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Steps to Christ
Thousands have become acquainted with Jesus through this little book, Steps to
Christ. And it has helped many more, including those who have walked with Him for years,
to know Him better.
In just thirteen short chapters, you discover the steps to finding a forever friendship
with Jesus. You read about His love for you, repentance, faith and acceptance,
growing like Him, the privilege of prayer, what to do with doubt, and how to spend your
days rejoicing in your best Friend, Jesus.
Library of Congress
Catalogue Card No. 56-7169 ISBN 0-8163-0045-3
Copyright (C) by The Ellen G. White Publications.
This online version
sponsored by the Othello SDA Church
CONTENTS
(9)
God's Love for Man
Nature and revelation alike testify of God's love. Our Father in heaven is the source of
life, of wisdom, and of joy. Look at the wonderful and beautiful things of nature. Think
of their marvelous adaptation to the needs and happiness, not only of man, but of all
living creatures. The sunshine and the rain, that gladden and refresh the earth, the hills
and seas and plains, all speak to us of the Creator's love. It is God who supplies the
daily needs of all His creatures. In the beautiful words of the psalmist--
"The eyes of all wait upon Thee; And Thou givest them their meat in due season. Thou
openest Thine hand, And satisfiest the desire of every living thing." Psalm 145:15,
16.
God made man perfectly holy and happy; and the fair earth, as it came from the Creator's
hand, bore no blight of decay or shadow of the curse. It is transgression of God's
law--the law of love--that has brought woe and death. Yet even amid the suffering that
results from sin, God's love is revealed. It is written that God cursed the ground for
man's sake. Genesis 3:17. The thorn and the thistle--the difficulties and trials that make
his life one of toil and care--were appointed for his good as a part of the training
needful in God's plan for his uplifting from the ruin and degradation that sin has
wrought. The world, though fallen, is not all sorrow and misery. In nature itself are
messages of hope and comfort. There are flowers upon the thistles, and the thorns are
covered with roses.
"God is love" is written upon every opening bud, upon every spire of springing
grass. The lovely birds making the air vocal with their happy songs, the delicately tinted
flowers in their perfection perfuming the air, the lofty trees of the forest with their
rich foliage of living green -- all testify to the tender, fatherly care of our God and to
His desire to make His children happy.
The word of God reveals His character. He Himself has declared His infinite love and pity.
When Moses prayed, "Show me Thy glory," the Lord answered, "I will make all
My goodness pass before thee." Exodus 33:18, 19. This is His glory. The Lord passed
before Moses, and proclaimed, "The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving
iniquity and transgression and sin." Exodus 34:6, 7. He is "slow to anger, and
of great kindness," "because He delighteth in mercy." Jonah 4:2; Micah
7:18.
God has bound our hearts to Him by unnumbered tokens in heaven and in earth. Through the
things of nature, and the deepest and tenderest earthly ties that human hearts can know,
He has sought to reveal Himself to us. Yet these but imperfectly represent His love.
Though all these evidences have been given, the enemy of good blinded the minds of men, so
that they looked upon God with fear; they thought of Him as severe and unforgiving. Satan
led men to conceive of God as a being whose chief attribute is stern justice,--one who is
a severe judge, a harsh, exacting creditor. He pictured the Creator as a being who is
watching with jealous eye to discern the errors and mistakes of men, that He may visit
judgments upon them. It was to remove this dark shadow, by revealing to the world the
infinite love of God, that Jesus came to live among men.
The Son of God came from heaven to make manifest the Father. "No man hath seen God at
any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared
Him." John 1:18. "Neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to
whomsoever the Son will reveal Him." Matthew 11:27. When one of the disciples made
the request, "Show us the Father," Jesus answered, "Have I been so long
time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the
Father; and how sayest thou then, Show us the Father?" John 14:8, 9.
In describing His earthly mission, Jesus said, The Lord "hath anointed Me to preach
the gospel to the poor; He hath sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance
to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are
bruised." Luke 4:18. This was His work. He went about doing good and healing all that
were oppressed by Satan. There were whole villages where there was not a moan of sickness
in any house, for He had passed through them and healed all their sick. His work gave
evidence of His divine anointing. Love, mercy, and compassion were revealed in every act
of His life; His heart went out in tender sympathy to the children of men. He took man's
nature, that He might reach man's wants. The poorest and humblest were not afraid to
approach Him. Even little children were attracted to Him. They loved to climb upon His
knees and gaze into the pensive face, benignant with love.
Jesus did not suppress one word of truth, but He uttered it always in love. He exercised
the greatest tact and thoughtful, kind attention in His intercourse with the people. He
was never rude, never needlessly spoke a severe word, never gave needless pain to a
sensitive soul. He did not censure human weakness. He spoke the truth, but always in love.
He denounced hypocrisy, unbelief, and iniquity; but tears were in His voice as He uttered
His scathing rebukes. He wept over Jerusalem, the city He loved, which refused to receive
Him, the way, the truth, and the life. They had rejected Him, the Saviour, but He regarded
them with pitying tenderness. His life was one of self-denial and thoughtful care for
others. Every soul was precious in His eyes. While He ever bore Himself with divine
dignity, He bowed with the tenderest regard to every member of the family of God. In all
men He saw fallen souls whom it was His mission to save.
Such is the character of Christ as revealed in His life. This is the character of God. It
is from the Father's heart that the streams of divine compassion, manifest in Christ, flow
out to the children of men. Jesus, the tender, pitying Saviour, was God "manifest in
the flesh." 1 Timothy 3:16.
It was to redeem us that Jesus lived and suffered and died. He became "a Man of
Sorrows," that we might be made partakers of everlasting joy. God permitted His
beloved Son, full of grace and truth, to come from a world of indescribable glory, to a
world marred and blighted with sin, darkened with the shadow of death and the curse. He
permitted Him to leave the bosom of His love, the adoration of the angels, to suffer
shame, insult, humiliation, hatred, and death. "The chastisement of our peace was
upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed." Isaiah 53:5. Behold Him in the
wilderness, in Gethsemane, upon the cross! The spotless Son of God took upon Himself the
burden of sin. He who had been one with God, felt in His soul the awful separation that
sin makes between God and man. This wrung from His lips the anguished cry, "My God,
My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" Matthew 27:46. It was the burden of sin, the
sense of its terrible enormity, of its separation of the soul from God--it was this that
broke the heart of the Son of God.
But this great sacrifice was not made in order to create in the Father's heart a love for
man, not to make Him willing to save. No, no! "God so loved the world, that He gave
His only-begotten Son." John 3:16. The Father loves us, not because of the great
propitiation, but He provided the propitiation because He loves us. Christ was the medium
through which He could pour out His infinite love upon a fallen world. "God was in
Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself." 2 Corinthians 5:19. God suffered with
His Son. In the agony of Gethsemane, the death of Calvary, the heart of Infinite Love paid
the price of our redemption.
Jesus said, "Therefore doth My Father love Me, because I lay down My life, that I
might take it again." John 10:17. That is, "My Father has so loved you that He
even loves Me more for giving My life to redeem you. In becoming your Substitute and
Surety, by surrendering My life, by taking your liabilities, your transgressions, I am
endeared to My Father; for by My sacrifice, God can be just, and yet the Justifier of him
who believeth in Jesus."
None but the Son of God could accomplish our redemption; for only He who was in the bosom
of the Father could declare Him. Only He who knew the height and depth of the love of God
could make it manifest. Nothing less than the infinite sacrifice made by Christ in behalf
of fallen man could express the Father's love to lost humanity.
"God so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son." He gave Him not
only to live among men, to bear their sins, and die their sacrifice. He gave Him to the
fallen race. Christ was to identify Himself with the interests and needs of humanity. He
who was one with God has linked Himself with the children of men by ties that are never to
be broken. Jesus is "not ashamed to call them brethren" (Hebrews 2:11); He is
our Sacrifice, our Advocate, our Brother, bearing our human form before the Father's
throne, and through eternal ages one with the race He has redeemed--the Son of man. And
all this that man might be uplifted from the ruin and degradation of sin that he might
reflect the love of God and share the joy of holiness.
The price paid for our redemption, the infinite sacrifice of our heavenly Father in giving
His Son to die for us, should give us exalted conceptions of what we may become through
Christ. As the inspired apostle John beheld the height, the depth, the breadth of the
Father's love toward the perishing race, he was filled with adoration and reverence; and,
failing to find suitable language in which to express the greatness and tenderness of this
love, he called upon the world to behold it. "Behold, what manner of love the Father
hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God." 1 John 3:1. What a
value this places upon man! Through transgression the sons of man become subjects of
Satan. Through faith in the atoning sacrifice of Christ the sons of Adam may become the
sons of God. By assuming human nature, Christ elevates humanity. Fallen men are placed
where, through connection with Christ, they may indeed become worthy of the name
"sons of God."
Such love is without a parallel. Children of the heavenly King! Precious promise! Theme
for the most profound meditation! The matchless love of God for a world that did not love
Him! The thought has a subduing power upon the soul and brings the mind into captivity to
the will of God. The more we study the divine character in the light of the cross, the
more we see mercy, tenderness, and forgiveness blended with equity and justice, and the
more clearly we discern innumerable evidences of a love that is infinite and a tender pity
surpassing a mother's yearning sympathy for her wayward child.
(17)
The Sinner's Need of Christ
Man was originally endowed with noble powers and a well-balanced mind. He was perfect in
his being, and in harmony with God. His thoughts were pure, his aims holy. But through
disobedience, his powers were perverted, and selfishness took the place of love. His
nature became so weakened through transgression that it was impossible for him, in his own
strength, to resist the power of evil. He was made captive by Satan, and would have
remained so forever had not God specially interposed. It was the tempter's purpose to
thwart the divine plan in man's creation, and fill the earth with woe and desolation. And
he would point to all this evil as the result of God's work in creating man.
In his sinless state, man held joyful communion with Him "in whom are hid all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge." Colossians 2:3. But after his sin, he could no
longer find joy in holiness, and he sought to hide from the presence of God. Such is still
the condition of the unrenewed heart. It is not in harmony with God, and finds no joy in
communion with Him. The sinner could not be happy in God's presence; he would shrink from
the companionship of holy beings. Could he be permitted to enter heaven, it would have no
joy for him. The spirit of unselfish love that reigns there --every heart responding to
the heart of Infinite Love --would touch no answering chord in his soul. His thoughts, his
interests, his motives, would be alien to
those that actuate the sinless dwellers there. He would be a discordant note in the melody
of heaven. Heaven would be to him a place of torture; he would long to be hidden from Him
who is its light, and the center of its joy. It is no arbitrary decree on the part of God
that excludes the wicked from heaven; they are shut out by their own unfitness for its
companionship. The glory of God would be to them a consuming fire. They would welcome
destruction, that they might be hidden from the face of Him who died to redeem them.
