"... reaching forth unto those things which are
before ...
toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus
"
(Philippians 3:13-14)
[ifc/61]
----------------
EDITORIAL
FOR many years I have used a wide-margin Bible in which I have entered
copious notes. Recently, however, I was presented with another Bible
whose wide margins are still blank, so I am able to start all over
again, and already I am finding this an aid in my constant quest for
new discoveries of the inexhaustible riches of God's Word. For,
valuable as my annotated Bible is, it tends to remind me of past
thoughts in such a way that my thinking runs in grooves. This is never
a good thing.
As an example, I have a note at the beginning of Numbers 32 which draws
attention to the fact that although Reuben and Gad obtained an easy
rest on the wrong side of Jordan, they paid the penalty of being the
first to be carried off into captivity, as shown in 1 Chronicles 5:26.
Now there can be no denying that these two, with half of Manasseh, do
seem to be typical of those who opt for the easiest possible kind of
Christian life. Their request: "bring us not over Jordan" suggests that
they wanted to settle for an immediate and selfish rest and to be
excused from sharing in the strenuous thrust into the promised land
which the remainder of God's people had yet to face. I notice that I
have underlined v.23: "Be sure your sin will find you out", and I must
confess that I have only thought of them to condemn them.
There are, however, positive lessons which I can learn from them, and I
realise that the book of Joshua shows how they obeyed the command to
help their brethren. They must have been tempted to ask why they should
enter that path through the flooded Jordan. So far as they personally
were concerned, it led nowhere, for their homes were on this side of
the river. Yet they marched with the rest. And even more, they could
have demurred against getting involved with Jericho's forbidding
fortress. Why should they march round it day after day? Jericho was no
menace to them. They had nothing to gain from a victory and everything
to lose if they were defeated. The fact remains that whatever they
thought, they loyally obeyed the command of Moses and took their place
at the forefront of the fighting forces. They played their part like
men at the Jordan, at Jericho and throughout the whole campaign. In the
end they received a hearty commendation from Joshua: "Ye have not left
your brethren these many days" (Joshua 22:3).
Will I receive a like commendation when my days are done? It would be
so easy to luxuriate in God's kindness to me personally and to settle
down comfortably with a sense that there is no particular Jordan or
Jericho to threaten or menace me. From my place in the green pastures
and beside the still waters do I decline to get involved with the
trials and battles of my brethren? If I do I will be put to shame by
the example of those two and a half tribes whom I have all my life
pitied or despised. They did not opt out or give up; they waited until
Joshua himself sent them back to their green pastures. Incidentally
they received a royal bounty of blessing and spoils (Joshua 22:6-8).
"Ye have not left your brethren these many days." I must make a note of
this verse in my new Bible.
Of course there are entries in the old one which simply must be
transferred to the Bible I now have. There is, for instance, the note
against 1 Kings 6:7: "And the house, when it was in building, was built
of stone made ready before it was brought thither: so that there was
neither hammer nor axe nor any tool of iron heard in the house, while
it was in building." My remark reads: 'This house represents the
eternal edifice. No more quarrying then!' I have found it a great help
to realise that life now is like being in the quarry. There may be a
sense in which even now we are being builded together, but mainly I
feel that our present life is like the quarry in which we are being cut
and hammered into shape so that we shall be ready for eternity. Here we
have the dust and noise and even the pain: there, these will have past
and it will be all glory.
And then there are some dates in my margins which record special
messages from the Word which characterised outstanding events in my
life. It would be a pity to forget them, and yet I must beware of
dwelling too much on the past. There should be new dates even for the
old verses. One notable entry can never be repeated. Against Matthew
20:4 I have a date -- 27/1/25. I remember the occasion well. I had
finished my time at the Missionary Training Colony and was due to leave
for Brazil in March of that year. In [61/62]
January we received news that a young and devoted missionary, Fenton
Hall, had died after only a few months of service in the Amazonian
jungle. In the light of this, my Missionary Society Committee felt that
they must ask me again if I were ready to proceed to that same area as
had already been arranged. In my simplicity I asked God to speak to me
through His Word, and felt that I had the answer in this verse: "Go ye
also into the vineyard, and whatsoever is right I will give you". So I
wrote the date against that verse and in due course sailed for Brazil.
I have never regretted that guidance. Later on, I added as a comment to
this verse: 'No bargaining for a wage. Leave the reward to Him!' As I
look back I realise how bountifully the Lord has fulfilled that
undertaking to give me "whatsoever is right". Indeed He understated it,
for He has given me "exceeding abundantly above". To Him be the glory!
There are a few other dates, and everyone of them is a reminder of His
great faithfulness to those who trust in Him.
I have not recorded the times when I failed so to trust Him. The
margins would be black with writing if I had. But then God has blotted
them all out because of the blood of His dear Son. so there is no value
in my brooding over them. Whatever Bible we use it is the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ which always has the last word.
----------------
LOVE SO AMAZING
Poul Madsen
CHRISTIANS talk and sing much about love but alas, the word 'love' has
suffered the same fate as many others, namely it has lost something of
its rich content by being used too often and too superficially.
Christians testify that they have received a new love, and some even
state publicly that they now love everybody. I am sure that they mean
what they say, but I am also convinced that they do not fully
understand what they are saying. It must surely be helpful, therefore,
to listen to what the apostle of love has to say about the subject.
1. Love's revelation
"In this the love of God was made manifest in us, that God has sent
his only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through him
" (1 John 4:9).
The love of God, which is the only real love, is something quite beyond
man's natural experience. We neither know it intuitively nor can we
discover it for ourselves.
The highest form of human love is mother love. It is so beautiful and
pure that poets never tire of celebrating its praises. In our Danish
'Story of a Mother' by Hans Christian Andersen, we catch a glimpse of
how sublime maternal love can be. The mother's sacrifice for her child
knows no limits -- except one. She can never sacrifice her child either
for her friends or her enemies. It is quite unthinkable that any mother
should sacrifice her own beloved child for another. The thought is
foreign and repugnant to our idea of a mother's love. So even the
highest form of human love has a limit.
But divine love knows no limit. God's love is not a mother's love made
more sublime; it is not human love brought to perfection; it is
something quite different from the highest form of love as we know it.
For this reason we can only know it by having it revealed or
"manifested" to us. That is why John uses this expression. This love is
so much beyond the reach of human understanding that it can only come
to us by divine revelation. These are weighty words. They teach us, as
every true Christian must come to realise, that God's love is not a
matter of emotional feelings -- His or ours. This manifestation or
revelation of divine love was not concerned with our inner feelings.
The revelation of true love consists in what God did, without our
having any part in it at all.
God sent His Son, His only-begotten, into the world for us. This means
that the Father relinquished His beloved Son into the hands of sinful
men, and that for His part the Son renounced His heavenly glory in
order to become the servant [62/63] of His
enemies. The Father so loved that He gave His Son to take upon Himself
all our guilt and lost condition. I ask again: What mother would so
renounce her son for the sake of her enemies? What mother would yield
up her child to the hands of wicked men in order to express her love to
them? For, make no mistake, we were all enemies of God by nature. The
fact that John tells us that in love God sent His Son into the world:
"that we might live through him", implies that even the finest love
would not give us life. If the Son had not come into the world to be
our Saviour, then without exception we would all have been doomed to
remain in death. So that even the finest mother, with all her love,
would still have been an enemy of God and a victim of spiritual death
if a different kind of love altogether had not been revealed by the
gospel.
The love of God is the heart-beat of the gospel. We take this for
granted, but do we realise that this love is in a higher realm than any
human ideas about love? In His amazing love God did something which no
father or mother could ever do. Could you see your son tortured to
death in the place of your enemies? Could you, out of love for those
who rejected you, refuse to let the cup of anguish pass from your son?
Could you resist the urge to intervene and rescue him from his
tormentors? No, you could not. You could not have done it then and you
could not do it now, not even for your best friends, let alone for your
enemies.
And yet we only have life because of this incomprehensible love of God
which did all this. By this love, and by this alone, do any of us have
true life. By this love and its atoning work of the cross, we are freed
from all our guilt and condemnation and by faith have, in time and in
eternity, that life which is only for the perfectly righteous.
2. Love's character
"Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and
sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins" (1 John 4:10).
In all human love, however great, there is a basic element of egoism.
We can only love when we get some satisfaction from loving. This is not
surprising, for as we are sinners there must be some taint of sin in
all our love. John assures us, though, that there is nothing faulty
about God's love; it is not subject to change; it is an immovable rock.
In contrast with all other loves, even the best, it will never fail
either in life or in death. It has both timeless and historic aspects.
Its timeless quality is implicit in the fact that He loved us before we
loved Him, and that means not only just before but long before; in fact
from the foundation of the world. In Christ He loved and chose us to be
His children before time began. You did not choose God out of love for
Him, but out of love for you He chose you before the world was. You,
therefore, have an unshakable foundation when you build upon the love
of God. His love is not emotional, not subject to the ebb and flow of
feelings as human love must always be. It does not fluctuate, it does
not allow itself to be disappointed. As 1 Corinthians 13:8 shows us.
