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The Wise and Proper Solution of a Problem

The Wise and Proper Solution of a Problem

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

October 19, 1958

I spent the week before last from Monday-to-Monday night in New York City preaching at the Gospel Tabernacle Church founded many years ago by Dr. A.B. Simpson. And I stayed over Monday and preached for the 149th anniversary of the New York Bible Society and 19 Jewish missions, their delegates. I wanted to tell you a little about it. Brother McAfee was there up until after Friday night, and he flew home and was here for Sunday.

But on the last Sunday the place was crowded out upstairs and downstairs and then the choir loft, out in the side and in the fellowship hall upstairs. And Brother Reidhead the pastor said this to me on Monday when he took me to the train and came clear up and sat until we almost pulled out of the station. He said now, I am taking Dr. Simpson’s picture and name off of the masthead. He said, I said I would allow Dr. Simpson, I’d be co-pastor with Dr. Simpson though he’s been dead since 1919, until we got as many people in here as he got. And then when we did, I’d become pastor. So, he is reverently taking the name of the founder off and he’s going to be pastor in his own right.

Something happened there that I think that I’d like to tell you about. Last Sunday, a week, that would be two weeks, they baptized an officer in the Turkish army, a Turkish air force officer. Well, this young fellow, quite a wonderful looking young chap with big soulful, dark eyes and I rather loved him to look at him. Somebody won him to the Lord in a hospital. And he came and wanted to be baptized. So, they baptized him. Then came word the United States government was sending him home. They said that Friday morning is the last day you can stay. You must take a boat or plane or something and get out of here Friday morning.

Turkey being the kind of country it is, Christian’s lives are just worth about that much in Turkey. A missionary to Turkey who interpreted for a lot of us, Brother McAfee, myself and the pastor and some others, gathered around this young man and we prayed. And it looked as if he was going back to his death. We prayed that God would do something and I felt my little part I had, I felt like praying that God would make the darkness light and break and cut asunder the bars of iron.

Well, he was to leave Friday morning for Turkey. Friday morning, he got a cable from his government saying, your orders have changed. You are now an attaché in the Turkish delegation in Washington, DC. So, our young officer is now in Washington DC serving there and will not have to go back to die or be persecuted to death. God answered prayer. I think that was evidence of the answer of God. It isn’t often you see it happen so fast, but it had to happen fast there. God only answers prayer fast when it has to happen fast. If there’s time, He waits and lets you wait. Well, I thought you’d like to know God’s working here and there over the earth.

And then, I want to fulfill a promise I made here when I said that I would finish talking about this thing here in the sixth of Acts. In those days when the number of the disciples was multiplied, there rose a murmuring of the Grecian Jews against the Hebrews because their widows were neglected in the daily ministration. Then the twelve called a multitude of the disciples unto them and said, it is not reason that we should leave the Word of God and serve tables.

Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom whom we may appoint over this business. But we will give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word. The saying pleased the whole multitude. And they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost, and Philip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolas:a proselyte of Antioch, the seven of them whom they set before the apostles. And when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them, and the Word of God increased, and the number of the disciples multiplied in Jerusalem greatly. And a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith.

Now, I talked about this, how the multiplying of numbers brought a multiplying of problems. And then I said that I would finish talking about this little thing the next time I preached, which is now.

Now I want you to note here how the apostles met the situation. There was trouble in that early church. You know, we as a rule seem to be very romantic. We’re an incurably romantic people, and I wouldn’t want God’s people to be any other way. I don’t like these metallic adding machine Christians, whose theology is based upon mathematics, and they’re just as cold and lifeless. I like God’s people to be romantic and emotional because that’s what makes you love them. Their good, righteous lives make you respect them. But their emotional, happy, joyous love makes you love them.

And these people, were not what our romantic outlook make them out to be. We draw an unpleasant comparison between, say, the sixth of Acts and now. And we say we have not a saint left in all the earth. The prophets occasionally fell into that trap as the Psalmist did and Elijah himself certainly did on one occasion. Elijah even went so far as to say, I’m the only saint left. The Lord reminded him he had a few others.

But always remember, the grass is greener on the field a few generations ago. I smile when I hear people and when I hear myself romantically talking about the early Methodists, those early Methodist had their troubles, brother. If you read the story of the early Methodist, you’ll find they had their problems. Wesley and his own brother didn’t get on always. When Charlie wrote a hymn, John said, Charlie, you never should have sung that hymn in the public assembly. It’s no good.

Now, they were saints, but they weren’t wax saints. They were just saints. They were just plain human beings who loved God and were redeemed, plucked out of the burning. But they hadn’t got yet all the glory that will be theirs when the Lord returns. So, let’s remember that. Let’s not think down our present generation too much. And specially, let’s not think up another generation. Politicians are always talking about Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin and George Washington, and everybody knows George Washington would drink whiskey. And everybody knows those men were just like other men.

So, let’s remember that when you read the book of Acts, you read it on a slant. You see the green, but you don’t see it straight down; you don’t see the weeds. There were some weeds in the book of Acts too. The Holy Ghost admits that. And here we have one of them. We have a little problem here. There was a sort of an old folk’s home where the widows were taken care of by the church. And the church mainly was made up of Jews. But there were two kinds of Jews. There were the Grecian Jews and the Hellenists there, otherwise called. They were the Jews who spoke other languages than Hebrew or Aramaic. Then there were the Palestinian Jews who were Hebrews of the Hebrews as they thought. And of course, they looked and raised their eyebrows at each other. The race problem is not a new thing. Don’t forget that my brother. Don’t forget it. The race problem is not a new thing.

And then they find a bit of difficulty integrating here, these Grecian Jews with the Hebrew Jews. And they said, some old Hebrew lady, Rebecca or Sarah. She looked at her plate, and then she looked across at the plate of a Grecian lady and she said, why, you got a bigger helping than I got. You know, that’s the second time that’s happened, and then the trouble was on, and they had no superintendent to send for, so they had to do the best they could. And perhaps they had to look to God about it.

And they went to the apostles, and the apostles said, men and brethren, don’t come bothering us about serving tables and dividing portions between two kinds of widows, because we have to preach the Word of God. But I’ll tell you what you do. And this was the beautiful thing that I love to hear about these apostles. They knew how to meet this situation. They knew how to meet it.

Now we have no such problem in our church, so don’t think that I’m slyly trying to cure a breach someplace. There’s no breach I know about. Either there isn’t any or I’m blissfully naive. I don’t know that there is, anybody. Somebody might criticize, but human beings do that, and it gets healed over in 24 hours. But there’s no problem, so I’m not preaching to a problem. I’m preaching to a principle that can happen anywhere in any church at any time. It can happen in a Sunday school or even in a choir or in a lady’s prayer band or anyplace as long as human beings are human beings.

Well, here’s how the apostles met the crisis. They knew two things. You got to know certain things if you’re going to carry on the work of God. They knew this. They knew that sin can always find a religious heart in which to lodge. Sin goes about, a kind of disembodied malignancy, looking for a place to light. And we think that this sin, this disembodied iniquity goes about and hovers over halfway houses and saloons. Well, I suppose it does. But there’s one little thing we forget. And that is, it also hovers over churches, waiting for somebody, a soul to get into, even the twelve that Jesus had around Him.

So, Satan entered in. There was a disembodied malignancy, waiting for a soul that was open that they could crawl into. So, he crawled into Judas, and he became the son of perdition. So, sin will always find a heart somewhere to lodge in. If it was in the Kremlin, we’d expect it. If it was at the racetrack or the den of iniquity, we’d say, well, that’s to be expected. But I say sin can always find a religious heart to get into. This deadly malignancy that floats about can find a religious heart.

And the second thing they knew was, that such a heart will mingle with the true Christian in churches. Did you ever think sometimes when you read a piece in the newspaper, did you ever stop to think maybe you rode on the bus beside a gangster? Do you ever think about that? Maybe the man on the subway next to you reading the paper had a gun under his arm out to kill somebody? I don’t know. I’ve never seen a gangster that I recognized as such. But I suppose, riding around as much as I have in public transportation in the last 30 years, I have ridden alongside of the gangster very likely, a man whose hands were crimson red with the blood of his fellow man. Did you ever think that it’s possible for us to be sitting beside someone into whom Satan may enter, even among the children of God?

When Jesus said, one of you will betray me, there wasn’t one of the eleven that knew who it was. Each one said, Lord is it I? And I have always been glad they didn’t say, Lord, it must be Peter, or Lord, it must be Andrew. They said, Lord, is it I? They were humble enough and self-effacing enough and lacked confidence in themselves enough that they said, Lord, is it I? You never know who you may be riding with, and you never know who you may be sitting beside. On the other hand, you may be sitting beside a saint, somebody who is marked high up on the Book of God, someone who, when rewards are passed out, will receive citation after citation for faithfulness beyond the call of duty. Don’t forget it. And don’t look at their clothing because sometimes those who will receive the highest citations may be dressed in very common clothes. So, they knew these things. And they knew there wouldn’t be any use looking for a church.

Now, they could have gone to these people and had an evangelistic campaign and brought in a real stinger of a preacher who could to have skinned then alive and said, you’re a lot of carnal people who are not worthy to be called by the name of Christ. What do you mean here with your divisions? They knew they would have only fanned the fire, so they did this. They went to the root of their problem and took away the occasion.

And I am just asking you, if you’re looking for a church with no murmurers in it. If you are, I can recommend one. I know where there’s a church with no murmurers in it. It is the Church of the Firstborn. It is over yonder, and they have already washed their robes and made them clean. And they have passed through death and are over there waiting. But as long as they’re down here, there will be a murmurer some time. And we might expect it. You are just like you are looking for a country without any crime. It’s like looking for a city without any disease to look for the perfect church. They don’t exist. All you can hope for is to keep it to a minimum and pray and trust God to be merciful to our faults.

So, here’s what they did. They went the second mile. You remember, Jesus had said, if anybody takes away your coat, give him your vest too. And they remembered that. So, they went the second mile and turned the other cheek and showed themselves to be men of peace and goodwill. And so, they said to the Christian assembly, well, now here, look, it isn’t right that you Christians should be fussing. It isn’t right. And furthermore, we apostles don’t know whether there’s anything to your charges are not. If we ask the Hebrew Christians, they would say, no. And if we asked the Grecian Christians, they’d say, yes. And so, we’d have one person’s word against another, and it wouldn’t be good. So here, here’s what we’ll do. You’ll get together, all of you and vote and pick some men and bring them to us and we will lay our hands on them and make deacons out of them and let them administer that work.

Well, you know what they did. They chose seven men. The apostles didn’t choose them. If the apostles had chosen them, they would have been charged with partiality. But the apostles didn’t choose them, they throw it back in their lap and said, choose you some umpires, somebody that you can trust. And you know what those Hebrew Christians did? They were so spiritual and kind and charitable, that they allowed the Grecians to choose all seven of them. And there wasn’t a single Hebrew Christian among the seven. There was Philip and Prochorus and Nicanor and Timon and Parmenas and Nicolas of Antioch. And they were all of the Hellenists, that is the Grecian Jews. They were not Palestinian Jews.

Now, I think that was just delightful myself, because you see it cut the ground out from under these complainers. I suppose that some of those complainers suffered over that, because when you take the occasion for complaining away from a man who has given the complaints, it’s like taking away a rattle from a baby. They don’t know what to do with themselves for a while till they get accustomed to not having anything to complain about. So, they had nothing to complain about here, because they took away the complaint. They said, every man chosen, bring him here. And when they looked at them, they smiled and said, well, there’s not a single Palestinian Jew and the Palestinian Jews said that okay, we’re satisfied.

So, they couldn’t get rid of their complaints, but they got rid of the occasion that had roused their complaints. Now here isn’t perfection, but here is spirituality, brethren. Here isn’t perfection. Here’s spirituality; and it’s the kind of spirituality that I believe God loves. It’s trying to see things from God’s standpoint. But I’d like to have you see the kind of men they chose.

