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Tozer Talks

Gifts That Build the Church

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

October 28, 1956

In line with a series of truths which I have been bringing, I want today to speak on the gifts of the Spirit. And many of the things that I say will be repetition. That is, I will have said them at some time in my life, and maybe at some time in your hearing, the hearing of some of you.

But I will sum it up and bring it all together in one place this morning. In 1 Corinthians 12, once more let me read, there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. There are differences of administrations, but the same Lord.

Diversities of operations, but the same God which worketh all in all. But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. For to one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit, to another faith by the same Spirit, to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit, to another the working of miracles, to another prophecy, to another discerning of spirits, to another diverse kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of tongues.

But all of these worketh that one and the self, same Spirit, dividing to every man severally as he will. Further on in that chapter, verse 27, Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular. And God hath set some in the Church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healing, helps, governments, diversities of tongues.

Are all apostles, are all prophets, are all teachers, are all workers of miracles? Have all the gifts of healing? Do all speak with tongues? Do all interpret? Those questions are what is known as rhetorical questions, and the answer, of course, is no.

Now, in the book of Romans, the twelfth chapter, we read this. After that famous, I beseech you therefore, brethren passage, which everybody quotes, then we come to this passage which scarcely anybody quotes.

For I say, through the grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think, but to think soberly according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith. For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office, so we being many are one body in Christ. And every one member is one of another, having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith;or ministry, let us wait on our ministering: or he that teacheth, on teaching; or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.

And in the book of Ephesians, the fourth chapter, verse 8, wherefore, he saith, When he ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men. Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? He that descended is the same that ascended, that is Christ, far above all heavens, that he might fill all things.

And he gave some apostles, and some prophets, and some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ, till we all come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, and to a perfect man, and to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.

Now let’s sketch something here that is known to us all, but in order to arrive at where we’re going, when you’re going into a new area, you always have to drive over familiar streets, the ones you know best to get where you’re going, if nothing else, just to get away from your house.

So, the doctrine of the body of Christ here, that the Church is the body of Christ, with Christ the head, and the true Christians are parts of that body. And that the Holy Spirit is to the body what our soul is to our body, the life, the union, that is what unites it, and the consciousness. Let the soul leave the body and all the parts of the body cease to function. The Spirit in the body gives to it life, cohesion, and consciousness.

And each member recapitulates the local Church, that is, every Christian, every human body, is an illustration. Paul uses it in three of his epistles and asserts it three different times in his epistles, not simply as an illustration to pass by, but something very carefully worked out and at great length. And each local church recapitulates the entire Church.

Now always illustrations break down, and parallels break down, particularly when we come to the sacred and infinite things of God. For a man’s body to function, it all has to be in one place. If you separate him and scatter him around, he’s dead.

But the body of Christ doesn’t all have to be in one place, because its unity is the unity of the Spirit. And therefore, the church is never all in one place. Some are in heaven.

I was wondering this morning what proportion of the members of the body of Christ are in heaven. I would suppose that ninety-eight percent of them might be in heaven, having two thousand years gone to die and go to heaven. But whatever the percentage, the largest number are in heaven and the remainder are on earth.

And not all are on earth at the same time, nor in the same place. And yet the body is not torn nor divided, because it is held together by the Holy Spirit, who is the life of the body. And each local group has all the functions of the whole group and recapitulates, that is, gathers up in itself and sums up all of the offices and gifts and workings of the entire church of Christ.

Now the members, according to Paul, we’re still on our familiar streets. The members, according to Paul, are designed for a function. He says the eye is designed to see, and we all know that. That’s what it’s there for. And the ear is designed to hear, that’s its function. The hand is designed for very, very many purposes, the foot for another purpose, the lungs for another, the heart for another.

And so all the parts of the body have their particular function. And they’re designed to cooperate and act in concert with each other. And in the body of Christ, the motto might be a good boy scout motto.

