their absolute dependence on
the Lord and expect all from
Him. The gift of the Spirit is imparted only by God Himself. Every fresh
bestowment of the Spirit
comes from above. There must be frequent personal dealing with God. The
minister of the Spirit
whom God is to use for communicating the blessing, as well as the
believer who is to receive it, must
meet with God in immediate and closest intercourse. Every good gift
comes from above: it is faith in
this truth that will give us courage to expect with confidence and
gladness that the full Pentecostal
blessing may confidently be looked for, and that a life under the
continual leading of the Holy Spirit
is within our reach.
The proclamation and appropriation of this blessing will restore the
Christian community to
the primary Pentecostal power. On the day of Pentecost the speaking "
with other tongues " and the
prophesying was the result of being filled with the Spirit. Here at
Ephesus, twenty years later, the
very same miracle is again witnessed, as the visible token and pledge of
the other glorious gifts of
the Spirit. We may reckon upon it that where the reception of the Holy
Spirit and the possibility of
being filled with Him are proclaimed and appropriated, the blessed life
of the Pentecostal
community will be restored in all its pristine power. In our days there
is an increasing
acknowledgment of the lack of power in the Church of the Lord. In spite
of all the multiplication of
the means of grace, there is neither the power of the divine salvation
in believers, nor the power for
conversion in preaching, nor the power in the conflict of the Church
with worldliness and unbelief
and unrighteousness that, according to God’s Word, we are bound to look
for. The complaint is
made with justice. Would that the expression of it became so strong that
the children of God, driven
by a keen sense of need, might be led to cast themselves upon the great
truth which the Word of God
teaches namely, that it is only when faith in the full Pentecostal
blessing and the full enjoyment of it
are found in the Christian Church that the members of it shall again
find their strength and be able to
do their first works.
The most urgent need of the Church is that of men who shall be able
to bear testimony to this
blessing. Whether it be of teachers like Peter and Paul, of deacons like
Philip, or of ordinary
believers like Ananias who came to Paul, this is our first need. It
furnishes abundant reason why
teachers and members of congregations should unitedly call upon God,
that alike in preaching and
pastoral intercourse there may be more manifest proof that those who
preach Christ Jesus may
preach Him as John the Baptist did, as the One who baptizes with the
Holy Spirit. It is only the
minister that stands forth as a personal witness and living proof of the
ministry of the Spirit whose
word will have full entrance into the hearts of the people and exercise
full sway over them. The first
disciples obtained the baptism on their knees; on their knees they
obtained it for others. It will be on
our knees also that the full blessing will be won to-day. On our knees:
let this be the attitude in
which we await the full blessing of our God, alike in our individual and
collective life. Have ye
received the Holy Spirit since ye believed? Let every reader submit
himself to this heart-searching
question. To be filled with the Holy Spirit of God, to have the full
enjoyment of the Pentecostal
blessing, is the will of God concerning us. Let us judge our life and
our work before the Lord in the
light of this question, and return the answer to God. do not be afraid,
my brother, to confess before
your Lord what is still lacking in you. Do not keep back, although you
do not as yet fully
understand what the blessing is or how it comes. The early disciples did
not know that, yet they
called upon their Lord and waited for it with prayer and supplications.
Let but your heart be filled
with a deep conviction of what you lack, a desire for what God offers, a
willingness to sacrifice
everything for it, and you may rest assured that the marvel of Jerusalem
and of Samaria, of Caesarea
and Ephesus, will once again be repeated. We may, we shall, be filled
with the Spirit. Amen.
Chapter #2
(Listen
to Chapter #2)
How glorious it is
"They were all filled with the Holy Spirit." ACTS ii. 4.
WHENEVER we speak of being filled with the Holy Spirit, and desire to
know what it
precisely is, our thoughts always turn back to the clay of Pentecost.
There we see as in a mirror how
glorious the blessing is that is brought from heaven by the Holy Spirit
and with which He can fill the
hearts of men.
There is one fact which makes the great event of the day of Pentecost
doubly instructive this,
namely, that we have learned to know very intimately the men who were
then filled with the Spirit,
by their intercourse for three years with the Lord Jesus. Their
infirmities and defects, their sins and
perversities, all stand open to our view. But the blessing of Pentecost
wrought a complete
transformation. They became entirely new men, so that one might say of
them with truth: " Old
things have passed away: behold, all is become new." Close study of them
and their example helps
us in more than one way. It shows us to what weak and sinful men the
Spirit will come. It teaches us
how they were prepared for the blessing. It teaches us also and this is
the principal thing how mighty
and complete the revolution is that is brought to pass when the Holy
Spirit is received in His fulness.
It lets us see how glorious the grace that awaits us is if we press on
to the full blessing of Pentecost.
I
The ever-abiding presence and indwelling of the Lord Jesus.
In this we have the first and principal blessing of the Pentecostal
life. In the course of our
Lord’s intercourse with His disciples on earth He spared no pains to
teach and train them, to renew
and sanctify them. In most respects, however, they remained just what
they were. The reason was
that up to this point He was ever still nothing more than an external
Christ who stood outside of
them and from without sought to work upon them by His word and His
personal influence. With the
advent of Pentecost this condition was entirely changed. In the Holy
Spirit He came down as the
inward, indwelling Christ, to become in the very innermost recesses of
their being the life of their
life. This is what He Himself had promised in the words: "I will not
leave you orphans: / come unto
you. In that day ye shall know that I am in My Father, and ye in Me, and
I in you." l This was the
source of all the other blessings that came with Pentecost. Jesus
Christ, the Crucified, the Glorified,
the Lord from heaven, came in spiritual power, by the Spirit, to impart
to them that ever-abiding
presence of their Lord that had been promised to them; and that indeed
in a way that was at once
most intimate, all powerful, and wholly divine: by the indwelling which
makes Him in truth their
life. 1 John xiv. 18, 20.
Him whom they had had in the flesh, living with them on earth, they
now received by the
Spirit in His heavenly glory within them. Instead of an outward Jesus
near them, they now obtained
the inward Jesus within them.
II
From this first and principal blessing sprang the second: the Spirit of
Jesus came into them as
the life and the power of sanctification.
Here I shall allude at the outset to only one feature in this change.
We know how often the
Lord had to rebuke them for their pride and exhort them to humility. It
was all of no avail.
Even on the last night of His earthly life, at the table of the Holy
Supper, there was a strife
amongst them as to which of them should be the greatest. (Luke xxii.
24). The outward teaching of the
outward Christ, whatever other influences it may have exercised, was not
sufficient to redeem them
from the power of indwelling sin; this could be achieved only by the
indwelling Christ. Only when
Jesus descended into them by the Holy Spirit did they undergo a complete
change. They received
Him in His heavenly humility and subjection to the Father, and in His
self-sacrifice for others, as
their life. Hence forth all was changed. From that moment onwards they
were animated by the spirit
of the meek and lowly Jesus.
This, in very truth, is still the only way to a real sanctification,
to a life that actually
overcomes sin. It is just because so many preachers and so many
Christians keep their minds
occupied only with the external Christ on the Cross or in heaven, and
wait for the blessing of His
teaching and His working without understanding that the blessing of
Pentecost brings Him into us,
to work Himself all in us, that they make so little progress in
sanctification. Christ Himself is of God
made unto us sanctification: and that in no other way than by our living
and being moved and
existing in Him, because He lives and abides in our heart and works all
there.
III
An overflowing of the heart with the love of God is also a part of the
blessing of Pentecost.
Next to pride, lack of love or, as we may put it in one word,
lovelessness was the sin for
which the Lord had so often to rebuke His disciples. These two sins have
in truth one and the same
root: the self-seeking and the desire for self- pleasing. The new
commandment that He gave them,
the token whereby all men should know that they were His disciples, was
love to one another. How
gloriously was it manifested on the day of Pentecost that the Spirit of
the Lord shed abroad His love
in the hearts of His own. The multitude of them that believe were as one
heart, one soul: all things
they possessed were held in common; no one said that anything of that
which he had was his own.
The kingdom of heaven with its life of love had come down to them. The
spirit, the disposition, the
wonderful love of Jesus, filled them, because He Himself had come into
them.
How closely the mighty working of the Spirit and the indwelling of
the Lord Jesus are bound
up with a life in love appears from the prayer of Paul in behalf of the
Ephesians, in which he asks
that they might be strengthened with power by the Spirit, in order that
Christ might dwell in their
hearts. Then he forthwith makes this addition: " that ye, being rooted
and grounded in love, may be
strong to apprehend the love which passeth knowledge." The filling with
the Spirit and the
indwelling of Christ bring of themselves a life that has its root, its
joy, its power, its evidence in love,
because the in dwelling Christ Himself is Love. How would the love of
God fill the Church and
convince the world that she has received a heavenly element into her
life, if the filling with the Spirit
and the indwelling of Christ in the heart were recognized as the
blessing which the Father has
promised us!
IV
The coming of the Spirit changed weakness and fear into courage and
power.
We all know how, from fear rising in his heart at the word of a
woman, Peter denied his
Lord; and how that same night all the disciples fled and forsook Him.
Their hearts were really
attached to Him, and they were sincerely willing to do what they had
promised and go to die with
Him; but when it came to the crisis, they had neither courage nor power.
They had to say: "To will is
present with me, but how to perform I find not." After the blessing of
the Spirit of Pentecost, there
was no more question of merely willing apart from performing. By Christ
dwelling in us God works
both the willing and the doing. With what confidence of spirit did Peter
on the day of Pentecost dare
to preach the Crucified One to thousands of hostile Jews. With what
boldness was he able, in
opposition to the leaders of the people, to say: "We must obey God
rather than men." With what
courage and joy were Stephen and Paul and so many others enabled to
encounter threatening and
suffering and death: they did this even triumphantly. It was because the
Spirit of Christ, the Victor,
yea, the Christ Himself, who had been glorified, dwelt within them. It
is the joy of the blessing of
Pentecost that gives courage and power to speak for Jesus, because by it
the whole heart is filled
with Him.
V
The blessing of Pentecost makes the whole Word of God new.
How distinctly do we see this fact in the case of the disciples. As
with all the Jews of that
age, their ideas of the Messiah and the kingdom of God were utterly
external and carnal. All the
instruction of the Lord Jesus throughout three long years could not
detach their minds from them.
They were utterly unable to comprehend the doctrine of a suffering and
dying Messiah or the hope
of His invisible spiritual dominion. Even after His resurrection He had
to rebuke them for their
unbelieving spirit and their backwardness in understanding the
Scriptures. With the coming of the
day of Pentecost an entire change took place. The whole of their ancient
Scriptures opened up before
them. The light of the Holy Spirit in them illumined the Word. In the
preaching of Peter and
Stephen, in the addresses of Paul and James, we see how a divine light
had shone upon the word of
the Old Testament. They saw everything through the Spirit of this Jesus
who had made His abode
within them.
So will it be also with ourselves. It is as necessary as it is
helpful that we should study the
Scriptures and meditate upon them, and keep the word of God alike in
head and heart and daily
walk. Let us, however, constantly remember that it is only when we are
filled with the Spirit that we
can rightly and fully experience the spiritual power and truth of the
Word. He is "the Spirit of truth."
He alone guides into all truth when He dwells in us.
VI
It is the blessing of Pentecost that gives power to Bless others.
The divine power of the exalted Jesus to grant repentance and the
forgiveness of sins is
exercised by Him through His servants whom He sends forth to proclaim
these blessings. The
minister of the gospel who desires to preach repentance and forgiveness
through Jesus with success
in winning souls, must do the work in the power of the Spirit of this
Jesus. The chief reason why so
much preaching of conversion and pardon is fruitless lies in the fact
that these elements of truth are
presented only as a doctrine, and that preachers endeavor to secure a
way to the hearts of their
audience in the power of merely human earnestness, and reasoning, and
eloquence. But little
blessing is won by these means. It is the man that makes it his chief
desire to be filled with the Spirit
of God, and then by faith in the indwelling of Christ comes to be
assured that the glorified Lord will
speak and work in him, who will obtain blessing. It is true, indeed,
that this blessing will not always
be given in the very same measure or in the very same manner, but it
will always certainly come:
just because the preacher permits the Lord to work in and through him.
Alike in preaching and in the
daily life of a servant of Christ, the full blessing of Pentecost is the
sure way of becoming a blessing
to others. "He that believeth on Me," said Jesus, "out of his belly
shall flow rivers of living water."
This he said of the Holy Spirit. A heart filled with the Spirit will
overflow with the Spirit.
VII
It is the blessing of Pentecost that will make the Church of Christ what
God would have her be.
We have spoken of what the Spirit will do in individual believers. We
have also to think of
what the blessing will be when the Church as a whole shall apprehend her
calling to be filled with
the Spirit, and then to exhibit the life and the power yea, and the very
presence of her Lord to the
world. We must not only seek and receive this blessing, every one for
himself, but we must also
remember that the full manifestation of what the blessing itself is,
cannot be given until the whole
body of Christ be filled with it. "If one member suffer, all the members
suffer with it." If many
members of the Church of Christ are content to remain without this
blessing, the whole Church will
suffer. Even in individual disciples the blessing cannot come to its
full manifestation. Hence it is of
the utmost importance that we should not only think of what the being "
filled with the Spirit "
means for ourselves, but also consider what it will do for the Church,
especially in our own
neighbourhood, and by her for all the world.
To this end, let us simply recall the morning of the day of
Pentecost. At that juncture the
Christian Church in Jerusalem consisted only of one hundred and twenty
disciples, most of them
poor unlearned fishermen, publicans, and humble women, an insignificant
and despised gathering.
Yet it was just by these believers that the kingdom of God had to be
proclaimed and extended: and
they did it. By them, and those who were added to them, the power of
Jewish prejudice and of pagan
hardness of heart was overcome, and the Church of Christ won glorious
triumphs. This grand result
was achieved simply and only because the first Christian church was
filled with the Spirit. The
members of it gave themselves wholly to their Lord. They allowed
themselves to be filled and
consecrated, governed and used only by Him. They yielded themselves to
Him as instruments of His
power. He dwelt in them and wrought in them all His wondrous deeds.
It is to this same experience that the Church of Christ in our age
must be brought back. This
is the only thing that will help her in the conflict with mere
civilization or paganism, with sin or the
world. She must be filled with the Spirit.
Beloved fellow-Christians, this summons comes to you. " One thing is
needful." Alike for
yourselves and the whole Church of the Lord, this is the one thing that
is needful: we have to be
filled with the Spirit. Pray do not imagine that you must comprehend or
under stand it all before you
seek and find it. For those that wait upon Him God will do even that
which has not yet entered into
their heart to conceive. If you would taste the happiness, if you would
know by personal experience
the unutterable blessedness, of having Jesus in the heart, of having in
you His Spirit of holiness and
humility, of love and self-sacrifice, of courage and power, as naturally
and continuously as you have
your own spirit; if you would have the Word of God in you as light and
power, and be enabled to
carry it about as a blessing for others; if you would fain see the
Church of Christ stand forth arrayed
in her first splendor then separate yourselves from everything that is
evil, cast it utterly out of your
heart, and fix your desire on this one thing: to be filled with the
Spirit of God. Beckon upon
receiving this as your rightful heritage. Appropriate it and hold it
fast by faith. It shall certainly be
given to you.
CHAPTER #3
(Listen
to Chapter #3)
HOW IT WAS BESTOWED FROM HEAVEN
"If ye love Me, ye will keep My commandments. And I will pray the
Father, and He shall give
you another Comforter, that He may be with you for ever, even the Spirit
of truth."
JOHN 14:15,16.
A TREE lives always according to the nature of the seed from which it
sprang. Every living
being is always guided and governed by the nature which it received at
its birth. Thus the Church of
Christ received the promise and the law of her existence and her growth
in that which was bestowed
upon her in the Holy Spirit on the day of her birth. This is the reason
why it is of such importance for
us to turn back often to the day of Pentecost and not to rest until we
thoroughly understand, and
receive, and experience what God did for His people on that day. When we
see how the blessing was
then for the first time given from heaven, and what the disposition of
heart was that fitted the
disciples for receiving the Spirit, then we know for all coming time
what remains to be done by
ourselves to enjoy the same blessing. The first disciples serve us as
examples and forerunners on the
way to the fulness of the Spirit.
What, then, was there in them which enabled them to become the
recipients of these
heavenly gifts and made them fit objects of the unspeakable grace that
in them first of all the Three-
One God came to take up His abode? The right answer to this question
will help us not a little on the
way to be filled with the Holy Spirit. What do we find in these first
disciples?
I
In the first place, there is the fact that they were deeply attached to
the Lord Jesus.
The Son of God came into the world in order to unite the divine life
which He had with the
Father with the life of man, and thus to secure that the life of God
should penetrate into the life of the
creature. When He had completed the work in His own person by His
obedience, and death, and
resurrection, He was exalted to the throne of God on high in order that
in spiritual power, and not
only apart from the limitations of earthly life but in the might of the
all-penetrating sovereign
presence of God, His disciples and His Church might participate in His
own very life. We read that
the Holy Spirit " was not yet," because Jesus was not yet glorified. It
was only after His glorification
that the Holy Spirit, as the Spirit of Godhead united with manhood, the
Spirit of the complete
indwelling of God in man, could be given. It is the Spirit of the
glorified Jesus that the disciples
received on the day of Pentecost, the Spirit of the Head, penetrating
all the members of His body.