Now, if I was looking for a fellow to ladle out soup for an old folk’s home. If I were looking for somebody to act as a waiter, it seems to me that in thinking the way I do, I wouldn’t give too much attention to it. I’d say, can you be here and are loyal to the church? And that would be about the end of it. And I think most people would. But you know, when they picked these men, they said, they’ve got to have three qualifications, to have a good reputation, to be full of the Holy Ghost, and full of wisdom.

It’s a strange thing, my brethren, that we ordain men now to the ministry, and make them evangelists and pastors of churches, when we’re not even sure that they’re full of the Holy Ghost. They wouldn’t even put men to serving tables until they knew that they were full of the Holy Ghost. There’s quite a difference in their way of looking at things. They had to be full of the Holy Ghost. And then they had to have a good reputation. That didn’t mean that these men were perfect and there were no flaws in them. But it did mean they weren’t religious racketeers. Nobody had any axe to grind. There was no ulterior motive here. They were men of good reputation.

One of the hardest things I have to bear as a Christian is having to inquire about a man to see if he’s all right. When somebody comes and wants to speak at the church or wants me to do something for him or wants me to write a little recommendation for a book he is writing or something, you have to check on the man to see whether you dare recommend him. That’s terribly bad. They wouldn’t have men of uncertain reputation. They said they have got to be men of good report. Men that are known to be completely candid and frank and honest, nobody hiding anything, and full of the Holy Ghost.

And then the third thing was, they had to have a baptism of wisdom. They didn’t dare simply be reckless fellows. I have from here and there throughout my travels, I have met Christians who are all ablaze, all ablaze, but after you got to know them for three months, your confidence in them diminished more and more and more and more, to finally it was burning down to there was barely a tiny little flicker because they proved by their lives that all they had was zeal. They had no wisdom at all.  They never knew how to approach a situation, but always ready to rush out in all directions.

Well, it says you can’t use men like that. I’ve often said in private conversation with men; I’ve said how sad it is to know that there’s much talent being wasted in the churches. Some men who are talented men and brilliant men without doubt, but some character trait prevents them from being used in the church. They just can’t be used, not only in any organized church but in God’s church, because they haven’t got the wisdom here. In all thy getting, get wisdom. If ever there was anything we need to pray for it is a baptism of discernment in an hour like this.

You don’t know when a man comes down the street carrying a five-pound Bible, whether he’s up to help here or out to rook, you. You don’t know, so we need wisdom. We need to be wise in God to be able to look quite through the deeds of men as Cassius said. They said about Cassius, looks quite through the deeds of men. And we need to have this. We need to have it in our pulpits. We need to have it everywhere. Superintendents of Sunday school need it to see quite through the deeds of men.

Now, it’s a dangerous thing. And if you have perception enough to see quite through the deeds of men, you’ll be tempted immediately to become a self-appointed critic of other men’s deeds. It is dangerous. But you’ve got to have it or else you’re in worse danger. It’s a question of being blind. And of course, that’s dangerous to walk down the street blind. It’s also dangerous to be able to have an x-ray vision so that you’re not taken in, because he’s likely to make a critic out of you, and you’ll be worse than if you had no eyes. So we’re caught in the middle. We’ve got to watch it.

Now. I just like to end by pointing out that these murmurers, I said the last time I talked in the early part of this chapter, I said that these murmurers were actually doing good. They actually were. They didn’t know it, but they were doing good. Just as Satan who tempted Christ was doing good. He was doing good, devilishly bad, but he was doing good, nevertheless. And just as the three men who rode poor, old, suffering Job, and skinned him with sarcasm and bitterness, just as those three men were doing good. At the same time, they were doing evil, God was using their evil for Job’s good. Just as the eleven sons of Jacob when they sold Joseph into Egypt, did good while they were trying to do evil. Joseph said, God meant it for good unto me, and He used it for good.

So, it’s possible to do good and at the same time be trying to do evil. And God will use your evil to bless His people. But he will judge you for the evil, nevertheless. He judged the three comforters of Job severely. And He judged Israel and He judged every time God’s people were punished. God used the punishment to bless them, but He judged those who punished. So, remember, as I have said before, God uses the rejected to perfect the accepted. And when a man has been the rejected of God, he may yet remain in the circle of fellowship and God uses him there as an abrasive to perfect and polish the saints, to polish the saints.

I am a weakling by nature, and I am really not a fighter. And I never like to meet a man that’s against me on anything. I would much rather be somewhere else. But you have to do it, because you see, the Lord has to polish off some things off of you. So, He lets the rejected hang around to perfect the accepted. Even Jesus Christ had to learn obedience by the things that He suffered. And when the Pharisees and the rest of them were chewing Him to pieces with words and threatening His life, He was learning obedience. Even the Son of God had to learn obedience by the things that He suffered. So, you and I too must.

What do we do in the meantime? What should men and women of goodwill do? What should they do? Well, quietly prepare and brace yourself and expect to suffer, because you will, either of two ways. There are two ways to take a blow. One is to brace yourself and catch it. And the other is to take it when it’s not expected. So, you will have your detractors of course and there will be difficulties. But the man of goodwill, and you know, we should never be any other way but of goodwill. We should always want things to be right and good. And we should have goodwill toward men.

That passage where the angels sang, peace on earth goodwill to men. Every version that I know of corrects that and says it’s peace on earth to men of goodwill. The man that has not goodwill, God cannot save him. The lowest, deepest, darkest sinner, if he turns to be a man of goodwill, good intention, God will save him out of his wallow. But the most righteous Pharisee, if he’s not a man of goodwill, God can’t help him.

So, men and women of goodwill, and there are a lot of them in the churches, a lot of them everywhere, a lot of good people yet, they’re here and there and they have goodwill. They only want to help people, that’s all. They want to be true to the Lord and help people. Sometimes I think they’re a little timid. But they are there, men and women of goodwill. What should we do? Well, we should keep our hearts tender and charitable, because you’re going to have yourself tender. One of these days you’re going to need tenderness and charity for yourself.

So keep your heart tender and charitable. You say, you are tender and charitable toward so and so because he’s such a dear man. He’s not the man that needs your tenderness and your charity, my dear friends. He’s not the man at all. It’s that old complaining Grecian widow that needs your tenderness and your charity. It’s that lady who says I didn’t get as big a helping as the other lady did. It’s that person that’s complaining. They need our charity. And just as a sick person needs our tender understanding, so a person who is carnal does.

And then be peacemakers wherever you can. My experience with being a peacemaker has never been too happy. Usually, I get caught in the middle. I told you here some weeks ago, that I had tried a couple of times to be a marriage counselor on two different occasions. Some couples came to see me. And when they left, the woman roared mad at me, and they never did get together. I don’t know why. But I am not too much of a peacemaker like that. Because I tried to stop a man from fighting with his wife and then they both get after me. But if you can, try to be peacemaker and keep out of trouble all you can and leave the judgment to God.

A man wrote me as I told you, and he said, leave the judgment to God. And I wrote him and said, thank you, my brother, I needed that. I needed it. I’m not that humble. But then when it comes from Vietnam, and takes two weeks to get here, and then I keep it around two weeks before I answer it. In four weeks, I’m able to say that. So, I said, thank you for that letter, brother. It did me good because it came when I needed it.

So, let’s leave judgment to God. I wouldn’t know whom to reward and I wouldn’t know whom to punish. But our Heavenly Father does. In the meantime, we can learn from these disciples. We can learn from the apostles. Go the second mile, turn the other cheek, show yourself a man of goodwill, qnd give the advantage to the other person. Give the advantage to the other person. Always, God will bless the man who is ready to give the other fellow the advantage. If you seek advantage, God will frown. If you give the advantage to the other man, God will smile. For that was the teaching of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount. That we always ought to put the advantage in the other man’s hand. But you say if I don’t defend myself, who will? I’ll give you three guesses.

If you’re God’s child and you don’t defend yourself, who will? Answer me, who will? God will. And I’d rather be defended by God than all the lawyers in Washington. I’d rather have God come over on my side and take my part against the enemy than all the lawyers in the world. Because God can make what He says stick, and lawyers can’t always do it. The best defense is God. I’ve always had a little speech I have wanted to make if anybody ever attacked me in public, but nobody ever did.

And I have had this around with me for quite a while. It’s a little speech I was going to make. But it’s like the stuttering fellow that learned to say, Swedish people like pumpernickel, but he said he couldn’t find the place to use. And I can’t find any place to use my speech. I always wanted to be able to get up when I was under attack someplace and say, the Lord is my defense. Mr. Chairman, the defense rests. I thought that would be a good speech, but I have never been able to use it, because up to now it’s just lying around, because nobody’s attacked me. But if anybody ever does, that will be my speech. Instead of getting up and fighting, I’m going to say, God in my defense, the defense rests and sit down. I think that will confuse the enemy. But I don’t know yet because I haven’t had opportunity to find out.

But anyhow, let’s leave our defense with God. God will take care of you, my dear sister and my dear brother. God will take care of you, well, provided you give the other fellow the advantage and leave your defense to God. But if you insist on taking the advantage and defending yourself, God will quietly lift His hand and let you take a few blows for your own instruction.

Humble yourself therefore under the mighty hand of God and He will exalt you in due time. Very soon, Sunday mornings, I’m going to begin a book of the Bible and preach sermons on a book. Perhaps by next Sunday, I may be able to announce it. But anyhow, this finishes up the little word I wanted to bring about the way the apostles got out of a tight squeak by doing the humble thing.

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Tozer Talks

Because I Live, Ye Shall Live Also

Because I Live, Ye Shall Live Also
Pastor and author A.W. Tozer
March 29, 1959

I have a text for the morning sermon. I turn to John 14. Our Lord spoke of His going away and said, yet a little while and the world seeth Me no more but ye see Me. Then follows a sentence which is complete in itself. You could put a period after me and make it a capital B and you’d have a sentence standing alone, one of the greatest utterances in the entire Bible: because I live, ye shall live also.

Now centuries ago, many centuries ago, possibly as long ago as before Moses’ time, there had lived a fine old man. He hadn’t always been old. He had grown up as all do. But now he’s in perhaps late middle life and he is a man deeply troubled and in great physical pain. And with a shadow of impending death hanging over him, as he thought then, he was giving to the world’s oldest and toughest question, a lot of earnest thought. And he asked a question. This question was serious and utterly sincere. Nothing academic here, because upon the answer to this question, rests, not this or that school of thought. But upon the answer to this question rests all the values of light. If it is answered, yes, it changes the whole complexion of our lives. If it is answered, no, it throws a gloomy shadow that can only deepen across our life. The question he asked was, if a man die, shall he live again? And the man who asked the question was the celebrated citizen of Ur, the man named Job.

Now, this old man of God was in trouble, I say, and deeply worried and physically in pain. And he pondered this question and ask it out loud. If a man die, shall he live again? And there was no answer given except more talk which contained no answer.

Now, there is another question which has never been asked for very obvious reasons. It is the exact opposite of the one Job asked. It is, if a man lives, shall he die. Now, nobody’s ever asked that question seriously. If a man lives, shall he die? Nobody’s ever asked that. From Adam, if Adam asked it, it’s not recorded, but nobody ever could have asked it seriously. He would have had to be insincere ever to ask the question, the opposite of, if a man dies shall he live? If a man lives, shall he die? And why was this latter question never asked? Because we do not in sincerity ask the obvious. We know the answer to the question, if a man lives, shall he die? We know the answer to that question in long, sad experience.

There lived in the United States a couple of centuries ago an amazing young man. He was 18 years old when he pondered on the same question that Job had pondered on, and he wrote what was called, A View of Death. And in that he says these words to comfort those who may be expecting to go the way of all the earth. He said in effect, don’t worry too much about it, because when you go, thou shalt lie down with patriarchs of the infant world with kings and the powerful of the earth, the wise and the good, fair forms and whori fears of ages passed, all in one mighty sepulcher.