I thought when I was thinking of it here that somebody might say, well, this is a pep talk, because actually it can be summed up like this, all for each and each for all, for that is what Paul says. He says that the whole body exists for its members, and the members exist for the whole body, and that therefore God gives gifts that the body might profit with all.

And remember one final thing, and it is that all take direction from the head. Cut a head off of a man’s body and there’s no direction anymore. We’ve all seen the familiar country scene of a chicken having its head cut off and still imagining that it was called upon to fly away. So it fluttered all over the barnyard, but it wasn’t going anyplace, it had no direction. Its direction was taken away from it and it soon died. So, the body has its direction from the head, and the body of Christ, the church of Christ, gets its direction from its Head, which is Jesus Christ our Lord.

Now I’ve talked about the functions, or Paul has, and what are these various functions? Well, they’re abilities which are called gifts in the Bible, gifts according to the measure of faith, and gifts according to grace.mThey’re gifts, they’re grace, some variously called, and it says, having then gifts, differing according to the grace, that’s in Romans 12.6. Now concerning spiritual gifts, brethren, 12:1, covet earnestly the best gifts, 12:31, and when He ascended up on high, He gave gifts unto men, 4:8, and then in Romans it says, let nobody think of himself more highly, but everybody judge himself according as God has given him gifts.

Now I find that there are more than nine gifts in the Scriptures. I find that there are about nineteen, and I’ve marked down seventeen of them here, but in reading over Ephesians you come to two more, evangelist and pastor. But because in this Corinthian passage Paul develops it by saying that there are diversities of gifts, and then names nine of them, we say those are the gifts.

But brethren, if you will read the rest of the Scripture, and read what Paul says in the passages I read today, and then read what Peter says, you will find that there are more gifts than nine. And it could be that in saying there are nineteen, that I have made too many because it’s possible some of them are synonymous with each other.

So that if that’s the case, then of course, if you were naming your family and you had one named Billy, and you also called him Willie, and you were counting them and you said Willie and Billy, you’d get one too many, because he’s the same one. You’d give him a synonymous name. So that if you, we are counting the gifts of the Spirit as revealed in the New Testament, if we should by accident find, or we should find that the Spirit had designated one gift by two names, then we’d have to cut it down that much and say, well, that’s, I’m sorry, that’s just using a synonym for the same thing.

But now here are the gifts as are found in the passages I read. The gift of an apostle, which means an ambassador or a messenger or one commissioned to go. And it’s generally believed, I think, by all sound Christians everywhere, that the twelve apostles, as we knew them, had a particular office which has not been perpetuated. Because it talks in Revelation of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. Judas by apostasy fell away and Paul was added to make up the number of the twelve. And yet the word apostle is only a name. It’s a designation. It means an ambassador.

And here sitting back in our congregation this morning are two who have gone as ambassadors for Christ, there may be others, two missionaries who have gone as ambassadors for Christ and as messengers for Christ, as those commissioned to go.

So that I am not at all sure that while the twelve apostles certainly were a group in themselves and their offices have not been perpetuated, still I am not sure that it’s not proper and permissible, if we know how we mean it, to call a missionary of an apostle. Because we often hear people call the apostle to the Jews, the apostles to this or that. Maybe we might call one of our missionaries that went into the Baliem Valley the apostle to the Doni, meaning simply an ambassador or a messenger as someone commissioned to go.

The second is the gift of the prophet. Now the gift of the prophet in the New Testament was only secondarily a gift of foretelling events. In the Old Testament the gift of the prophet was to foretell events mainly and to warn and to plead and to call back erring men to God. But in the New Testament the gift of the prophet is not so much to foretell events inasmuch as the Bible has been written and the prophecy stands, and all events have been foretold that God wants to foretell. But the gift of the prophet in the New Testament is to tell forth and to see with an anointed eye and to give meat in due season, and not simply to be a mimicker, but to tell out what God has to say for a given time.

Then there is the gift of the teacher. Not everybody can teach, we might just as well admit it, and even of those that teach, not many can teach. There is a gift of the teacher. It is both a natural gift and it is a gift of the Spirit.

