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A.W. Tozer Talks

Where There is No Vision, the People Perish

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 1, 1959

I want to call attention to the new issue of the Alliance Witness. It’s interesting, more than usual. I’ve written an editorial on Wesley’s poetic commentary, which some of you may find enjoyable.

Somebody already did, a lady had the courage to write me and ask where she could get it, and if she couldn’t get it, would I lend her mine. Well, I’m going to. I may never see it again, but I’m going to actually send it to her. She lives in Upper Darby, PA, very close to Chester, and she must be all right. William D. Carlson has a missionary, the kind of missionary needed today, which I think is most interesting. Bernard King has an article called, It Came, A Floodtide of Missionary Giving.

And then there’s a lovely picture, so lovely that your heart is moved by it, of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Lobston, lovely faces, and a story of Melvin’s accident in which he was killed.

Then we also have here something that most of you will enjoy. That is the picture and the story of Dr. Richard A. Forrest, Dr. R. A. Forrest. Without a sound to indicate his passing, Dr. Forrest went into the presence of his Lord. He said he wanted to go with his flag flying and his boots on, and he did. He’s been here many times, and we loved him here and love his memory.

Then on the back is a picture of Raguel Chavon, who is the moderator. I’m sure those Indians would enjoy my pronunciation here. But Raguel P. Chavon, the moderator of the Alliance Marathi Churches in India, and the story of the self-supporting churches in India. I think this is a most unusual issue. If it comes to your home, why, that’s something else. But if it doesn’t, pick up a copy, keep it, any that are left, Brother Myers takes around and uses them in the neighborhood as he visits.

Now for the morning sermon. In Proverbs 29:18, I just want the first half of it, because as is often true with these proverbs, the second half says something else, quite away from the subject. First sentence, where there is no vision, the people perish. And if you are a margin addict or a lover of other versions, you will notice that, perish there, has to do with desolation and nakedness. Where there is no vision, the people are desolate.

Now, it is a cliché to say that we are serving God in a changing world. We sing a little song, wrongly attributed to a man named Alan, I don’t know how he got in it, but actually it was written by Sir John Bowering. One stanza says, Chance and change are busy ever, worlds decay and ages move. You and I might as well not attempt to change this. The only thing we can’t change is change. Chance and change are busy ever, worlds decay and ages move. And as time goes on, the face of the world is being altered.

Now, everybody under 20 will think, will wish I was somewhere else, or they were, because they won’t believe this. The reason they won’t believe it is they haven’t lived long enough to experience it. But everybody over 30, we leave the ones from 20 to 30 to figure it out, but everybody over 30 will begin to know that I’m telling the trope. Chance and change are busy ever, and we are serving God in a changing world.

And the face of the world is being altered by irresistible forces. There are at least four forces that are at work changing the face of the world. One is political.

Those of you who are old enough to remember the 30s, 37 and 38, will note a painful parallel between the rantings of Khrushchev and the rantings of the paper-hanger Hitler. He said, give me five years and you won’t know Europe. They gave him five years and they didn’t know Europe.

And there are parts of Europe that today lie in desolation and rubble. And the same irresponsible mouthings, the same troublemaking, the same moving from one part of the world to the other and starting trouble there and then withdrawing and starting trouble somewhere else like a gang of delinquent boys breaking windows and when the police rush there they go someplace else where the police are not and break a window, and keep a neighborhood in trouble. That’s what’s happening in the world now. Those political forces are at work. They’re at work in Africa.

About eight years ago, Brother Roseberry, while he was still chairman of our French West Africa field, said to me that he would give, well it’s been longer than eight, it could have been ten years ago. He said he would give Africa five years yet for missions to operate there, Christian missions to operate there. And he said communism and nationalism would take over and drive out the missionaries.

We have been driven out of China. We have been driven out of North Vietnam. We’ve been driven out of North Korea. We’ve been driven out of Arabia. And there is a likelihood, if things continue, that foreign missions, Christian missions will be driven out of Africa. Political changes are taking place. Political forces are changing the face of the world. And there are economic changes.

When I was a boy, they used to say about a man, in order to sort of commend him, to give him a compliment, they said he raised ten kids on a dollar a day. But you couldn’t raise a real healthy parakeet on a dollar a day now. And economically, the face of the world has changed. And biologically, there has been what they call a population explosion. It started with the Second World War.

You know, in those days, the soldiers said, if it moves, salute it. If you can lift it, pick it up. If you can’t lift it, paint it. If it cries, change it. If it’s hollow, rent it. And if it has wheels, buy it. That’s all gone now, and the population explosion has altered everything.

A few years back, you would ride out and you would see cows contentedly munching. And then now you go out there and you see a schoolhouse, a lodge hall, a movie picture house, a chain store, and a whole carpet of new houses. South Holland is an example of where our New Alliance Church has been located. Fortunately, in time, the population explosion has literally spattered the world with houses and homes and young couples and new children and overflowing schoolhouses, everything overflowing.

And then, of course, military. One of the forces that’s changing the world is the military force. I have myself lived in three different Americas.

I lived in the America from the time I was born near the turn of the century to 1917 when America entered the war. A new America was born out of the First World War. Then things went on.

And another, there was until between the two wars, we had a different world altogether from the world that we knew before the First World War. Then came the second, and after the second, we have a different world altogether.

If in 1925 you had talked about countdown, would anybody know what you meant? You’d think it was a kid’s game. If anybody had talked about orbiting Venus, as they did in the newscasts last night, you’d have smiled and said more of that Jules Verne stuff or H.G. Wells.

Now that’s common talk. I saw the other day a list of the new words that have been created in the last few years. Panelist, for instance, and simulcast, and countdown, and missile. Some of them are created and some of them are used in other ways than they had been, so it added up to a new word. And I suppose that you could do with 150 to 200 or maybe many more than that words that a little while before simply had no meaning, but political forces have changed the world completely. And the next world war will change it still more completely. If there’s another world war, as there undoubtedly will be an Armageddon, but we’ll not go into prophecy this morning.

Now, I say that we’re serving God in such a world as that. We’re not serving God in a static world. I wish that we could. I’m static by nature, I don’t mind telling you. But I have said that if God had made me a tree and made me conscious, I’d have been a happy man, rooted in one place, loving the familiar scenes and never changing. I don’t like to travel never did and like it less all the time. I get invited all around.

I was invited to Japan here last week, but I’m not going unless the Lord sends me because I’m too much of a tree by disposition. I like to stay. But you know we’re serving God in a changing world, not in a static world, but in a changing world.

And the Christian or the church that lives for just a little while will be forced to serve God under a set of circumstances different from those that were extant when he was converted, altogether different, in a radically new situation.

Your grandchildren, if the Lord tarry, will serve God in a world so different from the one you know now that your grandchildren will look at your pictures and laugh and will look back at the houses you lived in, the automobiles you drove, and grin and say, isn’t that quaint, if they used the word quaint in that day. A radically new situation.

If you’re going to serve God on and endure unto the end, you’re going to have to learn to adapt to all these situations. Rigidity is always a bad thing. You know rigidity belongs in the cemetery, and that’s the most rigid, most carefully well laid out and carefully planned and most conventional part of the world is the poor, pathetic cemetery. People are rigid there. They do not move; they do not adapt.

They say that intelligence is the ability to adapt mentally to a changing situation. You’re intelligent if instead of going straight down the line, you can adapt. You’re fast in your mental footwork to change with the new idea that comes up.

Now, if you’re going to serve God until the end, and I trust all of you are, then you’re going to have to serve Him under changing sets of circumstances. This one we know now will have to change, and the one that we’re going into will have to change. If the Lord tarry in another generation, we’ll have to be alert to see it change. We’ll have to occupy new territory and witness to a new generation.

But what do we mean now about the vision? Well, the vision, what does it mean? To follow Christ and to follow Him rightly, there must be a vision. There has to be a vision. But what do I mean by vision? I mean a knowledge of the inspired Word.

You see, we are the victims of the planners who know not the word. They know not the word. They’re the planners. They’re our city planners, and we can resist it all we will. We get shoved around by these planners. But those who know the Word, they have a vision. That is, they have insight and intelligent awareness.

The average person does not know where he is. He knows in a general way, or he can look at the street signs and tell. But mostly as touching situations and current circumstances, we don’t know where we are. Even newscasters and men who gather gossip all over the world from all halls of legislation and debate, from presidential palaces and palaces of kings, they know what is taking place, but they don’t know why.

Now, vision means that we not only know what’s taking place, but that we know why. And without a vision, people are desolate. People perish. Not only the people that they go to help, but they themselves, because they have not a vision.

Vision means insight, ability to see in, to see through. Back in the 11th chapter of the book of Isaiah, it tells about the Holy Spirit coming upon Jesus and making him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord. That quick understanding in the Hebrew means a sense of smell. He has a quick sense of smell. He’s a bloodhound. He can tell smells.

A thousand pairs of gloves can lie in a pile, and a bloodhound will go in and pull one out, the glove that belongs to the man he’s after. Or he’ll rub that one glove out of a pile of fifty on the dog’s nose, and he’ll follow the scent of the man who wore the glove right through swamps and across rivers and on until he finds him. And God says the Holy Ghost comes on a man, and He makes him of a quick sense of smell.

He doesn’t simply vegetate and live in the world, letting circumstances push him wherever he will, but that he’s alert and alive and awake, and he can see, and he knows where he’s going. And he knows the current situation in which he lives.

I have not prayed to God that I might have the gift of divine healing. I did when I was a boy, but I soon gave that up. But I have long prayed to God that I might have prophetic insight, that I might live in the world and know what God is saying to the world at a given time, and to know what He’s saying to the church at a given time, to know what He’s saying. He doesn’t always say the same thing.

And what is good for fifty years ago still stands, but the emphasis may lie someplace else, when times and circumstances change. And the wise prophet is the one who has insight to know what God is saying at a given time, under a given set of circumstances, and to know our relation to conditions and the purpose of God in those changing or changed conditions.

Now, there are two purposes of God that I want to talk about briefly. There is the remote and the immediate. The remote purposes of God, of course, have been set as the beam upon which the airplane flies on, and it never alters any. Those are the purposes of God. They are, as far as we know, they involve Israel and the church and the nations, the earth and the heavens.

God has a remote plan for Israel. That is why I do not get excited when some little thing happens in Jordan or Iran, because those are immediate, short-term things. But the long-range plan of God must be carried out, and it will be carried out. God would not lie to Abraham, his friend, and God has a long-range purpose for Israel.

He also has a long-range purpose for the church. That long-range purpose is that she, after she has suffered a while and has bled sufficiently and groaned and wept enough and prayed and worshipped enough, she will be led into the presence of God on the arm of her Bridegroom, and that from north and south and east and west round the world the Bride shall be gathered, and Jesus Christ, who left the earth apparently a defeated man, shall come back bringing her on His arm to show unto to all created intelligences as being a Bride worthy of Her Bridegroom. God has that in mind for the Church, and that is a long-range purpose, and it can’t change and won’t.

Then for the nations, God has purposes for the nations. That is the reason I keep telling you, don’t you let yourself get excited about warnings from the scientists and the writers. Keep calm. God has His plans, His remote plans, plans way out there.

And the day will be when He will call all nations before Him, and there will be nations in that day as there are now. He will call the nations before Him. It won’t be one brown nation, so those who would have His intermarry all around the world are not going to win.

There will be nations and there will be tongues, and we won’t all be speaking Esperanto or basic English. The planners are trying to teach us Esperanto or basic English. They say we ought to cease to have so many languages. We’d love each other more if we only had one language, and so the poor butterfly brains are trying to create one language.

Listen, when Cain slew Abel, he spoke Abel’s language without an accent, whatever it was. And when he planned to take Abel out into the woods and murder him, he said in a language Abel could understand. Come on, brother, let’s take a walk. And there was no accent. A common language between Cain and Abel did not prevent Cain from murdering his brother.

We have fought Britain twice, and we speak the language of Britain, even though the British don’t think we do. But at least we make a stab at it. And we speak the language of Britain, and yet we fought Britain twice.

So, language doesn’t mean a thing, yet they say it does. The nations of the earth are going to have their languages redeemed from tongues and peoples and tribes. And so instead of the planners making us all one brown race with an antenna on top of our head and no hair as the comic artists make it, we’re going to remain very much as we are now until we see Jesus. I don’t know whether you scientists believe that or not, but it’s so.

All right, now, that’s the remote purpose. God has a remote purpose for this earth on which we live. I love the earth, always have loved the earth. I love the red birds that sit and sing their poor little goofy heads off these cold mornings because the sun is shining and the temperature is 30 and they don’t know the difference. But there they sit and sing to beat the band. You know, if they’d look at the thermometer out on our porch, they’d go back to bed. But because the sun is shining, they’re singing. I love the earth.

I love to see the trees blossom in the spring and lose their brown leaves in the fall. I don’t like too much snow. You can get enough even of a good thing, and while snow is beautiful, we overdid our beauty this year.

But I love the earth. I love God’s wonderful, lovely earth, and God has a plan for the earth. Don’t write the earth off, and don’t allow anybody to tell you why we’re going to dissolve it into atomic dust. We’re going to do nothing of the sort.

Jesus Christ, when He died on the cross, the blood that ran down over His legs and down off His toes onto the ground was earthy blood, blood that He had gotten out of the ground. It was the blood of men, the blood of man, made of dust. Though He was God, His body was man’s body.

And this is our Mother Earth, and when we call her Mother Earth, it’s not a poetic flight of fancy. It’s a reality, Eighty percent of it is water, and the rest is dust and earth, eighty percent water. And the part of us that’s from heaven is inside, the spirit, the soul, the mind. But physically we belong to the earth. It’s our mother, as God is the Christian’s father.

And God isn’t allowing old Mother Earth to be dissolved in atomic dust until the day when He burns all things up with fire. Then they will not be annihilated. They will simply be rejuvenated. The fire that Peter talks about in 2 Peter 3 is not a fire that makes ash, it’s a fire that burns out impurities and renews, as the fire of the Holy Ghost renews the heart of a Christian. So, He has His plans for the earth, and He has His plan for the heavens above.

Brother Chase said this morning that he kind of wished that one of our satellites would bump into a Sputnik and blow it up. But there’s too much room up there for them, you know. The traffic isn’t heavy enough up there yet for there to be any bumping. There’s plenty of room up there yet, but one of these days God is going to take His rake and rake the leaves off His front lawn, and they’ll be the Sputniks and all the rest of the satellites that we hurl up there in our pride. That’s the remote plan of God.

Then there’s the immediate plan of God. And the immediate has to do with current situations and conditions which break out because of political changes and because of economic forces and because of military campaigns. And now a vision means that while I keep in mind always the remote purpose of God, I’ve got to be able to adapt to the immediate purpose of God.

Now, that’s why we need a vision. We’ve got to know what the current situation is. And you know that it’s so easy to settle down and not know what the current situation is. And you think, you know, I think we did it here over the past few years unintentionally.

We love to sing so much in this church, and I’ve been preaching over the years about worship and the eternal wisdom and the Triune God and the Attributes, and people have been enjoying it, they tell me and coming to hear it. And we’ve been no trouble, nobody’s raising any fuss, no divisions.

And we have just enjoyed it to a point where it’s been wonderful. And even the people have moved away, and God knows they’ve been vast numbers. They’ve all left with a tear in their eye. Nobody wanted to go. But changing circumstances, chance and change are busy ever.

A sample of it was here about the latter part of May. I’ve got a wrap on my door here. And I said, come in. And in came Brother Campbell with that red face, you know, and a head innocent of hair. And he was really shocked and excited. And he was never an excitable man. And I said, hello, Brother Campbell, how are you? He said, good morning, and he sat down. He said, you know what, Brother Tozer? I said, no. He said, I have been transferred to Los Angeles, and I’ve got to report there by the 9th of June. Just a week or two away.

That was a sample. And his wife came up then, too, almost wringing her hands, as much as that good godly woman ever would. Said, what are we going to do? Well, they didn’t want to leave, but they had to leave. They wiped away a tear and said goodbye, and they have done it and done it. But mostly we like to hear the old truth. You don’t hear deep truth in too many places. And this church has enjoyed it tremendously. The chance and change are busy ever. Worlds decay and ages move.

And the situation, the current situation, is not what it was even five years ago. Conditions have changed, and the purposes of God, the immediate purposes of God, not the long-range purposes. They never change. But the immediate purposes, the plans of God, the strategic purposes of God.

Now, the present question is, for us, and I think that it is biblical, it’s here before us, the present question is, what direction is God moving now? Here my human sympathies conflict with the call of God. And you know that it’s possible for our human sympathies to go one way and the will of God to go another for a little while. It was so with Peter.

Jesus said to Peter, to his disciples, Peter heard it, He said, now the Son of Man, and they loved him so much, the Son of Man, they said, is going up to Jerusalem and He’s going to be arrested by the Gentiles, and the people are going to crucify Him. And Peter jumped up and put a comforting hand across Jesus’ shoulder and said, not so, Lord, not so. And Jesus said, ah, Peter, you don’t savor of heaven, you savor of earth. Your human sympathies are getting away with you.

It’s entirely possible to let our human sympathies miss the will of God if we don’t look out. And I’m in great danger of it because my human sympathies are away from what I believe the plan of God is.

And I refer particularly now to this church, this fellowship, having to relocate its place of worship and have a new field of service. My heart says, now wait a minute here. You don’t want to run away from the poor. You don’t want to let a neighborhood rot. You mustn’t do that. You must stay and minister to what we call the poor classes of people.

That’s where my sympathies lie. And you just have to bump me twice real hard, and I’d go down and apply for assistant superintendency at the Pacific Garden. Because that’s where my sympathies lie.

But you know, friends, here are some things. Now some people won’t like this, and I may alienate a few minds here. But I’ll say it anyhow because it’s true and it must be said that slums are changing, are moving. And they’re moving out and covering areas like a blight.

Now somebody says, but wait a minute, should not we minister to these blighted areas? The answer is yes. The slums will always be a mission field. There will always be an important place for the rescue mission. There will always be an important place for the mission church. And there will always, I suppose, be a place for the storefront gospel mission. Always.