It is impossible for us, of ourselves, to escape from the pit of sin in which we are
sunken. Our hearts are evil, and we cannot change them. "Who can bring a clean thing
out of an unclean? not one." "The carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is
not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be." Job 14:4; Romans 8:7.
Education, culture, the exercise of the will, human effort, all have their proper sphere,
but here they are powerless. They may produce an outward correctness of behavior, but they
cannot change the heart; they cannot purify the springs of life. There must be a power
working from within, a new life from above, before men can be changed from sin to
holiness. That power is Christ. His grace alone can quicken the lifeless faculties of the
soul, and attract it to God, to holiness.
The Saviour said, "Except a man be born from above," unless he shall receive a
new heart, new desires, purposes, and motives, leading to a new life, "he cannot see
the kingdom of God." John 3:3, margin. The idea that it is necessary only to develop
the good that exists in man by nature, is a fatal deception. "The natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither
can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." "Marvel not that I
said unto thee, Ye must be born again." 1 Corinthians 2:14; John 3:7. Of Christ it is
written, "In Him was life; and the life was the light of men"--the only
"name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." John 1:4; Acts
4:12.
It is not enough to perceive the loving-kindness of God, to see the benevolence, the
fatherly tenderness, of His character. It is not enough to discern the wisdom and justice
of His law, to see that it is founded upon the eternal principle of love. Paul the apostle
saw all this when he exclaimed, "I consent unto the law that it is good."
"The law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good." But he added,
in the bitterness of his soul-anguish and despair, "I am carnal, sold under
sin." Romans 7:16, 12, 14. He longed for the purity, the righteousness, to which in
himself he was powerless to attain, and cried out, "O wretched man that I am! who
shall deliver me from this body of death?" Romans 7:24, margin. Such is the cry that
has gone up from burdened hearts in all lands and in all ages. To all, there is but one
answer, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." John
1:29.
Many are the figures by which the Spirit of God has sought to illustrate this truth, and
make it plain to souls that long to be freed from the burden of guilt. When, after his sin
in deceiving Esau, Jacob fled from his father's home, he was weighed down with a sense of
guilt. Lonely and outcast as he was, separated from all that had made life dear, the one
thought that above all others pressed upon his soul, was the fear that his sin had cut him
off from God, that he was forsaken of Heaven. In sadness he lay down to rest on the bare
earth, around him only the lonely hills, and above, the heavens bright with stars. As he
slept, a strange light broke upon his vision; and lo, from the plain on which he lay, vast
shadowy stairs seemed to lead upward to the very gates of heaven, and upon them angels of
God were passing up and down; while from the glory above, the divine voice was heard in a
message of comfort and hope. Thus was made known to Jacob that which met the need and
longing of his soul--a Saviour. With joy and gratitude he saw revealed a way by which he,
a sinner, could be restored to communion with God. The mystic ladder of his dream
represented Jesus, the only medium of communication between God and man.
This is the same figure to which Christ referred in His conversation with Nathanael, when
He said, "Ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending
upon the Son of man." John 1:51. In the apostasy, man alienated himself from God;
earth was cut off from heaven. Across the gulf that lay between, there could be no
communion. But through Christ, earth is again linked with heaven. With His own merits,
Christ has bridged the gulf which sin had made, so that the ministering angels can hold
communion with man. Christ connects fallen man in his weakness and helplessness with the
Source of infinite power.
But in vain are men's dreams of progress, in vain all efforts for the uplifting of
humanity, if they neglect the one Source of hope and help for the fallen race. "Every
good gift and every perfect gift" (James 1:17) is from God. There is no true
excellence of character apart from Him. And the only way to God is Christ. He says,
"I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by
Me." John 14:6.
The heart of God yearns over His earthly children with a love stronger than death. In
giving up His Son, He has poured out to us all heaven in one gift. The Saviour's life and
death and intercession, the ministry of angels, the pleading of the Spirit, the Father
working above and through all, the unceasing interest of heavenly beings,--all are
enlisted in behalf of man's redemption.
Oh, let us contemplate the amazing sacrifice that has been made for us! Let us try to
appreciate the labor and energy that Heaven is expending to reclaim the lost, and bring
them back to the Father's house. Motives stronger, and agencies more powerful, could never
be brought into operation; the exceeding rewards for right-doing, the enjoyment of heaven,
the society of the angels, the communion and love of God and His Son, the elevation and
extension of all our powers throughout eternal ages--are these not mighty incentives and
encouragements to urge us to give the heart's loving service to our Creator and Redeemer?
And, on the other hand, the judgments of God pronounced against sin, the inevitable
retribution, the degradation of our character, and the final destruction, are presented in
God's word to warn us against the service of Satan.
Shall we not regard the mercy of God? What more could He do? Let us place ourselves in
right relation to Him who has loved us with amazing love. Let us avail ourselves of the
means provided for us that we may be transformed into His likeness, and be restored to
fellowship with the ministering angels, to harmony and communion with the Father and the
Son.
(23)
Repentance
How shall a man be just with God? How shall the sinner be made righteous? It is only
through Christ that we can be brought into harmony with God, with holiness; but how are we
to come to Christ? Many are asking the same question as did the multitude on the Day of
Pentecost, when, convicted of sin, they cried out, "What shall we do?" The first
word of Peter's answer was, "Repent." Acts 2:37, 38. At another time, shortly
after, he said, "Repent, . . . and be converted, that your sins may be blotted
out." Acts 3:19.
Repentance includes sorrow for sin and a turning away from it. We shall not renounce sin
unless we see its sinfulness; until we turn away from it in heart, there will be no real
change in the life.
There are many who fail to understand the true nature of repentance. Multitudes sorrow
that they have sinned and even make an outward reformation because they fear that their
wrongdoing will bring suffering upon themselves. But this is not repentance in the Bible
sense. They lament the suffering rather than the sin. Such was the grief of Esau when he
saw that the birthright was lost to him forever. Balaam, terrified by the angel standing
in his pathway with drawn sword, acknowledged his guilt lest he should lose his life; but
there was no genuine repentance for sin, no conversion of purpose, no abhorrence of evil.
Judas Iscariot, after betraying his Lord, exclaimed, "I have sinned in that I have
betrayed the innocent blood." Matthew 27:4.
The confession was forced from his guilty soul by an awful sense of condemnation and a
fearful looking for of judgment. The consequences that were to result to him filled him
with terror, but there was no deep, heartbreaking grief in his soul, that he had betrayed
the spotless Son of God and denied the Holy One of Israel. Pharaoh, when suffering under
the judgments of God, acknowledged his sin in order to escape further punishment, but
returned to his defiance of Heaven as soon as the plagues were stayed. These all lamented
the results of sin, but did not sorrow for the sin itself.
But when the heart yields to the influence of the Spirit of God, the conscience will be
quickened, and the sinner will discern something of the depth and sacredness of God's holy
law, the foundation of His government in heaven and on earth. The "Light, which
lighteth every man that cometh into the world," illumines the secret chambers of the
soul, and the hidden things of darkness are made manifest. John 1:9. Conviction takes hold
upon the mind and heart. The sinner has a sense of the righteousness of Jehovah and feels
the terror of appearing, in his own guilt and uncleanness, before the Searcher of hearts.
He sees the love of God, the beauty of holiness, the joy of purity; he longs to be
cleansed and to be restored to communion with Heaven.
The prayer of David after his fall, illustrates the nature of true sorrow for sin. His
repentance was sincere and deep. There was no effort to palliate his guilt; no desire to
escape the judgment threatened, inspired his prayer. David saw the enormity of his
transgression; he saw the defilement of his soul; he loathed his sin. It was not for
pardon only that he prayed, but for purity of heart. He longed for the joy of holiness--to
be restored to harmony and communion with God. This was the language of his soul:
"Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the
man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, And in whose spirit there is no guile."
Psalm 32:1, 2. "Have mercy upon me, O God, according to Thy loving-kindness:
According unto the multitude of Thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions. . . . For I
acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me. . . . Purge me with hyssop,
and I shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. . . . Create in me a clean
heart, O God; And renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from Thy presence; And
take not Thy Holy Spirit from me. Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation; And uphold me
with Thy free spirit. . . . Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, Thou God of my
salvation: And my tongue shall sing aloud of Thy righteousness." Psalm 51:1-14.
A repentance such as this, is beyond the reach of our own power to accomplish; it is
obtained only from Christ, who ascended up on high and has given gifts unto men.
Just here is a point on which many may err, and hence they fail of receiving the help that
Christ desires to give them. They think that they cannot come to Christ unless they first
repent, and that repentance prepares for the forgiveness of their sins. It is true that
repentance does precede the forgiveness of sins; for it is only the broken and contrite
heart that will feel the need of a Saviour. But must the sinner wait till he has repented
before he can come to Jesus? Is repentance to be made an obstacle between the sinner and
the Saviour?
The Bible does not teach that the sinner must repent before he can heed the invitation of
Christ, "Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy- laden, and I will give you
rest." Matthew 11:28. It is the virtue that goes forth from Christ, that leads to
genuine repentance. Peter made the matter clear in his statement to the Israelites when he
said, "Him hath God exalted with His right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to
give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins." Acts 5:31. We can no more repent
without the Spirit of Christ to awaken the conscience than we can be pardoned without
Christ.
Christ is the source of every right impulse. He is the only one that can implant in the
heart enmity against sin. Every desire for truth and purity, every conviction of our own
sinfulness, is an evidence that His Spirit is moving upon our hearts.
Jesus has said, "I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto
Me." John 12:32. Christ must be revealed to the sinner as the Saviour dying for the
sins of the world; and as we behold the Lamb of God upon the cross of Calvary, the mystery
of redemption begins to unfold to our minds and the goodness of God leads us to
repentance. In dying for sinners, Christ manifested a love that is incomprehensible; and
as the sinner beholds this love, it softens the heart, impresses the mind, and inspires
contrition in the soul.