The golden sun, said this amazing young teenager, the golden sun, the planets and all the infinite host of heaven are shining on the sad abodes of death through the still lapse of ages. All that tread the globe are about a handful to the tribes that slumber in its bosom. And millions in these solitude since first the flight of years began, have laid them down in their last sleep, the dead rein there alone. That was written out of experience, an experience over thousands of years which has never varied. Nobody asked if the sun rises, will it set because of centuries of observation, unvaried and always, always alike. The sun rises and sets and rises and sets. We can count on it. Nobody questions this.

So, a man may ask, if a man die shall he live again, but nobody asks if a man lives, shall he die, because I say the experience has proved and accords with what the Bible teaches, that it’s appointed unto man once to die. Shall he live again?

Now we know that he will die, because that’s demonstrated hourly. But on the other side, there is no answer. The dead do not come back to say, yes, we live again. They have not come back. They do not come back. They maintain a long, unbroken silence. And not all the pleading and coaxing can get one word out of those who are gone. But because we want to believe, because men want to believe they will live after they die, we have invented every kind of reasoning.

Oh, 399 years before the birth of Christ, there lay on a cot in an Athenian prison, a fine old Greek philosopher by the name of Socrates. He had been condemned to death by the Athenian court because of his teachings, and there were gathered around him in his last hour, his friends. There was Fado and Simmias and Cebes and Apollodorus and Crito and a number of others coming and going. And they were asking the old man questions, for he was one of the profoundness thinkers the world ever knew. And they said, Socrates, you’re going to leave us. Where are you going? Or, are you going anyplace? Are you just closing your eyes and going back to the dust to be born round in earth’s diurnal motion with rocks and trees and stones, or what are you going thing to do?

Well, Socrates began to talk, and as he did, he talked long-windingly and gave his reasons for believing that he was going to live again. And one of his chief arguments was what they call recollection. He said, the reason I know I’m going to live again is that I have lived before. He said, I lived before, and everything that I have learned now during this present lifetime is simply a recollection of what I learned before. Reincarnation, they call that in the Far East, but the Greeks called it recollection. He said, learning is recollecting.

And he said, don’t you remember, notice that when something is told you that you hadn’t heard before, how instead of sounding strange to you, it sounds strangely familiar? He said, it’s because you have a deep racial memory. You knew that before; you’re finding it out again. He didn’t tell us what kind of God it would be who would put a man in the world to reincarnate him and teach him over and over and over and over again, the same thing.

But that he went out and into the next world, believing that he was going to live again. But philosophers have been wrong so often, that I, for my part, can’t possibly accept Socrates’ argument. There was no proof, no demonstration. Nobody came back and entered the dark place and said, I am here to tell you they do come back. Men do live again. Nobody was answering the old, old question that Job has asked, if a man die, shall he live again, but we can all submit our reasons. We all submit them you know. But they don’t come back to confirm them.

If I were pressed, if I were being pressed by some studious young man who would come to my study and urge upon me and say, would you give me your reasons for believing in immortality in the future life? I could think of reasons. I have dreamed out the reasons many long years I’ve spent, and I would give reasons. But not one of those reasons would be valid, and not one of them could be proved and not one of them could have any demonstrated proof offered for them.

When I listen to a great something, say, like the Messiah. When I hear a performance of that, and I stand along with the others, all struck while they sing the Hallelujah Chorus, something in my heart says and cries out that says God is the man that can do that. A man that could compose, couldn’t go out like a candle. He couldn’t snuff out like a falling star. He must exist on. He must live on. And then my reason would carry me on to say we who stand breathless to listen to this thing being sung and can appreciate and enjoy it, we can’t die either. That’s what reason would tell me. But reason is wrong so often, I don’t dare trust it.

So, I say this to you, don’t count on anything if you have no better proof than the philosophers. Socrates could be wrong. Don’t count on anything if you have no better proof for it than that of the poets. Poets can be wrong and very often are.

But within the last 100 years or so in the Western world, there has arisen a weird group of dark ladies, with a few gentlemen thrown in, who undertake to get us in touch with the other world. They call them spiritists. And something will happen like this, a businessman, a fine, intelligent, jovial man; a good sense of humor and well educated and prosperous, successful, suddenly slumps over his desk and dies of a heart attack. His wife is heartbroken. She has no hope. He had none. So she goes off to the witch of Endor and pays $50 to some weird sister to get her in touch with her husband. And the weird sister goes into some kind of trance and foams at the mouth and turns pale and pretty soon, the grief-stricken and now delighted widow hears her husband speaking back from the other world.

But you know, here’s the strange thing. I’ve read a lot of those reports of those seances. That’s what the plural is, that where they talk back from the other world. And they always make a man sound like an idiot. Have you ever noticed that? He may have been a perfectly intelligent man. He may have had a good education, loved good music, loved good literature, had a good library and been literate and able to make himself understood in the best circles, but as soon as he dies and his wife goes to a spiritist, he talks like a mumbling, jumbling idiot. Always, it’s the same. That in itself would cancel it out for me. I don’t think a man would be dumber after he’s dead than he was before he died. I can’t see how he’d get that way.

I remember one time in a bookstore seeing a book that was supposed to have been written by the spirit of Shakespeare. One of these weird sisters got in tune with Shakespeare’ spirit. But Shakespeare wrote himself some more sonnets. And he wrote them through the mouth or through the pen of this weird sister and she wrote them down and published them. I saw the book.

Well now, I happen to have read Shakespeare a little now and again and have read and mulled over and memorized his sonnets, a good many of them, so when I came to this, you could only smile. And out of the weeds of her own subconscious, she had raked the old dead leaves, the tattered bits of what she’d remembered and wrote them down as sonnets and said Shakespeare was talking back from the other world. Shakespeare would have been ashamed of it. He would never have allowed it to be printed. She was a victim of her own subconscious.

So, if you don’t count on anything, I say don’t count on anything the spiritists say. Don’t count on anything anybody says unless they can offer proof. If a man die, shall he live? I don’t know, but if a man live, I know he will die. But if he dies, is he going to live? No proof. Nobody’s ever come back and said, here I am. Yes, it’s so.

But listen now. We go back to our text. There lived a Man. That Man was born as no other man was ever born. That Man was born by what the theologians call the Virgin birth. The shadow of the Holy Spirit shall be, of the Holy One, shall be upon thee and the Spirit shall overshadow thee, and that Holy Thing which is born of thee shall be called the Son of God, born without human father of a virgin mother. Born in Bethlehem of Judea in those days of Herod the king.

And when He was born, they came from heaven above to celebrate. They came from the Far East riding their camels to celebrate. The shepherds came in off the fields to celebrate. Something had happened in history, something different from anything that had ever happened before. And they called his name Jesus. And that Man grew to manhood and began to do a work such as none other had ever done. He did a work of healing and opening eyes of the blind, unstopping deaf ears, stilling waves, rebuking winds, walked a complete Victor and Master in the world. And He spake as no other man spake.

So, even after the passing of nearly 2000 years, His teachings rate higher than the teachings of any other religionist that has ever lived. This Man was different from any other man. And when He died, He died as no other Man died. For every man has died for his own sin, but He says, which of you convicteth Me of sin? And his whole life showed that there was no sin there.

This Lord Jesus was different from other men. After He had died and been completely and clear dead, and it was known that He was dead. And He was taken stiff down from the cross, rigor mortis in every cell of that sacred body. They wrapped Him up and laid Him in a tomb, and there He stayed three days. And then He appeared after His decease and His resurrection and revealed Himself to Mary and Peter and the 500 brethren and to the disciples on the road to Emmaus. In other words, God took out of the hands of reason the question of whether if a man died, he shall live again.

He knew that if you can give a reason in favor of something, somebody else can give her a reason against it. He knew that if this school of thought says yes, this school of thought can cancel it out by saying no. He knew that. So, He took the matter of a future life out of the hands of human reason. He canceled out the human brain and said, you don’t have to cudgel your brain and ask yourself questions. You don’t have to invite the considered opinion of the wise and the great of the century. I will demonstrate it to you.

And so, this Man walked out of the grave alive. He had said, because I live ye shall also live. And if He had broken down in the first part of the sentence, we’d have broken down in the last part of it. He said, I’ll live and you’ll live. And because I live, you live. But if He hadn’t lived, we couldn’t live. But He did live and now we can live.

And so, our hope of immortality rests not upon reason. It rests not upon the gracious and kindly thinking of a Socrates. It rests not upon the weird efforts of a spirit that is to penetrate the veil and bring back messages from another world. It rests upon demonstration. He did rise. He did come out of the grave. He did stand up tall and strong and alive forevermore. He did speak to His disciples. He did send the Holy Ghost down in confirmation of His resurrection. He did. And that same Holy Spirit is alive in the world today. And red and yellow, black and white around the world this very hour when I’m talking are united in the Spirit of one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one Father, one hope, one atonement, and one glorious future.

And before He died, He foretold His resurrection and did exactly what He had foretold. He did exactly what He had foretold. He also told and foretold that men should live again. The human mind is caught between hope and fear, hope that we may and fear that we will not. But Jesus Christ said, don’t worry your head about it. Let not your heart be troubled. He knew their troubled hearts and their worry about immortality in the future. Let not your heart be troubled. Ye believe in God.

Why do we always go to take that text to a funeral? That text is like cut flowers always at a funeral. And so, we hesitate from using it because it’s attended all the funerals since Jesus said it. Let not your heart be troubled. Why was he saying that? Because he was going away from them and he was going the only way men can go. He was going by the way of death and the tomb. But He was coming back again, and said, do you believe in God, believe also in Me. And nineteen verses later said, because I live ye shall live also. And He foretold that His friends should rise again. He told them he’d meet them again. He said, I’ll see you. I’ll go before you and I’ll see you and I will prepare a place for you and kept throwing into their minds, as they were able to take it, little bits of glorious truth, telling them and foretelling and predicting. And then He died and rose and fulfilled His part of it. And don’t you think if He fulfilled His part of it, He’ll fulfill our part of it? I think so. And he said, because I live ye shall live also.

So, He is our demonstrated proof. My dear friend, your hope of immortality rests with Jesus Christ. It rests with Him, syncs with Him, rises with Him, lives with Him, or dies with Him. For nobody else has ever done what He did, no other teacher, no other teacher. Oh, I know, Zoroaster was a great teacher. Zoroaster died and nobody ever claimed he rose again. So, all that he taught never was demonstrated, and it can’t be demonstrated, because he never came back to demonstrate.

I talked, as I said last week, I talked in Toledo a week before last to an educated Hindu who came to see me. He heard me preach five times, he come to hear me. I took it as something that he would and he did and brought his prayer books with him with his gods, and explained to me with great tenderness, it was Krishna, his God. Where’s Krishna? Buddha, where’s Buddha? They all died and they all stayed there. Where’s Mrs. Eddie? Where’s Joseph Smith? Where are they. They’re all gone.

I remember back there years ago, that when the tribes of Israel were in the wilderness, and God was getting them sorted out and getting some order out of the chaos, that the Exodus, he said, now, the Levites, would be the priestly tribe. And he said the Aaronic tribe, the Aaronic family is going to be the high priestly family. And some of them got angry and said, why should ye sons of Aaron, why should you take so much upon you? Why should you make priests out of the Aaronic family and not out of the rest of us, of Judah and the rest, Dan and Gad.

So, God said, Moses, have every one of the tribes of Israel cut off a rod. Let them go to a tree and cut off a piece of the tree, a branch, a rod, trim it, trim it, trim it all off, and then put it here in the holy box. And then the next day, go get them. Mark them first so there’ll be identified and the one that blooms, that’s the high priestly tribe, the high priestly family. So, everybody cut himself a rod, and they took it and put it in that holy place. They waited with taught nerves to see what the morning would bring. And the next morning they went and reverently opened it and looked, and lo, eleven rods lay cold and lifeless. And one rod had burst into bloom with flowers and that settled it. The one that can die and live is the high priests.