But have you noticed one ominous thing? Rescue missions, mission churches, and storefront gospel missions have to be staffed and supported from without. A blighted area never supports itself. The slums will never be the place of spiritual outreach. Missionary societies have never been born there. Never.

The appeal of Christ, while it is rarely to the very rich, it is never to those who are willingly of degraded taste, to persons without aspirations and without ambitions, lazy drones who are satisfied with degeneration.

Now you say, isn’t that a terrible way for you to talk? Are we not all sinners in the presence of God? Brother, I don’t suppose any man or woman here has spent more time beating the floor and telling God what a hopeless, worthless, rotten sinner he is.

But every city does have a people without aspiration. You can’t make them aspire. You can’t. Every city does have people without ambition. They don’t want to be any different from what they are.

I remember visiting a rescue mission once down on Madison Street. I was standing in the doorway and men were coming in. I saw a particularly good-looking young fellow coming in. He was bright-faced and smiling, and I spoke to him. I found he wasn’t a Christian at all. He was there coming into the mission. I said, I being the father of six sons, I loved him. I said to him, now listen. I took hold of his sleeve, and I said, listen, you don’t want to go on like this, do you? I said, look, you’re young, and if you continue like this you’ll be a bum. He said, I’m a bum now.

I didn’t faze him. He was contented. I don’t know what his background was. I only know he was physically good to look at and wasn’t too badly gone yet in his clothing. And he’d had a haircut at least within recent months. But he didn’t mind saying, I’m a bum now.

And there are hundreds of thousands in the great cities, while they’re those for whom Jesus died, and while they are just as good as you and me, and if we stood on our own merits, we’d all perish alike, they simply don’t aspire. They have no ambitions. A mug of beer, unshaven, shoes off, while the wife splashes around barefooted and hair down, getting up for breakfast, cussing each other while little kids run about.

You say, but shouldn’t the church do something? Brethren, the church tries hard. Through the arm of the church, her missions, her mission churches, her storefront churches. But there are masses of people who simply don’t care and they won’t care. You say, well, now wait a minute. Don’t write cities nor sections of cities off.

Did not God write Sodom and Gomorrah off? He did. And he wrote Pompeii and he wrote other cities off. It’s possible simply to get so degenerate that we’ve lost all desire to be different.

And a church with a message such as ours, I wish that we could move further north and settle further north in the middle of this and try to do something. That’s where my human sympathy says. But all of church history cries, No.

Denominations were not born among lazy, degenerate people who live in their lusts and who live like beasts and don’t care. You say, The Methodists ministered to common people? Yes. But John Wesley was an Oxford man, along with all of his brothers. You say, The Salvation Army ministered to the poor in the slum? Yes. But William Booth was a man of high social position and education and aspiration. The Moravians? Yes. But Zinzendorf was a Count.

What do I mean by this? I simply mean that it’s possible to get up where God can’t reach you and it’s possible to get down where God can’t reach you. It’s possible to be a Gold Coaster and live up where the gospel of Christ is scorned. It’s possible to give up to saloons and sex and beer and shows and poker until there’s no thought of God, and not all the rescue missions in the world will ever win people like that. Not all the help you can give them will ever bring them. One here, one there, maybe.

Harry Monroe was rescued and came out of Pacific Garden. Billy Sunday came out of Pacific Garden. But those men were men with fiery ambitions. Don’t forget the very missions that won those two men were supported by the middle-class Christians, who did have some ambition and some aspiration, and who did want to shave and put on a clean shirt.

Now, it says here that the common people heard Him gladly, and the fruitful field has always been the middle classes. It is from these that the support comes for foreign missions. It’s from these that the support comes for rescue missions and mission churches and institutional work, hospital work such as ours from this church, and other such work, old folks’ homes and orphanages, and home missions and foreign missions, and missions among the Indians.

Practically none of these, at first at least, are ever self-supporting. Foreign missions may become so, but not at first, neither the Indian work, and certainly never the orphanage work. The little chaps can’t earn any money. A dime is high finance, you know, to them. Somebody has to think for them, and somebody has to be where he can be producing so he can think for them.

You want to know why we’re planning to move and why we’re leaving this area and going to a place, a simple place, a plain place, not the Gold Coast, but where young couples move and where babies are born and where schools are overflowing and where the simple people, the plain people like you and me who do have some ambitions in God and in the world, who are aspiring, who do believe in education and a bit of culture, at least, and who do have some aspirations where they are. They have always been those to whom the gospel of Jesus Christ appealed.

That’s history, brethren, and you can’t get away from it. You can get up so high, behold your calling, brethren, not many mighty, not many noble are called. But also behold your calling, brethren, that there are whole blighted areas where people’s ambitions are dead and their aspirations lost and where they live for liquor and food and sex and gambling and care nothing about God.

And if they’re going to be ministered to, it must be from the outside. Somebody out there that does have some ambition and that does care will go back there and preach to them. But they’ll never support a church, and they will never be interested enough ever to carry on the work of God. And foreign missions to them, the name wouldn’t even be known.

So, my brethren, over top of the nostalgia of my own heart and the grief and the heartache, we must go and open a truth center where the common people are and where they will be over the next years and where the next economic or military bump will put them by the hundreds of thousands. And the vast numbers will be.

But we’ll never forget the missions and we’ll never forget the jails and we’ll never forget the hospitals. And we’ll never forget those who are ready to forget themselves. And always we’ll be a part of the missionary activity that takes the Truth to them. And we’ll always have boys like Lou Finney, Dave Lutschweiler, and Stan Lemon, and I could name others of you if I just look around here, that feel called to go and minister to the people that haven’t any money, to the people that can’t support missions, to the people that you have to catch them and make them listen.

We’ll always have them and God bless them and increase their number by the thousands. For to me it’s a tragic and terrible thing to leave whole sections of blighted areas of the city without a gospel witness. Or worse, to leave them with a witness every third storefront of church presided over by an ambitious ignorant preacher who lives off of the fears and superstitions and emotions of his people, but who has no message, no vision, no outlook, no aspiration, no desire for anything but a bit of fast music and some shouting.  So, with a heart full of nostalgia, we plan to relocate.

A young person wrote a letter recently. We’ve got a lot of kids out from here in the various schools, and one of them wrote and said, I am so sorry that the church is going to have to move. I have such sweet memories of the Alliance Church, one of our girls. Sweet memories, and I know it.

And have I? I have such sweet memories of this church and of the people here and of the music, Brother McAfee, the gorgeous, wonderful music. We’re not a Robert Shaw chorale or a choir, I know. You’re hard-working people that work all day and then drag yourself to practice Friday night. I know we’re not a Robert Shaw chorale, but brothers and sisters, we’ve sung beautifully about a wonderful God.

And for me to get put where we’d hear nothing but choruses and cheap gospel numbers, I think it would break my heart. If I’d ever have to leave here, I think that I would take three days off, like Nehemiah, to grieve. But sometimes you have to do what your heart doesn’t want you to do. I’m talking now about locating. I think when we do relocate, I’m going to have to come back every once in a while.

I don’t drive a car, but I can get a bus by, walk around and look it over and try to recapture some of the blessedness that I’ve known in this place among the good people. I have a little trouble here and there once in a while, one every ten years, but it doesn’t last, and everybody loves everybody else. It’s been very sweet and very wonderful.

But the change has come. Chance and change are busy ever. World decay and ages move.

And if we’re going to maintain this blazing gospel witness that has sent young people to the ends of the earth over the last thirty years, we’re going to have to go with God on it, literally go with God. And if we can’t see it and have no vision, without a vision the people perish. Without a vision, that is, without knowledge, without the insight and intelligent awareness to appraise the situation and know what you ought to do, without it we fail God.

Tomorrow I’ll preach twice. I have to preach one, two, three, four, five times next week, in addition to a board meeting and radio meeting. But I’ll be preaching for the Mennonites at a conference of Mennonites.

For many years they’ve had at the corner of 19th Street and Union Avenue a church and some kind of an institution there. I never was too sure what, but it was a church. One of these churches where they don’t have musical instruments, they sing a cappella, and I enjoy being with them.

And I’m going to enjoy it tomorrow when I preach for them twice. But you know what? The thruway condemned their area. Now after trying to hang there, they’re having to go; 19th and Union. Good people. They stuck.

But chance and change are busy ever. And when the man with the star-spangled hat and the white beard says, I want to put a highway through where your church is, no matter whether you’ve dedicated and wept over it and soaked it in salty tears, I want it!

I want to put a highway through so beer trucks can travel over where your church used to be. And young fellows drive wildly while they sit close to their girlfriend, and traffic can come back and forth. People want to go out in into the country, and we’re going to have to provide them a way out of the city, and your church is in the way!

So, they condemn it. So, our poor friends the Mennonites have to pick up and move. Leave a lot of heartaches behind, but they’re having to go. So are we. And we are going with mixed feelings, but we’re going with certainty that we have the vision that we see where God is moving to.

I preached here a few, I guess, ten days ago at the Methodist church down here at 70th and Union. And a good fellow, an old brother by the name of Mr. Cox, a Methodist brother, Mr. Cox, drove me out to my house after the meeting. Had a nice meeting, I enjoyed it, I preached on the cross of Christ. We sang about the cross.

And I said, well, Brother Cox, I suppose you’ve been a member here a long time. He said, 40 years. He said, you know, Reverend, when I joined this church, it was on the outskirts. He said, this was way out when I joined it. I don’t know whether anybody here can remember back 40 years or not. But I remember whole areas out here that were what the boys called prairies, that is, we call them vacant lots, are now packed solid.

The city is moving. And we’re going to move with it. We’re going to have in mind little fellows that need a Sunday school, young couples that need a church home, older people that are retired and can afford to build a decent little cottage out, and those who are leaving in droves or being driven out from this city.

So that’s what we’re doing. And that’s why we’re doing it. And remember one thing, that while we’ll never forget the jails and the hospitals and the institutions and the street corners, the hope of the Church for tomorrow does not lie with them.

The hope of the Church for tomorrow lies with responsible families. And we’re going where the families are.

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Messages

A.W. Tozer Talks

Man’s Accountability to God

Pastor and Author A.W. Tozer

June 13, 1954

In the book of John, the fifth chapter, I want to read verses 22, and 26 to 29. For the Father, the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son, that all men should honor the Son, even as they honor the Father. He that honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father which hath sent Him.

Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth My word, and believeth on Him that sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is passed from death unto life. Verily, verily, I say unto you, the hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live. For as the Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself, and hath given Him authority to execute judgment also, because He is the Son of Man.

Marvel not at this, for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and shall come forth, they that have done good unto the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation. I can of mine own self do nothing. As I hear, I judge, and my judgment is just, because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent Me.

Now, I don’t mind telling you that I would very much rather not speak on the topic which is mine tonight. But in preaching through a book of the Bible, we must either preach it all or tacitly assume that some of it was not supposed to be preached. I don’t believe that any of it should be skipped.

And we come now to the matter of the Judgment, Christ Jesus our Lord, the Judge. I’m going to treat it like this. We’ll talk a little about the basic concept of judgment, and then point to some inadequate concepts of judgment, and then show the qualifications which the judge of mankind must have, and then show that Christ qualifies as the judge.

Now, the basic concept of judgment is very simple, and it has been believed by practically all religious people that have ever lived anywhere, with variations in detail. And it is that human beings are morally accountable. They are not self-created beings, nor self-sustaining. They have their life as a derived thing from Another and not from themselves.

The Father hath life in Himself, so nobody can judge the Father. He is not a derived being, He is the original Being. And He hath given also to the Son to have life in Himself.

No one can judge the Son. He is not a derived being but is of the Father alone. This concept of judgment is universal, with, I say, variations in application, and that human beings are morally accountable, and that while they are free to make moral choices, they are nevertheless under necessity to account to some authority for those choices.

Now, I have used a word and a phrase, and one seems to cancel the other one out. I have said free and under necessity, but there is nothing inconsistent here. Men are free to decide their own moral choices, but they’re also under the necessity to account to God for those choices. That makes them both free and also bound, for they are bound to come to judgment and give an account for the deeds done in the body. Now, that’s the basic concept of judgment. Some have tried to deny that.

In your high school days, you read Emerson’s famous self-reliance, I believe it was, or compensation, I think was the essay that contained this doctrine, that there is no such thing as a judgment, that everything is judged now and sentenced and rewarded or punished now. This, of course, is not the universal belief, and it’s not the belief of the Old Testament, it’s not the teaching of the New Testament, it is not the teaching of the Church, it was hatched out of the head of the very great man who lived in Concord.

Now, let us look at some inadequate concepts of judgment, and I think maybe we might mention that one first. That judgment is the operation of the law of compensation. That if you take it out of your left pocket, you’ll have to put it in your right pocket. And that everything that you do in one direction is counterbalanced by something that’s done in another direction.

The thief steals from himself, says Emerson. And the only punishment the thief will ever get is the knowledge that he is a thief. Now, that is true, but it’s not enough. That’s an inadequate concept of judgment. There is another, and it is that we are accountable only to society. Now, it is true that we are accountable to society, but that is only a portion of the truth, not all of it. The rest of it is that we are accountable to God, which we’ll mention later.

Now, we are responsible to public opinion, for instance. Everybody here is responsible to public opinion, and public opinion is going to judge you, and indeed has already judged you.

A rather silly but nevertheless accurate definition or proof of what I’m saying, that we are judged by public opinion, is seen in some time ago, it’s been some years ago now, I was walking down the street, and a little boy that just about came up to here, I would say, up to the lower part of this pulpit, and he took a good look at me as I walked along.

Usually I’m friendly to children, but I was preoccupied that day, I must have been. And when I got within hearing distance of him, he looked up at me and said, hello, picky puss. He had me figured out already, I was a pickle puss. And I was responsible to human society for the very shape my face was in. Now, I wasn’t mad at anybody, but he evidently thought I wasn’t as cheerful looking as I might have been, thought he’d needled me a little, which he did.

So we’re responsible for everything we do. You drive down the highway and you’re accountable to public opinion. They’re either going to conclude that you are a fine driver and a good man, or they’re going to conclude you’re a road hog, one or the other.

You live beside your neighbor, and your neighbor is going to judge you as being a good neighbor or not being a good neighbor. Now that’s true. But to say that that’s all the judgment there is, is to argue like a backward child, because there’s something more yet, and that is human law.

We’re also accountable to human law. Every nation makes its laws, from the most primitive tribes of New Guinea to the most civilized nation in the world, they have their own laws and everybody’s responsible to those laws.

But you say, how about the outlaw? And the answer is that the outlaw is an outlaw only in a few things. An outlaw will rob a bank in order that he might get money to pay taxes or pay something else. He is keeping one law and breaking another one to get the money to do it. So the outlaw is an outlaw only in certain details. In the majority of his life, say that in 95 percent of his life, he’s a keeper of law, not a breaker of law. But he is an outlaw, nevertheless, in those details.

A man is a murderer. Well, he’s broken the law that says that we’re not to murder our fellow man. But he might have been up to that time a keeper of all the laws of the land.

Another thing is that an outlaw is never a happy man. He’s accountable to the law even while he is breaking it, and he’s miserable even while he’s flouting the law.

Now, there’s a third thing here about this, that we are accountable to society. And it is that society cannot reach us in that sphere of our being where we’re most vitally accountable, namely, to God and to ourselves. I am a human being, an American living in Chicago. I am accountable to public opinion. I am accountable to the law of the land. But I am also accountable to myself and my God. Human society can’t touch me there. And in the very relationships that are the most vital to me, human society cannot touch me at all.

A man wants to commit suicide, he turns a gun on his head and blows his own brains out. He is not accountable to society nor the law. He’s accountable to some higher authority, for society cannot punish him.

A man stands up and says he’s an atheist and turns his back on God, society cannot punish him for that. There isn’t a country in the world that can punish a man for hating God. They can only punish him in some countries for not going to church, not paying his ecclesiastical tax, or not kowtowing to the host as it passes by. But he can hate God in his heart and never be punished because society cannot reach him in that important and vital realm.

Well, then there is a third inadequate concept of judgment, and it is that man’s accountability is to himself alone. That every man stands before the bar of his own reason and of his own conscience, and that the judge and jury of man will be man’s reason and man’s conscience.

Now this is the infamous relativity of morals that is taught in many of our universities. That each man is a law unto himself, and that good is whatever brings social approval, and evil is whatever brings social disapproval.

The answer to that of course is very simple, and it is that if that were true then there would be as many moral codes as there are human beings, and each one of us would be our own witness, our own prosecutor, our own judge, our own jury, and our own jailer. A man is accountable to himself. You know, that is so silly as scarcely to be worthy of consideration here tonight.

But never underestimate the ability of human beings to get mixed up. Any of you that are preachers or will be preachers, take a little advice and never overestimate the ability of people to get confused. And if a man with an eloquent tongue were to come to some of us and preach man’s accountability to himself alone, some silly people would accept it, forgetting that it has no basis anywhere.

How can a man be accountable to himself? You say, well, he’s accountable to his conscience, and I ask, to whom is his conscience accountable? How can I be my own prosecutor, my own prosecutor, witness on the prosecuting side, my own prosecuting attorney, my own judge, my own jailer, and my own executioner? All very silly and very poetic and very dreamy, and sounds very learned and very mystical, but it’s all ridiculous. It’s an inadequate concept of judgment.

For I never knew anybody yet except Leonard Ravenhill, it would be hard on himself. He’s hard on himself. He’s a judge and jury of himself, and he punishes himself, but outside of Christians like that, and they’re rare, God knows in our day, I don’t know anybody scarcely but what’s pretty easy on himself, you’re undersigned included. I know that if I were to be a judge and jury and witness and prosecutor and executioner, I’d lose my axe. I wouldn’t cut my own head off. I wouldn’t have the courage to do it.

So, God is not going to make this man accountable to Himself finally, and neither is He going to make you and me accountable to the law finally, human society finally. We are accountable to the One who gave us being. We are accountable to the One out of whose heart we came and who laid His laws upon us. We are accountable to God.

And it was this and is this that makes Christians and makes men and makes character and makes nations. And it’s the absence of this belief that makes soft, spineless Christians and churches without any meaning in them.