It is true that men sometimes become ashamed of their sinful ways, and give up some of
their evil habits, before they are conscious that they are being drawn to Christ. But
whenever they make an effort to reform, from a sincere desire to do right, it is the power
of Christ that is drawing them. An influence of which they are unconscious works upon the
soul, and the conscience is quickened, and the outward life is amended. And as Christ
draws them to look upon His cross, to behold Him whom their sins have pierced, the
commandment comes home to the conscience. The wickedness of their life, the deep-seated
sin of the soul, is revealed to them. They begin to comprehend something of the
righteousness of Christ, and exclaim, "What is sin, that it should require such a
sacrifice for the redemption of its victim? Was all this love, all this suffering, all
this humiliation, demanded, that we might not perish, but have everlasting life?"
The sinner may resist this love, may refuse to be drawn to Christ; but if he does not
resist he will be drawn to Jesus; a knowledge of the plan of salvation will lead him to
the foot of the cross in repentance for his sins, which have caused the sufferings of
God's dear Son.
The same divine mind that is working upon the things of nature is speaking to the hearts
of men and creating an inexpressible craving for something they have not. The things of
the world cannot satisfy their longing. The Spirit of God is pleading with them to seek
for those things that alone can give peace and rest--the grace of Christ, the joy of
holiness. Through influences seen and unseen, our Saviour is constantly at work to attract
the minds of men from the unsatisfying pleasures of sin to the infinite blessings that may
be theirs in Him. To all these souls, who are vainly seeking to drink from the broken
cisterns of this world, the divine message is addressed, "Let him that is athirst
come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." Revelation 22:17.
You who in heart long for something better than this world can give, recognize this
longing as the voice of God to your soul. Ask Him to give you repentance, to reveal Christ
to you in His infinite love, in His perfect purity. In the Saviour's life the principles
of God's law--love to God and man--were perfectly exemplified. Benevolence, unselfish
love, was the life of His soul. It is as we behold Him, as the light from our Saviour
falls upon us, that we see the sinfulness of our own hearts.
We may have flattered ourselves, as did Nicodemus, that our life has been upright, that
our moral character is correct, and think that we need not humble the heart before God,
like the common sinner: but when the light from Christ shines into our souls, we shall see
how impure we are; we shall discern the selfishness of motive, the enmity against God,
that has defiled every act of life. Then we shall know that our own righteousness is
indeed as filthy rags, and that the blood of Christ alone can cleanse us from the
defilement of sin, and renew our hearts in His own likeness.
One ray of the glory of God, one gleam of the purity of Christ, penetrating the soul,
makes every spot of defilement painfully distinct, and lays bare the deformity and defects
of the human character. It makes apparent the unhallowed desires, the infidelity of the
heart, the impurity of the lips. The sinner's acts of disloyalty in making void the law of
God, are exposed to his sight, and his spirit is stricken and afflicted under the
searching influence of the Spirit of God. He loathes himself as he views the pure,
spotless character of Christ.
When the prophet Daniel beheld the glory surrounding the heavenly messenger that was sent
unto him, he was overwhelmed with a sense of his own weakness and imperfection. Describing
the effect of the wonderful scene, he says, "There remained no strength in me: for my
comeliness was turned in me into corruption, and I retained no strength." Daniel
10:8. The soul thus touched will hate its selfishness, abhor its self-love, and will seek,
through Christ's righteousness, for the purity of heart that is in harmony with the law of
God and the character of Christ.
Paul says that as "touching the righteousness which is in the law"--as far as
outward acts were concerned --he was blameless" (Philippians 3:6); but when the
spiritual character of the law was discerned, he saw himself a sinner. Judged by the
letter of the law as men apply it to the outward life, he had abstained from sin; but when
he looked into the depths of its holy precepts, and saw himself as God saw him, he bowed
in humiliation and confessed his guilt. He says, "I was alive without the law once:
but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died." Romans 7:9. When he saw the
spiritual nature of the law, sin appeared in its true hideousness, and his self-esteem was
gone.
God does not regard all sins as of equal magnitude; there are degrees of guilt in His
estimation, as well as in that of man; but however trifling this or that wrong act may
seem in the eyes of men, no sin is small in the sight of God. Man's judgment is partial,
imperfect; but God estimates all things as they really are. The drunkard is despised and
is told that his sin will exclude him from heaven; while pride, selfishness, and
covetousness too often go unrebuked. But these are sins that are especially offensive to
God; for they are contrary to the benevolence of His character, to that unselfish love
which is the very atmosphere of the unfallen universe. He who falls into some of the
grosser sins may feel a sense of his shame and poverty and his need of the grace of
Christ; but pride feels no need, and so it closes the heart against Christ and the
infinite blessings He came to give.
The poor publican who prayed, "God be merciful to me a sinner" (Luke 18:13),
regarded himself as a very wicked man, and others looked upon him in the same light; but
he felt his need, and with his burden of guilt and shame he came before God, asking for
His mercy. His heart was open for the Spirit of God to do its gracious work and set him
free from the power of sin. The Pharisee's boastful, self-righteous prayer showed that his
heart was closed against the influence of the Holy Spirit. Because of his distance from
God, he had no sense of his own defilement, in contrast with the perfection of the divine
holiness. He felt no need, and he received nothing.
If you see your sinfulness, do not wait to make yourself better. How many there are who
think they are not good enough to come to Christ. Do you expect to become better through
your own efforts? "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? then
may ye also do good, that are accustomed to do evil." Jeremiah 13:23. There is help
for us only in God. We must not wait for stronger persuasions, for better opportunities,
or for holier tempers. We can do nothing of ourselves. We must come to Christ just as we
are.
But let none deceive themselves with the thought that God, in His great love and mercy,
will yet save even the rejecters of His grace. The exceeding sinfulness of sin can be
estimated only in the light of the cross. When men urge that God is too good to cast off
the sinner, let them look to Calvary. It was because there was no other way in which man
could be saved, because without this sacrifice it was impossible for the human race to
escape from the defiling power of sin, and be restored to communion with holy
beings,--impossible for them again to become partakers of spiritual life,--it was because
of this that Christ took upon Himself the guilt of the disobedient and suffered in the
sinner's stead. The love and suffering and death of the Son of God all testify to the
terrible enormity of sin and declare that there is no escape from its power, no hope of
the higher life, but through the submission of the soul to Christ.
The impenitent sometimes excuse themselves by saying of professed Christians, "I am
as good as they are. They are no more self-denying, sober, or circumspect in their conduct
than I am. They love pleasure and self-indulgence as well as I do." Thus they make
the faults of others an excuse for their own neglect of duty. But the sins and defects of
others do not excuse anyone, for the Lord has not given us an erring human pattern. The
spotless Son of God has been given as our example, and those who complain of the wrong
course of professed Christians are the ones who should show better lives and nobler
examples. If they have so high a conception of what a Christian should be, is not their
own sin so much the greater? They know what is right, and yet refuse to do it.
Beware of procrastination. Do not put off the work of forsaking your sins and seeking
purity of heart through Jesus. Here is where thousands upon thousands have erred to their
eternal loss. I will not here dwell upon the shortness and uncertainty of life; but there
is a terrible danger--a danger not sufficiently understood--in delaying to yield to the
pleading voice of God's Holy Spirit, in choosing to live in sin; for such this delay
really is. Sin, however small it may be esteemed, can be indulged in only at the peril of
infinite loss. What we do not overcome, will overcome us and work out our destruction.
Adam and Eve persuaded themselves that in so small a matter as eating of the forbidden
fruit there could not result such terrible consequences as God had declared. But this
small matter was the transgression of God's immutable and holy law, and it separated man
from God and opened the floodgates of death and untold woe upon our world. Age after age
there has gone up from our earth a continual cry of mourning, and the whole creation
groaneth and travaileth together in pain as a consequence of man's disobedience. Heaven
itself has felt the effects of his rebellion against God. Calvary stands as a memorial of
the amazing sacrifice required to atone for the transgression of the divine law. Let us
not regard sin as a trivial thing.
Every act of transgression, every neglect or rejection of the grace of Christ, is reacting
upon yourself; it is hardening the heart, depraving the will, benumbing the understanding,
and not only making you less inclined to yield, but less capable of yielding, to the
tender pleading of God's Holy Spirit.
Many are quieting a troubled conscience with the thought that they can change a course of
evil when they choose; that they can trifle with the invitations of mercy, and yet be
again and again impressed. They think that after doing despite to the Spirit of grace,
after casting their influence on the side of Satan, in a moment of terrible extremity they
can change their course. But this is not so easily done. The experience, the education, of
a lifetime, has so thoroughly molded the character that few then desire to receive the
image of Jesus.
Even one wrong trait of character, one sinful desire, persistently cherished, will
eventually neutralize all the power of the gospel. Every sinful indulgence strengthens the
soul's aversion to God. The man who manifests an infidel hardihood, or a stolid
indifference to divine truth, is but reaping the harvest of that which he has himself
sown. In all the Bible there is not a more fearful warning against trifling with evil than
the words of the wise man that the sinner "shall be holden with the cords of his
sins." Proverbs 5:22.
Christ is ready to set us free from sin, but He does not force the will; and if by
persistent transgression the will itself is wholly bent on evil, and we do not desire to
be set free, if we will not accept His grace, what more can He do? We have destroyed
ourselves by our determined rejection of His love. "Behold, now is the accepted time;
behold, now is the day of salvation." "Today if ye will hear His voice, harden
not your hearts." 2 Corinthians 6:2; Hebrews 3:7, 8.
"Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart"--the
human heart, with its conflicting emotions of joy and sorrow; the wandering, wayward
heart, which is the abode of so much impurity and deceit. 1 Samuel 16:7. He knows its
motives, its very intents and purposes. Go to Him with your soul all stained as it is.
Like the psalmist, throw its chambers open to the all-seeing eye, exclaiming, "Search
me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked
way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting." Psalm 139: 23, 24.
Many accept an intellectual religion, a form of godliness, when the heart is not cleansed.
Let it be your prayer, "Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit
within me." Psalm 51:10. Deal truly with your own soul. Be as earnest, as persistent,
as you would be if your mortal life were at stake. This is a matter to be settled between
God and your own soul, settled for eternity. A supposed hope, and nothing more, will prove
your ruin.
Study God's word prayerfully. That word presents before you, in the law of God and the
life of Christ, the great principles of holiness, without which "no man shall see the
Lord." Hebrews 12:14. It convinces of sin; it plainly reveals the way of salvation.
Give heed to it as the voice of God speaking to your soul.
As you see the enormity of sin, as you see yourself as you really are, do not give up to
despair. It was sinners that Christ came to save. We have not to reconcile God to us,
but--O wondrous love!--God in Christ is "reconciling the world unto Himself." 2
Corinthians 5:19. He is wooing by His tender love the hearts of His erring children. No
earthly parent could be as patient with the faults and mistakes of his children, as is God
with those He seeks to save. No one could plead more tenderly with the transgressor. No
human lips ever poured out more tender entreaties to the wanderer than does He. All His
promises, His warnings, are but the breathing of unutterable love.