Love -- this divine love -- never fails. By its very nature it is
eternally constant.
On the historical side, the apostle points out that God's love made Him
send His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. The love of God is
not only a matter of words but of deeds, and not normal deeds either
but deeds which completely baffle all human understanding. The prophet
tells us that: "the Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all" (Isaiah
53:6). This does not only go beyond any human conception of love, it
also lies outside of all our human ideas of justice. Paul's language on
this subject seems hardly logical. He says, for example, that God
reconciled the world to Himself through Christ. Anyone with a logical
mind would say that this is an absurd statement. You can say that the
world reconciled itself to God; though of course it did not and could
not do so, in spite of the fact that it was under an obligation so to
do. Or you can say that God reconciled Himself to the world; but He
certainly did no such thing, for He was not the offender. But it sounds
completely illogical to say that God reconciled the world to Himself.
Yet this is the marvellous truth. This is the amazing character of the
love of God. In human relations your enemy can reconcile himself to you
or you can reconcile yourself to him, but it would be absurd to talk of
reconciling your enemy to yourself. You can assert that you and your
enemies are reconciled to each other. God's enemies, though -- and
ourselves among them -- had no wish to reconcile themselves to God. but
rather to run away or turn their backs on Him. But this is the amazing
truth which defies logic and beggars the human language. God's love is
boundless. It contains no element of egoism. Indeed it is so pure that
we [63/64] who are defiled cannot properly grasp
its wonders and find it hard to believe that His love was of such a
nature that it led His Son to blot out our sins with His own blood
before we ever gave Him a thought. Compared with this firm rock of
divine love, all our attempts at love are shifting sand.
Notice that this love is not just past history but absolutely valid
today. John does not write: 'Herein was love ...', but "Herein is
love"; yet at the same time we only know that love by looking back to
the cross, for the apostle says: "Herein is love ... that God loved ...
and sent ...". So we only know His present love today in terms of that
great historic sacrifice on the cross of Calvary. Such a look takes our
attention right away from ourselves; as we look back we also look away,
away to the one who Himself is love. It is the same Calvary love which
operates today, the same love which inspired our Saviour to love His
own to the uttermost and to bear our sins in His own body on the tree.
This is the love of the Spirit, the love which He never tires of
witnessing to, and we have no other love to talk about or to preach. It
is overwhelming in its greatness.
3. Love's debt
"Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to (Danish 'are
indebted to') love one another" (1 John 4:11).
It is obvious that such love makes us debtors. There is one thing which
we always owe to men and that is the debt of love: "Owe no man
anything, save to love one another" (Romans 13;8). We would all agree
about this but we are left with the problem of how we can fulfil our
obligation and pay our debt. The Word of God does not teach that we can
have an especially strong experience which will give us such a supply
of divine love that our problem of loving one's neighbour as oneself is
immediately solved. We may have experiences which bring great warmth to
our hearts and for the time we feel as though we could love everybody
but, as we have been saying, this is not just a feeling of love but
something much deeper and more spiritual. If, then, God does not impart
to us a supply of His love so that we can love in the way which John
describes, how can we do it?
Firstly I want to say that this matter of 'how' will always overwhelm
us. Unless it does, we shall begin to feel that we can cope with this
job of loving, and if we do there will be something seriously wrong
with us. The man who talks glibly about loving others, feeling a
certain self-confidence that he is now able to do this, is in great
danger of conceit and deception. Only those who are consciously poor in
spirit can know the power of the kingdom of heaven. To claim to have
great love and yet manifestly to be lacking in humble dependence on
God, poverty of spirit, is to be mistaken almost to the point of
deception. So let us take comfort from our sense of inadequacy. Let us
not fall into despair because we do not know how to love as He loved.
What is more, let us take our poverty to the Lord, readily confessing
our personal incapacity in the face of this great debt and coming anew
to the place where all our debts are provided for, namely at the cross.
The truly poor in spirit knows that of himself he cannot provide this
kind of amazing love, so he comes low before the cross and, to his
amazement and delight, finds there a new manifestation of divine love.
So we have come full circle. We started by saying that God's love is
manifested in the death of His Son and now we find in that cross a new
supply of grace which we can draw upon, humbly receiving and as humbly
displaying that love to friend and foe alike.
But the debtor is never discharged. He never pays off his debt of love
so that he is freed from further obligation. However many payments are
made, love's debt never diminishes and the debtor never feels that it
is any easier to show this kind of love. In fact the very contrary is
true, for the closer he comes to the cross and the Christ of the cross,
the more enormous does the debt become and the more appalling his own
inability to pay. Yet at the cross he discovers the infinite
sufficiency of divine love and so is able to meet love's demands even
though he himself is more and more discovered to be poor and powerless.
He goes on paying his debt, but he never gets a receipt for the
payment. Whatever others may think or say about him, he knows that he
is still up to his eyes in debt. But every day he makes new discoveries
of the great wealth of love which can be found at the foot of the cross
and he goes on learning that supreme lesson of the spiritual life,
which is faith. How better can I close, then, than with Paul's words:
"Salute them that love us in faith" (Titus 3:15). When we are
concerned about showing real love there is only one way -- it is the
way of faith. [64/65]
----------------
ANOTHER LETTER TO THAT YOUNGER BROTHER
[Eric Fischbacher]
DEAR D....
Thanks for your letter -- I can see from it that your honest approach
to the Bible will be a great blessing to you, and perhaps to many
others in the future.
Your question about Balaam's experience has occurred to me before now,
and here is what I have been thinking about it.
When Balak's men came to Balaam with the request to curse what seemed
like a marauding tribe threatening his borders, Balaam did the right
thing -- he asked God about it. (Some of our modern prophets omit this
step.) Obviously his reputation as an effective agent of spiritual
power must have been based on some kind of relationship with the
Almighty, and it is clear that in fact he was in the habit of
consulting God before acting. God's answer on this occasion was brief
and to the point -- 'You must not go. You must not curse this people
for they are blessed' (Numbers 22:12). This was a simple directive with
a simple explanation. What more could be required?
It was enough for Balaam, so he got up next morning and transmitted the
short message to Balak. I presume that he received the usual divination
fees which the messengers would bring with them, though of course he
may have offered a refund for dissatisfied clients! Anyway, they came
back again, with more fees and with an urgent request for a good
cursing. Balaam went back to God. Why? I think the answer to that
question is the answer to your question, namely, 'Why did God tell
Balaam to go this time, and then why did He become so angry when Balaam
went?'
May I suggest that when Balaam went back this second time, although he
appeared to be asking God for further instructions, he was really
saying, 'Please let me go. I need the money!' (We know from 2 Peter's
reference to Balaam's love of the hire of wrong-doing and also from a
similar remark in Jude that the prophet's great concern was what is
known in some quarters as the 'quick buck'.) God, who knows the heart,
answered the real question, not the pretence one. He always does.
I entirely agree with you that this issue is not simply a
hair-splitting detail in an obscure Old Testament story -- it has
important implications for all who want to walk with God and to serve
Him. Balaam was certainly not a true prophet of God on the pattern of
Isaiah or Jeremiah, or Nathan, but the Bible gives us bad examples as
well as good ones, which is just as well, since we see ourselves more
readily in the lives and experience of the former. What Balaam forgot,
though he must have been aware of it, was that God knows all and even
if we succeed in concealing our real intentions from everyone else,
they are clear enough to Him. Occasionally we even deceive ourselves
but we never confuse Him. God will always answer the REAL question we
are asking. He is not at all influenced by the pious and altruistic
language in which it is couched. He ignores all this and attends to
what He knows to be the real desire behind the words. What is more, He
will never withdraw our basic right, given to us by Himself, to freedom
of choice and action.
The lesson here for us seems to be this: God is pleased to receive any
reasonable request from us, at any time. He may grant it or He may
refuse it. He may even accede -- as here -- to some selfish request in
which we persist even after He has told us what He wants. But this does
not mean that He approves of it or will back us up in it. Indeed He
reserves the right to prevent our causing harm to others or interfering
with His plans even when He seems to have assented to our propositions.
Where His own affairs, His own people, His will are involved, it is not
the time or the place for us to ask to be allowed to do this or that
because it suits us. When we come to Him we must come for one thing
only -- to find out what He wants us to do, and then to do it.
Next time your motorcycle breaks down, listen carefully!
As ever, your brother, E. F. [65/66]
----------------
GIFTS IN THE CHURCH
Alan G. Nute
Reading: 1 Corinthians 12
THIS is an important subject which is very meaningful to us all. In our
considerations we must be careful to take the Scriptures as our sole
guide. Fortunately they are explicit on the matter, and extensive
teaching is supplied by the Spirit of God through the apostle Paul in 1
Corinthians 12.
