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Tozer Talks

The Victorious Leading of the Lord

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

May 25, 1958

Please turn to the 23rd chapter of Exodus. Exodus 23, everybody, let’s look at that, beginning with verse 20 on. This has been and will be, for some time, the scriptural basis for my series of talks on the victorious leading of the Lord, the angel before thee.

Now, the passage I particularly want to use is this one. If thou shalt indeed obey His voice, and do all that I speak, then I will be an enemy unto thine enemies, and an adversary unto thine adversaries. In verse 27, I will send my fear before thee, and will destroy all the people to whom thou shalt come. And I will make all thine enemies turn their backs unto thee.

Now, it is necessary, if we’re going to get anything out of this, it’s necessary that we believe. Once more I repeat that this has been my life chapter for thirty years, more than thirty, about thirty-two. And I have paid no attention to those who would not accept it as being for New Testament Christians. I believe that it is. And in order for us to get anything out of it, we’ve got to believe.

Not that this was written to us, for we well know better than that. We know historically this was written to Israel. But as I have tried patiently to explain from night to night, the spiritual laws here disclosed are operative in the kingdom of God.If we do not believe this, we limit ourselves tremendously. If we insist upon putting everything in its dispensational pigeonhole, we end up with nothing but the Book of Romans, and we don’t understand it.

But we’ve got to believe. And if you don’t believe, if thou shalt not believe, thou shalt not be established. And if you don’t believe, then I have no message for you at all. But if you believe, and will believe, that the spiritual laws here disclosed are operative now in the kingdom of God, I wish God’s people could see that. That while there are different dispensations, there is only one God and only one human race. And God never changes his mind and works one way one time and one way another.

There are those who believe that in the Old Testament, God saved by law, and in the New Testament he’s saved by grace, and no sillier thought could ever be entertained. A man would have to spin around for a half an hour to get that much many bubbles in his head to believe a thing like that. That in the Old Testament, law, men were saved by keeping law. In the New Testament, they are saved by believing. In the Old Testament, they were saved by law. In the New Testament, they are saved by grace. All this is wrong. It never was taught in the Bible. It isn’t taught in the Bible. It is a fiction, pure and simple, imposed upon us by Bible teachers.

The simple fact is God never saved anybody from Abel to this hour in any other way than by grace through faith. And you’ll find as much about faith in the Old Testament as you do in the New, and you’ll find as much about grace in the Old Testament as you do in the New.

The word, grace, occurs over and over in the book of Psalms. I don’t think the word grace, the actual word, grace, would be found as often in the Old Testament, but the idea of grace goes all through the Old Testament Scriptures. God saves by grace in the Old Testament as He saves by grace in the New. And a righteous man is justified by his faith in the Old Testament as in the New.

In fact, when Paul wanted to get established in the doctrine of justification by faith, he had to go back to the Old Testament to get it. And it was David in the 32nd Psalm who talked about the man who was justified by believing, and it was the minor prophet in the Old Testament who talked about justification by faith. So that the same spiritual principles that operated back there operate here. It’s such a liberating thing if the people of God could only believe that. We must believe, I say, that these laws, our spiritual principles are ours and they’re operative now toward God’s redeemed children everywhere.

Now, if we don’t believe this, by our unbelief we can hinder ourselves. We can hinder the operation of these laws by not believing in them. We can impede our progress in the Christian life, and most people’s progress has been impeded terribly. We can interfere with the Lord’s leading of us, and we can wander aimlessly around in the desert when we ought to be over in the land feeding on grapes of Eshcol.

Now, I want to talk a bit before I enter into the main part of the sermon about how you can identify unbelief. Unbelief is not the attitude of the atheist. Unbelief believes all the promises. That’s the subtle thing about unbelief, it believes all the promises. Every last one of them. Unbelief, I suppose there are some unbelievers that don’t believe anything in the Bible, but I’m talking a bit about unbelief up on the level of Christians and in the kingdom of God.

Unbelief believes all the promises for someone else, somewhere else, some other time. That’s how you can always tell unbelief. Unbelief says, I believe some other time, not now. I believe that God will do these things for some other people, not us, somewhere else, not here.

Those are the three errors that unbelief makes. And faith changes it around, and faith says, if some other time, why not now? If some other place, why not here? And if someone else, why not us? You can always tell faith, for faith is ready to believe if God did it for Moses, He’ll do it for me. If He did it for Isaiah, He’ll do it for you. Faith is always ready to say, if some other time, some other place, to some other people, why not now, here, and us?

Now, let us look. If thou shalt indeed obey my word and do all I speak. Now, the question comes up, does this disqualify everybody who has slipped? Since the Lord says, if thou shalt indeed obey and do all that I speak, then does this disqualify the people who have failed God, who have slipped, who have failed, who have lapsed, who have disobeyed, somewhere back down the line? Is everybody that has ever failed or lapsed or fallen, tripped or fallen on his face in the kingdom of God, is he mournfully to walk away into the shadows and say, this spiritual principle doesn’t apply to me because it applies to the person who is obedient, and I have failed the Lord? Well, let me answer it. Circumstances being what they are, and what are the circumstances? Well, the circumstances of our fall, to begin with. We are a fallen race. The circumstances of our inborn depravity, and the circumstance of our weakness and of our flesh, and the circumstance of there being a devil and sin in the world, that being true, then God could not possibly be naive enough to make His plan depend upon the indefectibility of His people.

I’ll explain what I mean by that. I mean that if the Lord is going to do anything for us at all, knowing us as He does, and He does know us, taking into account all the circumstances, and He does take them into account, if God is going to do anything for us, then He does not make His promises dependent upon our never defecting, our never lapsing, our never failing. For Him to do so would indicate imperfection in the Godhead.

Because if God believed in me and you, and said, Now I will bless my people, and I will make promises, and I send an angel before them, but only on the ground that they be perfect, then God would be starry-eyed and unrealistic, and He wouldn’t be the wise God that He is. But being the wise God that He is, and knowing us as He knows us, and being perfect in all His attributes, then God has thought ahead of us on this, and God has fixed it so, while He doesn’t want us to be imperfect, and He doesn’t excuse us when we fail, He has a way of curing us.

A mother does not want her children to be sick. She doesn’t want them ever to run a fever or to get a disease. She doesn’t want it, but she’s studied up and she’s in touch with her doctor, and if anything goes wrong, she thinks ahead and goes after it.

And so, God says, little children, these things write I unto you, that you what? Sin not. I don’t want you to sin. Don’t imagine I’m preaching here that imperfections and falling and lapsing is a part of God’s plan for us. It definitely is not a part of God’s plan for us.

But God being the realistic, wise, perfect God that He is, knows us too well to trust us too far. So, He has fixed it so that if we should fail Him, instead of surrendering and saying, O God, I give up, I’m going to go back into Egypt, we say, O God, pardon me, forgive me for Jesus’ sake and I’ll start over right here.

I want to read what a dear old German said. He said, it’s further written that love hides a multitude of sins. Perfect love and confidence cannot be where sins are, but love does hide completely. Love knows nothing of sin, not that man has not sinned, but sins are blotted out at once by love and they vanish as if they had not been. This is because whatever God does, He does completely like a cup running over. Whom He forgives, He forgives utterly and at once, much preferring great forgiveness to little.

Complete confidence is like that, he says. Moreover, to be forgiven much is to love much, as our Lord Jesus Christ said. Now that’s a quotation from an old devotional theologian of several hundred years ago, and he might have said that to us just five minutes before and would be as fresh, it would be no less fresh.

Now this, I’d like to tell you most, most to encourage your heart, that the Lord wants us to be obedient and He will not overlook, He won’t let us pile up a lot of wrongdoings, He won’t let us go one way and have Him try to lead us the other. There’s got to be an approximation of faith and belief and obedience, and if we should fall, He’s a Shepherd and He’ll help us to our feet again if we want to get up.

Granted that, now, and granted that this is for you and me, that if it was for Fletcher, it’s for us. If it was for Calvin, it’s for me. If it was for Wesley, it’s for you. If it was for anybody, it’s for anybody. And until you get there, you won’t have the buoyancy in your spirit that ought to be there.

Now notice what He says, I will be an enemy to thine enemy and an adversary to thine adversary. Now why does He talk about enemies and adversaries? Because He’s going before you to lead you into that glorious place He has for you right now down in this world, and He being the realistic God that He is and knowing what He knows, He knows that the devil won’t take this lying down. I admire the old scoundrel. I at least like a man who will fight for his rights, or fight for the thing he conceives to be his rights, and the old devil won’t allow any Christian to take one forward step without protesting it.

Modern teachers are trying to make pussycats out of Christians, but the devil’s no pussycat. He’s a roaring lion going about seeking whom he may devour. And he’s going to oppose you and straddle clear across the way, as John Bunyan said in Pilgrim’s Progress. He’s going to straddle clear across the way and try to keep you away from the delectable mountains and from the city of God.

So, you figure on enemies. You say, who are they, communists? No. Who are they, liberals? No. Communists and liberals and all that gang, they’re a thousand miles from you, friend. Don’t blame your backsliding on the liberals. Don’t blame the fact that you haven’t gone forward ten feet in ten years. Don’t blame that on the communists. They’re bad enough, God knows, and there’s a hell waiting for all such, but don’t blame somebody else for your own weaknesses and faults.

The trouble is, you’re not obeying and not doing what you should, not believing, and the angel of God can’t lead you. The Spirit of God can’t lead you because of your own fault. Don’t let’s blame the Catholics and say, it’s the priest. There’s no priest big enough in all the wide world. He was fourteen inches between his eyes and had horns four feet high. He still couldn’t stop you, not stop you one inch, if you want to go on.

Well, He says, I will be an adversary to your adversary. Now what’s the difference between the adversary and the enemy? Well, I suppose I ought to identify the enemy. I said who he was and now who is he? Well, the devil is your enemy chiefly, and demons and people and circumstances, those are your enemies. And the devil’s back of the whole business, just as the communists in Moscow are back of all of this stuff that’s going on around over the world. There’s one old devil in the Kremlin there, some they say there’s twelve devils in the Kremlin, and all this devilishness streams out from there.

So, there’s one devil called Satan and that dragon and the old serpent, and he works through demons, through people, and through circumstances to keep you from being led into the way which God has prepared for you, that beautiful, rich, fruitful way. And he works to oppose you, and he’s going to oppose you, and not only that, he’s too strong for you. You’ll never be able to whip him, you’ll never be able to beat him, you’ll never be able to outthink him, and there isn’t a gadget that’s ever been invented the devil’s afraid of. These theological screwdrivers and sanctified light meters, and all of these gadgets that men have invented in the kingdom of God in the modern day.

You know, a preacher nowadays has to be an engineer, a chemist, a chef, and an artist, and a sign painter, and he’s got to have at least a brush-up course in engineering in order to be able to preach at all. I wonder how our fathers managed with the hymn book and the Bible. I wonder how they got along. Maybe that’s why they had fire and all we’ve got light, and it isn’t even the light of God, it’s the light of a bulb.

Well, anyhow, I didn’t intend to say that, but I thought I’d throw that in. That the demons and the people and circumstances, they’re your enemy, and they’re too big for you because the devil’s back of them. He’s pouring in plenty of money and plenty of arms and ammunition, and he’s out thinking you all the way along.

The young fellow that struts out and says, I’ve got ideas. Yeah, you have, but there’s one idea that you ought to get, and that is how little and worthless and weak and helpless you are. Until you find that out, you’re a sucker for the devil and a victim of his power and his wiles.

So God says, now I’m leading you out, and I’m leading you in, and all I require of you is that you do what I say and go along with me and read your Bible, obey it and believe it, and come cheerfully along with me, and I’ll take you in. But I’m going to have to take you the rough way, and I’m going to have to take you the way that is surrounded by enemies. I’m going to be on the left of you, on the right of you, and in front of you, and all around you, but I’ll take you through.

Well, you say, God, how can we do it? How can we advance under such tremendous firepower aimed against us? How can we advance? Well, God says, I’ll handle your enemies and your adversaries.

Now, the difference between an enemy and an adversary is very fine. It’s really splitting your hair nicely, but as I see it, an enemy is one who is hostile to you, who has ill will and an attitude of hate toward you, but who may be inactive temporarily. An adversary is an enemy in action. The enemy may lie back and sulk, but the adversary is up after you, and they may be the same fellow under two different phases, the enemy and the adversary.

And God says, these enemies of yours and these adversaries of yours, they’re too big for you. Don’t imagine that you can ever study up on how to win over them. Don’t imagine you can ever read a book on how to beat the devil. You can, but don’t bother. Better read the comic strip, because that book is wrong. You never, you never can win, and you never can defeat him. You’re not as smart, you’re not as wise, you’re not as knowing, you’re not as powerful, and you’re not as sly, and you’re not ubiquitous.nHe’s so fast that he can get around you.

They used to say about Henry Armstrong, the prizefighter, that he fought, he fought and struck so fast that blows came from all directions, that the fellow that was fighting thought he had half a dozen adversaries in there, because Henry was pumping them in from all directions at once. Well, that’s the devil for you. You never know where to locate him, because if you say, I’ve got him, he’ll hit you from the other side. But he’s too much for you.

So God says, God says, I will be an enemy to your enemies. In other words, I will identify myself with your enemies so completely, and you with me, so completely, that every enemy you have, I take as my enemy. Every adversary that you have, I take as my adversary.

And I want this church to hear this. I want the people of this church to hear this. I want you to get that chin up off of your Adam’s apple. And I want you to hear God say, if you’ll just listen to me now, and be good and obey me, and do what I tell you, you won’t have to worry, because these laws operate now. They operate as powerfully as the law of gravitation.

God says, what I’ll do to the enemy, I will become your enemy. Let’s read verse 27. I will send my fear before thee, and will destroy all the people to whom thou shalt come. And I will make all thine enemies turn their backs upon thee. Now, how to treat our enemies? I will send my fear before thee.