When Satan comes to tell you that you are a great sinner, look up to your Redeemer and
talk of His merits. That which will help you is to look to His light. Acknowledge your
sin, but tell the enemy that "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners"
and that you may be saved by His matchless love. 1 Timothy 1:15. Jesus asked Simon a
question in regard to two debtors. One owed his lord a small sum, and the other owed him a
very large sum; but he forgave them both, and Christ asked Simon which debtor would love
his lord most. Simon answered, "He to whom he forgave most." Luke 7:43. We have
been great sinners, but Christ died that we might be forgiven. The merits of His sacrifice
are sufficient to present to the Father in our behalf. Those to whom He has forgiven most
will love Him most, and will stand nearest to His throne to praise Him for His great love
and infinite sacrifice. It is when we most fully comprehend the love of God that we best
realize the sinfulness of sin. When we see the length of the chain that was let down for
us, when we understand something of the infinite sacrifice that Christ has made in our
behalf, the heart is melted with tenderness and contrition.
(37)
Confession
"He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them
shall have mercy." Proverbs 28:13.
The conditions of obtaining mercy of God are simple and just and reasonable. The Lord does
not require us to do some grievous thing in order that we may have the forgiveness of sin.
We need not make long and wearisome pilgrimages, or perform painful penances, to commend
our souls to the God of heaven or to expiate our transgression; but he that confesseth and
forsaketh his sin shall have mercy.
The apostle says, "Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that
ye may be healed." James 5:16. Confess your sins to God, who only can forgive them,
and your faults to one another. If you have given offense to your friend or neighbor, you
are to acknowledge your wrong, and it is his duty freely to forgive you. Then you are to
seek the forgiveness of God, because the brother you have wounded is the property of God,
and in injuring him you sinned against his Creator and Redeemer. The case is brought
before the only true Mediator, our great High Priest, who "was in all points tempted
like as we are, yet without sin," and who is "touched with the feeling of our
infirmities," and is able to cleanse from every stain of iniquity. Hebrews 4:15.
Those who have not humbled their souls before God in acknowledging their guilt, have not
yet fulfilled the first condition of acceptance. If we have not experienced that
repentance which is not to be repented of, and have not with true humiliation of soul and
brokenness of spirit confessed our sins, abhorring our iniquity, we have never truly
sought for the forgiveness of sin; and if we have never sought, we have never found the
peace of God. The only reason why we do not have remission of sins that are past is that
we are not willing to humble our hearts and comply with the conditions of the word of
truth. Explicit instruction is given concerning this matter. Confession of sin, whether
public or private, should be heartfelt and freely expressed. It is not to be urged from
the sinner. It is not to be made in a flippant and careless way, or forced from those who
have no realizing sense of the abhorrent character of sin. The confession that is the
outpouring of the inmost soul finds its way to the God of infinite pity. The psalmist
says, "The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be
of a contrite spirit." Psalm 34:18.
True confession is always of a specific character, and acknowledges particular sins. They
may be of such a nature as to be brought before God only; they may be wrongs that should
be confessed to individuals who have suffered injury through them; or they may be of a
public character, and should then be as publicly confessed. But all confession should be
definite and to the point, acknowledging the very sins of which you are guilty.
In the days of Samuel the Israelites wandered from God. They were suffering the
consequences of sin; for they had lost their faith in God, lost their discernment of His
power and wisdom to rule the nation, lost their confidence in His ability to defend and
vindicate His cause. They turned from the great Ruler of the universe and desired to be
governed as were the nations around them. Before they found peace they made this definite
confession: "We have added unto all our sins this evil, to ask us a king." 1
Samuel 12:19. The very sin of which they were convicted had to be confessed. Their
ingratitude oppressed their souls and severed them from God.
Confession will not be acceptable to God without sincere repentance and reformation. There
must be decided changes in the life; everything offensive to God must be put away. This
will be the result of genuine sorrow for sin. The work that we have to do on our part is
plainly set before us: "Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings
from before Mine eyes; cease to do evil; learn to do well; seek judgment, relieve the
oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow." Isaiah 1:16, 17. "If the
wicked restore the pledge, give again that he had robbed, walk in the statutes of life,
without committing iniquity; he shall surely live, he shall not die." Ezekiel 33:15.
Paul says, speaking of the work of repentance: "Ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what
carefulness it wrought in you, yea, what clearing of yourselves, yea, what indignation,
yea, what fear, yea, what vehement desire, yea, what zeal, yea, what revenge! In all
things ye have approved yourselves to be clear in this matter." 2 Corinthians 7:11.
When sin has deadened the moral perceptions, the wrongdoer does not discern the defects of
his character nor realize the enormity of the evil he has committed; and unless he yields
to the convicting power of the Holy Spirit he remains in partial blindness to his sin. His
confessions are not sincere and in earnest. To every acknowledgment of his guilt he adds
an apology in excuse of his course, declaring that if it had not been for certain
circumstances he would not have done this or that for which he is reproved.
After Adam and Eve had eaten of the forbidden fruit, they were filled with a sense of
shame and terror. At first their only thought was how to excuse their sin and escape the
dreaded sentence of death. When the Lord inquired concerning their sin, Adam replied,
laying the guilt partly upon God and partly upon his companion: "The woman whom Thou
gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat." The woman put the
blame upon the serpent, saying, "The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat."
Genesis 3: 12, 13. Why did You make the serpent? Why did You suffer him to come into Eden?
These were the questions implied in her excuse for her sin, thus charging God with the
responsibility of their fall. The spirit of self-justification originated in the father of
lies and has been exhibited by all the sons and daughters of Adam. Confessions of this
order are not inspired by the divine Spirit and will not be acceptable to God. True
repentance will lead a man to bear his guilt himself and acknowledge it without deception
or hypocrisy. Like the poor publican, not lifting up so much as his eyes unto heaven, he
will cry, "God be merciful to me a sinner," and those who do acknowledge their
guilt will be justified, for Jesus will plead His blood in behalf of the repentant soul.
The examples in God's word of genuine repentance and humiliation reveal a spirit of
confession in which there is no excuse for sin or attempt at self-justification. Paul did
not seek to shield himself; he paints his sin in its darkest hue, not attempting to lessen
his guilt. He says, "Many of the saints did I shut up in prison, having received
authority from the chief priests; and when they were put to death, I gave my voice against
them. And I punished them oft in every synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme; and
being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted them even unto strange cities." Acts
26: 10, 11. He does not hesitate to declare that "Christ Jesus came into the world to
save sinners; of whom I am chief." 1 Timothy 1:15.
The humble and broken heart, subdued by genuine repentance, will appreciate something of
the love of God and the cost of Calvary; and as a son confesses to a loving father, so
will the truly penitent bring all his sins before God. And it is written, "If we
confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness." 1 John 1:9.
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Part Two
(43)
Consecration
God's promise is, "Ye shall seek Me, and find Me, when ye shall search for Me with
all your heart." Jeremiah 29:13.
The whole heart must be yielded to God, or the change can never be wrought in us by which
we are to be restored to His likeness. By nature we are alienated from God. The Holy
Spirit describes our condition in such words as these: "Dead in trespasses and
sins;" "the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint;" "no
soundness in it." We are held fast in the snare of Satan, "taken captive by him
at his will." Ephesians 2:1; Isaiah 1:5, 6; 2 Timothy 2:26. God desires to heal us,
to set us free. But since this requires an entire transformation, a renewing of our whole
nature, we must yield ourselves wholly to Him.
The warfare against self is the greatest battle that was ever fought. The yielding of
self, surrendering all to the will of God, requires a struggle; but the soul must submit
to God before it can be renewed in holiness.
The government of God is not, as Satan would make it appear, founded upon a blind
submission, an unreasoning control. It appeals to the intellect and the conscience.
"Come now, and let us reason together" is the Creator's invitation to the beings
He has made. Isaiah 1:18. God does not force the will of His creatures. He cannot accept
an homage that is not willingly and intelligently given. A mere forced submission would
prevent all real development of mind or character; it would make man a mere automaton.
Such is not the purpose of the Creator. He desires that man, the crowning work of His
creative power, shall reach the highest possible development. He sets before us the height
of blessing to which He desires to bring us through His grace. He invites us to give
ourselves to Him, that He may work His will in us. It remains for us to choose whether we
will be set free from the bondage of sin, to share the glorious liberty of the sons of
God.
In giving ourselves to God, we must necessarily give up all that would separate us from
Him. Hence the Saviour says, "Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he
hath, he cannot be My disciple." Luke 14:33. Whatever shall draw away the heart from
God must be given up. Mammon is the idol of many. The love of money, the desire for
wealth, is the golden chain that binds them to Satan. Reputation and worldly honor are
worshiped by another class. The life of selfish ease and freedom from responsibility is
the idol of others. But these slavish bands must be broken. We cannot be half the Lord's
and half the world's. We are not God's children unless we are such entirely.
There are those who profess to serve God, while they rely upon their own efforts to obey
His law, to form a right character, and secure salvation. Their hearts are not moved by
any deep sense of the love of Christ, but they seek to perform the duties of the Christian
life as that which God requires of them in order to gain heaven. Such religion is worth
nothing. When Christ dwells in the heart, the soul will be so filled with His love, with
the joy of communion with Him, that it will cleave to Him; and in the contemplation of
Him, self will be forgotten. Love to Christ will be the spring of action. Those who feel
the constraining love of God, do not ask how little may be given to meet the requirements
of God; they do not ask for the lowest standard, but aim at perfect conformity to the will
of their Redeemer. With earnest desire they yield all and manifest an interest
proportionate to the value of the object which they seek. A profession of Christ without
this deep love is mere talk, dry formality, and heavy drudgery.
Do you feel that it is too great a sacrifice to yield all to Christ? Ask yourself the
question, "What has Christ given for me?" The Son of God gave all--life and love
and suffering--for our redemption. And can it be that we, the unworthy objects of so great
love, will withhold our hearts from Him? Every moment of our lives we have been partakers
of the blessings of His grace, and for this very reason we cannot fully realize the depths
of ignorance and misery from which we have been saved. Can we look upon Him whom our sins
have pierced, and yet be willing to do despite to all His love and sacrifice? In view of
the infinite humiliation of the Lord of glory, shall we murmur because we can enter into
life only through conflict and self-abasement?