The Nature of Spiritual Gifts
First of all we find that in this chapter the nature of spiritual gifts
is defined. This is done by means of two words, the first of
which is 'gift' (vv.4, 9, 30, 31). This is a precise translation of the
Greek word here used. A gift is not something purchased or otherwise
acquired; it is not something achieved or obtained as of right. It is
bestowed quite gratuitously, a fact which we can plainly recognise when
we notice its use in connection with the subject of eternal life. Death
is a wage paid by sin, whereas eternal life is the free gift of God
(Romans 6:23). The actual text says "the gift of God", but people often
insert the word 'free', and this is a legitimate amplification and
rightly stresses the point. It would apply equally to the subject we
are now considering and may help us to realise from the first that
spiritual gifts are a free gift of God.
The second word gives further definition, for it is the word
'spiritual'. The actual phrase in verse 1 is "spiritual gifts" but in
certain versions the word 'gifts' is in italics. This denotes that it
is absent in the original text and has only been inserted to complete
the sense to English readers. For us the word is an adjective, but here
it is allowed to stand on its own and thus to do service as a noun. By
this means emphasis is laid on the fact that such gifts are essentially
spiritual. And no wonder; for they originate with the Spirit, are
operated in the power of the Spirit, and have as their object the
spiritual benefit of the Church. That their essential nature is
spiritual is further indicated by the fact that their exercise is
described as 'the manifestation of the Spirit' (v.7). It may be
concluded therefore that gifts are divinely and gratuitously bestowed
and are essentially spiritual in character.
The question is frequently raised as to the relation of a spiritual
gift to a natural ability. The two may not be equated; frequently,
however, they are closely related. In bestowing His gifts God does not
do despite to the individuality of the recipient, imposing on His
children that which will rob them of that which is vital to their
character. In any case, it needs to be borne in mind that all our
natural endowments are divinely bestowed and to a Christian they are
all gifts of God's grace. For as long as natural ability is used in the
power of the flesh and for personal ends it remains just that; but when
it is surrendered to God, set apart for His purpose and used truly in
the power of the Spirit, it may well be constituted a spiritual gift.
Both Jeremiah and Paul speak of having been under the eye and hand of
God from their very birth, and Ephesians 2:10 possibly gives us a hint
that this is how God deals with us all. But of course there will always
be certain spiritual gifts which are additional to and independent of
any natural talents or qualifications which might be possessed.
Not only are spiritual gifts defined in this chapter, they are listed
. Several such lists are to be found in the New Testament (Romans 12, 1
Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4). It is doubtful whether these were ever
intended as formal lists and they are certainly not exhaustive ones.
The differences in the catalogues found in the passages referred to
would indicate that it is a mistake to regard them as an inventory of
gifts always to be found in each local assembly of Christians. Perhaps
it would be better to take them as samples of the gifts which were in
evidence at that time, having been given by God to meet needs then
current. We may well believe that certain gifts will be given to answer
situations which may arise in different places and at different times.
Honesty demands that we should also acknowledge our inability to
provide an accurate description of the precise nature of some of the
gifts listed. Considerable divergence of opinion exists on this
question and humility should keep us from dogmatism. One of the two
catalogues in 1 Corinthians 12 (vv.8-10) describes 'abilities', [66/67] whereas the other (v.28) describes 'persons'.
This suggests that God by His Spirit may either grant to a member of
the church a special endowment or may give to the church a person
already so gifted. It also conveys the important truth that God works
through people, and that it is wrong to think of gifts and persons
separately.
The nature of spiritual gifts is illustrated as well as being
defined and listed. A gift is to the church what a member is to the
body. This analogy is used to pin-point two facts, unity and diversity.
Unity, since four times we are informed that there is one body, and
also that we are incorporated into this body by the 'one Spirit'. But
unity is not to be confused with uniformity. That is no part of the
Spirit's work. Instead there is diversity. Just as a body is composed
of a variety of members, so the Church is blessed with a variety of
gifts. These, as the members of the body, are interrelated and
interdependent. Each is different from every other, representing
distinct abilities, having separate contributions to make, and yet all
operating together so that the whole body functions fully and properly.
The Bestowal of Spiritual Gifts
The chapter under consideration plainly teaches that gifts are bestowed
according to the sovereign action of God. They originate with
Him. The emphasis in this action of Scripture is on the role of the
Holy Spirit in the granting of those gifts, but Paul is at pains to
stress that their source is the triune God (vv.4-6). This is further
developed by the fact that in verses 18, 24 and 28, God, that is God
the Father, is said to take the initiative and to exercise control in
this matter, whereas in Ephesians 4 the gifts are seen as the largesse
of that ascended Christ who distributes them as the fruit of His great
victory. The leaders of this same church at Ephesus are described in
Acts 20:28 as having been bestowed upon that church by the Holy Spirit.
So there is a beautiful harmony of the Godhead dispensing all these
spiritual gifts; Father, Son and Spirit unitedly operating to further
the divine will through anointed servants here on earth. The
sovereignty of the divine action is affirmed in verses 11 and 18 where
the gifts are seen to be the implementation of God's will and the
expression of His pleasure.
Why then, we might ask, do local churches so often appear to lack an
adequate supply of spiritual gifts? The answer is surely this, that the
truth of divine sovereignty must never be played off against that of
human responsibility. This may be the reason why the apostle indicates
that gifts are given in response to the fulfilling of certain
conditions. There are two main areas where there should be exercise,
the first being desire on the part of the individual (12:31;
14:1, 39). We have no right to remain passive in this matter. It is our
responsibility to cultivate an earnest desire to serve God and His
people in the way He appoints. Clearly this ambition must be purged of
all self-interest and born of a pure longing and zeal to make a
worthwhile contribution to the work of God. But we must know that it is
not really spiritual to be passive and withdrawing. The servant in the
parable who was 'slothful' was condemned by the Lord as being 'wicked'
and 'worthless' and found that in the end his talent was taken from him
because he was too timid to make use of it. If God tells us "earnestly
desire ... spiritual gifts" then He means what He says and can be
trusted to respond to genuine desires which have His glory at heart.
Such desires will not only find expression in prayer but in humble
consultation with others as well as in observing needs and
opportunities which are to hand.
There must also be a concern on the part of the church. The
gift of Barnabas and Saul as missionaries arose from a deep spiritual
concern on the part of the church at Antioch (Acts 13:1-3). They must
have been aware of the Saviour's commission to His disciples to take
the gospel into all the world, and perhaps they were concerned with
some sense of failure to discharge this commission. Certainly they had
sufficient soul-exercise to set aside time for concerted prayer and
fasting. It was then that the Holy Spirit spoke. He had been waiting to
do so. He had already gifted men and called them to this task. So as
they listened to His voice He indicated to the leaders who these two
men were. Without hesitation the church identified itself with them by
the laying on of hands and 'sent them off'.
There was a somewhat similar position in the case of Timothy. His
ministry did not arise from his own initiative. Prophecies led the way,
as God made known His will to and through others. It seems that this
young man's call to service was disclosed to Paul and his company as
well as to the brethren at Lystra and Iconium (Acts 16:2). So it was
that Timothy was separated to the ministry to which God had called him,
and at [67/68] that very time God imparted to
him the spiritual gift requisite for the work.
In this way see the harmony between God's sovereign work by His Spirit
and the spiritual exercise both of the individual and of the church.
The Exercise of Spiritual Gifts
In 2 Timothy 1:7 Paul enunciates three great principles which should
govern the exercise of spiritual gifts:
(1) Spirit of Power
Timothy was plagued by timidity. Such a spirit of fear will always
prevent the proper discharge of responsibility in connection with the
exercise of a spiritual gift. It does not come from God. There is a
world of difference between a proper modesty and a crippling timidity.
So Timothy was urged to respect, to develop and to use the gift which
he possessed. Its flame must not be allowed to die down. "Neglect not
the gift that is in thee" (1 Timothy 4:14). In a similar way God had
sent a special message to Archippus, saying: "Take heed to the ministry
which thou hast received in the Lord, that thou fulfil it" (Colossians
4:17). A spiritual gift cannot be cultivated and employed apart from
the Holy Spirit: it is designed to operate on spiritual power and on
none other. If such a gift is used on the basis of a man's natural
strength it becomes not only worthless but positively dangerous. Thank
God that an adequate supply of the power essential for true functioning
in Christ is freely available in the Holy Spirit. But we must be ready
as well as careful always to obey Him.
(2) Spirit of Love
In this chapter the apostle writes of the danger that exists of
exercising one's gift in a spirit which is other than the spirit of
love. He warns of jealousy, and does so by means of an imaginary
conversation between the foot and the hand, and the ear and the eye.