Now, religious persons, for the most part, try to send their fear before them. I’ve seen this lots of times. Somebody, you know, that had a degree and was elected to something, if you criticized him, he swells up and looks dignified and stuffed shirtish and stands on his record. Oh, no, come on down off the pedestal, boy, because the devil isn’t afraid of you nor your record. He isn’t afraid of your swelling up and huffing and puffing. God says, I’ll send my fear ahead of you. He didn’t say, I’ll send your fear ahead of you. The devil isn’t afraid of you, and he isn’t afraid of me. He is afraid of God, and God’s the only one he is afraid of.

Devils, of course, there is a sense in which the fear of a man who has God in him, Satan’s afraid of the man who has God in him, I realize that. But it’s God he’s afraid of and not the man. I said God, I think, but I mean Satan is afraid of the man that has God in him, but he’s not afraid of the man without God.

So, keep that in mind. And instead of swelling up and standing on your record, I’m a Christian. I want you to know that you, you, this, this is, this is an impudence and a terrible thing for you to accuse me of this.

And so we defend ourselves and argue and write letters and get insulted. Nobody can insult a Christian. You’re only insulted if you’re insultable. But a Christian oughtn’t to be insultable. Nobody can insult Jesus Christ. Nobody ever could. They abused Him and condemned Him and lied about Him and called Him a devil, but they couldn’t insult Him.

A fellow that suddenly gets tart and brittle and acts insulted and walks out not angry, but very dry, he thinks he’s sending the fear of him ahead of his face. No, he’s not. He’s just making a donkey out of himself, is all. God says, I’ll send my fear before thee, but we write letters. I understand that you said that I believed so-and-so, or that I did so-and-so. Come on now, friend, don’t try to defend yourself. He that defends himself has himself for his defense, and he hath no other.

But he that humbles himself and looks to God has God for his defense, and I don’t know how you’d want any more than that. God will look after the man who lets God look after him. But the fellow that struts out and says, now, you have impugned my honesty. You have reflected upon my uprightness. Oh, dear, dear.

They called Jesus a devil and nailed Him on a cross. And we go around looking dignified and swelling up and standing on our record. One man one time sat in a meeting, and I wasn’t fussing, I was just sitting there trying to be good. And they were, this young fellow, he slapped me on the knee and he said, I’ll match my ministry with your ministry any day.

Well, I wasn’t matching ministries, nothing for me to worry about. So I just let him match and said, shut up, and never answered. And last I heard of him, he divorced his wife and married a 16-year-old girl and was running a cleaning and pressing establishment.

That’s what happened to his ministry. He was out matching ministries, oh no. Don’t compare yourself with anybody. Don’t defend yourself against anybody. Don’t write a hot letter and try to get untangled. Just say, Lord God, behold, here he is. Look at him.

Remember when Hezekiah’s enemies came and cursed and swore and used obscene language on the wall? Hezekiah took the letter, that beastly, ugly letter, took it in, turned it around so God could read it and said, God, look. God said, that’s all right, I’ll handle that. He said, I’ll take care of it. He said, I’ll put a hook in his jaw and out of here he’ll go. Hezekiah got up and brushed off his knees and said, all right, God, I knew I couldn’t do it because I’ve only got just a little handful of soldiers, and they’re half scared to death. But he said, if you’ll take care of it, I’m not afraid of Assyria.

So, the Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold and his cohorts were something in silver and gold, but before the night was over, they lay dead. 185,000 of them. Hezekiah never as much as used a water pistol. No, never did. He just took it to God.

Now, I’m not fooling. I’m preaching serious truth to you here. And here’s some of you fellows are going to be preachers in the time to come. Somebody’s going to start a rumor about you. And you’re going to write in to the district superintendent or the bishop and try to get it untangled. Never do it, boy, never do it. I will be an enemy to thine enemy and an adversary to thine adversaries. And if God takes him on, why should I worry about it?

Maybe I told this some years ago, but I knew a preacher, a Southern preacher, a great man of God years ago. Hent into a neighborhood and began to hold a meeting in the church. And the town big shot, who owned about everything. And what he didn’t own, he bossed just by his chin, going around sticking his chin out, everybody’s afraid of him. And he hated the meeting. He hated it, hated evangelists and evangelism and God and church in general.

So he hired a brass band and went across the street and on his lawn across from the church. He was bothered by their singing, so he hired a brass band. And every night at 7:30, when the meeting would start, his brass band would start and away it would go. And of course, all they could do was to close the church house and go home. And that went on night after night until finally this good brother said, I gave it up. He said, nothing I could do.They just brass banded me out of the town. Oh, he said, they wanted me to do something about it. No, he wasn’t going to do anything about it. He’d committed it to God.

So, he, a short while after that, got a call. He said, come quickly, this fellow that hired the brass bands on his deathbed, and he wants help. And he raced there, but as I recall, got there too late. And there he was, stiffened out, and his soul in hell. And they came to him and they said, Reverend, would you preach the funeral sermon for this man? Yes, he said, I will.

So, he said he was going to preach on the love of God. I suppose it would be John 3, 16, for God so loved the world. He said he went down on his knees and said, Father, I got to preach a funeral sermon for the man who had run me out of town, literally with a drum. And he said, what’ll I say? And God said, take your text. And the rich man died, and in hell, he lifted up his eyes. And the preacher said, oh, no, God, no, no, I couldn’t do that. It’d be awful. He said, they’d ride me out of town on a rail this time. He said, I couldn’t. God said, you do what I tell you. No, no, God, he said, I want to preach on love. He said, I want to show I love the poor man.mNo hard feelings. God said, you do what I say.

So when the day of the funeral came, the preacher walked in, in fear and trembling. And the whole town was out, you know, they’re afraid of the old guy even after he’s dead. And the whole town was out, and they gathered from everywhere. And the preacher got up and took his text. The rich man died, and in hell, he lifted up his eyes. He preached a sermon about the rich man who died and gone to hell, and here he was lying right in front of them.

Well, you know the result of that? And that little southern town, the result of that was the wife of the dead man, the widow got converted. The children of the dead man got converted. As things spread like wildfire, they reopened the church without a brass band. And in a short time, a fire of revival struck the whole town. But it took one man going to hell to get it.

God says, I’ll be an adversary to your adversary and an enemy to your enemy. Use your typewriter for something better than writing hot letters of protest. Don’t fight anybody. We try to fight people and only succeed in getting our noses bumped and our hearts injured, and nothing happens.

God says, I’m acting for you, and I’ll take your place, and I’ll accept your enemies as my enemies, and they’ve got to deal with me. And I’ll make them turn their backs on you. You’ll see the face of the enemy, but pretty soon all you’ll see is his back. No enemy can stand before you all the days of thy life. God throws a secret and mysterious fear in an enemy.

I’m a fighter by disposition, and if God hadn’t given me this when I was a young man, still in my twenties, I suppose that I would have been one that had joined some of these fighting fundamentalists as being a fighter, because I got it in my disposition. But I’ve never written a letter of protest. Did I ever? I don’t recall that I ever did since. If I did, I shouldn’t have, and if I did, I know that I got the worst of it. But I can’t recall having done it.

So. people write me letters, and I never reply. Or if I do reply, I write them one of the neatest little disclaimers you ever heard in all your life. People write me and tell me that I am a terrible fellow, and I write back and say, Dear friend, your charges are such that it would not be the coming of me to defend myself against them. Therefore, I must ask you to pray for me until I become such a man as you want me to be. Sincerely yours.

My wife said that was hypocrisy. I don’t know whether she’s right or not. But I mean it, I mean it, I mean it. If he’s got something on me and he really sees weaknesses, he can pray for me.

But don’t imagine I’ll defend myself, because just as soon as you start defending yourself, your knuckles get skinned and your knees get stiff. Get on your knees and the Lord will take care of your enemies. I’ll make them turn their backs upon you. You can destroy every enemy without lifting your hand or raising your voice, by turning them over to God. Accept the covenant and vow never to defend yourself.

Years ago, Dr. Simpson was going through the country putting on missionary meetings. He was quite a preacher, and people came to hear him in numbers. They do that with only a few preachers in a generation. He was one of them. And he’d go to a town and have a big hall and they’d come and hear him, then he’d go to the next town.

So, a certain enemy of his decided that he was going to go ahead of Dr. Simpson just about a day or two and ruin him. So he went, thought he’d start in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He’d hire the big hall there, knew Simpson was coming in say on Sunday, and he got there on Friday and announced he would preach and he was going to undercut Dr. Simpson. Dr. Simpson wanted not to get anybody, just trying to preach missions and the victorious life. He wasn’t mad at anybody.

This fellow didn’t like Simpson. So, he was quite a preacher too and could draw crowds. So, he had a supper one night just before the first meeting. He had a supper and he had a piece of fish. And he was sitting there, I suppose, thinking over the sermon, the pulverizing, devastating, annihilating, decapitating sermon that he was to deliver against Dr. Simpson. And suddenly he began to shake and rub his neck and said to somebody, I think I got a bone caught in my throat.

And sure enough, God used a whale to swallow Jonah. And he used a fish bone to stop the enemy of a good man. And that fellow never did get to preach that night. He had to go to a doctor and have some kind of a minor operation, if I remember, have that little silver fish bone pulled out of his epiglottis. The result was he gave the whole thing up in disgust and went back home. Somebody told Dr. Simpson, Dr. Simpson said, oh, him, I turned him over to God long ago and he went off about his business.

It’s always that way, my brother. If you want to fight your battles, you fight your battles and you lose nine times out of ten. But if you want to win nine times, ten times out of ten and not have to do any fighting, you believe what God says. I will be an enemy to thine enemies and an adversary to thine adversaries.

And for these 32 years, I’ve never asked for money. I’ve never asked for a raise. I’ve never asked for a job. I’ve never written and asked if I could come. And I’ve never grumbled if I got little. And I’ve never demanded more. And very often, uh, not very often, but sometimes at least, I come out in the hole in some of my meetings, financially.  But God says, now you, I’ll take care of your money, and I’ll take care of your enemies and I’ll take care of everything. I’ll go ahead of you.

And the result is, now I know I have a friend, God bless his memory, he’s still alive. But, uh, he, uh, he and I began to preach about the same time. And he fights everybody. And I don’t think I ever met him that he wasn’t two sizes larger than normal, huffing, huffing, huffing, puffing, puffing. Superintendent, you wronged me, I tell you, it wasn’t fair.

And, uh, he and I went along together and God met me and taught me 32 years ago what to do with the fellas that are not fair to you. Just pay no attention to them. Turn them over to God, mention their name on high, and then go about your business.

And this dear brother’s been getting littler and littler all these years, trying to get big enough with his enemies. One of these days he’s going to go on, retire and move to Carlisle or some other home and sit there and sulk over the way he’s been treated by his enemies. And my enemies have never done anything to me only to drive me to my knees.

I told you when I began to preach, I was going to do some testifying, and I don’t apologize. This is too real to me to make it into an ordinary objective sermon. It’s real. I live in this.

So, God looks after His people, and He’ll go ahead of them, and He’ll lead them into that wonderful place, if you’ll just obey Him. Some other time, Lord? All right, if some other time, then why not now? If you did it some other time, why not now? If you did it for some other people, why not us? If you did it somewhere else, why not here, says faith.

And the wise anointed eye will see tonight, and the anointed ear will hear, and the illuminated heart will understand, and the others will go out huffing and puffing and saying, he wasn’t dispensationally correct. Go on your way, bud. Have your dispensation, and when it’s all over, you’ll end up bruised and beaten and cold and hard and brittle and stiff.

And the ones who are ready to be malleable and obedient and believe God and go ahead, they’ll be way out there so far you can’t even hear them whistling anymore. And you’ll be coming stumbling along behind, trying to beat everybody’s skull in, and do it in a good dispensational way. You obey God, brother, and everything will be all right.

Are you ready to believe that? Are you ready to believe it? Is this church ready to believe it? Sure. This church, we’ve been led down the years, we’ll be still led. Don’t you worry about it. Don’t worry at all. Keep cheerful. Every time you wake up at night, thank God everything’s all right in your Father’s house.

When you get up in the morning, bless God before you get your coffee. Thank Him before you get your your eye opener. Praise him. Keep on doing it. God wants to be praised. He wants to be loved. He wants to be blessed. He wants to have people going cheerfully along.

I wrote a phrase the other day, God’s redeemed children, and the thing struck me one night. I said, isn’t this wonderful to be one of God’s redeemed children? Belong to God, to be redeemed. No more auction block, no more shackles, no more slavery. Free as a bird that flies. God’s redeemed child. You look at me, you go ahead.

Now, I’ve got an awful lot more to say on this same subject. We’ve got to talk next time about these parasites and highlights and satellites and Jebusites and all the rest. And what all this means, what all this means when translated into its spiritual meanings in the New Testament. And about bowing down, I want to talk about that next Sunday night.

Well, it’s time to go home. Let’s stand.

Thank Thee Heavenly Father tonight that we have a Friend, oh, such a friend, that He loved us ere we knew Him. And we thank Thee that as the mountains are round about Jerusalem, so are the Lord’s round about His people. And the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear Him and delivereth them. We thank thee, Father.

We thank Thee we love everybody. We love the people that don’t like us. We love the people that are bitter and wish we were dead. But Lord, we thank thee they can’t kill us by wishing. And they haven’t got the courage to do it any other way. We thank thee, Heavenly Father, thou dost turn the edge of every sword. We bless Thee for the back of necks that we see. Here’s one and there’s one. He huffs and puffs and then turns his back when the fear of God strikes him.

Oh, help us, Father, we beseech Thee to live in Thy love and dare to obey and be obedient and try to remember everything that Thou hast promised and live in it. And then see our enemies go down before us and go in and inherit the land of the parasites. It’s our land and we’re going to take it.

And all the people said, Amen, we’re dismissed.

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Messages

Tozer Talks

The Leading of the Lord

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

May 11, 1958

In the book of Exodus, the twenty-third chapter. I want to review just a little bit and point out that this passage which we read was spoken by God to Moses for Israel, and that it is also spoken for our admonition, upon whom the end of the world is come.