Jesus Christ stood among men. There had been Moses and Isaiah and David and Jeremiah and Solomon and all the rest of them. Now He comes. And they say, who does He think He is? He talks bigger than Moses talks. He makes David sound small. He outtalks Isaiah. Who does he think He is? And God said, put them all in the grave together, put them all down in the grave and whoever comes out and blooms and blossoms and is fragrant in the morning, that will be my Christ. And on that morning, only one man came forth. Moses still lay in the dust. And Isaiah with all his silver tongue, still laying the dust. And David with his harp still lay in the dust. But the son of God walked in the garden and said, Mary, and she shouted back, Rabboni. She knew He had come out.

So, God Almighty has caused his high priests to bloom and bring forth fruit and fragrance and demonstrated who He is, and that the whole world can know that if a man die, he’ll live again. Live again not in theory. Live again not because it can be proved by science or by philosophy. We live again because a man did live again; because the rod of Aaron blossomed and brought forth through truth.

I live, ye shall live also. And He said, I ascend to my Father and your Father. And we are even as He. This verse, our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory, our light affliction. Paul, what’s the matter, our light affliction? Don’t you know that some of the Christians you’re writing to have lost everything? Don’t you know they’ve lost property. They’ve lost their family ties. Their wives or husbands or children have walked out on them, these Christians. He said that it’s all right. It’s a light affliction. It’s nothing compared with what Jesus endured. Which is but for a moment.

But Paul, don’t you know, Bunyan was in jail 14 years. You yourself in jail many years all told. And look, He says, ah, but it’s but for a moment. It’s but for the moment. You see everything is relative. And when you sit 14 years in prison over it against eternity with God. Why, I think your memory would hold it. I don’t suppose John Bunyan even can remember Bedford Jail now. You know, little things that happen only last two or three minutes, you tend to forget them. And what’s 14 years in Bedford Jail along with an eternity at the right hand of God?

And those light afflictions work for us far more in exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Because I live, ye shall live also.

Let me read to you a hymn as I close. Jesus lives and so shall I. Death thy sting is gone forever. Jesus lives and nothing now from my Savior’s love can sever. Jesus lives no longer now can thy terror death appall me. Jesus lives and well I know from the dead He will recall me. Jesus lives to Him the throne over all the world is given. I shall go where he is gone, live and reign with Him in Heaven. Jesus lives my heart knows well, not from me His love can sever. Life nor death nor powers of hell. tear me from His keeping ever. Jesus is my confidence. Because I live, ye shall live also.

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“Nicodemus – The Singular Call Of God Upon Him”

Nicodemus – The Singular Call Of God Upon Him

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer
January 24, 1954

In the third chapter of John, just four lines. There was a man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews. The same came to Jesus by night. Since that is all I intend to talk about tonight, that’s all I’m going to read. I’m to speak tonight of the man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus. Out of the thousands of millions of people who have lived in the world, and out of the hundreds of thousands of Jews who’ve lived in the world, even hundreds of millions of them, and out of the tens of thousands of Pharisees, the Holy Spirit, let’s say, a pencil of light falls upon the head of one man, Nicodemus, the Pharisee of Israel. And the Holy Spirit who wrote the book and who is rigidly economical in his use of words, nevertheless, devotes twenty-one verses to this story of Nicodemus who visited Jesus, what he said to Christ and what Christ replied to him.

Now this if nothing else would lead us to believe that this is an important story. We’re not done with it tonight. It is vastly important that God ever put it in the Scriptures at all. And therefore, we want to approach it respectfully, reverently and with an inquiring mind. It says that this man Nicodemus was a Pharisee. I think the man Paul, later best described the Pharisees in a phrase that is almost comical. He says these people all know if they would tell, how I lived all my life in the most strictest sense of our religion. The most strictest sect was the Pharisees, the most strictest of all. That double negative doesn’t bother God at all and I’m not going to let it bother me. It means that a Pharisee followed the strictest, straightest letter of Judaism. In addition to being a Pharisee, a fundamentalist par excellence, he was also a ruler. That is, he was a member of the Sanhedrin.

Now, it’s well known, but I’ll throw it in for the sake of those who might not know, that the Sanhedrin was the supreme governing body in Israel, not quite equivalent to our Supreme Court, but very much like it. Because the Sanhedrin had some executive as well as judicial doings. There were seventy of them, and they were composed of the high priest, who was the president, and all the ex-high priests that might be living, and the elders and the legal assessors, and all these, says the books, all these were drawn from the privileged families, whatever that might mean.

The point is, that not every Tom, Dick and Jerry got into the Sanhedrin. He had to be a VIP, which I understand in our day is a very important person, and he had to be in order to get in. He had to be a high priest or an ex-high priest, or an elder or a scribe, or somebody at least from the privileged families. And these members could be either Pharisees or Sadducees just as we can have on our Supreme Court in Washington, men who are either Republicans or Democrats. We can have in our Congress, Republicans or Democrats, and the way we have it, they’re usually fairly well-balanced. Sometimes, only one or two will turn the balance between one and the other, Pharisees and Sadducees there in Washington. But we’re getting a parallel there anyhow.

Now, the Scripture says that Nicodemus came to Jesus; there were seventy of them. And Nicodemus came to Jesus out of seventy, one came. Why? He was separated from Christ by all the wide gulf, that separated all the other sixty-nine, high position, and Jesus was a common carpenter; religious bigotry, and Jesus was anything but a straight-laced bigot. His religious philosophy was as broad as all of Palestine, and you could take in the Mediterranean too. And then pride of his higher position for remember, he belongs to the privileged family, and so did they all. And then, remember the prejudice, the sharp prejudice that an educated Jewish member of the Sanhedrin had against an uneducated fisherman, or an uneducated carpenter who lived among the fishermen, and who had in his little group, some fishermen without any education.

Now, why did Nicodemus cross that gulf? What mysterious power laid hold on the man Nicodemus and not on the other sixty-nine? And why he and not they, or why he and not somebody else? Is the answer simply that he was more sensitive to God’s voice than the rest? Could I repeat again, what I said only a few weeks ago about the prevenient grace of God. The mysterious secret working of God in the souls of men, turning them toward Himself, influencing them toward Himself, and magnetically attracting them toward Himself. That’s the prevenient work of God in the human breast, without which there never could be a conversion.

And I wonder if this man Nicodemus was simply more sensitive to this operation of God than the other sixty-nine, because nobody in a thousand years of jumping up and down on the family Bible could ever make me believe that God showed anything like partiality, that he picked out Nicodemus, and let the other sixty-nine go. The heart of God that yearned over Nicodemus, yearned over the other sixty-nine too, but only Nicodemus came. Why? I think that it was because he was more sensitive to God’s voice.

I am talking to some people right now. You’ve been reared in Christian homes. You’ve been brought up in this Sunday school. You’ve cut your first baby tooth on the back of a hymn book when your mother wasn’t watching you. And still, you’re not right with God or you make some kind of a halfway profession, but you’ll never be much of a Christian if you’re a Christian at all. And the reason is, you lack sensitivity to the in workings of God. It wasn’t because this man was more receptive to spiritual impulses.

Now, some people are more receptive than others to spiritual impulses. Some people are simply extroverts, and you can’t reach them. They’re not sensitive to anything. They live more or less on the level of the stomach. But this man though, he was a Pharisee. And though he was a member of the Sanhedrin and though he had all the high pride with the rest and position and prejudice and bigotry and all that cursed the rest of them too. There must have been a receptivity here to spiritual impulses. I want to keep that alive inside of my soul, brethren. I’d rather lose a leg and hobble along the rest of my life than to lose my spiritual sensitivity. I want to keep it within me.

And then he must have had a humility that the other ones didn’t have. You know, some people are not ever going to get right with God. And the reason is, they don’t have humility. They simply will not humble themselves. Some of us go to this church and not much of anyplace else. And we shuffle in and out of here and we forget that the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church, this particular church, it pays its bills, and it’s honored that way. And its people behave themselves fairly well. And not many go to jail from this church. But nevertheless, in spite of all that, we’re considered to be just a little bit cross-eyed and just a little bit off center. We’re eccentrics. It takes humility to cast in your lot with people who are possibly considered as being necessary that that they see a psychiatrist, or that they do something to balance themselves. We’re off balance.

Now, Jesus had that kind of crowd all around Him. He Himself was considered to be a man, a very strange kind of man. And the people that followed Him were considered, of course, also to be very strange. Now, here was a member of the High Court, and He had to have a lot of humility to humble Himself and cast in His lot with the plain people.

I got a bit of amusement out of a news report that came in over the wires here not so very long ago. That one of the high officials in India was apologizing because he said the news had gone out all over the world that Christian missionaries were being hindered in India. Now, he said, I want you to know that is not true. He said, we are not hindering the propagation of the Christian doctrines in India. And we understand that a few low caste people have believed. I could just hear the pride in that fellow’s voice as this brahman spoke patronizingly, the condescension, about those low castes, that he understood a few had believed in Jesus Christ and he wasn’t going to get in their way. Oh, the bigotry and the pride there. You don’t have to go to Chicago’s Gold Coast or to the Midway. You can go to India or Africa or anywhere, and you will find that there is human pride, and it feasts on almost anything that will make it fat.

Now he crossed over this gulf. And the Scripture says that he came by night, evidently feeling his way. Because you see, Nicodemus well knew what it would cost him. He knew that to follow Christ would cost him something.

I know my friend Reiny Barth too well to believe that he would ever go to Germany and tell the people there, just come, just come, just come as you are, just come and it will cost you nothing. The price has all been paid, just come. Brethren, there is always a price connected with salvation. And our missionaries, I know too well, to believe that they would ever go to any part of the world and simply say, you don’t have to do a thing.

There is a program on the air, and I get the magazine also; somebody sends it to me. Brother, if it’s you, quit sending it. It doesn’t mean a thing to me. They send it in plain paper without a return address. And this fellow has a philosophy of faith. He says everybody has faith. Everybody has faith. Now, that’s point number one. Build on that. Everybody has faith. Everybody in the wide world has faith. And all you have to do is turn your faith in the right direction, toward Christ, and it’s all fixed up. Now, his basic premise is as false as the devil, because Paul says not all men have faith. Faith is not a plant that grows by the way, that everybody has. Faith is a rare plant that grows in a penitent soul only.

And so, the basic teaching that everybody has faith, and all you have to do is use the faith you have is simply humanism in the guise of Christianity. For the faith everybody has is a humanistic faith and it is not the faith that saves. And it is not that faith which is a gift of God to an open heart. This man had a faith that cost him something and he was feeling his way. They say that the man, now, this has a question mark after it, but some scholars believe that this Nicodemus was Nicodemus Ben Gurion, and Nicodemus Ben Gurion was a brother to Flavius Josephus who was of course, as you know, one of the great Jewish historians of the time, who perhaps is the most famous of all the Jewish historians.

And this Nicodemus was one of the three richest men in all Jerusalem. And yet history tells us that later on, the daughter of Nicodemus, they’re one of the three richest men in Jerusalem, and brother to Flavius Josephus possibly, was found picking up corn off of the street where the horses had thrown it out of their feedbags as they traveled down the street. And picking it up and roasting it in order to get something to eat. Why, because when Nicodemus finally threw in his lot with Jesus Christ, they took everything he had, confiscated his property and turned him out as if he were the scum of the earth. And his daughter had to pick up corn on the street to get anything for her stomach. That’s why he came by night. There’s been a tremendous lot of wind wasted on this man, and a great deal of abuse hurled upon him, abuse that he never deserved at all because he came to Jesus by night.

He came feeling his way. He came inquiring. He came asking questions. He wasn’t sure. He only knew that he was spiritually sensitive, and he wanted help. And he also knew the reputation this man had, and he knew what would happen to him and his family and his position and his money and his reputation if he cast his lot with this man.

Now his coming then suggests only one thing. His coming suggests that the soul of man is too nobly conceived and too high born ever to be satisfied with anything less than Jesus Christ. His coming suggests that only Jesus Christ is enough. And I can stand without any embarrassment and say to you that you will find either now or later in your life or at death or in the world to come, that only Jesus Christ is enough.

