The Importance of Preaching Repentance

             The apostles of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ were specially charged to preach “repentance and remission of sins” (Luke 24:47). Some of us are apt to overlook the first part of this commission in our eagerness to get to the second. This is a most serious mistake. It is our truest wisdom to keep close to the actual terms in which our blessed Lord delivered His charge to His earliest heralds. Do we give sufficient prominence to the first part of the commission? Do we preach repentance?

             Our Lord preached repentance (Mark 1:14,15) and He commanded His apostles to preach it; they did so consistently (Acts 2:38; 3:19; 17:30,31; 20:21; 26:20). With the example of our Lord and His apostles before us, may we not ask whether we preach repentance as we ought? No doubt it is very important to preach the gospel of the grace of God in all its fullness, clearness, and power. But if we do not preach repentance, we will seriously damage our testimony and the souls of our hearers. What would we say if we saw a farmer scattering seed on a hard road? We would pronounce him out of his mind. The plow must do its work. The ground must be broken up before the seed is sown; and we may rest assured that, as in the kingdom of nature, so in the kingdom of grace, the plowing must precede the sowing. The ground must be duly prepared for the seed or the operation will prove altogether defective. Let the gospel be preached as God has given it to us in His Word.

             What is this repentance which occupies such a prominent place in the preaching of our Lord and His apostles? We are not aware of any formal definition of the subject furnished by the Holy Spirit. However, the more we study the Word in reference to this great question, the more deeply we feel convinced that true repentance involves the solemn judgment of ourselves, our condition, and our ways in the presence of God; further, this judgment is not a transient feeling but an abiding condition, not an exercise to be gone through as a sort of title to the remission of sins, but the deep and settled habit of the soul, giving seriousness, tenderness, and profound humility which should characterize our entire lives.

             We greatly deplore the light, superficial style of much of our modern preaching. It sometimes seems as if the sinner were led to suppose that he is conferring a great honor upon God in accepting salvation at His hands. This type of preaching produces levity, self-indulgence, worldliness, and foolishness. Sin is not felt to be the dreadful thing it is in the sight of God. Self is not judged. The world is not given up. The gospel that is preached is what may be called “salvation made easy” to the flesh. People are offered a salvation which leaves self and the world unjudged and those who profess to be saved by this gospel often exhibit a great lack of seriousness in their Christian lives.

             [Editor’s note:Perhaps this reminds us of some modern evangelism which says, in effect, “Accept Christ and enjoy good fellowship”; “accept Christ and play better football”; or “accept Christ and solve all your problems.”]

             Man must take his true place before God, and that is the place of self-judgment, contrition of heart, real sorrow for sin, and true confession. It is here the gospel meets him. The fullness of God ever waits on an empty vessel, and a truly repentant soul is the empty vessel into which all the fullness and grace of God can flow in saving power. The Holy Spirit will make the sinner feel and own his real condition. It is He alone who can do so; but He uses preaching to this end. By preaching, He brings the Word of God to bear upon the conscience. The Word is His hammer wherewith He “breaks the rock in pieces” (Jer. 23:29); it is His plowshare wherewith He breaks up the “fallow ground” (Jer. 4:3; Hos. 10:12; Matt. 13:23). He makes the furrow and then casts in the incorruptible seed to germinate and bear fruit to the glory of God.

             Let us be careful that we do not draw from these remarks that there is anything meritorious in the sinner’s repentance. This would be to miss the point completely. Repentance is not a good work whereby the sinner merits the favor of God. True repentance is the discovery and hearty confession of our utter ruin and guilt. It is the finding out that my whole life has been a lie, and I myself am a liar. This is serious work. There is no flippancy or levity when a soul is brought to this. A repentant soul in the presence of God is a solemn reality.

             May we more solemnly, earnestly, and constantly call upon men to “repent and turn to God” (Acts 26:20). Let us preach “repentance” as well as “remission of sins.”

             (From “The Great Commission” in Miscellaneous Writings, Vol. 4.)

Heaven-Deserving or Hell-Deserving?

             During a recent visit to the town of Buxton, Derbyshire, I was asked by a Christian lady to visit a woman in whose spiritual welfare she was interested. One afternoon I called at the house, and in the course of conversation was amazed at her deplorable ignorance. On my enquiring if she was prepared for eternity, she replied that she did not know. Asked if she was a sinner, her response was, “Oh, yes; we are all sinners.”

             “God’s Word tells us that ‘The wages of sin is death’ (Rom. 6:23). Have you earned these wages?” “I don’t know,” she responded.

             “Have you been ‘born again’?” (John 3:3). “I have not.”

             “Have you been ‘converted’?” (Matt. 18:3). “No.”

             “Are you a hell-deserving sinner?” “No; I am not so bad as that.”

             “If, then, you are not a hell-deserving sinner, are you a heaven-deserving one?” “Yes; I believe I am.”

             “What! Do you mean to say that you deserve to go to heaven?” “I do.”

             “Why do you think so?” “Because I never did any harm in my life.”

             This woman is a representative of thousands of decent, respectable persons all over the land. They seem to be utterly unconcerned about their guilt and danger. Ask them if they expect to get to heaven, and they unhesitatingly declare that they “hope” or “expect” to reach it “at last.” Enquire the ground of their confidence, and they tell you that they “never did any harm,” and have tried to “do their duty.” They admit in a general way that they are “sinners,” but they don’t believe that they are hell-deserving sinners. Ask them how long it is since they were “born again,” “converted,” or “saved,” and they reply that they have not got “that length” yet.

             Is the reader “heaven-deserving” or “hell-deserving?” Surely you don’t believe that you have always been what you should have been, and always done what you should have done.

                “I know that I am a sinner.” Then, according to your admission, you deserve to be punished. All unsaved, unconverted sinners are lost and guilty, helpless and hell-deserving, for God’s Word declares that “The soul who sins, it shall die” (Ezek. 18:20). What, then, is to become of you? Can you pay the debt that you owe to God? Will future well-doing blot out the past? Surely not. Thank God, there is deliverance for you at this very moment. Christ died for “sinners” (Rom. 5:8), for the “ungodly” (5:6), for you (1 Tim. 2:6). On account of His “finished” work God’s claims have been fully met, and by simply believing on Him who did it all and paid it all, you may now pass from death unto life, from darkness into light (Rom. 10:9). Settle the important question now—“Are you heaven-deserving or hell-deserving; are you bound for heaven or Hell—WHICH?”

“I Will Not Keep Silence”

“Our God shall come, and shall not keep silence:a fire shall devour before him, and it shall be very tempestuous round about him” (Psa. 50:3).

             “Behold, it is written before me:I will not keep silence, but will recompense, even recompense into their bosom” (Isa. 65:6).

             “Our God shall come”. Precious thought and hope for the believer. Although this coming is in reference to the Lord’s coming to set up His kingdom on the earth, it is still an event to be eagerly anticipated by the believer. What a wonderful day it will be when the Lord judges the nations and, having eradicated all that is dishonoring to His name, begins his thousand year reign on the earth. It will, however, be a sad day, to be sure. Many will be judged. In order to maintain His own holy standards, the Lord MUST judge.

             What a sobering thought it is that the Lord will judge and not keep silence. While it may seem that the Lord is relatively silent now, the day is coming in which He will not keep silence any longer. He will judge. He will judge without mercy. He will judge without grace. His judgment will be harsh, but fair. How can any stand before Him and dispute with Him when He speaks from His throne? His own righteousness will be evidenced by His piercing judgments. How it saddens the Lord to judge. Isaiah refers to judgment as being God’s “strange work” (28:21). God is love and He desires, yes demands, that all men everywhere repent (Acts 17:30). Without repentance, there is nothing left but for God to judge … and to judge completely. We find the Lord saying, “Say unto them, As I live, says the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live:turn, turn from your evil ways; for why will you die?” (Ezek. 33:11). There is joy in heaven over one sinner who repents. There is no joy in executing judgment on the wicked. There is not the slightest notion that God delights in punishing the sinner. However, judgment must come and the day is approaching when the Lord no longer will keep His silence.

             When the Lord Jesus first came to the earth, He kept His silence in relation to judging. “He shall not strive, nor cry; neither shall any man hear His voice in the streets” (Matt. 12:19). There is a time for silence (Eccl. 3:7), but that time is soon over. It will be time for the Lord’s silence to end. He refuses to be silent any longer. Sin must be dealt with in harshness and without prejudice.

             Thankfully, the believer will never experience the judging hand of God. Being in Christ, we are free from condemnation. Never will the harsh hand of God be raised against us. We are His, precious thought! However, we are surrounded by precious souls who are in danger of facing the Lord in His wrath against sin … where He will not keep silence. He will speak in complete and fiery condemnation against the rejecters of His grace. Brethren, if the day is coming in which the Lord will not keep silence, then it must be that the day is here in which we must not keep silence. “I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night:you who make mention of the LORD, keep not silence” (Isa. 62:6). Shout it, fellow believer. Proclaim the name of the Lord from the rooftops, in the streets, in the factories and businesses. Speak His name in the schoolyards, in the malls, in the highways and byways. We have been silent for too long. There is a time to keep silence, but that time is not now … not when it concerns the proclamation of the gospel of salvation. “How shall they hear without a preacher?” (Rom. 10:14). What a grand privilege and responsibility we have.

             Without a doubt, we live in a day of apathy. People care very little about one another. People do not want to be bothered with the problems of their neighbors. This is indicative of the Laodicean age in which we live. “I know your works, that you are neither cold nor hot; I would you were cold or hot” (Rev. 3:15). This is a true characteristic not only in the professing Church, but in the real Church as well. How important is it to you that your friend is saved? How concerned are you that your neighbor is destined for hell? How much will you go out of your way to tell a lost, precious soul that salvation is a free gift from God through faith in Christ Jesus? Will you risk being ridiculed or rejected to tell someone that God loves them? Consider Paul’s earnest, soul-wrenching longing for the salvation of Israel, “For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh” (Rom. 9:3). Can you believe that? Paul said, in effect, that he would give up his salvation for the salvation of Israel. Sometimes, I won’t even give up one of my free afternoons for the opportunity to tell someone of God’s saving grace, and that is to my own shame.

                There is an old saying that says, “Silence is golden.” I was once told by a dear, older brother that sometimes silence is not golden, it is just plain yellow. May the Lord give us the resolve to commit ourselves to doing the work of an evangelist. May our battle cry be, “I will not keep silent.” May the Lord give us such a burden for the lost that we cannot ignore it. “How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard?” (Rom. 10:14).

Repentance:What Is It?

             First it may be well to observe what repentance is not. Repentance is neither penitence (simple sorrow for sin), nor penance (the effort in some way to atone for wrong done), nor reformation (an attempt to replace bad habits with good ones).

             Repentance is a complete reversal of one’s inward attitude. To repent is to change one’s attitude toward self, toward sin, toward God, toward Christ. John the Baptist came preaching to publicans and sinners, hopelessly vile and depraved, “Repent [or change your attitude], for the kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Matt. 3:2). To the haughty scribes and legalistic Pharisees came the same command, “Change your attitude,” and thus they would be ready to receive Him who came in grace to save. To sinners everywhere the Saviour cried, “Except you [change your attitude], you shall all likewise perish” (Luke 13:3,5).

             True repentance implies that the pleasure lover sees and confesses the folly of his empty life; the self-indulgent learns to hate the passions that express the corruption of his nature; the self-righteous sees himself a condemned sinner in the eyes of a holy God; the man who has been hiding from God seeks to find a hiding place in Him; the Christ-rejecter realizes and owns his need of a Redeemer, and so believes unto life and salvation.