Now I want you to be sure that I am not spiritualizing this passage, as they say. Or if I am, I am in good company. For the passage of Israel from Egypt to Canaan was held to be a type of the Christian’s progress from earth to heaven, in one of its aspects, and from conversion on toward the victorious and fruitful life in another of its aspects.

Those who teach that the passage of Israel from Egypt to Canaan was a type of the Christian’s progress from earth to heaven have had a bit of a quarrel with those who teach that it stands for the progress of the Christian from his conversion to the period when he reaches the victorious life. But I do not see why there should be any disagreement about it for the simple reason that it’s both.

And in teaching this, that we have a right to this passage, that I have a right to take it as I have taken it and used it and applied it to my heart tenderly over the past years—thirty of them, really, thirty-two of them, as I’ve explained. In using it this way, we are quite in accord with Paul, who freely took the story of the Old Testament characters and applied them to the new, who freely explained that the Old Temple was the physical manifestation of the Heavenly One, and in the whole book of Hebrews is dedicated to that doctrine, that everything God did for Israel was physical and earthly and has its heavenly and spiritual counterpart.

And we’re quite also in accord with John, particularly in the book of Revelation, and we’re in accord with the Church Fathers. The Church Fathers, I mean from the early Church Fathers down to the present day, and we’re in accord with the hymnists who sing about, Lead me, O thou great Jehovah, pilgrim through this barren land.

The whole thing is an image drawn from the Lord leading Israel through the wilderness, and you will find this all through our hymn books. Now that I say because I want you to know that I am doing a piece of legitimate exegesis here, and I don’t want you to be argued out of it by somebody, somebody with an accountant’s mind.

There are so many God’s children who have accountant’s minds, that is, they’re adding machines, and their theology is about as imaginative as an adding machine. And you’re likely to fall into the hands of these pedestrians, and when you do, smile and say, I’m in line with Paul and John and the book of Hebrews and the Church Fathers and the hymnists and the saints generally.

Now, He says the place which I have prepared, and I want to point out and take a step beyond what I spoke of last week, that God had a place prepared for Israel, and He has a place prepared for His church, and He has a place prepared for every individual member of that church. And that that place is to be understood in two ways, as provisional and final.

God had a provisional place prepared for Israel, that is, God had a long-range plan for Israel, but to get Israel to the final long-range place He had a short-range plan. And the short-range plan dealt with an hour from now and tomorrow and next week and next month, whereas the long-range plan dealt with the place of the next millennium.

And so let’s look a little how this short-range provisional plan of God, the place which I have prepared, I’m going to read to you a bit out of the Word of God. I’ll read from Exodus first, Exodus the 40th chapter. Here’s what the Holy Spirit says, Then the cloud covered the tent of the congregation, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter into the tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.

And when the cloud was taken up from over the tabernacle, the children of Israel went onward in all their journeys. But if the cloud were not taken up, then they journeyed not till the day it was taken up. For if the cloud of the Lord was upon the tabernacle by day, the fire was on it by night, in the sight of the house of Israel throughout all their journeys.

And then, that passage in Deuteronomy 1.29, Then I said unto you, Dread not, that is, Moses is saying, I said unto you, Israel, dread not, neither be afraid of them. The Lord your God, which goeth before you, he shall fight for you, according to all that he did for you in Egypt before your eyes. And in the wilderness, where thou hast seen how that the Lord bare thee as a man bares his son, in all the way that he went until he came unto this place. Yet in this thing ye did not believe the Lord your God, who went in the way before you, to search out a place to pitch your tent in.

Now the Lord had Canaan in mind as the long-range plan, and He finally took them there. But you notice here, you pitch your tent at the end of a day, or maybe it was two days, or however long it was. But he said, the Lord went before you to search you out a place to pitch your tent in. He went in fire by night to show you by what way ye should go, and in a cloud by day.

Now there is the provisional short-range leading of God. He led Israel, not only into the land finally, but he led them step by step in order that they might go to the land. You can see this, can’t you? That if God is not able to lead us the next mile, he cannot lead us the next hundred miles. If He cannot lead us the next ten feet, He cannot lead us the next mile.

The Lord leads His people. He has led the church through all her history, and He leads the Christian, the individual Christian, and He is grieved when the Christian makes Him say, yet in this thing ye did not believe the Lord your God, who went in the way before you to search out a place to pitch your tents in, in fire by night and in a cloud by day. And He leads a local church. If we are in His will and stay in His will, I believe in the leadership of the Holy Ghost. I believe that the Spirit of God is to the church what the cloud and fire was, for it is the same thing to Israel.

But then there is the final and long-range plan of God. That is, Israel was to be in full possession of the land, and the church is to be in full possession of the Father’s house at last. But for the individual Christian there is also this, that the Lord would lead us into a place of fruitfulness and power and heaven at last.

Now I have prepared you this place. The great trouble is, and I repeat, that we want a place, and we want to pray that the Lord will lead us to the place which we have chosen, whereas God says, I will lead you into the place which I have prepared. And there is very often, a good part of the time it would not be too much to say, a good part of the time there is a controversy on between the Christian and God over that place.

The Christian says, I want Thee, O Lord to lead me to the place which I have chosen. And God says, I will, O child, lead thee to the place which I have prepared. We have got to settle this. Are we going to have this controversy all our lives, seeking the place which we have chosen, or are we going right now to cut the red tape and lower the overhead and get it over with and say, Lord God, here take me.

The place I want would not be all right anyway. Take me and lead me into the place which Thou hast prepared. If we will decide to let God lead us into the place which he has prepared, we’ll have His leadership, not only His long-range leadership, but we’ll have His day by day, short range provisional leadership.

Then he says, an angel to keep thee and to bring thee. You see, if Israel was going to reach the holy land, she had to be led by a power equal to or superior to the opposition. If God led Israel by a power equal to the opposition, they would reach a stalemate. If He led Israel by a power less than the opposition, He would never be able to move Israel toward the holy land. It became necessary, therefore, that God should bring to bear upon the opposition a power superior to their power.

And that’s exactly what God said He would do. There were enemies there and they did fight. They weren’t cowards. They didn’t lie down and take it and let Israel walk over them. They did oppose Israel. But God said, I will send an angel before thee to keep thee and to bring thee in.

And now my messenger, he said, the Holy Spirit, God’s omniscient providences, these are what we mean, the Holy Spirit and God’s omniscient providences. What do I mean by his omniscient providences? I mean that God, being the sovereign God that He is, plays over the chessboard of history, and He can always outthink and outmaneuver the enemy, and can always be there ahead of the enemy.

And if He needs power, He can crush the enemy by His power. If it’s wisdom, He can outmaneuver the enemy by His wisdom. But always in His providences, He leads the people of God.

My brethren, I am not at all sure that I would exchange, if God were to say to me, now son, I have led you a good many years by my providences. You have trusted Me, and I have led you, but I’ll exchange this now and I will give you a visible fire by night to hover over you, and I will give you a visible cloud by day. Nobody else will see it but you, but you will see the cloud and fire visible to you. I think I’d not exchange it, because anything that I can see with my eyes, the time can come when I can no longer see it.

But you can’t outthink the providences of God. No man can do that. God’s providences are His plans which He lays down, and He leads his people into it by a kind of a holy dance of circumstance. And when it’s all over, then we look back and see that God has led us all the way.

Now he says, beware of him. That’s verse 21. Beware of him, because he provoke him not, for He will not pardon your transgressions, for my name is in him. Now right here, this verse 21 will discourage some people, and they will say, well, in that case then, Mr. Tozer, you’re preaching to some perfect, pure person, but you’re not preaching to me, because I have not lived my life, my Christian life, since the Lord first took hold of my hand to lead me into the place He hath prepared. I have not obeyed the angel in every particular, and I have transgressed, and if therefore it says that He’ll not forgive your transgressions, then that cuts me out. Your sermon is preached to some Joseph, or some Daniel, or someone who has never had any trouble.

But I don’t think we ought to look at it like that at all, because the Lord says, beware of the angel. That is, don’t think that I make an unconditional promise that I’m going to lead you and let you get away with murder. Don’t think for a minute that I am going to make a unilateral promise to you here, and I’m going to promise myself, and promise myself like John or like Herod did before the assembled guests, and get myself in a jam that I can’t get out of, and for the sake of the guests around me, I’m going to have to fulfill my promise no matter what you do. Now, let’s not think like that at all. That’s to have rigor mortis of the theological intellect, and a lot of people have that.

But what the Lord says is this. He said, now remember, you’ve got to be pliable if you’re going to be leadable. You’ve got to be malleable if you’re going to be made into the right kind of vessel. You’ve got to be mobile if you’re going to be led. God says, in effect, I can’t guide a bicycle when it’s standing still. I can’t lead an arrow to its mark when it’s still on the string.

You’re going to have to put away your stubbornness. I can’t overlook your stubbornness. If you’re stubborn and refuse to be led, I can’t lead you. And if you’re rebellious and rebel against my plan to lead you, then I can’t lead you. And if you’re filled with unbelief and don’t think I will lead you, then that hinders you. And if you’re disobedient, that hinders you.

You see, the physician, if he’s going to cure the patient, has to have the cooperation of the patient. If a guide is going to lead someone through the wilderness, the man is going to have to go along with the guide. And he will not overlook, says God.

Remember now, you Christians, I am leading you, and my plan is that I’m to lead you into the place I’ve prepared. But I’m not expecting that I’ll lead you without your cooperation, because the Spirit has no authority to just wink and act as if you hadn’t sinned. If you sin, then you’ve temporarily slowed things down. If you sin, then you have hindered me, and I can’t lead you right.

And I wouldn’t be so foolish as to preach to a church where I knew that the members of the board were unconverted, and the Ladies Auxiliary was carnal, and the Sunday School superintendent drank. And I wouldn’t preach this way to that kind of church, because God said simply that this isn’t, you can’t do this.

He said, beware of him, because walking with God is a pretty serious business, and you can’t get loose and go at ease in Zion and learn the ways of the world if you’re going to go with me. If I’m going to take you out of that iron furnace and take you on into that grand land where the bees make honey in the rocks, and where the cows walk with great udders across the grassy meadows, where milk and honey flows, and where grapes of Eshcol are thick and large and juicy, and where pomegranates are sweet.

If I’m going to lead you in there and establish you there, you’re going to have to walk pretty close to me. Beware, because this rule that I laid down here is not for worldlings. This rule that I laid down is not for carnal people who want to have their own way, and then who want to try to get leadings when they’re not intending to obey. He has no authority, said God, to let you live like the world and be led like a child of heaven. You’ve got to obey the voice of the Lord.

Now that’s plain enough, and it ought not to discourage anybody. But you say, but I haven’t obeyed the Lord fully in everything, and I have had periods when I failed the Lord. What can we do? Well, you can come to yourself. Do you remember that’s what the prodigal son did. He came to himself. He’d been living out in the suburb, and then he came into himself.

You can come to yourself, and you’ll see what the history of Israel tells you. Read the history of Israel and see that when Israel failed God anywhere, God punished her, corrected her, disciplined her, and then took up and led her on. And if she failed him again, he punished her again, forgave her, disciplined her, and took her on. The way wasn’t a smooth and easy way. It could have been, but Israel chose sometimes not to make it so. And the history of Israel has been the history of failure.

I wish that I could say that a Christian takes off from the ramp like a conveyor, right, just zoom, and it’s off into the air and gone. I wish that I could say that’s the way. No, that isn’t the way. That’s not realistic, so to speak, so to say. It’s not realistic, and nobody here needs to stand up and tell me that he has never had any difficulty with himself since his conversion, that there never has been a fall, never a failure, never a lapse, never any trouble. He has moved with calm precision upward and onward. Don’t anybody tell me that. If you’ve been converted over one day, don’t bring me that because I’ll have to look at you and turn away. I can’t believe it. It just isn’t so.

Human beings aren’t like that. Israel wasn’t, and the Church wasn’t, and the Twelve Disciples weren’t, and the people in the Book of Acts weren’t, in spite of all we say about them. They still have failed the Lord sometimes, but always the story of Israel is that God forgives. God forgives. And the story of the New Testament is, God forgives.

Jesus took his Twelve Disciples to lead them into the place which he had prepared, and all but one of them entered that place which he had prepared. All but one of them. Judas, the son of perdition, never found it. Judas sinned away any possibility of it. If he indeed ever was converted, he sinned away any possibility. But the other eleven made it through. And always it’s so in the New Testament. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all righteousness.

I have a prayer in my little book which I carry with me, and I lose everything under the sun, but in 15 or 20 years I’ve never lost my little prayer book. It’s all badly worn out now, but still legible. And I have a little prayer in there saying, O God, because I have been the worst of men, therefore let grace operate to do the most for me. Where sin abounded, let grace much more abound. And I believe God’s going to do that. He has in some measure been doing it, as I have believed. And He’ll do exactly the same thing for you.

Sin will prevent the Lord from leading you, but not sin repented of. Sin repented of will be cleansed, and it will not prevent you. You see, if God made no provision for human failure, then there could be nothing but human failure. If God made no provision for human failure, that would be the end of it.

And granted that God knows humanity, granted that God knows humanity, that He knows the human nature, human flesh, then imagine that God should make a redemption and send it to the world and make no provision for the frailties of the ones to whom he sent it, would be, even to think that, would be to think unworthily of God. If God made plans contingent upon human perfection, then there would be no use to make any plans, because if we were perfect, we wouldn’t need God.

If we were perfect, we would not need any leadership. We’d not need any angel to lead us at all. We would not need to be admonished not to be afraid but go forward. We wouldn’t need it, but he does not. God is not so unwise as to make His plans for us contingent upon human perfection. He makes His plans for us contingent upon His goodness and His grace and His willingness to forgive and to renew. And if God made His plans contingent upon human perfection, then they could only fail. And that God’s plan should fail would be unthinkable, that God should be unwise would be unthinkable. No.

