Tag Archives: Issue WOT12-5

In Perplexity

We have recently come in contact with several perplexed and perplexing cases among young Christians mostly. They have lost all enjoyment of communion with God _ some having lost even peace with God. They were quite sure they were sincere and in earnest when they confessed Christ, but what they experienced at that time has gone from them and they stand in doubt about themselves. They find no delight in the Word of God and prayer any more, and they mourn the indifference they find within themselves. Complaints run on in these lines, and they are perplexed. They are not aware of having committed any great wrong to mark the beginning of a downward course. What are they to do to recover themselves? One feels the need of wisdom from above in seeking to help such.

First, there may have been undue pressure put upon them to confess Christ and the possession of salvation before their state of soul justified such a confession. Such a confession made apart from the state of soul which belongs to it is most dangerous. An intellectual peace will not stand when Satan fires his darts, and no confessor of Christ can escape encountering Satan. Sin is an awful reality. It was so to Christ when He bore it on the cross. It brought upon Him the fearful distress which wrung out the cry, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me." The sense of sin must also be real to us if we would enjoy divine peace without a break. When a wise man plants a tree, he is most concerned about its root, for there lies the secret of its progress. Spiritual things demand no less care and wisdom. Pressing souls beyond their spiritual state can but bring disaster later on.

But there is more. Believers, no matter how young, are by their faith separated to God and are no longer their own. They are Christ’s., redeemed at great cost by His precious blood. If in their daily life _ in their pleasures, choice of friends, and choice of books, _ they neglect private communion with God by means of His Word and prayer, thus denying His claim over them, they may be sure the results will come with sorrow and loss to them.

But when that sad day comes what is to be done? Is there no remedy? Such is the grace of God that there is no evil place into which we may have brought ourselves but He has a way for us out of it. Let "there be honest confession to God of all we know, of all we can say against ourselves. Let there be no excuses made, no letting ourselves down in an easy way, no trying to lay blame upon others; but, being conscious that God knows already, and that we can tell Him nothing new, nothing that can surprise Him, let us lay bare our hearts before Him in the utmost confidence. Jesus who first washed us quite clean for God’s presence is ready now to wash our feet (as is shown in John 13) to restore the soul to communion with Him, and to enable us to walk aright before God again.

Fear not, therefore, beloved ones who are now in perplexity. Only judge yourselves before Him unsparingly for whatever is laid on your conscience, and wait for Him. It may be some time before you experience the same former joy, for the Lord must have His way with us for our greatest good; but He will not leave you in your perplexity. All the while, however, do not take yourself away from the company of God’s people. Abide among them, even though your misery may be the greater by it. By withdrawing, you will be inclined to brood over the evil and continue under its power, instead of confessing it to God and in due time being restored. Do not be discouraged if at first you see but little sorrow in your heart for the evil you confess. God, who alone is the Author of what is good, will produce this in you as you go on.

Above all, refuse Satan’s suggestions that God loves you no more. He does love you. He never ceases to love you, not because, you are worthy, but because His grace has linked you with Christ on whom His love rests, with His own, eternally.

  Author: Paul J. Loizeaux         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

Extract on Balance

GOSPEL ASSEMBLY

"The glad tidings … of which I Paul became minister."

"His body, which is the assembly; of which I became minister, according to the dispensation of God which is given me towards you to complete the Word of God" (Col. 1:23-25 JND).

Paul’s double ministry, that of the gospel and that of assembly truth, is to be faithfully, lovingly, and earnestly maintained_one not less than the other_until the Lord Jesus comes.

  Author: William Kelly         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

Caleb’s Patience

In the book of Numbers, chapter 14, we are told that all in Israel from twenty years old and upward must wander forty years in the wilderness because of their unbelief. "After the number of the days in which ye searched the land, even forty days, each day for a year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years" (verse 34). "Doubtless ye shall not come into the land . . . save Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the son of Nun" (v. 30). "But My servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and hath followed Me fully, him will I bring into the land whereinto he went:and his seed shall possess it" (v.24).