It is evident without proof that, if the fulness of the Spirit thus
dwells in Jesus, a personal
relationship to Him is the first condition for the reception of the full
gift of the Comforter. It was to
attain this end that the Lord Jesus throughout all His three years work
on earth kept the disciples in
such close converse with Himself. He desired to attach them to Himself.
He wanted them to feel
themselves truly one with Him. He wanted them to identify themselves
with Him, as far as this was
possible. By knowledge and intercourse, by love and obedience, they
became inwardly knit to Him.
This was the preparation for participating in the Spirit of His
glorification. The lesson that is
here taught us is indeed extremely simple, but it is one of profound
significance. There are not a few
Christians who believe in the Lord and are very zealous in His service,
who eagerly desire to become
holy, and who yet do not succeed in their endeavor. It seems oftentimes
as if they could not
understand the promise of the Spirit. The thought of being filled with
the Spirit exercises but little
influence upon them. The reason is obvious. There is lacking in their
religion that personal
relationship to the Lord Jesus, that inward attachment to Him, that
perfectly natural reference to
Him as the best and nearest Friend, as the beloved Lord, which was so
characteristic of the disciples.
This, however, is absolutely indispensable. It is a heart that is
entirely occupied with the Lord Jesus,
and depends only upon Him, that can alone hope for the fulness of the
Spirit.
II
They had left all for Jesus.
"Nothing for nothing." This proverb contains a deep truth. A thing
that costs me nothing may
nevertheless cost me much. It may bring me under an obligation to the
giver, and so cost me more
than it is worth. I may have so much trouble in appropriating it and
keeping it that I may pay much
more for it than the price which should be asked for it. "Nothing for
nothing ": the maxim holds
good also in the life of the kingdom of heaven. The parables of the
Pearl of great price and the
Treasure hid in a field teach us that, in order to obtain possession of
the kingdom within us, we must
sell all that we have. This is the very renunciation that Jesus
literally demanded of the disciples who
had to follow Him. This is the requirement He so often repeated in His
preaching: "He that forsaketh
not all that he hath cannot be My disciple." The two worlds betwixt
which we stand are in such
direct conflict with one another, and the world in which we by nature
live exercises such a mighty
influence over us, that it is often necessary for us, even by external
and visible sacrifice, to withdraw
from it. It was thus that Jesus trained His disciples to long for that
which is heavenly. Only thus
could He prepare them to desire and receive the heavenly gift with an
undivided heart.
The Lord has left us no outward directions as to how much of the
world we are to abandon
or in what manner. But by His whole Word He teaches us that without
sacrifice, without a deliberate
separation from the world and forsaking of it, we shall never make much
progress in grace. The
spirit of this world has penetrated so deeply into us that we do not
observe it. We share in its desire
for comfort and enjoyment, for self-pleasing and self-exaltation,
without our knowing how
impossible these things make it for us to be filled with the Spirit. Let
us learn from the early disciples
that to be filled from the heavenly world with the Spirit that dwells
there, we must be entirely
separate from the children of this world or from worldly Christians. We
must be ready and eager to
live as entirely different men, who literally represent heaven upon
earth, because we have received
the Spirit of the King of heaven.
III
They had despaired utterly of themselves and all that is of man.
Man has two great enemies by whom the devil tempts him and with whom
he has to contend.
The one is the world without, the other is the self-life within. This
last, the selfish Ego, is much more
dangerous and stronger than the first. It is quite possible for a man to
have made much progress in
forsaking the world while the self-life retains full dominion within
him. You see this fact illustrated
in the case of the disciples. Peter could say with truth: " Lo! we have
left all and followed Thee." Yet
how manifestly did the selfish Ego, with its self-pleasing and its
self-confidence, still retain its full
sway over him.
As the Lord at their first calling led them up to the point of
forsaking their outward
possessions and following Him, so shortly afterwards He began to teach
them that a disciple must
deny himself and lose his own life if he would be worthy of receiving
His. He must hate not only
father and mother, where this was necessary, but even his own life. It
was love for this self- life,
more than all love for father and mother, that hindered the Lord Jesus
from doing His work in the
heart. It was to cost them more to be redeemed from the selfish Ego
within them than to get quit of
the world around them. The self-life is the natural life of sinful man.
He can be liberated from it by
nothing save by death that is, by first dying to it and then living in
the strength of the new life that
comes from God.
The forsaking of the world began at the outset of the three years
discipleship. It was at the
end of that period, at the Cross of Jesus, that dying to the self-life
first took place. When they saw
Him die, they learned to despair of themselves and of everything on
which they had hitherto based
their hope. Whether they thought of their Lord and the redemption which
they had expected, or
whether they thought of themselves and their shameful unfaithfulness
towards Him, everything
tended to fill them with despair. Little did they know that it was just
this despair which was to prove
the breaking up of their hard hearts the mortification of the self-life
and of confidence in themselves
which would enable them to receive something entirely new namely, a
divine life through the Spirit
of the glorified Jesus in the innermost depths of their souls.
O that we understood better that there is nothing which so hampers us
as secret reliance on
something in ourselves or in the Church around us, which we imagine can
help us! On the other
hand, there is nothing that brings so much blessing as entire despair of
ourselves and of all that is
upon the earth, in the way of teaching us to turn our hearts only and
wholly to heaven and to partake
of the heavenly gift which comes thence.
IV
They received and held fast the promise of the Spirit given by the Lord
Jesus.
We know how, in His farewell address on the last night of His sojourn
on earth, Jesus
comforted His disciples in their sorrow over His departure with one
great promise namely, the
mission of the Holy Spirit from heaven. This was to be better than His
own bodily presence among
them. It would be to them the full fruit and power of His redemption.
The divine Life yea, He
Himself, with the Father was to make abode within them. The unheard-of
wonder, the mystery of the
ages, was to be their portion. They were to know that they were in Him
and He in them. At His
ascension from the Mount of Olives, this promise of the Spirit was the
subject of the last words He
addressed to them.
It is evident that the disciples had still but little idea of what
this promise signified. But
however defective their understanding of it was, they held it fast; or
rather, the promise held them fast
and would not let them go. They all had only one thought: something has
been promised to us by our
Lord; it will give us a share in His heavenly power and glory; we know
for certain that it is coming.
Of what the thing itself was, or of what their experience of it was to
be, they could give no account. It
was enough for them that they had the word of the Lord. He would make it
a blessed reality within
them.
Now it is just the same disposition that we have so much need of now.
To us also, even as to
them, has the word of the Lord come concerning the Spirit who is to
descend from the throne in the
power of His glorified life. " He that believeth in Me, out of his heart
shall flow rivers of living
water." For us also it is the one thing needful to hold fast that word;
to set our whole desire upon the
fulfilment of it; to lay aside all else, until we inherit the promise.
The word from the mouth of Jesus
concerning the reception of the Spirit in such measure that we shall be
endued with power from on
high must animate and fill us with strong desire, with firm and joyful
assurance.
V
They waited upon the Father until the performance of the promise came
and they were filled
with the Spirit.
The ten days of waiting were for them days in which they were
continually in the Temple
"praising and blessing God " and "continuing instant in prayer and
supplication." It is not enough for
us to endeavor to strengthen desire and to hold fast our confidence. The
principal thing is to set
ourselves in close and abiding contact with God. The blessing must come
from God; God Himself
must give it to us; we are to receive the gift directly from Him. What
is promised us is a wonderful
work of divine Omnipotence and Love. What we desire is the personal
occupancy and indwelling of
God the Holy Spirit. God Himself must bestow this personally upon us. A
man gives another a piece
of bread or a piece of money. He gives it away from himself and has
nothing further to do with it. It is
not thus with God’s gift of the Holy Spirit. No: the Spirit is God. God
is in the Spirit who comes to
us, even as He was in the Son. The gift of the Spirit is the most
personal act of the Godhead: it is the
gift of Himself unto us. We have to receive it in the very closest
personal contact with God.
The clearer the insight we obtain into this principle, the more deeply
shall we feel how little
we can do to grasp the blessing by our own desiring, or endeavoring, or
believing. No: all our
desiring, and striving, and believing can only issue in a more complete
acknowledgment that we
ourselves can do nought to win the boon. It is the Goodness of God alone
that must give it; it is His
Omnipotence that must work it in us. Our disposition must be one of
silent assurance that the Father
desires to give it to us; that He will not keep us waiting one moment
longer than is absolutely
necessary; and that there shall not be a single soul which persists in
waiting in the pathway of self-abnegation
and dependence that shall not be filled with the glory of God.
Every tree continues always to grow from the root out of which it
first sprang. The day of
Pentecost was the planting of the Christian Church, and the Holy Spirit
became the power of its life.
Let us turn back to that experience. There is our power still. We learn
from the disciples what is
really necessary. Attachment to Jesus, the abandonment of everything in
the world for Him, despair
of self and of all help from man, holding on to the word of promise, and
then waiting on God, " the
living God " this is the sure way of living in the joy and the power of
the Holy Spirit.
CHAPTER #4
(Listen
to Chapter #4)
HOW LITTLE IT IS ENJOYED
"My speech and my preaching were not in persuasive words of
wisdom, but in demonstration
of the Spirit and of power: that your faith should not stand in the
wisdom of men, but in the
power of God." 1 COR. 2: 4,5.
PAUL speaks here of two kinds of preaching and two kinds of faith.
According to the spirit of
the preacher will be the faith of the congregation. When the preaching
of the Cross is given only in
the words of human wisdom, then the faith of the hearers will be in the
wisdom of men. When the
preaching is in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, the faith of
the Christian people will also be
in the power of God, at once firm and strong. Preaching in the
demonstration of the Spirit will bring
the double blessing of power in the word and power in the faith of those
that receive that word. If we
desire to know the measure of the working of the Spirit, we must
consider the preaching and the faith
that springs from it. In this way alone can we see whether the full
blessing of Pentecost is truly
manifested in the Church of Christ.
There are very few who are prepared to say that this is really the
case. Everywhere among the
children of God we hear complaints of weakness and sin. Amongst those
who do not so complain,
there is reason to fear that their silence is to be ascribed to the
prevalence of ignorance or selfsatisfaction.
It is of the utmost importance that we should concentrate our thoughts
upon this fact,
until we come under the full conviction that the condition of the Church
is marked by impotence, and
that nothing can restore her but the return to a life in the full
enjoyment of the blessing of Pentecost.
The more deeply we feel our deficiency, the more speedily shall we
desire and obtain restoration. It
will help to awaken longing for this blessing, and to find out the way
to obtain it, if we earnestly
consider how little it is enjoyed in the Church and how far the Church
is from being what her Lord
has willingness and power to make her.
I
Think, for example, what little power over sin there is amongst the
children of God.
The Spirit of Pentecost is the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of God’s
holiness. When He came down
upon the disciples, what a transformation was effected in them. Their
carnal thoughts were changed
into spiritual insight, their pride into humility, their selfishness
into love, their fear of man into
courage and fidelity. Sin was cast out by the inflowing of the life of
Jesus and of heaven.
The life which the Lord has prepared for His people is a life of
victory. It is not indeed victory
to such an extent as that there shall be no temptation to evil; nor yet
that the inclination towards sin,
inward sinfulness, shall be utterly rooted out of the flesh. But there
is to be victory of such a kind that
the indwelling power of the Spirit who fills us, the presence of the
indwelling Savior, shall keep sin in
subjection, as the light subdues the darkness.
Yet, to what a small extent do we see power for victory over sin in
the Church of Christ. On
the contrary, how often, even amongst earnest Christians, do we see much
untruthfulness and lack of
honour, pride and self-esteem, selfishness and lack of love. How little
are the traces of the image of
Jesus obedience, and humility, and love, and entire surrender to the
will of God seen even among the
people of God. The truth is that we have become so accustomed to the
confession of sin and
unfaithfulness, of disobedience and backsliding, that it is no longer
regarded as a matter for shame.
We make the confession before each other, and then after the prayer rest
comforted and content.
Brethren, let us rather feel humbled and mourn over it! It is because so
little of the full blessing of the
Spirit is enjoyed or sought for that the children of God still commit so
much sin, and have therefore
so much to confess. Let every sin, whether in ourselves or others, serve
as a summons to notice how
much is lacking of the Spirit of God amongst us. Let every instance of
failure in the fear of the Lord,
in love, and holiness, and entire surrender to the will of God, only
urge us the more unceasingly to
call upon God to bring His Spirit once more to full dominion over the
whole Church of Christ.
II
Think, too, how little there is of separation from the world.
When the Lord Jesus promised the Comforter, He said: "Whom the world
cannot receive."
The spirit of this world, which is devotion to the visible, is in
irreconcilable antagonism with the
Spirit of Jesus in heaven, where God and His will are everything. The
world has rejected the Lord
Jesus; and, to whatever extent it may now usurp the Christian name, the
world at heart is still the
same untamable foe. It was for this reason that Jesus said of His
disciples, and as indicating one of
their chief distinctive marks: " They are not of the world, even as I am
not of the world." This, too, is
the reason why Paul said: " We have received, not the spirit of this
world, but the Spirit which is of
God." The two spirits, the spirit of the world and the Spirit of God,
are engaged in a life-and death
conflict with one another.
Hence it is that God has always called upon His people to separate
themselves from the
world, and to live as pilgrims whose treasure and whose heart are in
heaven. But is this what is really
seen amongst Christians? Who shall dare to say so? When they have
attained to a measure of unblamableness
in walk and assurance of heaven, most Christians consider that they are
at liberty to
enjoy the world as fully as others. There is little to be seen of true
heavenly-mindedness in
conversation and walk, in disposition and endeavor. Is not this the case
just because the fulness of the
Spirit is so little enjoyed and sought for? Nothing but light can drive
out darkness; and nothing but
the Spirit of heaven can expel the spirit of the world. Where a man does
not surrender himself to be
filled with the Spirit of Jesus and the Spirit of heaven, there can be
no other issue than that, Christian
though he may be, he must come under the power of the spirit of the
world. O listen to the piercing
cry that rises from the whole Church of Christ: " Who shall rescue us
from the power of this spirit of
the world? " And let your answer be: " Nothing, no one, save the Spirit
of God. I must be filled with
the Spirit."
III
Think how little there is of steadfastness and growth in faith.
There is nothing of which ministers, and especially those who labor
for the salvation of souls,
have to complain more than that there are so many who for a time are
full of zeal and then fall away.
We see, not only among the young or in times of awakening, but even
among many that have for
years maintained a good confession, that whenever they enter into
another circle of influence, and are
put to the proof by prosperity or any special form of temptation, they
forthwith cease to persevere.
Whence does this unhappy result arise? From nothing but the fact that
the preaching is more with the
wisdom of persuasive words than in demonstration of the Spirit and of
power. Hence their faith also
stands in the wisdom and work of man rather than in the power of God. So
long as such people have
the benefit of earnest and instructive preaching, they continue to
stand; whenever they lose it, they
begin to backslide. It is because the current preaching is so little in
the demonstration of the Spirit
that souls are brought so little into contact with the living God. For
the same reason, far too much of
the current faith is not in the power of God. Even the Word of God which
ought always only to be a
guide pointing towards God Himself becomes all too frequently a veil
with the study of which the
soul becomes occupied, and is thus kept back from meeting with God. The
Word, and preaching, and
means of grace become a hindrance in place of a help if they are not in
demonstration of the Spirit.
All external means of grace are things that inevitably change and fade.
It is the Spirit alone that
works a faith which stands in the power of God, and so remains strong
and unwavering.
Whence comes it that there are so many who do not continue to stand?
Let the answer of God
to this question penetrate deeply into our hearts. There is a grave lack
of the demonstration of the
Spirit. Let every sad discovery of congregations, or of smaller circles,
or of individuals that do not
remain steadfast, or that do not grow in grace, serve as a summons to us
to acknowledge that the full
blessing of Pentecost is lost. This is what we long for and must have
from God. Let all that is within
us begin to thirst and cry out: " Come from the four winds, thou Spirit
of God, and breathe upon these
dead souls, that they may live."
IV
Think how little there is of power for service amongst the unconverted.
What an immense host of workers there is in Christian countries. How
varied and unceasing
is the preaching of the Word. Sunday School teachers are to be numbered
by hundreds of thousands.
How great is the number of Christian parents that make their children
acquainted with the Word of
God and would fain also bring them to the Lord as a Savior. Yet how
widespread is the
acknowledgment of the little fruit that springs from all this work. How
many there are who,
notwithstanding all they hear, and in spite of the fact that they are by
no means indifferent, are yet
never laid hold of with power and helped to make a definite choice of
salvation. How many also there
are who from youth to old age are conversant with the Word of God but
are never seized by it in the
depths of their heart. They find it good, and pleasing, and instructive
to attend church, but they have
never felt the power of the Word as a hammer, and a sword, and a fire.