Then there is the gift of the exhorter. Let him exhort, says the apostle. Now an exhorter is not known in our day, but the old Methodists were wise enough that they had an office of an exhorter. They commissioned him, called him a lay preacher. He had a license, he couldn’t marry people, and he couldn’t give the Lord supper, but he could get up and burn up sin and tell how wonderful God was, better than most preachers can do.

It might be interesting to remember that it was a lay preacher, an exhorter, that won Spurgeon to the Lord. Spurgeon came in out of a snowstorm into a Methodist church and got up in the balcony and sat and listened, a young Spurgeon and an exhorter who wasn’t much of a preacher at all, but he had the gift of exhorting. He was exhorting the people. Spurgeon said he said, I believed in Jesus Christ right there and I could have stood up with the best and the oldest saint and sung, “There is a Fountain Filled with Blood.” He was converted.

Then there is the ruler. Now a ruler is used in the same sense as a ruler of the synagogue. He’s not a legal ruler, he’s simply somebody that takes some direction and reads the Scripture and teaches, and I don’t know whether he might be synonymous with a pastor or not.

Then there’s the gift of wisdom also, and the gift of knowledge, and the gift of faith, and the gift of healing, which a few people have had, and the gift of miracles, and the gift of tongues, and the gift of interpretation of tongues, the gift of discernment, the gift of helps. Whatever that is, I do not know, but I sometimes think some people are gifted just to be helpers.

Then there’s the mercy shower, which I’ve called for want of a better name, and this mercy shower appears to be someone who’s particularly gifted by the Holy Ghost to go about helping people that are discouraged, and helping the poor, and otherwise going about doing good, as it was said of Jesus.

Then there’s the gift of government, and that might be the same as the gift of ruling.

Then there’s the gift of giving. Somebody says, aren’t we not all to give? Yes, we’re all to give, just as we are all to have some wisdom. But there’s such a thing as a gift of wisdom.

We’re all to have some discernment, but there’s such a thing as a gift of discernment. We’re all to show mercy and be helpful, but there’s such a thing as a gift of helping and showing mercy.

And so, we’re all to give, but there’s such a thing as a gift of giving. And I believe that God enables some men, if they will allow him by the Holy Spirit, to sow, control, and run business, that they’ll be able to support the Church, and the cause of missions, and the cause of Christ on earth, and to help the poor in a way that we, the average people, can’t possibly do. Then there’s the gift also of the evangelist, and everybody knows that there’s a gift of an evangelist. We admit that today. Then there’s the gift of the pastor.

Now, I’ve named nineteen. Now, my brethren, these are gifts given by the Holy Spirit to individual persons, just as the gift of sight is given to my eye, the gift of hearing is given to my ear, the gift of smelling is given to my nose, the gift of taste is given to my tongue, and the gift of manipulation is given to my hand, and particular gifts are given to every member of the body, so God gives to his Church, of which Christ is the head, these gifts.

Now, the work of the Church is to be done by the Spirit working through these gifted members. Now, you hear me. The work of the Church is to be done by the Spirit working through these gifted members.

Now, I’ll go further than that. I will say this, that in the judgment, when we all receive the gifts for the deeds we’ve done, the rewards for the deeds we’ve done, and we know as we’re known, and that which is chaff and wheat and straw and stubble is separated from that which is gold and silver and diamonds, and all that that is of the flesh perishes and passes away, and that which is of the Spirit alone stands, you will find that not only does God design to do all his work through gifted men, but He does do all His work through gifted men.

Now, He doesn’t carry on all religious activity through gifted men.You don’t have to have a gift of the Holy Ghost to be a preacher. You don’t have to be a gift of the Holy Ghost to be a Bible expositor. We can be Bible expositors by reading commentaries and going to Bible school and learning what men say is true of the Scripture. And a man can get up and preach. A politician can get up and preach, turn from politics if he’s talking to a religious group and preach like a house on fire. You only have to be able to talk and know how to use religious phrases to be a preacher.