             To own frankly that I am lost and guilty is the prelude to life and peace. It is not a question of a certain depth of grief and sorrow, but simply the recognition and acknowledgment of need that lead one to turn to Christ for refuge. None can perish who put their trust in Him. His grace superabounds above all our sin, and His expiatory work on the cross is so infinitely precious to God that it fully meets all our uncleanness and guilt.

             (From Except Ye Repent.)

The Great Gospel Parables (Luke 15)

These parables are our Lord’s answer to the murmuring of the Pharisees—“This Man receives sinners and eats with them” (Luke 15:2). They are His divinely perfect way of vindicating the love and grace of God. So far from denying the charge, the Lord displays the truth and blessedness of that with which they charge Him. To do this He uses not one but three parables, each giving different aspects of the same love and grace, and all blending together to reveal the heart of God. And in this we have displayed the whole Trinity.

 

The Lost Sheep (15:1-7)

             Fittingly, the Lord begins with Himself, the Son. He had come into the world for this very purpose—to save sinners. The sheep belongs to Him (as all things are His), but has gone astray, beyond all hope of recovery by its own efforts. In fact it does nothing toward that recovery; both the shepherd in the parable and the true Shepherd do it all—leave all to accomplish this purpose. It includes Christ’s coming in flesh, His perfect life showing His absolute sinlessness, and above all His atoning death—the finished work of divine love, in making possible its saving the lost.

             “But none of the ransomed ever

                 knew

How deep were the waters crossed;

Nor how dark was the night that

                 the Lord passed through,

             Ere He found the sheep that was

                 lost.”                                                                                                                                                          (E.C. Clephane)

             As the work of saving was His, so the power to keep and bring home is His. The joy in it all and over the lost one found is His also. Indeed the joy throughout these parables is looked at as chiefly on God’s part. The reflection of that is in the saved soul. 

The Lost Piece of Money (15:8-10)

             Here in the woman seeking to find the lost coin it is not difficult to think of the present work of the Holy Spirit in the people of God, seeking diligently by the light of the Word, and the zeal of love, to reach those hidden in the dust of the world—behind their business, cares, pleasures—whatever hides them. Those who believe in the truth of their sin and of Christ as Saviour are “found.” The Spirit’s work is accomplished in working “repentance unto life” (Acts 11:18). Again there is joy in the presence of the angels of God. 

The Lost Son (15:11-24)

             In the first two parables the lost is seen largely or entirely passive. But in the last is seen the working of grace in the person, leading to a sense of misery, a turning to God, and coming with confession, to Him from the place of distance and of shame. And yet, may we not say, this is but the background upon which to display the love of the Father. It is the Father who is waiting, who sees the poor wanderer at a great distance—for who has ever “repented enough” or come all the way alone? With divine haste, the Father anticipates all, and with the kiss of pardon welcomes the lost to the best in His house—robe, ring, sandals, and feast. All are the gift of the Father whose joy He only, with the Son and Spirit, knows in its divine eternal fullness.

             To God the Father be the praise now and ever, by the Spirit through Jesus Christ our Lord.

                (From Help and Food, Vol. 38.)

Christ our Pattern

“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 2:5-8).

        In order that the mind of Christ may be formed in us, the apostle in this passage presents Christ before us as our perfect Pattern. We have a touching presentation of the lowliness of mind that was expressed in Him in His marvelous journey from Godhead glory to the cross of shame. Let us note that the force of the passage is to present, not simply the downward path He took, but the lowly mind that marked Him in taking the path.

        First, Christ is presented as “being in the form of God.” No man could pretend to describe the form of One “whom no man has seen nor can see” (1 Tim. 6:16); nevertheless we are told what was the mind of Christ while yet in the form of God. His mind was so set upon serving others in love that He thought not of Himself and His reputation, but “made Himself of no reputation,” and laid aside the outward form of God—though never ceasing to be God.

        Second, He exhibits the lowly mind by taking the form of a servant. Not only does He serve, but He assumes the form that is proper to a servant.

        Third, still further does He express the lowly mind by the particular “form of a servant” that He assumed. The angels are servants, but He passed the angels by. He “was made a little lower than the angels” (Heb. 2:9) and took His place in the likeness of men. He passed by the higher form of servant to take the lower. He was made in the likeness of men, a word that surely implies manhood in its full constitution—spirit, soul, and body. However, let it be remembered that His was not manhood in its fallen condition nor even with the capability of sinning (2 Cor. 5:21; John 5:19,30).

        Fourth, still further is the lowly mind expressed in Christ, for when found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself. He did not take occasion by “being found in fashion as a man” to exalt Himself among men according to the natural thought of His brethren who said, “If Thou do these things, show Thyself to the world” (John 7:3,4), but He humbled Himself. He did not claim His rights as a man.

        Fifth, yet further He expressed the lowly mind by becoming “obedient.” He might have become a man and commanded, but He takes the place of obedience. This implies the laying aside of individual will to do the will of another.

        Sixth, then again the lowly mind is seen by the measure of His obedience, for He was “obedient unto death.” This was more than obedience. In obedience He gave up His will; in death He gave up His life.

        Seventh, finally His lowly mind is expressed in the death that He died. There are many forms of death, but of all the deaths that man can die, He died the most ignominious of deaths—“the death of the cross.” This was more than an ordinary death, for while in going to death a man gives up his life, in going to the death of the cross a man gives up, not only his life, but his reputation before men. Thus it was with the Lord. In going to the death of the cross, such was His lowly mind—so truly did He ignore self—that He gave up His reputation before men and “was numbered with the transgressors” (Isa. 53:12).

        Let it be impressed upon our souls once again that the purpose of this wonderful passage is to set forth the pattern that Christ Himself has given for us to follow.

        (From Scripture Truth, 1930.)

The Grace of Christ (Luke 7:36-50)

In this passage we find the One who was presenting all the value and preciousness of that work that was yet to be accomplished in His own holy Person down here, and who could attract by His grace a poor, wretched, miserable creature into the one place where she was least likely to be welcome. There was not one spot where this woman could expect to find so little interest and appreciation as in the house of Simon the Pharisee, and there was no person on this earth that was less likely to be tolerated in such a place than this woman of the city.

        Observe the contrast between Simon and the woman. The Pharisee probably thought very highly of his own goodness, and, no doubt, wanted to gain some credit for himself by asking the Lord into his house. At the same time, this poor woman, owning herself as a miserable and brokenhearted creature, had Christ filling her thoughts. What was it, beloved, that first of all drew her in there? She did not know the forgiveness of sins—she did not bring that in, for as yet she did not possess it. But what did she bring in? only a broken heart. And let me assure you of this one thing, a broken heart is the very condition that gets the knowledge of the blessedness of the Person of Christ. It was the misery of man that brought Christ here.

        It is a wonderful thing to think of it, and yet it is true of us all, saints as well as sinners, that in our joys we were far away from Him, but in our miseries He came near to us. You will find it was nearly always a scene of sorrow and misery that was the occasion for His displaying the grace of His Person down here in this world. I have often thought that it was in the Lord that that word found its fullest and most blessed verification, “It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to go to the house of feasting” (Eccl. 7:2). Was it not to the house of mourning that He came? What is this world but a great scene of misery? It was that which attracted Him, and He made known in it all the grace of His Father and all the love of His heart. It was that which brought this woman in to Him—the grace that shone in His blessed Person. And now see the effect of it. The first thing is that she must get where He is. That is always the effect of grace; the desire to know Christ is not natural to any of us.

        There is a possibility of our attempting to work up feelings of love and affection for Christ in our hearts by our own efforts. I feel increasingly the need of being watchful as to this. That which Christ delights to receive from us is the affection of the new man that is called out and satisfied by His own Person. It is not a matter of working up feelings in our hearts for Christ; instead it is the objective presentation to faith of the Person of Christ which is the spring of the subjective affection of the new man; and therefore you find that you have desires after Christ and long to know Christ just in proportion as He is objectively before your soul. If He is the One before your soul, you will long to be with Him; but it is all formed by Him, and gratified by Him, and therefore Christ Himself becomes the spring and maintainer of the affections of the new man.

        It was grace that drew this poor woman in. What is so beautiful in it is to see how she faced all the difficulties; all that stood in her way in Simon’s house were never once thought of. Oh, the power of having One who is above all the difficulties simply before you! You never then think of difficulties. Mary Magdalene, in John 20, was the same way; she was so intent upon finding Him that nothing deterred her—nothing would keep her away.

        May the Lord, by His grace, grant that we may know what has been called the “expulsive power of a new affection,” even that blessed Person of Christ in the soul. It is that alone which drives all other things out.

Wonderful Love

The Lord Jesus
Left the glory and love of the
     Father’s presence
To come to earth to be …
Abused, ridiculed, beaten,
Mocked, whipped, humiliated,
     crucified.
Wonderful love!

He who did no sin,
Who knew no sin,
Who hated sin because He was holy,
Willingly became sin for us
And bore our sins.
Wonderful love!

He who had been in the bosom of the
     Father,
Who was one with the Father,
Who always did the will of the
     Father,
Who had loved and been loved by the
     Father through all eternity,
Was forsaken by God in order to bear
     the judgment for our sins.
Wonderful love!
Infinitely wonderful love!

The Seven Feasts of Jehovah

1. The Passover (Exod. 12:1-14;

Lev. 23:5)

        When God wanted to deliver the Israelites out of Egyptian slavery, He told Moses that each family should select a perfect male lamb from their flock and pen it up for four days to make sure it was healthy. At the end of the four days, on the fourteenth day of the first month, they were to kill the lamb and put the blood on the two door posts and on the lintel (making an outline of the cross).

        God told Moses that He would destroy the firstborn of every family in the land unless He saw the blood on the door posts and lintel; if the blood was there He would pass over that house and spare the firstborn.

        We know that the spotless Passover lamb whose blood saved from judgment is a type of the Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 5:17; 1 Pet. 1:19,20) who shed His blood “for many for the remission of sins” (Matt. 26:28) on a Passover Day many hundreds of years after the first one. It is the blood of Jesus Christ, God’s Son, that cleanses us from all sin (1 John 1:7). Have you come to Jesus, counting upon His precious blood to wash your sins away?

 

2. The Feast of Unleavened Bread

(Exod. 12:15-20; Lev. 23:6-8)

        The seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread points to the whole course and character of the believer’s life on earth, from the day of his/her conversion onward. It speaks of communion with God based upon redemption, sustained by feeding on Christ, and maintained in holiness and separation from evil. The apostle Paul makes this connection:“Therefore, let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth” (1 Cor. 5:8). This is followed by instructions to the Corinthians concerning purging the one from their midst who was living an unholy life. The purging is the negative aspect of the feast. Eating the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth, examining ourselves according to God’s standards, would be the positive aspect of the feast and the basis for communion and fellowship with God and our fellow Christians (1 John 1:5-9).

 

3. The Feast of Firstfruits

(Lev. 23:9-14)

        The Feast of Firstfruits marked the beginning of the spring grain harvest. (In the Mediterranean lands, such as Israel, with rainy, mild winters and hot, dry summers, wheat was planted in the late fall or early winter and harvested in the spring.) Although no specific day or month, such as is given for the Passover, is mentioned for this feast, it would probably have occurred close in time to the Passover. It was always on the first day of the week, “on the morrow after the Sabbath.” The sheaf of firstfruits is a type of Christ risen from the dead. The Lord Jesus hinted at the analogy between grain harvest and His resurrection in John 12:23-26. The apostle Paul stated the analogy clearly in 1 Corinthians 15:20-23. Because Christ was raised, we can look forward to being raised at His coming. Even now we have been raised with Christ and seated “together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus” (Eph. 2:6).