The reason why they are so
little disturbed is that the preaching they listen to is so little in
demonstration of the Spirit and of
power. Alas! There is evidence enough that there is but too great lack
of the full blessing of
Pentecost.
Does the blame for this issue attach to preachers or to
congregations? My belief is that it
belongs to both together. The preachers are the offspring of the
Christian community. By the children
we are enabled to see whether the mother is healthy or not. Preachers
are very dependent on the life
that is in their congregations. When a congregation finds satisfaction
in the merely acceptable and
instructive preaching of a young minister, it encourages him to go
forward on the same path, whilst
he should rather be helped by its elder or more advanced believers to
seek earnestly the demonstration
of the Spirit. When a minister does not lead his congregation, either in
public worship or in private
prayer, really to expect everything from the Spirit of God, then he is
tempted, both for himself and his
people, to put confidence in the wisdom of man and the work of man. O
that we could lay it to heart,
that, in the midst of all our lamentation over increasing worldliness of
spirit and widespread
indifference, the great cause of all impenitence is the lack of the full
blessing of Pentecost! This alone
gives power from on high which can break down and quicken again the hard
hearts of men.
V
Think how little preparedness there is for self- sacrifice in behalf of
the extension of the
Kingdom of God.
When the Lord Jesus at His ascension promised the Holy Spirit, it was
as a power in us to
work for Him. " Ye shall receive power, when the Holy Spirit is come
upon you, and ye shall be My
witnesses unto the uttermost parts of the earth." The aim of the
Pentecostal blessing from the King in
heaven was simply to complete the equipment of His servants for His work
as King upon the earth.
No sooner did the Spirit descend upon them than they began to witness
for Him. The Spirit filled
them with the desire and the impulse, with the courage and the power, to
brave all hostility and
danger, to endure all suffering and persecution, if only they could
succeed in making Jesus known as
a Savior. The Spirit of Pentecost was that true missionary Spirit which
seeks to win the whole world
for Jesus Christ. It is often said in our days that the missionary
spirit is so much on the increase. Yet
when we reflect carefully how little effort is expended on the
missionary enterprise in comparison
with what we bestow on our own interests, we shall see at once how
feebly this question is still
kindled in our hearts: " What more can I still sacrifice for Jesus? He
offered Himself for me. I will
offer myself wholly for Him and His work." It has been well said that
the Lord measures our gifts not
according to what we give, but according to what we retain. He who
stands beside the treasury and
observes what is cast into it still finds many who, like the widow, cast
in all their living. But, alas!
how many are there who with their five shillings or their five pounds
have given only what they could
never miss and what costs them little or no sacrifice. How far different
would it be if the full blessing
of Pentecost began to flow in. How would the hearts of men burn with
love to Jesus, and out of very
joy be impelled to give everything that He might be known as a Savior
all around, and that all might
know His love.
Brother, contemplate the condition of the Church on earth, of the
Christian community
around you, of your own heart, and then say if there is not grave reason
for the cry: " The full
blessing of Pentecost: how little is it known." Ponder the present lack
of sanctification, of separation
from the world, of steadfastness amongst professing Christians, of
conversions amongst the unsaved,
and of self-sacrifice for the kingdom of God, and let the sad reality
deepen in your soul the conviction
that the Church is at present suffering from one great evil, and that
this is her lack of the blessing of
Pentecost. There can be no healing of her breaches, no restoration from
her fall, no renewing of her
power, except by this one remedy namely, her being filled with the
Spirit of God.
Let us then never cease to speak, think, mourn, and pray over this
trouble until this "one thing
needful " becomes the one thing that occupies our hearts. The
restoration is not easy. It will perhaps
not come all at once: it may not come speedily. The disciples of Jesus
required every day with Jesus
for three long years to prepare them for it. Let us not be unduly
discouraged if the transformation we
long for does not take place immediately. Let us feel the need and lay
it to heart. Let us continue
instant in prayer. Let us stand fast in faith. The blessing of Pentecost
is the birthright of the Church,
the pledge of our inheritance, some thing that belongs to us here on the
earth. Faith can never be put
to shame. Cleaving to Jesus with purpose of heart can never be in vain.
The hour will surely come
when, if we believe perseveringly in Him, out of our hearts too will
flow rivers of living water. Amen.
CHAPTER #5
(Listen
to Chapter #5)
HOW THE BLESSING IS HINDERED
Then said Jesus unto His disciples: If any man would come after
Me, let him deny himself,
and take up his cross, and follow Me. For whosoever would save his life
shall lose it. and
whosoever shall lose his life for My sake shall find it." Matthew
16: 24,25.
THERE are many who seek the full blessing of Pentecost long and
earnestly and yet do not
find it. Often the question is put as to what may be the cause of this
failure. To this inquiry more than
one answer may be given. Sometimes the solution of the problem points in
the direction of one or
another sin which is still permitted. Worldliness, lovelessness, lack of
humility, ignorance of the
secret of walking in the way of faith these, and indeed many more
causes, may also be often
mentioned with justice. There are, however, many people who think that
they have come to the Lord
with what of these sources of failure still remains in them, and have
sincerely confessed them and put
them away, and yet complain that the blessing does not come. For all
such it is particularly necessary
to point out that there remains still one great hindrance namely, the
root from which all other
hindrances have their beginning. This root is nothing else than our
individual self, the hidden life of
Self with its varied forms of self- seeking, self-pleasing,
self-confidence, and self- satisfaction. The
more earnestly anyone strives to obtain the blessing and would fain know
what prevents him, the
more certainly will he be led to the discovery that it is here the great
evil lies. He himself is his worst
foe: he must be liberated from himself; the self-life to which he clings
must be utterly lost. Only then
can the life of God entirely fill him.
That is what is taught us in the words of the Lord Jesus to Peter.
Peter had uttered such a
glorious confession of his Lord, that Jesus said to him: " Blessed art
them, Simon Bar-Jonah: for flesh
and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in
heaven." But when the Lord
began to speak of His death by crucifixion, the self-same Peter was
seduced by Satan to say: " Be it
far from Thee, Lord: this shall never be unto Thee." Thereupon the Lord
said to him that not only
must He Himself lay down His life, but that this same sacrifice was to
be made by every disciple.
Every disciple must deny himself and take up his cross in order that he
himself may be crucified and
put to death on it. He that would fain save his life will lose it; and
he that is prepared to lose his life
for Christ’s sake will find it.
You see, then, what the Lord here teaches and requires. Peter had
learned through the Father
to know Christ as the Son of God, but he did not yet know Him as the
Crucified One. Of the absolute
necessity of the Cross, and death on the Cross, he as yet knew nothing.
It may be so with the
Christian. He knows the Lord Jesus as his Savior; he desires to know Him
better, yea, fully; but he
does not yet understand that for this end it is necessary that he must
have a deeper discernment of the
death of the Cross as a death which he himself must die; that he must
actually deny, and hate, and
lose his life his whole life and being in the world ere he can receive
the full life of God.
This requirement is hard and difficult. And why is this so? Why should a
Christian be called
upon always to deny himself, his own feeling, and will, and pleasure?
Why must he part with his life
that life to maintain which a man is prepared to make any sacrifice? Why
should a man hate and lose
his life? The answer is very simple. It is because that life is so
completely under the power of sin end
death that it has to be utterly denied and sacrificed. The self-life
must be wholly taken away to make
room for the life of God. He that would have the full, the overflowing
life of God, must utterly deny
and lose his own life.
You see it now, do you not? There is only one great stumbling-block
in the way of the full
blessing of Pentecost. It lies in the fact that two diverse things
cannot at one and the same time
occupy the very same place. Your own life and the life of God cannot
fill the heart at the same time.
Your life hinders the entrance of the life of God. When your own life is
cast out, the life of God will
fill you. So long as I myself am still something, Jesus Himself can not
be everything. My life must be
expelled; then the Spirit of Jesus will flow in. Let every seeker of the
full blessing of Pentecost accept
this principle and hold it fast. The subject is of such importance that
I should like to make it still
clearer by pointing out the chief lessons which these words of the Lord
Jesus teach us.
I
Our life, our individual self, is entirely and completely under the
power of sin.
When God created the angels and man, He gave them a separate
personality, a power over
themselves, with the intention that they should of their own free will
present and offer up that life,
that individual self, to Him, in order that He in turn might fill them
with His life and His glory. This
was to be the highest blessed ness of the creature. It was to be a
vessel filled with the life and the
perfection of God. The whole Fall alike of angels and of inert consisted
of nothing but the perversion
of their life, their will, their personality, away from God, in order to
please themselves. This self-exaltation
was the pride that changed the angels into demons and cast them out of
heaven into hell.
This pride was the infernal poison that the serpent breathed into the
ear and the heart of Eve. Man
turned himself away from God to find delight in himself and the world.
His life, his whole
individuality, was perverted and withdrawn from the control of God that
he might seek and serve
himself. It was no wonder that Jesus said: " You must hate, you must
utterly lose that life, ere the full
life of the Spirit of God can be yours. To the minutest details, always
and in everything, you must
deny that self -life; otherwise the life of God cannot possibly fill
you. He that will come after Me, let
him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow ME."
A deep conviction of the entire corruption of our nature, manifesting
itself in the fact that
even the Christian still pleases himself in many things, is an
experience that is still lacking in many
people. It appears to them both strange and harsh, when we say that in
nothing is the Christian free to
follow his own feeling, that self-denial is a requirement that must
prevail in every sphere of life and
without any exceptions. The Lord has never withdrawn His words: " He
that forsaketh not all that he
hath cannot be My disciple, cannot walk with Me, cannot be as I."
II
Our own life must be utterly cast aside to make full room for the life
of God.
At the time of his conversion the young Christian has but little
understanding of this
requirement. He receives the seed of the new life into his heart while
the natural life is still strong. It
was still thus with Peter when the Lord addressed to him the words that
have been quoted. He was a
disciple, but, alas! how defective and incomplete. When his Lord was to
die, instead of denying
himself, he denied his Lord. But that grievous failure brought him at
last to that despair of himself
which caused him to go out and weep bitterly, and so prepared him for
losing entirely his own life
and for being wholly filled with the life of Jesus.
This, accordingly, is the point to which we must all in the long-run
come. So long as a
Christian imagines that in some things for example, in his eating and
drinking, in the spending of his
time or money, in his thinking and speaking about others he has still
the right and the liberty to
follow his own wishes, to please himself, to maintain his own life, he
cannot possibly attain to the full
blessing of Pentecost.
My brethren, it is an unspeakably holy and glorious thing that a man
can be filled with the
Spirit of God. It demands inevitably that the present occupant and
governor of the heart, our
individual self, shall himself be cast out, and that everything within
it, everything wholly and entirely,
shall be surrendered into the hands of the new Inhabitant, the Spirit of
God. Would that we could
understand that the joy and power of being filled with the Spirit will
come of themselves when once
we comply with the first and principal condition namely, that He alone
shall be acknowledged as our
Life and our Leader.
III
It is once for all impossible for the Christian to bring about this
great transformation in
himself.
At no stage of our spiritual career are the power and the
deceitfulness of our individual self
and the self-life more manifest than in the attempt to grasp the full
blessing of Pentecost. Many people
endeavor to appropriate this blessing, and that by a great variety of
efforts. They do not succeed, and
they are not able to discover the reason why. They forget that Self-will
can never cast out Self-will:
that Self can never really mortify itself. Happy is the man who is
brought up to the point of
acknowledging his helplessness and impotence. He will here specially
need to deny himself, and so
cease to expect anything from his own life and strength, but will rather
lay himself down in the
presence of the Lord as one who is alike impotent and dead, that he may
really receive the blessing
from Him.
It was not Peter that prepared himself for the day of Pentecost or
brought down the
Pentecostal blessing from heaven; it was his Lord that did all this for
him. His part was to despair of
himself and yield himself to his Lord to accomplish in him what He had
promised. Hence also it is
your part, believer, while yielding obedience to this call, to deny
yourself, and to lose your own life,
and in presence of the Lord to sink down in your nothingness and
impotence. Accustom yourself to
set your heart before Him in deep humility, and silent patience, and
childlike submission. The
humility that is prepared to be nothing, the patience that will wait for
Him and His time, the
submission that will yield itself wholly that He may do what seemeth Him
good, is all that you can do
to show that you are ready to lose your life. Jesus summons you to
follow Him. Remember how He
first sacrificed His will, and when He had laid down His life into the
hands of the Father, and went
down into the grave, waited till God raised Him again to life. Be you in
like manner ready to lay
down your life in weakness, and be assured that God will raise it up
again in power with the fulness
of the Spirit. Have done with the strength of mere personal efforts;
abandon the dominion of your
own power of apprehension. " Not by might, nor by power, but by My
Spirit, saith the Lord."
IV
It is the surrender of faith to Jesus in His self-humiliation and death
that opens the way to the
full blessing of Pentecost.
You of course say at once: "Who is sufficient for these things? Who
can sacrifice everything
and die and lay down his life utterly as Jesus did? To man such a
surrender is impossible." My reply
is that it is indeed so. But "with God all things are possible." You
cannot literally follow Jesus, and
like Him go down into death and the grave. That ever remains beyond your
power. Never will our
individual self yield itself up to death or rest quietly in the grave.
But hear the glad tidings. In Christ
you have died and have been buried. The power of His dying, of His
willing surrender of His spirit
into the hands of the Father, of His silent resting in the grave, works
in you. In faith in this working,
however little you may understand it - in faith in this working in you
of the spirit and the power of the
death and the life of the Lord Jesus, give up yourself willingly to lose
your life.
For this end, begin to regard the denying of yourself as the first
and most necessary work of
every day. Accept the message I bring you. The great hindrance in the
way of the life of Pentecost is
the self-life. Believe in the sinfulness, the detestableness, of that
life: not on account of its gross
external sins, but because it sets itself in the place of God; seeks,
and pleases, and honours itself more
than God. Exercise yourself in what Jesus lays upon you, and hate your
own life as your own worst
foe and as the foe of God. Begin to see what the full blessing is that
Jesus has prepared for you and
which He bestowed at Pentecost namely, His own life, His own indwelling;
and count nothing too
precious or too costly to give as an exchange for this pearl of great
price.
Brother, are you really in earnest about having the full blessing of
Pentecost and being filled
with the Spirit of God? Is it your great desire to be made to know what
hinders you from obtaining it?
Take the word of our Lord and keep it in your heart. Take it and go with
it to Himself. He is able to
make you understand, and consider, and experience it. It is He who
baptizes with the Holy Spirit. Let
everything in you that belongs to self be sacrificed to Him, and be
counted as loss, and cast away to
give place to Himself. He who by His death obtained the Spirit, who
prepared Peter for Pentecost in
the fellowship of His suffering, has your guidance in His hands. Trust,
trust Him, your own Jesus. He
baptizes with the Spirit, beyond doubt or question: deny yourself, and
follow Him; lose your own life
and find His. Let Him impart Himself in the place you have hitherto
retained for yourself. From Him
there will flow rivers of living water. Amen.
CHAPTER #6
(Listen
to Chapter #6)
How it is Obtained by Us
" Be not drunken with wine, wherein is riot, but be filled with
the Spirit." Ephesians 5:18.
THE command to be filled with the Spirit is just as peremptory as the
prohibition not to be
drunken with wine. As truly as we are not at liberty to be guilty of the
vice are we bound not to be
disobedient to the positive injunction. The same God who calls upon, us
to live in sobriety urges us
with equal earnestness to be filled with the Spirit. His command is
tantamount to a promise: a sure
pledge that He Himself will give what He would fain see us possess. With
full confidence in this fact,
let us in all simplicity ask for the way in which in this respect we
should live in the will of God, as
those who would be filled with the Spirit. I desire now to suggest to
those who really long for this
blessing some directions whereby they may obtain what is prepared for
them.
I
The full blessing of Pentecost is the inheritance of all the children of
God.
This is the first principle we have to enunciate. There are many of
God’s children who do not
fully believe this. They imagine that the day of Pentecost was only the
birthday feast of the Church,
and that it was thus a time of blessing and of power which was not
destined to endure. They do not
reflect on the command to be filled with the Spirit. The result is that
they never with earnestness seek
to receive the full blessing. They take their ease and remain content
with the weak and defective life
in which the Church of the day exists.
Is not this the case with you, my reader? Far be it from us. In order
to carry on her work in
the world, the Church requires the full blessing. To please your Lord
and to live a life of holiness, and
joy, and power, you too have need of it. To manifest His presence, and
indwelling, and glory in you,
Jesus counts it necessary that you should be filled with the Spirit.
Believe firmly that the full blessing
of Pentecost is a sacred reality. A child of God may and must have it.
Take time to contemplate it and
to suffer yourself to be fully possessed by the thought of its glorious
significance and power. A firm
confidence that the blessing is actually within our reach is the first
step towards obtaining it and a
powerful impulse in the pursuit.
II
I do not as yet have this blessing.