Peevishly, with a blend of self-pity and mock-modesty, both foot and
ear wish to opt out of the body! They represent that churlish attitude
which exclaims: 'If I can't be what I want to be, I won't be anything
at all'. Paul replies that this is both illogical and irreverent. It is
illogical in that someone has to supply the hearing -- we cannot all be
'eyes'. And if all were hearing, he asks, what would happen to the
faculty of smell? Jealousy is stupid. It is also irreverent, for it is
virtually a censure on the Creator who arranged the organs in the body.
Why be resentful against God? What a tragedy it is when God's people
give way to this kind of jealousy which shows itself in fleshly
ambition and worldly rivalry. The spirit of love is quenched, and the
exercise of true spiritual gift is prevented.
Paul also warns of pride. The imaginary conversation this time reflects
a spirit of arrogance. The eye conceitedly disparages the hand, and the
head adopts a similar attitude to the foot. But what ground is there
for such pride? None! There never is. The very word 'gift' underlines
how wholly unjustified it is. If each, however seemingly insignificant,
is indispensable, how can one elevate itself against another?
All this is negative. Positively, the spirit of love will manifest
itself in a 'care for one another' (v.25). It will foster that
mutuality, that interdependence, which is the hall-mark of the body of
Christ. Love is never selfish. It is outgoing. It is characterised by a
solicitude and a concern which promotes the well-being of the whole.
Spiritual gifts are not to be exercised for private enjoyment, but for
the common good.
(3) Spirit of self-control
Holy Spirit control and self-control may appear at first sight to be
mutually exclusive. This, of course, is not the case. It may well be
that the Corinthians imagined that being under the control of the Holy
Spirit would mean an abdication of self-control. Paul reminds them that
prior to their becoming Christians, as idolators, they were often swept
away, however they happened to be moved (v.2). They had submitted to
the powers of darkness and these had 'taken over' in such a way that
they were borne unresistingly along. It seems likely that they had
carried the same notion over into their Christian life, wrongly
supposing that what was required of them was an attitude of passivity
to the controlling Holy Spirit. It was needful, therefore, that they
should be informed that the Holy Spirit operates in conjunction with a
spirit of self-control. The presence of the Holy Spirit in the life
does not make a man an automaton: it demands the human contribution of
personal discipline.
In this matter of self-control four criteria are applied:
(a) The intelligence. 'In thinking be mature.' Paul has just expressed
his intention to pray and to sing not alone with the spirit but with
the mind (14:15). As John Stott wisely says: 'in all true [68/69] worship the mind must be fully and fruitfully
engaged' (Your Mind Matters , p.27).
(b) The effect. This must be profitable. The stress throughout the
chapter is conveyed by the repetition of such words as edification,
up-building, etc. Does the gift exercised promote the spiritual
well-being of God's people? This is the crucial question.
(c) The judgment of others. 'Let the others weigh what is said'
(14:29). Self-control will always be manifest by a willingness to
submit to the spiritual judgment of other brethren, and in particular
to those who are leaders in the church. It is their responsibility to
assess the profitability or otherwise of the contribution made, and it
is a mark of maturity where members defer with grace to such an
assessment.
(d) The Word of God. This is our sole and final authority, and must
judge and determine all things (14:37). Only so can we be a living
proof of the fact that our God is not a God of confusion but of peace.
We close these considerations with a reminder that the exercise of
gifts in the church is described as "a manifestation of the Spirit"
(12:7 and 14:12). This is a challenging thought. We may well ask
ourselves whether this is true in our case. What Spirit is manifest? If
it is a spirit of timidity, self, jealousy, pride or indiscipline, then
it cannot be the Holy Spirit. A true "manifestation of the Spirit" can
only be seen where there is a spirit of power, of love and of
self-control. This is the divinely appointed means of achieving 'the
common good'.
----------------
TAKE YOUR SHARE
T. Austin-Sparks
Reading: 1 Chronicles 15:1-2; 2 Timothy 2:1-3
THE Levites are a very interesting people and their history is full of
valuable things for the Lord's people at all times, but the thing which
we are concerned with now is that they were the men who took
responsibility for the Lord's testimony. David's decision about their
task was the sequel to a tragic experience. One of the very many snares
set by Satan against God's testimony in the life of David had succeeded
when the king thoughtlessly ordered a new cart to be made for the
transportation of the ark. It was a violation of divine law; it
produced the death of at least one man; and it brought the whole
testimony to a halt for a long time. After the chastening experience,
David corrected his mistake by reference to God's Word and a new
spiritual movement was made possible. So in accordance with the
Scripture which David now remembered, the ark was brought out and
committed to the Levites, as David affirmed: "None ought to bear the
ark of God but the Levites, for them hath God chosen ...". Theirs was a
peculiar responsibility among the Lord's people, and they had to take
up their responsibility and not leave it to other means. It belonged to
them, and if they did not shoulder this burden then everything went
wrong and was held up.
Maturity and Responsibility
These men are a reminder to us in our day that God calls us to take up
our responsibilities and to play our part in His testimony. The Levites
could not enter upon their ministry until they were thirty years of
age, and then they had to give it up when they were fifty. While the
age for going to war was twenty, the entering upon this Levitical
ministry in fullness was not allowed until they were thirty. This
represents real maturity. The Levites then had to retire at fifty
before their strength began to wane. It is a spiritual thing which is
represented, and what it seems to say to us is that for this carrying
of the Lord's testimony, full strength is required. Levitical ministry
was the expression of the best years of a man's life. It does not apply
to us in the matter of age, either for beginning or for laying down our
work for God, but it does remind us that spiritual strength is required
for the bearing of this responsibility. That is why God calls us to be
strong.
This brings us to the reference in the message to Timothy: "Thou
therefore, my child, be strengthened in the grace that is in Christ
Jesus" and then: "Take your part ...". What was [69/70]
Timothy's spiritual strength needed for? It was that he might take his
part in suffering hardship for Christ. So far as others were concerned
he was to commit to faithful men those treasures which had been
committed to him. The whole background is levitical. Timothy and the
other faithful men were having responsibility committed to them by the
Lord, and so they needed fresh grace to be strong in the Lord. In our
day there is a tremendous need for people to take their share in the
Lord's testimony and not always to think of others being responsible
instead of them. The Lord calls for His people to grow up spiritually,
not always to remain babes, demanding that they be carried and nursed,
nor being immature youngsters who childishly complain or avoid
responsibility. Such can never be entrusted with the work of Christ,
they will never take their share in its hardship, never be good
soldiers of Jesus, and the testimony will not be safe in their keeping.
Perhaps one of the greatest spiritual tragedies of our time is the fact
that so few seem to be sufficiently strong spiritually to shoulder the
interests of Christ in a mature fashion, preferring rather to follow
and let others take the lead.
I feel quite sure that it was because Israel had not recognised
spiritually the meaning of the Levites in their midst that they failed
so constantly in the wilderness. The Levites had been chosen to take
the place of the priestly firstborn in every family. The firstborn was
the natural priest who was to take responsibility in household affairs,
but the Levites had been chosen to substitute for the firstborn and had
become the tribe of the firstborn ones. If all Israel had recognised
this, and abode by the spiritual truth, there would not have been that
detachment which meant so much weakness and which found the general
company constantly drawing back, wavering in uncertainty. They let the
Levites carry the ark as though it was something separate from
themselves, never realising their own responsibility, and so they were
often murmuring and complaining, not giving any sort of loyal support
to their representatives.
It seems that today we have something very similar. A large number of
those who belong to the Lord are just in the camp, content to be lost
in the throng of God's people and leaving the main responsibility to
others. They like to see things going on, but for themselves they do
not want to carry any responsibility. To all such the Lord says: 'Take
your share, take your part in the sufferings as a good soldier. Do not
be always babes, carried about by every changing wind or impulse. Do
not be those of whom the letter to the Hebrews complains that when they
should have been teachers they were still needing to be put right over
the simple elementary principles of the spiritual life.'
Responsibility Means Strength
There is a sense in which those who take responsibility have to feel
that all will fail if they fail. The important thing is to realise, in
a right and humble spirit, that the Lord's testimony does depend on us
individually. Each one is fully justified in taking the attitude that
this is his business, that he is not just one of a crowd, but a
responsible member. The real difference between the Levites and the
rest of the people was that this tribe had been called to bear the
Lord's burdens, to accept responsibility in His name, and in this sense
we are all Levites. When these men accepted their responsibility and
took up the ark, we are told that they received special help from the
Lord (1 Chronicles 15:26). Timothy was assured that God's grace would
supply him with new strength as he took his share.