4. The Feast of Weeks or Pentecost

(Lev. 23:15-21)

        This feast is a type of the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2). The two loaves, waved before Jehovah as the sheaf of firstfruits, point to the fact that by the Holy Spirit Jews and Gentiles were formed into one body (1 Cor. 12:13), “one new man” (Eph. 2:15). These two loaves were baked with leaven (usually a type of sin), further indicating that they are a type of Christ’s people, not of Christ Himself. No sin offering was offered with the sheaf of firstfruits, but a sin offering was to be offered with the two wave loaves (Lev. 23:19). God’s people are “accepted in the Beloved” (Eph. 1:6), but only in the Beloved.

 

5. The Feast of Trumpets

(Num. 29:1-6)

        The first four feasts took place in the first two months of the Israelite year. After an interval of four months, the Feast of Trumpets began a series of three feasts, all taking place in the seventh month. The Feast of Trumpets took place on the first day of the seventh month. In Numbers 10:1-10, Jehovah gave Moses instruction for making two trumpets which were to be used to gather the people together. This feast, a holy “calling together” or assembly, looks forward to the raising of those who have died in Christ, the changing of those Christians still living, and the gathering of both groups of believers together to meet the Lord in the air at the time of the rapture (or Lord’s coming). “We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment … at the last trump” (1 Cor. 15:51,52). “The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout … with the trump of God; … so shall we ever be with the Lord. Wherefore comfort one another with these words” (1 Thess. 4:13-18).

 

6. The Day of Atonement

(Lev. 16:1-34; 23:26-32)

        The characteristic aspects of the Day of Atonement are the blood taken within the veil and sprinkled on the mercy seat and the ceremony of the scapegoat. These ceremonies were performed once a year on the tenth day of the seventh month, the Day of Atonement, and at no other time. We have boldness now “to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus” (Heb. 10:19). After the rapture we will be in the very presence of God and we will appreciate the value of the blood of Christ as we never did before. So also will we understand the exceeding sinfulness of sin, the marvelous grace of God, and the fullness of Christ’s redemption. Our songs in glory will express eternal praise for the blood of the Lamb (Rev. 1:5,6; 5:9,10).

 

7. The Feast of Tabernacles

(Lev. 23:33-36,39-43)

        The Feast of Tabernacles was celebrated for eight days beginning on the fifteenth day of the seventh month. The first day was a day of rest and the eighth day was a day of rest. It was a harvest festival after the grain and the wine had been gathered in and rejoicing was expected (Deut. 16:13-15). A unique aspect of this feast was the requirement to make tabernacles or booths out of tree branches and to live in these booths for seven days. This was a reminder of the temporary dwellings the people of Israel had lived in during the journey from Egypt to Canaan.

        This feast is a picture of Christ’s millennial reign on the earth when the earth will be more fruitful than ever before and God’s people will rejoice that their beloved Lord and Saviour is at last being given the honor He deserves. Part of the joy of this time will be the remembrance of God’s care and grace during our own “wilderness journey.” The eighth day, the last “great day of the feast” (John 7:37), points to the dawn of the eternal day, the long Sabbath of Eternity, where, in a new heaven and a new earth, righteousness will dwell (2 Pet. 3:13) and God will be “all in all” (1 Cor. 15:28).

Friendship with Christ

“Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knows not what his lord does; but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you” (John 15:15).

        We are in danger on several sides of superficial and shallow conceptions of a religious life. One of these is that it consists in correct doctrinal beliefs, that holding firmly and intelligently to the truths of the gospel about Christ makes one a Christian. Another is the liturgical, that the faithful observance of the forms of worship is the essential element in the Christian life. Still another is that conduct is all, that Christianity is but a system of morality. Then, even among those who fully accept the doctrine of Christ’s atonement for sin, there is ofttimes an inadequate conception of the life of faith, a dependence for salvation upon one great past act of Christ—His death—without forming with Him a personal relation as a present, living Saviour.

        In the New Testament the Christian’s relation to Christ is represented as a personal acquaintance with Him, which ripens into a close and tender friendship. This was our Lord’s own ideal of discipleship. He invited men to come to Him, to break other ties, to attach themselves personally to Him, to leave all and go with Him (Matt. 4:19-22; 8:22; 10:37,38). He claimed the full allegiance of men’s hearts and lives:He must be first in their affections and first in their obedience and service; He must “have the preeminence” (Col. 1:18). He offered Himself to men, not merely as a Helper from without, not merely as One who would save them by taking their sins and dying for them, but as One who desired to form with them a close, intimate, and indissoluble friendship. It was not a tie of duty merely, or of obligation, or of doctrine, or of cause, by which He sought to bind His followers to Himself, but a tie of personal friendship.

        The importance of this personal knowledge of Christ is seen when we think of Him as the Revealer of the Father (John 1:18; 14:9). The disciples first learned to know Christ with His divine glory veiled. He led them on, talking to them, walking with them, winning their confidence and their love, and at length they learned that the Being who had grown so inexpressibly dear to them was the manifestation of God Himself, and that by their relation to Him as His friends, their poor, sinful humanity was lifted up into union with the Father (Rom. 8:15-17; Eph. 1:5).

        But how may we form a personal acquaintance with Christ? It was easy enough for John and Mary and the others who knew Him in the flesh. His eyes looked into theirs; they heard His words, they sat at His feet, or leaned upon His bosom (Luke 10:39; John 13:23; 1 John 1:1-3). We cannot know Christ in this way for He is gone from earth, and we ask how it is possible for us to have more than a biographical acquaintance with Him. If He were a mere man, nothing more than this would be possible. It would be absurd to talk about knowing the apostle John personally, or forming an intimate friendship with the apostle Paul. We may learn much of the characters of these men from the fragments of their stories that are preserved in the Scriptures, but we can never become personally acquainted with them until we meet them in heaven. With Christ, however, it is different. The Church did not lose Him when He ascended from Olivet. He never was more really in the world than He is now. He is as much to those who love Him and believe on Him as He was to His friends in Bethany. He is a present, living Saviour. We may form with Him an actual relation of personal friendship, which will grow closer and tenderer as the years go on, deepening with each new experience, shining more and more in our hearts, until at last, passing through the portal that men misname death, but which really is the beautiful gate of life, we shall see Him face to face, and know Him even as we are known (1 Cor. 13:12; 1 John 3:3).

        Is it possible for all Christians to attain this personal, conscious intimacy with Christ? There are some who do not seem to realize it. To them Christ is a creed, a rule of life, an example, a teacher, but not a friend. There are some excellent Christians who seem to know Christ only biographically. They have no experimental knowledge of Him:He is to them at best an absent friend—living, faithful and trusted, but still absent. However, no word of discouragement should be spoken to such. The Old Testament usually goes before the New, in experience as well as in the Biblical order. Most Christians begin with the historical Christ, knowing of Him before they know Him. Conscious personal intimacy with Him is ordinarily a later fruit of spiritual growth; yet it certainly appears from the Scriptures that such intimacy is possible to all who truly believe in Christ. Christ Himself hungers for our friendship, and for recognition by us, and answering affection from us; and if we take His gifts without Himself and His love, we surely rob ourselves of much joy and blessedness.

        The way to this experimental knowledge of Christ is very plainly marked out for us by our Lord Himself. He says that if we love Him, and keep His words, He will manifest Himself unto us, and He and His Father will come and make their abode with us (John 14:23). It is in loving Him and doing His will that we learn to know Christ; and we learn to love Him by trusting Him. Ofttimes we learn to know our human friends by trusting them. We may see no special beauty or worth in them as we pass through the ordinary experiences of life. But when we enter into difficult and trying circumstances, then the noble qualities of our true friends appear as we trust them, and they come nearer to us, and prove themselves true. In like manner, most of us really get acquainted with Christ only in experiences of need, in which His love and faithfulness are revealed.

        The value of a personal acquaintance with Christ is incalculable. There are men and women whom it is worth a great deal to have as friends. As our intimacy with them ripens, their lives open out like sweet flowers, disclosing rich beauty to our sight, and pouring fragrance upon our spirits. A true and great friendship is one of earth’s richest and best blessings. It is ever breathing songs into our hearts, evoking impulses of good, teaching holy lessons, and shedding all manner of benign influences upon our lives. But the friendship of Christ does infinitely more than this for us. It purifies our sinful lives; it makes us brave and strong; it inspires us ever to the best and noblest service. Its influence woos the most winsome graces out of mind and spirit. The richest, the sweetest, and the only perennial and never failing fountain of good in this world is the personal, experimental knowledge of Christ.

        That Christ should condescend thus to give His pure and divine friendship to sinful people like us is the greatest wonder of the world; but there is no doubt of the fact. No human friendship can ever be half so close and intimate as that which the lowliest of us may enjoy with our Saviour. If we but realize our privileges, the enriching that will come to our lives through this glorious relationship will be better than all gold and gems and all human friendships upon this earth.

        (From Reiner Publications, Swengel, Pennsylvania.)

The “Go” Chapter (Matthew 8)

The “Love” chapter (1 Cor. 13} and the “Faith” chapter (Heb. 11) are well known and loved, but have you ever read the “Go” chapter? Matthew 8 contains five specific miracles and the mention of many others, showing the Lord’s mastery over the human body, the weather, the sea, and demons. Interspersed throughout the chapter are many instances of this word of action—“Go.”

        Go and be a testimony. “And Jesus said unto him, See that you tell no man; but go your way, show yourself to the priest, and offer the gift that Moses commanded for a testimony unto them” (Matt. 8:4). Let us also go and show to others what our Lord has done for us as a testimony to them.

        Go and obey. “For I am a man under authority, having soldiers under me; and I say to this man, Go, and he goes; and to another, Come, and he comes; and to my servant, Do this, and he does it” (Matt. 8:9). This centurion was accustomed to obeying his superiors and to having his words be obeyed. Has the Lord asked you to do something? Are you dragging your feet or are you obeying Him promptly?

        Go and believe. “And Jesus said unto the centurion, Go your way; and as you have believed, so be it done unto you. And his servant was healed in the selfsame hour” (Matt. 8:13). The Lord marveled about the faith of only one person in the Scriptures and that is of this Gentile Roman soldier. Go on your way trusting the Lord for each need, casting every care upon Him for He does care for you.

        Go and serve Christ. “And He touched her hand, and the fever left her:and she arose, and ministered unto them” (Matt. 8:15). There are times that we may be laid aside due to illness and not able to do what we did when we were healthy. If the Lord chooses to heal us, we have the opportunity to serve Him and others with renewed strength. The word “minister” also has the thought of “to wait upon” as a waiter or waitress would do. How can we go today and attend to the needs and desires of the Lord?

        Go and avoid. “Now when Jesus saw great multitudes about Him, He gave commandment to depart unto the other side” (Matt. 8:18). The Lord was not impressed nor drawn by great numbers of people. He was on a mission given to Him by His Father and He was not moved by how His popularity ranked with the public. The Lord rewards those who are faithful to Him, not those who are politically correct or otherwise enmeshed with what our culture promotes.

        Go and follow. “Master, I will follow Thee wherever Thou goest” (Matt. 8:19). This bold statement is met with a proclamation of the Lord’s lack of a place to lay His head. A follower of Christ is not promised wealth, position, or power in this world. We are called to come apart and rest awhile when needed, but walking as He walked would keep us actively completing the mission that we are called to do, just as He did.