This is the second step towards it. You may perhaps put the question
why it should be
necessary to cherish this conviction. I will tell you briefly the
reasons why I consider it of importance.
The first is that there are many Christians who think that they already
have the Holy Spirit,
and that all they require is to be more faithful in the endeavor to know
and to obey Him. They think
that they are already standing in God’s grace, and that they only need
to make a better use of the life
they possess. They imagine that they have all that is necessary for
continued growth. On the contrary,
it is any deep conviction that such souls are in a sickly state and that
they have need of a healing as
divine and effective as that which the blind and lame received from the
Lord on earth. Accordingly,
just as the first condition of my recovery from disease is the knowledge
that I am sick, so it is
absolutely necessary for them to discover and acknowledge that they do
not live the life of Pentecost,
that they do not walk in the fulness and the joy of the Spirit, that
they do not possess the full blessing
which is indispensable for them if they are to please God in everything.
Once this first conviction is made thoroughly clear to them, they
will be prepared for another
consideration namely, that they ought to acknowledge the guiltiness of
their condition. They ought to
see that if they have not yet rendered obedience to the command to " be
filled with the Spirit," this
defect is to be ascribed to sluggishness, and self-satisfaction, and
unbelief. They should be induced to
acknowledge with shame that they have despised what God had prepared for
them. When once the
confession that they have not yet received the full blessing is deeply
rooted in them, there will spring
from it a stronger impulse to attain to it. Take, then, this thought and
let it work in you with power:
"No: it is true that I do not as yet have the full blessing."
III
The thought that will come next in succession is: This blessing is for
me.
I have spoken of those who suppose that the full blessing of
Pentecost was only for the first
Christian community. There are others who are willing enough to
acknowledge that it was intended
also for the Church of later times but still think that all are not
entitled to expect it. Eminent believers,
the leaders of the Church, and such as have much leisure and abundant
opportunity to occupy their
minds with such attainments, may well cherish the hope of receiving this
blessing, but it is not to be
expected by ordinary members of the churches. Any one of these might
quite reasonably say: "My
unfavorable circumstances, my unfortunate disposition, my lack of real
ability, and similar
difficulties, make it impossible for me to realize this ideal. God will
not expect this at my hands: He
has not destined me to obtain it."
O soul, do not permit yourself to be deceived by such shallow views.
All the members of a
body, even to the very least, must be healthy before the body as a whole
can be healthy. The
indwelling, the fulness of the Spirit, is nothing but the entire
healthfulness of the body of Christ. Be
assured that, even though you are actually the most insignificant member
of it, the blessing is for you.
In your own little measure you can at least be full. In this respect the
Father makes no exceptions. A
great distinction doubtless prevails in point of gifts, and calling, and
circumstances; but there can be
no distinction in the love of the Father and His desire to see every one
of His children in full health
and in the full enjoyment of the Spirit of adoption. Learn, then, to
express and to repeat over again the
conviction: " This blessing is for me. My Father desires to have me that
He may fill me with His
Spirit. The blessing lies before me, to be taken with my full consent. I
will no longer despise by
unbelief what falls to me as my birthright. With my whole heart I will
say: This blessing is for me."
IV
I cannot grasp this blessing in my own power.
Whenever a Christian begins to strive for this blessing, he generally
makes a variety of efforts
to reach after the faith, and obedience, and humility, and submission
which are the conditions of
obtaining it. Then, when he does not succeed, he is tempted to blame
himself, and if he does not
become utterly discouraged, he rouses himself to still stronger effort
and greater zeal. All this
struggling is not without its value and its use. It has its use,
however, in other ways than are
commonly anticipated. It does the very work that the law does that is to
say, it brings us to the
knowledge of our entire impotence; it leads us to that despair of
ourselves in which we become
willing to give to God the place that belongs to Him. This lesson is
entirely indispensable. "I can
neither bestow this blessing on myself nor take it. It is God alone that
must work it in me."
The blessing of Pentecost is a supernatural gift, a wonderful act of
God in the soul. The life of
God in every soul is just as truly a work of God as when that life was
first manifested in Jesus Christ.
A Christian can do as little to bring the full life of the Spirit to
fruition in his soul as the Virgin Mary
did to conceive her supernatural child. Like her, he can only receive it
as the gift of God. The
impartation of this heavenly blessing is as entirely an act of God as
the resurrection of Christ from the
dead was His divine work. As Christ Jesus had wholly and entirely to go
down unto death, and lay
aside utterly the life He had, in order to receive a new life from God,
so must the believer abandon all
power and hope of his own to receive this full blessing as a free gift
of divine Omnipotence. This
acknowledgment of our utter impotence, this descent into true
self-despair, is indispensable if we
would enjoy this supreme blessing.
V
I must have this blessing at any cost.
To get possession of the pearl of great price, the merchant man had
to sell all that he had. The
full blessing of Pentecost is to be obtained at no smaller price. He
that would have it must sell all,
must forsake all: sin to its smallest item, the love of the world in its
most innocent forms, self-will in
its simplest and most natural expressions, every faculty of our nature,
every moment of our life, every
pleasure that feeds our self-complacency, every exercise of our body,
soul, and spirit all must be
surrendered to the power of the Spirit of God. In nothing can
independent control or independent
force have a place: everything, everything, I say must be under the
leading of the Spirit. One must
indeed say: "Cost what it may, I am determined to have this blessing."
Only the vessel that is utterly
empty of everything can be filled and overflow with this living water.
We know that there is oftentimes a great gulf betwixt the will and
the deed. Even when God
has wrought the willing, the doing does not always come at once. But it
will come wherever a man
surrenders himself to the will which God has wrought, and openly
expresses his consent in the
presence of God. This, accordingly, is what must be done by the soul who
intends to be sincerely
ready to part with everything, even though he feels that he has no power
to accomplish it. The selling
price is not always paid at the moment; nevertheless, the purchaser may
become the possessor as soon
as the sale is concluded and security is given for the payment. my
brother, this very day speak the
word: " Cost what it may, I will have this blessing." Jesus is surety
that you will have power to
abandon everything. Express your decision in the presence of God with
confidence and perseverance.
Repeat it before your own conscience and say: "I am a purchaser of the
pearl of great price: I have
offered everything to obtain the full blessing of Pentecost. I have said
to God that I must, I will have
it. By this decision I abide. I must, I will have it."
VI
In faith that God accepts my surrender and bestows this blessing upon
me, I appropriate it for
myself.
There is a great difference betwixt the appropriation of a blessing
by faith and the actual
experience of it. It is because Christians do not understand this that
they often become discouraged,
when they do not at once experience the feeling and the enjoyment of
what is promised them.
Whenever in response to the offer of Christ you have said that you
forsake all, and count it but loss
for the full blessing of Pentecost, then from that moment you have to
believe that He receives your
offer and that He bestows upon you the fulness of the Spirit. Yet it may
easily be that you cannot at
that crisis trace any marked change in your experience. It is as if
everything in you remained in its old
condition. Now, however, is just the very time to persevere in faith.
Learn by faith to be as sure as if
you had seen it written in heaven that God has accepted your surrender
of everything as a certain and
completed transaction. In this faith look upon yourself as a man who is
known to God as one that has
sold everything to obtain this heavenly treasure. Believe that God has
in heaven bestowed upon you
the fulness of the Spirit. In this faith regard yourself as on the way
to know the full blessing also in
feeling and experience. Believe that God will order this blessing to
break forth and be revealed in
you. In this faith let your life be a life of joyful thanksgiving and
expectation. God will not disappoint
you.
VII
Now I count upon God and wait upon Him to reveal truly within me the
blessing which He has
bestowed upon me.
Faith must lead me to the actual inheritance of the promise, to the
experience and enjoyment
of it. Do not rest content with a belief that does not lead to
experience. Rest in God by faith in the full
assurance that He can make Himself known to you in a manner that is
truly divine. At times the
whole process may appear to you too great and too wonderful, and really
impossible. Be not afraid.
The more clearly you discern the amazing elements in the fact that you
on your part have said to the
Eternal Holy God that He on His part may have you to make you full of
His Holy Spirit here on
earth, the more shall you feel what a miracle of the grace of God it
must be. There may be in you
things you are not aware of, which hinder the breaking forth of the
blessing. God is bent on putting
them aside. Let them be consumed in the fire of strong burning desire.
Let them, be annihilated in the
flame of God’s countenance and His love. Let your expectation be fixed
upon the Lord your God. He
who in a frail woman revealed the divine life in the Infant Jesus, He
that raised up the dead Jesus to
the life of glory, He can, He will, indeed just as miraculously bring
this heavenly blessing to fruition
in you, so that you may be filled with the Holy Spirit and that you may
know, not by reasoning but
by experience, that you have actually received the Holy Spirit.
Beloved brother, thou who readest all this, give answer, I entreat
thee, to the summons I bring
thee. God promises, God desires to make you full of the Holy Spirit. He
would fain have your whole
nature and life under the power of the Holy Spirit. He asks if you on
your part are willing, if you
really desire to have it. Pray let there be in your answer no uncertain
sound, but let all that is within
you cry out: "Yea, Lord, with all my heart." Let this promise of your
God become the chief element
in your life, the most precious, the chief, the only thing you seek. Do
not be content to think and pray
over it, but this very day enter into a transaction and a compact with
God that will admit of no doubt
concerning the choice you have made.
When once you have made this choice, cleave firmly to what is the
chief element in it namely,
the faith that expects this blessing as a miracle of divine Omnipotence.
The more earnestly you
exercise that faith, the more will it teach you that your heart must be
entirely emptied of everything
and set free from every fetter, to be filled with the Spirit, to be
occupied by the indwelling Christ.
Contemplate yourself in faith as a man betwixt whom and God a firm
compact has been made that
you must receive the full blessing. You may take it for granted that it
will surely come. Amen.
CHAPTER #7
(Listen
to Chapter #7)
HOW IT MAY BE KEPT
"But ye, praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in the love
of God.... Now unto Him who is
able to guard you from stumbling, to the only God our Savior, be glory
for evermore. Amen."
Jude 21, 24.
How can one who has the full blessing of Pentecost lose it again?
Yes: undoubtedly. God
does not bestow this boon with such constraint that a man retains it
whether he will or not. No: this
blessing also is intrusted to him as a talent which must be used; and
only by use does it become
secure and win success. Just as the Lord Jesus after He was baptized
with the Holy Spirit had to be
perfected by obedience and submission to the leading of the Spirit, so
the Christian who has received
the blessing of Pentecost has to see to it that he guards safely the
deposit that has been intrusted to
him.
When we inquire how we can keep it, Scripture points us to the fact
that our keeping of it
consists in our intrusting it to the Lord to be kept by Him. Paul places
these two ideas along side one
another in his second letter to Timothy: "He is able to keep my deposit"
(2 Tim 1:12, 14. K.V.
margin); "That good thing which was committed unto thee, guard through
the Holy Spirit which
dwelleth in us." Jude also, after saying, "Keep yourselves in the love
of God," adds the doxology: "
Unto Him that is able to keep us be glory." (Jude 21, 24.) The main
secret of success in the
preservation of the blessing is the exercise of a humble dependence on
the Lord who keeps us and on
the Spirit by whom we ourselves are kept in close fellow ship with Him.
It is with this blessing as
with the manna that fell in the wilderness: it must be renewed from
heaven every day. It is with the
new heavenly life as with the life we live on earth: the fresh air that
sustains it must be drawn in every
moment from without and from above. Let us see how this ever-abiding,
uninterrupted keeping takes
place.
I
Jesus, who gave us the blessing, will keep it for us.
Jesus is the Keeper of Israel. This is His name and this is His work.
God not only created the
world but also keeps and upholds it. Jesus is not content with merely
giving the blessing of Pentecost:
He will also maintain it every moment. The Holy Spirit is not a power
that in any sense is
subordinate to us, that is entrusted to us, and that we must use; He is
a power that is over and above
us, that possesses and energizes us, a power by which Jesus in heaven
will carry forward His work
from moment to moment. Our right place and our proper attitude must
always be that of the deepest
dependence, a sinking down in our own nothingness and impotence. Our
chief concern is to let Jesus
do His work within us.
So long as the soul does not discern this truth there will always be
in it a certain dread of
receiving the full blessing. Such a one will be inclined to say: " I
shall not be able to continue in that
holy life. I shall not be able to dwell always on such a lofty plane."
But these thoughts only show
what a feeble grasp such a one has of the great reality. When Jesus
comes by the Spirit to dwell in my
heart and to live in me, He will actually work out the maintenance of
the blessing and regard my
whole inner life as His special care. He who believes this truth sees
that the life in the joy of the
blessing of Pentecost, while it can never be relieved of the necessity
of watchfulness, is a life that is
freed from anxiety and ought to be characterized by continued gladness.
The Lord has come into His
holy temple. There He will abide and work out everything. He desires
only this one thing namely,
that the soul shall know and honour Him as its faithful Shepherd, its
Almighty Keeper. Jesus, who
gives the blessing of Pentecost, will certainly keep it in us.
II
Jesus will keep the blessing, as He gave it, by faith.
The law that prevails at every stage in the progress of the kingdom of
God is: "Be it unto you
according to your faith." The faith that in the first reception of the
Lord Jesus was as small as a
grain of mustard-seed must, in the course of the Christian life, becomes
always so enlarged that it
shall see more and receive and enjoy more of the fulness that is in the
Lord. Paul wrote to the
Galatians: " I live, yet no longer I, but Christ liveth in me: and that
life which I now live in the flesh I
live in faith." (Gal 2:20.) His faith was as broad and boundless and
unceasing as were the needs of his
life and work. In everything and at all times, without ceasing, he
trusted in Jesus to do all. His faith
was as wide and abundant as the energy that flows from Jesus for the
enrichment of His people is
mighty and glorious. He had given up his whole life to Jesus: he himself
lived no longer. By a
continuous and unrestricted faith he gave to Jesus the liberty of
energizing his life without ceasing
and without limitation.
The fulness of the Spirit is not a gift that is bestowed once for all
as a part of the heavenly life.
No: it is not so. It is rather a constantly flowing stream of the river
of the water of life that issues from
beneath the throne of God and of the Lamb. It is an uninterrupted
communication of the life and the
love of Jesus, the most personal and intimate association of the Lord
with His own upon the earth. It
is by the faith which discerns this truth, and assents to it, and
cleaves to it with joy, that Jesus will
certainly do His work of keeping.
III
Jesus keeps this blessing in fellowship with Himself.
The single aim of the blessing of Pentecost is to reveal Jesus as a
Savior, so that He may
exhibit His power to redeem souls in us and by us here in the world. The
Spirit did not come merely
to occupy the place of Jesus, but only and wholly to unite the disciples
with their Lord more closely,
and deeply, and completely than when He was on earth. The power from on
high did not come as a
power which they were thenceforth to reckon as their own: the power was
inseparably bound up with
the Lord Jesus and the Holy Spirit. Every operation of the power was a
direct working of God in
them. The intercourse which the disciples had with Jesus on earth, the
following of Him, the reception
of His teaching, the doing of His will, the participation in His
suffering all this was to be still their
experience, only in greater measure.
Not otherwise, accordingly, is it with us. The Spirit in us will
always glorify Jesus, will
always make it manifest that He alone is to be Lord, that all which is
glorious comes only from Him.
Close communion with God in the inner chamber, faithfulness in searching
His Word and seeking to
know His will in the Scriptures, sacrifice of time and business and
intercourse with men, to bring us
into touch with the Savior, all this is indispensable for the keeping of
the blessing. Jesus keeps us
through our intercourse with Him, being occupied with Himself. He that
loves His fellowship above
everything shall have the experience of His keeping.
IV
Jesus keeps the blessing in the pathway of obedience.
When the Lord Jesus promised the Holy Spirit, He said three times
over that the blessing was
for the obedient. "If ye love Me, ye will keep My commandments: and I
will pray the Father, and He
shall give you another Comforter." (John 14:15,16; cf. vv. 21, 23.)
Peter speaks of " the Holy Spirit
whom God hath given to them that obey Him." (Acts 5: 32) Of our Lord
Himself we read that "He
became obedient unto death. Wherefore also God highly exalted Him."
Obedience is what God
cannot but demand. It is the only true relation and blessedness of the
creature. It is obedience that
attains what was lost by the Fall. It is the power of obedience Jesus
came to restore. It is His own life.
Apart from obedience the blessing of Pentecost can neither come nor
abide.
There are two kinds of obedience. There is one that is very
defective, like that of the disciples
previously to Pentecost. They desired from the heart to do what the Lord
said, but they had not the
power. Yet the Lord accounted their desire and purpose as obedience. On
the other hand, there is a
more abundant life, which comes with the fulness of the Spirit, where
new power is given for full
obedience. The characteristic of the full blessing of Pentecost, and the
way to keep it, is a surrender to
obedience in the minutest details. To listen to the voice of Jesus
Himself, to the voice of the Spirit, to
the voice of Conscience, this is the way in which Jesus leads us. The
method of making the life of
Pentecost within us sure and strong is to know Jesus and to love Him,
and receive Him in that aspect
which made Him well-pleasing to the Father namely, as the Obedient One.