We must remember, beware of him, he says. And I don’t see this, I don’t see this as any reason. Behold, I send an angel before thee to keep thee and to bring thee but beware of him. I don’t see anything here to stop me. Suppose that Israel did stumble and fall on their face, and they did. But remember, the cloud and the fire never left them.

It took hundreds of years of persistent incorrigible sinning before the cloud and the fire lifted. And then the cloud and the fire only lifted for a while. And God will yet restore Israel to Himself, and the cloud and fire will one time more hover over the temple in Jerusalem.

Read the book of Ezekiel and see. God Almighty never brought you out and said, no, I’ll bring him out, but I can’t bring him in. Because God said about Israel, He said, I’ll never allow them to say that about me, that I brought Israel out, but can’t bring Israel in.

The whole human race would have laughed at a God who started to build and found to His red-faced embarrassment that He didn’t have enough material to finish the building. The whole human race and the angels in heaven would laugh at a God who started to bring a nation out of Egypt and wasn’t able to bring them in where He had planned to bring them. He did bring them in, and He did establish them there.

And for hundreds of years, they did worship God there. They did build a temple there. And David wrote his psalms, and Solomon built his temple, and the children of God met and worshiped and praised God, hundreds of years they were in that land.

So, remember that you’re being led by One who’s got a plan for you, and nothing short of a 100 percent persistent and perpetual rebellion with refusal to return can stop the sovereign plans of God. Do I sound like a Calvinist? I don’t know whether I do or not, but I sound like the truth. And if any of you who are over on the other side should be shocked, a shock is good for you, brother. It’s good for you. I believe that God Almighty will lead His people.

And don’t you try to pin me down and make an Arminian out of me nor a Calvinist out of me. I’m neither one. I’m a lover of the Bible. I believe the Bible. I’m not going to be pinned down by anybody. Are you a Simpsonian or a Wesleyan or a Calvinist or an Arminian or a Plymouth Brethren? I am none of those things. I’m a Christian by the grace of God, a poor one, but a Christian. I’ve got my Bible here, Old Testament and New.

Some fellow comes in and wants to tag me and put a tag on me and say, now, here, you wear this button. I’ll wear no button. You can categorize a man and put him in his place, say, Tozer, oh, he’s a, and then they can invent a name that long and dismiss a man like that. I’m none of those things. I’m a Christian and here’s what the Holy Ghost says in the Book. My heart speaks out against me.

David had an awful time with his heart, you know, he had a time with it. It lectured him and he talked to it, and he lay in bed at night and talked to his soul, meditated, and sometimes he wept and sometimes he got up and played a hymn on his own made harp. But when our own hearts speak to us about our past, now think about it, be realistic.

I’ve been thinking it over the last few days, and you know what I’ve decided? I’ve decided that for the most part, evangelical Christianity is just plain dumb and that stupidity and Pollyannaisms has pretty well taken over. That anything like tough, realistic thinking, daring to search the Word of God and obey, daring to shake yourself loose from tradition and stand up and say, this is what God says and I don’t care what Dr. so-and-so says. We’ve got very little of that left anymore in our country. We’re the spongiest bunch of mediocre people you ever met in all your life.

I confess frankly that I can’t read the average book put out by the fundamentalists and yet I’m a fundamentalist. I’m a believer clear down to the roots and I believe everything the Bible teaches and I go back to Moses and Paul and believe it all at the same time. I get nothing from hearing the average man or from reading the book because everybody’s scared, cautious, got to guard yourself.

But listen, if you say this, what will these people think of you? I don’t happen to care and it doesn’t make any difference. And if they write me off and I’ve been written off, you and I went someplace one time, Ray? You sang and I preached. They never invited us back. They said they were going to, but the mailman didn’t get the letter to us. They never invited us back. But I don’t care about that because if they shut one door, God will open twelve more.

And if I had toes and hands and all the hairs left in my poor, rather shaggy head, were preachers, I could put them all to work. Hear me? Oh, if we could get out of this cowardice and this mediocrity that the evangelical church has become a paradise of mediocre clowns, what we need is courage and anointing and a bit of daring and, above all things, obedience. Obedience.

I will send mine angel before thee and he will guide thee, young fellow. You don’t have to worry one little bit. All you have to do is be sure you don’t take the bit in your teeth. The Lord says, if you take the bit in your teeth, you’re in trouble. As long as you’re obedient, you’re being led. You’re being guided. As long as you want God’s will. But if you want your own will, of course, that’s different.

Well, here was Jacob and Jacob was a terrible failure. Do you remember Jacob’s failure? But you remember how on that riverbank he and God had it out? And wrestling, Jacob prayed through and limped away.

Oh, if I were an artist, what a picture I could paint of Jacob. I wouldn’t paint a picture of God or of Christ. I think both pictures of God and Christ are borderline blasphemy. To try to picture the infinite God or to try to put down on a canvas that wondrous, beautiful being we call Jesus, I think it’s horrible to try to do it.

But I wouldn’t have any hesitation painting pictures of Bible characters. And I think one character I’d paint would be old Jacob, a little bald on top. Jacob’s hair was gone and his wife and his children and his camels and all the rest were gone before. And Jacob was on the riverbank all night. He wrestled all night. He wrestled.

The doctor said, Jacob, you better not stay up at night because you need your eight hours, Jacob. Remember, you’re not as young as you were and you need your eight hours. Now, remember, you take care of yourself and take a few hours, take a few days and go to Florida. But Jacob wrestled all night with his God.

And the next morning he got blessed. But along with his blessing, he got a limp. And you know, he was marked out as a limping man. He was a limping man. He limped from that time on. And it says the sun did rise upon him. I can just imagine him limping up out of the sandy riverbed, having crossed it now wet to his knees. But he limped up on the other side with a big smile on his face and the sun making a halo around his shiny bald head.

And when he appeared all the way down there where his family was waiting, somebody said, I wonder what’s keeping Dad. And somebody said, who’s that coming there? That looks like Dad. And wife said, no, that couldn’t be Dad. That man limps. She didn’t know that he’d had an experience that night that made him different. He walked different from everybody else from that time on. But Jacob was a terrible man, really. He was a terrible man. There isn’t anybody here much worse than Jacob was, unless it’s me by nature. Jacob was that kind of man.

Then there was another old fellow who said, I am vile. I am vile. And you know, his end, the Lord took the vileness away and gave him twice as much of everything. And he went marching out of the last chapter of the book into the glory. And he’s there now. And there was a man named Elijah, and he was so discouraged. He said, let me die. I’ve always been afraid to ask God, let me die. Because sometimes, you know, God just takes you at your word.

And I’ve always been cautious. I remember the Greek said that if there’s ever a time that a man ought to tell the truth, it’s when he comes into the presence of the gods. And if a Greek would think that up, I think a Christian ought to know that much.

So, I’m very cautious about going to God about things. And I’ve never gone to God and said, O God, let me die. But there are times when I had a sneaking hope. But I’ve always been afraid to say it, for He’d take me at my word, and I got some things to do yet. So, I didn’t pray that.

But this man did, O Lord, let me die. It looked as if that should have been the end. But you know, he left in a chariot, of fire, this man left in a chariot. God is a whole lot easier on His people than we are, because He understands them.

I like to sometimes let my imagination run in a little piece about St. Paul or somebody applying to a mission board, or Stephen applying to a conference for ordination, sitting around being examined for ordination. Stephen never would have made it, because he’d have jumped up and looked far into the distance and gone out and started to preach. And they’d have said, well, he’s a well-intentioned young fellow, but he’s a fanatic.

And I don’t think there’s very many people here in the New Testament that would have got along. Elijah never could have. He never could have graduated from any school on the North American continent. Never, they’d never have given that old fellow.

Could you imagine his going around with a parchment saying, to whom it may concern, this is to certify that Elijah has completed his studies, and therefore is authorized that we grant him this diploma. Never would have made it, never would have made it. Elijah couldn’t have made it. But he left in a chariot, brother, at last. He left in a chariot.

And there was Peter. Peter cried; I never knew the man. I never knew the man. What a liar he was. Dirty mouth Peter, lying Peter. I never knew the man. He lied, he did.

Paul Richards, the French satirical philosopher, said the first Pope said, I never knew the man, and he lied. But if the present Pope would say it, he’d probably tell the truth. I never knew the man.

But he was the man at Pentecost. He was the man at Pentecost. He was the man. The Lord had got to him. The Lord said, Peter, beware of him, beware of the angel. Peter stumbled and fell and said, I never knew the man. The Lord said, Peter, that wasn’t you talking. Get up on your feet. And Peter got up and wept bitterly.

No, my dear brother, God never overlooks sin, or failure, or weakness, or flaws. He never overlooks them, but He knows what to do about them. And the angel in the meantime pauses and turns around and waits, and says, is my boy going to get up and come on, or is he going to give up and lie there in the gutter?

Meister Eckhart is a quotable fellow, and Meister Eckhart said this. I marked it with pencil, drew lines along it. I want to remember. Eckhart said, when God forgives a man, he starts all over with him from right there. And his past is automatically canceled out, as far as God’s concerned.

And not only that, but God trusts him as completely as if he’d never sinned. I believe he’s right. God trusts the man. Starts all over with the man right there. You can’t out-sin the mercy of God if you repent sincere.

Some people have misunderstood the Methodists. They think the Methodists got converted and then got perfect love. And from that time on, never sinned, never failed God anywhere.

Well, it wasn’t God’s plan they should. Certainly, John Wesley tried to prevent them. And all their class leaders and exhorters tried to prevent them. And they’ve had a pretty high batting average, I’d say, on the whole. But you read the writings of Wesley. Read the little book of Discipline, which I have read with such great care.

The only book of Discipline I ever cared for in all my life was the Methodist book of Discipline. You could set it to music. They knew what to do with a man if he failed the Lord. Beware of him. He has no authority to let you go and just act as if nothing had happened. If you fail him, something has happened. You got to deal with it immediately and right away. How do you deal with it? Name it.

I used to hear Paul Rader say back in those great days when he was preaching those great sermons, the like of which I’ve never heard on the North American continent except his. He said, if you’ll name it, God will break it, talking about shackles, shackles. He said, they’re on your wrists, they’re on your ankles. Name it and God will break it. But if you call it something else, it’ll be right there for two weeks, two months, two years.

If we could hear with our spiritual ears as we can with our physical ears, when we dismiss this meeting tonight and you start out, there’d be a clanking sound. You’d think there were 40 ghosts in the attic rattling their chains because so many of you wear on your ankles, chains, spiritually. We can’t hear them because we can’t hear except with these ears.

But the dear Heavenly Father knows they’re there. If you name them, God will break them. Temper, bad disposition, love of money, lust, pride, unholy ambition, self-love, stubbornness, rebelliousness. Name them and God will break them. Jacob had to tell God his right name, Jacob. You’ll have to tell Him your right name. Whatever it is, tell Him your right name.

There is such a thing as a repentance. As Kierkegaard has said, there’s such a thing as a repentance that is so acute that you feel you want to help justice find your sins. Did you ever experience a repentance like that? Where you turned against yourself and wanted to help God find your sins instead of covering up and hiding and running from God, you race to God and say, God, I want to tell you this and this and this and this. That’s repentance. That’s repentance.

So, if you repented like that, sincerely, the guiding angel isn’t leaving you. He’s just pausing, just pausing. The individual, this church, any church, evangelicalism, I wonder if I were this church, I’d dismiss this pastor. You need somebody that’s a lot more local. My burden is not this church only. My burden is for the whole evangelical church. I grieve over the whole evangelical church. I pray and have my prayer list with the whole evangelical church.

I worry over the whole church that calls itself fundamentalist. My heart cries to God that He’ll help me some way to write something or do something or pray in such a way that it’ll begin to lift and jar the whole evangelical church back out of her shameful Babylonian captivity, that God might lead us again to the place where we ought to be.

And a man that has a burden for the whole church of Christ must divide his time somewhat, at least his prayers. So I may be somebody that could think in narrower terms, could do more, but I’ll never be able to get over it because I had to make my choice to be dumb and happy, or to be informed and be miserable, to not know much about what was going on and thus keep a kind of a cheap tranquility, or to know what was wrong with the church and grieve over it. And I grieve over the church.

I grieve over what’s happening in the church of Christ and the Alliance too. Any of you brethren should be here on your way to Council. You hear me say this and I don’t care who. The Alliance as well as every other. We’re on the same greased skids that the others are. And unless God can break us down and stop us and turn us around, we’ll never find the place He’s called us to.

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Tozer Talks

The Voice of the Saved

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

July 29, 1962

There is a difference between being lost and being damned. I have heard men in their eagerness and urgency of spirit refer to sinners as damned and invite them to come. It’s a total impossibility for a damned man to make any approach toward God. The fact is there is a difference between being lost and being damned.

Being lost is what everybody is who is not saved. But being damned is what the lost are after it’s too late, and there is no hope for them ever to return. We are not damned in this world. We are lost in this world. By, we, I mean people. Men can be lost in this world and lost finally or damned in the world to come.

So, men are lost, but they are not deserted. Scripture says, my Spirit shall not always strive with man. Those are our words, our burning words. My Spirit shall not always strive with man. But while they carry a finality about them like doom, they also carry hope in them because you could not say, my spirit shall not always strive except the spirit were striving. The fact that he puts the word always in there indicates that there is a time when the spirit is striving, and that time is now.

Now I would, if I were writing a book, put a little footnote in for by way of explanation, and I would say that it’s necessary to annotate what I have said and put this footnote in that there may be individual persons who have been deserted and with whom the spirit no longer strives. But now those are individual persons I’m talking about and not the great masses who are simply careless and sinning and not minding it.

Now, not only is it true that man is lost, but not deserted, but it’s true that God is entreating us, be ye reconciled to God, and His voice is sounding in many voices. I’ve talked about the voice of the lost, and I’ve talked about the voice of Christ’s blood, and the voice of conscience, and the voice of reason, and the voice of God’s love, and I could go on and on because there are so many more voices than I have been able to designate.