Apparently, Caleb lost the best part of his life in the wilderness. Those forty years of aimless wandering were, to outward appearance, thrown away. Nor was he to blame. His faith was ready to take him into the land of Kadesh Barnea. He knew God was able to give the people their promised inheritance, and he was ready in the vigor of that assurance to act at once:"Let us go up at once, and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it" (Num. 13:30). But he, with Joshua, stood alone, and in vain attempted to stem the torrent of fear, unbelief, and rebellion which swept the whole congregation past this point of opportunity_opportunity never to come again to any of that unbelieving host. "So we see that they could not enter in because of unbelief" (Heb. 3:19). And so he must accompany a rebellious and unbelieving people compelled to go up and down in a waste land, and all that time the home of his choice, fair Hebron, lay away off in that "pleasant land" which the people had despised.

What did it cost him to walk those forty years in peace and patience? He was suffering under the government of God, not for his own sin, but because he was identified with Israel and had to go through all the circumstances of trial, sorrow, and temporary cutting off which, in righteous chastening, God was bringing upon the people. Personally he was guiltless, but this enabled him more clearly and fully to enter into the reality of the chastening.

In all this, he presents a vivid illustration of our blessed Lord as Messiah, Israel’s King. In the gospel of Matthew, Christ had attracted the people and awakened their desire for the "kingdom of heaven." He had shown them_as it were "spied out" for them_the holy principles of that kingdom in the sermon on the mount; He had exhibited the "power of the coming age," Eshcol’s fruit (Num. 13:23), in healing every kind of sickness and infirmity, only to find the same unbelief that existed in Caleb’s day. This unbelief culminated in the same rebellion and apostasy, even ascribing to Satan the works of the Holy Ghost! How like Kadesh Barnea and how similar in result! The people as a nation refuse to enter with Him into the blessings of the kingdom, and so from the thirteenth chapter of Matthew we see Him, Caleb-like, turn from the prospect of an immediate earthly kingdom to tread in patience the thorny path of rejection, ending in His being "cut off" as Messiah. "For the transgression of My people was He stricken" (Isa. 53:8).
Caleb, in his measure, no doubt exhibited this same patience in accompanying the people in their wanderings. To be sure, it was the only thing for him to do; but he evidently did not succumb to the surrounding circumstances for we hear him say when at last a new generation of the people under Joshua had entered the land:"And now, behold, the Lord hath kept me alive, as He said, these forty and five years, . . . while the children of Israel wandered in the wilderness:and now, lo, I am this day fourscore and five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as I was in the day that Moses sent me:. . . for war, both to go out, and to come in" (Josh. 14:10,11). Only a man who had kept himself "unspotted from the world" could have said that. Only of the righteous can it be said, "They shall still bring forth fruit in old age; they shall be fat and flourishing" (Ps. 92:14). There is no need to mention the various instances where special patience, kindness, or diligence was shown. His wilderness history is an unwritten one to be filled out by each one who will walk in his steps. And are not our circumstances very similar to Caleb’s in many ways? To be sure, there is the added factor of personal failure and the need of realizing the chastening for this,, but there are certain general characteristics which can be applied to us all. What an example for those who, shut out for the time from their Home, become absorbed with their surroundings and forget "those things which are before." Did not the memory of Hebron remain in Caleb’s heart as fresh during all those years as at the first? How is it with us, dear brethren? Do we have a longing to be there? Do we have a desire to depart, if need be, and be with Christ? Are our treasures realized to be there and not here? Let us be taught by Caleb, who, though his feet were in the desert, had his heart in the land. "Set your affection [or mind] on things above, not on things on the earth" (Col. 3:2).

But "we can get help and encouragement from Caleb’s example for individual cases. He was yoked with a carnal people and outwardly had to follow where they were led. We, too, are in Christendom and must accept, in a broad sense, the position brought upon it by unbelief. We have often heard it said that it is impossible to restore a ruin; this is true, and we go wrong if we ignore it or attempt to extricate ourselves from the consequences of this ruin. Caleb could not leave the rest of the people, neither can we separate ourselves from the professing church; we must sorrowfully bear witness to the fact that we are in confusion. (And who can, with Caleb, claim personal blamelessness in contributing to this confusion?) But, though Caleb was outwardly with the people, who could dream of his taking part in, or by his presence sanctioning the shameful scenes of Bethpeor? So we have not the slightest excuse for mixing ourselves with practices which, if not so gross, are as much forbidden as the sin of Peor. Specification is not needed. "Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity" (2 Tim. 2:19). We are to hold ourselves ready to help in every way and to minister to God’s people wherever they are, but we are most assuredly not to partake in their unscriptural practices.