        Go and serve self? “Lord, suffer [allow] me first to go and bury my father” (Matt. 8:21). “Me first.” This is a common statement that is repeated by children and adults alike through our actions and decisions. It has been said many times by young parents that they never realized how selfish they were until they had children of their own who interrupted their sleep and wouldn’t let them do what they wanted to do. We need to replace “me first” with “Jesus first” and learn the words of the song, “Jesus and Others and You; What a wonderful way to spell JOY.” The Lord’s response to this person’s request is, “Follow Me.” To follow Him requires looking at Him, studying Him, and going where He is going,

        Go to sleep “Behold there arose a great tempest in the sea, insomuch that the ship was covered with the waves:but He was asleep” (Matt. 8:24). The only record we have of the Lord sleeping is on a boat during a storm. He knew the importance of sleep to his body and took advantage of this sailing trip to get some refreshment. The National Sleep Foundation’s website states, “Before Thomas Edison’s invention of the light bulb, people slept an average of 10 hours a night; today Americans average 6.9 hours of sleep on week nights and 7.5 hours per night on weekends.” A well-rested body is better suited to resist temptation and serve the Lord cheerfully and energetically.

        Go with God’s Word “If Thou cast us out, suffer us to go away into the herd of swine. And He said unto them, ‘Go’” (Matt. 8:3l,32). The Lord spoke one word and it was instantly obeyed by the demons, just as the wind and waves obeyed the rebuke He gave to them previously. The power in the Word of God is beyond compare! Read it. Memorize it. Speak it.

        Go away “And, behold, the whole city came out to meet Jesus; and when they saw Him, they besought Him that He would depart out of their coasts” (Matt. 8:34). If we go out with the gospel, we may be received with open arms, treated with indifference, or told to leave. The Lord didn’t press these people to accept Him. He departed but He left behind a healed man who published in ten cities “how great things Jesus had done for him:and all men did marvel” (Mark 5:20).

 

Who wrote the book of Hebrews?

Question:

Who wrote the book of Hebrews?



Answer:

Some think that Barnabas wrote it.  Some say Timothy.  Some say Paul. Hebrews 13:23 and 2 Peter 3:15 may be good clues that Paul wrote it. We know that the Lord really wrote this book (2 Timothy 3:16, 17).

The fact that the human writer is not mentioned shows that the attention is be on the Lord and the Holy Spirit who guided that person to write it. (Edited).

Why do we love the Lord?

Question:
Why do we love the Lord?

Answer:

Romans 5:1: “Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Romans 5:8: “But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.  We love the Lord because He has given us this peace, and we know that we are made right with God through the blood of His Son.   Some other references were Ephesians 2:4-8; 1 John 3:1; and 1 John 4:19.

Swallow That Gossip

In this passage we find the One who was presenting all the value and preciousness of that work that was yet to be accomplished in His own holy Person down here, and who could attract by His grace a poor, wretched, miserable creature into the one place where she was least likely to be welcome. There was not one spot where this woman could expect to find so little interest and appreciation as in the house of Simon the Pharisee, and there was no person on this earth that was less likely to be tolerated in such a place than this woman of the city.

        Observe the contrast between Simon and the woman. The Pharisee probably thought very highly of his own goodness, and, no doubt, wanted to gain some credit for himself by asking the Lord into his house. At the same time, this poor woman, owning herself as a miserable and brokenhearted creature, had Christ filling her thoughts. What was it, beloved, that first of all drew her in there? She did not know the forgiveness of sins—she did not bring that in, for as yet she did not possess it. But what did she bring in? only a broken heart. And let me assure you of this one thing, a broken heart is the very condition that gets the knowledge of the blessedness of the Person of Christ. It was the misery of man that brought Christ here.

        It is a wonderful thing to think of it, and yet it is true of us all, saints as well as sinners, that in our joys we were far away from Him, but in our miseries He came near to us. You will find it was nearly always a scene of sorrow and misery that was the occasion for His displaying the grace of His Person down here in this world. I have often thought that it was in the Lord that that word found its fullest and most blessed verification, “It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to go to the house of feasting” (Eccl. 7:2). Was it not to the house of mourning that He came? What is this world but a great scene of misery? It was that which attracted Him, and He made known in it all the grace of His Father and all the love of His heart. It was that which brought this woman in to Him—the grace that shone in His blessed Person. And now see the effect of it. The first thing is that she must get where He is. That is always the effect of grace; the desire to know Christ is not natural to any of us.

        There is a possibility of our attempting to work up feelings of love and affection for Christ in our hearts by our own efforts. I feel increasingly the need of being watchful as to this. That which Christ delights to receive from us is the affection of the new man that is called out and satisfied by His own Person. It is not a matter of working up feelings in our hearts for Christ; instead it is the objective presentation to faith of the Person of Christ which is the spring of the subjective affection of the new man; and therefore you find that you have desires after Christ and long to know Christ just in proportion as He is objectively before your soul. If He is the One before your soul, you will long to be with Him; but it is all formed by Him, and gratified by Him, and therefore Christ Himself becomes the spring and maintainer of the affections of the new man.

        It was grace that drew this poor woman in. What is so beautiful in it is to see how she faced all the difficulties; all that stood in her way in Simon’s house were never once thought of. Oh, the power of having One who is above all the difficulties simply before you! You never then think of difficulties. Mary Magdalene, in John 20, was the same way; she was so intent upon finding Him that nothing deterred her—nothing would keep her away.

        May the Lord, by His grace, grant that we may know what has been called the “expulsive power of a new affection,” even that blessed Person of Christ in the soul. It is that alone which drives all other things out.

Why should we love others?

Question:

Why should we love others?



Answer:

John 13:34,35: “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.”   By loving others we are a good testimony to the world and are a shining light for the Lord, and by following His commandments for us we are loving the Lord.  We can show that love to others by putting them before ourselves as in Philippians 2:3: “Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves.” We also talked a lot about walking in the light rather than darkness so that we can have fellowship with the Lord. 1 John 1:7: “But if we walk in the Light as He Himself is in the Light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin.”     We are supposed to do as it says in Romans 12:1,2 – present our bodies to God as a sacrifice, and as in 1 John 1:9 –  confess our sins before Him in order to have that fellowship restored.

Isaac and Jacob:Lessons of Faith

“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 2:5-8).

        In order that the mind of Christ may be formed in us, the apostle in this passage presents Christ before us as our perfect Pattern. We have a touching presentation of the lowliness of mind that was expressed in Him in His marvelous journey from Godhead glory to the cross of shame. Let us note that the force of the passage is to present, not simply the downward path He took, but the lowly mind that marked Him in taking the path.

        First, Christ is presented as “being in the form of God.” No man could pretend to describe the form of One “whom no man has seen nor can see” (1 Tim. 6:16); nevertheless we are told what was the mind of Christ while yet in the form of God. His mind was so set upon serving others in love that He thought not of Himself and His reputation, but “made Himself of no reputation,” and laid aside the outward form of God—though never ceasing to be God.

        Second, He exhibits the lowly mind by taking the form of a servant. Not only does He serve, but He assumes the form that is proper to a servant.

        Third, still further does He express the lowly mind by the particular “form of a servant” that He assumed. The angels are servants, but He passed the angels by. He “was made a little lower than the angels” (Heb. 2:9) and took His place in the likeness of men. He passed by the higher form of servant to take the lower. He was made in the likeness of men, a word that surely implies manhood in its full constitution—spirit, soul, and body. However, let it be remembered that His was not manhood in its fallen condition nor even with the capability of sinning (2 Cor. 5:21; John 5:19,30).

        Fourth, still further is the lowly mind expressed in Christ, for when found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself. He did not take occasion by “being found in fashion as a man” to exalt Himself among men according to the natural thought of His brethren who said, “If Thou do these things, show Thyself to the world” (John 7:3,4), but He humbled Himself. He did not claim His rights as a man.

        Fifth, yet further He expressed the lowly mind by becoming “obedient.” He might have become a man and commanded, but He takes the place of obedience. This implies the laying aside of individual will to do the will of another.

        Sixth, then again the lowly mind is seen by the measure of His obedience, for He was “obedient unto death.” This was more than obedience. In obedience He gave up His will; in death He gave up His life.

        Seventh, finally His lowly mind is expressed in the death that He died. There are many forms of death, but of all the deaths that man can die, He died the most ignominious of deaths—“the death of the cross.” This was more than an ordinary death, for while in going to death a man gives up his life, in going to the death of the cross a man gives up, not only his life, but his reputation before men. Thus it was with the Lord. In going to the death of the cross, such was His lowly mind—so truly did He ignore self—that He gave up His reputation before men and “was numbered with the transgressors” (Isa. 53:12).

        Let it be impressed upon our souls once again that the purpose of this wonderful passage is to set forth the pattern that Christ Himself has given for us to follow.

        (From Scripture Truth, 1930.)

Are You a Withered Leaf? Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Solomon

The Lord Jesus
Left the glory and love of the
     Father’s presence
To come to earth to be …
Abused, ridiculed, beaten,
Mocked, whipped, humiliated,
     crucified.
Wonderful love!

He who did no sin,
Who knew no sin,
Who hated sin because He was holy,
Willingly became sin for us
And bore our sins.
Wonderful love!

He who had been in the bosom of the
     Father,
Who was one with the Father,
Who always did the will of the
     Father,
Who had loved and been loved by the
     Father through all eternity,
Was forsaken by God in order to bear
     the judgment for our sins.
Wonderful love!
Infinitely wonderful love!

Why should we love God and where do we read about our love for God?

Question:
Why should we love God and where do we read about our love for God?

Answer:

Deuteronomy 6:5: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.” The Lord should come first in our life just as He put us before Himself.

Verses that were given as to why we should love God were:  Psalm 139:14: “I will give thanks to You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; Wonderful are Your works,” and John  3:16: “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.”   Some reasons that we should love the Lord are because He made us, and He gave His Son to die for us.  The ultimate reason that we should love the Lord is 1 John 4:19: “We love, because He first loved us.”

Are We Murmuring Against the Lord?

I desire to bring before you the way in which the Lord draws our hearts to Himself. I do not speak of how the conscience is set at rest. I trust all of my readers are at rest in the conscience, through the work of Christ, as to all questions of sin and judgment. But it is possible to know the work of the Lord and greatly rejoice in it and yet never really to have experienced His company. Let us look at some Scriptures that show how the Lord values our company, our affections, our love.

 

Simon Peter

        In Peter (Luke 5:4-11) we get the way the soul is first set at ease in the company of the Lord. If a poor man received a great benefit from a nobleman, he would better enjoy his gift than his company. This feeling needs to be removed. We may appreciate the grace of the Lord in having paid our debts, while little knowing His love. There is a difference between grace and love. We can enjoy grace a great way off, but to enjoy love there must be nearness; we must be in the company of the one who loves us. When the Lord came from heaven, He did not come into the midst of angels but of men in order to find companions for eternal glory. Peter had already known the Lord, but now it dawned on him who the One was whom he knew. He learned by the miraculous draught of fishes that Christ was the Lord of earth and heaven, who could command the fish to come into his net. When we apprehend in some measure the Person of the Lord, we wonder that He should want to bring such as we are into His own company. Peter says, “Depart from me,” for he felt that he was a sinner; yet he was attracted to Him all the while. Notwithstanding our sense of disparity, He sets us at ease in His presence. He says, “Fear not.” Christ would not only have us to believe what He has done for us on the cross, but He would take away every suggestion of fear and make us at home in His company. He has been here with us and we shall be with Him for ever, but do we enjoy His company now?