The whole Jesus becomes
the life of the soul.
It is the exercise of this obedience that gives to the soul a
wonderful firmness and confidence
and power to trust God and to expect all from Him. A strong will is
necessary for a strong faith, and it
is in obedience that the will is strengthened to trust God to the
uttermost. This is the only way in
which the Lord can lead us to ever richer blessing.
V
Jesus keeps the blessing in fellowship with His people.
At the outset of His seeking for the full blessing a Christian thinks
for the most part only of
himself. Even after he receives the blessing as a new experience, he is
still rather disposed to see
merely how he can keep it safely for himself. But very speedily the
Spirit will teach him that a
member of the body cannot enjoy the flow of healthful life in a state of
separation from others. He
begins to under stand that " there is one body and one Spirit." The
unity of the body must be realized
to enjoy the fulness of the Spirit.
This principle teaches us some very important lessons about the
condition on which the
blessing received can be maintained. All that you have belongs to
others, and must be employed for
their service. All that they have belongs to you, and is in turn
indispensable for you. The Spirit of the
body of the Lord can work effectively only when the members of it work
in unison. You should
confess to others what the Lord has done for you, ask their
intercession, seek their fellowship, and
help them with what the Lord has given you. You should lay to heart the
unhappy condition of the
enfeebled Christian Church in our days, yet not in the spirit of
judgment or bitterness, but rather in
the spirit of humility and prayer, of gentleness and willingness to
serve. Jesus will teach you what is
meant by the saying that " love is the greatest ;" and by the very
intensity of your surrender to the
welfare of His Church He will both keep and increase the blessing in
you.
VI
Jesus keeps the blessing in the service of His kingdom.
We have said more than once that the Spirit came as the power for
work. The very name of
Jesus Christ involves entire consecration to God’s work, utter devotion
to the rescue of souls. It was
for this end alone that He lived: it is only for this cause that He
lives in heaven. How can anyone ever
dream of having the Spirit of Christ otherwise than as a Spirit which
aims at the work of God and the
salvation of souls? It is an impossibility. Hence from the outset we
must keep these two aspects of the
Spirit’s operation closely knit together. What the Spirit works in us is
for the sake of what He works
by us. Our seeking for the blessing will miscarry, our initial
possession of the blessing will be lost, if
we do not as the dominant feature of our life present ourselves to be
used by the Spirit in the doing of
His work.
The blessing of Pentecost does not always come with equal power and
not always at once.
God often gives preparatory experiences and awakenings that must lead to
the full blessing. Every
attempt to keep such gracious gifts for ourselves will entail loss. He
that does not follow his own
inclination, either in being silent or in speaking, but presents himself
to the Lord and waits upon Him
with an undivided spirit, will experience that work, so far from
exhausting or weakening, is the sure
way to keep the treasure.
VII
One thought more. It is as the indwelling Lord that Jesus keeps the
blessing of Pentecost in
us.
Whenever mention is made of Jesus as our Keeper, it is oftentimes
difficult to believe that we
who are upon the earth can really know ourselves to be always, without
interruption, in His hands
and under His power. How much clearer and more glorious does the truth
become when the Spirit
discovers to us that Christ is in us; and that, not only as a tenant in
a house, or water in a glass, in
such a fashion that they continue quite distinct, but rather as the soul
is in the body animating and
moving every part of it, and never to be separated from each other
except by a violent death. Yes: it is
thus that Christ dwells in us, penetrating our whole nature with His
nature. The Holy Spirit came for
the purpose of making Him thus deeply present within us. As the sun is
high in the firmament above
me, and yet by his heat penetrates my bones and marrow and quickens my
whole life, so the Lord
Jesus, who is exalted high in heaven, penetrates my whole nature by His
Spirit in such a way, that all
my willing, and thinking, and feeling are animated by Him. Once this
fact is fully grasped, we no
longer think of an external keeping through a person outside of us in
heaven, but rather become
convinced that our whole individual life is itself quickened and
possessed by One who, not in a
human but in a divine, all-penetrating manner, occupies and fills the
heart. Then we see how natural,
how certain, how blessed it is that the indwelling Jesus keeps the
blessing and always maintains the
fulness of the Spirit.
Brethren, is there anyone amongst you who is longing for this life in
the fulness of blessing,
and yet is afraid to enter upon it, because he knows not how he is to
persevere? Pray listen to what I
say: Jesus will make this blessing continuous and sure. Is there any one
of you who longs for it and
yet cannot understand wherein the secret of it lies? Again listen to me:
the blessing is this that as
Jesus Christ was daily with His disciples in bodily fashion, so He will
by His Spirit every day and
always be your life; yea, live His life in you. No one can fully
understand how things look on the top
of a mountain until he himself has been there. Although you do not
understand everything, yet
believe that the Lord Jesus has sent His Spirit with no other object in
view than just to receive and
keep you in His divine power. Trust Him for this. Let all burdens be
laid aside, and give yourself up
to receive from Him this full blessing of Pentecost as a fountain which
He Himself will cause to
spring up in you unto everlasting life.
Chapter #8
(Listen
to Chapter #8)
HOW IT MAY BE INCREASED
"He that believeth on Me shall never thirst." John 6:35
"He that believeth on Me, out of him shall flow rivers of living
water." John 7:38
Can the full blessing of Pentecost be still further increased? Can
anything that is full become
still fuller? Yes: undoubtedly. It can become so full that it always
overflows. This is especially the
characteristic and law of the blessing of Pentecost.
The words of our blessed Lord Jesus which have been quoted, point us
to a double blessing.
First, Jesus says that he who believes in Him shall never thirst: he
shall always have life in
himself that is to say, the satisfaction of all his needs. Then He
speaks of something that is grander
and more glorious: he that believeth in Him, out of his heart shall flow
rivers of living water to
quench the thirst of others. It is the distinction betwixt full and
overflowing. A vessel may be full and
yet have nothing over for others. When it continues full, and yet has
something over for others, there
must be in it an over-brimming, ever-flowing supply. This is what our
Lord promises to His believing
disciples. At the outset, faith in Him gives them the blessing that they
shall never thirst. But as they
advance and become stronger in faith, it makes them a fountain of water
out of which streams flow to
others. The Spirit who at first only fills us will overflow out of us to
souls around us.
It is with the rivers of living water as with many a fountain on earth.
When we begin to open
them, the stream is weak. The more the water is used, and the more
deeply the source is opened up,
the more strongly does the water flow. I should like to inquire how far
this principle holds good in the
realm of the spiritual life and to discover what is necessary to secure
that the fulness of the Spirit may
constantly flow more abundantly from us. There are several simple
directions which may help us in
reaching this knowledge. Holdfast that which you have.
I
See to it that you do not misunderstand the blessing which God has given
you.
Be sure that you do not form any wrong conceptions of what the full
blessing is. Do not
imagine that the animation, and joy, and power of Pentecost must be felt
and seen immediately. No:
the Church at present is in a dead-and-alive condition, and the
restoration often comes slowly. At
first, indeed, one receives the full blessing only as a seed: the full
life is wrapped up in a little
invisible capsule. The quickened soul has longed for it; he has
surrendered himself unreservedly for
it; he has believed in silence that God has accepted his consecration
and fulfilled His promise. In that
faith he goes on his way, silent and happy, saying to himself: "The
blessing of the fulness of the Spirit
is for me.” But the actual experiences of the blessing did not come as
he had anticipated; or they did
come, but lasted only for a short time. The result was that he began to
fear that his surrender was not
a reality; that he had been rejoicing in what was only a transient
emotion; and that the real blessing
was something greater and more powerful than he had yet received. The
result is that very speedily
the blessing becomes less instead of larger, and he moves farther back
rather than forward through
discouragement on account of his disappointment.
The cause of this condition is simply lack of faith. We are bent on
judging God and His work
in us by sight and feeling. We forget that the whole process is the work
of faith. Even in its highest
revelations in Christians that have made the greatest progress, faith
rests not on what is to be seen of
the work of God or on the experiences of it, but on the work of God as
spiritual, invisible, deeply
hidden, and inconceivable. To you, therefore, my brother, who desirest
in this time of discouragement
to return to the true life according to the promise, my counsel is not
to be greatly surprised if it comes
to you slowly or if it appears to be involved in darkness. If you know
that you have given yourself to
God with a perfect heart, and if you know that God, really and with His
whole heart, waits to fulfil
His promise in you with divine power, then rest in silence before His
face and hold fast your integrity.
Although the cold of winter appears to bury everything in death, say
with the prophet Habakkuk:
"Though the fig-tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the
vines, yet I will rejoice in the Lord,
I will joy in the God of my salvation." (Hab 3:17) Do this, and you
shall know God, and God will
know you. If you are sure that you have set yourself before God as an
empty, separated, purified
vessel, to become full of His Spirit, then continue still to regard
yourself so and keep silence before
Him. If you have believed that God has received you to fill you as a
purified vessel purified through
Jesus Christ and by your entire surrender to Him then abide in this
attitude day by day, and you may
reckon upon it that the blessing will grow and begin to flow. " He that
believeth shall not be
ashamed."
II
Persevere in the entire denial of yourself and the sacrifice of
everything.
If I wish to have a reservoir of water, the greater the excavation I
make for it, the wider the
space I occupy with it, the greater is the quantity of water I can
collect, and the stronger is the stream
that flows from it when the sluices are opened. In your surrender for
sanctification, or for the full
blessing of the Spirit, you have said in truth and uprightness that you
are prepared to sacrifice and
forsake all in order to win this pearl of the kingdom of heaven; and
this consecration was acceptable
to God. But you have not yet fully understood the full import of the
words you have used. The Lord
has still much to teach you concerning what the individual self is, how
deeply rooted in your nature,
how utterly corrupt as well as deeply hidden it is, as the secret source
of many things you both say
and do. Be willing to make room for the Spirit by a constant, daily, and
entire denial of the self-life,
and you may be sure that He will always be willing to come and fill the
empty place. You have
forsaken and sacrificed every thing so far as you know; but keep your
mind open to the teaching of
the Spirit, and He will lead you farther on, and let you see that only
when the entire sacrifice of
everything after the example of Christ comes again to be the rule in His
Church, shall the full
blessing again break forth like an overflowing stream.
It is surprising how sometimes a very little thing may hinder the
continuance in the increase
of the blessing. It may, for example, be a little variance betwixt
friends, in which they show that they
are not willing to forgive and to forbear at once according to the law
of Christ. Or it may be some
unobserved yielding to undue sensitiveness or to the ambition which is
not prepared to take the lowest
place. Or it may be the possession or use of earthly property as if it
were our own. Or it may be some
providing for the flesh in the enjoyment of eating and drinking without
the self-denial which Christ
always expects at our hands every day. Or it may be in connection with
things that are lawful and in
themselves innocent, which, however, do not befit us in our profession
of being led by the Spirit of
God. For here, like the Lord Jesus in His poverty, we are bound to show
that the heavenly portion we
possess is itself sufficient to satisfy all our desires. Or it may be in
connection with doubtful things, in
which we give way too easily to the lust of the flesh.
Christian brother, do you really desire to enjoy the full measure of
the blessing of the Spirit?
Then, before temptation comes, train yourself to understand the
fundamental law of the imitation of
Jesus and of full discipleship namely, Forsake all. Suffer yourself also
to be strengthened and drawn
into the observance of it by the sure promise of the " hundredfold in
this life." A full blessing will be
given you, a measure shaken together and running over.
III
Regard yourself as living only to make others happy.
God is Love. His whole being is nothing but a surrender of Himself in
love to be the life of
the creature, to make the creature participate in His holiness and
blessedness. He blesses and serves
all that lives. His glory as God is that He puts all that He has at the
disposal of His creatures.
Jesus Christ is the Son of God’s love, the Bearer, the Bringer, the
Dispenser of the love. What
God is as invisible in heaven, He was as visible on earth. He came, He
lived, He suffered and died
only to glorify the Father that is, to let it be seen how glorious the
Father in His love is, and to show
that in the Godhead there is no other purpose than to bless men and make
them happy; to make it
manifest that the highest honour and blessedness of any being is to give
and to sacrifice.
The Holy Spirit came as the Spirit of the Father and the Son to make us
partakers of this
divine nature, to shed abroad the love of God in our hearts, to secure
the indwelling of the Son and
His love in our hearts to such an extent that Christ may verily be
formed within us, and that our
whole " inner man " shall bear the impress of His disposition and His
likeness.
Hence, when any soul seeks and receives the fulness of the Spirit,
and desires to have it
increased, is it not perfectly evident that he can enjoy this blessing
only according as he is prepared to
give himself to a life in the service of love? The Spirit comes to expel
the life of self and self-seeking.
The fulness of the Spirit presupposes a willingness to consecrate
ourselves to the blessing of others
and as the servants of all, and that in a constantly increasing and
unreserved measure. The Spirit is
the outflowing of the life of God. If we will but yield ourselves to
Him, He will become rivers of
living water, flowing from the depths of our heart.
Christian brother, if you will have the blessing increased, begin to
live as a man who is left
here on earth only in order that the love of God may work by you. Love
all around you with the love
of God which is in you through the Spirit. Love the children of God
cordially, even the weakest and
most perverse. Exercise and exhibit your love in every possible way.
Love the unsaved. Present
yourself to the Spirit to love Him. Then will love constrain you to
speak, to work, to give, and to
pray. If there is no open door for working, or if you have not the
strength for it, the door of prayer is
always open, and power can be obtained at the mercy-seat. Embrace the
whole world in your love;
for Christ, who is in your heart, belongs also to the heathen. The
Spirit is the power of Christ for
redeeming them. Like God and Jesus and the Spirit, live wholly to bless
others. Then the blessing
shall stream forth and become overflowing.
IV
Let Jesus Christ for your faith be everything.
You know what the Scripture says: " It was the good pleasure of the
Father that IN HIM
should all the fulness dwell, that in all things HE might have the
pre-eminence "; (Col 1:19) and
again: " All the promises of God are IN HIM Yes and IN HIM Amen, to the
glory of God by us." (2
Cor 1: 20) When the Lord spoke of " rivers of living water," He
connected the promise with faith in
Himself: " He that believeth in ME, out of his heart shall flow rivers."
If we only understood that
word "believeth" rightly, we should require no other answer than this to
the question as to how the
blessing may be in creased.
Faith is primarily a seeing by the Spirit that Jesus is nothing but a
flowing fountain of the
divine love, and that the Spirit Himself always flows from Him as the
Bearer of the life that this love
brings and that always streams forth in love. Then it is an embracing of
the promise, an appropriation
of the blessing as it is provided in Christ, a resting in the certainty
of it, and a thanking of God for
what He is yet to do. Thereafter, faith is a keeping open of the soul,
so that Christ can come in with
the blessing and take possession and fill all. Accordingly, faith
becomes the most fervent and
unbroken communion between the soul in which Christ obtains His place
and Christ Himself, who by
the silent, effectual blessing of the Spirit is enthroned in the heart.
Christian brother, pray, learn the lesson that, if you believe, you
shall see the glory of God.
Let every doubt, every weakness, every temptation find you trusting,
rejoicing in Jesus, and
reckoning upon Him always to work all in you. You know that there are
two ways in which a
believer can encounter and strive against sin. One is to endeavor to
ward it off with all his might,
seeking his strength in the Word and in prayer. In this form of the
conflict we use the power of the
will. The other is to turn at the very moment of the temptation to the
Lord Jesus in the silent exercise
of faith and say to Him: " Lord, I have no strength. THOU art my
Keeper." (Ps 71:5) This is the
method of faith." This is the victory that overcometh the world, even
your faith." (1 John 5:4) Yes:
this is indeed " the one thing needful," because it is the only way in
which Jesus, who is in Himself "
The One Thing Needful," can maintain the work of His Spirit in us. It is
by the exercise of faith
without ceasing that the blessing will flow without ceasing.
Christ must be all to us every moment. It is of no avail to me that I
have life on earth unless
that life is renewed every moment by my in-breathing of fresh air. Even
so must God actually renew,
and uphold, and strengthen the divine life in me every moment. He does
this for me in my union with
Christ. Christ is simply the fulness of God, the life of God, the love
of God prepared for us and
communicating itself to us. The Spirit is simply the fulness of Christ,
the life of Christ, the self-communicating
love of Christ, surrounding us as the air surrounds the body. Let us
believe that we
are in Christ, who surrounds us in His heavenly power, longing to make
the rivers of His Spirit flow
forth by us! Let us endeavor to obtain a heart filled with the joyful
assurance that the Almighty Lord
will fulfil His word with power, and that our only choice is to see Him,
to rejoice in Him, and
sacrifice all for Him. Then shall His word become true: " He that
believeth in Me, out of his heart
shall flow rivers of living water." Amen.
CHAPTER #9
(Listen
to Chapter #9)
HOW IT COMES TO ITS FULL MANIFESTATION
"I bow my knees unto the Father "
That He would grant you that ye may be strengthened with power through
His Spirit in the
inward man;
That Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith;
That ye, being rooted and grounded in love, may be strong to know the
love of Christ which
passeth knowledge;
That ye may be filled unto all the fulness of God. Eph 3:14-19.
