The
Ear
The Lord is to have
supreme control of the ear. We must come on to the ground
where the ear is dead to every other controlling voice,
every other governing suggestion, and is alive unto God,
and unto God alone.
It is quite clear that,
in some way, the governing faculty of every life is the
ear; not necessarily the outward organ, but that by which
we listen to suggestions - that, as we say, to which we
"give ear." The suggestions may arise
from our own temperament and make-up; the constraining
things in our life may be our natural inclination; the
pull and the draw of our constitution, deep-seated
ambitions, inclinations, interests, which are not
cultivated nor acquired but which are simply in us
because we are made that way. To listen to these is to
have our lives governed by our own interests. Or it
may be other things, such as the suggestions, the
desires, the ambitions of others for us, the call of the
world, the call of human affections, consideration for
the likes of others. Oh, how many things may come
to us like the activity of a voice, to which - if we
listen - we shall become slaves and servants, and the
ear, and the life with it, become so governed.
You and I, if we say
that we are consecrated men and women, mean that. we have
brought the death of Christ to bear upon all the
government and domination of voices which arise from any
quarter save the Lord Himself. We are not to consult the
voice of our own interests, our own ambitions, our own
inclinations, or the voice of anyone else's desires for
us. We must have an ear only for the Lord. That is
consecration.
It is a solemn and
direct word for everyone - and perhaps especially for the
younger men and women, whose lives are more open now to
be governed by other considerations, because life lies
before them. It may happily be that the sense of
responsibility about life is uppermost. The feeling is
that it might be disastrous to make a mistake and along
with it there is a strong ambition to succeed and not to
have a wasted life.
Herein is your law for
life, and although the course of things may be strange
and the Lord's ways oft-times perplexing, and you may be
called upon in a very deep way to give ear to the
exhortation addressed to us in the book of Proverbs:
"Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not
unto thine own understanding", nevertheless, in the
outworking you will find that God's success has been
achieved and after all what matters more than that or as
much as that? The course may be very different from what
you expected or thought or judged would be the reasonable
way for your life, but that does not matter as long as
God has been successful in your life - as long as your
life has been a success from God's standpoint. This is
the secret - an ear alive only unto Him, and dead to
everything that comes from any quarter other than the
Lord Himself.
Chapter 17 of John's
Gospel is an exposition of that. "They are not of
the world, even as I am not of the world." If we
were of the world, we should take the judgments of the
world for our lives - what the world would suggest to be
the course of greatest success, prosperity, advantage.
The spirit of the world does sometimes get into our own
hearts and suggests to us that it would be fatal for us
to take this course or that: to give heed to that voice
is to become conformed to this age. "I beseech you
therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present
your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God,
which is your reasonable service". From the outset
the point of supreme government is the ear. The ear must
be put under the blood, to be God's vehicle of government
It means that we must have a spiritual ear. As children
of God we have, by reason of our new birth, a spiritual
faculty of hearing and we must take heed to develop it as
the Lord would have us do.
It means that the ear
must be a listening ear. Many people hear, and yet do not
hear. They have ears and they hear, but yet they hear
not, because they do not listen. The Lord says many
things to us, and we do not hear what He is saying
although we know He is saying something. There must be a
quiet place for the Lord in our lives. The enemy will
fill our lives with the voices of other claims and duties
and pressures to make it impossible for us to have the
harvest of the quiet ear for the Lord.
That ear must be an ear
that is growing in capacity. The child has an ear and it
hears, but it does not always understand what it hears. A
babe hears sounds, and you notice the signs of the babe's
having heard a sound, but that babe does not understand
the sound that it hears. As it grows, it begins to know
the meaning of those sounds. In the same way there must
be a spiritual ear - a consecrated ear - marked by the
same features of growth and progress.
Then, further, this ear
must be an obedient ear, so that hearing we obey. Thus
God governs the life from the outset.
The
Hand
The Lord must have the
place of honour and strength in the activities of our
life, in the work of our life. Now this all sounds very
elementary, but we must listen for the Lord's voice in
it. The point is that in whatever we are doing, or about
to do - in all our service - there must be death to self:
no self serving, no world-serving, no serving for our own
gratification, pleasure, advantage, honour, glory,
position, exaltation, reputation. In the death of our
Offering we died to all that, and now our hand, in
whatever it does - and it may have to work in this
world's business, to do a multitude of uninteresting
things of a very ordinary character - whatever activity
of life it has to engage in, on the one side our hand is
to be dead to self and on the other side to work with the
Lord's interests in view: "Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy might..." (Ecc. 9:10).
You will remember how
much the apostle warned about service being done to men,
as by men-pleasers, and not as unto the Lord. He was
speaking largely to the slave of those days. When the
slave system obtained and the slaves had to do many, many
things that must have gone much against the grain - he
said to them: Fulfill your service, not as unto those men
who are your masters, but as unto the Lord.