Someone was telling me of a young man in our Sunday school who went to a church down in Indiana that belonged to a denomination. The church was part of a denomination that used to be holiness people. I know them. I know the people.

And he said he’d been there recently, and they talked about books and your dreams and the effect they have on your life. And you know the topic when our friend was there? Peptic ulcers. Now believe that or not, that was the religious topic of the day. The church had backslidden and was talking about peptic ulcers. I’d get an ulcer if I stayed around a church like that or had to.

My brethren, when we backslide from the Truth and run away from the Word of God and build up our own notions out of our own heads, there is no telling what fools God will make of us, and how far we’ll go, and how silly it will all be, and how foolish we’ll become.

In the city of Detroit some years ago, some of our Alliance preachers were walking down the street past a church, and that preacher’s subject was out on the board in front. And he announced that next Sunday morning at 10:45, the Reverend Doctor would preach on the theme, Who Killed Cock Robin? You see, when the old Greeks have a word, they said, whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad. That is, drive them crazy.

And when the judgment of God begins to fall on the church, when they cease to believe in the judgment of God, then the judgment of God begins to fall. And you never know what that church will get into next, or where it’ll go.

It was belief in the accountability of man to his Maker that made America great at one time. One of the great leaders of America was Daniel Webster. That great bulging brow of his and those blazing eyes used to hold the Senate spellbound. His oratory used to, as he stood there and talked to them, not silly quips, not funny remarks.

The Senate in those days was not composed of half-baked comedians, but of strong noble statesmen who carried the weight of the nation on their shoulders. And someone said, Mr. Webster, what do you consider the most serious thought that has ever entered your mind? He said, the most solemn thought that has ever entered my mind is my accountability to my Maker.

And men who talked like that couldn’t be corrupted and bought off. And they wouldn’t have to be ashamed to have their telephone calls read back to them. They weren’t worried about what people thought as much as the fact that they were accountable to God.

Now, the third is that the judge of mankind must have certain qualifications. And according to this that I have read to you, there must be an authority to execute judgment. That is, the ones that are to be judged must be accountable to the judge. In this tentative and provisionary world in which we live, one group of men may make a law, and a judge, born a hundred or two hundred years later, may enforce that law, and may not even be remotely acquainted with the person whom he is judging.

But it is not so in the kingdom of God to be a judge according to the Scripture that judges those who are accountable to Him, and accountable to Him not only not by a law imposed by another, but accountable to Him morally and vitally, rather than merely legally. And in order to be a judge, a righteous judge of mankind, the judge has to have all knowledge.

Now let’s look at it a little, and sort of toss it around, let it get home to our hearts. I point out here that the judge has to have all knowledge so there can be no error. Many an innocent man has been hanged, and if the truth were known, many a life-termer who died in grave pallor behind prison walls was paying a debt he had never contracted, and the rascal who did the crime for which he was sentenced died in his bed surrounded by his friends. Human justice does its best, but because it is not all-wise, it makes mistakes.

But God Almighty is never going to judge the race of mankind and allow a mistake to enter. The judge must be one who has all wisdom. Therefore, I appeal away from St. Paul, I appeal away from Moses and Elijah, I appeal away from all men, because no man knows me well enough to judge me finally.

And I don’t know you well enough to judge you finally. I may pass brief judgment on you on some simple matter, or you on me, but when it comes to the placing of my eternal and everlasting soul somewhere, I don’t want any mistakes made. The judge of mankind is going to have to be one that will never need the testimony of a third party.

Nowadays they get witnesses in, and the judge sits solemnly and listens to the witnesses as the witness says, I saw him do this, I heard him say that. And if the witness is lying, the judge is misled. But the judge of mankind is not depending upon the testimony of another.

Listen to what He says. Verse 30, I can of mine own self do nothing, as I hear, I judge. And My judgment is just, because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which sent Me.

And there is another point. The judge has to be disinterested. He must have no personal interest in the case.

Many a judge has been severe because election time was coming up, or because public opinion was getting stronger, the newspapers were getting on him, and to save his own hide he passed a severe sentence, or didn’t pass a sentence, and his motives were ulterior and false.

The Son of God says, I judge as one who seeks not mine own glory, but the glory of God alone. Therefore, He can be the judge. He can be the judge because He’s personally related and yet disinterested and has nothing to gain or lose by His judgment. But all the glory belongs to God. Jesus Christ, therefore, I say qualifies as the Judge.

But more than that, he must have a sympathetic understanding. I don’t want to be judged by an archangel that never shed a tear. I don’t want to be judged by a seraphim that never felt a pain. I don’t want to be judged by a cherub that never knew human grief or disappointment or woe.

The judge of mankind must be one of them. For Jesus said, The Father hath given the Son power to execute judgment because He is a Son of Man. Because He is a Son of Man, He not only can be their advocate above, a Savior by the throne of love, but He can be their judge to sit upon the throne also.

Then there will be no dodging, no whimpering, no whining, no crying on our wrists and saying, But Lord, you didn’t understand. He does understand because He became one of us and walked among us. And never was a tear that He didn’t shed, never a bitter disappointment He didn’t feel, never a grief that He didn’t suffer, never a temptation that did not come to Him, never a critical situation that He wasn’t in.

So, because He’s a Son of Man, He has authority to execute judgment. Christ qualifies on every count to be the judge of mankind. The tears that He shed, the pains that He suffered, and the griefs that He bore made Him not only a just but a sympathetic Judge of mankind.

Now, His presence in the human race is our present judgment, or present judgement on sins. For judgment am I come into this world, that they which see not, might see, and they which see, might be made blind, 9:39, in the same book. For judgment am I come into this world.

Now, here is one of the forgotten doctrines of the Bible. Somebody could write a great and, I believe, important book on neglected Bible doctrines. This would be one of them, that Jesus Christ is the judge of mankind, that the Father judgeth no man. When the Lord, the Son of Man shall come in clouds of glory, then shall be gathered unto him the nations, and he shall separate them.

It is He who is the judge. And when the Judge of mankind shall appear, He’ll have the shoulders of a man, and the face of a man, and be a man, the man Christ Jesus. God has given authority to judge mankind, so that He is both the Judge and the Savior of man. That makes me love Him and fear Him. Love Him because He’s my Savior, and fear Him because He’s my judge.

And if the ten-cent store Jesus that is being preached nowadays by a lot of men, if the plastic-painted Christ, who has no spine and no justice but is a soft and pliant friend of everybody, if he is the only Christ there is, then we might as well close our books and bar our doors and make a bakery out of this or a garage. But that Christ that is being preached is not the Christ of God, nor the Christ of the Bible, nor the Christ we must deal with.

For the Christ we must deal with has eyes as a flame of fire, and His feet are like burnished brass, and out of His mouth come with a sharp two-edged sword. He will be the judge of mankind.

You can leave your loved ones that have died lost in His hands, knowing that He Himself suffered, knowing that He knows all, no mistakes can be made, there can be no miscarriage of justice, because He knows all that can be known.

It’s said one time, rather, or as though it was an afterthought, sort of thrown in, it says that Jesus need not that any should testify of man, for He knew what was in man. That’s in John, second chapter, 25 verse. He didn’t need anybody to testify about men, because He knew all that was in man.

Let me read verses 28 and 29. Let me read them. Marvel not at this, He said, for the hour is coming into which all that are in the grave shall hear His voice, the Son of Man’s voice, and shall come forth, they that have done good unto the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation.

And this coming out of the graves will be at the invitation of the Son of God Himself. Like a file officer He will command, and they will stand on their feet, a great army, to receive judgment. And the judgment will be based, strangely enough, upon the kind of life they lived in this world. That’s another forgotten doctrine, but it’s here. They that have done good unto the resurrection of life, they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation.

And this is the Judge, the Judge with the flaming eyes, so that Jesus Christ our Lord is one with whom we must deal, cannot escape Him. We can shrug Him off and drive away in a cloud of fumes, but we’re going to have to come back and deal with Him finally. You’re going to have to deal with Him, and I am.

And be sure of one thing, He’ll either be my Savior now, or my Judge in the end. And the tenderness and sympathy of the Savior now will be laid aside while the justice and severity of the Judge then, comes to the front. Without canceling out one, He will exercise both, so that Jesus Christ is both the Lord and the Judge of men, as well as the Savior of men.

Where’s our book, Brother? We have 1,000 or 800 or 900 of these, and still, I never can keep one down. 116, let me read it. Not all the blood of beasts on Jewish altars slain could give the guilty conscience peace or wash away the stain.

Now, where is that taken from? The 8th and 10th chapters of Hebrews. But Christ, the heavenly Lamb, takes all our sins away, a sacrifice of nobler name and richer blood than they. The precious blood of Jesus Christ takes away all sin. Then says the writer, My faith, and I want you to think yourself into this, My faith would lay her hand on that dear head of thine.

Does anybody know where he got that? In the Old Testament, a sinner used to come to the priest, and he would say, I have sinned, and I bring a lamb, or some other creature. And they would take that creature, and the sinner would lay his hand on the head of the beast, and they would kill it and sprinkle it blood, and the sin which he had committed would be forgiven him. My faith would lay her hand on that dear head of thine, while like a penitent I stand and there confess my sin.

Those of you who don’t want Him as a judge, you better think seriously now about Him as a Savior and stand like a penitent or kneel like one and confess your sin. My soul looks back to see the burden thou didst bear while hanging on the cursed tree and knows her guilt was there.

Do you believe that brothers and sisters, that your guilt was there on that cursed tree? He that knew no sin became sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. And then he says, believing, we rejoice to see the curse removed. I’ve seen this song edited and they’ve twisted it around and some educated, sophisticate, who didn’t like this word, curse, and removed, he fixed it up.

But I won’t sing it, I sing this one. Believing we rejoice to see the curse removed. What curse? The curse of the broken law, the curse of sin.

We bless the Lamb with cheerful voice and sing His bleeding love. How wonderful all this is, came to my heart tonight as I was upstairs by myself there in my room. I thought of this, what a wonderful invitation song, what a wonderful song of triumph, what a song full of theology and meaning and gospel. That what blood of goats couldn’t do, the blood of Christ is doing and has done.

So, I would urge you tonight, if you are not now consciously forgiven, consciously forgiven, close your eyes and by faith lay your hands on that dear head of His, and like a penitent confess your sin and then the curse will remove from your heart and you will know your sins forgiven and the blood will cleanse and you’ll know you’re delivered.

Which is He going to be for you, Savior or Judge? He will be one or the other. If He is the first, He won’t be the second. But if He is not the Savior, He will be the Judge. I for my part can’t afford to face Him as my Judge. I must have His protecting blood and face Him as my Savior, now. Praise God He knows too much me for me to dare brazenly barge into His presence and let Him judge me.

Scripture tells us of certain ones who have sent their sins on before the judgment. You can send your sins on before the judgment, have them judged and settled and dispelled of, now while you’re still on the earth, the Savior will cover your sins, cover them.

As the old brother said, if Jesus Christ had covered our sins with His life, when they took His life away, they’d have been exposed, but He covered them with His death. And by His death forever He put my sins where they can’t be found, for the blood of the everlasting covenant. Do you believe it? You certainly have powerful control over your emotions. Amen, I get blessed when I get thinking about these things.

What about you, my unsaved friend, my borderline friend, my doubtful friend, my doubting friend, if there be such here. What about you? Right now, this is your opportunity, there’ll never be a better one.

Bow your head, look back and see the burden He bore. Lay your hand of faith on His holy head and confess your sins and the curse will remove. And you can say, believing, I rejoice to see the curse removed, I praise the Lamb with cheerful voice and sing His dying love. Amen.

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A.W. Tozer Talks

The Foundations of the World are out of Plumb

Pastor and Author A.W. Tozer

May 3, 1953

You will find the Book of Psalms to be a very revealing book, for the Holy Spirit is in the Book of Psalms, and as has been said, the Spirit of Christ is in the Psalms. And many places in the Book of Psalms you will find the Holy Spirit looking down the centuries and making present tense statements, which were not present tense, but were future prophetic tense.

The “is” is sometimes way down the years, and this 82nd Psalm is that kind of psalm. Certainly, it has its local application to circumstances that gave it birth. But just as certainly there is more here than at first meets the attention, there is the groaning and the yearning of the Spirit of Christ which was in them, to quote Peter, who saw and here foretells conditions that are to be in later times. We have a picture here of God standing among the mighty angels, not sitting because He had risen.

If you are interested in this, you will find many places in the Bible where God stands, but almost always God sits. A judge always sits. It is a subject that stands. So that we find God sitting and men standing in His presence, that is as it should be. The great God sits quietly and calmly in His everlasting rest while men and angels stand before Him. But a few times we see God standing.

When our Lord Jesus Christ went to heaven, the Scripture says that He sat down on the right hand of the Father. We read of that very many places in the Bible, that Jesus Christ sat down on the right hand of God. His position is that of a seated one. Having completed the work on earth, He has now gone to sit down, waiting the time when His enemies shall be made His footstool.

But there was one exception to this, and that was when they were stoning Stephen to death. Stephen looked up, and his death-dimmed eyes became preternaturally bright, and he said, I see Jesus sitting, standing at the right hand of God. He had been sitting, now He is standing, as though he had become suddenly so keenly interested that He rose and was gazing down, in His divine excitement, watching His first martyr die.

Here we find God standing now, and He is standing among the mighty angels. Here is what He sees. He sees injustice, and oppression, and poverty, and ignorance, and darkness, and dying, and He sees it all over the earth. It says here that He judgeth among the gods. That gives some people a notion that there are gods, and that God recognizes these gods. The truth is very much otherwise. God does not recognize any gods.

He says, I am the Lord, and there is none other beside me. But the word “gods” here is elohim in the plural, and it is a reference to leaders and judges of the earth. It is, says Rotherham, God ascribing to those whom He has placed in high position, something of His own name, because they are His ambassadors. He gives them not the sword in vain. They are the judges and rulers of the earth. And God boldly calls them after His own name, and says, God standeth in the congregation of the mighty, He judgeth among the elohim, the judges, the rulers of the earth.

And what He sees there, I repeat, is injustice, and oppression, and poverty, not the poverty that a reluctant earth might impose upon a people who could not rest a living from her, but rather the poverty that comes from oppression and from injustice. And there was ignorance and darkness and dying. The sad thing about this all, my friends, is that it could be avoided. All of this could have been avoided.

Now, in this dark world in which we live, there are some things that can’t very well be avoided. And I suppose that we might as well get used to them and say, there be here; they were here when my grandfather walked the hills of Ohio or Indiana. And they were here when the red Indian roamed and hunted the buffalo there. And they were and will be and always have been, and we may expect them to be.

There will always be accidents, and there will always be diseases, and there will always be bereavement as long as the sun rises and sets. And there will always be the sad leave-taking when friend greets and shakes the hand of friend and tearlessly turns away with an agony that knows no respite in tears. There will always be the lightning that will flash out of the sky and smite the great oak, and the boy that lies sleeping under it. And there will always be the wild beasts and the rampaging river and the tornado and the tempest.

And my friends, you can take all of the accidents of the world and all of the adverse forces of nature and include in it all the diseases that mortal flesh is heir to and combine them together. And you will not have all told and added up as much sheer misery and pain as man imposes upon himself by his wicked deeds.

This is not merely a preacher talking. Let us look at over the last hundred years. There have been floods in Europe, and there have been earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. And there have been in Europe over the last hundred years epidemics and the outbreak of diseases. There have been storms and lightning flashes. Nature has shaken her fallen shoulders, and poor victims have died. No one with an ounce of brains would deny that nor attempt to deny it.

And nobody would dare to close his eyes if he has any regard to his own reputation for sanity, and say that nature is all gentle and tender, and that all is good, and good is all, and all is God, and God is all, and all is all, and none of that. We got to face facts, and we might as well be realistic.

Europe, just to choose one continent, has suffered greatly in the last hundred years, sporadically, now and again. There has been toil, and there have been tears, and there have been bereavements and losses. But ladies and gentlemen, it fell to the lot of one little undersized man, inconsequential in looks and build and weight, education and gifts, it fell to the lot of one little man to bring to the continent of Europe more suffering and agony and pain in four years’ time than one hundred years of the combined forces of misfortune was able to visit upon that same continent.

Korea has had her famines, and she has seen her people die. The snows and bitter cold of the winters have taken their toll, and diseases have taken their toll. But in the last two years in Korea, man has visited upon that peninsula more sheer misery and unbearable pain than all the unfortunate circumstances that nature might have visited in the last five hundred years.

God standeth among the mighty. He judges among the elohim, and He’s not pleased with what He sees. For He sees injustice and oppression and a poverty that’s imposed, and He sees an ignorance that can’t be excused and a darkness that shrouds the minds of men, and He sees dying and dying and dying.

Now he says, ye are gods, but you shall die like men, because you will bring down upon you your social structure. You will bring it down on your heads by the natural law of cause and effect. It will not be as the astronomers sometimes dream by a sideswipe from some wandering maverick planet. It will not be as the result of the insects taking over the earth as some naturalists prophesy morbidly.

It will be that man proves himself unfit to live and therefore must die like men, that he proves himself unfit to build and must watch his structure collapse around his ears. Your building, says the Holy Ghost, is worthless. It can’t last because all the foundations of humanity are out of plumb. And everybody knows that if you build a building upon a crooked foundation, your building will stand in imminent peril of falling. The higher you go and the heavier your superstructure, the more certain will be the collapse.

Now, the hope of the nations is deceitful. I wish that I might be able to be an optimist one time in my life if God would only allow me. I’d love to do it. I’d love to get up sometime and for 25 minutes or 45 minutes just stand here and spout optimism and tell you that I believe that the world is getting better. But I’d be a liar if I said it. The hope of the nations is deceitful. But the nations of the world, strangely, are seeking to make a sound, free world for themselves. And they’re promising it to the people.

I am not as old as I will be if I live ten years more. I’m older than I thought I was because I was in a restaurant tonight with my little girl. She’s 13 and looks older. And the waitress came up and wanted to know if that was my granddaughter. Imagine that, she needs glasses.