But tonight, I want to talk about the voice of the redeemed, and what I want to say is this, summing it up before I begin, is that the ransomed, the ransomed, have a voice, and that voice is sounding, and sounding not only now in the testimony of living men, but it’s sounding down the years. It is the voice of the ransomed, and they’re all saying the same thing. They are saying, be ye reconciled to God.

Now a little text, if I wanted to use a text, would be that one in Hebrews, wherefore, seeing we also are compassed about, with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight.

Now Paul, of course, or whoever wrote the book of Hebrews, had in mind the old Roman amphitheater, where they used to meet, as they meet here in the Maple Leaf Gardens, or in Yankee Stadium, or wherever men do meet to put on games. Paul must have attended them sometime in his life, though I seriously doubt whether he ever bothered much with them after he got right with God. I doubt it. I don’t say he didn’t, but I say it doesn’t seem like Paul to write. Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ, unto Timothy, my beloved son, meet me tomorrow morning down at Maple Leaf. I don’t think he would write that. I can’t conceive it, though I don’t say it would be wrong to do it. I just say I think he was too busy, but he did draw on his knowledge of the games, the Olympic Games, and so he paints a picture here for us.

I’m assuming Paul wrote the book of Hebrews I explained when I began my morning talks on the book of Hebrews, and nobody knows for sure who wrote it. But if it wasn’t Paul, it was somebody else, and my personal opinion is if it wasn’t Paul, it was a man named Paul. So, if I say Paul, you more or less have my opinion of what I think about it.

But whoever wrote this was used to the Olympian Games and knew about them. One thing that evidently impressed him deeply was tier upon tier upon tier of spectators all the way around. And the tracks down here and the wrestling arenas and boxing arenas and all the rest could be seen. And then tier upon tier upon tier from the person down here, as if it had gone into heaven itself, of people all the way around. And they were looking on, seeing therefore, he said, that we have so great a cloud, and they looked like a cloud. As you were down there looking out, they might look well, look like a cloud, seeing you have a great cloud of witnesses.

Who were these witnesses? We won’t press it too far nor try to go profoundly into exegesis here, but only say that these runners who were down here running, or anybody, athlete of any sort, but runners in that chapter, they were greatly affected by the people round about them. Every preacher knows he preaches better to a large crowd, and everybody that engages in competitive sports knows he does it better to a large crowd. And everybody knows, too, that if a man is competing in the games, he will do his work better if he knows that some of the old champions are present.

A fighter goes into the ring to defend his title or to try to take another title, and there’s just another Joe back there, another Mary, on the way up to the spectators all the way around. But if he knows back here there are men who themselves once competed in that same arena and won and were champions and wore the laurel and who know what it’s about and who bear the scars and bruises of the contest on them, I think that these athletes have a good deal more spirit when they go into the contest.

And so the man of God who wrote the Hebrews said, listen you people that are halfway in and halfway out, don’t you know that here were the old champions that competed in the ring of faith once, who fought, who ran, who boxed, who threw lance. These men of faith, don’t you know about Abel and don’t you know about Noah? And don’t you know that that old champion back there, Joseph and and Jacob and Moses, they all sit there. They won, they won, they were, they bear the marks and the scars of their combat on them. But they’re around you everywhere and their voices, even though you don’t hear them, the voices are there, the voices that are more eloquent than in the oratory, the voices of the redeemed who have made it through and who by the grace of God have laid down their cross and picked up their crown and are now safe from it all.

No more contests, no more tears, no more bruises, no more heartache, no more grief, no more being out of breath and ready to drop with fatigue, no more hunger, no more rags, no more nakedness, no more persecution, no more jails. They’ve made it through, the Saints of God, and they are saying to us and saying to everybody, come on, come on, don’t, don’t, the other fellow’s as tired as you are, give it another half mile, you can do it, come on. It’s the cheer that we get from other people.

Why do we like to meet in meetings like this? Well, you don’t have to meet like this to be a Christian. You’re a Christian because you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life. And you’re a Christian because He gives you power to become the sons of God when you believe on His name. That’s why you’re a Christian.

So, you’re not a Christian? Christianity doesn’t rub off from the elbow of the man that sits near to you. It doesn’t come out to you in a song. It doesn’t come to you by the talk and conversation of the people. But being a Christian, it’s great to be with other Christians, to be surrounded by witnesses who will say, I made it, you can.

That’s why I believe we make a great mistake when we draw too sharp lines between young people and older people in our churches. I’m not going to say we must abolish the young people’s societies, but I do say that we have made great mistakes down the years by drawing a sharp chasm between the old people and the young people. Do you know the young people need to be around the old people and the old fellow that has come up the hard way and lived and loved and served and walked with his God until the sun is shining on his old gray dome and everybody knows what kind of a saint he’s been.

The very fact he’s there will give to the young fellow more zip and more spirit and will urge him to prayer and will nudge him along to want to walk with his God a whole lot better if the young fellow sees the old fellow. But if we separate the church down the middle and say, oh, you young people who don’t know much about it, you worship God over here and the old saints over here, I think it’s a great mistake. I think that the old saints need the young people.

The old sheep need the sight of the lambs. And I think also that the lambs need the old sheep. And so the man of God says here, why you look around you, he says, these witnesses, they were only in their imagination, of course, because they couldn’t actually see from heaven above. I assume they couldn’t anyhow. I’d hate to think that some of the dear old saints who’ve gone to heaven would have to look down. I’d hate to think that the early Christian and Missionary Alliance people would have to look down and see the mess we’re in.

And I’d hate to think that the Methodists that started that great denomination would have to look down now on some things that are going on in that denomination. And so with all the denominations, practically all of them, I don’t know any of them, but what their founders would be grief stricken, if not downright ashamed.

So, I hope that God spares the saints the sight of what’s going on on the earth, but they’re there anyhow, their presence is there. A cloud of witnesses grating away into glory itself. And so every Christian that gets on his knees now and prays knows that he is in the way the Father’s trod.nHe knows that he has all holy tradition behind him. He knows that he has Bible history behind him. He knows that he has the call and hears the call and the voice of the saints who’ve made good. And he knows he’s being cheered on by men living and dead who walked with God and are walking with God.

Now these witnesses, a great crowd of them, I say, you’re not hearing their sermons maybe, nor hearing their songs because their tongues are silent now. And we’re not hearing John Wesley and John Knox and Martin Luther and Charles Finney and the rest of them. We’re not hearing them, but yet we’re hearing them too. We’re hearing their voices, the voice of silence, the voice of the knowledge that they did it, they went, they made it true by the grace of God. They walked with the Lord and are not for the Lord took them. And that to any Christian is a great source of encouragement.

The older Psalm writers of the Psalms used to say in the hour of their great distress and pressure of soul, they used to say they remembered the days of old, the years that were past and how God, what had God had done to their fathers and done for their fathers. And they said, O God, you did it for our fathers, do it for us. And they took courage from the fact that around them, grating away to the skies were great clouds of men and women who walked with God and sleep now waiting for the trumpet that shall wake the dead.

And so the voices of the saved are coming to us out of the world above. I don’t mean literally that if you cock your ear, you can hear John Wesley again or Martin Luther. I wish I could. I wish I could. I’d fast a week if I thought it would help me, but I know I can’t ever hear them again. I can read their works, but I can’t hear them speak because their voices are for a little time silent and yet they’re not silent. I repeat, they’re being heard. The fact that they ever lived is a voice. The fact that they walked with God is a reason why I can walk with God.

And so, lives speak with a loud voice to us, even though their tongues are silent. The fact that redeemed men have been here constitutes a powerful argument for the Christian faith. The fact that anybody has lived a Christian life in a world like this, there has been a good and holy man in a world like this, that in itself constitutes a powerful argument for the validity and authenticity of the New Testament and the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.

So bad is the world, so deep in sin, so bad is human nature, so unutterably, incurably evil is human nature, that if there was not something supernatural in the gospel of Christ, nobody could be a Christian.

When I first became a Christian, I was converted, as you may have heard me say. I was converted in an old-fashioned, simple, old-fashioned way. I believed in the Lord Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior. I went and joined a church and got to work. That’s about all there was to it, but the transformation was complete, revolutionary, and final. It happened, and I know it happened.

Then later on in my life I began to read every kind of atheistic literature, the philosophies of the Romans like Kyrgios and the rest of them, who did not believe in Christ, the Greeks and the Romans, who did not believe in God. Some of them, this Lucretius, who wrote his Nature of Things, did not believe in God, nor in any world above. I read at least his Nature of Things, and I read as much or more atheistic literature as I did Christianity.

I used to get on my knees after I had read a book or read a chapter or two in a book, and he pushed me into a corner and proved that I couldn’t prove there was any God and that I was having hallucinations and all the rest. I couldn’t answer it because I wasn’t scholar enough to do it, but I would turn away from that book and get on my knees, and with tears near the surface I would kneel, and with joy in my heart thank God that I had found Him before I found that book, that I had found Him before I had found a book that said I couldn’t find Him, that I had been converted before I read the book that said conversion was a hallucination.

I knew what conversion had done for me. It had taken a high-tempered, sulky, angry, mean-spirited rascal of a young fellow and had turned him into a God-loving and Christ-honoring young fellow who wanted to do the will of God the best he knew how, so I knew he couldn’t argue me down because I already had what they said I couldn’t have. So the fact that any righteous man ever lived in the world is a good sound argument for Christianity because without this power of the gospel no man could be a good man.

And then the fact that any redeemed man ever lived in the world constitutes a convincing witness against sin-loving men and indifferent men and stubborn men who refuse to walk with God. If any good man ever lived, that man may long be sleeping in his dust, now be moldering along with the just. And still the fact that he ever lived is saying to every sin-lover, you ought not to love sin, saying to every indifferent man, you ought to wake up and do something about your soul. And it constitutes an eloquent entreaty.

Let us, says the Holy Ghost, see them by their hair, the old champions, the old champions with the withered leaves on their brows and the bruises and scars and marks to show where once in combat they fought or ran or wrestled. Now you’re in there. You can do it. Wonderful what a little encouragement will do for people.

Long ago I asked the Lord to give me the spirit of Barnabas. You know, Barnabas was called the man of good words. He spoke good, encouraging words. And a good, encouraging word to a Christian who is having a tough time of it sometimes will help them very greatly.

Well, now these voices, I don’t think I need to go into it in any great detail, but I think here about this man Abel that we’ve talked about before, he being dead yet speaketh, and his loyal obedience to God cost him his life. I suppose it did. I think he probably was the first martyr. He certainly was the first man murdered in the world, and his killing was the first fratricide, the first murder. And Cain killed him as the first murderer; Abel, the first man murdered.

But I would suppose from reading it, both in the Old Testament and the New Testament commentary on it, I would suppose it was his faith that cost him his life because he believed in Jesus or in looking forward to the cross. As we look back, he believed in God.

He believed in the efficacy of the shed blood, and so he brought a lamb and slew it. And God spoke His word of approval, and Cain heard it. And Cain got no approval, and so Cain became angry. And I would suppose there was the first time the flesh and the Spirit ever came together in hostile warfare. Later on, we see it plenty.

Later on, we see it in Jacob and Esau. Later on, we see it in David and Saul. Later on, we see it in Peter and Judas. Later on, we see it all down the centuries, the hostile conflict between that which is of the flesh and that which is of the Spirit. But this is the first indication of it, that there was Abel. They looked for him and found him buried out there somewhere, a shallow grave with the leaves pulled over him, and Cain trying to look innocent. But God said, I hear a voice. I hear a voice. It’s the voice of Abel. It’s the voice crying from the ground.

There is another voice, as this twelfth chapter tells us, that cries more loudly, and that’s the voice of Jesus’ blood, which cries not for justice but mercy. But the voice of Abel’s blood does cry, and it tells us, I made it. Now I would like to ask these men, I would like to ask these men if it were possible, Abel, you could have lived a long time.

Men lived a long time in those days, up to 969 one man lived. You might have lived upwards of a thousand years, Abel, but because you insisted upon praying and obeying God and living a right life and trusting in a bloody sacrifice, you got killed early when you were a young chap. If you had it to do over again, would you do it, Abel? You know what Abel would say.

Do you think for one second that Abel would sulk and say, I’m sorry? From his high place yonder, is he sorry? Ask the captain that brings his ship in through the roaring storm, and all battered and bruised, in her safe harbor, asking, Captain, are you sorry you brought her in? Are you sorry for the wind and the gale and the howling storm? And he’d smile and say, No. Now I look back and I enjoyed it. The main thing is she’s tied up safe and her cargo safe and her people are safe.

So, we ask Abel, Abel, are you sorry you had such a stormy voyage? And I’m sure he would smile and say, No. The voice of that redeemed man is saying to every one of you, get on your knees and do it and get right with God and straighten your lives out and quit fooling and quit trying to be a Western 20th century, civilized, educated, sophisticated, overstuffed Canadian American or whatever you are, and believe in God now and get right and streamline your life and strip for the race. That’s what Abel would say to us if he were speaking. I think he probably would say it in a good deal more refined language than I have, but he would say something like that.

Then there was Enoch who walked with God and God took him because he pleased God. Now if you asked Enoch, are you sorry about this? Do you wish it was some other way now? No. Enoch would smile and say, how could I, a man who walked with God and then was taken to be with God, a man who spoke in the power of the Holy Ghost and left my testimony among men? Do you think I’m sorry now? No. No, he’s not sorry.

Ask that soldier who, as the famous Canadian regiment did here at Dieppe—is that the way you pronounce that? French town? I never could pronounce it right. But the other day they had the anniversary of it here in the newspapers, and over the radio they talked about it. Canadian soldiers made themselves famous around the world. By that terrible fight, some of them came away. A great many of them sleep over there.

But some of them came away from that, walked away from it bloody but unbowed, came back after the war was over and went back into the shops and out onto the farm and into the stores and into the classrooms and went on their regular lives. Ask any one of them, are you sorry about that? Do you wish you’d been home cutting out paper dolls? Do you wish you’d been home teaching tatting and knitting in a school for children? Not a one of them, not a one of them, but would straighten his shoulders and snap to the old military bearing and say, I’m proud, proud of my people, proud of my regiment, proud of that hour.