We must question
ourselves as to why we are in any given place, or what it
is that moves us to desire any particular place or work.
What is the governing motive of our ambition for service?
Before God we must be able to say that any personal or
worldly consideration is dead and that our service now is
not only a reluctant nor resigned giving of ourselves to
what we have to do, but a ready applying of ourselves to
even difficult, hard, unpleasant, and uninteresting
things for the Lord's pleasure.
Do write this word in
your heart: that the Lord will not - indeed cannot -
exalt you and give you something else, something more
fruitful, more profitable, more glorious for Himself,
until in that least, that mean, that despised, that
irksome - maybe even revolting - place and work, you have
rendered your service utterly as unto Him, even if it has
meant a continual self-crucifixion. That is the way of
promotion. This is the way in which we come into a
position where the Lord gets more out of our lives than
we imagine He is getting.
There is a priestly
ministry in doing that difficult and unpleasant thing as
unto the Lord, but we do not see that we are priests at
the time. The idea of being girded with a linen ephod at
the time you are scrubbing floors and washing dishes, and
other like things, is altogether remote from your
imagination. Yet there is a testimony being borne which
is effective, of which maybe you have no consciousness.
It may come to light one day. Someone may say: I proved
that Jesus Christ is a reality, simply by seeing the way
in which you did what I know you naturally hated doing.
It was wholly distasteful to you - you had no heart for
it - but you did it in such a way that it convinced me
that Christ is a living reality. That is no imagination
and sentiment. It is true to life. The Lord has His eye
upon us.
The Lord is to have the
direction of our lives... all our outgoings and our
stayings are to be controlled alone by the Lord's
interest. We are not always being bidden to go. Sometimes
the going is a relief. It is staying which is so
difficult. We are so eager to go, and yet often the Lord
has a difficulty to get us to go in His way. However the
case may be, it is a simple point, it is a direct word.
Our going has been rendered dead to all but the Lord, and
our staying also. Our life has been poured out, has been
let go, has been taken away, that is, the life which is
for ourselves, of ourselves. Life has been taken up on
another level.
Had He, the Supreme
Example, ever an ear for Himself or for the world? Had He
not an ear for the Father alone? Satan came to Him in the
wilderness and began to speak - the strong bearing down
upon the Lord Jesus of certain other considerations,
every one of which was in His own interest. He heard what
Satan said, but His ear was crucified, and the power of
that voice was paralyzed by His consecration to the
Father. In effect He triumphed on this ground: I have no
ear for you. My ear is for the Father alone!
Satan came in other
forms, not always openly but under cover. Thus a beloved
disciple would sometimes serve him for a tool: "Be
it far from Thee, Lord: this shall never be unto
Thee" (Matthew 16:22). The Lord turned and said,
"Get thee behind Me, Satan". He recognized that
as the voice of self consideration, self preservation. He
was dead to that. This way of the cross was the Father's
way for Him. He had an ear for Him only. And so it was,
all the way through.
Was it true of His
service? Did He for a moment seek His own ends by His
works - His own glory by what He did? No! Even in
tiredness and weariness and exhaustion, if there were
interests of the Father to be served, He was alive to
those interests, never consulting His own glory or His
own feelings and I have no doubt that His feelings were
sometimes those of acute suffering.
We read of Him as
"being wearied." We know what that is, and how
in weariness we would not only sit on the well but remain
sitting on the well, even though some demand were being
made upon us. If we are the Lord's we must be governed by
the Lord's interests and brush aside all the rising
suggestions of looking after ourselves.
So it was with Him in
all His goings. He submitted His going or His staying to
the Father. His brethren would argue that He should go up
to the feast, but He does not yield to their persuasions
and arguments: His one criterion is, what does the Father
say about this? His mother entreats Him at the marriage
in Cana, and says they have no wine. His unlooked-for
reply is, "What have I to do with thee?" In
other words, what does the Father say about this? So His
whole life was, on the one hand, dead to self, to the
world, and on the other hand, alive only to God. And what
a fruitful life... what a God-satisfying life!
Are you reaching out for
something? Are you being governed by your own conception
of things, by what other people think of you, by what the
world would do or what others would do if they were in
your place? These are not the voices for you to heed.
What does the Lord say? Wait upon that; rest in that. You
may not understand, but be sure a life on this basis is
going to be God's success.
Do you want God's
success? God may do something through you for which you
are temperamentally, constitutionally, altogether unfit,
and for your part you have thought that because you are
made in a certain way, that must govern your direction in
life. Not at all!
Come, then, let us get
down before Him on this matter, to deal with
consecration, if needs be, all anew.