I do believe that if we recognised the responsibility resting upon us
and took it up, however conscious we are of our weakness and
inadequacy, we would have a new incoming of divine strength. If, for
the Lord's sake and for the sake of His testimony, we reached out to
Him, He would give us more strength. The way to get strengthened is to
take on more than you can of yourself carry. Perhaps you are working
the other way round. You may be thinking that when you are stronger you
will be able to accept more responsibility, that when you feel more of
His power in you, then you will be more serviceable to Him. I ask you
if it has ever worked out like this with you yet? What is your
experience so far? Has the Lord ever come to you, given you a new sense
of His power within, and then appointed a new task? Or has He not
called you to something which is quite beyond you, and then given you
the strength and enablement as you have moved forward in faith. Your
experience differs very much from mine if it has not been in this
second way. I have always found that the Lord makes demands upon me,
calling for an exercise of new faith in Him, and then has met the
demand as I have been willing to take my share. [70/71]
So we must not wait until we have become such wonderful people that we
feel competent to carry the load, but must shoulder our responsibility
and prove the strength and enabling which the Lord will give us. It is
as though the Lord said: 'Take your responsibility and then take your
strength'. Strength comes not merely along the line of consciously
feeling the need of it, but of appropriating it because of a specific
need. It is the object in view which brings the strength. We tell the
Lord that we are willing to take our share, to accept responsibility
for His interests and yet feel quite unequal to the task, and so we can
have a new experience of His strengthening grace.
The Nature of Responsibility
The fact that none but the Levites should bear the ark does not mean
that in our day there is a special class of worker, but it reminds us
that all of us are called to a priestly ministry and should have our
lives altogether bound up with the Lord's interests. The tabernacle was
the place where the Lord was known as King. This means, then, that all
that relates to His majesty, to His honour and glory was put into the
hands of the Levites. They were a sort of bodyguard here on earth of
the King invisible. They had to keep things for Him, to watch His
interests and to maintain His testimony in strength. This is our
calling. The Lord is in the midst of us, and things must be maintained
in accordance with His presence. This is not just a latent and passive
truth, but a challenge to our spiritual energy to care for His
interests. He is holy; then the responsibility of holiness is committed
to us, His Levites. He is a Being of power and majesty; then that power
and majesty are our responsibility. We have to be faithful, and that is
why the charge to Timothy was concerned not with clever but with
faithful men, men who by life even more than by words were able to
teach others and bring them into taking their share in the testimony.
The Levites were divided into three sections. They had three
departments of responsibility. One section had the vessels of the
sanctuary, all the holy vessels; another section had all the curtains
and the coverings; while the third had the boards and the bars. We may
have our different aspects of work, some in preaching and more
obviously spiritual work and others in different spheres, but it is all
the same testimony. The Levites were divided into sections of different
kinds of work. Some had the rougher work, the heavy bars and boards,
which was more strenuous physically than the carrying of the pots and
pans; but it was all Levitical work, they were all one people, one
tribe. Responsibility rested upon an equally, for the totality of their
labours made one ministry. The great thing was -- and still is -- that
each should take his own responsibility seriously and give himself to
his ministry.
I am sure that the Lord's heart must long for that. I am sure that at
times in looking at me, He has had to say: 'Oh, I wish that I could
trust him more; I wish he were more reliable, more responsible'. And I
know that, as I have looked at many of God's people I have sometimes
said that I wish that they did not need so much looking after. If only
they would begin to stand on their own feet and take responsibility, so
that we need not worry about them any more because we know that they
can be trusted! They need urging and encouraging and all the time to be
followed up, put right, and pacified when they get touchy and take
offence. We all need fresh grace from the Lord to take our share in the
labours and the sufferings as good soldiers of Jesus Christ. His grace
will give us the necessary strength if we put our shoulders to the
burden and take our share in the testimony.
----------------
THE MINOR PROPHETS
4. AMOS and OBADIAH
John H. Paterson
THE Christian's understanding of God and His world is full of paradoxes
and apparent contradictions. So often he has to hold in balance two
equal and opposite points of view, refusing to allow either to exclude
the other. Often, too, in the history of the Church Christians have
made the mistake of adopting such points of view as flags around which
to rally opposing forces. By [71/72] doing so
they polarise differences, create divisions and make reconciliation
impossible. One of the clearest historical examples of this process is
to be found in the centuries-long continuation of the debate between
Calvin and Arminius about the nature of God's grace towards man and the
possibility of falling away from it. We have Calvinists and Arminians
to this day.
The problem is that such divisions as these stem from our very limited
appreciation of the "manifold wisdom of God". Because His mind and
character are indeed many-sided, they transcend our simple
formulations; yet God Himself is entirely consistent and perfectly
balanced. He is not a Calvinist -- or an Arminian either.
In particular situations, nevertheless, it may be necessary to stress
one or other aspect of the character of God which, at that moment and
by particular individuals, is being dangerously neglected. It has
already been suggested in these articles on the Minor Prophets that
that is what these men of God were called on to do. But as users of the
Word of God, who now have at our disposal all twelve of the prophets'
messages, we must make sure that we, in turn, do not stress one
prophecy or one message at the expense of another.
Next in line for our consideration in this series is Amos. But a Bible
student writing studies which appear at intervals of two months may
perhaps be allowed to feel that it is wise to link the message of Amos
with that of Obadiah, which follows it in our Bibles, lest for the
two-month period between publications he appears to be encouraging a
one-sided view of the character of God. For in a rather curious way we
find in these two prophecies the Calvinist-Arminian debate of later
centuries foreshadowed. We do well, therefore, to consider them
together.
The Message of Amos
Of all the prophets speaking to Israel and Judah Amos was, probably,
the sternest and most forthright. He was unsparing in his
denunciations, and refused to modify his tone for king or priest
(7:12-17). He charged them all alike with moral failure. The 'missing
dimension' in their understanding of God was, quite simply, a failure
to understand the moral basis of God's dealings with men. The
mistake they made was to confuse religion with morality; to assume that
the special relationship with God which they had been granted all those
centuries before was sufficient cover for them, and that after that
what they did was irrelevant.
Not so, says the prophet; no change of status or special favours alter
or cancel the moral imperatives that stem from the character of God. On
the contrary, the only consequence of being 'special' people in any way
is to, increase moral responsibility: "You only have I known of all the
families of the earth: therefore I will punish you for all your
iniquities" (3:2).
The basic message of Amos is conveyed by him in two particular ways:
firstly, by a list of denunciations in Chapters 1 and 2 and, secondly,
by a series of visions in Chapters 7 and 8. In the first of these
sections Amos denounces in turn Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon and
Moab -- all Israel's heathen neighbours -- and then passes straight on
to denounce Judah and Israel too. There is no break, no distinction,
between friend and foe, heathen and Hebrew. Only the nature of the sin
denounced is different; Judah has "despised the law of the Lord, and
have not kept his commandments" (2:4), a sin which is only possible to
those who have a knowledge of that law in the first place.
To a people like the Jews, who were accustomed to think of themselves
as an altogether distinct and special nation under God, it must have
come as a blow to find themselves listed with all their heathen
neighbours in a common stream of denunciation. But worse was to come,
in the four visions recorded in Chapters 7 and 8 -- locusts, fire,
plumbline and summer fruit. For the point of the first three of these
is surely to be found in their indifference to the name or nationality
of their victims. After centuries of attempts by man at controlling or,
at least, predicting the movements of Middle East locusts, there is
still no telling where they will strike, or whose crops they will
devastate; they eat the corn of friend and foe indifferently. The fire
does not sweep through a town sparing certain houses because their
owners are, or are not, Jewish; it burns everything in its path. And
the point of the plumbline is surely the same: it is an entirely
objective test of the quality of the building. It does not matter
whether the wall is made of mud or stone, whether it has been built by
black men or white men, soldiers or priests. The plumbline simply asks:
'Is it straight?' [72/73]
And so to the basket of summer fruit. It is a fact that during the
soft-fruit season, many green-grocers who are selling baskets of
strawberries or raspberries invite their customers to select their own
from the display in the shop. This is because the average customer has
a deeply ingrained fear of being swindled; summer fruit goes bad so
quickly that an unscrupulous seller can arrange a basket of
fine-looking fruit on top and squashed and mouldy fruit underneath.
Reputable green-grocers therefore invite their customers to 'choose
your own', to show that there is no deception.
Israel had gone bad. On the top of the basket there was the thinnest
possible layer of what still appeared to be good fruit -- a few burnt
offerings and feast days (5:21-22) giving an impression of devotion to
Jehovah. But underneath injustice, disregard for God's law and the
worship of other gods had rotted away the life of the nation. Therefore
"prepare to meet thy God, O Israel" (4:12).
Amos reminds us that God is a God of justice. He does not have
two moral standards, a high one for the heathen and a low one for those
people to whom, for quite separate reasons, He has shown His favour.
That would be grotesquely unjust. To paraphrase the principle in New
Testament terms, faith is not an evangelical substitute for good works.
It is a point which James made clear, centuries later, in his epistle.
And it is the same point which Stephen argued (Acts 7:42), when facing
his accusers; he quoted the words of Amos while he charged his audience
with being blinded by national pride in the face of moral bankruptcy
and the murder of the Son of God.