Now, out of all the rulers, one ruler came. Out of all the Jews, this Jew came. And I want to point out that those who came to Jesus Christ our Lord, came of the various levels of life, and their reason for coming was always about the same.

Let me mention some others that came to Jesus. Here was the rich young ruler that everybody knows about. Now, here, this rich young ruler was an example of a model man because he had four things or three things anyway that everybody might want to emulate. He had wealth and morality and position.

And I can hear a mother when her little boy got out of line, holding up this rich young ruler that lived around the corner, and say, now, why don’t you try to be like that man. Now, there is a successful Jew. There is a moral man. Nobody’s ever found him doing anything wrong. There is a man of high position which he earned by virtue of study and hard work. And there is a wealthy man, and his wealth has come also from shrewdness and hard bargaining. And here is a young man. If you want to be like anybody, choose this young fellow as your example. I can just hear the mothers in Israel in that day holding up this young fellow.

And yet one word tells the secret of his great disappointment. For notice he had the four things that everybody wants, he had youth. Everybody wants youth and mourn when they begin to lose it. Everybody wants wealth although almost everybody modestly says they only just want enough to get along with. And everybody wants morality. Nobody wants really to be bad. Everybody wants morality, or at least admires it. And everybody would like to have a high position.

Now this young fellow had the four things that are supposed to be desirable, which, if you attain to or obtain, will give you peace of mind. And yet this young ruler came to Jesus, and the language of his question, tipped us off, as they say, gave away what was the matter with the young man. He said, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life? There was the answer. That’s what brought the young man, youth. He looked forward to the time when youth would be no more and withered and palsied and shaken with age, he would brush back his few remaining gray hairs and lie down stiffly on the bed from which he should never rise again. He had to have something with eternity in it. And he knew also that his wealth could not help him then, and his morality could not help him then. And he knew that his position would have to be given up and his place filled by another.

So he came saying, What shall I do for eternity? What shall I do that I might have that eternal life, that eternal quality, which I don’t now have. Oh, my friends, the world is filled with liars. And David didn’t need to apologize when he said, every man is a liar. Because until we are really converted to Christ and the holiness of Christ enters our heart, we are part and parcel of a mighty deception. And that deception is, that you can have peace of mind and be relatively happy and get along fine and make a big success of your human life if you have wealth and morality in high position.

But it’s all false, as the rich young ruler shows us, because there’s one word missing from it all and that is, eternal. If it could be said of him, he had eternal youth. If it could be said of him that his wealth was eternal wealth, if it could be said of him that his position was everlasting, then we might say that wealth and youth and morality and position might be enough for a man. But the word eternal is not there. You have to read it in. The man knew that God had set eternity in his heart. That man knew that his soul was too nobly conceived and too highly born and too much of a universe within itself ever to be satisfied with anything that didn’t have eternity in the middle of it.

Let’s look at another character that came, and that was the Ethiopian chancellor found in the eighth chapter of Acts. Now, he had something else. He had authority, prestige and religion. Read that story sometime and think about what I have said. He had authority, for he was a man of great authority under Queen Candace, who was queen of Ethiopia. And of course, he had the prestige that went with it. And then in addition to that, he was a Jewish proselyte. He was as black as could be, for he was an Ethiopian. He wasn’t a Jew, but he had joined the Jewish religion. And no doubt had undergone the rites that had made him a Jew.

And there was some feast or other going on up in Jerusalem, so he went up there to pray, being a chancellor of the exchequer and the big shot in Ethiopia, of course, he could get permission from Queen Candace. And she said, why certainly go. So, he went and took in the religious festival in Jerusalem among the Jews. And they admired him and admitted him in and took him in among them as a proselyte Jew. And still, not all of this newfound religion, and not all of the swinging of the censors in Jerusalem, and not all of the chanting of the priests and not all of the beauty of the form of their religion could make his heart sing. He couldn’t rejoice. His heart was too discriminating, that man, but when he had met Jesus through faith and the man Philip had preached Jesus unto him, then he immediately says the Scripture went on his way rejoicing.

Now what was it that gave rejoicing to the heart of the Ethiopian chancellor, the eunuch, who served under Queen Candace, and he couldn’t get it anyplace else? It was nothing else then that he found the one of whom Moses and the prophets did write. The Ethiopian eunuch also confirms this, that Nicodemus suggests only Jesus is enough. Religion won’t do. It’s amazing how many things religious people want to do to you. Thank God I’ve never had but two things done to me yet. One, I was baptized, and the other, I had men lay their hands on my empty head and ordained me. And that’s the only two things they’ve ever done to me.

But you know, it’s astonishing how many things they can do to you in churches. They can start when you’re eight days old with circumcision and end up with last rites when you’re 108 years old. And all the time, there’ll be shooting something into you or rubbing something on you or putting something around your neck or making you eat something, or lay off of eating it, or something else. Manipulate you and Swedish massage your soul all the time. And when it’s all done, you’re just what you were, you’re just a massaged sinner, that’s all

When you’re finished, you’re simply a sinner, that didn’t eat, fish, and if you ate fish, then you’re a sinner the did eat fish. And if you made the long journey to the temple, and you’re a sinner that went to the temple. And if you didn’t, then you’re a sinner that didn’t go to the temple. And if you attended the church, then you’re a sinner that went to the church. If your name is on the roll book, then you’re a sinner whose name is on the roll book. And if it isn’t, then you’re a sinner whose name isn’t on the roll book.

Measure it any direction and approach it from anywhere, and we’re sinners, still, after religion has done all, it can do to us. They put us on the roll and educate us and train us and teach us and instruct us and discipline us and when it’s all over, there is still something that says, eternity is in my heart, and I don’t find anything to satisfy us. So you will be searching and searching forever until you find Christ, for only Christ is enough.

Then I think now, I’ll bring this to a close. Don’t get too optimistic, though, for it may be some little time, but I will take as long as you need.

For this woman, Lydia, I’m interested in Lydia. Now Lydia was a career woman. And she was born out of due time. We have our businesswomen now, businesswomen, this and that. Scripture made women to have homes and bear children and keep their husbands happy. But we have now career women and businesswomen, and I suppose it’s all right. And God knows I can’t do anything about it. They just look at me and shrug, push past me and take my seat in the bus. So, I can’t do anything about it.

But I can only say that the businesswomen, they told us back there a few years back those poor women had been trodden down, they said. They said, we’ve trampled the poor ladies under our feet and their faces show the marks of hobnails where we men trampled them down into the ground. And so, they passed an amendment. What was it, the seventh amendment, and it emancipated the ladies and set them free. And now they can go vote and not know what they’re voting for just like the men. And we set the women free to be just as bad as a man and just as miserable. We’ve set the women free to curse and swear and tell dirty stories and smoke filthy cigarettes and run around and come in when they please. We’ve set women free to make nasty political speeches and vote blind. They say they’re free, but they’re not free. They’re simply free to be bad and miserable. of course, they’re free to be good too, if they come to God in Christ.

But the so-called freedom of the modern career woman needs to be reexamined in the light of history and in the light of the female heart. But anyway, apart from that, Lydia came. Now, Lydia had what every woman is supposed to have when she’s perfectly satisfied to have. She’s free now. No more of this being an appendage to a man. No more of this simply being a help meet, strung on as an afterthought. She now takes her place along with bearded men.

All right, Lydia, you were born out of new time. You were a seller of purple; and she traveled. She lived in one town and Paul found her in another, and she was converted, and she came to Jesus too. I wonder why? Ladies, really now, if you were to tell me the truth about this and and not put on that front, and just break right down, is your newfound freedom enough? Is your freedom to yawn and stretch and and be a man if you want to, is it enough? No, you know it isn’t. Lydia found it wasn’t. And every woman if when she finally wakes up, she’ll find it isn’t. Only Jesus Christ is enough.

Now, Lydia found that out. And she came and gave her heart to Jesus Christ, and she was so delighted with what she found that she said to Paul, she had a big house, and she said, Paul, if you think I’m really a convert now. She was used to the Jewish way of looking at women. And they didn’t count women, they only counted men, you know. They belonged to the patriarchal way of looking at things. But she’d broken over the fence. She was one philly that had jumped over the corral. And she should have been the happiest Jewess in all Asian Minor. But in place of that she came humbly to Paul and said, would you tell me about this One. And he told her, and she said, now do you think I’m a believer, come to my house and make it your headquarters. There was Lydia.

And I think of another man as the last, and that is Nathaniel, the plain man. Now I’ve searched about this fellow Nathaniel, and I don’t know who he is. There’s not much said about him and the only thing I know about him is that he was a fellow full of prejudice like any man on the street. He thought nobody could come out of Nazareth. And yet he was a man completely simple. Now, psychology tells us that if we would be simple and sincere and put away strain and pretense and just relax and cast out fear, we will be real persons. If any of you have read widely enough in liberal religious literature to catch on to that real person? Harry Emerson Fosdick wrote a book called, How to be a Real Person.

And being a real person is to be a great, big, glory, Adam of a man or a evil woman, and be all you are; not have any little corners that aren’t developed, not have any inhibitions. But get out in the moonlight and bay the moon and show that you’re a man. Stand up on your hind legs and beat your hairy chest and tell the world today I am a man. Well, that’s what they tell us. Just be a man, be a plain man. Be a real person, simple and sincere and honest and direct and fearless.

And the high priest of that kind of goo was none other than Walt Whitman, that dirty, unkempt, smelly poet of the eastern seaboard. And in his Leaves of Grass, which is the Bible of a great many fellows now, in his Leaves of Grass, he celebrates himself. He says and writes long poems addressed to himself. If this wasn’t a church, I would just bellow and show you how it sounds. But he was a man if you please. And he-man if you please, a Tarzan of America.

Well, Nathaniel was a simpler man, but he was what the psychologists say we ought to be, unafraid, simple, direct, not covering anything, inhibited, humble and plain. And yet, the sun wouldn’t come out for Nathaniel. He lived under a shadow and just couldn’t get the sun to come out. And then somebody came and said, come and see what we’ve seen and find what we found. And they came and found Jesus, and then the sun came out and a new life dawned. And Nathaniel became, according to the scholars, Bartholomew. And he became a follower of Jesus and lives today in the memories of thousands. But it started when he cried, my Lord and my God, and when he turned from his simplicity and his relaxed position.

Now, I got another book last week telling me to relax. And I get letters telling me, now, Brother Tozer, you must relax. If I was as relaxed as all of my friends want me to be, you’d have to sop me up with a sponge. You couldn’t get a hold of me. I’d just be too slippery. But they say, relax and you will be alright.

Now, brethren, Nathaniel was relaxed man. But the sun wouldn’t come out and the joy wouldn’t come. Why? Because man sinned and broke his fellowship with God, lost the gold from his spirit and wandered away like a sheep from the fold, like a son from the household, pulled himself free like a limb from a tree to wither on the ground. And we simply don’t have in us what we need. The way of man is not in himself says the Holy Ghost. Only Jesus Christ is enough, in all of these men’s sake.

Now, there were many rulers in Israel. Why do we find old Nicodemus and the rich young ruler came? There were many women, no doubt, who were sellers of purple and career woman even in that day. Why did only Lydia attach herself to Paul? There were many plain men who walked the streets of Jerusalem and other towns in the Holy Land. Why was it Nathaniel whose name is put here? Was it, I repeat, some secret working of God in the human breast?

Oh, friends, I believe in that secret working. I believe in the secret working of God in the human breast. If I might be allowed a minute of testimony. There is something in the line from which I come that is not religious; moral, on a certain level, but not religious, cold, earthly, profane. And it runs down both lines of my father and my mother. Moral high standards, but completely without a thought of God. God might as well not exist; profane, secular, without a spark of desire after God. Will you tell me why, at 17, I surrounded by unbelief 100%, should find my way to my mother’s attic and kneel on my knees and give my heart to Jesus Christ and be converted. without anybody’s help? Without a human being, without anybody with a marked New Testament, showing me how easy it is. And without any friends to place an arm over my shoulder and pray beside me. That conversion was as real as any man’s conversion has ever been. You tell me why? I don’t know why.

