When we come into Christ, while it is true that we come into the Divine Person, we have to come into our place in a Divine order...
And being in Christ requires that there shall be a right relationship to one another; an appointing, a functioning, a relativity about everything.
It is a wonderful Divine system.
Death and Satan have their occasion when anything that relates to Divine order is not obeyed, recognized or observed.
It is quite easy for death to get a chance amongst the Lord's people when there is a disorder amongst them...
When they are not conformed to Christ in the sense of His being an expression of an ordered, heavenly system.
Surely the New Testament rather thunders upon that than speaks.
If the Corinthian Church is an example of weak testimony, and indeed it is, the reason is not far to seek.
It was a matter of disorder amongst believers.
~T. Austin Sparks~
We Pray That The Seeds Of Truth Contained In This Blog Will Penetrate The Good Soil Of Your Heart And Bear Much Fruit.
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Saturday, March 14, 2020
We Must Use Adversity As Means Of Discipline
One important use of adversity, is that it brings discipline.
The tendency of prosperity is to make one careless.
It leads
to undisciplined living, which, in turn, always leads to weakness, to
failure, dissatisfaction, and unhappiness.
For the past generation or two,
some of our philosophers have been teaching the undisciplined life, telling
our young people to let themselves go, to follow their impulses, to give
reign to their passions, to deny themselves nothing they desire.
They have
taught parents not to correct their children but to let them run wild, to
live their own lives, to gratify all their propensities, to have their own
way in everything.
Many people have followed and are still following this
unrestrained, undisciplined way of life.
What is the result today?
The
undisciplined of a former generation, are now the mothers of this
generation.
As a result, juvenile delinquency has reached a peak far above
anything known hitherto.
The home life of former days, with all its rich
associations and blessings to the family and to society is today almost
entirely unknown in millions of homes or places called homes.
As a result of following this philosophy of "do as you
please"...we are an undisciplined nation.
Prisons and asylums are full. There
is one divorce for every six marriages. Suicides never were so common as in
recent years.
Has all this lack of discipline brought happiness? On the contrary, there is more unhappiness now than our nation ever knew before at any other time in its history.
No, undisciplined lives do not lead to happiness, no matter how great the opportunities for gratification.
It is only the disciplined life that can produce happiness, and very often adversity is the only thing that will bring about the discipline necessary to set our feet in the way of true happiness.
Sheltered lives are rarely strong lives.
Why is military discipline and training so rigorous? Why must soldiers be drilled and disciplined from morning until night?
It is to bring out those qualities, characteristics, and abilities that will make the difference between an ordinary civilian and a soldier.
Only troops that have been rigorously trained for long periods are able to meet the shock of war successfully, or to endure its hardships, or accomplish its purposes.
The story of our marines at Guadalcanal and New Guinea is a vivid illustration of the result of discipline and training.
God knows the need of discipline for His children and He knows that truer, better discipline can come through adversity, than by any other means.
Jesus speaks of himself as the vine and His people as branches of that vine. "He prunes every branch that bears fruit that it may bring forth more fruit."
John 15:2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit.
How are vines pruned? The gardener goes into his vineyard and prunes his vines, often cutting away so large a portion of them that it looks as though he would destroy them.
But they are not destroyed. On the contrary, they bring forth an abundant harvest, much more abundant than would have been possible had they not been pruned so thoroughly.
Are you a branch in Christ? If so, do not assume that you are going to have an easy, happy time with pleasant circumstances always, and never a sorrow or a care.
No! God wants you to bear fruit, an abundance of fruit.
He knows you cannot do that when you are at ease and merely enjoying yourself.
In the school of adversity He will from time to time employ the pruning knife that will cut away from you many of the things you do not wish to lose.
Christ is a wise gardener. He will not let adversity prune you too closely, nor will He take away from you that which will not profit you more by its absence, than by its retention.
By disciplining you, He will strengthen you and instruct you, enlighten you and profit you.
Adversity develops Christian character.
We can develop patience, only as we have tests which require the use of patience.
We can become steadfast, only by standing firm against opposition and pressure.
We can develop loyalty, only by having that loyalty tested and put under strain.