The Message of Obadiah
If a knowledge of God brings extra responsibility and, consequently,
extra guilt, are we not better off without it? As a Jewish character in
a modern play asks, turning his eyes to heaven, 'Lord, I know we're
your chosen people, but couldn't you choose someone else, just for a
change?' This thought brings us to Obadiah, briefest of all the
prophets: making, indeed, one simple point and making it in a single
sentence (v.17): "the house of Jacob shall possess their possessions".
To understand Obadiah, we must notice to whom he was speaking: to Edom,
the nation who were Israel's cousins through descent from Esau.
Evidently, Israel had been attacked by enemies and the nation was in
dire straits. At that point Edom, judging Israel's resistance to be at
an end and the moment favourable, declared war on her in order to be
able to share in the spoils of her defeat. It was the more
reprehensible because Edomites had always enjoyed something of a
special status in Israel (Deuteronomy 23:7). But now, on the basis of
expediency and short-term advantage, Edom was prepared to forget old
family ties and join Israel's enemies.
It was Obadiah's task to warn Edom that it had backed the wrong side.
Whatever the present appearance, Israel's future was secure, and secure
for the very good reason that God is not an Edomite. God is God of
faithfulness ; a God of principle, not expediency; a God loyal to
His purpose and so to His people who form part of that purpose.
Contrary to the present appearances, there was a future for Israel, but
not for Edom (vv.15, 18: cf. Malachi 1:4), and whatever spoils Edom
might have obtained by taking sides against Israel would soon be
returned to their original owner: the house of Jacob was, in the long
run, safe in its possessions.
The actions of the Edomites need not surprise us; with their tendency
to be ruled by expediency, they were running true to ancestral form.
Esau had sacrificed principle for short-term advantage; he had despised
his birthright (Genesis 25:34) and traded it for food. Neither he nor
his descendants -- who, in a spiritual sense, are with us to this day
-- could make head or tail of the way God deals with His own people:
"My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when
thou art rebuked by him: for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth"
(Hebrews 12:5-6). The appearance of God's dealings with His
people is apt to be misleading; it may be the moment of chastening or
testing. But the underlying principle is never in doubt -- faithfulness
to His purpose and promises.
So the two books complement each other. We need them both, and we need
them together. They present equal and opposite truths about God. Yet
neither prophet was entirely one-sided. With Amos, the gloomiest of
prophets, the way back is still open: "I will bring again the captivity
of my people of Israel ... and they shall no more be pulled up out of
their land" (9:14-15). And with Obadiah, there is hope even for the
Edomite (a character who lurks somewhere in all of us) though not as an
Edomite. For it was specifically [73/74]
provided that an Edomite might become an Israelite (Deuteronomy
23:7-8); in time, in the third generation, he might come to share in
the trials, the responsibilities, but also the privileges of a people
whose God is always faithful to His own.
----------------
MAN OF GOD (6)
Alan L. Barrow
"I charge you to keep the commandment unstained and free from
reproach
until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Timothy 6:14)
WE are reaching the end of Paul's great message to the man of God, and
we come to something of a climax in his charge to keep the commandment
without spot and free from reproach. Timothy had had it made clear to
him how the man of God should order his life. With considerable
apostolic authority Paul had commanded him to have certain attitudes
and a concentration of certain qualities, telling him what he should be
avoiding and what he should be following. Having offered these
commands, he then urged Timothy to keep the commandment. We can see
something of the apostle's concern for his spiritual son as he himself
was approaching the end of his earthly span, and looked to the younger
man as one who was continuing to lay the foundations of the early
Church and accept responsibility for maintaining the gospel witness. He
spoke with great stress, not just commanding but solemnly charging
Timothy to keep the commandment, and in doing so he used all the
strength and authority he possessed to insist that due attention should
be paid to his words.
He further continued his earnest exhortation by telling Timothy that he
must keep the commandment "unstained, and without reproach". This may
seem quite strange. You normally keep commandments or you fail to do
so; the term 'stain' is not usually applied at all in this connection.
They were strange words to use, and they indicate the downright
approach to the matter which was typical of Paul. Even when
commandments are kept, there is always the possibility that something
of their purity may be spoiled by a stain or a spot. That which we
neither expected nor intended may come from without and rob our
obedience of its full value. Perhaps it comes as a surprise to us that
Paul felt that the man of God might intend obedience and yet in some
way incur reproach by allowing some blemishes to mar his devotion. I
recently saw a quite expensive item greatly reduced in price because it
had become shop-soiled. It had not been kept unstained and free from
reproach. It had been standing around in the shop and someone had
carelessly stood a cup of coffee on it, so marring its proper
condition, The article was quite sound, but it had lost much of its
value by exposure to the world around. This is all too possible with
us. Some inadvertence, some lack of watchfulness can put a stain or
spot on our obedience, since we have to live our lives amid much
defilement and we can easily be affected by it. The people with whom we
have to mix may be good enough in themselves and yet have ways of
thinking and talking which represent the world's standards rather than
God's. We who are called to be men of God must beware of carelessness
in this matter for while we reckon to be keeping the commandment, we
can imbibe a spirit which is not that of godliness, faith and love.
There is in us all that which much too easily responds to what is going
on around us.
May I give an illustration from a school concert? The rest of the
orchestra had vacated the platform while one boy played a tuba solo.
The instruments had been left on the stage and every now and again the
solo was accompanied by the rattling of a side drum which lay there
apparently unattended. It almost seemed that some hidden hand was
playing the drum, and we suspected a practical joker. Afterwards,
however, the music staff verified that there was no concealed
mischief-maker, but that the rattling had been caused by the fact that
the drummer, instead of removing the 'snare' used for producing a
rattling effect with his side-drum, had left it hanging from the drum.
Whenever the tuba played deeper notes it set in motion a strong
vibration which made the drumming accompaniment. It was all a question [74/75] of wavelength. The snare was tuned to that
particular oscillation or whatever the scientist would call it. The boy
responsible was not deliberately accompanying the tuba but he had
failed to safeguard his instrument from being affected by it. It seemed
to me that this was an illustration of what can so easily happen to us.
We can unintentionally respond to vibrations which are -- as it were --
in the air around us, and so interfere with the glory of God without
intending to do so. The man of God is charged not only to keep the
commandment, but to keep it unspotted. There is only one way in which
faulty man can do this, and that is by constant cleansing and
adjustment. Nothing less than the continual delivering power of the
cross can save us from the reproach which in ourselves we can so easily
incur, even when we plan to be obedient.
THE next point of emphasis is that the man of God is to keep the
commandment in this way: "... until the appearing of our Lord Jesus
Christ". This is surely something more than a time limit. Paul was not
saying that Timothy must keep on until the Lord came and then need not
worry any more. No, it is much more than this. It is in fact the third
motive for keeping the charge. We have previously seen that the first
such motive was that we are living in the sight and presence of the
life-giving God. The second was that we make our profession in the
presence of Christ who witnessed such a good confession when He was
here on the earth. Now we have the third motive, which is that we do
all in the light of the imminent return in glory of the Lord Jesus.
The New Testament is full of this motive for holiness which is found in
the fact that Jesus is coming again. We have parables about talents,
about pounds, about workers in the vineyard and about marriage feasts,
all of which find their climax in the return of Christ. We have the
Lord's own insistence that we must never for one moment relax our
watchful looking for that arrival of His. We have the story of the
importunate widow, which focuses on the coming vindication of God's
oppressed people with the question as to whether in fact He will find
that kind of faith operative when, as Son of man, He comes in judgment.
There is so much in Christ's teaching which stresses that the goal and
objective of faithful service is the fact that He will come again, and
come soon. That return is depicted either as an occasion of rejoicing
or of embarrassment. It can be undiluted happiness or it can carry
something of reproach. So it is in the light of that coming that God's
man is told to keep the commandment unstained and without reproach. Our
loins are to be girded, our lamps are to be burning, and hearts are to
be eager in expectation -- this is the thrust of so many of the
parables and lessons of the Gospels.
As he moved towards the end of his life on earth the apostle tended to
concentrate more and more on this Coming and especially on the word
translated 'the appearing' which is 'epiphany' -- the out-shining. It
seems that he was thinking of the way in which the sun breaks over the
horizon, bringing the dawn of a new day. It is possible that this
particular aspect of Christ's return made special appeal to him at the
end of his life because it reminded him of how his Christian life had
begun. Into the darkness of his soul there had come the blinding light
of Christ's presence. Those around him seem to have had some sense of
light and sound, but they did not see the Lord as Saul of Tarsus did.
Saul saw the 'out-shining' and it blinded him to everything and
everybody else. From then on Christ was all in all to him. He must
often have wished and prayed that the same glorious light might break
in upon his fellow men. And increasingly he must have longed for the
day when the whole world would be flooded with the light of His
appearing.