My little mother, cold as stone. My high-strung English father, utterly without regard to God. And none of the members of my family cared for God. I found Christ Jesus my Lord. Why? There is such a thing as the secret working of God in the human breast. There is such a thing as the prevenient workings of the Holy Ghost within the human personality. If you feel the tug of God in your breast, what a happy man you could be. What riches are yours.

If you could be given Fort Knox and the government would supply the trucks to haul all the buried gold to your door. You couldn’t be as rich as you are. If you feel the inner tug of God in your bosom and hear the secret whisper that not very many men hear, to be on God’s prospect list. To be on God’s active list, that God is working, in whose breast God is working is a marvelous thing.

And if you You’ve got a trace of it left, in God’s name, get up tonight and do something about it. If you feel a pull in your bosom this night, do something about. Remember, a thousand men may work where you work and only you feel that tug. God yearns over them all, but they won’ listen. They won’t hear and they kill it within them. If it’s still alive in you, thank God and follow the light. Chicagoans around us by the thousands and even millions, and how few are they who feel the pull and hear the voice and realize that God is speaking. And you don’t have to have a course in theology or know a thousand things about the Bible. You only have to know that you’re a sinner and Christ is a Savior. But those two things together and you have met God’s condition. You’re a sinner and He’s the Savior.

I say the secret working of God; remember one thing. It’s possible to feel that secret working and ruin the whole business. Look at the rich young ruler. He came. He felt it, pulled by his longing for eternity. Young? Yes. But not eternally young. Rich? Yes, but not eternally rich. Moral? Yes, but how could he be sure that his morality was eternal morality? High position? Yes, but not eternal high position. And his soul says, O God, why did you put eternity in my heart and then give me time? I must have eternity. He went looking for a man that could teach him how his eternity might be safe. And he found that Man in Christ Jesus the Lord.

And Jesus stopped and turned from everybody else and talked to this shiny-eyed inquirer. But the last Jesus saw of him was when he was looking sadly at the back of His neck as He walked away. It isn’t enough to be a recipient of the yearnings of God. It isn’t enough to feel the tug of the Spirit. It isn’t enough to feel a longing for heaven and God. It isn’t enough. The rich young ruler proved that. He had all, but he went away. He loved the world.

If you feel that tug within you tonight, cherish it and then follow it. Follow it immediately. Come every soul by sin oppressed. There’s mercy with the Lord. Come every soul by sin oppressed. The Lord will give you rest and give you peace. I want tonight to put out this invitation. If the Holy Spirit has spoken to your heart, come. Come any way you can come. Nicodemus came by night. Someone else came another way. But they came. Come, Will you? For, remember, only Jesus Christ is enough. Have the sensitivity to hear it. Have the humility to obey it.

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The Brevity of this Life and the Vanity of This World

The Brevity of this Life and the Vanity of This World

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

September 26, 1953

Tonight, I choose a psalm, a familiar and favorite Psalm of mine, the 39th. When David established worship many years before, it tells us in 1 Chronicles that they cried and said, blessed be the Lord God of Israel forever; and all the people said, amen and praise the Lord. So he left there before the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord, Asaph and his brethren to minister before the Ark continually as every day’s work required.

And then he says that Zadok the priest and his brethren priests before the tabernacle of the Lord, the high place that was at Gibeon to offer burnt offerings unto the Lord upon the altar of the burnt offering continually, morning and evening. To do according to all that is written in the law of the Lord, which commanded Israel. And with them Heman and Jeduthun, and the rest that were chosen, who were expressed by name, to give thanks to the Lord, because his mercy endureth for ever; And with them Heman and Jeduthun with trumpets and cymbals for those that should make a sound, and with musical instruments of God. And the sons of Jeduthun were porters. And all the people departed every man to his house: and David returned to bless his house. And here was a man by the name of Jeduthun with his trumpet. And his business was, to stand by when the priest offered a sacrifice, Jeduthun raised the trumpet and led the brethren in singing the praises of God because His mercy endureth forever.

Now, David was not unappreciative of this singing brother, his trumpet playing brother. So when he wrote the 39th Psalm, He dedicated it to Jeduthun. And it says to the chief musician, even to Jeduthun, a psalm of David. David wrote it when he was old.

Now, let’s read it. I said, I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with my tongue: I will keep my mouth with a bridle, while the wicked is before me. I was dumb with silence, I held my peace, even from good; and my sorrow was stirred. My heart was hot within me, while I was musing the fire burned: then spake I with my tongue, Lord, make me to know mine end, and the measure of my days, what it is: that I may know how frail I am. Behold, thou hast made my days as an handbreadth; and mine age is as nothing before thee: verily every man at his best state is altogether vanity. Selah. Surely every man walketh in a vain shew: surely they are disquieted in vain: he heapeth up riches, and knoweth not who shall gather them. And now, Lord, what wait I for? my hope is in thee. Deliver me from all my transgressions: make me not the reproach of the foolish. I was dumb, I opened not my mouth; because thou didst it. Remove thy stroke away from me: I am consumed by the blow of thine hand. When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity, thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth: surely every man is vanity. Selah. Hear my prayer, O Lord, and give ear unto my cry; hold not thy peace at my tears: for I am a stranger with thee, and a sojourner, as all my fathers were. O spare me, that I may recover strength, before I go hence, and be no more.

Now, there is a little heavy note here, and it would be relatively easy to bog down in this psalm, for the man who wrote it was not in a jovial mood. This is the prayer of a man of wide experience and great intelligence. This man had obviously lived a long time. He was not a novice. He was not a new fellow lately come up, but he had lived a long time. And there were many things, no doubt, that he used to think he knew, that he wasn’t so sure about now. That the mellowing influences of time had gone over his mind, like the sun over the fields and forests in the fall of the year. And David knew there were some things that he didn’t know. Blessed was David when he found that out.

In Rochester last week, in my closing morning message, the chairman got up and said, now, we have a few minutes before closing time. And if any of you would like to ask Mr. Tozer a question, be brief with your questions. He hadn’t told me that, so I got up and I said, Mr. Chairman, you’re 25 years too late to turn the meeting over to me like this. Twenty-five years ago, I could have answered any question anybody here could have asked, but now I beg to be excused. So they dismissed the meeting.

It’s a blessed thing to find out that you don’t know something, and to be joyful about it and buoyant, cheerful, and know that you don’t know it, and be perfectly willing to wait until that day when with a touch of His tender fingers, God steps your IQ up 3,000,000%. And then you will be so blessed and so intelligent, that looking back upon your earthly sojourn, you will think you were a moron for sure. For just one touch of the wonderful fingers of the Holy Ghost, and you will know as you are known.

Now, David knew that. And so he didn’t presume to all knowledge. He was a very humble man. And he said in this 39th Psalm that he kept his mouth shut. He kept it, he used the word dumb here. We use it, not in the sense David did. He meant silent. He said I was dumb with silence. And yet, when he tried to keep still, he couldn’t keep still, because the fervor in his heart made him talk. He said, when I was musing the fire burned and then I spake with my tongue. If we could have it a rule of our lives, that we never talked on spiritual subjects until the fire has burned. And then out of the burning fire of inward experience, we spake with our tongues.

They say there’s an old saying that some preachers preach because they have to say something. And some preachers preach because they have something to say. There’s only a matter of juggling words around and you have the same words. But the difference is as wide as the ocean between the man who talks because he has to say something.

It’s Saturday night again, so help me, and I’ve got to get ready for tomorrow because they expect me to say something. But this man of God said, I tried to keep from talking. And I was done with silence, and I held my peace even from good. I wouldn’t talk at all, and my heart got hot in me. And while I was musing, the fire burned, and then spake I with my tongue. Now, that was the man of God. He was talking out of a vast experience and a broad knowledge of life.

And now David, when he wrote this Psalm, not only knew certain things, but he had lived certain things. And I want to say to you younger people, that is, younger in years, that there are two kinds of knowledge. There is the knowledge of information and the knowledge of experience. You can go to an encyclopedia and get knowledge. But it takes life to give you experience. You will never know anything really until you’ve lived it.

You can know about a thing by being told about it. You can read about it, but you can’t know it until you have lived through it. That’s why I always insist that it is more important to know less and to live through it than it is to know a great deal more, and never get to it. That’s why we turn out such wooden preachers from a lot of our schools. We take them in, isolate them and cram them, and then ordain them, and put them in a pulpit. And they are like a beetle carrying a bale of cotton. They take a text and it’s just too big for them. They know it. And they’ve got their well-marked Bible there. And they can tell you where it’s found, and maybe give you the Greek or the Hebrew root. But before the people they flounder helplessly because they know so much that they don’t know. They have so much information that they never lived through. Better to be a living dog than a dead lion said the Holy Ghost back in the Old Testament. Better know as much as a little poodle and be alive than to have all your head filled with information and yet be a stuffed lion. It’s better to know a little and know it well.

Well, that’s why a lot of these little old saints that run around are such a blessing to everybody because they don’t know very much. But what they know they know with intensity. It’s the difference between a pile of junk iron in the backyard and a razor blade. A razor blade doesn’t know so much, but it’s mighty sharp and keen and what it does know it knows sharply. But there’s a whole truckload of junk metal in the backyard. But you couldn’t shave with it in thousand years. You couldn’t cut bread with it nor meat. It just lives up there. But the razor is smaller, but it has lived. It has been in the fire and in the heat and under the hammer’s steady beat. I think that’s in a hymn somewhere. And it has lived.

Now, David was a man that had lived. You meet them. We talked so much about Brother Hare. The only thing about Brother Hare is he just lives what he knows, that’s all. So, he lives it. He sat up here in my office and I told him I was going to interview him. I said, I think that some of the things God has been showing you ought to get into print; and I’d like to write it up for you and get the people to reading it. He broke down and began to cry and he said I’m afraid of losing my power with God. He says, I don’t want to lose my power. He said they wanted to send a reporter out to talk to me, but I wouldn’t talk to him. I don’t want to lose my powers he said.

Well, he’s lived it, brother. Now, he hasn’t got a head full of it, but he’s got a heart full and he’s lived it. David lived this. And when you talk to this man or when he talks to you, you don’t need to discount him. He’s been in there. He’s seen it. And now he’s calmly speaking out of a vast background of experience. And here’s what he said. He said I am a stranger and a sojourner as my fathers were.

An intelligent young man or woman usually goes through several stages of development with regard to the past. There is that bright-face, adolescent, early youth experience. When everything more than 10 years old, is old and bearded and passe. Then, as he goes on, he begins to appreciate the things that were. And then he gets if he lives it, gets geared into yesterday.

So to Him there is no yesterday nor tomorrow and a today but an everlasting now and He sees how wondrous it is to be geared up and back into the eternal yesterdays. And He goes marching through time, like a fish through the ocean with time and eternity all around about Him. And His appreciation for our yesterdays as one man call it called it grows upon him as gets older. You can always tell a novice in the things of God by His attitude toward the past.

And you can tell a rich, ripe saint by his attitude toward the past. It is not that the rich, right saint believes it because they wore their coats up like this back in 1904, that we ought to wear them that way now. It isn’t that He glorifies the incidentals of the past. That’s not it. He doesn’t glorify the buggy and then the spinning wheel and the incidentals of yesterday. But He glorifies the residium of gold and goodness and intelligence and piety and spirituality that has piled up like a great mound of rich minerals. And he lives in that and by that and out from that, and his tomorrows are grounded in his yesterday’s, and he rests down on his todays knowing that he’s got the backing of his yesterdays. That is experience, spiritual experience and it’s good to have that.

If I were a layman, you know what I’d like to have for a pastor? I’d like to have a young man with the experience of an old man, and then I’d be all set. Wouldn’t I? But you know, you can’t get them that way. You have to take a young man and then pray for him and live along with him till you break him in. And the young pastor is usually like a new shoe, all right with a lot of potentialities and a good future, but a little painful because he knows more than he’s lived through.