But I’ve been around quite a while, and I have seen quite a number of men get elected. I’ve seen three presidents elected on the promise that there wouldn’t be any war. Or if there was any, they’d get over it right away.

When I was just old enough to be interested in such a thing, Woodrow Wilson ran for the presidency on the slogan, he kept us out of war. And we elected him with a great big majority. And he was hardly inaugurated when he had to declare war on Germany. And we had three years of World War I.

There was a silver-voiced gentleman whom I never followed, but whom I can’t help but admire because he certainly was a big man. And with his New York accent, he told the trembling mothers of America, I say to you again and again and again that your sons will never fight on foreign soil. Three of mine did. That was World War II.

And in our horror of dying and blood and woe and prison camps, the American electorate last fall turned in fury on the man they thought had put them in Korea and listened to the voice of the man who said, if I’m elected, I’ll go over. No, I admire the gentleman that said it. I think he’s just a good, honest American, and a good and big American. But he opened his mouth a little too wide when he told us, or gave us to understand that he could bring war to a end. One hundred days he’s been in the White House, and they’re still dying in Korea. It’s not his fault.

The only fault would lie in a man saying they can when the whole world is stacked against them. They can’t. Woodrow Wilson meant well, but the foundations of the world are out of joint. Franklin Roosevelt never meant to betray the mothers when he said again and again, they’ll not go overseas. They did go. And Ike Eisenhower’s honest, Kansas heart meant what he said, that the foundations of the world are out of joint.

How long has it been since they were promising us the four freedoms? How long since they said we’ll fight this out and finish it and then we’ll never have any more war? We’ll have freedom from war. I think at that time they called it war. Freedom, they said, from war, because we hate war. But war we’ve had, brother. Go and ask those poor Koreans.

My son who fought in Korea said, Dad, it was touching and almost unbelievable a wave of war would sweep over a hillside. And there would be a little hut, and you’d see the old Korean with his tired old wife and a kid or two, and he’d get his belongings on his back and disappear into the woods or cave someplace, and the wave of war would pass over.

As soon as the last retreating soldier’s neck was, back of his neck was seen, they’d be right back in where they’d been before. Next week, the wave would come back the other way and out would go the Korean to the hills with his sack full of possessions. And as soon as the backs of the necks of the soldiers seen back, he was in his little hut again.

Go to Korea and say, are you free from war? Go to Indochina and ask that question. Go to Laos, where they’re rapidly engaged in the terrible business of losing their nation to the Communists. Ask them, are you free from war? No. It was all big, windy talk, this talk about freedom from war. And they said we were to have freedom of religion.

I’m just reminding us of what they said, freedom of religion. But we have gotten more persecution and had more religious troubles since the war ended than we had for decades before. Go to Columbia and ask our missionaries, is there freedom of religion there? No, of course not. Go to Palestine and inquire. Arab and Jews quarreling. Go to India.

Nehru has lately come out with an edict that nobody dares make converts there. No freedom of religion. Freedom from want, they said. The orators and the silver-tongued boys that yodel down the airways, vote for me and we’ll fix up this business. Everybody will have enough. Go into the dark places of the earth and inquire.

Our missionaries say, and all the good people tell us, such a percentage, and it’s a large, high percentage, never have enough to eat from the time they’re born till they die. No freedom from want.

And then freedom for the masses. No freedom for the masses. We have the greatest freedom in America, and I thank God we do. But there’s no freedom in Czechoslovakia. There’s no freedom in East Germany. There’s no freedom in Yugoslavia, nor in Russia, nor in China, nor in Manchuria, nor in Austria, nor wherever the heel of the Communists has gone, there’s no freedom. Freedom is a mirage.

And the relative and conditional freedom which we have in this country has been at the price of everlasting vigilance and eternal warfare to keep ourselves free. But the foundations of the world are out of plumb.

And the temple of freedom rests upon a foundation. It isn’t something that simply grows up like a dandelion without planting and without cultivation. There are great foundations that are there, and if those foundations are crooked, the building will be crooked. It’s just a question of time till it collapses.

These foundations foretell the future of the temple. Any builder can stand up and look at a foundation and know theoretically what will happen without ever waiting around. We built this building, we had on our board a gentleman who’s still with us.

I don’t know whether he’s here tonight, Mr. Marx, a structural engineer. And he could look at a few marks on a piece of paper and tell you whether the thing was structurally sound or not.

Somebody wrote him all enthusiastically, his daughter Esther, from up in New York State, and she told him about the building that the Alliance district had built at Rome, Delta Lake at Rome, and gave him a description of it. And he made a few marks on a piece of paper and said that building won’t stand, that it’ll collapse.

And that year, somewhere, I think in December, when the heavy snows came, it collapsed. It went down so flat that even the seats went down with it. It was a big tabernacle. Even the seats flattened out. There wasn’t anything around there that wasn’t as flat as a hymn book. He never saw the thing; he just heard the description of it.

You don’t have to be there if you have any imagination, brother. All you have to do is project what you know into what you don’t know, and you have what you known. See what I mean?

So, you don’t have to wait around to see whether Democrats or Republicans come out on top. All you have to do to project and foretell the future is to say, look at your foundations. If your foundations are solid, your superstructure will stand. If they’re not solid or if they’re crooked or out of line, it’ll go down, it can’t help it. You needn’t be a prophet; you only need to be a man with a bit of imagination and information.

Now let’s look at the foundations of human society. Sketch them out here a minute as we go along. One of the first is faith in God. It’s absolutely essential to the sanity of the human race that men believe rightly concerning God.

Put these down, if you will, for they constitute the foundations of society. And if they’re crooked, society will be crooked. And anything built upon crooked foundations is bound to collapse.

The day in which we live, faith in God is a rarity. Somebody will say, no, I know better, Mr. Tozer. There are more Bible schools and more big evangelists and more coast-to-coast broadcasts and more FMs and shortwaves and more Bibles printed and all that. I know that there’s more faith in God than there used to be.

Well, maybe, faith of a kind. But what kind of God is it people are believing in now? I ask you. They say that there’s a resurgence of religion in America, that more people are buying books about religion and more people are going to church than used to go to church. One man said, greatly encouraged, that there was, I think, sixty-some percent belong to churches now and only ten percent belong to churches in the days of the founding fathers. Therefore, the difference between ten percent and sixty-some percent is the difference in how good we are compared with how good we were then.

My friends, it’s impossible to be very much wronger than that. Faith in God doesn’t simply mean to have an area of your hide somewhere that’s sensitive to religion. That doesn’t mean that. You can find more carnal, unborn-again, self-centered old maids than you could bury in Grand Canyon who have religion and they’re sensitive toward it.

You can find more stoop-shouldered, weary old beaten-up men like me who have some sensitivity toward religion. You can find it. You can find men that live like the devil but they’re sensitive toward religion. And if an evangelist sweeps through and the excitement gets big enough, they’ll go to the meeting and swell the crowd and give a dollar and get counted and get photographed and it’ll look big.

But the catch is here. After it’s all over, the moral standards of the community are right where they were before. And whatever does not raise the moral standard of a church, or the community has not been a revival from God.

We have become too chummy with God altogether. We have dragged God down to our level in place of painstakingly trying to help Him to bring us to His, humanly speaking. And the God we believe in is not the sovereign God who judges men.

And when we believe in that kind of God, we’ll change our way of living, and we’ll change it for the better. And we’ll repent and we’ll reform, and we’ll turn to God, and we’ll cease to do evil and we’ll begin to do good. And we’ll put away our evil from us and we’ll turn from the world and turn hard unto God.

Seek to crucify our flesh and put on the new man which is renewed in holiness. Faith in God is all but gone. When the Son of Man cometh, will he find faith on the earth? So don’t you be taken in by statistics that tell you that more people belong to churches now than belonged in the days of our fathers.

In the days of our fathers, everybody except a rare infidel now and then, and he had been taken. But everybody went to church. Grandfather got up. Grandmother got up. Married couple got up. Then they dug their babies and children out of their beds and all fixed them all up. And washed them off and put clothing on them they hated thoroughly. They got into their starched clothes, out of their ginghams. And marched off to church and sat together in church through sermons an hour to two hours long. And rode there in a buggy and rode back in a buggy. Hayburners, if you please, took their time about getting there. And almost everybody went to church.

But nowadays almost everybody goes to church Easter and Christmas, and for the rest of the time they don’t. That’s number one. Faith in God. Any hope for the nations that is not built upon faith in God is a false hope and will collapse.

Then there’s love for our fellow men. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God and thy neighbor as thyself, love for our fellow men. But in place of that we have quarreling and lying and exploiting and competing to a shocking degree.

But did you happen to notice this? Since the beginning of the world there never has been more hatred among nations than today. And that hatred doesn’t cross the color line always. In fact, rarely does. It’s within the race itself. The presence of specific races is not the source of our trouble. Our trouble is the disease of our own hearts.

And the white Russian hates the white American. And twice within 25 years the white German tried to kill and destroy the white Englishman. Occasionally there’s race flare-ups between races. But mostly it’s within their own racial strain. It’s not race, brethren, it’s sin. Sin, sin, sin, sin. And the foundations of the world are out of focus, out of plumb, because we hate instead of love.

Then there’s a mutual trust, and that’s very close to what I’ve been saying before. Mutual trust among men and nations. Where is there any trust among nations? Do you trust a communist? Does he trust you? No. I wouldn’t believe a communist if he stood on the stack of 150 Bibles and swore by the beard of Lenin. I wouldn’t believe him. He’s a liar. He’s a liar from the beginning. He’s been taught to lie. Lying has become his religion. And hell has become his heaven. Sin has done all this.

So, there’s no trust among nations. And friends, if you can’t have trust among nations, you can’t have a lasting edifice of any sort. I might mention the relation of parents to children. Children to their parents has gone so badly out of plumb in the last 50 years, under the prodding of John Dewey and the Columbia School, and old maid preachers that wear trousers and shave, but have enough manhood to be able to tell the truth. There’s no obedience to parents left anymore. The foundations are upside down and out of joint.

And as soon as the children are able to earn their own money, they turn on their parents, scorned in a great many instances. And until there has been established a proper relationship between the parent and the child, there never can be a foundation that is strong. And until we have a strong and level foundation, we never can have a safe superstructure.

The English couldn’t whip us. Some fellow took a ride one time and said, the British are coming. You remember that? One lantern, if they’re on, coming in canoes, and another lantern if they’re walking. Remember that? That was Paul Revere. The English couldn’t beat us. The Indians couldn’t beat us, and the Spaniards couldn’t beat us, and the Germans couldn’t beat us.

And I’m not a jingoist, but I don’t believe the Russians can beat us. But I’ll tell you what can beat us. Our kids can beat us. They can beat us by grieving God Almighty and outraging divine justice, by violating the right relation between child and parent, and upsetting the normal order. That can beat us, because God will withdraw His defense and we’ll be left as helpless as was Samson after his hair was cut, the right relation between men and women in their respective places. The world is sowing a field of thorns.

Now my friend John R. Rice has written a book called Bossy Wives, Bobbed Hair, and what was it? I haven’t read the book and don’t intend to. I think I sketched it when it first came. And I don’t follow my friend John on that, but I will just tell you this much.

God made man, and He made woman. In spite of Christine Jorgensen, He made them different from each other. And He not only made them different from each other, He gave them different functions in society. But we have all mixed it up. Mixed it all up now until we don’t know one from the other. We say, isn’t that funny, Mr. Tozer? He’s such a cute fellow.

Yes, our old boy’s telling you some things somebody ought to tell you. And the proper relation between the sexes. I’m not talking now about immorality, that’s another field. I’m talking now about the right social place for both. We have violated the Scriptures, and we have violated common sense, we have violated the laws of biology. And we’re going to reap, and don’t you think we’re not going to reap? The foundations of the world are out of plumb.

And then I think also of our rapport with nature. Dr. Mason said, and rightly said, and I thought so much of it I wrote it into an editorial right away. Man was born in a garden.

Now why didn’t God build a city? He could have done it, made it out of plastic. God could have done that. Let there be a plastic city, and it came to pass there was a plastic city, and the morning and the evening were the ninth day. God could have made a plastic city and trimmed it in chrome. He could have done it, and placed man in it. And said, here you are, get on to that escalator, go up nine stories and come to the stories, and come down the elevator. God could have made a plastic city and put man in it.

He could have gone better; He could have made it out of gold. But He didn’t, He made a garden; worms in it, flowers and fruit, and all of it makes a garden. God put man in a garden. I think it was Milton that said, God made the country and man-made the city.

Now, we are losing our rapport. You French speakers please forgive; I don’t know whether any other word to use there except that bad French. But we have lost our rapport with nature. We are born in hospitals, laid out in mortuaries, and buried in memorial parks. If anything goes wrong with it, we are shot full of mold, penicillin or something. People live and die and never get off the sidewalk. We’ve lost our power.

Mr. Chase tells about some artists from Chicago that went down in Brown County, Indiana, for a little vacation and do a little painting. They were city fellows, and they slept down there in a little house in the woods among the beautiful rolling hills of Brown County.

I suppose they all more or less felt the same way about it, but it was the job of one fellow to shamelessly tell how he felt about it. He said, these birds are driving me crazy. He said, listen to them, I can’t stand that. He said, listen to them, birds, birds. And he got on the train and came back and listened to the elevator. He couldn’t stand birds. God put man in the garden and man says, I can’t stand birds. So, he comes back to listen to the elevator.

Some fellow said, who was it? I believe it was here in Chicago. Somebody said that New York was the dirtiest city in the world and this fella indignantly denied it. He said, New York isn’t as dirty as Chicago. He said, let the person that said that New York was dirty in Chicago feel our air between her thumb and fingers. He said, just let her take a little of our air and feel it like that and just see how dirty it is. And yet there are people that love it and look on a whore with a lovely worm with a fur coat or a bird that drives them crazy.

Now, of course, those are extreme. That’s not true of many people. A great many people love nature. So, they get a basket full of sardines and pickles and olives and they go out and have themselves a picnic and commune with nature among the sardine can.

But we’re as artificial as it’s possible to be, nevertheless. We’ve lost our rapport with the garden or with that best thing after the garden, the field in which God’s cast us. So, we’re going to pay a price for that? Oh yes.

One of my favorite writers as a younger fellow, he still is when I don’t have much time for him anymore, was William Wordsworth. My heart leaps up when I behold a rainbow in the sky. So was it when my life began, so is it now that I’m a man, so let it ever be or let me die.

One of my boys told me that the kids in the college or university where he got his degree referred to Wordsworth as Nature Boy. When they had to study Wordsworth, they scornfully referred to him as Nature Boy.

But his heart leaped up when he beheld a rainbow in the sky. And was he that talked about the cataracts blowing their trumpets from the hills, praising the art that could catch that cloud before it disappeared and put it in on a canvas and hold it there. He loved the world around him.

And our fathers loved the world around us. Strong men, they didn’t have any chlorophyll in those days, but they weren’t so confined, and the embarrassment was not so great. The big out-of-doors helped them out so that they didn’t need the chlorophyll. Why reeks the goat on yonder hill who seems to dote on chlorophyll. But they sell us chlorophyll nevertheless and all the rest. And we’re a bunch of artificial zoo animals.

Emerson said, every once in a while, take off your shoes and go out and walk on the ground. It’s good for you. Get in on the floor with the earth. He might have had something there. Try that sometime in your fourth-floor apartment.

And then I got one left and I’m through. Are you glad?

And this is very serious, and it is basic righteousness, justice, and honesty. If the blood of Jesus Christ can’t cure a man’s dishonesty, it can’t guarantee his entrance into the kingdom of heaven.

Our Salvation Army friends sing a song, when I reached the pearly gates, I’ll then put in my plea, I was once a guilty sinner, but Jesus died for me. I believe that. I believe it with all my heart. Supposing Jesus Christ came to me and said, son, you’ve been a sinner, but I’ll justify you by my blood. And I said, thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you.

When it comes time for you to die or I come in the glory, you will enter into the presence of the Father with exceeding joy, all by my blood and righteousness. Thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you. Another thing, son, my blood is going to cleanse you and make you clean. And my spirit is going to enter you and help you to live a right life. Thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you.

But I found after 25 years of following Him that His blood didn’t cleanse. The Spirit couldn’t make you right, that Christianity didn’t have the power to make you live right. It didn’t. Now this is all hypothesis. I know better, of course. I’m talking from the other side for the moment.

So, I find after 25 years of praying and trying and reading and giving and listening to sermons, I find Christianity doesn’t work. And then you expect me to die in peace and say a Lord who lied to me once won’t lie to me again. The Savior that was too weak to save me from iniquity will be strong enough to take me boldly through the pearly gates. I wouldn’t believe it for a second yet.

A Savior that can’t save me from my sins now and here can’t have my confidence to save me from judgment in that great day. But he can do both, thank God. He can do both. I want no other argument. I want no other plea. It is enough that Jesus died and that He died for me.

I believe that. And I’m helped to believe it by the fact that that same Lord Jesus Christ can take a sinner and make a Christian out of him down here now, can clean him up and change him, put a new impulse within his heart and a new direction to his life and change him. He’s not a phony and he’s not selling you a bill of goods.

He’s promising you safety in the judgment and He’s proving that you’ll be safe in the judgment by demonstrating that right down here now He can give you a new heart and renew a right spirit within you. And the things you used to want to do, you don’t want to do. And the things you used to be careless about, you’re now doing with delight.

You used to hate your brother and now you love him. You used to be stingy and now you give generously to the Lord’s work. You used to be dirty-minded and now a dirty thought hurts you so bad you repent before God for it. You used to have sinful tendencies, but God’s cured them. God can lay solid foundations, ladies and gentlemen, He can. I don’t know whether He ever will for the nation of America or not. I doubt that very much.

I ought to be ashamed to say that. But I don’t know in this confused country of ours, the light we’ve had, the truth we’ve trampled under our feet, and the insults we’ve offered to God, the trying of God over the centuries.

Possibly we’ve sinned away our day and like Pompeii and Babylon and Assyria the future may see us pass from the scene if the Lord tarries. I don’t know that. But I do know that wherever righteousness is laid down by faith in God and Christ, there is a solid foundation. I do know that.