And you ask Enoch, ask Noah, ask Abraham. Are you sorry? Were you sucked in by the emotional vortex? Did somebody get fanatical and win you? No, Enoch would say, I walked with God. No, Noah would say, I heard a voice, and I recognized it. No, Abraham would say, I’d never go back to my idol making, never back to Ur of the Chaldees. I thank God for the high privilege, he would say, of going down with my family into the holy land and becoming the father of the faithful. And from me proceeded finally the Messiah in holy lineal descent from my loins.

Nobody was ever sorry they served God when it’s all over and tent’s down and the wind has blown the dust away and the devil has gone to look for somebody else and the Christian feels around for his laurels. And though he’s won, nobody’s ever sorry about it.

Ask old Jacob, Jacob, are you sorry? The way you lived, sorry you got wrestled with that night on the bank of the river, Jacob would smile and say, no, that’s where I got my new name. Ask Joseph, Joseph, are you sorry that you saw the sheaves bowing down to you and the sun and moon stars bowing? Are you sorry, Joseph? Are you sorry for what you had to pay for your religion? No, Joseph would say, thank God. I praise him every moment for what He did. This is the cloud of witnesses, the old champions, the old, bruised champions.

Once in the early days of the church, about 324, maybe I’m wrong by a few years, there met the council of the church, the last, I would suppose, the last ecumenical council, the council of the church. And it was over the old matter of Athanasius, where they asked whether Jesus Christ was the son of God or not.

They came in. The delegates came in. They came in, not slapping each other on the back as the delegates do now when we gather in these hotels. They came limping in. They came in with one arm hanging loose in the sleeve. They came in with one eye out. Some of them came in with no tongue in their mouths. It had been torn out by pincers. Some of them came in with a foot off and some with a leg.

How did they get that way? The persecutions under the Roman emperors. The champions gathered there. Many of them had died. Millions of them had died, but a few had been tortured and turned loose. And these were the ones, many of them, not all, but many of them who came to that famous council and gave us that Athanasian creed, I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord.

They were the old champions. They had the scars to show for it. You suppose that after they had sat around there a few days and discussed theology and made their speeches, a young fellow just starting out who never knew persecution, sitting beside an old man with a silent tongue, the stub of a tongue, and couldn’t talk but the light of God in his face, you think that young man was ever the same again? You think that he went out pitying himself because he had to give up something? I think he went out with his chin up, saying, there’s a man whose tongue was torn out for his faith, and there’s an old man whose leg was burnt off for his faith, and here’s another man whose eye was put out for his faith. I’ll never complain again.

Brethren, it’s this kind of thing that I hear. I hear it in all Christian history. I hear it from the church fathers. I hear it in the voices of the patriarchs. I hear it in the psalmists and prophets and apostles. I hear these voices. They’re the voice of the ransomed, the voice of the victors, the voice of the saved, and they’re all saying the same thing. We made it. You can.

The blood of Jesus cleanses, the power of God enables, and God hears prayer, and He that’s in you is bigger than he that is in the world. You can make it through. Don’t get discouraged and pity yourself and weep on your own shoulder and get a crick in your neck from self-weeping. Quit it. Straighten up. You haven’t suffered yet striving against sin.

I think about the lady whose chauffeur had driven her out, two ladies, and the chauffeur was, they were driving along, and something went wrong with the car. And here was one of these black, lovely things with a little flowerpot and a flower in it, you know, and all the little telephone and all the rest. And while the man with the uniform and the cap was out trying to fix up the engine, she patted her two gloved hands together like a martyr and turned to the friend beside her. They were on their way to a religious meeting. And she said, Now I know what the apostles went through in their day. Sitting in the back seat of a luxurious car for five minutes while the tire or the engine gets fixed. I don’t think God laughs, but I wouldn’t blame an angel for chuckling. And I think the devil must hold his black sides down yonder when he sees such things.

Well, they speak all with one voice, and they say we weren’t compelled to suffer. Nobody put a chain around our neck and made us go. We wanted to do it. We wanted to do it. We followed the Lord because we’d chosen to follow the Lord. We wanted to follow the Lord. Both the suffering and the glory are ours by our choice. We wanted it that way. I think they all speak with one voice and say, you can serve God under any circumstances.

You can serve God in this terrible age in which we now live. You can serve God now. Circumstances may be various and different, each from the other, but you can serve God now. God will receive you and bless you and keep you, and so be reconciled to God. Don’t listen too avidly to your radio. Don’t sit glued as though you’re hypnotized looking at your TV. Don’t spend too many minutes going over your newspaper. Live clean from the world. Find out what’s going on.

I always listen at ten o’clock at night to see who’s going to shoot who and what Diefenbaker did and John Kennedy and the rest of them. But when that’s over, I’m thinking of something else. I don’t want to get so embroiled in it that I become a part of a society that I’ve repudiated, that I might follow the Lamb withersoever He goes.

Now, in closing, be ye reconciled to God, and to be reconciled, one of three things happens. A and B are alienated from each other. They seek a reconciliation. There can be a reconciliation achieved between A and B one of three ways. A comes all the way over to B, or B comes all the way over to A, or they each come halfway. Either A changes completely, B changes completely, or they compromise. Be reconciled to God.

What does that mean? That God is going to come over on my side. That’s the way it’s preached now. God is so nice and kind and old-fashioned and Hollywood-ish that he’ll come clear over on my side. No, He won’t. God the eternal God. I change not, says God.

If there’s any changing to be done, man, you and I have to do it. God is right the first time. You and I are always wrong, and the alienation is our fault, not His.

Thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel. So, if there’s any coming to God, we must come to God. But you say, how can we come to God? We can come to God because Jesus Christ, who was Himself God by His blood and death, took away everything that can prevent the reconciliation.

Be ye reconciled to God. We can because seeing that He died He died once for all, and He died for all, and He took away all that was between us and God, and we can come now. So, the change must be on your part.

The reason you and God haven’t been getting on is you haven’t been right, and God isn’t going to change. So, if you’re going to be right, there’s only one way to do it, and that’s for you to make the change. Make the change by repentance and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ as your personal Redeemer and Lord. Will you do it?

New Christians that have dragged around and pitied yourself and lived half-out, God help you and pity you. There are a thousand voices from a thousand directions, right on this huge strip of territory from Hudson Bay to the border, from the Maritimes to Vancouver. If you could go back and know the history of the Saints that have lived right on this country, you’d straighten up and say to yourself, I can’t afford to be a half-Christian.

These great Saints set an example for me down in my land, I know her sins. I know her money. I know her entertainment. I know her sins. I know her sins better than you do. I also know that you can’t go into a cemetery from the rock-bound coasts of Maine to the slopes of California, but what there lies in peaceful silence the dust of some holy man or woman who lived and loved and served and suffered and rejoiced in triumph. And I can’t walk as I often have walked through these old cemeteries and not know that there lies the dust sacred to God, for it was once the dwelling place of the Holy Ghost and will be again when our Lord Jesus comes to raise the dead and rapture the living.

So, the voices of holy men and women of all ages everywhere are saying, get right with God, straighten out, come to God, read the Bible, pray, get family altar, start giving, start going to prayer meetings, start having personal prayer, and God will be with you. Let’s pray. It could be that somebody would like me to offer prayer for you.

Last Sunday night after service, a young man from another country who was a Roman Catholic came to me, said he had heard me twice, and he was concerned. I can’t recall word for word, but something to the effect that he was deeply concerned about his soul and his relation to God. Could I help him? I prayed with him, exhorted him, and then told him to read the gospel of John prayerfully, asking God for light.

Maybe he’s here tonight. I hope he is. He promised to keep in touch with me. Maybe you would like to have me pray for you. If you would, the simplest old-fashionedest way I know is just to raise the hand, so I’ll know who wants prayer. Would you raise the hand? Who would like to have me pray for you? For any need at all that might be in your life, any need that might be in your life, put the hand up. We’ll know that somebody wants prayer.

Dear Lord Jesus, we pray tonight that Thou wilt help us to hear Thy people. Oh, we thank Thee for that glorious Jerusalem the golden, with milk and honey blessed, where dwell the spirits of just men made perfect, and where Thy church will someday be.

We thank Thee, O Lord Christ, victorious, triumphant Lord Jesus. God hath made Thee both Lord and Christ, and hath set Thee Head over all things to the church, and hath made Thee heir of all things. Thou who art the shining forth of His glory, and express image of His person, in whom dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, we love Thee, Lord Jesus.

We want to serve Thee. We want this church to be a Christ’s church, indeed. We repudiate the ways of worldly churches. We repudiate the psychology and philosophy of worldly churches. We insist we want to be a New Testament church. Make it so, Lord, we pray Thee. Bless these dear friends, for Christ’s sake. Amen.

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Tozer Talks

The Voice of the Soul

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

August 16, 1953

Now, next Lord’s Day, as Mr. McAfee has said, I will be, God willing, preaching in that part of the country they call the Land of the Sky, Ben Lippin, up on the hill above Asheville. Brother McAfee will be here, and our disorganized church will be back together next Sunday, too. We certainly came apart today, and the only service out of the whole 104 services during the year that we don’t have a choir. The choir will be here and rendering good music, and we hope you’ll be back and bringing your friends.

Now, let me read a passage familiar to you from the 12th chapter of Luke. And He spake a parable, verse 16, He spake a parable unto them, saying, the ground of a certain man, certain rich man, brought forth plentifully. And he thought within himself, saying, what shall I do? Because I have no room where to bestow my fruits. And he said, this will I do. I will pull down my barns and build greater. And there will I bestow all my fruits and my goods. And I will say to my soul, soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years. Take heed, take thy needs, eat, drink, and be merry. God said unto him, thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee. Then who shall these things be which thou hast provided?  Then Jesus draws this conclusion from, So is he that layeth up treasures for himself and is not rich toward God.

Now, this passage gains meaning from its setting, that is, from what precedes it and from what follows it. What precedes it was that a man came to Jesus, very much disturbed because he was afraid, he wasn’t going to get his part of the inheritance, saying, Master, speak to my brother that he divide the inheritance with me. And Jesus said to him, man, who made me a judge or a divider over you? And he said unto them, take heed and beware of covetousness. For a man’s life consists not in the abundance of the things which he possesses.

That’s what preceded this. And to point it up, he gave them this parable which I have read. Then he followed it by saying, Therefore, I say unto you, take no thought for your life which ye shall eat, neither for the body what ye shall put on. For the life is more than meat and the body is more than raiment. Here, between the inheritance which this man was about to lose and the goods of the world, the very great treasures of the world, our Lord Jesus places a parable concerning the soul, and He teaches us the eternal worth of the human soul as compared with or to any other thing.

Now, I suppose this sounds like a religious bromide or a series of cliches, and I wouldn’t blame you too much if you went out saying as some have said, thou speakest an undisputed thing in such a solemn way.

I have claimed that much in fundamental circles is the solemn repetition of an undisputed thing, and I do not want to fall into that snare. But on the other hand, I know the age in which I live, and I’m quite sure that this is the hour when the soul of man is getting less attention, perhaps than ever it did since at least the beginning and rise of revealed religion. The eternal worth of the soul needs again to be declared, and it must be declared as having worth over against all other human values, that there is nothing else that is to be compared with the human soul.

Now, I wonder whether I might seem to be putting up a straw man to shoot him down or a straw lion to slay it if I said that man has a soul. Now, this is assumed in the Bible and declared in the Bible. There are two things you see. The Bible has two ways of teaching things. It teaches by blunt positive declaration, and it teaches by assumption. And you can learn almost as much from what the Bible takes for granted as you can by what it states, as a matter of fact. Not as much, but almost as much.

Now, that man has a soul is assumed in the Bible, and it appears throughout the Bible, not in one book or one chapter. If it was only taught in one book of the Bible, we might be tempted to wonder whether we understood it correctly. If it was only taught in one chapter of the Bible, we might be tempted to wonder whether we had properly understood that chapter.

But it is assumed in the Bible, it is a common coin of knowledge, that man has a soul, that you and I have souls, is taken for granted in the Scripture, just as we take the dollar for granted. The validity of the dollar in our American monetary system gives value to all other coins and all values, so that a dime is valuable because it’s tenth of a dollar, a quarter because it’s quarter of a dollar, ten-dollar bill because it’s ten dollars.

The dollar is the monetary unit, and you don’t run around always talking about a dollar being worth a dollar, a dollar being worth a hundred cents. You take it for granted, it’s a common coin. It circulates freely and unchallenged throughout all the borders and confines of the United States and over into Canada, because the dollar is the common coin, it’s taken for granted. When you see a dollar, you don’t say, what is this? You give back the change, if there’s any change, usually there isn’t any. But you find that the dollar is the common coin, or the common unit of value.

So the Bible, with the soul, takes it for granted. It is not everlastingly asserting it, though it does assert it, but it takes it for granted, assumes it, and goes on from there. And just as if you take out the dollar and its value, if you devaluate the dollar to zero, you have no monetary system left in the United States. Nothing is of any value until we find ourselves again and declare some value.

So when you read your Bible, you read it in the full light of the declared and assumed fact that man has a soul, that this that we have, we see, is not all that we are. We have souls. And if you take that away, then you devaluate the man. If you doubt it or deny it, then you no longer have a man, you have a sub-man. You have something less than a man. The assumption or the declaration or the belief that man has no soul devaluates the man and reduces him to less than a man.

For God blew into man’s body the breath of life, and man became a living soul. And Jesus here did not assert that man had a soul. He took it for granted, did you notice that? Jesus didn’t say a thing here about a man having a soul. He didn’t say, no, I speak this parable unto you in order to teach you that man has a soul. He thought within himself and he said, soul, and he said, this night thy soul shall be required of thee.

Just as I reach my pocket and hand out a dollar and assume its value and don’t argue about it and take it for granted, He reached into the treasure house of understood theology, took out the soul and handed it out and said, here, I’m talking about a soul. Nobody challenged that because it was a common coin of knowledge in the time of our Lord as it is today.