The inquiry of many a proud heart is, "Why need I go in penitence and humiliation
before I can have the assurance of my acceptance with God?" I point you to Christ. He
was sinless, and, more than this, He was the Prince of heaven; but in man's behalf He
became sin for the race. "He was numbered with the transgressors; and He bare the sin
of many, and made intercession for the transgressors." Isaiah 53:12.
But what do we give up, when we give all? A sin-polluted heart, for Jesus to purify, to
cleanse by His own blood, and to save by His matchless love. And yet men think it hard to
give up all! I am ashamed to hear it spoken of, ashamed to write it.
God does not require us to give up anything that it is for our best interest to retain. In
all that He does, He has the well-being of His children in view. Would that all who have
not chosen Christ might realize that He has something vastly better to offer them than
they are seeking for themselves. Man is doing the greatest injury and injustice to his own
soul when he thinks and acts contrary to the will of God. No real joy can be found in the
path forbidden by Him who knows what is best and who plans for the good of His creatures.
The path of transgression is the path of misery and destruction.
It is a mistake to entertain the thought that God is pleased to see His children suffer.
All heaven is interested in the happiness of man. Our heavenly Father does not close the
avenues of joy to any of His creatures. The divine requirements call upon us to shun those
indulgences that would bring suffering and disappointment, that would close to us the door
of happiness and heaven. The world's Redeemer accepts men as they are, with all their
wants, imperfections, and weaknesses; and He will not only cleanse from sin and grant
redemption through His blood, but will satisfy the heart-longing of all who consent to
wear His yoke, to bear His burden. It is His purpose to impart peace and rest to all who
come to Him for the bread of life. He requires us to perform only those duties that will
lead our steps to heights of bliss to which the disobedient can never attain. The true,
joyous life of the soul is to have Christ formed within, the hope of glory.
Many are inquiring, "How am I to make the surrender of myself to God?" You
desire to give yourself to Him, but you are weak in moral power, in slavery to doubt, and
controlled by the habits of your life of sin. Your promises and resolutions are like ropes
of sand. You cannot control your thoughts, your impulses, your affections. The knowledge
of your broken promises and forfeited pledges weakens your confidence in your own
sincerity, and causes you to feel that God cannot accept you; but you need not despair.
What you need to understand is the true force of the will. This is the governing power in
the nature of man, the power of decision, or of choice. Everything depends on the right
action of the will. The power of choice God has given to men; it is theirs to exercise.
You cannot change your heart, you cannot of yourself give to God its affections; but you
can choose to serve Him. You can give Him your will; He will then work in you to will and
to do according to His good pleasure. Thus your whole nature will be brought under the
control of the Spirit of Christ; your affections will be centered upon Him, your thoughts
will be in harmony with Him.
Desires for goodness and holiness are right as far as they go; but if you stop here, they
will avail nothing. Many will be lost while hoping and desiring to be Christians. They do
not come to the point of yielding the will to God. They do not now choose to be
Christians.
Through the right exercise of the will, an entire change may be made in your life. By
yielding up your will to Christ, you ally yourself with the power that is above all
principalities and powers. You will have strength from above to hold you steadfast, and
thus through constant surrender to God you will be enabled to live the new life, even the
life of faith.
(49)
Faith and Acceptance
As your conscience has been quickened by the Holy Spirit, you have seen something of the
evil of sin, of its power, its guilt, its woe; and you look upon it with abhorrence. You
feel that sin has separated you from God, that you are in bondage to the power of evil.
The more you struggle to escape, the more you realize your helplessness. Your motives are
impure; your heart is unclean. You see that your life has been filled with selfishness and
sin. You long to be forgiven, to be cleansed, to be set free. Harmony with God, likeness
to Him--what can you do to obtain it?
It is peace that you need--Heaven's forgiveness and peace and love in the soul. Money
cannot buy it, intellect cannot procure it, wisdom cannot attain to it; you can never
hope, by your own efforts, to secure it. But God offers it to you as a gift, "without
money and without price." Isaiah 55:1. It is yours if you will but reach out your
hand and grasp it. The Lord says, "Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as
white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool." Isaiah 1:18.
"A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you."
Ezekiel 36:26.
You have confessed your sins, and in heart put them away. You have resolved to give
yourself to God. Now go to Him, and ask that He will wash away your sins and give you a
new heart. Then believe that He does this because He has promised. This is the lesson
which Jesus taught while He was on earth, that the gift which God promises us, we must
believe we do receive, and it is ours. Jesus healed the people of their diseases when they
had faith in His power; He helped them in the things which they could see, thus inspiring
them with confidence in Him concerning things which they could not see--leading them to
believe in His power to forgive sins. This He plainly stated in the healing of the man
sick with palsy: "That ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive
sins, (then saith He to the sick of the palsy,) Arise, take up thy bed, and go unto thine
house." Matthew 9:6. So also John the evangelist says, speaking of the miracles of
Christ, "These are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son
of God; and that believing ye might have life through His name." John 20:31.
From the simple Bible account of how Jesus healed the sick, we may learn something about
how to believe in Him for the forgiveness of sins. Let us turn to the story of the
paralytic at Bethesda. The poor sufferer was helpless; he had not used his limbs for
thirty-eight years. Yet Jesus bade him, "Rise, take up thy bed, and walk." The
sick man might have said, "Lord, if Thou wilt make me whole, I will obey Thy
word." But, no, he believed Christ's word, believed that he was made whole, and he
made the effort at once; he willed to walk, and he did walk. He acted on the word of
Christ, and God gave the power. He was made whole.
In like manner you are a sinner. You cannot atone for your past sins; you cannot change
your heart and make yourself holy. But God promises to do all this for you through Christ.
You believe that promise. You confess your sins and give yourself to God. You will to
serve Him. Just as surely as you do this, God will fulfill His word to you. If you believe
the promise,-- believe that you are forgiven and cleansed,--God supplies the fact; you are
made whole, just as Christ gave the paralytic power to walk when the man believed that he
was healed. It is so if you believe it.
Do not wait to feel that you are made whole, but say, "I believe it; it is so, not
because I feel it, but because God has promised."
Jesus says, "What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive
them, and ye shall have them." Mark 11:24. There is a condition to this promise--that
we pray according to the will of God. But it is the will of God to cleanse us from sin, to
make us His children, and to enable us to live a holy life. So we may ask for these
blessings, and believe that we receive them, and thank God that we have received them. It
is our privilege to go to Jesus and be cleansed, and to stand before the law without shame
or remorse. "There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ
Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit." Romans 8:1.
Henceforth you are not your own; you are bought with a price. "Ye were not redeemed
with corruptible things, as silver and gold;... but with the precious blood of Christ, as
of a lamb without blemish and without spot." 1 Peter 1:18, 19. Through this simple
act of believing God, the Holy Spirit has begotten a new life in your heart. You are as a
child born into the family of God, and He loves you as He loves His Son.
Now that you have given yourself to Jesus, do not draw back, do not take yourself away
from Him, but day by day say, "I am Christ's; I have given myself to Him;" and
ask Him to give you His Spirit and keep you by His grace. As it is by giving yourself to
God, and believing Him, that you become His child, so you are to live in Him. The apostle
says, "As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in Him."
Colossians 2:6.
Some seem to feel that they must be on probation, and must prove to the Lord that they are
reformed, before they can claim His blessing. But they may claim the blessing of God even
now. They must have His grace, the Spirit of Christ, to help their infirmities, or they
cannot resist evil. Jesus loves to have us come to Him just as we are, sinful, helpless,
dependent. We may come with all our weakness, our folly, our sinfulness, and fall at His
feet in penitence. It is His glory to encircle us in the arms of His love and to bind up
our wounds, to cleanse us from all impurity.
Here is where thousands fail; they do not believe that Jesus pardons them personally,
individually. They do not take God at His word. It is the privilege of all who comply with
the conditions to know for themselves that pardon is freely extended for every sin. Put
away the suspicion that God's promises are not meant for you. They are for every repentant
transgressor. Strength and grace have been provided through Christ to be brought by
ministering angels to every believing soul. None are so sinful that they cannot find
strength, purity, and righteousness in Jesus, who died for them. He is waiting to strip
them of their garments stained and polluted with sin, and to put upon them the white robes
of righteousness; He bids them live and not die.
God does not deal with us as finite men deal with one another. His thoughts are thoughts
of mercy, love, and tenderest compassion. He says, "Let the wicked forsake his way,
and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have
mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon." "I have blotted
out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins." Isaiah 55:7;
44:22.
"I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God: wherefore
turn yourselves, and live ye." Ezekiel 18:32. Satan is ready to steal away the
blessed assurances of God. He desires to take every glimmer of hope and every ray of light
from the soul; but you must not permit him to do this. Do not give ear to the tempter, but
say, "Jesus has died that I might live. He loves me, and wills not that I should
perish. I have a compassionate heavenly Father; and although I have abused His love,
though the blessings He has given me have been squandered, I will arise, and go to my
Father, and say, 'I have sinned against heaven, and before Thee, and am no more worthy to
be called Thy son: make me as one of Thy hired servants.'" The parable tells you how
the wanderer will be received: "When he was yet a great way off, his father saw him,
and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him." Luke 15:18-20.
But even this parable, tender and touching as it is, comes short of expressing the
infinite compassion of the heavenly Father. The Lord declares by His prophet, "I have
loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn
thee." Jeremiah 31:3. While the sinner is yet far from the Father's house, wasting
his substance in a strange country, the Father's heart is yearning over him; and every
longing awakened in the soul to return to God is but the tender pleading of His Spirit,
wooing, entreating, drawing the wanderer to his Father's heart of love.
With the rich promises of the Bible before you, can you give place to doubt? Can you
believe that when the poor sinner longs to return, longs to forsake his sins, the Lord
sternly withholds him from coming to His feet in repentance? Away with such thoughts!
Nothing can hurt your own soul more than to entertain such a conception of our heavenly
Father. He hates sin, but He loves the sinner, and He gave Himself in the person of
Christ, that all who would might be saved and have eternal blessedness in the kingdom of
glory. What stronger or more tender language could have been employed than He has chosen
in which to express His love toward us? He declares, "Can a woman forget her sucking
child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget,
yet will I not forget thee." Isaiah 49:15.
Look up, you that are doubting and trembling; for Jesus lives to make intercession for us.
Thank God for the gift of His dear Son and pray that He may not have died for you in vain.
The Spirit invites you today. Come with your whole heart to Jesus, and you may claim His
blessing.