And I know that any religious individual, and I’m through in three minutes, less than three, any religious individual, anybody, that wants to be sure that his superstructure will stand in the eternal light of God only needs to build down upon the Rock, Christ Jesus. That’s all.

But if he builds on anything else, the foundations of his life are out of plumb. And no matter how high he goes; the collapse will only be the greater. So let us tonight, let us turn to Jesus Christ our Lord.

We’re units of society. I can’t help Chicago too much, nor the state of Illinois, nor the country, but as a unit of society, as one individual, I can lay my foundation solid down on repentance, down on the Book, down on high conceptions of the sovereign majesty of God, down on strong faith in the power of Jesus Christ to save me now and in the day of judgment. I can lay my foundations down on those, my building down on those foundations. So can you. Starting now, let us pray.

O Lord Jesus, we can feel the breath of hell on our necks. We hear his ugly, ominous growls. He hates us, and he hates our church, and he hates our people, and he hates us for God’s sake and Christ’s sake. And he hates to see foundations solid. He’ll undermine them. He’ll get us interested in something else, so we’ll lay crooked ones if he can. O God, we’re not scared in spite of it. We’re not frightened.

Jesus, Thou art our big Brother, our Lord. God has given Thee power in heaven and earth. All power is Thine. Thou hast made a show of principalities and powers and exposed them openly, defeated them and risen from the dead. Thou art seated at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. Thou hast sent Thy Holy Spirit here to the earth, and we thank Thee that He’s with us tonight and in us tonight.

Now we beseech thee, Lord Jesus, Thou wilt help us to go out and straighten our lives, straighten them reverently, tearfully if need be, before the throne of grace, with repentance and sorrow of heart and strong yearnings for righteousness and true holiness, so the foundations will be solid.

Lord, here’s a church. It isn’t a big one, but it’s a church. And we’re building on solid foundations. Eternity itself can’t eat away nor dissolve what we’re doing. But Father, look at our foundations. They’re crooked. They’re out of plumb.

O Lord, we tremble for that day when Thou wilt judge the deeds of every man. We shall stand and say, I wrought, I worked there in that church, I attended there, I went there.

O Lord, we pray that our church may be founded upon the solid foundations, so that all our money won’t be wasted, so that our prayers won’t be wasted, so that everything like the pieces of broken bread will be gathered up and nothing be lost.

Now we trust Thee to bless this Word spoken. We don’t claim anything for it, only that it’s true, that’s all. Send these friends out, we beseech Thee, to a week of strong faith and holy living and earnest prayer and Bible reading, worship, and faithful testimony, and honesty, and truth-telling, clean thinking, frugality with themselves and generosity with everybody else.

We ask this in Jesus’ name. Amen.

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Messages

A.W. Tozer Talks

The Feeding of the Five Thousand

Pastor and Author A.W. Tozer

August 29, 1954

I hope that you patient friends will be still more patient with me as I talk again on the feeding of the five thousand. I’ve spoken twice before on it and this will be the third talk and I hope there will not be too much repetition though the first little point I want to make will be a bit of repetition. For it says in verse three that Jesus went up into a mountain. He went up into a mountain and there He sat. There he sat.

Now He withdrew, our Lord withdrew from the press of the people, and I’d like to say to you, I don’t know whether it does much good or not, but I think maybe there will be those who will hear, but I’d like to say to you that there are some things you’ll never learn with anybody else present.

I’m a church man and I believe in churches, and I love the fellowship of the assembled brethren, and there is much, very, very much that you and I can learn when we come on Sundays to the church and sit among the saints. But there are certain things that you will never learn when anybody else is with you. You will never learn in company.

Our Lord certainly, his disciples came unto him and he talked to his disciples, but it is also said in the 15th verse that Jesus departed into a mountain Himself alone so that He knew that there were some things you can never learn in company. So, He sat and there we have, I suppose, the epitome of inactivity. There He sat.

Now there can be an inactivity in the religious life which is plain laziness and there is very much laziness. I used to hear with a kind of sad smile the exhortations of the brethren in the little churches down in the West Virginia area years ago when they accused each other of what they called sitting on the stool of doolittle. You’ve heard that? Well, this sitting on the stool of doolittle, I’ve always had such a such a vivid imagination that I’ve tried to picture that stool, three legs I assume, and no back, and here was some dear old saint sitting down on that stool doing little.

Now there is such an inactivity, and I do not recommend it, and I told you last week that the Lord hasn’t anything to say good about the sluggard. There isn’t one lonely text in the whole 66 books of the Bible that says anything kind about the sluggard. He’s always branded as being no good. So, the inactivity that arises out of sheer laziness has no place in the Bible.

And then there is an inactivity that arises from fear. People are simply afraid to do anything, and they figure that they can cut down and narrow the area of their peril by doing nothing. If they simply stand still, there will be less danger of their getting into trouble.

And of course, that kind of inactivity is no good either, in that it springs out of a wrong motive, and it has that element in it which God never forgives, or at least never overlooks, though He’ll certainly forgive it, that of fear.

And then there is an inactivity also, which may come from lack of vision and confusion. People don’t know what to do, because they don’t know what to do, they don’t do anything. Now I think very great sections of the church are in that condition. They don’t know what to do, they lack vision, they’ve never seen anything, and so they don’t know where to go.

They’ve never seen a path and they don’t know where to find one. They have no highway stretching ahead, so they stand still because they don’t know where to go, nor what to do. That kind of activity is not the kind recommended in the Bible, and it’s not the kind our Lord practiced, nor His disciples.

But there is an inactivity which is the highest possible activity. I think I’ll want to stop here and explain what I mean. I’m pointing out to you that there is a nervous activity, an effort to help people, which adds up to sterility and finally, inactivity. And then there is a suspension of the activity of the body, as when our Lord told His disciples to tarry until they were filled with the Holy Ghost.

And they did, and they waited on God. And the Old Testament is full of these expressions of waiting on God. It is good for a man to wait on God. Oh, wait on God, wait on God is the exhortation found often in the Old Testament Scriptures. And it meant to come before the presence of the Lord with expectation, and there wait with physical inactivity and mental inactivity.

Dr. Simpson wrote that song you just sang. Well, Dr. Simpson was a great evangelical mystic, and he got an awful lot done. But he was also a man who understood the deep workings of the inner life. And he had much to say, particularly in his hymns, about keeping still and waiting to hear what God would say to you. Be still and know that I am God was a kind of text of his, though I don’t think I ever knew him to quote it. But the sum of it was what he taught.

And he taught the inactivity; there was a place where the mind becomes inactive. He wrote, cease thy thinking, troubled Christian, where the mind ceases to figure out its ways, and throws itself wide open to God. And the shining glory of God comes down into the life and imparts an activity.

Do you understand what I mean when I say that we can go to God with an activity that is inactive? We go to God with a heart that isn’t in the flesh or in the natural trying to do anything but is going to God and waiting.

Now, the inner spirit is seeing and hearing and mounting up on wings while the outer physical person is inactive, and even the mind is in some degree suspended. And that was where Jesus took His disciples.

I know that He once rebuked a woman who was too active, and that was Martha. And I know that we sometimes add a good deal to what the Lord says. I remember in the Old Testament that when God punished anybody, and then anybody else saw God punishing that person and decided to get a few licks in on his own. God always punished the fellow that added too much.

When the Lord punished Israel, and then along came some nation and said, well, if God’s punishing Israel, that’ll be our cue. And so, they sent an army out and started, God turned on their army and he said, you won’t add anything to My punishment, don’t you add anything.

And I think sometimes that the Lord’s kindly rebuke to Martha has been a cue for the preachers to abuse the poor little woman an awful lot. I think we’ve abused her too much. I thank God for the Marthas of the world. If it wasn’t for the Marthas of the world, we wouldn’t be so sleek and well-fed as we are now.

Somebody has to cook, and somebody has to do dishes, and somebody has to work, somebody has to do it. There has to be a few Marthas around certainly, and the Lord’s rebuke to Martha ought to be enough. I don’t think that you and I ought to add so many licks to the chastisement that the Lord gave us.

But here was Mary, and Mary was simply sitting. There’s the same word is used, she was simply sitting at the feet of the Savior, and the Lord rebuked Martha for her nervous activity. She carried her activity beyond the point where it did any good, and she didn’t buttress it and back it up by her spiritual inactivity.

Now the people came to Him, I note here. In the text they came to the Lord, and he was ready for them because He had been quiet and silent, and there alone had sat and meditated and looked upward and waited until the full charges of Divine Life moved down from the throne of God into His own soul. And He had gotten poised and like a violin tuned, and like a battery charged, and was prepared for them when they came.

Now my brethren, the failure today, there’s no question about it, is religious activity that is not preceded by aloneness and inactivity. Aloneness, the getting alone with God and waiting in silence and in quietness until we are charged. And then when we are active, our activity amounts to everything because we have been previously prepared for it.

Now here were the people. I talked to you about them before, this great multitude of people without anything to eat, a great mob of them. They had charged out and followed the Lord, and they brought their babies along, and some people were old and some weren’t very strong, and now they were three days on the way and their food had all run out, and there was no place to buy anything, and they were in need.

And our Lord said to Philip, whence shall we buy bread? Now what does that say to you and me? It says to us that our human Lord was concerned with the bread.

There never was a camp meeting yet that didn’t have a kitchen attached. There never was a Pentecost anywhere that didn’t have a cook someplace around the corner to feed the Spirit-filled saints. The Lord knows that we’re human beings.

I’d like to have you get that. I don’t want to relax you too much, and I don’t want, certainly see any of you sitting on that stool of Doolittle, but I’d like to have you know that the Lord understands all about you. Do you ever have the feeling that; I wonder why God gave me a body and didn’t give me wings.

My dear old Dutch grandmother, God bless her memory, she’d have made a good a good writer or something if she’d had a little more opportunity and come out of the hills there. But she used to imagine the strangest things. She said, I wonder why God, when He made us people, didn’t give us just a nice coating and covering of feathers. She said it would have saved so much trouble. She said, just think of it, if we’d all had feathers, we wouldn’t have had to worry about changing clothes, we wouldn’t have had to worry about all this business styles and fashions and sewing. She said, a nice coat of feathers.

And I thought my grandmother was just a little bit off, but she wasn’t. She was just using her imagination, and we have a right to do that if you wanted to know why we didn’t have feathers. And I sometimes wonder why God gave us a body and tied us down here.

I knew one man that knew. He said that it was, God gave him 60 children, you know, and tied them to his coattail in order to keep him down. He ran an orphanage. But I think God gave us our bodies more or less as a discipline. I don’t know what else they’re for. They’re a sort of discipline.

Emerson taught that, that nature had one function toward the world, for people, and that was to discipline them. But the body sometimes it gets a little out of hand, and it takes as much time and energy and care to look after this tabernacle as it does to look after all the rest of the family and your business too. And we wonder about that.

But I’m glad that God understands about it, and He knows. He gave us these mortal frames, and He expects us to take care of them. And when they got hungry, He said, whence shall we buy bread that these may eat? Now, the Lord is concerned about our eating.

Years ago, I preached a sermon on the, on the fact that there was no dividing line between the sacred and the secular. And then I wrote that chapter into the pursuit of God, which said, I called it the sacrament of living.

And I heard a talk today from the United Nations up here, I mean the World Council of Churches up here, and two men, one from South Africa, a bishop, and the other a layman from England, were talking. And they actually came to this thing that I have discussed, and I think disposed of most happily years ago, this distinction, this dividing line between the sacred and the secular. And they evidently hadn’t handled it. They obviously hadn’t read my book.

But anyway, I have never believed in the distinction between the sacred and the secular. If I ever did, I do no longer. I believe that eating can be as religious a thing as praying. I believe that it’s just as spiritual to eat your breakfast as it is to have family prayer.

And I believe that the man who separates his breakfast from his family prayers is making an unnecessary division. And he is putting eating in one category, and apologizing to the Lord, and saying, I’m awfully sorry, Lord, but you know I have to eat now. I’ll be seeing as soon as I’m through. But now I have to eat, and I’m sorry.

So, we divide up our work, the thing we do, our physical necessities. We divide them and put them on one side, and we put praying and singing and giving and Bible reading and testifying on the other side. And we say here on the other side, this is spiritual, and this is secular. And we try to walk the tightrope in between, a kind of a braiding, lacing in and out of the secular and the spiritual, apologizing to God when we have to turn aside for a little while to do something secular.

My brother, I’ve got a better way to live than that, and I can tell you that the Lord Jesus never made such a distinction. Never did he make such a distinction. He said he was the Lord. He was God himself. And He said, where can we get bread that these may eat?

And so, He broke the bread and gave it to them, and they ate, and the eating was as spiritual as the teaching had been. And the teaching and the eating were equally spiritual, and the praying that was before, the grace before meal, was just as spiritual, but no more so than the eating afterwards.

Now, if you can get a hold of that, it would mean a wonderful thing to you, that the Lord is the Lord of our bread, and the Lord of our eating, and the Lord of our bathing, and the Lord of our sleeping, and the Lord of our dressing, and the Lord of our working. So that when we work, we need not say, now, Lord, I have to work today, but I’ll see you tonight. We do not leave God at the door as a man leaves his wife when he goes to work, but the Lord is with us, sanctifying everything we do, everything we do provided that it is honest and good.

Now, God doesn’t sanctify the bartender’s activities. No bartender can pray in the morning and say, now, Lord, be with me today, because God isn’t going to work with a bartender. I’m sure of that, though I’m not so sure but what if things continue to go downhill as fast as they have been in the last few years, that we won’t have a society of beer tender, bartenders and beer sellers.

And they won’t have John 3:16 painted on the bottom of the cup so that when they drain the glass, they will see John 3:16. They say, why, these dear people are Christians. They’re good Christian beer drinkers and bartenders. Look at, they’ve got a text. They’ve got a text on the ceiling. It says, the Lord is with thee, be not afraid. And as soon as they tip their glass up and it’s empty, they’re seeing a text on the ceiling. Don’t say they’re not Christian. You, why, you would condemn those dear beer guzzlers? Why, they’ve got a text on the ceiling. Of course they have their text in hell. Don’t forget that.

But anyhow, the Lord is not going to bless the gambler and the bartender, but if your job is decent, the Lord is going to bless it. And if the Lord is in you, the Lord will be in your labors. Whence shall we buy bread that these may eat? Now the Lord of glory said that. He didn’t delegate it to a prophet or an angel, but He Himself was concerned with our eating.

And now these hungry people, here they were; it was Jesus’ problem really. But you know, he made it Philip’s problem. He honored Philip by taking him in with it.

I preached a sermon quite a while ago now in which I said the Lord was self-sufficient and didn’t need us. And I bothered some people by that because I assume that they thought the Lord needed them. And if they should retire or resign, the Lord would have to scramble around to find somebody else. What a low view of God that is, my brother. Could you get down on your prayer bones and bend your supple knee and cry to a God that needed you? I couldn’t.

A God that needed me would be a God that had to have help from somewhere. He doesn’t have to have me, and He doesn’t have to have you. That’s bitterness to some people because we have come to believe that we’re indispensable. And when we go, there will be a great tree fall and leave a vacant place against the sky. Brother, I’m afraid that when some of us die, it’ll be like a stalk of grass that was eaten by a grasshopper. Nobody noticed the difference anyhow.

But here were these hungry people, and the Lord was going to feed them, but He didn’t want to just feed them and have it over with. He wanted some blessing to flow all around as a result of it. So, He picked out one of His disciples and He said to Himself, Now I’m going to take Philip in on this. I’m going to honor him by letting him be a part of this plan. And he helped Me work it out here, though actually I don’t need him at all.

So, He encouraged Philip to tackle the problem along with Him, though He certainly didn’t need him as was proved later on. But He nudged Philip a little and got him into a hard spot in order to reveal to Philip his own emptiness.

Now, my friends, it is never a waste of time to learn that you don’t know something, and it’s never a waste of time to learn how little you have. That is a very useful procedure. It’s a positive victory when I learn the things I can’t do, a positive victory when I learn the things I haven’t got.

So, there is so little filling these days because there is so very little emptying these days. We don’t stay to get empty, and so we cannot be filled. And the Lord cannot fill a vessel that is already full. But He has to empty and empty, and He had to empty this fellow Philip. He had to empty him in order that He might fill him. But Philip was full of his own ideas, and Philip couldn’t have been filled because he was already full. And the Lord wanted to empty the man.

Very little is said after that about Philip here, nothing is said here at all about Philip. But I’m sure that Philip’s face was red, and I’m sure that he was a much meeker and humbler man after that. And his obedience and his humility were far more perfect after this experience.

And Philip didn’t acquit himself very well here. The Lord said, Philip, where are we going to buy bread that these may eat? And Philip revealed a type of mind, uninspired and uninspiring, calculating and altogether earthy. Here is what Philip did. When Jesus said, Philip, where are we going to get bread? Philip reached and took out his pencil and clicked the button and went to work. And he brought his pencil to bear on the miracle. He brought his little pencil and his sheet of paper to bear, and he became Philip the Calculator.

I don’t know why we don’t name people the way they used to. In the olden days, Middle Ages and previous to that, they named people according to what they were. And even in country places up when I was growing up, they named people according to what they were. Black Simon Pennington was a man in our neighborhood. He wasn’t any blacker, I guess, than I. He was a white man, but he was named Black Simon. Another one was called Little Simon.

So, there was Black Simon and Little Simon, they distinguished them. And if you’ll look in history, you’ll find one man called, what was his name? The Bald. Another man was named so-and-so, the Good. And then there was Alexander the Great. They named them according to what the characteristic was that strewed out of them.

And you can easily figure for yourself a hirsutic situation. That is how much hair the man had who was called so-and-so the Bald. We know his condition just by his name. You’d never want to run your fingers through his curl just because he was Philip the Bald. I think it was Philip, wasn’t it? Philip the Bald.

Now, I wonder why we couldn’t go to the New Testament and name some of these characters. Here would be Philip the Calculator, Philip the Mathematician, Philip the Clerk. And he took out his pencil.