Now, I hardly need to say not only that the Bible assumes and takes for granted a soul and weaves it in and out of its truth, weaves it in and out as a golden thread through all the fabric of theology, but it also declares it as a hard tenet of truth. It is more than an assumption because you see, if it’s only an assumption, then some barbarian can come to you and say, prove to me from the Bible that man has a soul.

And then if you do not have a positive declaration of truth, well, you’re put to it to answer him with chapter and verse. But all through the Bible, it is declared that man has the soul. And not only is it assumed in the Bible and declared in the Bible, but it is believed by all peoples and all races and all religions since time began. That is something people do not argue about. And the great religions of the world have taken this for granted.

The Egyptians and the Indian and the Chinese and all of the religions of the world, however far they might have been from revealed truth, they nevertheless took it for granted as a matter that needed no proof that what you see is not the man, but that there is an essential something in the man of which this we see is only the tabernacle and the dwelling place.

I say it’s believed by all the races of the world. Now that is a large order, but I believe that the history and the findings of men who made it their business to find out will well back up what I say, that all the races of the world have assumed that man has a soul. Now they have not thought about it in the same way.

I read in the question-and-answer department of one of our newspapers recently, someone wrote in and said, how is it that Catholic priests sometimes anoint a dead body after it’s been dead for a long time? And the answer was given objectively. It was given as being a belief that the soul may inhabit the body yet a while after it seems to be dead. And they didn’t say this, but this is the fact that they believe that if it can get the oil on the body before the soul leaves it, that it has some value.

But the point is they assume the soul is there. The Egyptians have in their book of the dead a weird idea that a soul hovers around over the body for a while and that that soul is there for I think it’s three days and they have to do certain things in order to woo the soul and hold it for a while.

Now it’s error, it’s tragic blindness, but it assumes something and takes for granted that which I say is the common property of all the races and all the religions of the world since time began. And there is not a people anywhere in the world that doesn’t have some idea of this. Man has a soul. Even superstition supports it.

Even the superstitious and false beliefs that men have as when they look in a mirror, the soul goes from them. When they break a mirror, they have shattered the visual image of themselves and so on. All of that, of course, is superstition, and it has no value except for this, that it shows once more that what is openly taught in the Bible and tacitly assumed in the Bible also is carried over from the dim beginnings of things and man has always believed that he has a soul.

Not only is this true, but one might almost say that the belief in the fact of the human soul is a test of our humanity and the rare one who denies it. Now there are some people that are just plain pig-headed, there isn’t any other name for them, and some of them become philosophers. Pig-headed philosophers they are. That is, they don’t have any particularly good reason for anything, they were just pig-headed. We used to say on the farm, bull-headed. But I like the word pig-headed better.

And there were one now and again, a rare pig-headed individual who insisted man doesn’t have a soul. But do you know something? That the man who comes forth declaring or throwing doubts upon the soul or declaring that man doesn’t have a soul is always a strained man. He’s always suspect.

And he’s always looked upon as something of a monster in society. And while he may get some publicity while he lives, they shrink from him and pull away from him as from a three-headed man or some other abnormality in nature. So the man that dares declare man doesn’t have a soul, as John B. Watson did and some others, he’s always looked upon as a monstrosity and a deformity in nature.

He has dehumanized himself and has sold out the value of himself as a human being and insists upon being something less than a man. For a man leads a dog down the street, if the man doesn’t have a soul, then the dog’s better off because the dog’s built better than the man and gets along better and isn’t easily killed and he’ll stand up under worse conditions and doesn’t take so much to eat and doesn’t have so many responsibilities and doesn’t have to pay income tax and doesn’t worry about the dead and death and the future and judgment.

And I say a man leading his dog down the street, if the man stops and talks to his friend and says, I don’t believe in the soul, he dehumanizes himself, makes himself less than the dog that he leads on the chain by his side.

Now, our Lord Jesus Christ took the soul for granted. I do not know anywhere in the entire New Testament where He said in so many words, Verily I say unto you, man hath a soul. He didn’t need to say it. The whole Old Testament taught it. The book of Psalms teaches it. And the man is admonished to be still and talk to his own soul upon his bed.

And we read about the souls of the righteous being in the hands of God. We read about the soul all through the Old Testament. So Jesus, when he spoke in the New, did not need to say, Verily I say unto you, man hath a soul. He took it for granted, and the soul in the mouth of Jesus, the soul is the endless part of the man. Often as not in the Bible, it is used synonymously with the spirit.

Now if you have a razor blade, a Gillette blue blade in your hand, and are in the habit of slicing theology very, very thin, and getting the word of God rightly dissected, dissected, or vivisected, then I will have to explain to you that the word soul and the word spirit are sometimes used synonymously in the Scriptures.

There would be those who would rush out and prove to me that that is not so. But you can prove so many things and yet not arrive anywhere. Sometimes the word spirit and the word soul are used synonymously as being the interior part of the man, that part of the man which is endless.

Now the body isn’t endless. The body is mere matter. Man, I repeat, fades as the leaf. And your body isn’t endless. When you’re 16 years old, you think it’s going to be. When you’re twice 16, you’re beginning to worry about it. And when you’re three times 16, you know it’s not going to be. And when you’re four times 16, you’re wondering how soon it’s going to dissolve. That’s about the size of it.

But we imagine that the body is endless until we think a little about it and look around us and then we know that it is not. The body has no life in itself. I never can get mad at the human body, as some people can, and blame it for everything. The Bible never blames the human body for anything. It’s a tabernacle. You might as well blame these four walls for what I say in it as to blame the human body for what goes on in it.

The human body is amoral. It’s neither good nor bad. It has no moral quality attached to it. The body is simply the tabernacle, the dwelling place. You might as well blame a Packard automobile for committing a murder because a man buys a Packard automobile and gets behind the wheel and goes out somewhere to shoot down someone. An automobile is simply amoral.

The man who gets behind the wheel gives for the moment its moral quality to it. And a Packard automobile being driven by a good man on his way to church is a good thing. An automobile, the same car being driven by an evil man on his way to a gambling den is an evil thing, and yet it isn’t either good or bad. It’s whatever the man in it makes it to be for the moment.

So, the human body can do evil, and it’s capable of evil. And yet it’s not capable of evil at all. It is the humble and helpless servant of the man who lives in it. You live in that body of yours, sir, so don’t you blame your body for anything. It’s absolutely guiltless. It’s not to blame for anything. It is what you make it to be.

That is why a man, when he gets converted, his old body lives a better life. It’s the same old body. God converts a bald-headed man. He doesn’t put a new thatch of brown hair on top of his head. He’s still a bald-headed man. God converts a one-legged man. He doesn’t give him two legs. He’s still a one-legged man. He’ll get a new leg when the Lord comes.

The Lord converts a man who has some difficulties or troubles, chances are, he’ll let him pretty much go on the same. You’ll recognize him on the street. You’ll see him going down the street there. You say, isn’t that Mr. Jones that lives across the street from me? Why, he was always on his way to the saloon. And usually he was taking in the whole sidewalk when he came back. But he’s got a Bible under his arm. What’s the matter? Same old Jones. You recognize him, but there’s a new man living in there. And the wheel has been taken over by a new driver, the soul.

So, the soul is the central part of the man; is the endless part of the man. The body isn’t endless. It’s going to dissolve and go back to dust as soon as the soul withdraws. Just as soon as the soul leaves it, it goes back to dust.

Now a poor, ragged and imperfect illustration might be what happens to a house when you move out of it. You ever go out into the country and see a house that nobody lived in for six months? Always goes to rot and ruin. Way to keep a house up to live in it.

Now that’s a poor illustration of a glorious fact that as long as the soul is the tenant there, as Bryant said, the soul comes from afar, a royal guest, to live for a little while in this tenement of clay. As long as it lives in that tenement of clay, why, you have a live body. As soon as it withdraws, you have a dead body.

It’s a solemn and almost eerie thing that when a doctor is forced to decide whether or not a man’s dead, he’s deciding whether the soul is left or whether it hasn’t left. He doesn’t know it, he has other terms for it, but that’s what he’s deciding nevertheless. When he runs and puts a stethoscope on a man’s chest, he’s trying to find out whether the soul is still in the tenement house, or whether it’s packed up and gone and left the house to decay.

I say the body is the least essential part of a man. It is simply, as one man called it, a concatenation of atoms. Just a group of atoms and molecules that have gotten together for a while, and you put a hat on it and go down the street and say, what a big boy am I. But you’re just a walking concatenation of atoms, that’s all you are. That’s another man’s way of saying it.

But the soul is the essential part, and just as soon as the soul decides to wing away, there won’t be anything there for you to put a hat on. The body will decay, depart. It is in the soul that memory lodges.

I remember years ago I preached a sermon that I called Memory, Treasure or Terror. That must have been a good sermon, I’ve never dared to preach it since. You can do lots of things when you’re young that you never dared tackle when you get older, you know. You don’t know as much as you did then, and you’re not as wise.

But I said that memory was either a treasure or a terror to a man. To be suddenly called upon to remember the deeds done in the body would be a treasure to some men, but a terror to other men. And intelligence, and moral perception, and moral responsibility, and everlastingness, and the hope of heaven, and of endless peace, all these repose in the soul, and that’s the essential part of the man.

That’s why a man can be a four, an amputee four times, have all his arms, his legs, everything gone. That’s why he can be by the terrors of war chopped to pieces, and still if we can just patch him up and hold him together long enough, long enough that soul can remain there, he’s still the man that he was, though crippled and hindered by the failure of his body to respond to the impulses of the soul.

My friend, you have a soul, and that’s the essential part of you. It is that that speaks when you say, I. It is that that prays when you say, O God, come to me. It is that of which Jesus spoke when He said, into Thine hand I commit my spirit. It is the essential part of the man. Theologically, there may be a distinction between soul and body, but for all proper human purposes as I speak now, it is the same. So, you do have a soul.

Now, the New Testament teaches something else. The New Testament teaches that man’s soul must be saved. It teaches that if a man saves his soul, all his being is saved. But it teaches that if he loses his own soul, then everything else goes down in ruin.

And Jesus our Lord said, what does a man gain if he, profit if he gains the whole world and loses his soul? He didn’t stop to explain that a man had a soul. He knew he had, and He knew that everybody to whom He addressed himself knew he had. And He knew that everybody that would read that word down the centuries would know that he had, so He didn’t waste any time. And He taught that a man must save himself. That there is the essential you, the everlasting you, the endless you within you, and that must be saved.

Now, if you’re as critical as some of my hearers sometimes are, you will say, I knew he was giving up. He’s a liberal. He said a man must save himself. Well, if quoting an apostle makes me a liberal, and I’m a liberal, Peter said, save yourself from this untoward generation, didn’t he? Save is the verb. Yourself is the object. And you is the implied subject, right? You save yourself, he said.

But of course, Peter wasn’t so foolish as to think that a man has any anodyne for his grief, that he has any panacea for his ills. Peter was not so foolish as to think that a man can forgive his own soul, or wash his own spirit, cleanse his own heart, he knew better. What he meant was, I preach unto you Jesus, the Redeemer, now take advantage of the opportunity. Go unto Jesus as you are and save yourself. And that’s what he meant, and that’s what I mean.

So, the Bible teaches that a man must save himself, in the sense that he must take advantage of the fountain that was opened in the house of David, that royal fountain for sin and uncleanness, that flows from Emmanuel’s veins. A man can cause his own soul to perish by neglecting it.

Now the soul has enemies. It would be wonderful if everything was geared to the salvation of a man’s soul. But everything is geared exactly the opposite. Fallen nature is not geared to the saving of a man’s soul. Think of the millions of people there are, in parts of the world that work from sunup to sundown.

Brother King the missionary tells us of those who never know what it is to have enough in their stomach from the time they’re born till they die. The man with the hoe immortalized by the French painter, and the American poet, whose brow slopes back, and whose brutal jaw hangs down. The necessity of making a living has brutalized him.

I’ve seen the tired old woman come out of the factory, or come in off of the farm, so fatigued that she was staring straight ahead, old before her time. She had no interest in her soul. She had no time to sit down. If she sat down to read the Bible, she’d fall asleep.

Too tired to do anything but push herself till she died. Fallen nature is no friend of God’s. Fallen nature is no friend of grace.

And the winds that blow through the corridors of this world, do not blow heavenward, they blow hellward. The streams that flow through the riverbeds of this world, do not flow heavenward, they flow hellward. And the dead fish goes downstream. And the man without anchorage goes the way the wind blows. Nevertheless, you have a soul to save and a God to glorify. A soul to save.

A lot of these theologians who don’t like that song, they don’t like to sing it. The sure divine my trust betray; I shall forever die. It bothers their conscience and confuses their theology, so they run a blue editorial, blue pencil through that line, don’t sing it. A soul to save, a God to glorify, a never dying soul to save, and fitted for the sky. One of the greatest theologians of the last thousand years wrote that hymn. And I go along with him.

God has given you your soul as a ship owner entrusted to a captain, a noble ship laden with fabulous cargo. He said, now bring her in. Bring her in. She’s ticketed for Liverpool or Dakar or somewhere else. Take that ship through and discharge your cargo there. Get your receipts. I want to know you’ve taken her through. That’s why the tradition of the sea is that the captain stays by the ship until the last man, and if need be, goes down with the ship.

That’s why that fine Swede or Norwegian, Carlsen, stayed by that ship until he knew there was no chance. He was only doing what the masters of ships have done for centuries. Because when a man walks to the deck, a captain, he has a charge in his hand. All that fine, noble, proud ship is in his charge, plus all of the cargo and passengers, if any.

And God has said to us now, here, you’ve got a soul. You have a soul. I’ve given you a soul. I’ve given you that essential part of you, that which is a treasure house stored with memories and imaginations and rich treasures. That bank vault stored with all the gold of Ophir; it all belongs to you. You see to it that you make that shore at last.