As you read the promises, remember they are the expression of unutterable love and pity.
The great heart of Infinite Love is drawn toward the sinner with boundless compassion.
"We have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins." Ephesians 1:7.
Yes, only believe that God is your helper. He wants to restore His moral image in man. As
you draw near to Him with confession and repentance, He will draw near to you with mercy
and forgiveness.
(57)
The Test of Discipleship
"If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold,
all things are become new." 2 Corinthians 5:17.
A person may not be able to tell the exact time or place, or trace all the chain of
circumstances in the process of conversion; but this does not prove him to be unconverted.
Christ said to Nicodemus, "The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the
sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is everyone
that is born of the Spirit." John 3:8. Like the wind, which is invisible, yet the
effects of which are plainly seen and felt, is the Spirit of God in its work upon the
human heart. That regenerating power, which no human eye can see, begets a new life in the
soul; it creates a new being in the image of God. While the work of the Spirit is silent
and imperceptible, its effects are manifest. If the heart has been renewed by the Spirit
of God, the life will bear witness to the fact. While we cannot do anything to change our
hearts or to bring ourselves into harmony with God; while we must not trust at all to
ourselves or our good works, our lives will reveal whether the grace of God is dwelling
within us. A change will be seen in the character, the habits, the pursuits. The contrast
will be clear and decided between what they have been and what they are. The character is
revealed, not by occasional good deeds and occasional misdeeds, but by the tendency of the
habitual words and acts.
It is true that there may be an outward correctness of deportment without the renewing
power of Christ. The love of influence and the desire for the esteem of others may produce
a well-ordered life. Self-respect may lead us to avoid the appearance of evil. A selfish
heart may perform generous actions. By what means, then, shall we determine whose side we
are on?
Who has the heart? With whom are our thoughts? Of whom do we love to converse? Who has our
warmest affections and our best energies? If we are Christ's, our thoughts are with Him,
and our sweetest thoughts are of Him. All we have and are is consecrated to Him. We long
to bear His image, breathe His spirit, do His will, and please Him in all things.
Those who become new creatures in Christ Jesus will bring forth the fruits of the Spirit,
"love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,
temperance." Galatians 5:22, 23. They will no longer fashion themselves according to
the former lusts, but by the faith of the Son of God they will follow in His steps,
reflect His character, and purify themselves even as He is pure. The things they once
hated they now love, and the things they once loved they hate. The proud and
self-assertive become meek and lowly in heart. The vain and supercilious become serious
and unobtrusive. The drunken become sober, and the profligate pure. The vain customs and
fashions of the world are laid aside. Christians will seek not the "outward
adorning," but "the hidden man of the heart, in that which is not corruptible,
even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit." 1 Peter 3: 3, 4.
There is no evidence of genuine repentance unless it works reformation. If he restore the
pledge, give again that he had robbed, confess his sins, and love God and his fellow men,
the sinner may be sure that he has passed from death unto life.
When, as erring, sinful beings, we come to Christ and become partakers of His pardoning
grace, love springs up in the heart. Every burden is light, for the yoke that Christ
imposes is easy. Duty becomes a delight, and sacrifice a pleasure. The path that before
seemed shrouded in darkness, becomes bright with beams from the Sun of Righteousness.
The loveliness of the character of Christ will be seen in His followers. It was His
delight to do the will of God. Love to God, zeal for His glory, was the controlling power
in our Saviour's life. Love beautified and ennobled all His actions. Love is of God. The
unconsecrated heart cannot originate or produce it. It is found only in the heart where
Jesus reigns. "We love, because He first loved us." 1 John 4:19, R.V. In the
heart renewed by divine grace, love is the principle of action. It modifies the character,
governs the impulses, controls the passions, subdues enmity, and ennobles the affections.
This love, cherished in the soul, sweetens the life and sheds a refining influence on all
around.
There are two errors against which the children of God--particularly those who have just
come to trust in His grace--especially need to guard. The first, already dwelt upon, is
that of looking to their own works, trusting to anything they can do, to bring themselves
into harmony with God. He who is trying to become holy by his own works in keeping the
law, is attempting an impossibility. All that man can do without Christ is polluted with
selfishness and sin. It is the grace of Christ alone, through faith, that can make us
holy.
The opposite and no less dangerous error is that belief in Christ releases men from
keeping the law of God; that since by faith alone we become partakers of the grace of
Christ, our works have nothing to do with our redemption.
But notice here that obedience is not a mere outward compliance, but the service of love.
The law of God is an expression of His very nature; it is an embodiment of the great
principle of love, and hence is the foundation of His government in heaven and earth. If
our hearts are renewed in the likeness of God, if the divine love is implanted in the
soul, will not the law of God be carried out in the life? When the principle of love is
implanted in the heart, when man is renewed after the image of Him that created him, the
new-covenant promise is fulfilled, "I will put My laws into their hearts, and in
their minds will I write them." Hebrews 10:16. And if the law is written in the
heart, will it not shape the life? Obedience--the service and allegiance of love--is the
true sign of discipleship. Thus the Scripture says, "This is the love of God, that we
keep His commandments." "He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His
commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him." 1 John 5:3; 2:4. Instead of
releasing man from obedience, it is faith, and faith only, that makes us partakers of the
grace of Christ, which enables us to render obedience.
We do not earn salvation by our obedience; for salvation is the free gift of God, to be
received by faith. But obedience is the fruit of faith. "Ye know that He was
manifested to take away our sins; and in Him is no sin. Whosoever abideth in Him sinneth
not: whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him, neither known Him." 1 John 3:5, 6. Here is
the true test. If we abide in Christ, if the love of God dwells in us, our feelings, our
thoughts, our purposes, our actions, will be in harmony with the will of God as expressed
in the precepts of His holy law. "Little children, let no man deceive you: he that
doeth righteousness is righteous, even as He is righteous." 1 John 3:7. Righteousness
is defined by the standard of God's holy law, as expressed in the ten precepts given on
Sinai.
That so-called faith in Christ which professes to release men from the obligation of
obedience to God, is not faith, but presumption. "By grace are ye saved through
faith." But "faith, if it hath not works, is dead." Ephesians 2:8; James
2:17. Jesus said of Himself before He came to earth, "I delight to do Thy will, O My
God: yea, Thy law is within My heart." Psalm 40:8. And just before He ascended again
to heaven He declared, "I have kept My Father's commandments, and abide in His
love." John 15:10. The Scripture says, "Hereby we do know that we know Him, if
we keep His commandments. . . . He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so to
walk even as He walked." 1 John 2:3-6. "Because Christ also suffered for us,
leaving us an example, that ye should follow His steps." 1 Peter 2:21.
The condition of eternal life is now just what it always has been,-- just what it was in
Paradise before the fall of our first parents,--perfect obedience to the law of God,
perfect righteousness. If eternal life were granted on any condition short of this, then
the happiness of the whole universe would be imperiled. The way would be open for sin,
with all its train of woe and misery, to be immortalized.
It was possible for Adam, before the fall, to form a righteous character by obedience to
God's law. But he failed to do this, and because of his sin our natures are fallen and we
cannot make ourselves righteous. Since we are sinful, unholy, we cannot perfectly obey the
holy law. We have no righteousness of our own with which to meet the claims of the law of
God. But Christ has made a way of escape for us. He lived on earth amid trials and
temptations such as we have to meet. He lived a sinless life. He died for us, and now He
offers to take our sins and give us His righteousness. If you give yourself to Him, and
accept Him as your Saviour, then, sinful as your life may have been, for His sake you are
accounted righteous. Christ's character stands in place of your character, and you are
accepted before God just as if you had not sinned.
More than this, Christ changes the heart. He abides in your heart by faith. You are to
maintain this connection with Christ by faith and the continual surrender of your will to
Him; and so long as you do this, He will work in you to will and to do according to His
good pleasure. So you may say, "The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the
faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me." Galatians 2:20. So
Jesus said to His disciples, "It is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father
which speaketh in you." Matthew 10:20. Then with Christ working in you, you will
manifest the same spirit and do the same good works --works of righteousness, obedience.
So we have nothing in ourselves of which to boast. We have no ground for self-exaltation.
Our only ground of hope is in the righteousness of Christ imputed to us, and in that
wrought by His Spirit working in and through us.
When we speak of faith, there is a distinction that should be borne in mind. There is a
kind of belief that is wholly distinct from faith. The existence and power of God, the
truth of His word, are facts that even Satan and his hosts cannot at heart deny. The Bible
says that "the devils also believe, and tremble;" but this is not faith. James
2:19. Where there is not only a belief in God's word, but a submission of the will to Him;
where the heart is yielded to Him, the affections fixed upon Him, there is faith-- faith
that works by love and purifies the soul. Through this faith the heart is renewed in the
image of God. And the heart that in its unrenewed state is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be, now delights in its holy precepts, exclaiming with the psalmist,
"O how love I Thy law! it is my meditation all the day." Psalm 119:97. And the
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us, "who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit." Romans 8:1.
There are those who have known the pardoning love of Christ and who really desire to be
children of God, yet they realize that their character is imperfect, their life faulty,
and they are ready to doubt whether their hearts have been renewed by the Holy Spirit. To
such I would say, Do not draw back in despair. We shall often have to bow down and weep at
the feet of Jesus because of our shortcomings and mistakes, but we are not to be
discouraged. Even if we are overcome by the enemy, we are not cast off, not forsaken and
rejected of God. No; Christ is at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for
us. Said the beloved John, "These things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if
any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." 1 John
2:1. And do not forget the words of Christ, "The Father Himself loveth you."
John 16:27. He desires to restore you to Himself, to see His own purity and holiness
reflected in you. And if you will but yield yourself to Him, He that hath begun a good
work in you will carry it forward to the day of Jesus Christ. Pray more fervently; believe
more fully. As we come to distrust our own power, let us trust the power of our Redeemer,
and we shall praise Him who is the health of our countenance.
The closer you come to Jesus, the more faulty you will appear in your own eyes; for your
vision will be clearer, and your imperfections will be seen in broad and distinct contrast
to His perfect nature. This is evidence that Satan's delusions have lost their power; that
the vivifying influence of the Spirit of God is arousing you.
No deep-seated love for Jesus can dwell in the heart that does not realize its own
sinfulness. The soul that is transformed by the grace of Christ will admire His divine
character; but if we do not see our own moral deformity, it is unmistakable evidence that
we have not had a view of the beauty and excellence of Christ.