We have remarked several times that every blessing which God gives is
like a seed with the
power of an indissoluble life hidden in it. Let no one therefore imagine
that to be filled with the Spirit
is a condition of perfectness which leaves nothing more to be desired.
In no sense can this be true. It
was after the Lord Jesus was filled with the Spirit at His baptism He
had to go forth to be still further
perfected by temptations and the learning of obedience. When the
disciples were filled with the Spirit
on the day of Pentecost, this equipment with power from on high was
given to them that they might
carry out the victory over sin in their own lives and all around them.
The Spirit is the Spirit of truth,
and He must guide us into it. It will only be by slow degrees that He
will lead us into the eternal
purpose of God, into the knowledge of Christ, into true holiness, into
full fellowship with God. The
fulness of the Spirit is simply the full preparation for living and
working as a child of God.
When we consider the matter from this point of view, we see at a glance
how entirely
indispensable it is for every child of God to aim at obtaining this
blessing. Then we begin to feel that
this is the very blessing that is to be pressed on the acceptance of the
weak and timid.
We also understand why it is that Paul offers this prayer on which we
are now to meditate, in
behalf of all believers without distinction. He did not regard it as a
spiritual distinction or special
luxury which was intended only for those who were prominent or favored
amongst the children of
God. No: it was for all without distinction, for all who at their
conversion had by faith received the
Holy Spirit, that he prayed. And his request was that by the special,
powerful, and ever-deepening
work of the Spirit, God would bring them to what was their true destiny
namely, to be filled unto all
the fulness of God. This prayer of Paul is everywhere regarded as one of
the most glorious
representations that the Word of God gives of what the life of a
Christian ought to be. Let us then
endeavor to learn what the full revelation and manifestation of this
blessing of the Spirit may become.
I
That the Father would grant you that ye may be strengthened with power
through the Spirit.
That these Christians had received the Spirit when they believed in
Christ is clear from a
previous statement of the Epistle. (1:14) But he sees that they do not
yet know or have all that the
Spirit can do for them, and that there is a danger that, by their
ignorance, they may make no further
progress. Hence he bows his knees and prays without ceasing in their
behalf that the Father would
strengthen them with might by His Spirit in the inner man. This powerful
strengthening with the
Spirit is equivalent to being filled with the Spirit, is indeed this
same blessing under another aspect. It
is the indispensable condition of a healthful, growing, and fruitful
life.
Paul prays that the Father would grant this boon. He asks for a new,
definite operation of
God. He entreats that God would do this according to the riches of His
glory. It is surely not any
trilling thing, anything very common, that he thus craves. He desires
that God would remember and
bring into play all the riches of His grace and, in a fashion
commensurate with the divine glory of His
power, do a heavenly wonder and as the living God strengthen these
believers with might by His
Spirit in the inner man.
Christian, learn at this point that your life every day depends on
God’s will, on God’s grace,
on God’s omnipotence. Yes: every moment God must work in your inner life
and strengthen you by
His Spirit, otherwise you cannot live as He would have you live. Just as
no creature in the natural
world can exist for a moment if God does not work in it to sustain its
life, so the gift of the Holy
Spirit is the pledge that God Himself is to work everything in us from
moment to moment. Learn to
know your entire, your blessed dependence on God, and the claim which
you have on Him as your
Heavenly Father to begin in you a life in the mighty strengthening of
the Spirit and to maintain it
without the interruption of a single moment.
Paul tells these believers what he prays for in their behalf, in
order that they may know what
they have need of and ask for it for themselves. Do you also learn to
offer up this petition.
Expect everything from God alone. Bow your knees, and ask and expect
from the Father that
He would manifest to you yes, in you the riches of His glory. Ask and
expect that He would
strengthen you with might by His Spirit, that Spirit who in fact is
already in you, but only as an
unknown, hidden, and slumbering seed. Let this become the one desire,
the strong confidence of your
soul: "God will fill me with the Spirit: God will strengthen me through
the Spirit with His Almighty
energy." Let your whole life every day be permeated by this prayer and
this expectation.
II
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith.
This is the glorious fruit of the divine strengthening with might in
the inner man by the Spirit.
The great work of the Father in eternity is to bring forth the Son.
In Him alone is the good pleasure of God realized. The Father can
have no fellowship with
the creature except through the Son. He can have no joy in it except in
so far as He beholds His
Son in it. Hence it is His great work in redemption to reveal His Son in
us, and so to obtain an
abode for Him in us, that our life shall be a visible expression of the
life of Jesus.
That is the aim He has in view in strengthening us with might by the
Spirit in the inner man.
It is that Christ may dwell in our hearts by faith.
This indwelling of Christ in us is not like that of a man who abides
in a house, but is
nevertheless in no sense identified with it. No: His indwelling is a
possession of our hearts
that is truly divine, quickening and penetrating their inmost being with
His life. The Father
strengthens us inwardly with might by His Spirit, so that the Spirit
animates our will and
brings it, like the will of Jesus, into entire sympathy with His own.
The result is that our heart
then, like the heart of Jesus, bows before Him in humility and
surrender; our life seeks only
His honour; and our whole soul thrills with desire and love for Jesus.
This inward renewal
makes the heart fit to be a dwelling- place of the Lord. By the Spirit
He is revealed within us
and we come to know that He is actually in us as our life, in a deep,
divine unity, One with us.
Brother, God longs to see Jesus in you. He is prepared to work
mightily in you that Christ may
dwell in you. The Spirit has come, and the Father is willing to work
mightily by Him that
the living presence of His Son may always abide in you. Jesus loves you
so dearly and longs so
intensely for you that He cannot rest until He makes His abode in your
heart. This is the
supreme blessing that the fulness of the Spirit brings you.
That Christ may dwell in your heart by faith. It is by faith that you
receive and know the
indwelling of the Spirit and the operation of the Father by Him. By
faith, which discerns
things invisible as clearly as the sun, you receive and know the living
Jesus in your heart. As
constantly as He was with His disciples on earth yea, more constantly
than with them,
because more inwardly and more really He will be in you and will grant
you to enjoy His
presence and His love. soul, pray that the Father would strengthen you
with might by the
Spirit, would open your heart for the fulness of the Spirit, and enable
you trustfully to
appropriate it. Then at last shall you know what it means to have Christ
dwelling in your heart
by faith.
III
That you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be strong to know the
love of Christ which
passeth knowledge.
Here is the glorious fruit of the indwelling of Christ in the heart.
By the Spirit the love of God
is shed abroad in the heart. By Christ who dwells in the heart the love
wherewith God loved Him
comes into us; and we learn that just as life in God, between Father,
Son, and Spirit, is only infinite
love, so the life of Christ in us is nothing but love. Thus we become
rooted and grounded in love. We
are implanted in the soil of love: we strike our roots into heavenly
love; henceforth we have our being
in it and draw our strength from it. Love is the supreme element in our
spiritual life. The Spirit in us
and the Son in us bring us nothing but the love of God.
Love is the first and the chief among the streams of living water
that are to flow from us. It is
thus that we come to discover the truths that love is the fulfilling of
the law; that love doeth no ill to
one’s neighbor; (Romans 13:10) that love seeketh not its own; 1 that
love lays down its life for the
brethren. 2 Our heart becomes ever larger and larger; our friends, our
enemies, the children of God
and the children of the world, those that are worthy to be loved and
those that are hateful, the
ransomed and the lost, the world as a whole and every individual
creature in particular are all
embraced in the love of God. We find, then, our happiness lies in the
sacrifice of our own honour, our
own advantage and comfort, in favor of others. Love takes no account of
sacrifice: it is its blessedness
to love: it cannot do otherwise; actual loving is its nature and its
life. We are able so to love, because
the Father with His Spirit works mightily within us; because the Son, "
who loved me and gave
Himself for me," dwells in us, and He, who is crucified Love, has filled
the heart completely with
Himself. We are rooted in love, and in accordance with the nature of the
root in God is the fruit from
God love.
That ye may be strong to know the love which passeth knowledge: that
is, to know love not
with the knowledge of the understanding and its thoughts alone, but in
the conscious blessedness of a
heart in which Jesus dwells; to know love as something that cannot be
known or conceived by the
heart of itself; to be strong to know it fully, so far as this is
possible before God, in order that He may
fill you, an earthen vessel, with His own love to overflowing.
Souls, pray, listen to the word: "God is Love "; and He has provided
everything to the end
that you may know love fully. It is for this object that the Spirit is
in you, and that the Father will
work mightily in you: it is with this aim that Christ desires to have
your whole heart. let us begin to
pray, as never before, that the Father would strengthen us with might by
the Spirit; that the Father
would grant unto us to be filled with the Spirit; that ye may be strong
to know the love of Christ.
IV
That ye may be filled unto all the fulness of God.
What an expression! what an impenetrable mystery! what a divine
blessedness! Filled unto all
the fulness of God: this is the experience to which the fulness of the
Spirit is intended to bring us, and
will bring us. Filled unto all the fulness of God: who shall ever unfold
the meaning of this expression
to us? How shall we ever reach any definite idea of what it signifies?
God has made provision for our
enlightenment. In Christ Jesus we see a man full of God, a man who was
perfected by suffering and
obedience, filled unto all the fulness of God: yea, a man who in the
solitariness and poverty of an
ordinary human life, with all its needs and infirmities, has
nevertheless let us see on earth the life
enjoyed by the inhabitants of heaven, as they are there filled unto all
the fulness of God. The will and
the honour, the love and the service of God were always visible in Him.
God was all to Him.
When God called the world into existence it was in order that it might
reveal Him. In it His
wisdom and might and goodness were to dwell and be visibly manifested.
We say continually that
nature is full of God. God can be seen in everything by the believing
eye. The Seraphim sing: the
whole earth is full of His glory. When God created man after His image,
it was in order that He
Himself might be seen in man, that man should simply serve as a
reflection of His likeness. The
image of a man never serves any other purpose than to represent the man.
As the image of God man
was destined simply to receive the glory of God in his own life, to bear
it and make it visible. God
was to be all to him; to be all in him: he was to be full of God.
By sin this divine purpose has been frustrated. Instead of being full
of God, man became full
of himself and the world; and to such an extent has sin blinded us that
it appears an impossibility ever
to become full of God again. Alas! even many Christians see nothing
desirable in this fulness. Yet it
is back to this blessing that Jesus came to redeem and bring us; and
this is the end for which God is
prepared to work mightily within us by His Spirit. This is no less the
result for which the Son of God
desires to dwell in our heart, and which He will bring to
accomplishment: it is all that we may be
filled unto the fulness of God.
Yes; this is the highest aim of the Pentecostal blessing. To attain
this, we can count upon the
Spirit to make sure of our reaching it. He will open the way for us and
guide us in it. He will work in
us the deep humility of Jesus, who always said: " I can of Myself do
nothing "; "I do not My own
will; The words I speak, I speak not of Myself." Amidst this
self-emptying and sense of dependence
He will work in us the assurance and the experience that for the soul
which is nothing, God is surely
ALL. By our faith He will reveal to us Jesus, who was full of God, as
our life. He will cause us to be
rooted in the love in which God gives all, and we shall take God as all.
Thus it will be with us as with
Jesus: man nothing, and God’s honour, God’s will, God’s love, God’s
power, everything. Yes; the
issue will be that we shall be "filled unto all the fulness of God."
Christian, I beg of you by the love of God not to say that this is
too high an experience for
you, or that it is not for you. No; it is in truth the will of God
concerning you: the will alike of His
commandment and of His promise.
He is bent on fulfilling His promise: He Himself will work it out.
To-day, then, in humility
and faith take this word, " FILLED UNTO ALL THE FULNESS OF GOD," as the
purpose and the
watchword of your life, and see what it will do for you. It will become
to you a mighty lever to raise
you out of the self-seeking which is quite content with only being
prepared for blessing. It will urge
you to enter into and become firmly rooted in the love of God which
gives everything to you, and
thereby in the love which gives everything back to Him. It will convince
you, that nothing less than
Christ Himself dwelling in your heart can. keep such a love abiding in
you, or actually make the
fulness of God a reality within you. It will train you to fix your only
hope of all this blessing on the
mighty operation of God Himself by the Spirit. It will also move you to
go down upon your knees
and summon to your aid the wealth of God’s glory, that it may itself
prepare you for this great
wonder. This it will continue to do until your heart is enabled to utter
the response: " Yes: FILLED
UNTO ALL THE FULNESS OF GOD is what my God has prepared for me."
With this glorious prospect before us, come and let us join with the
apostle in the doxology: "
Unto Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask
or think, according to the
power that worketh in us (the power of His might), unto Him be the glory
for ever and ever." ] Let us
desire nothing less than these riches of the glory of God. To-day, if we
have never done it before, let
us make a beginning and appropriate to ourselves the full blessing of
the Spirit as the power which is
sure to lead us to be " filled unto all the fulness of God." When God
said to Abraham, " I am God
Almighty," He invited him to trust His omnipotence to fulfil His
promise. When Jesus went down
into the grave and its impotence, it was in the faith that God’s
omnipotence could lift Him to the
throne of His glory. It is that same Omnipotence that waits to work out
God’s purpose in them that
believe in Him to do so. Let our hearts say, " Unto Him THAT is ABLE to
do exceeding abundantly
above all that we ask or think, unto Him be the glory." Amen.
CHAPTER #10
(Listen to Chapter #10)
HOW FULLY IT IS ASSURED TO US BY GOD
"If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your
children: how much more shall
your Heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?"
Luke 11:13.
"THEN Jairus came to the Lord Jesus to entreat His help for his dying
daughter, and he
learned by the way the sorrowful tidings that she had already died,
Jesus said: " Be not afraid: only
believe." l Face to face with a trial in which man was utterly helpless,
the Lord called upon him to put
his trust in Himself. There was but one thing that suited his case or
could help him: "only believe."
Many a thousand times has that word been the strength of God’s children,
where so far as man was
concerned all hope was lost and success appeared to be impossible. So
here also, whilst we are on our
way to search for and know the full Pentecostal blessing, we have need
of this word. In view of the
inconceivable preciousness of the blessing, and of the divine element in
it, it will indeed be only the
wonderworking power of God that can make this exceeding grace a reality
within us. Let us only be
silent before God; here also we shall hear the voice of Jesus saying to
us: " Be not afraid, only
believe: God will do it for you."
It is nothing less than this that is the aim of this word of our Lord
concerning the divine
assurance that, much more readily than an earthly father will give his
children bread, will God give
the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him. We should regard it as quite
unnatural on the part of a father if
he did not give his child bread; how much more, then, shall not God give
the Holy Spirit, yea, all the
promised fulness of the Spirit, to those that ask Him. In the midst of
all our thinking and speaking, all
our praying and hoping, the fundamental element in our spiritual life
must be the firm confidence that
the Father will give His child His full heritage. God is spirit: He
desires in His eternal love to obtain
full possession of us; but He can do this in no other manner than by
giving us His Spirit. As surely as
He is God, will He, child of God, fill thee with His Holy Spirit.
Without that faith you will never
succeed in your quest of this blessing. That faith will give you the
victory over every difficulty.
Therefore, " be not afraid: only believe." Hear the voice of Jesus:
"Said I not unto thee that if thou
believest thou shalt see the glory of God?"
Let us listen to these three great lessons.
I
Although you cannot comprehend or explain everything by the mere power
of your
understanding, still: " only believe."
There are many preliminary questions which arise at once in
connection with this subject, and
which tempt us to resolve that we shall first take in and understand
everything about it before we
expect the blessing. Two of these questions I shall venture to mention
now. The first is: whence must
this blessing come, from WITHIN or from ABOVE? Some earnest Christians
will say at once that "
it must come from WITHIN." The Holy Spirit descended upon the earth on
the day of Pentecost and
was given to the Christian community. At the moment of conversion He
comes into our heart. We
have therefore no longer to pray that He may be given to us: we have
simply to recognize and use
what we already have. It is not as if we had to seek to have more of the
Spirit: we have Him in the
fulness of the gift as it is. It is rather the Holy Spirit who must have
more of us. As we yield ourselves
entirely to Him He will entirely fill us. It is from WITHIN that the
blessing must come: the fountain
of living water is already there; the fountain has only to be opened and
every obstruction cleared out
of the way and the water shall stream forth. It must spring from WITHIN.
On the other hand, there are not a few that say, " No; it must come
from ABOVE." When, on
the arrival of the day of Pentecost, the Father bestowed the Spirit, He
did not give Him away beyond
His own control. The fulness of the Spirit still remains in God. God
bestows nothing apart from
Himself, to work without or independently of His will. He Himself works
only through the Spirit, and
every new and greater manifestation of the Spirit’s power comes directly
from ABOVE. Long after
the day of Pentecost the Spirit came down again from heaven at Samaria
and Caesarea. In His fulness
He is in heaven still; and it is from God in heaven that the fulness of
the Spirit is to be ever waited
for.