But we have lessons still more individual. One of the constant complaints of God’s people, if not upon their lips, in their hearts at least, is that their circumstances are so unfavorable to a full enjoyment of divine things. One is hampered by absorbing business; another is thrown with ungodly persons in the performance of his duty; a third has, it may be, a worldly family. If matters were different, how much more would they enjoy the things of God. Caleb teaches us to have the heart wholly set upon God’s things, and then to walk the path of duty. It is not said that we cannot alter some of our circumstances. We surely ought where they involve us in dishonor to God. But the vast mass will remain unchanged, and it will spoil us for service if we are going to be dragged down by it. Here is our lesson_to live with God and for Him where He puts us. Nay, we may have, through unfaithfulness, put ourselves in positions where we must quietly learn from God and glorify Him in the position.

What is the foundation of a proper walk? To be wholehearted for God. "Hebron [communion] therefore became the inheritance of Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenezite unto this day, because that he wholly followed the Lord God of Israel" (Joshua 14:14). If the Lord has not our whole heart, the world will, wedge like, enter and spoil all. Oh, for that confidence in His love, that conviction of His all-sufficiency which will abide with us in all our path and give us such rest of soul that we may remain, like Caleb, fresh and full of vigor until the Lord Jesus returns.

Faith never expects to learn deep lessons without deep difficulties; therefore she is not surprised by strange and dark providences. How many are apt to say, "My temptation is peculiar," but we should remember that it is the peculiar aggravations which make a trial effectual and we should not forget the word, "There has no temptation taken you but such as is common to man" (I Cor. 10:13). Our faith is greatly strengthened when we are brought to see that no one but God can help.

  Author: Samuel Ridout         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

By Him Actions Are Weighed

The Lord does not judge persons in relation to Himself, as men often do. We naturally judge others according to the way they treat us, and we make our interest in them the measure of their character and worth. But this was not the Lord. God "is a God of knowledge, and by Him actions are weighed." He understands every action fully. In all its moral meaning He understands it, and according to that He weighs it. Again and again we see our Lord Jesus Christ in the days of His ministry here, as the image of the God of knowledge. (See Luke 11) There was the air of courtesy and good feeling toward Him in the Pharisee that invited Him to dine. But the Lord was "the God of knowledge," and as such He weighed this action in its full moral character.

The honey of courtesy, which is the best ingredient in social life in this world, did not pervert His taste or judgment. He approved things that are excellent. The civility which invited Him to dinner was not to determine the judgment of Him who carried the weights and measures of the sanctuary of God. It is the God of knowledge that this civility has on this occasion to confront, and the civility does not stand; it will not do. Oh how the tracing of this may rebuke us! The invitation covered a purpose. As soon as the Lord entered the house, the host acts the Pharisee and not the host. He marvels that his guest had not washed before dinner. And the character he thus assumes at the beginning shows itself in full force at the end. The Lord deals with the whole scene accordingly, for He weighed it as the God of knowledge. Some may say that the courtesy He had received might have kept Him silent. But He could not look on this man simply as in relation to Himself. He was not to be flattered out of a just judgment. He exposes and rebukes, and the end of the scene justifies Him. "And as He said these things unto them, the scribes and the Pharisees began to urge Him vehemently, and to provoke Him to speak of many things:Laying wait for Him, and seeking to catch something out of His mouth, that they might accuse Him" (Luke 11:53,54).

Very different, however, was His way in the house of another Pharisee, who in like manner had asked Him to dine. (See Luke 7.) For Simon had no covered purpose in the invitation. Quite otherwise. He seemed to act the Pharisee too, silently accusing the poor sinner of the city, and his Guest for admitting her approach. But appearances are not the ground of righteous judgments. Often the very same words, on different lips, have a very different mind in them. And therefore the Lord, the perfect weigh-master according to God, though He may rebuke Simon and expose him to himself, knows him by name and leaves his house as a guest should leave it. He distinguishes the Pharisee of Luke n from the Pharisee of Luke 7, though he dined with both of them.

