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| | THE ABANDONMENT OF GOD |
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"God so loved the world that He gave. . ." John 3:16
Salvation is not merely deliverance from sin, nor the experience of
personal holiness; the salvation of God is deliverance out of self
entirely into union with Himself. My experimental knowledge of
salvation will be along the line of deliverance from sin and of
personal holiness; but salvation means that the Spirit of God has
brought me into touch with God's personality, and I am thrilled with
something infinitely greater than myself, I am caught up into the
abandonment of God. To say that we are called to preach holiness or
sanctification, is to get into a side eddy. We are called to proclaim
Jesus Christ. The fact that He saves from sin and makes us holy is part
of the effect of the wonderful abandonment of God. Abandonment never produces the consciousness of its own
effort, because the whole life is taken up with the One to Whom we
abandon. Beware of talking about abandonment if you know nothing about
it, and you will never know anything about it until you have realized
that John 3:16 means that God gave Himself absolutely. In our
abandonment we give ourselves over to God just as God gave Himself for
us, without any calculation. The consequence of abandonment never
enters into our outlook because our life is taken up with Him.
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| | THE INSPIRATION OF SPIRITUAL INITIATIVE |
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"Arise from the dead." Ephesians 5:14
All initiative is not inspired. A man may say to you - "Buck up,
take your disinclination by the throat, throw it overboard, and walk
out into the thing!" That is ordinary human initiative. But when the
Spirit of God comes in and says, in effect, "Buck up," we find that the
initiative is inspired. We all have any number of visions and ideals when we are
young, but sooner or later we find that we have no power to make them
real. We cannot do the things we long to do, and we are apt to settle
down to the visions and ideals as dead, and God has to come and say -
"Arise from the dead." When the inspiration of God does come, it comes
with such miraculous power that we are able to arise from the dead and
do the impossible thing. The remarkable thing about spiritual
initiative is that the life comes after we do the "bucking up." God
does not give us overcoming life; He gives us life as we overcome.
When the inspiration of God comes, and He says - "Arise from the dead,"
we have to get up; God does not lift us up. Our Lord said to the man
with the withered hand - "Stretch forth thy hand," and as soon as the
man did so, his hand was healed, but he had to take the initiative. If
we will do the overcoming, we shall find we are inspired of God because
He gives life immediately.
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| ARE YOU READY TO BE OFFERED?
"Yea, and if I be offered upon the sacrifice and service of your faith, I joy and rejoice with you all." Philippians 2:17
Are you willing to be offered for the work of the faithful - to pour out your life blood as a libation on the sacrifice of the faith of others? Or do you say - "I am not going to be offered up just yet, I do not want God to choose my work. I want to choose the scenery of my own sacrifice; I want to have the right kind of people watching and saying, 'Well done.'
It is one thing to go on the lonely way with dignified heroism, but quite another thing if the line mapped out for you by God means being a door-mat under other people's feet. Suppose God wants to teach you to say, "I know how to be abased" - are you ready to be offered up like that? Are you ready to be not so much as a drop in a bucket - to be so hopelessly insignificant that you are never thought of again in connection with the life you served? Are you willing to spend and be spent; not seeking to be ministered unto, but to minister? Some saints cannot do menial work and remain saints because it is beneath their dignity. | | |
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY
RICKY
JOHNNY
CHRISTINE
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| | HAVE YOU EVER BEEN ALONE WITH GOD? |
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"When He was alone the twelve . . . asked of Him . . ." Mark 4:10
His Solitude with Us. When God gets us alone by affliction,
heartbreak, or temptation, by disappointment, sickness, or by thwarted
affection, by a broken friendship, or by a new friendship - when He
gets us absolutely alone, and we are dumbfounded, and cannot ask one
question, then He begins to expound. Watch Jesus Christ's training of
the twelve. It was the disciples, not the crowd outside, who were
perplexed. They constantly asked Him questions, and He constantly
expounded things to them; but they only understood after they had
received the Holy Spirit (see John 14:26). If you are going on with God, the only thing that is clear to
you, and the only thing God intends to be clear, is the way He deals
with your own soul. Your brother's sorrows and perplexities are an
absolute confusion to you. We imagine we understand where the other
person is, until God gives us a dose of the plague of our own hearts.
There are whole tracts of stubbornness and ignorance to be revealed by
the Holy Spirit in each one of us, and it can only be done when Jesus
gets us alone. Are we alone with Him now, or are we taken up with
little fussy notions, fussy comradeships in God's service, fussy ideas
about our bodies? Jesus can expound nothing until we get through all
the noisy questions of the head and are alone with Him.
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Oswald Chambers
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