And every Christian group has a boy with a pencil. I’ve sat on boards now for a good many years, good many years. And oh, there’s rarely a board that doesn’t have the Philip the Calculator present. When you suggest anything, he takes out his pencil and leans back a little and leaves a few streaks on the wall and comes up with a proof that you can do it. You can’t do it.

When we built this church, we had this old mule barn over here, and we built this church. And that was 12 years ago or so. And when we started to build it, we had more Philips who said it can’t be done. Can’t be done. And they proved it. We built it and paid for it for in six years. But it couldn’t be done. It just couldn’t be done.

And I sit on boards. I suppose now, God willing, I’ll be sitting on boards all the rest of my life. Brother Chase once said that he had been on the Ways and Means Committee ever since he was converted. And I have been on boards, little boards and big boards. And I will be, week after next, sitting on the board in New York.

And there’s always two kinds of men. The man who can see the miracle and the man who can see the pad and the pencil. They even provide pad and pencils in our New York board. They got a little table there and there’s a pencil and a pad. I wonder whether they expect us to use them or not.

Philip did. He took out his pencil, he went to work, and he said, how much was it here now? Let me see. He knew how much money he had. Two hundred pennies. And he counted the number of people, and he figured out how much he could buy with two hundred pennies. And then he cut the two hundred pennies worth of bread, knowing how much bread sold for, up into little slices, big enough to feed the five thousand, and turned to the Lord and said, two hundred penny worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may take a little, period. And then he walked away. That was his contribution. It was one hundred percent negative. And if they’d listened to Philip, they’d have dropped starving in the wilderness, and the glorious miracle never would have taken place.

Philip the Calculator, the man with a pencil, a dangerous man, brother, in the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ. Every suggestion that is made in the direction of progress is voted down by the calculators.

And then we come to the next man, and that was Andrew. And Andrew did a little better. Now Andrew made a timid suggestion, and he said, there is a lad here, and he has a little lunch, five barley loaves and two small fishes. And then added, but what are these among so many?

Now I wouldn’t call Andrew a world-beater here. If he were living now, he wouldn’t be what we call a founder, nor a promoter. That’s sure enough. We’ve got so many founders now and promoters. We’ve got founders every place. I know because it says on the door, so-and-so, Founder. And we have founders, and we have promoters.

But Andrew wouldn’t have done, because Andrew was only partly over on this side of the wonder, only partly. He looked around and said, surely this final tally at the bottom of the column isn’t the end of things. He said, my brother Phillip here’s a good boy and I like him, but he’s a bit on the negative side.

And he looked that sheet over and so much bread for so many pennies, so many people sliced bread into so many. No, he says, no use. Merely be a little, a hollow toothful for each one. But he said, that can’t be the end. Can’t be. He said, there must be help someplace. And the man Andrew began to look around.

Now you’re getting a little closer to a miracle when you can get a church full of Andrews. If you don’t have anybody else, you have an Andrew or two. They usually have a footnote and they say, why there’s a boy here that has a lunch and some bread and fish, but then after all that’s not very much.

And there’s a sort of a rising inflection in the voice as much as to say, well, somebody come to my support and help me a little. If I can just get a little encouraging word from somebody, I think I can go someplace. That’s Andrew.

You’re getting a little warmer when you’re like Andrew, brother. Phillip was cold as ice. He had his adding machine, and he proved conclusively nobody was going to eat that night, and he could show you. But Andrew looked around and said, well, we got to start. Got a little lunch here, a little basket, a lad, a boy.

Now I have never been able to figure out how that boy ever managed to hang on to that lunch. Boys that I know would have been, would have had it eaten by nine o’clock the first morning and here it was the third day. But he still managed to hang on to a little lunch. Maybe his good mother had given him a little extra. He still had it. Three loaves, three slices. They weren’t really loaves; they were simply glorified pancakes. That’s all they were, five of them, I’m sorry, five. And two small fishes.

Now, this was the lad. Andrew didn’t have anything himself, but he knew somebody that did, he thought, might help out a little bit. He’d have been a help on any board because at least he was looking around for a fellow with a lunch.

And there was a little note of hopefulness here and a little faith. I know what the Lord means when He says, sheep. All you have to do, brethren, to kill a church is to begin to talk it down. That’s all you have to do. Just let the sheep begin to bleat the blues and the thing will die in no time at all. Just begin to bleat the blues.

I used to tell a story about a power of suggestion. A healthy, robust extrovert who never knew he had a stomach nor a heart nor any other organ. He walked around healthy as a horse on the earth and some fella came along and said, you know, the power suggestion’s tremendous and they got to arguing about it in the country store and so they decided to work it on this fellow.

And a half a dozen men fixed it, so they met this big healthy boy on the sidewalk. The first man that met him ran up with a smile to shake his hand and then dropped a smile and shook his hand very carefully and said, good morning, John. Don’t, uh, feeling so well? Oh, sure, he said. He just exuded all over the place. Sure, he said, feeling well. He said, I, I’m glad. I thought maybe when I first saw you weren’t looking so well.

And then about a block further down, the second fella met him, and he rubbed it in a little further than the third fella met him and the fourth. And by the time he’d met the fifth rascal, his feathers were down, and he went limping off home, pale and discouraged and said to his wife, I got to see a doctor. She said, why? He said, well, I don’t know. I’m not feeling so good.

And so, he showed up at the old family doctor’s office and cooled his heels there and waited. And he was as healthy as they come. But the prior suggestions put him in the doctor’s office. And if the doctor had only been a bit pessimistic, it could have landed him right in the hospital.

You know, there is in medical circles, a disease. I don’t know the name of it. I always forget the name of the thing, but it means a heart disease induced by a doctor. Now, you know the Latin on that, I don’t, but it means a disease of the heart that has been induced by a doctor’s suggestion.

A fellow goes in, you know, and he’s overeating or something. And the doctor looks at him and says, you look like a coronary to me. And the poor fella gets scared to death, and they rush him around and electroplate him, I mean electrocardiogram him, and fix him up. And the first thing he knows, he begins to go slowly up the stairs. And he let three streetcars pass before he’d run for one. There’s nothing wrong with him, but he has a heart condition induced by the suggestion of a physician who didn’t know any better. Doctors themselves, they got that name. I didn’t invent it.

And you know, churches are like that too. You can talk a church down and one fellow will meet another fellow and say, things aren’t going so well, are they? No, not going so well. In other words, they’re not going so well. No, that’s what I’ve been hearing. Just had heard it five minutes before from another fellow. And then another fellow meets another, still another fellow and says, oh, have you heard what the talk is? And pretty soon they have talked the church down.

And the calculators and the clerks and the mathematicians, they’ve seen the pencil, but they haven’t seen God. They figured things out, but they haven’t figured God in. And we have so much of this in the day in which we live.

Brethren, it’s time we at least find an Andrew or two that can look around for the tokens, for that’s all this lunch was. It was merely a token. It wasn’t very much. It wasn’t enough for more than one. The little boy had saved it up, saved enough that he expected his lunch to last him, and he had that. It would have done with a little water on the side to wash it down. But after all, it was only a token. It didn’t amount to very much. But Christ took that inadequate token, and He made it enough for 5,000.

My brethren, oh, you know, I told them, quoted the little passage I got from the dear old Walter Hilton who lived back before Shakespeare’s time. He was talking about how we ought to serve God and how much we ought to give and how we ought to go about serving God. And he said, I’ll give you a little rule. And he used the old English word mickle, meaning much. He said, mickle have, mickle do. Less have, less do. Nothing have, at least have a good intention.

Oh, I can’t think of a better rule than that. If you’ve got mickle, that’s much, do much. If you haven’t got mickle, but scarcely anything, then just do what you can. And if you haven’t anything, then, have a good intention. Andrew at least had a good intention and a lunch, a token. He was on God’s side at least far enough. He was optimistically inclined. But the lad was caught in the middle. Andrew didn’t have anything, but he knew a boy who had.

And so the little boy was caught in the middle. And it doesn’t tell us at all about how they got that lunch. It says Jesus took the loaves. It doesn’t say how He got the loaves. It says, He took them.

Now, it doesn’t mean that He took them away from the boy by force, certainly. Ordinarily this lunch wouldn’t amount to very much, but the circumstances made the lunch vitally important to the boy. Jesus had shown the importance of food by saying, if I dismiss these now, they’ll go fainting on the way. He knew there was no food between there and their homes, and He knew that they had to have it. It was vitally important.

And this little lad had something vitally important here, important to him. Yet, he surrendered it to Jesus. I know he did. I’ve read too much about my Lord to believe the Lord took it away from him by force. He never takes anything by force.

So, He must have gone and smiled and said, boy, would you like to help all this crowd and happy little boy looked up and said, certainly Master. Well, He said, let me have your lunch. And the boy grinned and handed it to Jesus.

And Jesus said, all right, tell him to sit down. And they sat down in an orderly tiers and rows. They sat down and Jesus took the bread and blessed, lifted up His heart and said, O God, bless this little scene. Bless this, this little optimistic note of hope, bless this token of belief. And then He began to spread it around, fill the baskets, empty baskets. Where did He get those empty baskets? Those were the lunch baskets of the people that had eaten theirs, all the food.

That’s where He got His baskets. Plenty of baskets around there, but only one lunch. And the Lord took the one lunch and multiplied it into enough for 5,000 because the lad surrendered his lunch to the Lord Jesus.

Now I briefly bring this to a close and ask you a question. Where do you stand? Are you a Philip, an Andrew, or the lad? Philip was so good at figures that he figured the situation out and didn’t figure God in. And Andrew was a little nearer. He didn’t have anything himself, but he thought he knew where he could dig up something. And it worked. And then there was the lad. He hadn’t much, but what he had, he gave. What he had, he gave to the Lord Jesus, and the Lord Jesus Christ made it sufficient.

Now there we have it. Which side are you on? There are those who are convinced that the Lord can’t do anything. They have their good reasons. They’re sure of themselves. They’ve got it figured out. And then there are the uncertain ones whose hearts are on the right side. They don’t think that that lunch is enough, but they think it’s something.

And then there’s the lad who says, If I give you this, Master, I don’t eat. But I like the way you do things, and I’m ready to go along with you. So here, take it. He didn’t know in surrendering his lunch that he was going to feed all the five thousand and have enough for himself.

And don’t you suppose that when the Lord had to send a basket full to the lad, He put an extra piece of fish on? I think He did. It’s quite in keeping with the ways of the Lord. Put a little extra bread in the basket of the fellow who had given his all. I know He does that in spiritual things, and why shouldn’t He do it with a lunch?

Well, there are some lessons from Jesus feeding the multitude. And I recommend, with the coming on of the fall days, and the return of the children back to school, and the coming home of people, and the coming of students, and the presence of persons who will be here in larger numbers, who in turn will reach others in times to come, I recommend that we ask God for at least the grace of Andrew.

And instead of a dead end, a cold calculation that says, No, it can’t be done, period, that we at least begin to look around for some tokens of the grace of God. And we’ll find those tokens. You may have a token like that and don’t know it.

You think the lad knew he had the key to the miracle? He didn’t know it, but he had it. He carried it in his lunch basket and didn’t know it. He’d lugged it for three days and didn’t know it.

You may have in your hand this night the key to the future of how many souls? You may have tonight in your hand, without knowing it, the key to the salvation of tens and even hundreds, yet if you only knew it. And if you’ll only surrender it and let the Lord have it. Say, Master, I only have a token, only a little, only this token. But take it, Lord Jesus, take it. And the Lord will take it. How He multiplies it, I don’t know, but He can do it and He will do it and He does do it. But He has to have the lad, and He has to have the willing heart and He has to have the surrendered lunch. Let us pray.

O Lord, our Lord, this night, here we are in the midst of a great, dangerous, ugly, dirty, sin-infested world, full of crime and sin and danger and death. And all around, among the bushes, there are hungry sheep. There are men and women who daren’t be sent away. They’re here in this city. They’re here even around this neighborhood. We daren’t send them away. We daren’t prove that we can’t feed them. We daren’t, we dare not say it can’t be done.

O God, our God, Thou hast given us a token of Thy grace. Thou hast given us a little beginning. We pray, help us to surrender it to Thee tonight in devotion, in sacrificial surrender. And let Thee take what we have, our minds, our tongues, our money, our abilities, and touch it with a miracle and bless it and break it and give it.

O God, we pray Thee that before the snow flies, we may yet see in this fellowship added numbers plus increased spirituality plus mounting faith plus deeper devotion plus holier living and plus more radiant worship.

We beseech Thee, O Lord, raise up some Lazaruses that will be the advertising we need. We can spend our money by going to the newspapers and telling people we’re over here. But we remember Thou didst raise Lazarus from the dead. And they came from everywhere to see the man that had been dead and lived again.

O God, we pray thee in the next weeks, find some drunkards and restore them again to sanity and health. Find some worldlings and cut them loose from the bondage of iniquity. Find, we pray Thee, some who are now bogged down and mud and sand flats of the world. Float them off, we pray, by the coming of new grace and raise them from the dead again. That the people may say this man was dead and lo, he liveth.

Raise us up some Lazaruses, O God, we pray, and some Martha’s and some Mary’s and some Paul’s and some who are now turned against Thee but will soon be turned toward Thee. Great God, help us over these days just ahead.

And we pray Thee that we may mount up with wings as eagles. We pray that we may run and not be weary, that we may walk and not faint. We pray that Thou will help us not to look back at the things that have been. But Thou hast said, say no more, talk no more of the things that have been. Lo, I do a new thing, now shall it spring forth. We pray that Thou who art the God who maketh all things new, will begin to make things new in our fellowship, in our Sunday school, in our choir, in our pulpit, in the pew, and on the board and in all of the Christian fellowship.

Great God, we pray Thou do new things among us. We pray that some of our sick may be miraculously restored to health. We pray that some who are now dragging around the edges and keeping their family divided may surrender and unite the family in the grace of God.

We pray thee that sulking, stubborn men may bow on their knees and beat their breasts and say, my God, what a fool I’ve been, and I’ll surrender my all to Jesus. Here, take my little all, the token of thy grace, bless it and give it.

God, we pray for Jesus’ sake thou will convert our young people. We pray for Jesus’ sake that Thou will send or bring in or cause our people to become so concerned that they will bring in the unchurched mobs that mill around Englewood, the crowds that are everywhere, but in the churches where the gospel is preached.

Now, Father, we are trusting Thee. We pray send us out with our eyes upward and our hopes cheerful and our beliefs strong that we shall yet see the goodness of God in the land of the living, and we wouldn’t forget to thank Thee for everybody that’s gotten help over the last weeks, these cruelly hot summer days with humidity incredibly high and our minds dull from the pressure and all the hindrances and obstacles, yet there are some whose faces are bright with what thou hast done for them even recently.

Thou hast been good, O God, otherwise we’d have fallen apart and flown apart by centrifugal force and been scattered over a thousand acres. Thou hast kept us together. Thou hast blessed us. Thou hast preserved the unity of our Christian assembly, and we like an army are ready to march. We like a club of players are ready to go out to do battle. Lord God, like farmers are ready to till the soil, like carpenters to build, like fishermen to fish. We only ask, bless what we have, Lord, bless what we have, bless what we have.

Let’s remain in an attitude of prayer, please.

How many would like to say something like this? Now trying to word somebody else’s request makes it awkward, I know, and I may miss it, but it’s something like this. You will say, O Lord, I’ve been a little on the blue side and certainly I’ve been negative, and I’ve lived a pretty negative life, but I’m sorry, and I believe that there’s hope, and I don’t have much, but I have a little, and what I have I’m ready to surrender, and I want Thee to take it and take me and begin to do something in my family and where I work, where I am going to soon be in school. Lord, I want Thee to take that and bless it and break it. I don’t know how you’ll do it,

Lord, but I just want Thee to know that I’m on your side, and I’m optimistic about it, and I have hope, and I’m cheerful and expectant, and I want Thee to take what I have, and I promise that I’ll obey, and I’ll walk with Thee, and I’ll expect.

And I want prayer. I want prayer that this might become real in my life, that I may like Andrew have hope, and like little lad, I may give some practical meaning to that hope by surrendering a token at least to be used as Thou will. Amen.

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A.W. Tozer Talks

Three Faithful Wounds-Contrition, Compassion and Longing for God

Pastor and Author A.W. Tozer

August 30, 1953

I said this morning, and I will now repeat, that I think the Lord gave me a little word about a year ago. And I have never preached it here, though I have referred to it and quoted a little. I preached it in California, in New Jersey, and North Carolina. And I wanted to preach it to you before it joined a great company of sermons, the place nearer thereof shall know it no more.

Because I’ve got a lot of sermons that I never preach anymore, and I don’t want this one to go by until you have heard it. Because I feel that it’s probably one of the most important things I’ll ever say to you. I’m going to read the text in the book of Proverbs 27:6, Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful.

Now we’ll just cancel out the last phrase because we are not interested in it tonight. Faithful are the wounds of a friend. And in order that we might know who that friend is, the translators have done what they could for us, but in order that we may know who that friend is, let me read from Job 5:17: Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth. Therefore, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord, or the Almighty, for he maketh sore and bindeth up, he wounded, and his hands make whole. Now that is God the Almighty who maketh sore and bindeth up, who wounded, and whose hands make whole again.

Now to introduce the little outline of this message tonight, I want also to introduce a woman who has been a great blessing to me over the past few years. She is none other than the woman they call the Lady Julian. Sometimes you hear it pronounced Julianna, but she was known as Julian, the Lady Julian. She lived more than 600 years ago in England, in the city of Norwich. She only wrote one book, and by the good grace of God, that book fell into my hands. She lived 200 years before Martin Luther was born, and yet she was in spirit a Protestant.

If she had ever met Luther, she would have shaken his hand and come over on his side. For she says in the little book which she has written that at one time in her life when she was praying, and you know the way they pray, with all sorts of gadgetry to help them along, she said the Lord feared to her, and the Lord said to her, you don’t have to have all this stuff to pray, that all God wants, and all God expects, is that you should believe in Him and love Him with all your heart.

So, she antedates Luther by a couple of hundred years in preaching justification by faith, and teaching that if you loved God with all your heart and believed in His Son, you’d be all right, regardless of how many of the various religious trinkets you had on at the time.