So we may look at the Lord with Peter in Matthew 16. Peter expresses fond and considerate attachment to his Master:"Be it far from Thee, Lord:this shall not be unto Thee." But Jesus judged Peter’s words only in their moral place. Hard indeed we find it to do this when we are personally gratified. "Get thee behind Me, Satan," was not the answer which a merely amiable nature would have suggested to such words. But again, I say, our Lord did not listen to Peter’s words simply as they expressed personal kindness and good will to Himself. He judged them. He weighed them, as in the presence of God, and at once found that the enemy had prompted them; for he that can transform himself into an angel of light is very often lurking in words of courtesy and kindness.
In the same way the Lord dealt with Thomas in John 20. Thomas had just worshiped Him. "My Lord and my God," he had said. But Jesus was not to be drawn from the high moral elevation that He filled, and from whence he heard and saw everything, even by words like these. They were genuine words_words of a mind which, enlightened of God, had repented toward the risen Saviour, and, instead of doubting any longer, worshiped. But Thomas had stood out as long as he could:he had exceeded. They had all been unbelieving as to the resurrection, but he had insisted that he would be still in unbelief till sense and sight came to deliver him. All this had been his moral condition; and Jesus has this before Him and puts Thomas in his right moral place, as He had put Peter. "Thomas, because thou hast seen Me, thou hast believed:blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed."

Our hearts in such cases as these would have been taken by surprise. They could not have kept their ground in the face of these assaults which the good will of Peter and the worship of Thomas would have made upon them. But our perfect Master stood for God and His truth and not for Himself. The ark of old was not to be flattered. Israel may honor it and bring it down to the battle, telling it, as it were, that now in its presence all must be well with them. But this will not do for the God of Israel. Israel falls before the Philistines though the ark be thus in the battle; and Peter and Thomas shall be rebuked, though Jesus, still the God of Israel, be honored by them.

  Author: J. G. Bellett         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

The Pueblo Incident

“Court-Martial of Bucher Overruled by Navy Secretary." the newspaper headlines of May 6, 1969. What happy news that was to people of this nation, and most of all to Commander Lloyd Bucher himself! Who can forget the incident:The capture of the U.S. Navy intelligence ship Pueblo by the North Koreans; the eleven month confinement and savage persecution of Commander Bucher and his men; the happy homecoming of the eighty men; the charges brought by a Navy court of inquiry against Commander Bucher and another officer of permitting the ship to be searched and failing to destroy all classified material on the ship; and the ensuing threat of a court-martial.

In overruling the court’s recommendation for court-martial of the officers, Navy Secretary Chafee said, "They have suffered enough, and further punishment would not be justified." He also was quoted as saying, "I make no judgment regarding the guilt or innocence of any of the officers of the offenses alleged against them." U.S. Representative Otis Pike of New York backed Secretary Chafee, saying, "The Navy took a hard line position which the Secretary tempered with mercy." Thus did the officers of the Pueblo receive pardons for their alleged offenses. However, it is clear from Secretary Chafee’s comments that in no way were the officers cleared of the charges leveled against them by the court of inquiry. They were the objects of mercy and obtained exemption from court-martial proceedings and from possible punishment, but did not, and perhaps will never, have the stigma of guilt removed from their persons.

This incident provides a striking illustration of the distinction between the Christian truths of forgiveness and justification. The repentant sinner who turns to Christ will find mercy and pardon, the forgiveness of sins. But God in His infinite grace has purposed something more for the sinner who trusts in Christ. He offers not only forgiveness, but justification as well. The sinner is cleared of every sin and every charge that could be leveled against him by a holy, sin-hating God, and thus is declared to be righteous, or just; in other words, he is justified. How is this blessed fact possible? Because the Lord Jesus Christ, God’s Son, took all of our guilt and sins as His own and bore the punishment for them on the cross. The two officers of the Pueblo received forgiveness for their alleged offenses_on the grounds that "they [had] suffered enough" _ but they were not justified. How much more blessed is the portion of the Christ-believing sinner:as a result of the atoning sufferings of Christ on the cross, he receives both forgiveness of sins and freedom from all guilt and shame and from every charge against him. "Who shall bring an accusation against God’s elect? It is God who justifies:who is he that condemns?" (Romans 8:33,34 JND translation).