THE practical implication here and in other passages in the pastoral
epistles, is that if we really expect that sudden breakthrough of
Christ in glory, then we should take care always to be living lives
which are consistent with such a hope. Titus, another man of God, was
reminded that "... we should live soberly and righteously and godly in
this present world; looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the
glory of our great God and Saviour Jesus Christ ..." (2:12-13). Here
again the word 'epiphany' is the one used, and in this reference we get
an insight into the fact that this event represents the Lord's goal as
well as ours, for He: "... gave himself for us, that he might redeem us
from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a people for his own
possession, zealous of good works." Our Lord is working towards this
great day, and our lives should be lived in the light of it. Timothy
and Titus, and every other man or woman of God, must be sure that their
readiness to keep the commandment should never be tarnished or
shop-soiled in the [75/76] interim period while
our glorious Sun of righteousness is still, as it were, below the
horizon. The dawn will come suddenly and soon, and it will bring the
day of all days when we must be free from reproach.
The man of God is jealous for the Lord's fair name, and is truly
concerned so to walk in obedience that there may be no stain or spot
which brings reproach to that name. This is motive enough for
watchfulness and humble exercise. He is also a sensitive man, careful
to maintain a good conscience in all things and not able to bear the
thought that his own heart shall be oppressed with self-reproach. But
most of all he is a man waiting for His Lord, absorbed with the
certainty that the brightness of His appearing may break through at any
time. So it is that he makes it his first priority to live in such a
way that there may be no cause for reproach when he meets his Lord.
This is the greatest motive of all for living as a man of God.
----------------
PREPARATIONS FOR THE KINGDOM
(Studies in 1 Samuel)
4. PATIENCE (Chapters 7 and 8)
Harry Foster
WE now consider the fourth of the elements which go to make preparation
for God's kingdom, and come to one which may seem less important than
the first three, but which is really just as essential. It is patience.
This is a divine quality -- God is the God of patience (Romans 15:5).
In his list of experiences which qualified himself as an apostle, Paul
spoke of this as being an overall characteristic: "Approving ourselves
as ministers of God in all patience" (2 Corinthians 6:4). The catalogue
which follows these words describes all the sufferings in which he
needed this divine patience. So it is not insignificant, this question
of patience; it is supremely important in the matter of the kingdom, as
the chapters 7 and 8 will show us.
First we have chapter 7, with its inspiring story of the lead which
Samuel gave to God's people, the governing word being Eben-ezer --
"hitherto hath the Lord helped us". The immediate context of the word
'hitherto' was the more than twenty years which had elapsed since it
was said about Samuel: "The Lord did let none of his words fall to the
ground". They had been bad years for Israel, and they had seemed very
long. During that prolonged period, no mention is made at all of
Samuel, so one imagines that in a very acute sense the time had been
long for him too. God had called and commissioned him, but there seemed
no opportunity for his ministry. In this sense he was a true forerunner
of David who, in his time, was to be sorely tried in having to wait
patiently for the Lord. And he was also a type of the Lord Jesus who
although at twelve years of age was able to affirm that He was about
His Father's business, yet had to wait for another eighteen years
before the time was ripe for Him to move out into public service. What
a test of patience those 'hidden years' must have involved! The same
principle obtained in the experience of Saul of Tarsus who was
commissioned through Ananias in Damascus but had to wait for some years
before the Holy Spirit was able to say at Antioch: "Separate me now
Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them". So Samuel
was a worthy member of that called and anointed band which has patience
as a fundamental basis of its ministry. He kept a sensitive ear open to
divine calls, and never flagged in his concern for the Lord's interests
among the people. And at last the delay came to an end; the people were
low enough and desperate enough to be ready to listen now to God's
servant and to respond when he called them together to Mizpah to be
prayed for.
It was not only Samuel who felt that the time had been long. They all
felt it and were oppressed by the defeat and confusion which was heavy
upon them. Samuel's message was clear and unequivocal. He did not start
with smooth comforts, but with the challenge to face the incredible
mixture of their loyalty to false gods [76/77]
as well as to the Lord. They are called 'strange gods'. It is indeed a
strange thing when the Lord's people put self and selfish interests
before Him. The world has plenty of gods, prosperity, ambition,
pleasure, etc. and these are false gods, but when these same values are
worshipped by those who claim to be the Lord's people, they are not
only false but they are strange gods. To Samuel this was intolerable.
His challenge was: "Prepare your hearts unto the Lord and serve Him
only". "Him only!" This is the kind of message which the Church
needs today. On every hand the false gods of this world's interests and
values have found a place in the lives of God's people. There is so
much mixture, within as well as in outward things. Another Samuel needs
to speak for God and to demand a cleaning up of things, so that the
Lord alone should be the object and ambition of all. We notice that to
Samuel this was a matter of the heart. He did not bring new teaching or
suggest new procedures, but called for a new heart. This is the
essential if we are to serve the Lord only.
THE call brought Israel to make their confession. They said: "We have
sinned against the Lord". There was no excusing of themselves; they did
not indulge in a morbid recapitulation of the less savoury areas of
their past; they did not make a virtue of self-revelation as some
Christians do in such a way as to make you wonder whether they are
regretting their past or boasting about it. They did nothing like this,
but just stood up together in an honest, straightforward way and
admitted that they had been wrong. And when they said 'We', they meant
it. Again you sometimes hear so-called confessions in prayer which are
really aimed at other people, with an implication that we are all
suffering because some of the others have failed. No, they admitted
that their poor condition was their own fault, and they did it all as
"before the Lord".
The next happening is most significant; their enemies heard all about
it. Well, this may not be surprising since it was a public event, but
there is a spiritual significance about it too, for we can be sure that
whenever there is a new move to give absolute supremacy to the Lord, to
serve Him only, then Satan soon hears about it. It may be the
experience of an individual or it may be some new phase among a group
of Christians, but there is always a swift and strong reaction from the
kingdom of darkness when people get right with God. The Israelites had
been permitted to live in relative quiet so long as they were following
their way of mixture. But now they were ready to be all for God, with a
united heart to serve Him, so immediately Satan sought to destroy them.
As long as the flesh rules, Satan is unperturbed, but as soon as there
is any kind of recovery in a unity of consecration to the Lord, then
trouble arises. Those involved may be tempted to wonder what is wrong.
There is nothing wrong. In fact the attack from the enemy is an
indication that now at last things are right. It is just because they
are right that there is a challenge to the kingdom of darkness. It is
when God's people covenant together to put Him first and serve Him only
that these new threats appear.
God's people were frightened -- and not without reason -- but now they
had someone to turn to. It was not like the old days of Eli when they
had to manage as best they could, for now they had a man of God to whom
they could appeal. 'Pray for us,' was their cry. 'Don't stop praying
for us. You know God. You have been praying for us through the time
when we were so indifferent. Please keep up your prayer intercession,
even though we don't deserve it.' What a comfort it is in some
extremity of trial to be able to turn to someone who has a life with
God and can intercede for us, Perhaps, like Israel, we felt sufficient
and were not ready to listen to wise counsel. But now calamity
threatens, and we turn to the very man whom we ignored or despised,
suddenly fearful that he may have given us up as hopeless and left off
praying.
SAMUEL had no intention of giving up his prayer ministry. For him it
would be sin to cease praying. But before he made his public appeal to
God he made it clear that he personally had no more standing with God
than they had. They might have thought that since he was a man of God
there would be virtue in his prayers. Not a bit of it! He made it very
plain that his intercessions were based on a sacrificial lamb. Yes, he
would cry to God, but first he must offer a sucking lamb as a burnt
offering. Note that it was not a sin offering. He was not going to keep
harping on sin when it had by grace been forgiven. To do this is not
spirituality, though it sounds pious: it is really unbelief.
Nevertheless even the forgiven sinner has no standing before God apart
from the merits and offering of a substitute, so his burnt offering
reminds us that our acceptance and all [77/78]
our hopes must be based on the perfect offering of Christ and not on
our own consecration. For us Christ is the Lamb who is to God all that
we ourselves could never be. We are only accepted in Him.
On this basis of the offering and the prayer Israel were given a great
deliverance; they had a victory without needing to fight. It was a
marvellous experience, to enjoy divine intervention because sin had
been confessed and put away and prayer made on the basis of the lamb.
It might have been repeated again and again, since it did not depend on
Samuel but on God. Alas that so soon they were to forget this and
demand a king who could lead them to victory! Meanwhile, however,
Samuel did his best to press home the spiritual lesson. People could
forget so quickly. Or they could explain away that miracle thunder as
though it were a natural phenomenon, allowing the Devil to obscure the
fact that the happening was not by chance but by God's mercy. So to
make this clear Samuel set up the stone of Eben-ezer, reminding them
that up to that very moment God's help had been given to them in grace.
I do not think that the word 'hitherto' so much referred back to
Israel's whole history -- though that was true -- but rather that it
was somehow associated with their cry to Samuel: "Cease not to pray for
us", as though he was focusing their attention on the present
deliverance. It was as though in that act he said: 'Get this clear. If
only you are right with God and He alone rules you, then whatever
powers of evil come against you, the answer is prayer on the basis of
the lamb. You have found this 'hitherto' and it is always valid. Right
up-to-date that has been your experience of God's wonderful help. Never
forget it!'