But if you’re going to preach so that it’ll stand in the day of the fire, then you’re going to have to speak by a gift of the Spirit. And any preaching that is not done by a gift of the Spirit is not the true preaching of God. For it’s written that Jesus Christ was anointed of by the Holy Ghost and went about doing good. And He said that He was, the Holy Spirit is upon me because He hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor, and He opened the eyes of the blind, and so on. Even our Lord Jesus Christ worked by a gift of the Spirit on His human nature.

And so if you’re giving and serving and working and it’s not by a gift of the Spirit, you may lose everything you’ve done, and everything that you’ve put into it may go down the drain in that day. And if we don’t have the gifts of the Spirit, then where these gifts are not present, then the Church is thrown back upon four or five things which I want to name. All of them should be talked about at length, but of course I can’t talk for two hours here. You wouldn’t stay, and I wouldn’t blame you.

But we fall now upon talent. We use the word talent. That is, some fellow can whistle through his teeth, or somebody else has a marvelous gift for impromptu composition of poetry. Somebody else is marvelously gifted in mathematics. You can give him a whole handful of numbers, toss them up, and by the time they’ve been said, he’ll tell you the sum of them. Now those are talents.

Some people are talented composers, some are talented musicians, and some are talented singers, and some are talented talkers, we might as well admit it. Some of you dear, honest, good, godly people haven’t opened your mouths in public because you just don’t have any gift for it, and it doesn’t mean that you’re dumb or ungifted, it just means that isn’t your gift. But some of the hollowest, most hopeless people in the world can run off at the mouth and talk like everything. So, talent. That’s the next thing. Talent.

And the talent runs the church, not the gifts of the Spirit, as God intended, but talents run the Church. Just as you can keep a body alive by a little while, or keep it functioning by, you know how Colonel Lindbergh and his name did? The man who wrote the great book about man? I’ve forgotten his name and doesn’t matter. But they took a chicken’s heart and kept it alive for a month. But it was being done by artificial stimulus from the outside, so the church can be run like that.

And then another method religion can carry on with is psychology. And a great many people are skilled master psychologists. They know how to handle people, really. They’re amazing how they know how to handle people. So, the church can be run, a new man comes in and the crowds come, and first thing you know you have what looks like an amazingly successful church. But that man is simply a shrewd psychologist who knows how to say Jesus in the right place and say tender things.

Then others, other religious work can be done by business methods. And a lot of it is being done by business methods today. And then some use political techniques and some use plain sales methods.

And so, with Christianity now, the church, this church, any church, can be carried on by the exercise of human talents without a touch of the Holy Ghost, by sharp use of psychology without a touch of the Holy Ghost, by business methods, by political techniques and by sales techniques that have not one trace of the Holy Ghost in it.

But I’m telling you and warning you, my dear friends, that when this takes place, we may not know it until the great and terrible day when our deeds are burned with fire and only that which was wrought of the Holy Ghost stands. Jesus said even now the axe lies at the root of the tree and whatever isn’t of God and wasn’t planted by my Father and doesn’t bring forth fruit shall be cast down. And much of the religious activity during the centuries has been an activity wrought by talent and psychology and business methods, political techniques and sales methods.

All right, you say, now Mr. Tozer, let’s be honest about this. If you say that the gifts of the Spirit ought to be in the Church, and I emphatically do, and that the people of God could have these gifts of the Church and could labor in these gifts, then why don’t we simply throw in our lot with the tongues people, the Pentecostal people, by various names. There are, I guess, seventeen or eighteen different splits and divisions of them. Why don’t we throw our lot in with them?

Well now, what I’m going to say now is going to hurt some of my friends. And God Almighty made me do it. He made me do it. And He makes me draw blood and hurt my friends. I don’t want to do it. I’d rather love them and have them love me and go around telling what a nice boy I am. But I must tell the truth, and so I have studied those who are of what we call the tongues persuasion since 1918. That’s about forty-one years, isn’t it? And in all love and charity, I tell you my findings. Not forty-one years, no, but whatever it is, my mathematics always leads me.