Brother Christian, pray, do not linger till by reasonings of your own
you have decided which
of these representations is the right one. God can bless men in both
ways. When the flood came all the
fountains of the abyss were broken up and the sluices of heaven were
opened. It came simultaneously
from beneath and from above. God is prepared to bless men in both of
these methods. He desires to
teach us to know and honour the Spirit who is already within us. He
would fain also bring us to wait
upon Himself in a spirit of utter dependence, and to beseech Him that He
as our Father would give us
our daily bread, the new, the fuller influx of His Spirit. I entreat you
not to suffer yourself to be held
back by such a question as this. God understands your petition. He knows
what you would have.
Believe that God is prepared to fill you with His Spirit; let that faith
look up to Him with unceasing
prayer and confidence. He will give the blessing.
The other question is: Does this blessing come gradually or at once?
Will it manifest itself in
the shape of a silent, unobserved increase of the grace of the Spirit or
as a momentary, immediate
outpouring of His power? It must suffice for me to say here again that
God has already sent this
blessing in both modes, and will continue to do so still. What must take
place at once is this: there
must be a definite resolve to place the whole life unreservedly under
the control of the Spirit, and a
conviction of faith that God has accepted this surrender. In the
majority of cases this is done at once.
It must at last come to this, perhaps after a long course of seeking and
praying, that the soul shall
present itself to God for this blessing in one definite, irrevocable
act, and shall believe that the
offering is then sanctified and accepted upon the altar. Thence forth,
whether the experience of the
blessing comes at once and with power, or comes quietly and gradually,
the soul must maintain its act
of self -dedication and simply look to God to do His own work.
Thus in dealing with all such questions the chief concern is- this:
"only believe " and rest in
the FAITHFULNESS OF GOD. Hold fast this one principle: God has given us
a promise that He
will fill us with His Spirit. It is His work to make His promise an
accomplished fact. Thank God for
the promise even as you would thank Him for the fulfilment of it. In the
promise God has already
pledged Himself to you. Rejoice in Him and in His faithfulness. Be not
held back by any questions
whatever. Set your heart on what God will do, on Himself from whom the
blessing must come. The
result will be certain and glorious.
II
Although you receive but little help from others, or even encounter
opposition, still: " only
believe"
It is one of the saddest tokens of the un- spiritual condition of the
Church that so many are
content with things just as they are, and have no desire to know more of
this seeking for the reality of
the Spirit’s power. They point to the present purity of doctrine, to the
prevailing earnestness of
preaching, to the generous gifts which are made for the maintenance of
religious works and the
enterprises of philanthropy, to the interest which is manifested in the
cause of education and of
missions, and they say that we ought rather to give God thanks for the
good we see around us. Such
people would condemn the language of Laodicea, and would refuse to say
that they were rich and
increased in goods and had need of nothing, 1 and yet there are some
traces of this spirit in what they
say. They do not consider the injunction to be " filled with the
Spirit." They have forgotten the
command to prophesy to the Spirit and say: " Come from the four winds,
Breath, and breathe upon
the slain, that they may live." l When you speak of these things you
will receive little encouragement
from them. They do not understand what you mean. They believe indeed in
the Holy Spirit, but their
eyes have not been opened to the fact that more of the Spirit, the
fulness of the Spirit, is the one thing
needful for the Church.
There are others who will agree with you when you speak of this need,
and yet will really
give you even less encouragement. They have often both thought and
prayed over the matter, but no
benefit has accrued from the effort: they have made no real progress.
They bid you look to the
Church of earlier times, and say that it was never much otherwise than
it is now. What you say of the
poverty and weakness of the Church in its relations to the world is
true: your representation of the
promise of God is glorious: all that you expect from the mighty working
of the Spirit it is the highest
degree desirable; but it is not to be obtained. These people belong to
the generation of the ten spies
who were sent to spy out Canaan: the land is glorious, but the enemy in
possession is too strong: we
are too weak to overcome them. Lack of consecration and of willingness
to surrender everything for
this blessing is the root of the unbelief, and has made them incapable
of exercising the courage of
Caleb when he said: "Lot us go up at once, and possess it; for we are
well able to overcome it."
My brother, if you would be filled with the Spirit, do not suffer
yourself to be held back by
such reasonings. " Only believe " and strengthen yourself in the
omnipotence of God. Do not say: is
God able? Say rather: God is ABLE. The God who was able to raise Christ
from the dead is still
mighty in the midst of His people, and is able to reveal His divine life
with power in your heart. Hear
His voice saying to you as to Abraham: " I am God Almighty: walk thou
before My face and be
perfect." 2 Set your heart without distraction on what God has said that
He will do, and then on the
Omnipotence which is prepared to bring the promise to accomplishment.
Pray to the Father that He
would grant unto you to be strengthened with might by His Spirit. Adore
Him who is able to do for
us exceeding abundantly above all that we ask and think, and give Him
the glory. Let faith in the
Omnipotence of God fill your soul and you will be full of the assurance
that, however difficult,
however improbable, however impossible it may seem, God can fill us with
His Spirit. "Only
believe."
III
Although everything in you appears entirely unfit for this Messing and
unworthy of it, still: "
only believe."
When one prays for this blessing of being filled with the Spirit, the
thought will spring up
unbidden, of what one’s life as a Christian has already been. The
believer thinks of all the workings
of divine grace in his heart, and of the incessant strivings of the
Spirit. He thinks of all his efforts and
prayers, of his past attempts at entire surrender and the appropriation
of faith. He then looks upon
what he is at the moment, upon his unfaithfulness and sin and
helplessness, and he becomes
dispirited. In the lapse of so many years so little progress has been
made. The past testifies only of
failure and unfaithfulness. What avails it to think that the future will
be any better? If all his praying
and believing of earlier days have been of so little avail, why should
he now dare to hope that
everything is to be transformed at once? He presents to himself the life
of a man full of the Holy
Spirit, and alongside it he sets his own life as he has learned to know
it, and it becomes impossible for
him to imagine that he shall ever be able to live as a man full of the
Spirit. For such a task he is once
for all unfit, and feels no courage to make the attempt.
Christian, when such thoughts as these throng in upon you there is
but one counsel to follow,
and that is: "only believe." Cast yourself into the arms of your Father
who gives His children the
Holy Spirit much more readily than an earthly father gives bread. Only
believe, and count upon THE
LOVE OF GOD. All your self- dedication and surrender, all your faith and
integrity is not a work by
which you have to move God or make Him willing to bless you.
Far from it. It is God that desires to bless you, and that will
Himself work everything in you.
God loves you as a father and sees that, to be able to live in perfect
health and happiness as His child,
you have need of nothing but this one thing to be full of His Spirit.
Jesus has by His blood opened up
the way to the full enjoyment of this love. You must learn to enter into
this love, to abide in this love,
and by faith to acknowledge that it shines upon you and surrounds you,
even as the light of the sun
illumines and animates your body. Begin to trust this love. I do not say
in its willingness: no in its
unspeakable longing to fill you entirely with itself. It is your Father,
whose love waits to make you
full of His Spirit. He Himself will do it for you. And what does He
crave at your hands? Simply this,
that you yield yourself to Him in utter unworthiness, nothingness, and
impotence, to let Him do this
work in you. He is prepared to take charge of all the preparatory work.
You may be sure that He will
help you by His Spirit. He will strengthen you with might in the inner
man, silently and hiddenly, yet
none the less surely, to abandon everything that has to be given up and
to receive this treasure. He
will help you in the faith of appropriation to rest in His word and to
wait for Him; and He will hold
Himself responsible for all the future. He will make provision that you
shall be able to walk in the
fulness of this blessing.
You have perhaps already formed a very high idea of what a man must
be that is filled with
the Spirit of God, and you see no chance of your being able to live in
such a fashion. Or it may be
that you have not been able to form any idea of it whatever, and are on
that account afraid to strive
for a life which is so unknown to you. Christian, abandon all such
thoughts. The Spirit alone, when
He is once in you, will Himself teach you what that life is, for He will
work it in you. God will take
upon Himself the responsibility of making you full of the Spirit, not as
a treasure which you must
carry and keep, but as a power which is to carry and keep you.
Therefore, Soul, " only believe ":
count upon THE LOVE OF YOUR FATHER.
In His promise of the blessing and the power of the Spirit the Lord
Jesus always pointed to
God the Father. He called it " the promise of the Father." He directed
us to the faithfulness of God: "
He is faithful that promised." He directed us to the power of God: the
Spirit was, as power from on
high, to come from God Himself. He directed us to the love of God: it is
as a Father that God is to
give this boon to His children. Let every thought of this blessing and
every desire for it only lead us to
God. Here is something that HE must do, that He must give, that HE, HE
ALONE, must work. Let
us in silent adoration set our heart upon God: He will do something for
us. Let us joyfully trust in
Him: He is able to do above all praying and thinking. His love will, so
willingly, bestow upon us a
full blessing. Therefore, " only believe ": God will make me full of the
Spirit. And say humbly:
Behold the servant of the Lord. Let Him do to me what is good in His
sight. Be it unto me according
to Thy word* " Faithful is He that calleth you, WHO ALSO WILL DO IT."
CHAPTER #11
(Listen to Chapter #11)
HOW IT IS TO BE FOUND BY ALL
" And I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean:
from all your filthiness, and
from all your idols, will I cleanse you. And I will put My Spirit within
you, and cause you to
walk in My statutes, and ye shall keep My judgments, and do them."
Ezek 36: 25, 27.
THE full Pentecostal blessing is for all the children of God. As many
as are led by the Spirit
of God, they are the children of God. God does not give a half portion
to any one of His children. To
every one He says: " Son, thou art ever with Me, and all that I have is
thine" Christ is not divided; he
that receives Him receives Him in all His fulness. Every Christian is
destined by God, and is actually
called, to be filled with the Spirit.
In the preceding chapters I have had in view especially those who are
to some extent
acquainted with these things, and have been already in search of the
truth: such as have been already
led after conversion to make a more complete renunciation of sin, and to
yield themselves wholly to
the Lord. But it is quite conceivable that amongst those who read this
book there may be Christians
who have heard but little of the full Pentecostal blessing, and in whose
hearts the desire has arisen to
obtain a share in it. There is, however, so much that they do not as yet
understand, that they are
willing indeed to have pointed out to them in the simplest possible
fashion, where they are to begin,
and what they have to do, in order to succeed in their desire. They are
prepared to acknowledge that
their life is full of sin, and that it seems to them as if they would
have to strive long and earnestly, ere
they can become full of the Spirit. I should like much to inspire them
with fresh courage and to direct
them to the God who has said: " I the Lord will hasten it in its time."
l I should like to take them and
guide them to the place where God will bless them, and to point to them
out of His Word what the
disposition and the attitude must be in which they can receive this
blessing.
I
First of all, there must be a new discovery and confession and casting
away of sin.
In the message of Ezekiel, God first promised: " I will cleanse you,"
and then: " I will put My
Spirit within you." A vessel into which any thing precious is to be
poured must always first be
cleansed. So, if the Lord is to give you a new and full blessing, a new
cleansing must also take place.
In your conversion, it is true, there was a confession and putting away
of sin. Yet this separation was
but superficial and external. The soul was still half enveloped in
darkness: it thought more of its
heinous sins and the punishment they might entail. After conversion it
did indeed endeavor to
overcome sin, but the effort did not succeed. It did not know in what
holiness the Lord desires His
people to live: it did not know how pure and holy the Lord would have it
be and would make it be.
This new cleansing must come through new confession and discovery of
sin. The old leaven cannot
be purged away unless it be first searched for and found. Do not say
that you already know
sufficiently well that your Christian life is full of sin. Sit down in
silent meditation and with the
express purpose of seeing of what sort your life as a Christian has
been. How much pride, self-seeking,
worldliness, self-will, and impurity has been in it. Can such a heart
receive the fulness of the
Spirit? It is impossible.
Look into your home life. In your intercourse with wife and children,
servants and friends, do
not hastiness of temper, anxiety about yourself, bitterness, idle or
harsh or unbecoming words testify
how little you have been cleansed? Look into the current life of the
Church. How much religion is
there that is merely intellectual, or formal, or pleasing to men,
without that real humiliation of spirit,
that real desire for the living God, that real love for Jesus, that real
subjection to the word, which
constitute worship in spirit and in truth. Look into your general course
of conduct. Consider whether
the people amongst whom you mingle can testify that they have observed,
by your honorable spirit
and disinterestedness and freedom from worldly- mindedness, that you are
one who has been cleansed
from sin by God. Contemplate all this in the light of what God expects
from you and has offered to
work in you, and take your place as a guilty, helpless soul that must be
cleansed before God can
bestow the full blessing upon you. On the back of this discovery follows
the actual putting away and
casting out of what is impure. This is something that you are simply
bound to do. You must come
with these sins, and especially with those that are most strictly your
own besetting sins, and
acknowledge them before God in confession, and there and then make
renunciation of them. You
must be brought to the conviction that your life is a guilty and
shameful life. You are not at liberty to
take comfort from the consideration that you are so weak, or that the
majority of Christians live no
higher life. It must become a matter of earnest resolve with you that
your life is to undergo a
complete transformation. The sins that still cleave to you are to be
cast off and done away with.
Perhaps you may say in reply that you find yourself unable to do away
with them or cast
them off. I tell you that you are quite able to do this; and in this
way. You can give these sins up to
God. If there should happen to be anything in my house that I wish to
have taken away, and that I
myself am unable to carry, I call for men who shall do it for me, and I
give it over into their hands,
saying: " Look here: take that away; " and they do it. So I am able to
say that I have put away this
thing out of my house. In like manner you can give up to God those sins
of yours, against which you
feel yourself utterly impotent. You can give them up to Him to be dealt
with as He desires and He
will fulfil His promise: " I will cleanse you from all your filthiness."
There is nothing so needful as
that there should be a very definite understanding between you and the
Lord, that you on your part
really confess your sin and bid it everlasting farewell and give it up,
and that you wait on Him until
He assures you that He has taken it, or rather has taken your heart and
life, into His own hands to
give you a complete victory.
II
In this way you come to a new discovery, and reception, and experience
of what Christ is and
is prepared to do for you.
If the knowledge of sin at conversion is superficial, so also is the
faith in Jesus. Our faith, our
reception of Jesus never goes further or deeper than our insight into
sin. If since your conversion you
have learned to know the inward invincible power of sin in you, you are
now prepared to receive
from God a discovery of the inward invincible power of the Lord Jesus in
your heart, such as you
have hitherto had no idea of. If you really long for a complete
deliverance from sin, so as to be able to
live in obedience to God, God will reveal the Lord Jesus to you as a
complete Savior. He will make
you to know that, although the flesh always remains in you, with its
inclination to evil, the Lord Jesus
will so dwell in your heart that the power of the flesh shall be kept in
subjection by Him, in order that
you may no longer do the will of the flesh. Through Jesus Christ, God
will cleanse you from all
unrighteousness, so that day by day you may walk before God with a pure
heart. What you really
need is the discovery that He is prepared to work this change in you,
and that you may receive it by
faith, here and now.
Yes: this is what Jesus Christ desires to work in you by the Holy
Spirit. He came to put away
sin; not the guilt and punishment of it only, but sin itself. He has not
only mastered the power and
dominion of the law and its curse over you, but has also completely
broken and taken away the
power and dominion of sin. He has completely rescued you as a new-born
soul from beneath the
power of sin; and He lives in His heavenly authority and all-pervading
presence in order to work out
this deliverance in you. In this power He will live in you and Himself
carry out His work in you. As
the indwelling Christ, He is bent on maintaining and manifesting His
redemption in you. The sins
which you have confessed, the pride and the lovelessness, the
worldly-mindedness and vanity and all
uncleanness, He will by His power take out of your heart; so that,
although the flesh may tempt you,
the choice and the joy of your heart abide in Him and in His obedience
to God’s will. Yes: you may
indeed become " more than conqueror" through Him that loved you. 1 As
the indwelling Christ, He
will overcome sin in you. What then is required on our side? Only this,
a thing that can be done at
once, namely, that when the soul sees it to be true that Jesus will
carry out this work, it shall then
open the door before Him and receive Him into the heart as Lord and
King. Yes: that can be done at
once. A house that has remained closely shut for twenty years can be
penetrated by the light in a
moment, if the doors and windows are thrown open. In like manner, a
heart that has remained
enveloped in darkness and impotence for twenty years, because it knew
not that Jesus was willing to
take the victory over sin into His own hands, can have its whole
experience changed in a moment.
When it acknowledges its sinful condition and yields itself to God, and
believes that the Son of God is
prepared to assume the responsibility of the inner life and its
purification from sin; when it ventures to
trust the Lord that He will do this work at the very moment; then it may
firmly believe that it is done,
and that Jesus takes all that is in me into His own hands.