 

Mary and Martha

        In chapter 5 the Lord had come down in grace to minister to man, and Peter was drawn into His company. In Luke 10:38 we have an advance. The time was come that the Lord should be received up; thus we find Him here on His way to suffer. “He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51). “As they went, He entered into a certain village” (10:38). After the Mount of Transfiguration, where Moses and Elias spoke to Christ of His decease, He was on His way to death. On the way “Martha received Him into her house.” She had not the sense of the path the Lord was taking, that He was not staying in this world. So she invited Him into her house and sought to entertain Him with her things. She did not understand what was before the Lord at this time and she was cumbered about much serving, making the Lord her guest. Mary was, so to speak, the Lord’s guest, and He was entertaining her with His things. No doubt Martha served Him to the best of her ability with her house, her means, her time, her labor. Mary was in the company of the Lord. Martha wanted to bring the Lord to her side of things. Mary went to the Lord’s side. Do we know a little of that? He has this object in bringing us into His company, to lead us to His side of things. The Lord did use what was Peter’s—his boat—but this is more. He wants to bring us to the path that Mary chose. Martha blamed her for idleness. The Lord says, “Mary has chosen that good part.” What is the good part? It is the Lord’s things. It cannot be taken away. We might be using our wealth for the Lord, and it might all be taken away; but if I get to His side of things and let Him open that out to me so that I become His guest, and He entertains me with His things, it is a good part that cannot be taken away.

 

Mary, Martha, Lazarus, and Judas

        Turn now to John 12:1-8, and you will find a yet further advance. The Lord has reached Jerusalem and His circumstances are greatly altered. The Lord’s heart was most gratified to turn aside to Bethany and to find those who would appreciate Him. There will be a moment in the history of the earth when the rejected One will know a people who will gladly receive and welcome Him. This is foreshadowed here in Martha. Her brother Lazarus, who had recently been raised to life again by the Lord, is also there. He represents the nation of Israel that will be brought back again to life in this world. It will be a wonderful thing when the remnant of Israel receives Him and the nation is brought back as from death. Judas, as one who had companied with the Lord, represents apostate Christendom, those who have had to do with Christianity and its blessings and yet who will turn and give up Christianity and apostatize from Christ. Judas was about to sell Christ; he had not the smallest appreciation of Him. Only think how people may have all the love and grace of Christ put before them, and yet not appreciate Him. They may do good to men, and yet not have one atom of appreciation of Christ. How very much even Christians are tainted with this spirit of the world!

        But finally we have in Mary one who already in spirit had gone to the Lord’s side of things. She stands out beautifully and represents the affections of the true Church. She has a sense, no doubt taught of God, that Christ is going out of the world. The most precious thing she has she pours out on Him for His burial. Christ interpreted it so. I do not say she fully understood the meaning of her act; but a kind of instinct in her apprehended the danger that awaited Him, and she appreciated Him the more. But the Lord understands and puts the full meaning on it:“Against the day of My burying has she kept this.” If drawn into His company, where do our affections go? Are we free from the spirit of the world that can have all the grace of Christ before it, and yet withhold from Him? May the Lord give us to understand how He lays hold of our hearts to draw us into His company, and to lead us outside this world to where He has gone!

 

Mary Magdalene

        In John 20:14-18 the Lord has come out of death in resurrection. In Mary Magdalene we have one greatly attached to Him. He had cast out from her seven demons, and she, along with other women, “ministered unto Him of their substance” (Luke 8:2,3). Now she seeks Him in death, but in very deep affection. She thinks she has lost Him. When we have lost a friend, we find out how much we love him. Mary’s affections for Him make her inconsolable; the one thing she wants is Himself. Would to God we had more of such affection for the Lord! He must be first in His love drawing forth ours; we often want to put our love first. George Herbert puts it thus:“As when the heart says (sighing to be approved), Oh, could I love! and stops; God writes—Loved.”

        Do not say, “Oh, could I love!” Be occupied with His love and love because He loves (1 John 4:19). Mary Magdalene loved Him and she was the one to whom the Lord first appeared. He said unto her, “Mary.” She is a figure of the Church learning Him in resurrection. At first she thought she had got Him back here again; she sprang forward as much as to say, “I have got Him back.” “No,” says the Lord, “touch Me not.” He is conducting her out of the place of the Jewish remnant into the place of the Church. “I ascend unto My Father, and your Father, and to My God, and your God.” He is going to re-enter, as a man, that scene of holy love where He was before. “Go and tell My brethren”—they were to be with Him where He is. He brings us to His position as sons before the Father, into the affections that He knows with the Father. Surely that is deep and blessed intimacy! If you have been conducted along this line, if you know the Lord now in resurrection and in ascension, you will be prepared for the next thing to take place—His coming again.

 

The Bride of Christ

        Turn now to Revelation 22:16-20. Here, at the close of the book, the person of the Lord shines out. Throughout the book He has been revealed in many and various characters, as Jehovah, the First and the Last, the One clad in a priestly garment, the Lamb, and others. Spiritual perceptions may say in many cases, “I see the Lord in these varied characters”; but when we come to this last chapter, all at once the sweet words break in, “I Jesus.” It is as when the disciples were in the storm. “They were afraid.” But He said unto them, “It is I, be not afraid. Then they willingly received Him into the ship” (John 6:20,21). It is the Person of the Lord there brought out. So here, at the close of the book, “I, Jesus … am the Root and the Offspring of David.” That is what He is for the earth:the Sun of righteousness will arise and the remnant will receive and know the Lord.

        “The bright and Morning Star” is a heavenly Christ, the portion of the Church. She belongs to Christ while He is in heaven and she knows Him there. The Jews will not know Him till He comes back to earth. His relationship will be renewed with them on earth. The Church belongs to heaven, associated with a heavenly Christ, but her light—and a heavenly Christ is her light—will be seen on earth. It is the privilege of the Church here to respond for both the earth and the heavens. “The Spirit and the Bride say, Come.” All the administration of heavenly glory to the earth will be by the Bride. The Church must go into heavenly glory before the earth can get its blessing.

        “I Jesus.” Do you say, “I know Him”? You may not understand all connected with His person; but can you say, “I know Him”? Immediately “the Spirit and the Bride say, Come.” If I know what it is to be found in the company of Christ, to have tasted His love in the smallest way, I must surely know a little what it is to desire His coming. I do not doubt there are many hindrances; but the Lord is expressing to us His affection in the words, “I come quickly,” and He counts on a response from His Church. The Spirit utters it in the Bride, “Come, Lord Jesus.” The Lord is bringing His own person before His beloved saints, conducting them to intimacy with Himself. The response will be, “Come!” It does not hinder service, for we shall surely all the more invite thirsty souls. We shall say, “Let him who is athirst, Come.” May the Lord lead our hearts more into full communion with Himself, for His name’s sake!

Humility and Dependence

Humility

      “Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart” (Matt 11:29).

      Pride is the greatest of all evils that beset us, and of all our enemies it is that which dies the slowest and hardest. God hates pride above all things because it gives to man the place that belongs to Him who is above, exalted over all. Pride intercepts communion with God and draws down His chastisement, for “God resists the proud” (1 Pet. 5:5).

      He who is lowest and lowliest will be most blessed. Often the soul, by seeking joy, cannot get it. This would not purify and bless it, and to bless, God must purify. When emptied of self and when seeking God we find joy.

      Shall I ever forget the humiliation of Christ? Never! never! through all eternity. I shall never forget His humiliation on earth. While seeing Him in glory animates the soul to run after Him, what feeds the soul is the bread come down. That produces a spirit that thinks of everything but itself. Go and study Him, and live by Him, and you will come out in His likeness, in all His grace and gentleness and loveliness. The Lord give us to be so occupied with Him who was so full of love, so full of lowliness, that we shall manifest the same.

      True humility does not so much consist in thinking badly of ourselves as in not thinking of ourselves at all. I am too bad to be worth thinking about. What I want is to forget myself and to look to God, who is worth all my thoughts. The only real humbleness and strength and blessing is to forget self in the presence and blessedness of God. May you be in yourself so broken down that you may find One who never breaks down.

      “Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 2:5). What was the mind that was in Jesus? It was always coming down. The more He humbled Himself, the more He was trampled on. He goes down till He can go no lower, down to the dust of death. Are you content to do this? Are you content to have the mind that was in Christ Jesus, content to be always trampled on?

Dependence

      “Without me you can do nothing” (John 15:5).

      When we are really weak God never leaves us; but when unconscious of our infirmities we have to learn them by experience. The whole thing for us is to achieve absolute dependence on infallible faithfulness and unwearied love to carry us through. Conscious weakness causes a saint not to dare to move without God. The very essence of the condition of a soul in a right state is conscious dependence. Let us delight in dependence—that a Person above us should minister to us and care for us.

      There is an easy way of going on in worldliness, and there is nothing more sad than the quiet comfortable Christian going on day by day apart from dependence on the Lord. We must always be in dependence or fall. In every detail of our lives there is no blessing but in dependence on God. The point for us is to rest in the arm of the Lord, whatever may be, and not run to get help elsewhere.

      We may be saying true things in prayer or in testimony, but if we are not realizing our dependence on the Lord we shall not have His strength in the battle. When victory does not tend to worship, we and God part company as soon as the victory is achieved. How sad to see victory often leading to mere joy instead of still greater dependence on and delight in God.

      One cannot do an instant without Him; how blessed it is to trust Him!

            (From Milk and Honey, Vol. 20.)

Empty Vessels and Broken

When the vessel is quite empty,
Then the Spirit has full play,
And the Word of God has power
In the life, from day to day.

Oh, ’tis well that it is empty!
Yea, but this will not suffice,
For it also must be broken,
E’en to meet the foe’s device.

’Tis alone the broken vessel
That reveals the hidden light,
Gives us victory in the battle,
Puts the enemy to flight.

’Tis God’s hand alone that breaks it,
Though we take it painfully,
We can trust Him, for He loves us,
He has proved it perfectly.

All man’s empty, broken vessels
Are cast out upon the heap;
But, with God, they are His treasures,
Just the things He loves to keep.

(From Help and Food, Vol. 50.)

I Must Decrease

      It belongs to the highest Christian experience to be able to say, “He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30). Self may be our greatest enemy, while we may be entirely ignorant of the power of such a foe. It is therefore well to sit down from time to time and ask ourselves the question, “What is the motive power of my zeal in the Lord’s work? Is it the constraining love of Christ (2 Cor. 5:14)? Or, beneath all my seeming earnestness, is there a secret, undefined longing to make a name for myself, or to build up something in which I can glory?”

      There is at least one test that we may apply to our devotion to the Lord, and it is this:If our eye is single for Him (Matt. 6:22), we will be quite ready to rejoice in the success of another man’s labors. We do not say we will be ready to rejoice in anything that professes to be work for God, for in that case we would be found rejoicing in very much that is simply a caricature of the “glorious Gospel” (1 Tim. 1:11). But what we say is that if our zeal is from above, we will be found rejoicing in every work for God that is manifestly from above. It will not matter whether I am the instrument or some other person is the instrument. Is Christ exalted? Is He increasing? If so, that is enough for every one who is truly devoted to His person.

      There may be no increase as regards my prominence in the work. On the contrary, I may be on the decrease. The Lord may be exalting other workers while I am being overlooked and forgotten by the saints at large. But what if this is the case? If I have the spirit of John the Baptist, if my zeal has had a heavenly origin, I will rejoice. It would surely be strange if that which causes joy in the presence of the angels should awake no responsive echo in my breast!