In all love and charity, and with complete Christian kindness, I want to say this. First, that there are some good, sweet Christians among our tongues friends. No question about that. I’ve met some of them. I’ve prayed with some of them. And some pretty nice songs, and no great songs, but say, Oh Sweet Wonder, for instance, came out of the Pentecostalism.

And there have been a few lovely songs, never any great songs, but a few good little sweet songs have come out of it, and some good people, and I have friends among them. And I’m not condemning, but I’m going to tell you this, that before I will become a part of a movement, or a school of thought, or a theological school of thought, or a church group, or a denomination, I am going to have to test them and see what have been the characteristics and the marks and earmarks of that group down the years.

Now, with the full understanding that there are many individual churches of which what I say is not true, and with a full understanding that there are individual Christians that are excellent, wonderful, godly, sweet people, then I say this, that the marks that have characterized the various splits and divisions of Pentecostalism since the turn of the century have been, A, a magnification of one single gift above all others, and that, the one that Paul says was of least value.

B, the unscriptural exhibition of that gift before the people like a boy with a toy on Christmas.

C, a tendency to place personal feeling above the Scriptures, which is always an insult to God.

D, an almost total lack of discernment, revealing itself in a predominance of women in their leadership, and sometimes women of questionable character. A credulity beyond belief, allowing them to be taught by little boy preachers, little girl preachers, religious racketeers, people back from the dead, they say, and allow them to adopt rock and roll music long before Elvis Presley, and that led them to splits and divisions.

E, free love, divorce and remarriage among their preachers to a shameful degree. E or E or whatever it is, unbecoming public conduct, not justified in the New Testament.

Now brethren, when a group of people say, we have the gifts of the Spirit, come and join us, then I want to see what cloud hovers over them. Is it a cloud of purity? Is it a cloud of sanity? Is it a cloud of sharp discernment that knows the flesh from the Spirit? Is it a cloud of moral living? Is it a cloud of cohesion and unity? Or is it a cloud of noisy flesh, and sex extravagance, and careless moral living? And if it is the latter, and it is, then I want nothing to do with it.

Realizing that there are among these brethren some good people, and some sweet people, and if they’re mad at me, I’ll grieve about it, because I don’t want them to be. I’m only saying what can be proved and would be agreed to by everybody that knows the facts. Well, so therefore we cannot help ourselves by going somewhere else.

Now I say we ought to have the gifts of the Spirit in the church. Every church ought to have. Well then somebody says, I believe what Tozer says, I’m going to go somewhere else. No brethren, I don’t know of a group or denomination or fellowship or communion anywhere in the world that realizes the Pauline apostolic doctrine of the body of Christ, with each member recapitulating the local church and the local church recapitulating the entire church, and that work as a team, and each one having a proper gift as God gave them to do, and work thus in the Holy Ghost.

Now I know denominations and churches where there are a few like that among them, but I don’t know denominations or groups or churches where that is the regular and general and common thing. So I’ll tell you this, you won’t help yourself by going somewhere else. We here now, in this present moment, this 1956, the 28th of October I think it is, we here and now can receive, this day before the sun sets tonight, we can receive an enduement of the Holy Ghost.

If we will pay the price, each one of us, any one of us, all of us, can receive a downcoming, an enduement of the Holy Spirit. And when he comes, he invariably brings these functional graces, which will enable some to have a sharp discernment.

Now you say, what gifts do you think that we ought to expect? And it says, covet earnestly the best gifts, and we have a right to pray for these gifts and covet them before our God that we might use them to bless His church and glorify His name.

You say then, what are the gifts that you would say would be the most needed in the Church today? I believe the gift of discernment is one of them. We have in fundamentalism ruled the Holy Ghost out, and because we’ve ruled him out, we have gone blindfolded down these decades, with the result that the church has traveled way over into entertainmentism, way over into rationalism, way over into worldlinessism, and the true church of Christ is scarcely to be found anywhere on the face of the earth. It’s not because men were bad, but because men had fearfully ruled out the Spirit, and so the gift of discernment was not there.