The less we see to esteem in ourselves, the more we shall see to esteem in the infinite
purity and loveliness of our Saviour. A view of our sinfulness drives us to Him who can
pardon; and when the soul, realizing its helplessness, reaches out after Christ, He will
reveal Himself in power. The more our sense of need drives us to Him and to the word of
God, the more exalted views we shall have of His character, and the more fully we shall
reflect His image.
(67)
Growing Up Into Christ
The change of heart by which we become children of God is in the Bible spoken of as birth.
Again, it is compared to the germination of the good seed sown by the husbandman. In like
manner those who are just converted to Christ are, "as new-born babes," to
"grow up" to the stature of men and women in Christ Jesus. 1 Peter 2:2;
Ephesians 4:15. Or like the good seed sown in the field, they are to grow up and bring
forth fruit. Isaiah says that they shall "be called trees of righteousness, the
planting of the Lord, that He might be glorified." Isaiah 61:3. So from natural life,
illustrations are drawn, to help us better to understand the mysterious truths of
spiritual life.
Not all the wisdom and skill of man can produce life in the smallest object in nature. It
is only through the life which God Himself has imparted, that either plant or animal can
live. So it is only through the life from God that spiritual life is begotten in the
hearts of men. Unless a man is "born from above," he cannot become a partaker of
the life which Christ came to give. John 3:3, margin.
As with life, so it is with growth. It is God who brings the bud to bloom and the flower
to fruit. It is by His power that the seed develops, "first the blade, then the ear,
after that the full corn in the ear." Mark 4:28. And the prophet Hosea says of
Israel, that "he shall grow as the lily." "They shall revive as the corn,
and grow as the vine." Hosea 14:5, 7. And Jesus bids us "consider the lilies how
they grow." Luke 12:27. The plants and flowers grow not by their own care or anxiety
or effort, but by receiving that which God has furnished to minister to their life. The
child cannot, by any anxiety or power of its own, add to its stature. No more can you, by
anxiety or effort of yourself, secure spiritual growth. The plant, the child, grows by
receiving from its surroundings that which ministers to its life --air, sunshine, and
food. What these gifts of nature are to animal and plant, such is Christ to those who
trust in Him. He is their "everlasting light," "a sun and shield."
Isaiah 60:19; Psalm 84:11. He shall be as "the dew unto Israel." "He shall
come down like rain upon the mown grass." Hosea 14:5; Psalm 72:6. He is the living
water, "the Bread of God . . . which cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto
the world." John 6:33.
In the matchless gift of His Son, God has encircled the whole world with an atmosphere of
grace as real as the air which circulates around the globe. All who choose to breathe this
life-giving atmosphere will live and grow up to the stature of men and women in Christ
Jesus.
As the flower turns to the sun, that the bright beams may aid in perfecting its beauty and
symmetry, so should we turn to the Sun of Righteousness, that heaven's light may shine
upon us, that our character may be developed into the likeness of Christ.
Jesus teaches the same thing when He says, "Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch
cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide
in Me. . . . Without Me ye can do nothing." John 15:4, 5. You are just as dependent
upon Christ, in order to live a holy life, as is the branch upon the parent stock for
growth and fruitfulness. Apart from Him you have no life. You have no power to resist
temptation or to grow in grace and holiness. Abiding in Him, you may flourish. Drawing
your life from Him, you will not wither nor be fruitless. You will be like a tree planted
by the rivers of water.
Many have an idea that they must do some part of the work alone. They have trusted in
Christ for the forgiveness of sin, but now they seek by their own efforts to live aright.
But every such effort must fail. Jesus says, "Without Me ye can do nothing." Our
growth in grace, our joy, our usefulness,--all depend upon our union with Christ. It is by
communion with Him, daily, hourly,--by abiding in Him, --that we are to grow in grace. He
is not only the Author, but the Finisher of our faith. It is Christ first and last and
always. He is to be with us, not only at the beginning and the end of our course, but at
every step of the way. David says, "I have set the Lord always before me: because He
is at my right hand, I shall not be moved." Psalm 16:8.
Do you ask, "How am I to abide in Christ?" In the same way as you received Him
at first. "As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in
Him." "The just shall live by faith." Colossians 2:6; Hebrews 10:38. You
gave yourself to God, to be His wholly, to serve and obey Him, and you took Christ as your
Saviour. You could not yourself atone for your sins or change your heart; but having given
yourself to God, you believe that He for Christ's sake did all this for you. By faith you
became Christ's, and by faith you are to grow up in Him-- by giving and taking. You are to
give all,--your heart, your will, your service,--give yourself to Him to obey all His
requirements; and you must take all,--Christ, the fullness of all blessing, to abide in
your heart, to be your strength, your righteousness, your everlasting helper,--to give you
power to obey.
Consecrate yourself to God in the morning; make this your very first work. Let your prayer
be, "Take me, O Lord, as wholly Thine. I lay all my plans at Thy feet. Use me today
in Thy service. Abide with me, and let all my work be wrought in Thee." This is a
daily matter. Each morning consecrate yourself to God for that day. Surrender all your
plans to Him, to be carried out or given up as His providence shall indicate. Thus day by
day you may be giving your life into the hands of God, and thus your life will be molded
more and more after the life of Christ.
A life in Christ is a life of restfulness. There may be no ecstasy of feeling, but there
should be an abiding, peaceful trust. Your hope is not in yourself; it is in Christ. Your
weakness is united to His strength, your ignorance to His wisdom, your frailty to His
enduring might. So you are not to look to yourself, not to let the mind dwell upon self,
but look to Christ. Let the mind dwell upon His love, upon the beauty, the perfection, of
His character. Christ in His self-denial, Christ in His humiliation, Christ in His purity
and holiness, Christ in His matchless love --this is the subject for the soul's
contemplation. It is by loving Him, copying Him, depending wholly upon Him, that you are
to be transformed into His likeness.
Jesus says, "Abide in Me." These words convey the idea of rest, stability,
confidence. Again He invites,"Come unto Me, . . . and I will give you rest."
Matthew 11:28. The words of the psalmist express the same thought: "Rest in the Lord,
and wait patiently for Him." And Isaiah gives the assurance, "In quietness and
in confidence shall be your strength." Psalm 37:7; Isaiah 30:15. This rest is not
found in inactivity; for in the Saviour's invitation the promise of rest is united with
the call to labor: "Take My yoke upon you: . . . and ye shall find rest."
Matthew 11:29. The heart that rests most fully upon Christ will be most earnest and active
in labor for Him.
When the mind dwells upon self, it is turned away from Christ, the source of strength and
life. Hence it is Satan's constant effort to keep the attention diverted from the Saviour
and thus prevent the union and communion of the soul with Christ. The pleasures of the
world, life's cares and perplexities and sorrows, the faults of others, or your own faults
and imperfections--to any or all of these he will seek to divert the mind. Do not be
misled by his devices. Many who are really conscientious, and who desire to live for God,
he too often leads to dwell upon their own faults and weaknesses, and thus by separating
them from Christ he hopes to gain the victory. We should not make self the center and
indulge anxiety and fear as to whether we shall be saved. All this turns the soul away
from the Source of our strength. Commit the keeping of your soul to God, and trust in Him.
Talk and think of Jesus. Let self be lost in Him. Put away all doubt; dismiss your fears.
Say with the apostle Paul, "I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life
which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and
gave Himself for me." Galatians 2:20. Rest in God. He is able to keep that which you
have committed to Him. If you will leave yourself in His hands, He will bring you off more
than conqueror through Him that has loved you.
When Christ took human nature upon Him, He bound humanity to Himself by a tie of love that
can never be broken by any power save the choice of man himself. Satan will constantly
present allurements to induce us to break this tie--to choose to separate ourselves from
Christ. Here is where we need to watch, to strive, to pray, that nothing may entice us to
choose another master; for we are always free to do this. But let us keep our eyes fixed
upon Christ, and He will preserve us. Looking unto Jesus, we are safe. Nothing can pluck
us out of His hand. In constantly beholding Him, we "are changed into the same image
from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord." 2 Corinthians 3:18.
It was thus that the early disciples gained their likeness to the dear Saviour. When those
disciples heard the words of Jesus, they felt their need of Him. They sought, they found,
they followed Him. They were with Him in the house, at the table, in the closet, in the
field. They were with Him as pupils with a teacher, daily receiving from His lips lessons
of holy truth. They looked to Him, as servants to their master, to learn their duty. Those
disciples were men "subject to like passions as we are." James 5:17. They had
the same battle with sin to fight. They needed the same grace, in order to live a holy
life.
Even John, the beloved disciple, the one who most fully reflected the likeness of the
Saviour, did not naturally possess that loveliness of character. He was not only
self-assertive and ambitious for honor, but impetuous, and resentful under injuries. But
as the character of the Divine One was manifested to him, he saw his own deficiency and
was humbled by the knowledge. The strength and patience, the power and tenderness, the
majesty and meekness, that he beheld in the daily life of the Son of God, filled his soul
with admiration and love. Day by day his heart was drawn out toward Christ, until he lost
sight of self in love for his Master. His resentful, ambitious temper was yielded to the
molding power of Christ. The regenerating influence of the Holy Spirit renewed his heart.
The power of the love of Christ wrought a transformation of character. This is the sure
result of union with Jesus. When Christ abides in the heart, the whole nature is
transformed. Christ's Spirit, His love, softens the heart, subdues the soul, and raises
the thoughts and desires toward God and heaven.
When Christ ascended to heaven, the sense of His presence was still with His followers. It
was a personal presence, full of love and light. Jesus, the Saviour, who had walked and
talked and prayed with them, who had spoken hope and comfort to their hearts, had, while
the message of peace was still upon His lips, been taken up from them into heaven, and the
tones of His voice had come back to them, as the cloud of angels received Him--"Lo, I
am with you alway, even unto the end of the world." Matthew 28:20. He had ascended to
heaven in the form of humanity. They knew that He was before the throne of God, their
Friend and Saviour still; that His sympathies were unchanged; that He was still identified
with suffering humanity. He was presenting before God the merits of His own precious
blood, showing His wounded hands and feet, in remembrance of the price He had paid for His
redeemed. They knew that He had ascended to heaven to prepare places for them, and that He
would come again and take them to Himself.