And then she lived 400 years before Charles Wesley and the Methodists. But this woman taught perfect love before Wesley was born. She believed that we ought to love the Lord until it became like the fire in the bush, a flaming thing, consuming and swallowing everything else up.

And then she was not only as a Methodist, a believer in perfect love, but this very dignified and proper little English lady was guilty at least at one time in her life of shouting a little bit. She said that one day she was meditating on the things of God, and she got to thinking about how high and lofty and wonderful Jesus was, infinitely exalted above the earth and above the heavens. And then she got to thinking what a poor little worm she was, and how far down and how lowly.

Then she said, I meditated how this infinitely high and lofty One should meek himself so low as to become so familiar with a poor worm like me. And she said, I shouted out, glory be to God, isn’t it wonderful.

And if she’d been in a Methodist camp meeting, she’d have felt perfectly at home, because they also had a great deal to say about the high Lord meeking Himself down to dwell in the heart of the common worm.

And then she lived also about 600 years or close to 600 years before A. B. Simpson. But she antedated Simpson and taught before he ever was born that Jesus Christ was everything. That it wasn’t creed or doctrine, but the Lord that was everything, and that creed and doctrine have meaning only because the Lord Jesus Christ is in them. And that when He gets out of them, or is left out of them, they cease to have any meaning at all.

Now she didn’t say it exactly like that, but that was the gist of what she had to say. Then not only did she teach that Jesus Christ was all in all, but she also believed in divine healing. She didn’t practice this, she didn’t preach it, but she practiced it on at least one memorable occasion. She became very, very sick, so sick, in fact, that she thought she was going to die, and everybody else thought she was going to die. So of course they began to cram for the examination, as the Christians do. They neglect, you know, until they’re brought to die, and then they cram for that last hasty and frantic preparation for the judgment seat.

So, they began to cram. They came from everywhere, and they put oil, I suppose, and water, and they did all sorts of things, and they gave her the works. They gave her everything possible to do, and still she kept dying. She said, finally she arrived at a place where she began to die, and knew she was dying. She said she was dying from the feet up, that her feet got cold and dead, and then her legs got cold and dead, and she was dying, and died, she said, clear to the waist.

She remembered telling the Lord, now Lord, I’m only 30 years old, and I’d hate to die and leave my work. She said, it’s now perfectly all right, if you want me to die, why, I’ll die. But she said, think about it a little, and see whether it wouldn’t be a good idea if I lived. For she said, I’m still young, and I’ve got a long time on earth in the natural course of things, and if I die, it won’t do much good.

So, she said, Father, just give that some attention, and she went on dying. Then she said, I began to dive my head down. She said, my head began to die, and I went blind. She said, there was a total darkness, and it began to settle down toward my heart, and I felt myself going. And just when I was about to breathe my last, she said, suddenly and instantaneously, I was perfectly well. She said, I know God did it, and it wasn’t nature, but grace, because it came so suddenly, and I was dying and knew it. And she said, I was instantly healed.

Now she never preached it, but she practiced it, and God delivered that woman marvelously and miraculously. I lay that little foundation as a sort of a little ramp from which we can take off.

And now I want to talk to you about the prayer she made. She said she conceived a strong desire in her heart for the Lord to give her three wounds there in her heart. She said she prayed to God that He would do her the favor.

Now imagine this, brethren, in this time of weak knees, spongy, soft Christians, who complain of the heat, and of the cold, and of the rain, and of the dry spell, and of everything else. Can you conceive of a woman praying this prayer? But she did it. She said, I prayed to God that he would give me three wounds in my heart, and she named them before the Lord. She said, I want thee to wound me with the wound of contrition, and then I want thee to wound me with the wound of compassion, and then I want thee to wound me with the wound of very longing after God.

Now God gave the little woman those three wounds, and she lived to be quite an old lady, and she was known throughout all the area. And they came to her from the north, and south, and east, and west. And she told them the way of love, and trust, and confidence, and the goodness of Jesus, who kneeled Himself down to a poor little worm, and the kind Father who gave His Son to die.

And she was literally a son in her generation, S-U-N, I mean, in her generation, shining upon all. And God answered her prayer, and gave her a great compassion, and a great longing after God, a longing that has imparted itself to everything she wrote, and is still alive in the earth, in the hearts of a multitude of people who know about it, and the wound of contrition she had also.

So, I want to speak of these three faithful wounds. Faithful are the wounds of a friend. And I want to point out that all great Christians have been wounded souls. And you’re pretty well conditioned to this kind of preaching, but the average rank and file run-of-the-mind Christian would think that I had lost my mind and needed to have the man with the white coat and gently lead me away where I could do myself no harm.

But you have been conditioned somewhat to this, but I don’t think you have what I’m preaching about, and I’m not sure I have too much of it myself. The fact that you have gotten used to this kind of preaching may be against you, because these three wounds are for us, and all great Christians have been wounded souls.

Now, it is a strange thing what a wound will do to a man. Here is a young fellow wearing the uniform of an American, or an Australian, or a Turk, and he’s fighting in the late lamented war in Korea. And he is at the peak of perfect health, strong and vigorous and self-confident. And though death is all around him, he’s bold and fearless and ready to crack jokes in the cannon’s mouth. And then a piece of shrapnel rips through his body and the blood begins to flow.

Instantly all the fight goes out of the man. Instantly all self-confidence goes out of the man. At once all of the old patriotic pride goes out of the man, all of the old Adam’s strength goes out of the man, and all his world shuts down and narrows in and becomes only as big as that wound.

It is bigger than the United States. It’s bigger than the world. It’s bigger than the universe to him. This sudden, brutal, sadistic, horrible, heartless, merciless thing that has ripped into his palpitating flesh and left a great hole that out of which pours his blood. And though he may get well again, as long as he’s the wounded man, he’s a defeated man, a beaten man, a child again.

Boys who have been thus hit, though they’re strong and tall and weigh 200 pounds, they have been known to cry for their mothers. The nurses and the doctors who work on such boys, it’s common to hear them revert to their childhood again, beaten back by the terror of that wound, till they think themselves in their pain, lying at home again, asking their mother to help them. The wounded man is the man out of whom all the carnal, self-confident fight has gone.

Now, you will go to your Bible, and you will have no difficulty whatever in identifying the wounded men of the Bible. We might begin with Abraham, one of my favorite characters. Abraham was the man from Ur of the Chaldees, an idol maker, history says.

And of course, I always think of him as being a big man, I don’t know why, but he was a big man in a great many ways, and a very sure man and a self-confident man. Then one day, God said, take thy son, thine only son, Isaac, whom thou lovest, and take him up to a mountain where I will show thee.

And Isaac took the wood on his back, and Abraham went ahead, and the servants came fearfully, close-mouthed, white-faced, following behind, for Abraham was taking his own son, whom he loved, who had gathered up all the love there was in the heart of the man Abraham, a doting, almost idolatrous affection that wound itself around the heart and life of the little Isaac, or the young Isaac. And Abraham raised a knife to slay his son.

You know the blessed, God-blessed sequel, how the Lord forbade him to slay his son, and said, I only wanted to know that thou wouldst indeed obey me. Or words to that effect. But Abraham never got over that wound. He was never the same man again. He was wounded by his friends, and he was wounded to save him from himself.

And that is always the reason God wounds men, to save them from themselves. We are weak when we are strong, and God can break that strength only by wounding us. Just changing it or bending it won’t do. It must be ripped into by a chunk of the cross, and there must be a gaping wound out of which human blood must flow.

And God wounded Abraham. And after that, Abraham was the great father of the faithful, and he has walked literally down the years. He sleeps somewhere yonder in a cave in Asia Minor. But the great spirit of the man has walked all down these years. But it was not the spirit of a Napoleon, or the spirit of a Washington, or the spirit of one of Adam’s earthly, strong, confident men.

But it’s the spirit of a man who was wounded by his friends, who was reduced to helplessness, and then thrown out upon the mercy of God as a baby is thrown out upon into the arms of his mother.

It might come on down to the man Jacob. His story is too well known to need repeating. As long as Jacob could get around unwounded, he was Jacob the supplanter, Jacob the crook, Jacob the bargain maker, Jacob of the ring-straight cattle and spotted sheep, Jacob who knew how to open a store down here, and in six years’ time, own a department store, and in 12 years’ time, own two department stores. That was Jacob. He was a Jew if ever there was one. And he was that kind of fella. He knew he was good. It wasn’t a question of being proud or vain. He just knew he was good.

And then one day God met him on the on the bank of the Jabbok River and wrestled with him into the night. And Jacob wrestled with the angel, and before the morning broke, the angel reached down and touched the thigh of Jacob and wounded him, and changed his name, and Jacob limped from that time on.

And I like to say that when Jacob went home, the sun was shining on his head because it said, the sun rose upon him. Before that, he had been in the shadow so much of the time that the sun couldn’t get to his old bald face. But when God wounded him so that he limped for the rest of his life, the sun shone on his head.

I say to you ladies and gentlemen, that the mere matter of a limp for the rest of your life is very cheap price to pay for the glorious benefits of a wound administered by the Lord Himself.

So the man Jacob was a wounded man, but he never was the same slimy, old, slick, serpentine Jacob that he had been before. His name was changed to Israel, the prince with God, for he prevailed.

And we come to the man Elijah, and I won’t tell you too much about him, but that man Elijah was not one of Adam’s brood. He had been born of the seed of Adam and had come naturally from the loins of a father.

But the man Elijah was a wounded man. He was a man who had gone into the presence of God. He was a man who had gone and stood before kings. He was a man who had stood on the hilltop and had put his life at hazard, and had loved not his life unto the death.

And then after that was over, and the great letdown came, and the nerves of the man were almost broken, Jezebel got after him, chased him into the wilderness. There he learned from God the story that it’s not by might nor power but by the still small voice of the Spirit. The man Elijah went a wounded man. God had gotten through to him and had wounded him deeply.

And there was Jeremiah. I once preached a sermon here in a series from Jeremiah, when I talked about the hurt of Jeremiah. He said, I am hurt for the hurt of the daughter of my people. You skip that over and say the King James Version isn’t easy to understand, is it? We ought to have a new version because the King James is hard to understand. I am hurt for the hurt of the daughter of my people.

It isn’t a low IQ or bad translation there. It’s lack of spiritual perception that makes that hard to understand. Whoever wants to can know that you were talking to a man who’d been wounded by the Holy Ghost, a man who called it a hurt. And he was hurt deeply, and he was hurt because his people had been hurt by the devil and sinned.

We come down to the man Paul, and I suppose there’s no theologian living or dead that quite knows what the man Paul meant when he said from henceforth, let me alone and don’t bother me. For I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus.

Every book written about it will have a different explanation. But I hold up the man Paul as a man who bore in his body the marks of the wounding. He had been wounded by his friends.

Now I could finish this sermon if I wanted to do it by coming on down the years and showing how there was hardly a man, hardly a woman anywhere in church history that ever amounted to anything until they had been wounded to death. Until God had caught them and beaten them and wounded them and made them helpless, then brought them back to life again.

Now let’s look at these three wounds. Here is the wound of contrition. They tell me that repentance is a change of mind. I wrote a little editorial one time, and I said, there is no regeneration without reformation. And I said that before anybody could be regenerated, he had to have repented. And repentance is more than a change of mind. Repentance is a reformation of life.

And I got a long letter this last week, beautifully written, nice, gentle, kindly letter, taking me to task and telling me there was nothing to that at all, that the only message the gospel had from Him is believe, believe, believe. I just as soon joined the Seven-Day Adventists, I just as soon joined the Buckmanites, as to adopt any kind of an unscriptural and false theory as that. The message of the cross carries with it the high imperative that I cannot accept it unless I’m willing to do the will of God.

To say that God has divorced the gospel message of forgiveness and life from the moral message of righteousness and true holiness is to put God at loggerheads with Himself and to bring confusion into the kingdom of God.

No, repentance is more than a change of mind. It is that, but it will not be effective until it becomes a wound. And the trouble with us in our day is that there’s no more wounds than repentance. There are no wounded men lying at the gate of the Kingdom.

They used to pray in the camp meetings, O Lord, bless thy servants, and may the slain of the Lord be many. I don’t know whether they quite knew what they meant or not. And it’s degenerated into a religious cliche, which an old lady could pray if she couldn’t remember anything else. But whoever prayed it first had something, and whoever prayed it with meaning had something. May the slain of the Lord be many.

But we have made entrance into the kingdom of God so cheap that nobody anymore cares whether he’s in or out much, because the price is too cheap, and nobody wants something that’s given away.

Our missionaries tell us that if they give away a gospel of John, nobody will read it. But if they charge the lowest piece of coin there is in the kingdom, if they charge what we’d say a penny for it, they’ll buy them and read it.

And we have made the kingdom of God so easy to get into that people scorn it. Very few people want to get into it anymore. But I say that we have not truly repented until our repentance has become a wound. Until that wound has captured us, and defeated us, and taken the moral fight out of us, and self-defense out of us, and wounded us near unto death.

Now I say that no man has repented until his wound, his repentance has been a wound, and he has not repented while he can reason about his sins. As long as sin is up in the head and we’re able to reason about whether it’s venial or mortal, whether it is one of those amiable sins that the seed of Adam may be forgiven for, or whether it is more serious than that. Just as long as we can reason about our sin, the wound hasn’t hit us yet, and we have not been enabled to repent.

But as soon as sin passes our reason and gets into the conscience, and we become conscious of the fact that we ourselves have killed the Savior, that our sins have nailed him on the cross, and it ceases to be reasoning about it, and becomes a biting, binding, horrible thing.

Some people will come and say, Mr. Tozer, there’s nothing in the Bible about tobacco. And therefore, I don’t want to be told that I can’t use tobacco because there’s nothing in the Bible about it. Whoever says that’s perfectly right, there isn’t anything in the Bible about it. Thank God there wasn’t any tobacco in Palestine where the Bible was written.

But I was south last week, and I saw a lot of it down there, and in case you think there isn’t any, turn on your radio to any station in Chicago but one. And that’s MBI. All the rest are trying to get everybody from a little kid up to use tobacco.

Now here’s the point. I have no doubt there are many people in heaven who use tobacco. I have no doubt about that.

Paul Rader said that a man who chewed tobacco could go to heaven, but he’d have to go to hell to spit. But I’m not bringing that in.

But I suppose there are a lot of people who use tobacco who went to heaven. I don’t doubt that at all. I think there are some people who drank beer who went to heaven. I have no doubt about that. And I think there are some people who drank wine who went to heaven. I have no doubt about that.

But the point is, just as soon as we begin to reason about it, we know it’s on our conscience. And just as soon as we begin to bring carnal reason or bring sin to the bar of carnal reason and argue for any kind of sin or any kind of bad company or the appearance of evil, we’re not penitent. And whether somebody went to heaven who smoked a pipe or not, I don’t know.

But I do know this, that if the thing bothers you and you still do it, you’re not a penitent man. And if you’re worried about a thing and still go on doing that and buy a book to prove you dare do it and go to hear a man who tells you it’s all right, you’re not a penitent man, you’re a moral dodger hunting a place to hide. And your sin has not wounded you and there’s no wound of contrition there.

And I say no man has repented until his sins have brought him to feel that he himself killed the Savior. And I don’t believe any man is repented who would rather be happy than holy. We’re living in the most gloomy age of the Church, and yet we’re living in the period when the Church is seeking happiness avidly and not finding it because she’s not looking for it in the right place.

As long as a man would rather be happy than holy, he’s an unrepentant man. For sin is of such a character that as soon as it hits our conscience, we don’t care whether we’re happy or not. We want to be right with God, but we need a conscience. We need to be hit with a conscience, smitten, wounded within, until contrition becomes a part of our life.

I’ve been telling around what Dr. Fleece told me about Mel Trotter. Now I suppose everybody knows Mel Trotter, knows about him. He was one of the great mission men of America a generation ago. I think he’s gone to heaven now. But he was preaching at a certain Bible school, and he said, God saved me. God converted my soul, he said. I got on my knees and said, God have mercy on me, a sinner. And God converted my soul.

As soon as the meeting was over, some old dispensationalist got to him. He said, Brother Trotter, don’t you know that you were dispensationally incorrect in praying, God have mercy on me, a sinner? Trotter had been around long enough; he knew those boys. Well, he said, brother, you may be right. But he said, if I was wrong, I didn’t know it. And besides that, he said, anybody that was in the shape I was, God would have saved him if he just said, Mary had a little lamb.

Now you know what I mean, don’t you? I mean that God doesn’t listen to words when you get on your knees. God looks for wounds when you get on your knees. He’s not caring whether you’re dispensationally right or not. He wants to know if your heart longs after God enough.

I told this years ago, here I repeat it now. In a certain camp meeting in the United States, maybe 30 years ago, an Indian woman came to the altar. She didn’t speak English, but it turned out she knew two words of English. She had evidently mingled with her converted Indian friends, and she was under blistering conviction. Her conscience seized and boiled and her heart ached, and she could scarcely keep the tears back. She listened to the sermon and didn’t know a word of it. She saw others going to the altar and getting up with a happy face. She decided if God would save them, he’d save her.

So, she got up and went down to the altar too, threw herself down there on her knees and her heart started to pray. Her reason got in the way and said, you know, God speaks English, and He doesn’t know your language. If you don’t speak in English, He can’t save you.

So, she only remembered two words and with tears overflowing her cheeks and her hands stretched up, she said, “O January, O February,” and the peace of God came to her heart, and she got up and converted a woman.

Now you say, what nonsense is that? That’s not according to Romans 10:11, and according to 1 Corinthians 15, 1-3. Oh brother, forget it. If you’d ever get on your knees and pray backwards in Latin and mean it, God Almighty would give you bigger answers than he’s giving you now with all your theological correctness. We’re so theologically correct and so infernally dead. And that’s why we’re where we are.

I told you this morning that I ran onto a Plymouth Brethren down at Ben Lippin that was the hottest Christian I’d met in a long time. Plymouth Brethren, if you please. And I hadn’t met anybody whose heart was so longing after God.