The mighty gift that can discern. Let me, I don’t think he’s here now but let me point out a man that I believe has the gift of discernment. Now I don’t think he knows he has, but I think your old praying brother Tom has a gift of discernment. It’s amazing how he can look at you and see through you and tell you all about yourself, and yet he doesn’t make anything out of it at all except to pray and help you a little.

And if this gift of discernment had been in our leadership, we wouldn’t be where we are today. We wouldn’t be locked up behind dispensationalism over here and entertainmentism over there and something else over here, but we’d be in the middle of the way going along. Pray that the leaders of the Church might be endued with the gift of discernment.

Second, I believe the gift of prophecy. That is, the gift of the prophet that can see his generation, know what’s going on, and tell it abroad and make folks listen in one way or another, and find the church in the middle of things and help the church through. I believe we need that gift. I believe we need the gift of faith. Everybody has to have some faith or he wouldn’t be saved, but there are those who have a peculiar gift of faith. And they come around when this church was being built, and we were trying to pay off the old one in the middle of things. There were a few people, I don’t know who they were all, but there were a few that had the gift of faith.

Twenty-eight years ago, when this Church, then the old building, meeting the old building, called me here as pastor. I wrote them back and said, thank you, very much, thank you, thank you, but I’m not coming. And they reported it properly to the church and to the board, that I was not coming, but there was a little woman in this church, still living, very old now, and she was a member of the prayer band. When she got up and said in her broken Dutch English, she said the Lord had shown her and answered her prayer and I was coming.

I said, don’t worry about it, that’s it. She said, this is all settled. I said, here’s the letter saying thank you, but I don’t feel it’s right, it’s not the will of God. She said, that’s okay. She said, the Lord showed me. I hadn’t heard it yet, but God had shown her. She didn’t write to me, that would have been a mistake for her to try to be a messenger boy to me. She just kept still and talked to God. Then shortly after that I began to feel it and sense it.

And that’s what I mean, that gift of discernment and faith that can get through to God when everybody else is excited, or everybody else is jumping up making speeches, let’s do it this way, let’s do it this way.

When the Bible school gets into difficulty, then the members of the board, and here’s one of them, not this one, he wouldn’t do it, he knows better. But members of school boards, and we’ve got another one back here, chairman of a school board or Bible college, and the members jump up and say, well, let’s call in a money-getting concern that for 29% of the proceeds they’ll raise the money for us.

Or let’s make a film of our church work, suppose we do that. Let’s photograph Brother Ruben Eglund in action, and let’s photograph Brother Chase in action, and wave your arms and hold your Bible high, and we’ll take that around among the churches and show that, and thus we’ll get the money. Oh, brethren, that isn’t the way it’s done.

Somebody sitting by will say, God has told me, He’ll look after us, and we don’t have to astute to that. And usually he’s voted down, but if he isn’t voted down and can have his way, God will honor that faith and bless that school. And somebody said recently that in all the Bible colleges and Bible schools, a great number, maybe not all in America, but vast numbers of them were examined, and there were only six of them that were going anyplace and increasing in numbers and making progress, and they were the ones that don’t use any business methods to get their money. They just pray. They have men on their boards that say to God, now here, God, you either do this or else the whole thing will blow up in our faces. And God does it.

I think I mentioned this briefly, that over in Highland Lake, last July, I spoke for a week there, and incidentally, out of that week, six young people went to the Bible school to become preachers and missionaries, out of that week. But anyway, this young man, Merrill Fuller is his name, forty years old, just when I got there, he had his birthday, and they sang Happy Birthday in the dining hall.

Well, this Merrill Fuller owns I don’t know how many hundred thousand dollars’ worth of property right around there, and over across the Pennsylvania state line, he owns another vast holding, which is going to make a Christian high school. He had no more idea how to run a Christian high school than I know how to run a B47. But he said, Mr. Tozer, a whole faculty came to me without my ever soliciting anybody, and said, I want a job, I want to teach. A whole faculty of Christian teachers, a whole high school faculty came.