"The sin alights on Jesus’ head,
Tis in His blood sin’s debt is paid;
Stern justice can demand no more,
And mercy can dispense her store.
"The sinner who believes is free,
Can say, ‘The Saviour died for me’;
Can point to the atoning blood,
And say, ‘This made my peace with God.’ “

  Author: Paul L. Canner         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

The Cross (From the Desk)

On July 20, 1969, at 9:56 p.m. (C.D.T.), Neil A. Armstrong became the first man to set foot on the surface of the moon. At 10:16 p.m., Edwin E. Aldrin joined him on the lunar surface. Together with Michael Collins, their pilot, they deserve every credit for bravery and devotion to service.

The world looked upon this as, without doubt, the greatest achievement of all time by man. Nor would we say one word to detract from the absolute marvel of it. Listening to the account of it, as we did at the time, we were simply dazed by the incredibility of it. We suggest that this feat could be accomplished (although not before the invention of the computer) only because men were dealing with physical laws and factors that were entirely predictable, and predictable with absolute certainty.

God, the Creator of the universe, has created and placed each celestial body in space as it pleased Him. These bodies are maintained by Him, and orbit with unerring accuracy in paths chosen by Him, so that their course can be predicted exactly, by observations and mathematics, any number of years in advance.

Now consider, on the other hand, the efforts of men in the realm of human behavior and affairs:here, all is unpredictable. Consequently, what a contrast! Rather than achievement there is frightening failure. How absolutely powerless men are to check the tide, rising at an alarming rate, of lawlessness and violence that is in the world through lust. "The world by wisdom" may send men to the moon, but it "[knows] not God" (1 Cor.1:21). That is the cause of its moral chaotic state_it has left out God. In its spiritual blindness, ignorance, rebellion, and self-will, it has come under Satan’s authority and power. Satan has become "the god of this world" (2 Cor. 4:4), "the ruler of the authority of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience" (Eph. 2:1,2 JND). However much its scientific and technological skills and achievements may advance, and men grope for words in the superlative to express their wonder and admiration, "the whole world lies in the wicked one" (1 John 5:19 JND) as the Word of God declares.

Times greatest -wonder, we unhesitatingly affirm, is the Cross. It proved incontestably man’s fallen and ruined moral condition:a condition which is incurable and irremediable by any effort or combined efforts of man. The Cross is the story of the mighty grace of God to ruined and sinful man, for He was "rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins" (Eph. 2:4,5). This divine grace was brought down to us by our Lord Jesus Christ, who came all the way from the heights of eternal glory to go to the Cross:a distance infinitely beyond the moon. He, "the Son of Man, [came] to seek and to save that which was lost." (Luke 19:10).

Tis the Cross of Christ the Saviour,
Hath the Father’s heart made known:
All His grace to me, the sinner,
Told in Judgment on His Son!
Measured by that Cross, that Darkness,
O how deep God’s love must be!
Deep as were Christ’s depths of anguish,
Is the Father’s love for me!
The world remains unchanged by the Cross. Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ draws men out of it in heart, attaching them to "those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God" (Col. 3:1). "But the present heavens and the earth by His Word are laid up in store, kept for fire unto a day of judgment and destruction of ungodly men. . . . But the day of the Lord will come as a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a rushing noise, and the elements, burning with heat, shall be dissolved, and the earth and the works in it shall be burnt up. All these things then being to be dissolved, what ought ye to be in holy conversation and godliness, waiting for and hastening the coming of the day of God, by reason of which the heavens, being on fire, shall be dissolved, and the elements, burning with heat, shall melt?" (2 Peter 3:7,10-12 JND)

The above thoughts on the Cross, and the Scriptures, prompt us to add a word about the Balance later on in this issue." In nothing is greater watchfulness called for than in maintaining a gospel testimony while, faithfully, being sensitive and obedient to assembly truth. "Our Saviour God . . . desires that all men should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth" (1 Tim. 2:3,4 JND). A little further on we are told that "God’s house, which is the assembly of the living God, [is] the pillar and base of the truth" (1 Tim.3:15 JND). Another has ably pointed out our responsibility and stressed the consequences of failure in this respect. We believe this to be of the utmost importance at the present time. We quote it here:

"If the Church in its union with Christ, or rather if Christ and the Church, be the special witness of divine counsels, the gospel is no less the standing witness of God’s grace to the world. The saints therefore, knowing both, are responsible to bear a true testimony to the one no less than the other. And in practice it will be found that overemphasis in one tends not only to cause the loss of the other, but the corruption of that which becomes the exclusive object. For Christ is the truth; neither the gospel nor the Church has an undivided right to our love, but both in subjection to Christ. And we are called to bear witness to the truth as we are sanctified, not by this or by that truth, but by the truth.

"Such is the danger today as it was of old. Saints like other men are apt to be one-sided. It looks spiritual to choose the highest line and stand on the loftiest point and fancy oneself to be safe at that heavenly elevation. On the other hand, it seems loving to steer clear of the church question so constantly abused to gratify ambition, if not spite and jealousy (and thus scattering saints instead of uniting them wholly around the Lord’s Name), and to devote all one’s energies, in the present broken state of Christendom, to the good news which wins souls to God from destruction. But this is to surrender the nearest circle of Christ’s affections and honor. The only course that is right, holy, and faithful, is to hold to all that is precious in His eyes _ to love the church with all its consequences on the one hand, and on the other to go out to all mankind in the grace that would reflect the light of a Saviour God. Let us seek to walk in both."

  Author: Joseph S. Butler         Publication: Issue WOT12-5

Where Is Your Faith?

"Now it came to pass on a certain day, that He went into a ship with His disciples:and He said unto them, Let us go over unto the other side of the lake. And they launched forth. But as they sailed He fell asleep:and there came down a storm of wind on the lake; and they were filled with water, and were in jeopardy. And they came to Him, and awoke Him, saying, Master, Master, we perish. Then He arose, and rebuked the wind and the raging of the water:and they ceased, and there was a calm. And He said unto them, Where is your faith? And they being afraid wondered, saying one to another, What manner of man is this! for He commandeth even the winds and waters, and they obey Him" (Luke 8:22-25).

The Lord let them be in jeopardy, the ship filled with water and Himself asleep, on purpose to put their faith to the test, to prove if they were really trusting Him, and that it might be seen if such foolish thoughts would arise when they were put into jeopardy. They say, "Master, we perish"; but they were in the ship with Christ, and could they be drowned? He said to them, "Where is your faith?" Well might He say thus to them, for though the water was in the boat, He was there too, and could sleep through it all. It was not so much of Him they were thinking as of themselves. "We perish" (said they), and it is just the same now; for the fact of being in danger with Christ in the boat is the same at one time as at another_ just as impossible then as now; and in truth Christ is much more with us now, being more perfectly revealed to us, and we are united to Him, one with Him, so that He is with us every moment in the power of the Spirit.

However high the waves may rise, there is no drowning His love and thoughts towards us. The test is to our faith. The question is, Have we that faith which so realizes Christ’s presence as to keep us as calm and composed in the rough sea as in the smooth? It was not really a question of the rough or the smooth sea when Peter was sinking in the water, for he would have sunk, without Christ, just as much in the smooth as in the rough sea. The fact was, the eye was off Jesus and on the wave, and that made him sink. As we go on with Christ, we shall get into all kinds of difficulty, many a boisterous sea; but being one with Him, His safety is ours. The eye should be off events, although they be ever so solemn, and surely they are so at this present time, and I feel them to be so; for none perhaps has a deeper sense than I of the growth of the evil and of the solemn state of things; but I know all is as settled and secure as if the whole world were favorable. I quite dread the way many dear saints are looking at events, and not looking at Christ and for Christ. The Lord Himself is the security of His people, and, let the world go on as it may, no events can touch Christ. We are safe on the sea if only we have the eye off the waves, with the heart concentrated on Christ and on the interests of Christ. Then the devil himself cannot touch us.

FRAGMENT "And [David] became a captain over them. . . . And David said . . . Abide with me, fear not; for he that seeks my life seeks thy life; for with me thou art in safe keeping" (I Sam. 22:2,22,23, JND).

  Author: John Nelson Darby         Publication: Issue WOT12-5