      “Rejoice with Me” says Christ (Luke 15:6,9). Self finds no part in that invitation. We are invited to rejoice with Him. Are we ever ready to rejoice?

            (From The Believer’s Treasury, 1887.)

Seeking Great Things

“And do you seek great things for yourself? Seek them not” (Jer. 45:5).

      This beautiful though brief chapter of just five verses is full of instruction for the children of God in all ages, and particularly for any who attempt to serve the Lord in any public capacity.

      Baruch had been an instrument, used of God, to communicate His mind to others. However, his own soul must not be neglected; hence the message given to him in the Scripture above. It is of the greatest moment that those who minister to others be in a right state of soul themselves. Nothing is more dangerous than to go on giving out the truth of God while the heart is set upon self-seeking, or the private life of the servant is accompanied with unholiness and lack of humility before the Lord.

      In Baruch’s case, it would seem that he felt the king’s rejection of the Word of God as an insult aimed at himself and his master, rather than at the Lord who inspired the writing that was in the roll. Perhaps almost unknown to himself, Baruch was seeking a measure of recognition from man. It is so easy to slip into this, especially if one is serving the Lord in the gospel or teaching the children of God. There is the secret desire, often, to be accorded a place, with the corresponding grief when that place is refused and one’s ministry is unacknowledged. Baruch felt the personal slight, the setting at naught, the despising of his ministry—always so hard for a sensitive soul to bear if out of the presence of God. Therefore he fainted and could find no rest.

      But the Lord has been graciously considering his case and had for him a needed word, both of admonition and of comfort. When the times were so evil, it was an especially improper season for self seeking and personal ambition. God was about to bring the then present order of things to an end in judgment, as He will soon bring the age in which we live to a close by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together unto Him. For Baruch it was no time to be troubled because he failed to gain the respect of a people who had so grievously departed from their God.

      But the Lord goes on to give His servant a watchword that may well be kept in mind by all who endeavor in any way to “contend for the faith” (Jude 3). “Do you seek great things for yourself? Seek them not.” This is a good motto for each of us. How apt is the heart to crave “great things”; but in doing so, how unlike the servant becomes to the Master who “pleased not Himself (Rom. 15:3), but could say, “I do always those things that please Him (John 8:29) and “I came not to do My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me” (John 5:30). Does not the position He took when down here determine our only proper one? Do we desire a place where He had none? Far better to be poor and despised here and have His approval than to seek great things for ourselves and lose His smile of approval!

      If tempted to turn aside from the narrow path of subjection to the truth for an easier path, or to be better thought of in a world like this, let us remember these words to Baruch; if “great things” attract and would lure us on, remember the words, “seek them not.”

      (From Milk and Honey, Vol. 21; published by Spread the Word, Inc., Dover, PA.)

What Is Self-Denial?

“Let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily and follow Me” (Luke 9:23).

      The ordinary thought of self-denial, whether among saints or the people of the world, is giving up. There may be many different ideas as to what is to be given up. Some would limit it to certain worldly things such as card-playing, dancing, or the theater [or, nowadays, television, videos, computer games, or Internet surfing]. Others would confine it to a certain season during which time pleasures that are freely indulged in the remainder of the year are rigidly avoided. This, that, and the other is to be given up, as deemed to be pleasing to the natural man. However, it is possible that this may tend to foster spiritual pride, for does not one deserve credit for relinquishing so much?

      But is this the thought of the passage, “Let him deny himself”? Self is to be refused, to be given up. A man may give up anything, and well-nigh everything, but so long as he holds fast to himself, he has not learned the first elements of self-denial. “I am crucified with Christ,” says the apostle. Did he mean that he was doing this or that distasteful thing, and so practicing self-denial? Ah no! Paul himself was denied; he was done with himself, and now it was Christ who lived in him. Can we think of Paul as occupied with a multiplicity of questions as to whether he had to give up one thing and another? The cross settled all that for him. There was an end to himself, as well as an end to the world, so far as he was concerned. And with this went the entire mass of questions that monasticism has tried in vain to settle.

      Does not this explain the taking up the cross, which comes in the immediate connection? Let him “take up his cross daily and follow Me.” The ordinary thought of taking the cross is doing something that is disagreeable. So people talk even of prayer and public confession of Christ as taking up the cross. But to the disciples the cross meant something very definite. They looked upon it as the sign of death, and death at the hands of the Romans. In modern language, we might substitute the word gallows [or electric chair] for the cross. The ignominy, judgment, and reproach of a shameful death go with it. To follow Christ, to take up the cross, then, means something more than doing a few distasteful duties. It means an end of self. Reckoning ourselves to be dead indeed to sin.

      But beloved, what relief we have here, what rest of soul. The root is cut and soon the fading leaves of human pride will drop off. Does the world persecute? does it threaten with the cross? It can have no terrors for one who knows the preciousness of the cross in his own soul. He has already taken it up, applied it, not to a few details; and in the end of himself, he has reached the end of struggling. The whole thing has gone, he is alive now in Christ Jesus, and can walk in the newness of life that goes with it. Now he will find power for laying aside every weight, and instead of a path of sorrow, he has one of unutterable peace and joy—the path of the cross, which ends in the cloudless glory of God.

            (From Help and Food, Vol. 18.)

Why Do We Suffer?

      In chapters 38-41 of Job, God asks Job if he is more wise, powerful, or just than God. God is not required to give reasons for our suffering. He has promised that it will work out for our good (Rom. 8:18,28; 2 Cor. 4:17,18) and that someday we will know (1 Cor. 13:12).

      Nowhere in the Book of Job does God answer any of the questions that caused so much debate between Job and his friends. He simply answers the need of Job’s heart. Job’s knowledge of God before his trials was primarily second hand, “by the hearing of the ear.” After passing through the fire of adversity, he sees God more clearly and gains faith and courage to trust Him more.

      God does not put just any of His children through a Job-like experience. It was because of Job’s God-fearing lifestyle that God permitted him to be tested by Satan, in order that his love and devotion might run even deeper.

      Are you facing a severe test of your faith today? View it, not as a sign that God has left you, but as a token of His desire to deepen and strengthen your commitment to Him.

      (Adapted from The Daily Walk, published by the American Tract Society, 1977.)

Job and His Friends

The book of Job occupies a very peculiar place in the volume of God. It possesses a character entirely its own, and teaches lessons that are not to be learned in any other section of inspiration.

 

Job’s Perfection and Prominence

      The opening page of this remarkable book furnishes us with a view of the patriarch Job, surrounded by everything that could make the world agreeable to him and make him of importance in the world. “There was a man in the land of Uz, whose name was Job; and that man was perfect and upright, and one who feared God, and eschewed evil” (Job 1:1). Thus much as to what he was. Let us now see what he had.

      “And there were born unto him seven sons and three daughters. His substance also was 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 yoke of oxen, and 500 she asses, and a very great household; so that this man was the greatest of all the children of the east. And his sons went and feasted in their houses … and called for their three sisters to eat and to drink with them” (1:2-4). Then, to complete the picture, we have the record of what he did.

      “And it was so, when the days of their feasting were gone about, that Job sent and sanctified them, and rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all, for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually” (1:5).

      Here, then, we have a very rare specimen of a man. He was perfect, upright, God-fearing, and avoided evil. Moreover, the hand of God had hedged him round about on every side, and showered his path with richest mercies. He had all that heart could wish—children and wealth in abundance and honor and distinction from all around.

 

Job’s Need for Testing

      But Job needed to be tested. There was a deep moral root in his heart that had to be laid bare. There was self-righteousness that had to be brought to the surface and judged. Indeed, we may discern this root in the very words that we have just quoted. He says, “It may be that my sons have sinned.” He does not seem to contemplate the possibility of sinning himself. A soul really self-judged would think of his own sins and his own need of a burnt offering.

      Let the reader understand that Job was a real saint of God, a divinely quickened soul, a possessor of eternal life. He was just as truly a man of God in the first chapter as he was in the 42nd. Chapter 1:8 establishes this point beyond all question:“And the LORD said unto Satan, Have you considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one who fears God and eschews evil?”

      But with all this, Job had never sounded the depths of his own heart. He had never really grasped the truth of his own utter ruin and total depravity. He had never learned to say, “I know that in me, that is in my flesh, dwells no good thing” (Rom. 7:18). This point must be seized or the book of Job will not be understood. We will not see the specific object of all those deep and painful exercises through which Job was called to pass unless we lay hold of the solemn fact that he had never measured himself by a divine standard.

      If we read chapter 29 through 30:1, we will find a striking proof of what we assert. We see distinctly what a strong and deep root of self-complacency there was in the heart of this dear servant of God. In this chapter we look in vain for any breathings of a broken and a contrite spirit. In the course of this single chapter, Job refers to himself more than 40 times, while the references to God are but five.

      Job had to be stripped of all this. When we compare chapter 29 with chapter 30 we can form some idea of how painful the process of stripping must have been. There is peculiar emphasis in the words, “But now.” Job draws a most striking contrast between his past and his present. In chapter 30 he is still occupied with himself, but how changed! The very men who flattered him in the day of his prosperity treat him with contempt in the day of his adversity. Thus it is ever in this poor, false, deceitful world—the fickleness of those who are ready to cry out “hosanna” today and “crucify Him” tomorrow.

      Thus it was with Job in chapter 30. But let it be remembered that there is very much more needed than the stripping of self and the discovery of the hollowness and deceitfulness of the world. One may go through all these and the result be merely disappointment. Indeed it can be nothing more if God be not reached. If the heart has not been brought to find its all-satisfying portion in God, then a reverse of fortune leaves it desolate and the discovery of the fickleness and hollowness of men fills it with bitterness. This will account for Job’s language in chapter 30:“But now those who are younger than I have one in derision, whose fathers I would have disdained to have set with the dogs of my flock.” Was this the spirit of Christ? Would Job have spoken thus at the close of the book? He would not. Ah, no, reader; when once Job got into God’s presence, there was an end to the egotism of chapter 29 and the bitterness of chapter 30.

 

Contrasts between Job and

the Lord Jesus

      All this is very far short of the mark. Lamentations over departed greatness and bitter invectives against our fellow-men will not do the heart much good; neither do they display anything of the spirit and mind of Christ, nor bring glory to His holy name. When we turn our eyes toward the blessed Lord Jesus we see something wholly different. For example, in Matthew 9:24, the people gathered at Jairus’s house “laughed [Jesus] to scorn” when He told them the daughter of Jairus was not dead but sleeping. The Lord Jesus ignored their scorn and proceeded with the business of raising the girl. In Matthew 12:14-16, when the Pharisees gathered to consider how they might destroy Him, the Lord Jesus was neither paralyzed by fear nor overcome by rage, but quietly withdrew and continued His ministry. In Luke 7:36-50, Simon the Pharisee did not extend to the Lord Jesus the usual courtesies shown a guest, but the Lord Jesus said nothing about it until Simon mentally criticized the Lord Jesus for allowing the sinful woman to touch Him. In John 8:41-54, the Pharisees insulted Jesus by implying He was illegitimate (verse 41), insane (had a demon) (verse 48), and a Samaritan (that is, racially impure and an enemy of Israel, verse 48). The Lord Jesus did not return insults, but continued His attempt to convict their consciences. And most astonishing, His response to all the physical and verbal abuse and contempt displayed toward Him during His arrest, trials, and crucifixion was, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34).

      The fairest and best of men must retire into the shade when tested by the perfect standard of the life of Christ. The light of His moral glory makes manifest the defects and blemishes of even the most perfect of the sons of men. He stands out in vivid contrast with Job in the matter of patient submission to all that He was called upon to endure.