And then the old fellow when he gets too old and begins to die down from the top. Then he becomes a problem maybe. But it would be wonderful, wouldn’t it, if you could have a young man with a young man’s bright-eyed enthusiasm with the experience and mellowness of the older man. There have been a few. I believe Murray McCheyne was a man like that. David Brainard was a man like that. But usually, it takes the average one of us with limited intelligence, it takes us half a lifetime to learn to live and then another half to get ready to die.

So, the world doesn’t really get much good out of us. We serve an apprenticeship and about the time that we’re to be declared ready to go to work, why, they send the wagon around for us. But this man, David, had lived a long time. He’d suffered a lot and he’d wept a lot. Now, I suppose that there isn’t a man in Scripture, that bawled more than David did. Read the book of Psalms and see they’re salty with human tears.

And yet, there wasn’t a bolder, braver man than David. He never ran from anybody. He ran at them. And he was a soldier, a strong soldier. But he was a sensitive man, a man of great inward conflict and fiery zeal and faith that geared into heaven. So, he was a mystical man with heaven very near to his fingertips. You only had to raise his head a little to see over in and the contrast between what he felt he wanted to be and what he was, was always deviling David. Many a night David got a little sleep, but his pillow in the morning was damp with salty tears. He was a man who lived and yet there wasn’t a happier man in the entire Bible as David. The book of Psalms leaps with delight. It leaps with the joyous abandon of a young child picking flowers on a June morning. The Book of Psalms is the happiest book in the entire Bible unless it is Philippians and Philippians, written by Paul, another old man who lived in jail.

Nowadays, you don’t dare talk about death nor jail nor hell nor dying nor old age nor anything serious. People want to be entertained and they want to give back and forth their quips and the, I know the French word but can’t pronounce it. That’s the day we want that, and we say, I liked that fella. He’s a card because he’s a scream. He’s got a wit there. He just tosses the ball of wit around back and forth.

And we want that now but Paul and David and Abraham and the rest of them, the one about whom we preach all the time. They didn’t care so much for the cute saying as they did for the eternal truth. We’re living in the age of the smart aleck now. And it doesn’t make any difference if it’s true, if you can say it in a cute way. Give it a backlash and make it click, why, it’s all well, David said, my days are as a handbreadth.

Now here was David’s estimate of his own life. And I should very much like to cheer you younger people and console you older ones. But I’m preaching the Bible, and the Bible says that the days of a man are as a handbreadth, the breadth of your hand, that’s the days of a man. Now, that is the wise man’s measure of his life. He says it’s just a handbreadth. Yes, I’d be saying, my hand is pretty big. I got big hands from working on a farm until I was 15. So, I take it that that would be five inches across. Let’s call it five inches. Some of you ladies of course, would have a much smaller handbreadth. But David said that the life of a man is but a handbreadth.

We hear the baby has been born. The Robinsons or the Smiths have a little baby, and the news goes around. And we say, what did they call him? Well, they said they called him John. They called him John after an old uncle. So, his name was John, Anderson or Robertson, whichever it was I said.

And so, we have John Robinson. Pretty soon he toddles and after that he talks and then after that he walks right and gets out and plays in the backyard and then goes to school and then gets into high school and then gets into young manhood. And we think it’s been a long time. But it isn’t very long. From the time the announcement goes out, the Robinsons have a new baby. They called him John, God winks His eye once and we read in the newspaper obituary, John Robinson died last night at his home in such and such. The same man and how long has it been? It’s been the wink of God’s eye. It’s been an handbreadth. That’s all.

That’s how long you’re around here. And that’s why I’m a serious preacher. Even though occasionally I spoil it by, what my boys would say is a half witticism. But I’m serious because this is a serious business, my friends. And you and I ought to be serious-minded people. David was, for David said, my life is about a handbreadth. And then he said, I’m a stranger and I’m a sojourner as my fathers were. He’s just here for a little while. David never accepted this world as being his home.

There’s a difference as wide as heaven between the man who is here and accepted as his home and the man who is only sojourning here. In the old country part of the United States where they meet in tents or in camp meetings and have straw. You sometimes hear some marvelous theology packed into some of the old prayers they make. I like to sit and listen. I think God forgives me. I’m not praying. I’m listening.

And I believe that’s all right occasionally. And I like to hear some of those old prayers and some of the dear old sisters who pray, O God, help us to wear this world like a loose garment. I like that very well because that’s it, brother. You can’t get out of the world. Even Jesus said they are in the world. But they wear it as a light garment. It is something that can be zipped down and tossed off when you hear the trumpet. It isn’t something you’re all bound up in. Lazarus in the grave was all bound.

And the Archangel Gabriel couldn’t have taken him away. He had to be unbound. But God never means His revived and redeemed people thus to be bound. He means that we should live here and, in the world, wearing the world like a loose garment, ready to throw it off and go heavenward at the slightest impulse of the Holy Ghost. And he said I am a stranger here. I just came for a little while. I think about people and how much like children we are.

The Bible often likens this to children and uses a child as an example of the profoundest spiritual truth. We’re like a child. We come into the world. We have our little playground, and we have our little front yard. And usually there’s a fence around it, and everybody wishes he was on the other side. And some migrate and get over there. But they find it’s the same as it was on this side of the gate. But there’s a little child. He’s pushed around and disciplined and fed, and he grows some and gets hurt a lot and cries some and laughs some.

And then the evening time comes around, and the little fellow, they tell him now you got to go to bed. But no matter how long they’ve been up, they never want to go to bed. I never saw one yet that ever did. I have seen them little ones fall asleep on their highchair. But that was sheer necessity. That wasn’t the volitional. But little children, they don’t want to go to bed. You always have to shoo them off and run them off to bed. And then tell them stories until you wear them out. To get a child to go to bed; they just don’t want to go to bed.

And God looks down at this little tribe of flesh and blood with all its cares and fears. And he finds that we don’t want to go to bed. We just don’t want to. God says it’s appointed unto man once to die and after that good judgment. God says you have got to go to bed, son. You’re only here for a little while, that’s all. Your life is like a handbreadth, and one of these days you’re going to lie down and sleep, sleep till the morning, sleep till you’re awake. But nobody wants to sleep.

Once in a while, some poor, reckless fellow, mad and filled with conflicts that are like storms at sea will kill himself, but it’s not many. Mostly we don’t want to go to bed. We get diseases and we run to doctors and divine healers, and we send off for pills and we hope for the best. We don’t want to sleep, nobody wants to. I have looked at people so old, you wonder why they didn’t just reach down and loose their strings and go off to heaven, but they don’t want to. They still want to stay around, this veil of tears, they still want to be here, but God has to sometimes tell us, now, go on to bed.

He had to tell Moses that. Moses was 120 years old, and he was overdue. So, God called Moses and He said, Moses go on up on Mount Moriah and go to bed. And Moses went up on Mount Moriah and he said, Father, I’m not sick and I’m not blind and I can hear as well as I ever could. And I have as much strength as Iever had and the sun shining bright, and I don’t want to die. And God said, Moses, lie down and die. He’s the only man I’ve found in the Bible that died completely well because God told him to.

And I have often wondered how he accomplished it. Did you ever stop to think, how if the Lord told you to die, how you’d work it. I wouldn’t know how to work it, would you? Now, He didn’t say commit suicide. He didn’t say that. You know, the only thing I could think of to do would be to stop breathing. But then you’d feel that sense of suffocation and you’d be breathing first thing you know.

But Moses simply laid down at the command of God and stopped breathing. And there laid his body, and his soul was with the God who gave it. And the devil came for his body and the archangel Michael rebuked him and God took the body and buried it. And no man knows his grave until this hour. Moses even didn’t want to go to bed. And Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the rest waited as long as they could. There’s something to me very tender about that.

Our life is a handbreadth, and we are as sojourners here and as strangers on the earth. And he says, man, at his best state, is all together vanity. Now, man at his worst state may be less than vanity, but at his best state he is no more than vanity. He equates with vanity, as they say. He is vain. And of course, vanity in the Old Testament means emptiness. it means unsubstantiality. It means the condition of being delusive and disappointing.

I remember in classical literature only one example that comes to my mind now that illustrates vanity. Vanity was down in the realms of the blessed or the realm of the dead. And he saw an old girlfriend that had been his sweetheart by the name of Beatrice. And she died before they could marry on Earth. and she had died, and he had never forgotten her and had waited to see her in the next world and, you know, it’s all that kind of stuff, more or less goofy, but anyhow it illustrates something.

And this, this donkey was looking around and suddenly before his wandering, and delighted mind, Beatrice appeared. And he forgot his etiquette and raced up to her and threw his arms around her to pull her to his bosom, but his fingers came back empty to his breasts. It was not Beatrice, but a phantom. It was only a phantom. And he was hugging to his breast a vain delusion and vanity. Now, that at least illustrates out of classical literature that which the Holy Ghost said, that man at his best stages is all together vanity.

That’s why you never can go along with the world and be a very good Christian. And that’s why the better Christian you are, the more you’ll see through the world. I say frequently that the world had better stop lying to me, because I can see through them long ago. They don’t have it. They patronize us and look down on us and leave the impression by the fling of the head and a shrug of the shoulder and raising the eyebrows. They leave the impression that they’ve got it. And we poor Christians don’t know what we’re talking about.

Don’t you be taken in by the world. The world doesn’t have a thing that will last. Man at his best stage is  all together vanity. And we have our ambitions and our plans. Some would like to be the richest person in the world, I suppose, in order that they might be the richest person in the graveyard at last. And some would like to be the best-looking woman in America so she could be Miss America. And some would like to be the best singer in the world, so they get the top billing. We have our ambitions. And there is a delusive and deceptive philosophy abroad.

That that is sound, that that sound, that if we get adjusted to that way of looking at things, we will be normal. But that if we don’t get adjusted to that there’s something wrong with our head. They can’t talk that way to me. I’ve got a sneaking suspicion, somebody’s head has got a bat in it, but I don’t believe it’s the Christian. I believe it’s the man who accepts without challenge the values of the world. The young woman who dreams on her bed at night and rises in the morning and thinks of nothing else would sell her soul in order that she might be a movie queen or that you might have some high position and get her picture on the front of magazines.

And then they tell me that’s normal. That’s life. That’s it. And get adjusted to that and yield to it and let that become a part of your makeup. And you’ll never have a nervous breakdown or blow a fuse. You’ll be alright if you get adjusted. You mean to tell me that Dante would have been sane if he had gotten adjusted to a phantom and that made love to spook?

Then he would tell me that he would be wise. He would have been a fool, ten times over a fool. The world doesn’t have it. Tomorrow morning, there’ll be a newspaper on your porch. And if you’re as silly as I’m afraid you are, some of you will be reading it while you squirt your grapefruit. And you’ll get the philosophy out of it and you’ll get its values. And now let’s see this is the 27th. All the magazines are out now they are out over these last few weeks. The monthlies and the weeklies will be out in the middle of the week.

And we read them, and we allow that spirit to enter into us, Time and Life and all the rest. Pretty soon, we’ve got the cheap little worldly, carnal philosophy that’s founded upon delusion and that glorifies phantom. Into the middle of all this comes the great, tall figure who brought life and immortality to light through the gospel, who went down into death and pulled its ugly teeth and broke its damnable jaws and came out of the grave the third day and stands with a world on His shoulders and says, come unto me and I will give you a rest. We Christians are not to be pitied, and we certainly ought not to envy those who make love to phantoms and glorify spooks. We thank God we have sound things and reality and truth. But the world hasn’t it.

What does the poet say, lasting joys and solid pleasures only Zion’s children know. Solid joys and lasting pleasures only Zion’s children know. The rest of them have nothing. You could go with me tonight. I got a letter from her just this last week.