As they met together after the ascension they were eager to present their requests to the
Father in the name of Jesus. In solemn awe they bowed in prayer, repeating the assurance,
"Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in My name, He will give it you. Hitherto have ye
asked nothing in My name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full." John
16:23, 24. They extended the hand of faith higher and higher with the mighty argument,
"It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right
hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us." Romans 8:34. And Pentecost brought
them the presence of the Comforter, of whom Christ had said, He "shall be in
you." And He had further said, "It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I
go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send Him unto
you." John 14:17; 16:7. Henceforth through the Spirit, Christ was to abide
continually in the hearts of His children. Their union with Him was closer than when He
was personally with them. The light, and love, and power of the indwelling Christ shone
out through them, so that men, beholding, "marveled; and they took knowledge of them,
that they had been with Jesus." Acts 4:13.
All that Christ was to the disciples, He desires to be to His children today; for in that
last prayer, with the little band of disciples gathered about Him, He said, "Neither
pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on Me through their
word." John 17:20.
Jesus prayed for us, and He asked that we might be one with Him, even as He is one with
the Father. What a union is this! The Saviour has said of Himself, "The Son can do
nothing of Himself;" "the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works."
John 5:19; 14:10. Then if Christ is dwelling in our hearts, He will work in us "both
to will and to do of His good pleasure." Philippians 2:13. We shall work as He
worked; we shall manifest the same spirit. And thus, loving Him and abiding in Him, we
shall "grow up into Him in all things, which is the head, even Christ."
Ephesians 4:15.
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The Work and the Life
God is the source of life and light and joy to the universe. Like rays of light from the
sun, like the streams of water bursting from a living spring, blessings flow out from Him
to all His creatures. And wherever the life of God is in the hearts of men, it will flow
out to others in love and blessing.
Our Saviour's joy was in the uplifting and redemption of fallen men. For this He counted
not His life dear unto Himself, but endured the cross, despising the shame. So angels are
ever engaged in working for the happiness of others. This is their joy. That which selfish
hearts would regard as humiliating service, ministering to those who are wretched and in
every way inferior in character and rank, is the work of sinless angels. The spirit of
Christ's self-sacrificing love is the spirit that pervades heaven and is the very essence
of its bliss. This is the spirit that Christ's followers will possess, the work that they
will do.
When the love of Christ is enshrined in the heart, like sweet fragrance it cannot be
hidden. Its holy influence will be felt by all with whom we come in contact. The spirit of
Christ in the heart is like a spring in the desert, flowing to refresh all and making
those who are ready to perish, eager to drink of the water of life.
Love to Jesus will be manifested in a desire to work as He worked for the blessing and
uplifting of humanity. It will lead to love, tenderness, and sympathy toward all the
creatures of our heavenly Father's care.
The Saviour's life on earth was not a life of ease and devotion to Himself, but He toiled
with persistent, earnest, untiring effort for the salvation of lost mankind. From the
manger to Calvary He followed the path of self- denial and sought not to be released from
arduous tasks, painful travels and exhausting care and labor. He said, "The Son of
man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for
many." Matthew 20:28. This was the one great object of His life. Everything else was
secondary and subservient. It was His meat and drink to do the will of God and to finish
His work. Self and self-interest had no part in His labor.
So those who are the partakers of the grace of Christ will be ready to make any sacrifice,
that others for whom He died may share the heavenly gift. They will do all they can to
make the world better for their stay in it. This spirit is the sure outgrowth of a soul
truly converted. No sooner does one come to Christ than there is born in his heart a
desire to make known to others what a precious friend he has found in Jesus; the saving
and sanctifying truth cannot be shut up in his heart. If we are clothed with the
righteousness of Christ and are filled with the joy of His indwelling Spirit, we shall not
be able to hold our peace. If we have tasted and seen that the Lord is good we shall have
something to tell. Like Philip when he found the Saviour, we shall invite others into His
presence. We shall seek to present to them the attractions of Christ and the unseen
realities of the world to come. There will be an intensity of desire to follow in the path
that Jesus trod. There will be an earnest longing that those around us may "behold
the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." John 1:29.
And the effort to bless others will react in blessings upon ourselves. This was the
purpose of God in giving us a part to act in the plan of redemption. He has granted men
the privilege of becoming partakers of the divine nature and, in their turn, of diffusing
blessings to their fellow men. This is the highest honor, the greatest joy, that it is
possible for God to bestow upon men. Those who thus become participants in labors of love
are brought nearest to their Creator.
God might have committed the message of the gospel, and all the work of loving ministry,
to the heavenly angels. He might have employed other means for accomplishing His purpose.
But in His infinite love He chose to make us co-workers with Himself, with Christ and the
angels, that we might share the blessing, the joy, the spiritual uplifting, which results
from this unselfish ministry.
We are brought into sympathy with Christ through the fellowship of His sufferings. Every
act of self-sacrifice for the good of others strengthens the spirit of beneficence in the
giver's heart, allying him more closely to the Redeemer of the world, who "was rich,
yet for your sakes . . . became poor, that ye through His poverty might be rich." 2
Corinthians 8:9. And it is only as we thus fulfill the divine purpose in our creation that
life can be a blessing to us.
If you will go to work as Christ designs that His disciples shall, and win souls for Him,
you will feel the need of a deeper experience and a greater knowledge in divine things,
and will hunger and thirst after righteousness. You will plead with God, and your faith
will be strengthened, and your soul will drink deeper drafts at the well of salvation.
Encountering opposition and trials will drive you to the Bible and prayer. You will grow
in grace and the knowledge of Christ, and will develop a rich experience.
The spirit of unselfish labor for others gives depth, stability, and Christlike loveliness
to the character, and brings peace and happiness to its possessor. The aspirations are
elevated. There is no room for sloth or selfishness. Those who thus exercise the Christian
graces will grow and will become strong to work for God. They will have clear spiritual
perceptions, a steady, growing faith, and an increased power in prayer. The Spirit of God,
moving upon their spirit, calls forth the sacred harmonies of the soul in answer to the
divine touch. Those who thus devote themselves to unselfish effort for the good of others
are most surely working out their own salvation.
The only way to grow in grace is to be disinterestedly doing the very work which Christ
has enjoined upon us--to engage, to the extent of our ability, in helping and blessing
those who need the help we can give them. Strength comes by exercise; activity is the very
condition of life. Those who endeavor to maintain Christian life by passively accepting
the blessings that come through the means of grace, and doing nothing for Christ, are
simply trying to live by eating without working. And in the spiritual as in the natural
world, this always results in degeneration and decay. A man who would refuse to exercise
his limbs would soon lose all power to use them. Thus the Christian who will not exercise
his God-given powers not only fails to grow up into Christ, but he loses the strength that
he already had.
The church of Christ is God's appointed agency for the salvation of men. Its mission is to
carry the gospel to the world. And the obligation rests upon all Christians. Everyone, to
the extent of his talent and opportunity, is to fulfill the Saviour's commission. The love
of Christ, revealed to us, makes us debtors to all who know Him not. God has given us
light, not for ourselves alone, but to shed upon them.
If the followers of Christ were awake to duty, there would be thousands where there is one
today proclaiming the gospel in heathen lands. And all who could not personally engage in
the work, would yet sustain it with their means, their sympathy, and their prayers. And
there would be far more earnest labor for souls in Christian countries.
We need not go to heathen lands, or even leave the narrow circle of the home, if it is
there that our duty lies, in order to work for Christ. We can do this in the home circle,
in the church, among those with whom we associate, and with whom we do business.
The greater part of our Saviour's life on earth was spent in patient toil in the
carpenter's shop at Nazareth. Ministering angels attended the Lord of life as He walked
side by side with peasants and laborers, unrecognized and unhonored. He was as faithfully
fulfilling His mission while working at His humble trade as when He healed the sick or
walked upon the storm- tossed waves of Galilee. So in the humblest duties and lowliest
positions of life, we may walk and work with Jesus.
The apostle says, "Let every man, wherein he is called, therein abide with God."
1 Corinthians 7:24. The businessman may conduct his business in a way that will glorify
his Master because of his fidelity. If he is a true follower of Christ he will carry his
religion into everything that is done and reveal to men the spirit of Christ. The mechanic
may be a diligent and faithful representative of Him who toiled in the lowly walks of life
among the hills of Galilee. Everyone who names the name of Christ should so work that
others, by seeing his good works, may be led to glorify their Creator and Redeemer.
Many have excused themselves from rendering their gifts to the service of Christ because
others were possessed of superior endowments and advantages. The opinion has prevailed
that only those who are especially talented are required to consecrate their abilities to
the service of God. It has come to be understood by many that talents are given to only a
certain favored class to the exclusion of others who of course are not called upon to
share in the toils or the rewards. But it is not so represented in the parable. When the
master of the house called his servants, he gave to every man his work.
With a loving spirit we may perform life's humblest duties "as to the Lord."
Colossians 3:23. If the love of God is in the heart, it will be manifested in the life.
The sweet savor of Christ will surround us, and our influence will elevate and bless.
You are not to wait for great occasions or to expect extraordinary abilities before you go
to work for God. You need not have a thought of what the world will think of you. If your
daily life is a testimony to the purity and sincerity of your faith, and others are
convinced that you desire to benefit them, your efforts will not be wholly lost.
The humblest and poorest of the disciples of Jesus can be a blessing to others. They may
not realize that they are doing any special good, but by their unconscious influence they
may start waves of blessing that will widen and deepen, and the blessed results they may
never know until the day of final reward. They do not feel or know that they are doing
anything great. They are not required to weary themselves with anxiety about success. They
have only to go forward quietly, doing faithfully the work that God's providence assigns,
and their life will not be in vain. Their own souls will be growing more and more into the
likeness of Christ; they are workers together with God in this life and are thus fitting
for the higher work and the unshadowed joy of the life to come.
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Part Three
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A Knowledge of God
Many are the ways in which God is seeking to make Himself known to us and bring us into
communion with Him. Nature speaks to our senses without ceasing. The open heart will be
impressed with the love and glory of God as revealed through the works of His hands. The
listening ear can hear and understand the communications of God through the things of
nature. The green fields, the lofty trees, the buds and flowers, the passing cloud, the
falling rain, the babbling brook, the glories of the heavens, speak to our hearts, and
invite us to become acquainted with Him who made them all.
Our Saviour bound up His precious lessons with the things of nature. The trees, the birds,
the flowers of the valleys, the hills, the lakes, and the beautiful heavens, as well as
the incidents and surroundings of daily life, were all linked with the words of truth,
that His lessons might thus be often recalled to mind, even amid the busy cares of man's
life of toil.
God would have His children appreciate His works and delight in the simple, quiet beauty
with which He has adorned our earthly home. He is a lover of the beautiful, and above all
that is outwardly attractive He loves beauty of character; He would have us cultivate
purity and simplicity, the quiet graces of the flowers.
If we will b
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