      “After this opened Job his mouth and cursed his day. And Job spoke and said, Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child conceived” (3:1-3; note similar words uttered by the prophet Jeremiah, Jer. 20:14-18). What language do we find here! It contrasts strongly with the meek and lowly Jesus of Nazareth. That spotless One passed through deeper sorrows and more in number than all His servants put together, but not one murmuring word ever escaped His lips. He met the darkest hour with such words as these:“The cup that My Father has given Me, shall I not drink it?” (John 18:11). Blessed Lord Jesus, Son of the Father, we adore Thee! We bow down at Thy feet, lost in wonder, love, and praise, and own Thee Lord of all, “the chiefest among ten thousand” and the One who is “altogether lovely” (Cant. 5:10-16).

      Surely the study of the history of God’s dealings with souls is a most fruitful one. One grand object in those dealings is to produce real brokenness and humility—to strip us of all false righteousness, empty us of all self-confidence, and teach us to lean wholly upon Christ. With some this process precedes, with others it follows, conversion or the new birth. God loves us too well to leave us unsubdued; hence it is that He sees fit to pass us through all sorts of exercises in order to bring us into a condition of soul in which He can use us for His own glory. God will make use of our circumstances and the people with whom we are associated to discipline the heart and subdue the will.

      All this comes out with great distinctness in the book of Job. It is very evident that Job needed a severe sifting. Had he not needed it, we may rest assured the gracious, loving Lord would not have passed him through it. It was not for nothing that He let Satan loose upon His dear servant. God loved Job with a wise and faithful love, a love that could look below the surface and could see the deep moral roots in the heart of His servant—roots that Job had never seen nor judged. What a mercy to be in the hands of One who will spare no pains in order to subdue everything in us that is contrary to Himself, and to bring out in us His own blessed image!

 

Satan’s Hand upon Job

      Satan has no power whatever over a soul who abides in the place of dependence and obedience; he cannot go one hair’s breadth beyond the limit prescribed by divine command. Thus, in Job’s case, “The LORD said unto Satan, Behold, all that he has is in your power; only upon himself put not forth your hand” (1:12).

      Satan was permitted to lay his hand on Job’s possessions—to bereave him of his children, and despoil him of all his wealth. With marvelous rapidity he executed his commission. Blow after blow fell, in quick succession, on the devoted head of the patriarch. Hardly had one messenger told his melancholy tale, before another arrived with still heavier tidings, until, at length, the afflicted servant of God “arose and rent his mantle, and shaved his head, and fell down upon the ground, and worshiped, and said, Naked came I out of my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return thither:the LORD gave and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD. In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God foolishly” (1:20-22).

      All this is deeply touching. To speak after the manner of men, it was enough to make reason totter to be thus, in a moment, bereft of his ten children and reduced from princely wealth to absolute penury. For what purpose was all this? For the deep and permanent profit of Job’s precious soul!

      But we must follow our patriarch into still deeper waters, as seen in chapter 2. Satan is allowed to make Job physically ill, but must spare his life (2:6). This is a very remarkable passage. It instructs us as to the place that Satan occupies in respect to God’s government. He is a mere instrument and, though ever ready to accuse the Lord’s people, can do nothing except as he is allowed of God. So far as Job was concerned, the efforts of Satan proved abortive; having done his utmost he goes away and we hear nothing more of his actings. Job was enabled to hold fast his integrity. Had matters ended here, his patient endurance would only have strengthened the platform of his righteousness, and ministered to his self-complacency. “You have heard,” says James, “of the patience of Job.” And what then? “You have seen the end of the Lord, that the Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy” (Jas. 5:11). Had it been simply a question of Job’s patience, it would have proved an additional ground of self-confidence, and thus “the end of the Lord” would not have been reached. Let it be ever remembered that the Lord’s pity and tender mercy can only be tasted by those who are truly penitent and broken-hearted. Now Job was not this, even when he lay amid the ashes. He was still the great man—as great in his misfortunes as he had been in his prosperity. His heart was still unreached. He was not yet prepared to cry out, “Behold, I am vile.” He had not yet learned to “abhor [him]self, and repent in dust and ashes” (42:6). We want the reader to get hold of this point, for it is the key to the entire book of Job. The divine object was to expose to Job’s view the depths of his own heart in order that he might learn to delight in the grace and mercy of God and not in his own goodness. Job was a true saint of God and all Satan’s accusations were flung back in his face; but, all the while, Job was unbroken material. God will not allow Satan to accuse us, but He will expose us to ourselves so that we may judge ourselves and learn to mistrust our own hearts and rest in the eternal stability of His grace.

      Thus far, then, we see Job holding fast his integrity. He meets with calmness all the heavy afflictions that Satan is allowed to bring upon him and, moreover, he refuses the foolish counsel of his wife. He accepts all as from the hand of God, and bows his head in the presence of His mysterious dispensations.

 

Job and His Three Friends

      All this is well. But the arrival of Job’s three friends produces a marked change. Their very presence—the bare fact of their being eye-witnesses of his trouble—affects him in a very remarkable manner. “Now when Job’s three friends heard of all this evil that was come upon him, they came every one from his own place—Eliphaz the Temanite, and Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite—for they had made an appointment together to come to mourn with him and to comfort him. When they lifted up their eyes afar off and knew him not, they lifted up their voices and wept; they rent every one his mantle and sprinkled dust upon their heads toward heaven. So they sat down with him upon the ground seven days and seven nights, and none spake a word unto him:for they saw that his grief was very great” (2:11-13).

      Now, we can fully believe that those three men were governed, in the main, by kindly feelings toward Job; it was no small sacrifice on their part to leave their homes and come to condole with their bereaved and afflicted friend. But it is very evident that their presence had the effect of stirring up feelings and thoughts in his heart and mind that had hitherto lain dormant. He had borne submissively the loss of children, property, and of bodily health; Satan had been dismissed and Job’s wife’s counsel rejected; but the presence of his friends caused Job to break down completely. “After this Job opened his mouth and cursed his day” (3:1).

      This is very remarkable. It does not appear that the friends had spoken a single sentence. They sat in total silence, with rent garments and covered with dust, gazing on a grief too profound for them to reach. It was Job himself who first broke silence, and the whole of the third chapter is an outpouring of the most bitter lamentation, affording unhappy evidence of an unsubdued spirit. It is, we may confidently assert, impossible that any one who had learned, in any little measure, to say “Thy will be done,” could ever curse his day or use the language contained in the third chapter of Job. It may, doubtless, be said, “It is easy for those to speak who have never been called to endure Job’s heavy trials.” This is quite true, and it may further be added that no other person would have done one whit better under the circumstances. All this we can fully understand; but it in no way touches the great moral of the book of Job, that Job needed to have the roots of his moral being laid bare in his own sight so that he might really abhor himself and repent in dust and ashes. Furthermore, he needed a truer and deeper sense of what God was so that he might trust Him and justify Him under all circumstances.

      We look in vain for any of this in Job’s opening address. “Job spoke and said, Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child conceived…. Why died I not from the womb?” (3:3,11).

 

Eliphaz—Experience

      Eliphaz was the first of Job’s friends to speak. He belonged to that class of people who argue very much from their own experience. His motto was, “As I have seen” (4:8).  Now, what we have seen may be all true enough, so far as we are concerned. But it is a total mistake to found a general rule upon individual experience, and yet it is a mistake to which thousands are prone. Eliphaz’s experience went for nothing in Job’s case, for no sooner had Eliphaz ceased speaking than, without the slightest attention to his words, Job proceeded with the tale of his own sorrows, intermingled with much self-vindication and bitter complaints against the divine dealings (chapters 6 and 7).

 

Bildad—Tradition

      Bildad is the next speaker. He takes quite different ground from that occupied by Eliphaz. He never once refers to his own experience, or to what had come under his own observation. Rather, he appeals to antiquity. “Inquire, I pray thee, of the former age, and prepare yourself to the search of their fathers. (For we are but of yesterday, and know nothing, because our days upon earth are a shadow.) Shall not they teach thee and tell thee and utter words out of their heart?” (8:8-10). It must be admitted that Bildad conducts us into a much wider field than that of Eliphaz. The authority of a number of “fathers” has much more weight and respectability than the experience of a single individual. But the fact is that neither experience nor tradition will do. Tradition is a mass of confusion, for one father differs from another. Hence, as might be expected, Bildad’s words had no more weight with Job than those of Eliphaz. The one was as far from the truth as the other.

 

Zophar—Legality

      Let us now notice the opening address of Zophar the Naamathite. He says, “Oh that God would speak and open His lips against you, and that He would show you the secrets of wisdom, that they are double to that which is! Know therefore that God exacts of you less than your iniquity deserves.” And again:“If you prepare your heart and stretch out your hands toward Him, if iniquity be in your hand, put it far away, and let not wickedness dwell in your tabernacles. For then will you lift up your face without spot; yes, you will be steadfast, and will not fear” (11:5,6,13-15).

      These words savor strongly of legality. They prove very distinctly that Zophar had no right sense of the divine character. He did not know God. No one possessing a true knowledge of God could speak of Him as opening His lips against a poor afflicted sinner, or as exacting anything from a needy, helpless creature. God is not against us, but for us, blessed forever be His Name! He is not a legal exacter, but a liberal giver. Then again, Zophar says, “If you prepare your heart.” But if not, what then? No doubt a man ought to prepare his heart, and if he were right he would. But then he is not right, and hence, when he sets about preparing his heart, he finds nothing there but evil. He finds himself perfectly powerless. What is he to do? Zophar cannot tell. No, nor can any of his school. How can they? They only know God as a stern exacter—as One who, if He opens His lips, can only speak against the sinner.

      Need we marvel, therefore, that Zophar was as far from convincing Job as either of his two companions? They were all wrong. Experience, tradition, and legality were alike defective, one-sided, false. Not any one of them, or all of them put together, could meet Job’s case. They only darkened counsel by words without knowledge. Not one of the three friends understood Job; what is more, they did not know God’s character or His object in dealing with His dear servant. They knew not how to present God to Job, and as a consequence, they knew not how to lead Job’s conscience into the presence of God. In place of leading him to self-judgment, they only ministered to a spirit of self-vindication. They did not introduce God into the scene. They said some true things, but they had not the truth. They brought in experience, tradition, legality, but not the truth.

      The more closely we study the lengthened discussion between Job and his three friends, the more clearly we must see the utter impossibility of their ever coming to an understanding. He was bent upon vindicating himself and they were bent upon the very reverse. He was unbroken and unsubdued, and their mistaken course of treatment only tended to render him more so. There was no point of contact whatever—no common ground of understanding. In a word, there was a demand for another kind of ministry altogether, and that ministry is introduced in the person of Elihu.

 

Elihu—God-Centered

      “So these three men ceased to answer Job because he was righteous in his own eyes. Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite, of the kindred of Ram:against Job was his wrath kindled because he justified himself rather than God. Also against his three friends was his wrath kindled because they had found no answer, and yet had condemned Job” (32:l-3).

      Here Elihu, with remarkable force and clearness, seizes upon the very root of the matter on each side. He condenses, in two brief sentences, the whole of the elaborate discussion contained in 29 chapters. Job justified himself instead of justifying God, and they had condemned Job instead of leading him to condemn himself.

      There is something peculiarly marked and striking in the ministry of Elihu. He stands in vivid contrast with the three friends. His name signifies “God is he” and, no doubt, we may view him as a type of our Lord Jesus Christ. He brings God into the scene and puts a complete stop to the weary strife and contention between Job and his friends. Elihu argues not on the ground of experience, tradition, or legality; he brings in God. This is the only way of putting a stop to controversy. Let us listen to the words of this remarkable personage.