He said, we were just praying, that’s all. They had me up at five o’clock in the morning praying. Boy, I never felt so old in my life. But I went up there and prayed, and we had a great time. Five o’clock in the morning, and then he said this. Every time he’d get up, he’d say,

Now, friends, we have put this whole business on a platform where it’s either God or total collapse. If God doesn’t hear our prayers and send in the money, we’ll all finish, and that’s the end of it, and we’ll close this place up and write Ichabod over it. He said, I am not going to pray and then do something in such a carnal manner that I won’t know whether God answered or whether my carnal methods worked. So he said, we’re going to walk out and say, Now, God, here I go. You either hold me up or I perish. Now, I ask him, do you think he’s going to fail? No, he’ll never fail. The man who trusts on God will never fail.

Well, the man of faith, we need some faith. Then I think we could use some people with the gift of showing mercy. We’re all so starry-eyed and long-distance in our piety, and we tremble about the Baleen Valley, but there are people within the neighborhood that could use a little help.

You say, why don’t you go do it? Brother, I’m already staggered to bed at night without what I have to do, and I’m not gifted anyhow. I’m not gifted to go to anybody and help them much, but certainly some of you could be, and maybe I could be, but we all ought to be gifted. I think a mercy shower would be a great help around here.

And then I think that God should bless some businessmen and give them a gift so that honestly and without cheating or without preying against a competitor, they could have money enough that they could keep God’s work humming along like a diesel engine.

All right, brethren, we don’t have to go somewhere else. God will not do anything for any church that He won’t do for this church. And He won’t do anything for any people that He won’t do for this people. And He won’t do anything for anybody that He won’t do for you. We here now can receive. Ye shall receive power, says the Holy Spirit, said Jesus about the Holy Spirit. And when the Holy Spirit comes, remember this, that he will bring not only the gifts, but the graces and the fruits of the Spirit.

So, it is my earnest hope and my earnest prayers, that we God’s children here, with the dignity and self-control that belongs to Christianity, with the calmness and sweetness that belong to Jesus Christ, but with the abandonment that belong to the Apostles and the early Christian church, might throw ourselves out on him with an expectation that He should come and endue us. Come Holy Spirit, heavenly dove, with all thy quickening power, come shed abroad a Savior’s love in these cold hearts of ours. I believe he’ll do it.

And He may easily come in great fullness to some people that you and I are kind of overlooking. And He may pass over some that we think are pretty bigshots. And some big shots may even look askance and wonder if it’s God. But I believe that the Spirit of God wants to do a new thing. I believe He wants to do a new thing.

Just about, I don’t know, maybe about the time my daughter was born, that’ll be seventeen years back. No, it was more recently than that. 1944, how long was that ago? Twelve years ago. God and I had something out. We had something out and settled. And God began to fulfill in my poor, ragged ministry what He had promised me so long that He would. And I believe He’s ready to do this for us all.

It wasn’t in 1944 that I was baptized with the Holy Ghost. That was when I was nineteen years old, I know that. But twelve years ago. And I have lived to see God do things He said he would do. I’ve lived to watch Him work and do the things He said He would do. Until out of this poor, humble, uneducated, and worthless preacher, God has influenced, and influenced in the right direction, men whose shoelaces I’m unworthy to loose around this world.

Brethren, we don’t have to go somewhere else. We can now and here have all the mighty outpourings of the Spirit. And wouldn’t it be a wonderful thing if to us in this Church would come that which came to the Moravians? And they could only explain it by saying, it was a sense of the loving nearness of the Savior instantaneously bestowed.

Now that’s what we want. A sense of the loving nearness of the Savior instantaneously bestowed. And then will come along with it, Scriptualness, purity, cohesion, dignity, usefulness, high moral living, purity of life. Because that’s the only kind of nearness the Holy Ghost ever brings. And the only kind of life He ever motivates.