But of course they did. We shall find them to be the very embodiment of
impatience. For the moment, however, they were delivered, and the rest
of chapter 7 gives a panoramic view of the remainder of Samuel's life.
He who had patiently waited for Israel to return to God now patiently
judged and served them. We must note how he did this. It was not in a
spirit of self-importance which would demand that people must come to
him if they needed help, but in a Christlike willingness to seek them
out and meet them where they were. Like a true shepherd he went from
place to place where the flock were, going round in circuit to help
God's people. But he always returned to Ramah and made that his home.
Ramah means 'a lofty place'. It was there, and not in the traditional
sanctuary of Shiloh, that he maintained his life of communion with God.
He built an altar there, journeying out from that place of holy
fellowship to carry light and blessing to people in their various
localities, but always returning there to resume his close contact with
God and his ministry of worship and prayer. The Bible idea of patience
is not placidity or resignation; it is this kind of persistent,
self-sacrificing 'stickability', a quality all too rare even among
God's servants. It means determined activity in the holy place and
equally determined activity in caring for God's people. Like Samuel,
God's king must be outstanding and shepherd-like in his patience. Such
patience was entirely lacking among the people as a whole, as we shall
see now that we pass on to chapter 8.
"AND it came to pass, when Samuel was old, that he made his sons judges
over Israel ... and his sons walked not in his ways, but turned aside
after lucre ... and perverted judgment." As a result there arose a
demand for a king and I must say that the more I think about it, the
more reasonable does this request appear. My own personal view is that
God always meant His people to have a king. Not everybody agrees with
this, but this is how I read the Scriptures as a whole. After the
tragic period of the Judges when there was no king in Israel, we have
the book of Ruth which terminates with a reference to David who thus
seems already to have been marked out for his kingly role. If this was
the case, then it follows that God's ultimate intention for His people
was that they should have a king. It seems that He did not plan to have
a constant perpetuation of the kind of regime which obtained as Samuel
maintained his circuit among the people. There was no sign of a
successor to Samuel: there was every reason to believe that God was
going to provide Himself -- Himself, note, not the people -- with a
king.
What we are confronted with, then, was a complete breakdown of patient
waiting for God's man and for God's time. Was Samuel wrong in making
his sons judges? Quite possibly so. After all, no man had appointed
him; it was God alone who had raised him up to be the last of the
judges. Were the elders wrong in clamouring for a king just at that
moment? It certainly seems that they were. Their demands were logical
but they were not only premature but coloured by very mixed [78/79] motives. The condition with regard to Samuel's
sons was tragic in the extreme. He who had seen the shocking example of
Eli's failure to discipline his sons was now found in the same
condemnation, with the added blame that their appointment was his
doing, whereas Hophni and Phinehas were priests by Scriptural
succession. Happily we do not have to explain away Samuel's fault, but
simply recognise the fact that perfection can never be found outside of
the Lord Jesus. Noah, Samson, Samuel and even David, were men of God
but they were all marked by faults and failures. Only Christ was
perfect. This does not excuse me, but it should make me reluctant to
fasten impatiently on the faults of spiritual leaders. Since man cannot
force his children to believe, we may rather sympathise with than
condemn a father in Samuel's position.
BUT what we find it hard to understand was his advancement of his sons.
This boded ill for Israel's future and it seems almost logical that the
elders felt that they must take action and insist on an instant
substitute for their ageing judge and his regime. We are, however,
given an insight into their real motive by their desire to be like all
the other nations. They saw that all the others had kings, and
therefore argued that this must be the right kind of set-up. But God's
purpose had always been that His people should be different from all
others; they were not expected to be governed by human skill or energy
but to be a testimony to God's superior power. Such an apparently
precarious basis of procedure made no appeal to their carnal reasoning.
They had forgotten Eben-ezer. Even when Samuel gave them a detailed
warning of the perils of the course they proposed to follow, they still
insisted: 'No, but we are determined to have a king over us' (v.20). So
although their plan seemed to have been made urgent by Samuel's age and
his sons' corruption, it was in fact an expression of that natural
reasoning which so often leads God's people into rash decisions.
It is possible that they felt that Samuel's lamb and his prayer was
part of an old procedure which had worked all right at that time but
ought now to give place to something more modern and generally
accepted. This respected leader of theirs exposed them to insecurity,
as he might not last much longer. 'You are old,' they said. We do not
know just how old Samuel was, but we do know that he lasted through
most of Saul's reign and lived to anoint the true king, David. So they
had no cause for worry. It reminds me of the time when Isaac got into a
similar kind of panic, thought that he was going to die, and determined
to make sure that Esau received the blessing. His action precipitated
Jacob's deceit over the venison and a host of other evils. The point,
though, is that Isaac did not die for many years after that, but his
sense of age was an excuse for that restless impetuosity which is a
feature of carnal impatience. So whether it is age or any other
weakness, this must never be an excuse for taking things into our own
hands. Such an action is the very opposite of patience, and it will
never serve the real interest of God's kingdom.
"THE thing displeased Samuel." He was doubtless hurt personally. Well,
that comes to us all, and we must learn to bear it. There was more than
that to it, though, for the margin tells us that it was evil in the
sight of Samuel, and in this he was right. Wisely he took his
displeasure to the Lord. How much better than complaining to men! He
took his hurt to the Lord and poured out the whole story to heaven's
sympathetic ear. Samuel, you see, lived in a lofty place. When you do
that you still feel the hurts of life but instead of brooding on them
or complaining to others you take them straight to God in prayer.
Samuel found that God both comforted and guided him. He comforted him
by assuring him that He, too, was hurt and that the prophet was only
sharing God's own suffering, for it was He whom they had in fact
insulted. Sharing His sufferings! Such a revelation takes all the sting
out of our bitterness. But God also called Samuel into a new share of
His divine patience by telling him not to resist this demand in any
way. Perhaps to his surprise, Samuel was told to accede to the people's
demand; they were to have their king.
I feel convinced that the elders' real mistake was impatience.
Difficult circumstances and their own impetuosity combined to tempt
them to force God's hand. The truth was that He had planned for a king,
but not yet. They were not wrong in thinking that God would provide
them with a king, but they were premature, unable to wait God's time.
For the Bible shows us that it was David who was God's choice. It makes
much of the fact that Christ was David's seed. At that time, though,
David was a very young boy, if indeed he had yet been born. God's time
is as important as God's man. And impatience will undermine [79/80] the strength of His kingdom. So we have Saul
in an impossible situation from the start, not because he had forced
himself forward but because he had become the victim of a counsel of
impatience by others. Now do not let us become involved in a
God-dishonouring attempt to rationalise this matter of divine choice.
It might be possible to say that Saul was not elected by God. Yet it
was God who called him, blessed him, empowered him by the Spirit, gave
him the victory and -- according to His own declaration -- would have
established his kingdom for ever (1 Samuel 13:13) if only Saul had been
obedient. It is most striking, however, that this same fault of
impatience was the cause of Saul's ultimate rejection and downfall. As
we shall later see, he was the man who could not wait for God. There
are many such in the Bible, and since Bible times, many more of us who
can be so described. This inability to wait is a sad hindrance to God's
purposes. How different was the true king when he came! David was the
outstanding example of how we should rest in the Lord and wait
patiently for Him.
But so far as Israel was concerned this demand for immediate action was
an outstanding example of the verse: "He gave them their request: but
sent leanness into their soul" (Psalm 106:15). You can persuade God
into accepting your ideas and then live bitterly to regret it. Samuel
warned Israel that this is what would happen to them, but they were
insistent. They could not wait, they must have their king and they must
have him now. So the chapter ends with God's command to Samuel:
"Hearken unto their voice, and make them a king". Even so the whole
outworking of the choice and appointment was done in prayerful
dependence on God, as we shall see. This might have reassured Samuel
for the time, and doubtless seemed to justify the people, but the fact
remains that nothing built on man's impatience can have lasting
stability. In contrast to Israel's rash ferment and living in the midst
of its unhappy outworking we see Samuel as an amazing embodiment of
patient constancy. He prays and suffers with God's people and with
their temporary and unsatisfactory king, and he puts his life at risk
in obedience to God's command to anoint young David concerning whom God
said: "I have provided me a king ...". And at the last we shall find
Samuel still at Ramah, the lofty place, and still praying and praising.
He was never king, but he was a key to the kingdom. There never was a
time when God's people needed more to learn and practise the spiritual
virtue of patience. It is foundational to the kingdom.
(To be continued)
----------------
OAK GLEN PINES CAMP
Mr. H. Foster will (D.V.) be ministering in California during August.
Applications for the above Camp (August 11-16) to: Whittier Fellowship,
P.O. Box 5271, Hacienda Heights, CALIFORNIA 91745 [60/ibc]
----------------
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