My poor old Dad, I repeat, 64, 62 at that time, maybe, years of age, used to sing, when the roll is called up yonder, I’ll be there. Used to shake his old head after he’d wasted 60 years of his time. Used to shake his head, and that tough hearted old man would cry like a baby and say, only that’ll be true of me.

Only that can be true, nothing else matters how wise he was. I think it was true of him. For he gave his heart to the Lord and lived four years. I believe he was saved and is in heaven tonight. God had given him that cargo. He said, now you discharge. You take it through because you’re accountable to me. And if in that day, when the roll is called, we can be there and answer to our name.

The old Song Camp meeting song says, I’ll be present when the roll is called. I’ll answer to my name. To be present and answer to your name. You say your body, no, no. Your body will long ago have been dissolved into dust. And will be rolled around in earth’s diurnal course with rocks and hills and trees. You’ll not take that body that you’ve got now with you.  But there’s an essential part of you that you’ll take, all right. That’s the part I’m interested in tonight. You say, what about a body?

A man asked me tonight for a book on what we’ll be like after death. I didn’t have at the moment such a book. But the Bible does not teach us that we are going to take this particular body to heaven. I’ve always been disappointed with mine. I want to weigh 185 pounds in my sock feet. And the best I could do for up until I was about 40 was 135. I’m really a heavy weight now, 152. But I’ve always been interested in fine bodies. And always had more or less to limp around with this smiling imitation of one.

But that isn’t going to go to heaven with me. Thou fool that thou sowest isn’t going to come up, but a new body such as God giveth it. It’s going to be somewhat like this one, only perfect and wonderful. But it’s not going to be the same old one.

Got the rheumatism, Grandpa? You’re not going to take the rheumatism to heaven with you. Don’t worry about that. Rest peacefully. Arthritis don’t go to heaven. You’re going to leave that in a hole in the ground someplace. God Almighty is going to call you up with the voice of the archangel and the trump of God and the shout of the Lord Himself. And when that shout comes, you’ll leave all those old lined up joints of yours and old hard arteries, you’ll leave them in that hole in the ground.

Thank God for those holes in the ground. There’s someplace to crawl away to rest while the Lord gets your mansion ready. You’re going to leave it down here. We’ll all be good looking up there. As good looking as Him who is the Lily of the Valley and the Rose of Sharon.

When He walked the earth among men with His deity disguised and wore the common garment of the peasant of Palestine, there was no beauty in Him that one should desire Him. And when they pulled Him and plucked out His beard and slapped His holy face and bruised His cheeks, He was marred more than any man and His visage more than the sons of men. And they looked at Him and He was not beautiful then, but He was the beautiful Jesus, nevertheless. And He is the Rose of Sharon and the Lily of the Valley.

Not all the stars that shine in their splendor, shine like His face. And we saw Him with His face shining like the sun and the beauty of Jesus. The beauty of Jesus will be upon all of His people. If they’re redeemed and cleansed and have walked in faithfulness and in the light and His name shall be on their foreheads. Some people think that God will write His name like some fella puts a big sign on Jesus only or Jesus saves on his lapel. That’s all right, do it if you want to, but that’s not what it means.

God isn’t going to write across your forehead and tattoo you with His name. It doesn’t mean that at all. His name shall be on their foreheads. What’s the forehead? It’s the first seen part of a man. As he walks along upright on the earth, the first seen part of a man is his forehead. And the name, the nature of God will be on that forehead.

Let the beauty of Jesus be upon me. Let the beauty of God be upon me, prayed Moses. And so, it is the beauty of God’s nature upon the forehead of the man, upon the countenance of the man. There is no need of the sun for the Lamb is the light thereof, and the beautiful, redeemed bodies like equivalent to and commensurate with the glory of their souls.

A good man doesn’t have a body commensurate with what’s in the body. It would be like putting several million dollars in royal crown jewels in a pine box and then letting the worms eat holes in the pine box yet. Letting the weather beat it till it turns gray. And there’s nothing beautiful about it. And you look at it and you say, is that anything valuable there? And a man says, valuable, jewels like King Solomon never saw, that’s what’s there. And you smile and say that old gray weather-beaten pine box with worm holes in it. Yes, sir.

People look at Christians, I think a dear old brother Tom Hare that sits over there. He isn’t there tonight. And He sits over there, red face and Irish. Getting old. He’s as handsome as the average man. I don’t mean he isn’t. But who’d ever dream to look at that old fellow with the jewelry of God that accumulated in that soul? Who’d ever imagine? Who’d ever imagine that in that weather beaten old frame somewhere hidden away in the real man there is that which looks like God and is beautiful like God? I say who’d imagine it? But it’s true. And it’s true with every saint of God.

There used to be in this church a little old lady named Mrs. Smith. Not the little Mary Smith down here. She’s still living. But this little old bent over lady. Remember she used to walk like this all the time. And she had lots of money. She gave money to the church in large sums. She had lots of money. She didn’t need any help.

But she was all bent over from an accident. And the only thing about her that looked really all right was that happy little face looking up from that bent over frame. People used to see her and pity her and give her money. She’d take it and give it to the Lord and laugh. They thought she was a cripple on the street because she was all bent over. She never could straighten up. She’d always have to way over here look up at you and talk.

Who imagined that the wealth of the Indies could not compare with what was in that little old bent over body? Will you imagine it? I often tell and repeat I suppose ad nauseum the song that I heard once by a little crippled girl years ago in the Grace Methodist Church in the city of Akron, Ohio. I never saw her before. I never saw her since.

I don’t know where, I suppose she’s in heaven now. She could be still living. But she was a hunchback. A real hunchback. Only about that high. And had that thin, sallow, sick face that such people get. And I heard her singing. Oh, cigarette smoking song. Singers were singing bass solo. Choirs that were as worldly as the devil and were singing delightful songs. They were worldly and all the rest. And the pastor would get up with his white hands and preach on the top of a thousand streams. And there wasn’t enough religion around there, you know, to save a mosquito even granted that he was salvageable.

One night in our Epworth League, Epworth League we called it. This little girl got up. They had her singing. There she stood about as high as the desk, but all hunched down and came out behind here on her back. And her face sat down on her breast. And there she stood, and she sang, My soul is so happy in Jesus. For he is so precious to me.

How does it go? For it is music to hear it. His face it is heaven to see. For I am happy in him. And she stood there and sang it. And here I was in an old backslidden Methodist church, in a backslidden Epworth League. And she went on. They say I shall someday be like him, a little hunchback. I never saw her again. I don’t know who she was. I don’t know her name. She was not much to look at, deformed. But she’d heard that someday she’d be like Him. Her cross and her burden lay down.

You show me anything better than that, brother? What has University of Chicago got better than that? Show me anything better than that. Take a fine-tooth comb and comb the world and come up with a diamond that shines like that. The hunchback and the cripple, the body eaten with cancer, and the thick-lipped black man among the Zulus, the slant-eyed yellow man, all of us.

When we come and the soul gets a tabernacle worthy of it shall have a body like unto His glorified body. What do you got that’s any better than that? What do you got that’s even worthy of being compared with it? There’s nothing in the world that can be compared with it.

One of the greatest preachers that I ever heard used to preach in the Alliance. But he went modernistic. And as soon as they go modernistic in the Alliance, they get out. That’s why we never have a modernist in the Alliance. It’s just not healthy. Nobody bothers him. He just freezes out and goes away. Or he, I mean, gets out somehow. And he’s a great preacher, this young man. One of the greatest preachers from the standpoint of ability to preach that I’ve ever listened to.

It came through the other day that he had said that we who preach the full gospel are preaching only a mutilated gospel. This is only a mutilated thing. And he was saying all sorts of unpleasant things. He said we had social implications. And that we were to preach social meanings to our gospel. Maybe so, but I’ll settle for that glorious truth. Let a little hunchback girl raise a happy shining face to heaven and sing. They say I shall someday be like Him, and know, it’s true. Don’t let the devil rob you of the glory.

But I got off there because I was saying that fallen nature isn’t geared to save your soul. Neither is fallen human nature. All around about you. The fallen human nature is determined that your soul shall not be saved. The fallen society is not going to allow you to be too good a Christian. No, no.  You want to join a church where you can do a new vena now and again and compact, compress your religion into certain hours. They’ll give you a place and they’ll say this is wonderful and they’ll invite you in. But if you want to be saved, they’ll reject you.

I say unto you that every Christian is a social spotted bird. And just as soon as he’s truly converted, he’s a spotted bird. I talk sometimes to liberals and men who hold other views. And I want you to tell it around, brother, if you ever happen to talk about me when you’re in company. I want you to talk it around. I want you to tell people, Tozer is an evangelical. No, no, no, no, a conservative. I am not a conservative.

I’m an evangelical. I not only believe in it all, but I believe that it ought to be activated and an engine put in the chassis and that it ought to be moving. I admit that my fundamentalist and evangelical friends sometimes make me ashamed. Just as there’s hardly a family that you don’t have a relative you’re ashamed of. You know, almost all.

We used to have somebody named Marianne in our family years ago. I never saw this old lady. But she must have been pretty bad because my father never would allow her name to be mentioned. There never, all the time that I was a young boy growing up until I was 15, I never heard my father mention my aunt or my great aunt, Marianne Tozer.

Now, she really must have been bad because her name was prohibited. Nobody mentioned it. And if the only reason I ever found out I had that great aunt or something, Marianne, was because they whispered to me, don’t ever mention her name. I don’t know what she’d ever done. I don’t know what she’s done, but she certainly must have been a tough one. She died and I don’t know where she is. By the grace of God, she might be in heaven, I don’t know.

But she was the member of the family everybody was ashamed of. She might not have been such a bad old soul if you’d get to know her. But my father and mother were going to see to it we didn’t get to know her. That’s all there was to that. Almost everybody’s got somebody in the family that you’re a bit ashamed of. And I have, you know, there are fundamentalists you’re ashamed of.

I heard somebody on the radio yesterday. I won’t tell you what radio or where it came from, but I was ashamed of him. What he was doing was just plain moronic, brother, that’s all. That fella like that drools at the chin and needs a kerchief 24 hours a day to keep from drowning. And you can’t tell me that he’s got any sense. Yet it came over a fundamentalist radio.

I’m ashamed of that. I’m just ashamed of the way some of God’s people act in the name of the Lord. But that isn’t going to scare me off, because I had an Aunt Marianne Tozer people didn’t like. I’m not going to change my name to Jones.

And because some fundamentalists insist upon having long ears and waggling them on slight provocation. I’m not going to stop saying that I’m an evangelical. I believe in the stream of Christianity that flowed from the wounded side of Jesus and comes down to this present day. The whole Bible for the whole world forever.

Now. I say society will make a speckled bird out of you just as soon as you start actually start telling the truth and living up to it.

Now the soul may be lost and about finished. The soul may be lost in numbers of ways. It may be lost by not knowing it can be lost. That’s some people’s fault. And some may lose the soul by not believing they can lose it. But most people lose the soul by neglecting it. Leaving it unplanned and unforgiven. There’s a word they used to use.

I don’t know they ever use it anymore. It’s the word shriven. S-H-R-I-V-E-N It’s the past perfect of the word, shrove. It’s an old Catholic expression. But I sort of like it somehow or other. A fellow went and got shriven.

Now I don’t know that it worked. I’m afraid some of these fellows that pretended to be shriven somebody, then it didn’t work, you know, and they left them, and they found them. But the point was, a man felt he wasn’t fit to die. And he had to have help. And he called in somebody to tell him the way. And he confessed his sins and posed to tell God what a sinner he was. And got assurance of sin forgiven. And got his soul cleansed. And his garments washed. And got ready to go. They call that being shriven.

Brother that’s a good word. I wouldn’t go to a priest to get shriven. But I’m willing to go to the high priest to get shriven. Take your poor old, battered soul. And your poor old, stained travel garments, covered with dust and torn by a thousand thorns. Take them to Jesus and get shriven. Go to Jesus and have Him cleanse your soul. And wash him and purify him and forgive the past and put it behind him. And say I’ll never remember it anymore. And get fixed up and ready. Ready to go.

The bride spends weeks getting ready for the wedding. Get ready.  Many a man loses his soul because he doesn’t believe he can lose it. Or because he carelessly fails to get it shriven. Washed and cleansed and purified.

So, I believe in the purifying power of the blood of Jesus. I believe in the best and dearest Father. I believe in the power of the blood of the Lamb to make a bad man good and a dirty man clean and an evil man righteous and a sinful man pure. I believe in it.

And as Moody said, he believes in instantaneous conversion. So, you don’t have to work at it for three weeks or six weeks or ten weeks. Instantaneous conversion. A man can kneel down impure and rise pure. By the blood of the everlasting covenant. Man has a soul. And amid all the creature noises, and how many there are. All the creature noises. They’re multiplying. Noise is every place.

There is the thin still voice of the soul, saying, be reconciled to God. That voice is still sounding from within the depths of your being. That’s the real you, under the camouflage. That’s the real you. The depository for all that is everlasting and endless. That’s the real you. It’s that you that you will take to heaven or hell. It’s that you that will slip away and out of that body of yours.

Shriven or unshriven. Saved or lost. Redeemed or damned. What can we do but look up and say, Jesus lover of my soul. Let me to thy bosom fly. Charles Wesley wrote that. This sensitive, godly John Wesley. His brother said, Charlie. I don’t like your hymn. He said, why John? He said, oh it’s too intimate. He said, it’s intimate. Jesus lover of my soul. He said, how can the congregation sing it, Charlie? It’s too intimate.

But 150 years have proved the wisdom of Charles Wesley’s choice. John could be wrong, you know, and he was at that time. In most everything he was right. But his sensitive soul couldn’t quite bring himself to sing before the congregation. Jesus lover of my soul. I don’t see anything indelicate about it, do you?

Suppose we just sing it tonight. No other church in the whole United States, in the evening would sing Jesus, lover of my soul. Let’s sing it anyhow and be different. Jesus, lover of my soul. And if you hear the voice of your soul crying within you, why, Jesus is your friend and your lover. And he waits to welcome you. Let’s stand as we sing.