We often acquire wisdom, by passing through the things that require wisdom.
We can get understanding, only by things that compel us to learn.
Love may reach its highest capacity when it has been severely tested.
Serenity comes to some people, only after they have suffered and have been ripened by that suffering.
Boldness belongs to those who have mastered themselves in many a conflict.
If you needed help in times of adversity, to whom would you go to seek that help? To one who has always had an easy and prosperous time, one who has never suffered?
No, you want someone who understands; and you know that only those who have drunk deeply of the cup of adversity understand it and are able to give help.
Who are those who become great souls? Are they not those who have dwelt long with adversity?
Yes, adversity has its uses; adversity is often a blessing.
We would never know what we might become or what we may do, unless we learn it through adversity.
~Charles Naylor
Has all this lack of discipline brought happiness? On the contrary, there is more unhappiness now than our nation ever knew before at any other time in its history.
No, undisciplined lives do not lead to happiness, no matter how great the opportunities for gratification.
It is only the disciplined life that can produce happiness, and very often adversity is the only thing that will bring about the discipline necessary to set our feet in the way of true happiness.
Sheltered lives are rarely strong lives.
Why is military discipline and training so rigorous? Why must soldiers be drilled and disciplined from morning until night?
It is to bring out those qualities, characteristics, and abilities that will make the difference between an ordinary civilian and a soldier.
Only troops that have been rigorously trained for long periods are able to meet the shock of war successfully, or to endure its hardships, or accomplish its purposes.
The story of our marines at Guadalcanal and New Guinea is a vivid illustration of the result of discipline and training.
God knows the need of discipline for His children and He knows that truer, better discipline can come through adversity, than by any other means.
Jesus speaks of himself as the vine and His people as branches of that vine. "He prunes every branch that bears fruit that it may bring forth more fruit."
John 15:2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit.
How are vines pruned? The gardener goes into his vineyard and prunes his vines, often cutting away so large a portion of them that it looks as though he would destroy them.
But they are not destroyed. On the contrary, they bring forth an abundant harvest, much more abundant than would have been possible had they not been pruned so thoroughly.
Are you a branch in Christ? If so, do not assume that you are going to have an easy, happy time with pleasant circumstances always, and never a sorrow or a care.
No! God wants you to bear fruit, an abundance of fruit.
He knows you cannot do that when you are at ease and merely enjoying yourself.
In the school of adversity He will from time to time employ the pruning knife that will cut away from you many of the things you do not wish to lose.
Christ is a wise gardener. He will not let adversity prune you too closely, nor will He take away from you that which will not profit you more by its absence, than by its retention.
By disciplining you, He will strengthen you and instruct you, enlighten you and profit you.
Adversity develops Christian character.
We can develop patience, only as we have tests which require the use of patience.
We can become steadfast, only by standing firm against opposition and pressure.
We can develop loyalty, only by having that loyalty tested and put under strain.
We often acquire wisdom, by passing through the things that require wisdom.
We can get understanding, only by things that compel us to learn.
Love may reach its highest capacity when it has been severely tested.
Serenity comes to some people, only after they have suffered and have been ripened by that suffering.
Boldness belongs to those who have mastered themselves in many a conflict.
If you needed help in times of adversity, to whom would you go to seek that help? To one who has always had an easy and prosperous time, one who has never suffered?
No, you want someone who understands; and you know that only those who have drunk deeply of the cup of adversity understand it and are able to give help.
Who are those who become great souls? Are they not those who have dwelt long with adversity?
Yes, adversity has its uses; adversity is often a blessing.
We would never know what we might become or what we may do, unless we learn it through adversity.
~Charles Naylor
Tuesday, March 10, 2020
God Dwells In The Thick Darkness
Exodus 20:21 And the people stood afar off, and Moses drew near unto the thick darkness where God was.
GOD is light, and dwells in light, but it is mercifully veiled to the weak eye of man.
This is why Christ spake in parables - that seeing, they might not see.
As Moses veiled his face when he spake to the people, so God veils Himself in the flesh of Jesus, in which He tabernacles...