She was a blessed nuisance, going around over the pointing out how she met God and could know Him better. The Lord is looking for people that are hungry and have been wounded and that are through with sin and that feel it in within them.

Now, I quote you what a man said, and I believe it. He said, beware vain and over hasty repentance. And he said, one can tell a man’s spiritual age by the intensity of his repentance. Progress in the spiritual life brings a milder but deep sorrow that remembers the guilt. But because we belong in the gloomy, happy, happy period, no contradiction intended and none there.

We’re living in probably the gloomiest age of the church. When there are more heavy hearts and nervous breakdowns and sad faces and minor tones in the church of Christ than ever there has been. The radiance, the joy, the brilliance, the sharp bell tones that once characterized the evangelical church is found no more in her.

And because we don’t have the wellspring leaping up and tinkling with music, why we have to invent instruments of music, not like David, but instruments of music like the devil. We play everything that isn’t nailed down. Nowadays you go to church, and they’ll just play everything they can get their hands on, bottles and glasses and cups and doorbells and handsaws and just everything.

One fellow blew up a 10-cent store balloon and wet his hands and played on that by depressing it and compressing it and so on. Why he managed to get a change in pitch, you know, up and down the scale. God bless his moronic soul. There’s hope in heaven even for fools, I suppose, but I don’t recommend it.

But because we haven’t the wellspring from within, we hunt every old dry water tap and play music on it, but we’re a sad, gloomy bunch because we haven’t repented. And God is not going to give His joy to the impenitent heart.

And she prayed, O God, wound me, wound me with the wound of contrition. And she carried that wound all her life, and she didn’t care whether she was happy or not. And I have no doubt that Paul was wounded with the wound of contrition, for he must have been, because every time he got up to talk, he talked about how he persecuted the church and how the Lord saved him.

And in his epistles, there are frequent reference, or if not frequent, at least there are references made to how he persecuted the saints of God. And how he was the least of all Christians and the worst of all the apostles because of his sins. But in this happy, happy age, this age of cheap infantile giggling, we want to get repentance over with so we can have fun.

O my God, wound us, wound us with the wound of contrition so we’ll never quite get over it. So always we’ll carry around with us the knowledge that we’ve been sinning. Never forget it, we’ve been sinning.

The second wound is the wound of compassion. Now, compassion, of course, is to feel along with or suffer along with. It is emotional identification. Now Christ had this, of course, in full perfection. I want to point out to you, my friends, that Jesus Christ can never suffer again to save men. He never can suffer to save men again. For the Bible tells us that He cried, it is finished and gave up the ghost.

And the writers of the New Testament epistles tell us that death has no more dominion over Jesus. It tells us that there’s no priest offering a sacrifice now. That Jesus Christ was the last priest and that all the lambs of Old Testament times were summed up in Him. And He died once for all, the Just for the unjust, to bring us to God.

And in a hundred places it tells us that Jesus Christ will never die again. He died once for all to save men. And He can never suffer to save them again. He suffers now to win them.

There is a difference. Our Lord had two bodies. He still has two bodies. He has the body of His flesh which He got from Mary, that pure, perfect, holy body which the Virgin Mary gave Him. In that body He suffered on a cross to save men, composed of His ransomed and regenerated people. And in that body, He is suffering again, not as once to redeem men, but now to win them. And only the Compassionate Heart can win men. You can be sure of that.

So, this woman knew it and prayed, O God, give me the wound of contrition so I’ll always feel what you felt, and always feel the way you feel about people, your people.

Have you ever wondered about us? So sure of ourselves, so sharp, so doctrinally sound, so religious, but oh, with so little compassion. I think that if we were to go to God and say, now God, I’m a believer, but I’m a hard believer. I’m a Christian, but I’m a hard Christian. And I have the courage, Father, to pray that you will wound me with a wound of compassion that will identify me emotionally with Thy Son on the cross and with all for whom He died.

I believe it could be the beginning of a marvelous transformation in our lives, and a marvelous transformation in the lives of the Church. But it’s lack of compassion that hurts us. It’s religious hardness.

A man will come and say, Mr. Tozer, I’d like to ask you a question. Do you think that we ought to pray to the Holy Spirit or merely to the Father, or to the Father and the Son? What do you think about that? And so, we spend hours trying to settle the impossible question of whether we ever ought to pray to the Holy Spirit or not?

Do you know something, brethren? I’m so naive that until somebody asked me that question, it never even occurred to me that could be a problem to anybody. It never occurred to me; you know. Somebody came and said, should we pray to the Father in the Spirit, in the name of the Son, or should we pray to the Spirit?

And I tried to straighten him out. He was an Englishman, by the way, Brother Leonard, might have been the reason, but he came, and he wanted to know about that.

Now here he was, and all around him there were the dead and the dying. And all around him there were those who wouldn’t have a chance, sick people, poor people, bereaved people, weary people, displaced persons, homeless persons. And he was trying to settle a theological question of how many angels could dance on the point of a pin, and whether or not it was proper ever to pray to the Spirit.

And I said, Holy Spirit, faithful guide, ever near the Christian’s side. And I pray to the Spirit very often and have done it ever since I was a Christian. I’ve never been rebuked for it yet, and it never entered my mind that was anything wrong with it. And so, some theological hair splitter came and wanted to worry me about it. There we are, Brother. There we are.

So we go with our hard, compassionless message. We go to the world with it, and the world rears back on its haunches and says, so what and who are you? Then we go away piously and said, so persecuted they the prophets which were before us.

No, no, Brother. They weren’t persecuting prophets. They were merely rejecting pinheads. They weren’t persecuting prophets. They were reacting from ice water.

Oh, for contrition and compassion. But you know that the man who’s been wounded with compassion will never be quite a happy man. I want to repeat this for it’s in all of my three little points.

Brethren, we’ll never be where we should be until we cease to hunt after happiness and begin to hunt after holiness. We will never be where we should be as long as we’re irresponsibly desirous of being happy. I’m almost got to a point where I believe it wrong to be happy because the world is wanting it.

See, I just want to know my daughter’s happiness. Now that’s all I care about, my daughter’s happiness. Now I just want John to be happy. If I could just know that John would be happy. Do you think your marriage will last, Mabel? I’m not sure, Mabel. I’d like to have your marriage last because I want you to be happy. And the magazines are full of it, and the radio’s full of it, and everybody’s full of it, and its wind and confusion.

God Almighty never said, be thou happy. He said, be ye holy for I am holy. He said, flee from the wrath to come. And He said, rejoice with them that rejoice and weep with them that weep.  Laugh, and the world laughs with you, says the old maid poet. Weep and you weep alone. She was right about it.

So, we want to be the laughing crowd, painted masks of laughter on the hearts that have never repented, that have no compassion for anybody. If you think we’re a compassionate world, you’re wrong, brethren, we’re not. We toss a quarter to a blind man on the street, not to bless the blind man, but to get it off our own conscience. We send money to India not to help India, but to get it off our conscience.

But the Holy Ghost would have us to have compassion. That is, com-passion, fellow suffering, along with Christ.

I have a little prayer book. I thought I’d lost it, and I gave it up in despair, and it turned up in my coat. I’m not sure my wife didn’t find it and slip it in there for somebody else, but thought I’d lost it. A little prayer book, and one of my prayers is, dear Father, give me a compassion so that I can feel about people exactly the way you feel about them. Now, I don’t want to go all overboard and get all dribbly sentimental and spoil everything. We do that, you know.

A fine old Jew told me at Ben Lippert, he said, Brother Tozer, he said, you know, Christians habitually spoil Jews, because they get them converted and make so much out of them and so much over them, and they just pour themselves out on them and spoil them. But we don’t want to be treated like that. We want to be let alone treated like other people.

It’s perfectly right. It’s possible to go all out and get all sentimental. I don’t want that. Jesus never was. Christ could be as tart as a lemon and as sharp as honed steel, but always there was a big heart there that was going to die for a man. And to have a compassionate heart doesn’t mean to get the baptism of grandma-itis and sit around with a Cheshire Cat’s grin that never sees any evil or hears any evil or speaks any evil, but just sits around like the three monkeys.

That’s not compassion, brethren. That’s senility. Compassion is identification with Jesus in his love for lost men who would be perfectly willing to do what He did, if necessary, die for those lost men. But who, when occasion requires, can rebuke those lost men until they turn white with the terror of it? That’s compassion. The most loving character in the New Testament was John. And by all long odds, the fiercest book in the New Testament is 1 John.

I’m almost through. I am through, but I’m not going to stop yet. For I have another wound that I want to speak about, and that’s the wound of longing after God.

Now, I speak with great caution right here, because the flesh, disguised as the Spirit, makes cheap love to the Lord Jesus Christ. And I’ll have no part of it. We make cheap love to the Lord Jesus.

There used to be a famous preacher. I won’t tell you what sex it was, but she wasn’t a man. And she used to pray, O Jesus dear, and my eyes shuddered when I heard it. Nobody that’s ever seen the Lord, high and lifted up, will ever take liberties with Jesus. Nobody that has ever seen standing while one foot is on the sea and the other on the land and crying, the time shall be no more. Nobody will ever call Him nicknames or get cheaply familiar with Him.

The heart that has ever looked upon the holy face of Jesus will be caught between a holy fear and a holy delight. And there will be a reverence there, along with a great delight, that I would with a wave of my hand dismiss most of the songs that have been written in this century about Jesus.

For they’re all cheap, and they’re borrowed from Tin Pan Alley. And if you would merely change the name Jesus and put the name Frankie Sinatra or Clark Gable in, you wouldn’t know the difference. Same thing. It is the carnal unregenerated flesh trying to make love to God.

Having said that, I would say this. Still, great Christians have always been wounded with love for God, always been wounded with love and a longing after God. Charles Wesley called it a restless thirst, a sacred infinite desire.

And Faber, he says, the lack of desire is the ill of all ills, many thousands through which the dark pathway have crossed. The unction, the balm of predestinate souls, is a jubilant pining and longing for God.

It’s a great gift of God to live after our Lord, yet the old Hebrew times, they were ages of fire, when fainting souls fed on each dim-figured word, and God called men he loved most, the men of desire. So pine for thy God, fainting soul, ever pine. O languish, mid all that life brings thee of mirth. Famished, thirsty, and restless, let such life design for what sight is to heaven, desire is to earth.

And I believe that the two great evils of our day are also two great lacks. One is, I have already mentioned, it is the evil of impenitence. The other is the evil of having no longing after God. I believe that if we longed after God, even with as much longing as a cow longs after her calf, we’d be Christians ten times bigger than we are now. If we longed for God as a bride longed for her husband to come back from the war, we’d be greater Christians than we are now.

But our difficulty is a lack of desire after God. We’ve reduced this thing to a Sears-Roebuck and Company proposition. He died for me upon the tree. I believe in Him and get it over with. And all He did accrues to me, and I’ve got nothing to do but wait until the Lord comes and gives me a crown as big around as a wash tub. Brethren, there’s going to be some bitter disappointment in that day when we find that we’ve reduced this to a money-in-the-slop proposition. It’s nothing of the sort.

You know, the old Greeks were wiser than we like to give them credit for being. And the old Greeks called love, and said love was a wound. They had a little fellow. He had a little pair of chubby wings, too small to lift him, but he got around on them. And he never wore much around him but a ribbon. But he was a handsome little fellow, and he had a bow and arrow. And he used to pull that arrow back on the string and let go. And there was a ping, and somebody was in love.

Now we’ve dragged that down into the gutter so far that you’re embarrassed to talk about it. But it works like that. Here’s this red-headed country boy, chewing his straw and whistling, going down the lane to bring the cows home, six o’clock in the afternoon. And he’s thinking about trout fishing and the engine in his motorcycle, and a lot of other mundane and earthly things. And as he walks along, suddenly Cupid appears and sees him and says, you’re about old enough, you ought to be thinking about marriage, Junior. So little old Cupid pulls back that arrow and–ping!.

And you know what the young fellow does? He stops thinking about trout fishing and automobile engines and begins thinking about that girl next farm over. And you say that’s a poor little illustration. No, sir, that’s what makes the world go round. People fall in love.

And you say, well, but that, you can’t call that a wound. If you had had the people that have come to me, white-faced, had wept until no tears were left, dry-eyed, and chalky, and told me a story of disappointed love.

You’d know it’s possible to be wounded even with human love. Or go up on a higher level. Go to that mother who gave life to that boy, and loved him, and nursed him, and kept him, and brought him up, and educated him, and gave him everything.

And he grows up and gets to be 21 years old, leaves home, for cruelly forgets his parents, never writes, treats them like dirt under his feet. You tell me that doesn’t wound the parents? They’re wounded with a wound. And love is a wound. And the love after God, after Christ, can become a wound in the human breast.

Now, I want you to see these three paradoxes. To be happily forgiven, and yet be wounded with perpetual contrition. To rest in the finished work of another, and yet feel so sympathetic and compassionate as though the burden lay on your heart. And of finding God, and yet always pursuing God. Of having Him, yet always wanting Him. That’s the paradox.

Now, the day in which we live, of course, Christianity has gone over to the jingle bell crowd. And Jesus has to do all the dying. Nobody else wants to do any dying. Jesus has to do all the sorrowing. Nobody wants to take time out for the luxury of pity. We insist upon being happy. And we’re going to be happy if we have to invent ways to get happy.

And in this terrible hour, Jesus has to do all the loving. We forget the first and great commandment is, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God. It’s God that keeps us on the everlasting stretch, always pursuing Him, and never satisfied.

I say, whoever bears those three wounds, will know that it’s grace of the cross. And this cross will never be socially acceptable. And this cross will never be forgiven and never be tolerated. It will not be tolerated by the world of sinful men, neither will it be tolerated by the Church. And these wounds will stigmatize their victims.

I remember when a great evangelist came to A.B. Simpson and said, Mr. Simpson, you’re one of the greatest preachers on the continent. And if you give up one point in your doctrine, you could be one of the most popular preachers in America. Simpson dismissed it this way. He said, I want to keep the stigma of the cross upon my movement.

What a wise man he was. And what wise people we would be who call ourselves by his name, or the name of his movement, if we kept the stigma of the cross upon that movement still.

I point out again in closing, perhaps the second time I’ve closed, that the soul that has been wounded will always be something of a haunted soul, a lonely soul, a wandering soul, and something of a pilgrim.

Do you want to settle down in your nest, get your roots in deep, get a reputation, satisfy your ambition? All right, all right, brother. But the wounded soul is a haunted soul. He hears the cries that others don’t hear. He hears the wails that never bother other people. He will be a lonely soul because he’ll be forced to go alone a lot of the time. He will be a wanderer and a pilgrim on the earth, as Abraham was, as Jacob was, as Elijah had to be at last, as Paul had to be, and as every man and woman has had to be, has been wounded.

Now I close by asking you this, would you have the courage tonight to pray a prayer, O God, wound me with contrition, compassion, and love-longing after Thee at any cost? I want to warn you about one thing. Don’t try to wound yourself. If you try to wound yourself, you won’t get any place.

Faithful are the wounds of a friend, and it’s that Friend that does the wounding. And if you try to wound yourself, you’ll only give place to the flesh. But come to Him and let Him do the wounding.

Nobody can teach me this wound, and I cannot inflict it myself. I can only know there’s a Friend who wants to chasten us for His own pleasure and our own holiness. And who wants to put the arrow of repentance in our heart, and the arrow of sympathy, and the arrow of love.

Would you have the courage to say, Lord, I want you to do this for me? And then add, as Julian added, this I ask without condition. Do it, Lord, at any cost. Could you do that? When we talk about revival, this is the way to it. When we talk about the deeper life, this is the beginning.

So, I’m going to close in prayer, but before I pray, I wonder if there might be some who would say, Mr. Tozer, in general I go along with you on this, and I do want God to do something for me more than I have known. And I’m not satisfied with present conditions. I know there’s something wrong, maybe this is it. And I want you to pray for me, that I’ll have the courage to pray for myself, and to request from God these three faithful wounds. I wonder if there might be such. Would you stand where you are? We’re going to pray.

Is there anyone we’d like to say, Mr. Tozer, I pray God may give me these three wounds in my heart. Others? Are there those who would say, yes, Mr. Tozer, I do want to live that kind of Christian life. It means ostracism, misunderstanding, it means wandering lonely, it means that I carry upon me the stigma of the cross. It’s all right, it’s all right. I just demand something better. I demand God to do something for my soul.

If you’ll stand, and we’ll remember you. Let us pray.

Dear Lord Jesus, there are about twenty people who desire us to pray for them. We would unite our hearts and come as one, so we are all one. And I, Thy servant who is praying out loud, dear Lord Jesus, join myself to all these who stand. We would pray together tonight.

Lord, please do something in us and for us. Please, Lord, the flesh is so cold, and our hearts are so loveless, and the thought of sin is the calmest, and our longing after Thee is so weak. We’re ashamed all the way around.

And yet we see, Lord, that if we’re going to make any spiritual progress, we’re going to have to lay bare our chest and say, wound me, O Thou, lover of my soul, Faithful Friend. Wound me unto death and raise me in newness of life. We pray for these, for all who beseech Thee, Lord, that Thou will take these friends on with Thee, step by step, into the deep things of the Bible.

Make these friends, we pray thee, a core, a hard central core, a nucleus around which can be built a larger group that can catch from them the fever of longing after God. It can catch from them the compassion. It can catch from them the right attitude towards sin in their own past.

O Lord, we thank Thee for forgiven sin. We’ll never have to face it again. But we don’t want carelessly to forget, Father, we’ve been sinners, the wounded.

And we beseech Thee, give us compassion, that if it takes away our happiness, all right, Lord, we don’t care about being happy. We want to be useful and holy.

And then, Lord, our love-longing after Thee is jubilant, pining, and longing for Thee. Fill our hearts with it, O Lord, until all hours, whatever we’re doing, there may be in our hearts always the upspringing of loving desire.

Grant, we beseech Thee, that these persons who requested prayer may have this in such measure as will astound us and will make great, useful, powerful Christian out of us. Grant it for Jesus’ sake.

Let us all stand, please.

And now may the grace and mercy and peace come from the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and be with all of us as we depart from each other and as we dismiss this meeting and go out from here. Amen.