      “And Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite, answered and said, I am young, and you are very old; wherefore I was afraid and dared not show my opinion. I said, days should speak and multitude of years should teach wisdom. But there is a spirit in man, and the inspiration of the Almighty gives them understanding” (32:6-8). Here divine light, the light of inspiration, begins to stream in upon the scene, and to roll away the thick clouds of dust raised by the strife of tongues. We are conscious of moral power and weight the very moment this blessed servant opens his lips. We feel we are listening to a man who speaks as the oracles of God—a man who is sensibly standing in the divine presence, who introduces us into “the inspiration of the Almighty.”

      This introduces another element altogether. The moment the Spirt of God enters the scene, it ceases to be a question of youth or old age, inasmuch as He can speak by old or young. “Not by might or by power, but by my Spirit, says the LORD of hosts” (Zech. 4:6). This holds good always. It was true for the patriarchs, true for the prophets, true for apostles, true for us, true for all. Here lay the deep secret of Elihu’s quiet power. He was filled with the Spirit, and hence we forget his youth while listening to the words of spiritual weight and heavenly wisdom that proceed out of his mouth. We are reminded of Him who spoke “as one having authority, and not as the scribes” (Matt. 7:29). There is a striking difference between a man who speaks as an oracle of God and one who speaks in mere official routine, between one who speaks from the heart by the Spirit’s holy anointing and one who speaks from the intellect by human authority. Who can duly estimate the difference between these two? None but those who possess and exercise the mind of Christ.

 

Elihu—Grace and Truth

      In studying the ministry of Elihu, we find in it two grand elements, namely, “grace” and “truth.” Both of these were essential in dealing with Job; consequently, we find both coming out with extraordinary power. Elihu tells Job and his friends that he does not know how to give flattering titles unto man. Here the voice of “truth” falls, with great clearness, on the ear. Truth puts every one in his right place, and because it does so, it cannot bestow titles of flattery upon a poor guilty mortal, however much that mortal might be gratified by them. Elihu begins by telling Job the truth. He introduces God into the scene in His true character. This was just what the three friends had failed to do. No doubt they had referred to God, but their references were cloudy, distorted, and false.

      Not so Elihu. He pursues a totally different line of things. He brings the light of “truth” to bear upon Job’s conscience, and at the same time he administers the precious balm of “grace” to his heart. He says, “Wherefore, Job, I pray you, hear my speeches and hearken to all my words. Behold, now I have opened my mouth, my tongue has spoken in my mouth. My words shall be of the uprightness of my heart, and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly. The Spirit of God has made me, and the breath of the Almighty has given me life. If you can answer me, set your words in order before me, stand up. Behold, I am according to thy wish in God’s stead:I also am formed out of the clay. Behold, my terror shall not make you afraid, neither shall my hand be heavy upon you” (33:1-7). In these accents, the ministry of “grace” unfolds itself, sweetly and powerfully, to the heart of Job. In the ministry of the three friends there was a total absence of this most excellent ingredient. They showed themselves only too ready to bear down upon Job with a heavy hand. They were stern judges, severe censors, false interpreters. They looked on the crumbling ruins of his house and drew the harsh inference that the ruin was but the result of his bad behavior. They had wholly misunderstood the dealings of God. They had never seized the full moral force of that one weighty sentence, “The LORD tries the righteous” (Psa.11:5). There was neither “grace” nor “truth” in their ministry, and therefore they failed to convince Job. They condemned him without convincing him, whereas they ought to have convinced him and made him condemn himself.

      Here it is that Elihu stands out in vivid contrast. He tells Job the truth, but he lays no heavy hand upon him. Elihu has learned the mighty mysterious power of the “still small voice” (1 Ki. 19:12)—the soul-subduing, heart-melting virtue of grace. Job had given utterance to a quantity of false notions about himself, and those notions had sprouted from a root to which the sharp axe of “truth” had to be applied. “Surely,” says Elihu, “you have spoken in my hearing, and I have heard the voice of your words, saying, I am clean without transgression, I am innocent; neither is there iniquity in me” (33:8,9).

      What words for any poor sinful mortal to utter! Surely, though “the true light” in which we may walk had not shone on the soul of this patriarch, we may well marvel at such language. And yet, mark what follows. Although he was so clean, so innocent, so free from iniquity, he nevertheless says of God, “He finds occasions against me, he counts me for His enemy. He puts my feet in the stocks, He marks all my paths” (33:10,11). Here is a palpable discrepancy. How could a holy, just, and righteous Being count a pure and innocent man His enemy? Impossible. Either Job was self-deceived or God was unrighteous. Elihu, as the minister of truth, is not long in pronouncing a judgment, and telling us which is which. “Behold, in this you are not just:I will answer you that God is greater than man” (33:12). What a simple truth! And yet how little understood! If God is greater than man, then obviously He, and not man, must be the Judge of what is right.

      Now, it is when the heart bows under the weight of this great moral truth that we are in a fit attitude to understand the object of God’s dealings with us. Assuredly He must have the upper hand. Elihu goes on, “Why do you strive against Him? for He gives not account of any of His matters. For God speaks once, yea, twice, yet man perceives it not. In a dream, in a vision of the night, when deep sleep falls upon men, in slumberings upon the bed; then He opens the ears of men, and seals their instruction, that He may withdraw man from his purpose, and hide pride from man. He keeps back his soul from the pit and his life from perishing by the sword” (33:13-18).

 

Job and the Character of God

      The real secret of all Job’s false reasoning is to be found in the fact that he did not understand the character of God nor the object of all His dealings. He did not see that God was trying him, that He was behind the scenes and using various agents for the accomplishment of His wise and gracious ends. God was trying Job in order that He might instruct him, withdraw him from his purpose, and hide pride from him. Had Job seized this grand point, it would have saved him a world of strife and contention. Instead of getting angry with people and things, he would have judged himself and bowed low before the Lord in meekness and brokenness and true contrition.

      This is immensely important for us all. We are all of us prone to forget the weighty fact that “God tries the righteous” (Psa. 11:5) and that “He withdraws not His eyes from the righteous” (Job 36:7). We are in His hands and under His eye continually. We are the objects of His deep, tender, and unchanging love; but we are also the subjects of His wise moral government. His dealings with us are varied. They are sometimes preventive, sometimes corrective, always instructive. We may be bent on some course of our own, the end of which would be moral ruin. He intervenes and withdraws us from our purpose. He interrupts many of our dreams and schemes on which our hearts were bent, and that would have proved to be certain destruction. “Lo, all these things works God oftentimes with man, to bring back his soul from the pit, to be enlightened with the light of the living” (33:29,30).

      How well if our patriarch had only seized the great fact that God was trying him for his ultimate good, that He was using circumstances, people, the Sabeans, and Satan himself as His instruments. How well if Job had learned that all his trials, losses, and sufferings were but God’s marvelous agency in bringing about His wise and gracious end. If Job had only fixed his thoughts upon the living God alone and accepted all from His loving hand, he would have more speedily reached the divine solution of all his difficulties.

      It is precisely here that we are all apt to break down. We get occupied with men and things; we view them in reference to ourselves. We do not walk with God through the circumstances, but rather we allow the circumstances to get power over us. Thus we lose the sense of His presence, the holy calmness of being in His loving hand and under His fatherly eye. We become fretful, impatient, irritable, fault-finding. We get far away from God, out of communion, judging every one except ourselves, until at length God takes us in hand, and by His own direct and powerful ministry, brings us back to Himself in true brokenness of heart and humbleness of mind. This is “the end of the Lord” (Jas. 5:11).

 

God’s Personal Dealings with Job

      When Elihu closes his ministry, God Himself begins to deal directly with the soul of His servant (chapters 38-41). He appeals to His works in creation as the display of a power and wisdom that ought assuredly to make Job feel his own littleness. The effect was threefold. It had reference to God, to himself, and to his friends—the very points on which he was so entirely astray. As to God, Elihu had declared Job’s mistake in the following words:“Job has spoken without knowledge, and his words were without wisdom. My desire is that Job may be tried unto the end, because of his answers for wicked men. For he adds rebellion unto his sin; he claps his hands among us, and multiplies his words against God…. Do you think this to be right, that you said, My righteousness is more than God’s?” (34:35-35:1). But mark the change. Hearken to the breathings of a truly repentant spirit, the brief yet comprehensive statement of a corrected judgment. “Then Job answered the LORD and said, I know that Thou canst do everything, and that no thought can be withheld from Thee. Who is he that hides counsel without knowledge? Therefore have I uttered that I understood not, things too wonderful for me, that I knew not…. I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees Thee” (42:1-5).

 

Job’s New Thoughts about

God and Himself

      Here, then, was the turning point. He comes to the realization that all his previous statements as to God and His ways were “words without knowledge” (38:2). What a confession! What a moment in a man’s history when he discovers that he has been all wrong! What a thorough breakdown! What profound humiliation! To get right thoughts about God is to begin to get right thoughts about everything. If I am wrong about God, I am wrong about myself, wrong about my fellows, wrong about all.

      Thus it was with Job. His new thoughts as to God were immediately connected with new thoughts of himself; hence we find that the elaborate self-vindication and the lengthened arguments in self-defense, are all laid aside. All is displaced by one short sentence of three words, “I am vile” (40:4). And what is to be done with this vile self? Talk about it? Be occupied with it? Make provision for it? No, “I abhor it” (42:6).

      This is the true moral ground for every one of us. Job took a long time to reach it, and so do we. Many of us imagine that we have reached the end of self when we have given a nominal assent to the doctrine of human depravity, or judged some of those sprouts that have appeared above the surface of our practical life. But alas, it is to be feared that very few of us indeed really know the full truth about ourselves. It is one thing to say “We are all vile” and quite another to feel, deep down in the heart, that “I am vile.” This latter can only be known and habitually realized in the immediate presence of God. The two things must ever go together, “My eye sees Thee, wherefore I abhor myself.” It is as the light of what God is shines in upon what I am, that I abhor myself. And then my self-abhorrence is a real thing. It will be seen in a life of self-abnegation and a humble spirit in the midst of the scene through which I am called to pass. It is of little use to profess very low thoughts of self while, at the same time, we are quick to resent any injury done to us, any fancied insult, slight, or disparagement. The true secret of a broken and contrite heart is to abide ever in the divine presence, and then we are able to carry ourselves right toward those with whom we have to do.

      Thus we find that when Job got right as to God and himself, he soon got right as to his friends, for he learned to pray for them. Yes, he could pray for the “miserable comforters” (16:2), the “physicians of no value” (13:4), the very men with whom he had so long, so stoutly, and so vehemently contended! “And the Lord turned the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends” (42:10).

      This is morally beautiful. It is the rare and exquisite fruit of divine workmanship. Nothing can be more touching than to see Job’s three friends exchanging their experience, their tradition, and their legality for the precious “burnt offering,” and to see our dear patriarch exchanging his bitter invectives for the sweet prayer of love. The combatants are in the dust before God and in each other’s arms. The strife is ended and the war of words is closed. Instead, we have the tears of repentance, the sweet odor of the burnt offering, the embrace of love.

      What a happy scene! What remains? Only that the hand of God should lay the top-stone on the beauteous structure, so we read, “The LORD gave Job twice as much as he had before…. After this lived Job 140 years, and saw his sons, and his sons’ sons, even four generations. So Job died, being old and full of days” (42:10-17).

      (Condensed from Miscellaneous Writings, Vol. 1.)