And in the mysteries of His providence, beneath which He conceals a smiling face.
The Sun of Righteousness in whose beams we rejoice must needs hide beneath the cloud, else we should fall at His feet as dead.
It may be that His light seems to us darkness, because of its excessive brilliance...
But God dwells in the thick darkness - clouds and darkness are round about Him.
The darkness of mystery...
God has still His hidden secrets, hidden from the wise and prudent.
Do not fear them; be content to accept things you cannot understand; wait patiently.
Presently He will reveal to you the treasures of darkness, the riches of the glory of the mystery.
Mystery is only the veil on God's face.
The darkness of trial...
Do not be afraid to enter the cloud that is settling down on your life.
God is in it.
The other side is radiant with His glory.
Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you: but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings.
The darkness of desertion....When you seem loneliest and most forsaken, God is nighest.
Jesus once cried "Forsaken," and immediately after, "Father."
God is in the dark cloud.
Plunge into the blackness of its darkness without flinching...
Under the shrouding curtain of His pavilion you will find God awaiting you.
~F. B. Meyer
GOD is light, and dwells in light, but it is mercifully veiled to the weak eye of man.
This is why Christ spake in parables - that seeing, they might not see.
As Moses veiled his face when he spake to the people, so God veils Himself in the flesh of Jesus, in which He tabernacles...
And in the mysteries of His providence, beneath which He conceals a smiling face.
The Sun of Righteousness in whose beams we rejoice must needs hide beneath the cloud, else we should fall at His feet as dead.
It may be that His light seems to us darkness, because of its excessive brilliance...
But God dwells in the thick darkness - clouds and darkness are round about Him.
The darkness of mystery...
God has still His hidden secrets, hidden from the wise and prudent.
Do not fear them; be content to accept things you cannot understand; wait patiently.
Presently He will reveal to you the treasures of darkness, the riches of the glory of the mystery.
Mystery is only the veil on God's face.
The darkness of trial...
Do not be afraid to enter the cloud that is settling down on your life.
God is in it.
The other side is radiant with His glory.
Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you: but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings.
The darkness of desertion....When you seem loneliest and most forsaken, God is nighest.
Jesus once cried "Forsaken," and immediately after, "Father."
God is in the dark cloud.
Plunge into the blackness of its darkness without flinching...
Under the shrouding curtain of His pavilion you will find God awaiting you.
~F. B. Meyer
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
The Humble Place
1Pe 5:5 Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder. Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility: for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble.
I have met two classes of Christians:
The proud who imagine they are humble and the humble who are afraid they are proud!
There should be another class...the self-forgetful men and women who leave the whole thing in the hands of Christ...
And refuse to waste any time trying to make themselves good.
They will reach the goal far ahead of the rest.
The truly humble person does not expect to find virtue in himself...
And when he finds none, he is not disappointed.
He knows that any good deed he may do is the result of God’s working within him.
When this belief becomes so much a part of any man or woman that it operates as a kind of unconscious reflex...
He or she is released from the burden of trying to live up to the opinion they hold of themselves.
They can relax and count upon the Holy Spirit to fulfill the moral law within them.
Let us never forget that the promises of God are made to the humble...
The proud man by his pride forfeits every blessing promised to the lowly heart...
And from the hand of God he need expect only justice!
~A. W. Tozer
I have met two classes of Christians:
The proud who imagine they are humble and the humble who are afraid they are proud!
There should be another class...the self-forgetful men and women who leave the whole thing in the hands of Christ...
And refuse to waste any time trying to make themselves good.
They will reach the goal far ahead of the rest.
The truly humble person does not expect to find virtue in himself...
And when he finds none, he is not disappointed.
He knows that any good deed he may do is the result of God’s working within him.
When this belief becomes so much a part of any man or woman that it operates as a kind of unconscious reflex...
He or she is released from the burden of trying to live up to the opinion they hold of themselves.
They can relax and count upon the Holy Spirit to fulfill the moral law within them.
Let us never forget that the promises of God are made to the humble...
The proud man by his pride forfeits every blessing promised to the lowly heart...
And from the hand of God he need expect only justice!
~A. W. Tozer
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