If you could go with me tonight, and cared to, I could take you in a 40-minute drive from here, 30-minute drive into the ghetto section, one of the ghetto sections of this city in where murder, rape and brutality and drunkenness and every kind of vice is rampant. And I can take you upstairs and down a hall where a rattail light let down on a wire burns without shade to light the way through the ratty, spooky hall. And I can take you into a room, a room where a woman sleeps on a dirty or at least an unkempt bed with old clippings piled from the floor as high as you can reach. But strange as wonderful she’s a Christian. She’s an old actress and trooper who traveled all over the country with her husband as a theatrical feature until he died, and she got old and crippled and arthritic.

And there she is waiting for the Lord for she became a Christian in her old age. I’ve been down to see her, and Chase and I went down one time. I frankly admit I was scared. He acted normal. But I was afraid. It was after night. And I didn’t know when one of those shadows would suddenly materialize into a man with a club, but it didn’t. God protected us and we went up there, gave communion to the older lady. Now, she’s an old actress.

And she has her old clippings there, yet I guess She knows a good many of the old troopers. She told us that she had just received a basket of fruit, or box of food and fruit from Jim Jordan and Molly Jordan. I forget now what they call them. McGee. Fibber McGee. She said, we just received a box of fruit from them, in memory of the old days when they played the circuits together. Now there she is. Now they send her a box of fruit occasionally. But what’s the world done for her? The world laughs and claps. And as she did her dance in the days when she had a beautiful figure to look at, they drool at the mouth and their eyes got unnaturally bright, and they watched her and made perhaps obscene comments as she danced.

And then they forgot her and picked up somebody younger that they would rather hear or see and she faded away. And now, if the Lord hadn’t found her and she hadn’t been converted, she’d have been one more forgotten old human wreck. And they’re all around, all around.

I went down here in my favorite drugstore the other day and I saw a magazine, and on the cover of that magazine was a famous actress, getting along little now. But she’s one of the most famous of the actresses. You would know her name in a second if I mentioned even the first name, because you couldn’t get away from it even though you were as chaste as snow and as pure as ice water, you ought to run into this old lady somewhere. You can see it all. Do you know what, I’ve seen better looking things in my dreams riding on brooms.

Now, I tell you seriously, I tell you seriously, she is a high concentration of brass and burnt-out sex and homeliness. And a voice like our rusty buzzsaw and a vocabulary like a drunk sailor. And I’m not telling you who she is, but her father was a senator. And I pray that God Almighty will keep contempt out of my heart because contempt is not a good Christian emotion.

Contempt means there’s pride present. But it’s awfully hard for me to keep from shuttering and turning my back on that degenerate, leftover, dragged in, pulled in as a rat pulled in by a collie dog. And there she is, the stringy, sexy, crude remnant of a human being. She’s now in early 50s, I think. Give her a few more years and she’ll go down the sink. And her memory won’t even be in the minds of the generation. What has life done for her. All life has done for her, is cynically etch, sin and hell on her painted countenance. That’s all.

Life at its best is vanity. And the best the world has to offer anybody is vanity. And I’ve picked out of course, I admit, I have picked out a very low case there. But the Bible says that man at his best, he’s vanity. The statesman that would sell his mother-in-law to get an extra vote; that would sell his honor to get a vote. That statesman, he comes in when the band plays and he’s forgotten and dies and is no more. He’s a vain thought and a vain show. A landowner buys his land, gets rich and dies, and it’s all a vain show.

The famous author, he autographs his book. Every once in a while, they’ll say such and such will be at the book store or somewhere else, and he’ll be autographing books and you go in and there he sits looking like the high concentration of all intelligence and sophistication. God says he’s a vain show. The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power and all the beauty, all that wealth there gave, await alike the inevitable hour and the path of glory leads up to the grave. There’s nothing anybody can do brethren.

Shakespeare’s bust, is somewhere with copies over all around in the libraries of the world, but unless Shakespeare found God through Jesus Christ and changed mortality for immortality, and change the earthly life for eternal life, he’s a flop and the failure. And not all of his fine sayings of rounded periods and brilliance for he was one of the world’s most brilliant men. Not all of his human brilliance can do anything for him now. 

Now he’s gone. His life is a handbreadth and he’s gone. What’s does the world got to offer me? And I answer, nothing at all. But God had called this man. And so, he was saying, now, what have I got? What is there now? The Mercy of God is like a ocean. The mercy of God is all around about us. And God is calling us vain creatures’ home, calling us home from vanity to the Rock of Ages, calling us home to the handbreadth life of ours, from that to that eternal life which was with the Father, and was manifested unto us, calling us from the cheap and tawdry values that the world offers to the things that can never perish nor pass away.

That’s the ground we rest upon my listening friends. It’s this that leads us to believe in Christ and in God. Not a desire to get our way, not a desire to have our prayers answered, but a desire to escape the clinging folds of mortality; the desire to escape the emptiness and the cheat and the delusion that is human life and enter into the life that is God. That’s what the church is for, not to entertain morons, but to save hungry-hearted men and women that are sick of being cheated all the time and deceived.

The world is a cheat and a lie, and the whole Bible says it is. But Jesus came to it nevertheless and took upon Him the form of a man and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel, so that there isn’t a dark cave in the world that hasn’t a little light in it now. There isn’t a human heart, however dark, but what can have the light of God’s love flash into it? For the light of the world is Jesus. What wait I for said David, and I asked you what you’re waiting for?

What are you waiting for? Some of you Christians, you are believers after a fashion, but you don’t live for God. You know you don’t live for God. As soon as you get out of here you go clunking downstairs and out onto the sidewalk, and you forget in no time everything you ever heard here. You don’t live it. What are you waiting for? Waiting until a better time comes? There will never be a better time. Waiting till you get better? You’ll never get better. You might as well wait to get younger as to wait to get better. Waiting till you’ll live a better life? You might as well wait for a dirty room to get clean.

No, you’ll never get better, you’ll never get younger, you’ll never get pure. There is only one thing to do and that is while the gates are still open, to come where the fountain flows for sin and uncleanness. Come and bring your empty earthen vessels clean through Jesus precious blood. Come bring your dirty vessels. Bring your life as it is, not waiting to clean yourself up and to educate your soul. But coming just as a you are without one plea coming to the foot of the cross. There never was anybody so far away, but the Lord could find them in the flash of an eye. There was never anybody so far down, but Jesus Christ had gone down further. There never was anybody so foul, but the blood of Jesus Christ could cleanse it from sin.

In some of the old tracts that they used to circulate years ago, there was the story of the Christian worker that went into the saloon, the old saloon, before the day of Roosevelt’s tavern. An indoor saloon, the old saw dust saloon, tobacco spit and sawdust and cigar ashes trampled on to the floor, soured and rancid from days and days of it. And a Christian worker went in, went up to the bar, began to talk to a sinner, a man who was completely down and out, and he said, the Lord can save you. And he said, you go talk to people other than I. Go talk to other people. I’m past it. He said, I left my home years ago. I’ve forsaken my family. I’m a liar and a thief and a drinker. I am everything, he said. I am so dirty; nothing can ever cleanse me. There was a glass of water on the bar. He looked down and here was a rose laying that had been tossed into the saw dust and had been kicked around, covered now with dirt and tobacco juice and cigar ashes.

And he picked it up; it was still relatively fresh. He picked it up and dipped it in this glass of water and then held it up. It was as clean as when it came off of the bush. And he said, you see what can happen to something that’s been trampled and kicked around in the dirt. And he said I know somebody that washes quieter and cleaner than all the waters of the world. It is the blood of Jesus Christ, God’s Son. And this poor bum bowed his head and tears came down his poor, unshaven cheeks. And he was led to the Lord Jesus Christ by the simple illustration of a cleansed rose. No, no, that is not even a good illustration. For the Lord doesn’t take a poor battered rose and cleanse it. That helped of course and it pointed the way, but that’s not enough. He does more than that. If he could have created a new rose where the old Rose was. And then if he could have dipped in the waters of immortality, that rose and said you’ll never be dirty again, then you’ll be getting near to it. For that’s what redemption does.

What are we waiting for? What are you waiting for? You that have been hanging around the edge so long. You’ll never get younger. You’ll never get better. You’ll never get pure. The grace of God will never get freer. The blood of Christ will never get richer. The call of God will never get tender or more persuasive. The gospel is for you, Sir, and for me. Men and women born for a handbreadth. Men and women who are at our best state, are all together, emptiness and vanity. God gave the gospel to such people as we. God wrought the gospel, man didn’t.

The Gospel never was concocted by a committee. Never an archangel had a hand in compounding the gospel of Jesus. And when God wanted His detergent to cleanse the souls of men, He never called in the scientists of the world, nor the angels of heaven. But he made His own gospel, and he gave it to the world. And you could not add anything to it. Not all the wisdom could add anything to it. And not all power for it’s all man needs. It’s all a guilty sinner needs, is Jesus, only Jesus.

So, you that are not saved, why aren’t you? What are you waiting for? What wait I for, my hope is in thee. You’ll never get help anywhere else. And you’ll never get better. So, take Him and seek Him and find Him and it’ll be your precious treasure forever.

O Lord, save some, I don’t know why. And it’s that strange confusion within the heart. Why I don’t come, I don’t know. I don’t either. Except the devil has charmed us and hypnotized us. And the Lord waits. And you Christians, you Christians that know you’re not living as you should live.

You know you’re not living right? Why don’t you do something about it now? Why don’t you start now? You’ll never get any better and you’ll never get any younger. Start now. O Lord, what wait I for? My hope is in thee. Let’s pray. Let’s talk to the Lord about it.

Dear Lord Jesus, we say with thy servant David, our hope is in Thee. We say with Peter, Lord, to whom shall we go? Where Lord, can we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life. Lord Jesus, there’s science and psychology and learning and religion and preoccupation, but not one of them afford a hiding place against the storm. Not one of them has a fountain where we can clean our souls, not one. Lord, Thou alone is our hope. Thou alone is our hope. We bless Thee. We worship Thee. We praise Thee. We magnify Thee for Thy precious blood, the blood that cleansed Paul a murderer and John Newton, the slave of slaves.

Mel Trotter, Jerry McCauley, Billy Sunday, and 10,000 times 10,000, whose names are never known in public, but who were sinners deep died and lost, but were washed by Holy Blood, cleansed, renewed and are now happy in Jesus. O Lord, the many who have gone on and the many who are still here.

How we thank Thee for that perfect gospel. We don’t apologize for it. We don’t even try to understand it. We only know that simple trust in the Precious Blood makes the soul clean and brings us into knowledge of eternal life through Jesus Christ the Savior. We pray thee for these friends who are here tonight. O God, let them not go out untouched with thoughts of holy things. Let them not go out and influenced by impulses of the Spirit.

Let them not go out as they came in, but sobered and thoughtful. We don’t want them to go out heavy hearted nor gloomy. For there’s no gloom, no heaviness in the cheerful call of the Holy Ghost. But we pray Thee they go out serious and sober and thoughtful and saying to themselves, I’m here for a little time and then I’ll go. What am I waiting around for? Why all this postponement? Why this loitering? Why this tarrying?

O Lord Jesus, some of us were never saved in church at all. Some of his haunted a attic room or a basement room or a park or somewhere there and loneliness he poured out our wreath and raised our Bethel and met the Lord we pray there be some here tonight, that before the midnight bells toll that they might have found Thee, that they might find the Savior. Bless Thou the saved tonight, Lord Jesus. These who are unsaved to bring them in.

For the young folks that are friendly, nice kids, but O God, so far from Thee and their feelings and emotions and impulses and ambitions, so horribly carnal. Yet they say they’re saved. We pray for them. O Christ, may they go on unto perfection. May they leave the first beginnings of the things of the Lord and put behind them the world and under their feet, the carnal things of flesh, and rise on Jacob’s Ladder and seek the high lands and the pure, sun kissed hilltops where the air is rare and sweet embracing, where they can see over Jordan and behold the bright tops of the City of God. Grant this we pray, for Jesus’ holy sake. Amen.