This is indeed an act of faith, that must be held fast in faith. When
doors and windows are
thrown open, and the light streaming in drives out the darkness, we
discover at once how much dust
and impurity there is in the house. But the light shines just in order
that we may see how to take it
away. When we receive Christ into the heart everything is not yet
perfected: light and gladness are
not seen and experienced at once; but by faith the soul knows that He
who is faithful will keep His
word and will surely do His work. The faith that has up to this moment
only sought and wrestled,
now rests in the Lord and His word. It knows that what was begun ~by
faith must be carried forward
only by faith. It says: " I abide in Jesus; I know that He abides in me
and that He will manifest
Himself unto me." As Jesus cleansed the lepers with a word, and it was
only when they were on their
way to the priest that they found out they were clean, so He cleanses us
by His Word. He that firmly
holds that fact in faith will see the proofs of it.
III
So the soul is prepared to receive the full blessing of the Spirit.
The Lord gave first the promise, / will cleanse you; and then the
second promise, I will put
My Spirit within yon. The Holy Spirit cannot come with power or fill the
heart and continue to dwell
in it, unless a special and complete cleansing first takes place within
it. The Spirit and sin are engaged
in a mortal combat. The only reason why the Spirit works so feebly in
the Church is sin, which is all
too little known or dreaded or cast out. Men do not believe in the power
of Christ to cleanse; and
therefore He cannot do His work of baptizing with the Spirit. It is from
Christ that the Spirit comes,
and to Christ the Spirit returns again. It is the heart that gives
Christ liberty to exercise dominion in it
that shall inherit the full blessing.
Therefore, my reader, if you have understood the lesson of this
chapter, and have done what
has been suggested to you; if you have believed in Jesus as the Lord
that cleanses you and dwells in
you to keep you clean, be assured that God will certainly fulfil His
word: " I will cleanse you and put
My Spirit within you." Cleave to Jesus, who cleanses you: let Him be all
within you; God will see to
it that you are filled with the Spirit.
Only keep in view these two truths.
First, that the gift and the blessing and the fulness of the Spirit
do not always come, as on the
day of Pentecost, with external observation. God is often a God that
hideth Himself: do not be
surprised, therefore, if your heart does not at once feel, as you should
like it to feel, immediately after
your act of surrender or appropriation. Best assured that, if you fully
trust Christ to do everything for
you, He there and then begins to do it in secret by His Spirit. Count
upon it that, if you present
yourself to God as a pure vessel, cleansed by Christ, to be filled with
the Spirit, God will take you at
your word and say unto you: “Receive ye the Holy Spirit; be it unto you
according to your faith."
(John 20:22)
At that moment bow down before Him, more and more silently, more and
more deeply, in
holy adoration and expectation, in the blessed assurance that the unseen
God has now begun to carry
on His work more mightily in you, and that He will also manifest it to
you more gloriously than ever
before.
The other thing you must keep in view is the purpose for which the
Spirit is given. I will put
My Spirit within you, and / will cause you to walk in My statutes and to
keep My judgments and do
them. The fulness of the Spirit must be sought and received and kept
with the direct aim that you
shall now simply and wholly live to do God’s will and work upon the
earth, yes: only to be able to
live like the Lord Jesus, and to say with Him: " Lo! I come to do Thy
will." If you cherish this
disposition, the fulness of the Spirit may be positively expected. Be
full of courage and yield yourself
to walk in God’s statutes and to keep His judgments and do them, and you
may trust God to keep His
word that He will cause you to keep and do them. He, the living God,
will work in you. Even before
you are aware how the Spirit is in you, He will enable you to experience
the full blessing.
My brother, have you never yet known the fulness of the Spirit, or
have you perhaps been
really seeking it for a long while without finding it? Here you have at
last the sure method of winning
it. Acknowledge the sinfulness of your condition as a Christian and make
renunciation of it, once and
for all, by yielding it up to God. Acknowledge that the Lord Jesus is
ready and able to cleanse your
heart from its sin; to conquer these sins by His entrance into it, and
to set you free; and that His
purpose is to do this at once. Take Him now as your Lord, at once and
for ever. Then you may be
assured that God will put His Spirit within you in a way and a measure
and a power of which you
have hitherto had no idea. Be assured that He will do it. permit Him to
begin; let Him do it in you
now. Amen.
CHAPTER #12
(Listen to Chapter #12)
Conclusion
HOW EVERYTHING MUST BE GIVEN UP FOR IT
"Then shall the Son also Himself be subjected to Him that did
subject all things unto Him,
that God may be all in all." 1 Cor. 15:28.
IF THEN we speak of entire consecration, we are frequently asked what
the precise
distinction is betwixt the ordinary doctrine of sanctification, and the
preaching of that gracious work
which has begun to prevail in the Church in recent years. One answer
that may be given is that the
distinction lies solely in the little word, all. That word is the key of
the secret. The ordinary method of
proclaiming the necessity of holiness is true so far as it goes; but
sufficient emphasis is not laid on this
one point of the " All." So is it also with the question as to the
reasons why the fulness of the Spirit is
not more widely enjoyed. That little word "All " suggests the
explanation. So long as the " All " of
God, of sin, of Christ, of surrender, of the Spirit, and of faith, is
not fully understood, the soul cannot
enjoy all that God desires to give and be, all that God would have it
be. In this our last meditation let
us consider the full Pentecostal blessing from this standpoint. We would
fain do this in a spirit of
humble waiting on God, and with the prayer that He would make us by His
Spirit feel so deeply
where the evil lies and what the remedy is, that we shall be ready to
give up everything in order to
receive nothing less than everything.
I
THE ALL OF GOD
It lies in the very being and nature of God that He must be all. From
Him and through Him
and to Him are all things.
As God He is the life of everything: all life is only the effect of
His direct and continuous
operation. It is because all is thus through Him and from Him that it is
also to Him. Everything that
exists serves only as a means for the manifestation of the goodness and
wisdom and power of God.
Sin consists in nothing but this, that man determined to be something
and would not suffer God to be
everything; and the redemption of Jesus has no other aim than that God
should again become
everything in our heart and life. At the end, even the Son shall be
subjected to the Father, that God
may be all in all. Nothing less than this is what redemption is to
secure. Christ Himself has shown in
His life what it means to be nothing, and to suffer God to be
everything; and as He once lived upon
the earth, so does He still live in the hearts of His people. According
to the measure in which they
receive and rejoice in the truth that God is all, will the fulness of
the blessing be able to find its way
into their life.
The All of God: that is what we must seek. In His will, His honour,
His power must He be
everything for us. No moment of our time, no word of our lips, no
movement of our heart, no
satisfying of the needs of our physical life, should there be that is
not the expression of the will, the
glory, the power of God. Only the man who discerns this and consents to
it, who desires and seeks
after it, who believes and appropriates it, can rightly understand what
the fulness of the Spirit must
effect, and why it is necessary that we should forsake every thing if we
desire to obtain it. God must
be not merely something, not merely much, but literally, ALL.
II
THE ALL OF SIN
What is sin? It is the absence of God; separation from God. Where man
is guided by his own
will, his own honour, his own power; where the will, the honour, the
operation of God are not
manifested, there sin must be at work. Sin is death and misery, only
because it is a turning away from
God to the creature.
Sin is in no sense a thing that may exist in man along with other
things that are good. No: as
God was once everything, so has sin in fallen man become everything. It
now dominates and
penetrates his whole being, even as God should have been allowed to do.
His nature in every part of it
is corrupt. We still have our natural existence in God, and doubtless
with not a few good inclinations
in nature and character, just as these are to be found in the lower
creatures. But of what is good in the
spiritual and heavenly sense of the word, of what is done out of inward
harmony with God or the
direction of His Spirit of all this there is nothing that has its origin
in His nature. All is in sin, and
under the influence of sin.
The All of sin: some small measure of the knowledge of this fact was
necessary even at the
time of conversion. This, however, was still very imperfect. If a
Christian is to make progress and
become fully convinced of the necessity of being filled with the Spirit,
his eyes must be opened to the
extent in which sin dominates over everything within him.
Everything in him is tainted with sin, his will, his power, his
heart; and therefore the
omnipotence of God must take in hand the renewal of everything by the
Holy Spirit. Man is utterly
impotent to that which is good in the highest sense: he can do no more
of what is good than what the
Spirit actually works in him at any moment. He learns also to see the
All of sin just as distinctly in
the world around him; for the fairest, the most useful, and the most
legitimate possessions or
enjoyments are all under the power of sin. Everything must be sacrificed
and given over to death: the
All of God must expel the All of sin. God must again live wholly and
entirely within us, and take
inwardly and continuously the place which sin usurped. He that desires
this change will rightly
understand and desire the fulness of the Spirit, and as he believes will
certainly receive it.
III
THE ALL OF CHRIST
The Son is the revelation of the Father: the All of God is exhibited
to our view and made
accessible to us in the Son. On this account the ALL of Christ is just
as necessary and infinite as that
of God. Christ is God come upon the earth to undo the All of sin, to win
back and restore in man the
lost All of God. To this end we must know thoroughly the All of Christ.
The idea which most
believing disciples have of the All of Christ is that He alone does
everything in the atonement and the
forgiveness of sin. This is indeed the glorious beginning of His
redemptive work, but still only the
beginning. God has given in Him all that we have need of: life and all
grace. Christ Himself desires to
be our life and strength, the Indweller of our heart, who animates that
heart and makes it what it
ought to be before God. To know the All of Christ, and to under stand
how intensely and how
completely and how really Christ is prepared to be everything in us, is
the secret of true
sanctification. He that discerns the will of God in this principle and
from the heart yields himself to its
operation has found the pathway to the full blessing of Pentecost.
The All of Christ, Acknowledge this in humble joyful thanksgiving:
confess that every thing
has been given by God in Him. Receive with firm confidence the fact that
Christ is all and the
promise that He will work all, yes, all, in you. Consent from the heart
that this must be so, and
confirm it by laying everything at His feet and offering it up to Him.
The two things go together: let
Him be and do all; let Him reign and rule over all. Let there be nothing
in which He does not rule and
operate. It is not impossible for you to accomplish this change. Let Him
be everything; let Him have
everything, in order that by His Almighty energy He may fill everything
with Himself.
IV
THE ALL OF SURRENDER
Leave all, sell all, forsake all: that was the Lord’s requirement
when He was here on earth:
the requirement is in force still.
The discernment of the fact that Christ is all leads of itself to the
acknowledgment that He
must have all. The chief hindrance of the Christian life is that,
because men do not believe that Christ
is all, they consequently never think of the necessity of giving Him
all.
Everything must be given to Him, because everything is under sin. He
cannot cleanse and
keep a thing when it is not so yielded up to Him that He can take full
possession of it and fill it. All
must be given up to Him, because He alone can bring the all of God to
its rightful supremacy within
us. Even what appears useful or lawful or innocent becomes defiled by
the stain of our selfishness
when it is held fast in our own possession and for our own enjoyment.
We must surrender it into the hands and the power of Christ: only
there can it be sanctified.
The All of surrender: it is because Christians are so ignorant of the
requirement that all their praying
and hearing avail so little. If then, Soul, you are really prepared to
turn to- God for the fulness of the
Spirit; if you have turned to Christ to have your heart purified and
kept pure; then be assured that it is
your blessed privilege to regard and deal with everything, everything
that you have to strive for or do
as given up to Him. The All of surrender will be the measure of your
experience of the All of Christ.
In a preceding chapter we have seen that surrender may be carried out at
once and as a whole: let us
not merely read and think of this, but actually do it. Yes: this very
day, let the All of Christ be the
power of a surrender on our part that shall be immediate, complete, and
everlasting.
V
THE ALL OF THE SPIRIT
The All of God and the All of Christ demand as a necessary
consequence the All of the Spirit.
It is the work of the Spirit to glorify the Son as dwelling in us, and
by Him to reveal the Father; how
can He do this if He Himself is not All and has not All and does not
possess and penetrate All with
His own power? To be filled with the Spirit, to let the Spirit have All,
is indispensable to a true,
healthful Christian life.
It is a source of great loss in the life of Christendom to-day that
the truth is not discerned, that
the Three -One God must have All. Even the professing Christian
oftentimes makes it his very first
aim to find out what he is and what he desires, what pleases him and
makes him happy. Then he
brings in God in the second place to secure this happiness. The claim of
God is not the primary or
main consideration. He does not discern that God must have him at His
disposal even in the most
trivial details of his life to manifest His divine glory in him. He is
not aware that this entire filling
with the will and the operation of God would prove to be his highest
happiness. He does not know
that the very same Christ who once lived upon the earth as the obedient,
lowly Servant of God,
entirely surrendered to the will of the Father, is prepared to abide and
work in like manner in his
heart and life now. It is on this account that he can never fully
comprehend how necessary it is that
the Spirit must be all and must fill him completely.
My brother, if these thoughts hare had any influence with you, surfer
yourself to be brought
without delay to the acknowledgment that the Spirit must be all in you.
Say from the heart: " I am not
at liberty to make any, even the least, exception: the Spirit must have
all." Then add to this confession
the simple thought that Christ has come to restore the All of God; that
the Spirit is given to reveal the
All of Christ within us, so that God may again be all; that the love of
the Father is eagerly longing to
secure again His own supreme place with us; and then your heart will be
filled with the sure
confidence that the Father actually gives you the fulness of the Spirit.
VI
THE ALL OF FAITH
"All things are possible to him that believeth." " All things
whatsoever ye pray and ask for,
believe that ye have received them, and ye shall have them." The
preceding sections of this chapter
have taught us to understand why it is that faith is all. It is because
God is all. It is because man is
nothing, and thus has nothing good in him except the capacity for
receiving God. When he becomes a
believer, that which God reveals becomes of itself a heavenly light that
illumines him. He sees then
what God is prepared to be for him; he keeps his soul silent before God
and open to God, and gives
God the opportunity of working all by the Spirit. The more unceasingly
and undividedly he believes,
the more fully can the All of God and Christ prevail and work in him.
The All of Faith. How little is it understood in the Church that the
one and only thing I have
to do is without ceasing to keep my soul in its nothingness and
dependence silent and open before
God, that He may be free to work in me; that faith as the willing
acceptance and expectation of God’s
working, receives all and can achieve all. Every glance at my own
impotence or sin, every glance at
the promise of God and His power to fulfil it, must rouse me to the
gladness of faith, to the willing,
cheerful acknowledgment that God is able to work all, to* the assurance
that He will do it.
Let such a faith, as the act of a moment, look upon Christ even
to-day and move you on the
one hand to make renunciation of every known sin, and on the other to
receive Him as One who
purifies you, who keeps you, who dwells in your heart. that faith might
receive the All of Christ and
take Him with All that He is! that your faith might then see that the
All of the Spirit is your rightful
heritage, and that your hope is sure that the full blessing has been
bestowed upon you by God
Himself, and will be revealed in you! Soul, if the All of God, the All
of Christ, the All of the Spirit be
so immeasurable, if the dominion and power of the terrible All of sin be
so unlimited, if the All of
your surrender to God and your decision to live wholly for Him be also
so real, then let your faith in
what God will do for you be also unlimited. " He that believeth in Me,
out of his heart shall flow
rivers of living water."
My reader, the time has now come when we must part. Ere this takes
place, let me press on
your heart one thing. There is something that can be done to-day. As the
Holy Spirit saith: "Today, if
ye will hear His voice, harden not your heart." I cannot promise that
you shall immediately overflow
with the light and joy of the Holy Spirit. I do not promise you that you
shall to-day feel very holy and
truly blessed. But what can take place is this: to day you may receive
Christ as One who purifies you,
and baptizes, and fills with the Spirit. Yes: to-day you may surrender
your whole being to Him to be
henceforth wholly under the mastery of the Spirit. To-day you may
acknowledge and appropriate the
All of the Spirit as your personal possession. To-day you may submit to
the requirement of the All of
faith and begin to live only and wholly in the faith of what Christ will
do in you through the Spirit.
This you may do; this you ought to do. Kneel down at the mercy- seat
and do it. Read once more the
earlier chapter with its directions as to what Christ is prepared to do,
and surrender yourself this very
hour as an empty vessel to be filled with the Spirit, that your whole
life may be carried out under the
leading of the Spirit. In His own time God will certainly accomplish it
in you.
There is also something, however, that He on His part is prepared to
do. To-day He is ready
to give you the assurance that He accepts your surrender and to seal on
your heart the conviction that
the fulness of the Spirit belongs to you. wait upon Him to give you this
to-day!
My brother, pray listen to my last words. The All of God summons you.
The All of sin
summons you. The All of Christ summons you. The All of the surrender
that Jesus requires summons
you. The All of the Spirit, His indispensableness and His glory, summons
you. The All of faith
summons you. Come and let the love of God conquer you. Come and let the
glorious salvation
master you. Do not hark away back from the glorious tidings that the
Triune God, with all that He is,
is prepared to be your All; but be silent and listen to it, until your
soul becomes constrained to give
the answer, "Even in me God shall be all." Take Christ anew to-day as
One who has given His life
that God may be all, and do you also yield your life for this supreme
end. God will fill you also with
His Holy Spirit. Amen.
Printed ly MORRISON & GIBB LIMITED, Edinburgh
By the Rev. ANDREW MURRAY.
(NIV) Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL
VERSION. Copyright (C) 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society.
Used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishers.
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