So shan’t we now, brethren, as we sing a song of our brother’s choosing. I won’t choose. He does such an almost uncanny job of choosing the right song that I won’t choose one. I’ll let him choose it. We’ll sing it reverently. And as we do, shall we not be expecting something from God this day? All right.

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Tozer Talks

The Spirit’s Gifts and the Church’s Duty

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

October 7, 1956

Over the next few Sunday mornings, the Lord willing, I want to talk on a chain of topics or ideas which the church of God needs very badly. And I’m going to read this morning, or rather, I’m going to let Paul talk to us and give us the Scripture, out of which later, over the next few Sundays, I expect to draw some truths.

Now I’m not going to tell you from where I’m reading, because I’m reading from Weymouth’s translation, a very old and honored translation, deliberately this morning. I rarely do it, but I want to today.

The man of God is talking to us. He says, Now, about spiritual gifts, brethren, I would not have you ignorant. We can go astray as easily by being uninformed as we can by being wrongly informed. We have no right to be either.

You know that when you were heathens, pagans, that is, Americans, you went astray after dumb idols. By dumb he means idols that couldn’t talk. Paul wanted his God to talk. And what disgusted him was that the gods of the heathen couldn’t talk. Jeremiah and Isaiah had something to say about that too. A dumb idol is no good. Dumb gods, no gods at all.

And he said, for this reason I inform you, that no one speaking under the influence of the Spirit of God says, Jesus is accursed. That is, it’s quoted. Nobody says, and the quotation is, Jesus is accursed. And that no one is able to say, in quotes, Jesus is the Lord, except under the influence of the Holy Spirit. That is, I assume, he means, no one is able really to say. You can mouth anything. But nobody can actually say and believe that Jesus is the Lord except by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Now, he says, there are various kinds of gifts, but there is the same Spirit. Various kinds of official service, and yet the same Lord. Various kinds of effects, and yet the same God. Notice you have the Trinity here, the Spirit, the Lord, and God. The same God who produces all the effects in each person, but to each a manifestation of the Spirit has been granted for the common good.

God never gives a gift to anybody except for the common good. To one, he says, the word of wisdom has been granted through the Spirit. And we can use a little of that now.

And to another, the word of knowledge by the will of the same Spirit. And to another, in the same Spirit, special faith. And to another, various gifts of healing in the same Spirit. And to another, the exercise of miraculous powers. And to another, the gift of prophecy. To another, the power of discernment between Spirits. To one, varieties of the gift of tongues. To another, the interpretation of tongues. But all these results are brought about by one and the same Spirit allotting to them each individually as He pleases. For just as the body is one and yet has many parts, and all its parts, many as they are, constitute one body, so it is with Christ. In fact, in one Spirit all of us, whether Jews or Greeks, slaves or free men, were baptized to form one body. And we all are imbued, or were imbued, with one Spirit.

Now, he writes to a different group and says this. To each of us individually, His grace was given, measured out with the munificence of Christ. For this reason, Scripture says, He ascended on high, He led a host of captives and gave gifts to man. And he puts in parentheses this explanation. Now this ascended, what does it mean but that he had first descended into the lower regions of the earth? He who descended is the same who ascended again far above all the heavens in order to fill the universe.

And He Himself, which is Jesus of course, appointed some to be apostles, and some to be prophets, and some to be evangelists, some to be pastors and teachers, in order to fully to equip His people for the work of serving, for the building up of Christ’s body, till all of us arrive at oneness in faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and at mature manhood and the stature of full grown men in Christ.

So, we shall no longer be babes, nor shall we resemble mariners tossed on the waves and carried about with every changing wind of doctrine; according to men’s cleverness and unscrupulous cunning, it makes use of every shifting device to mislead. But we shall lovingly hold to the truth and shall in all respects grow up into union with Him who is our head, even Christ. Dependent, he says, on Him, the whole body, its various parts closely fitting and firmly adhering to one another, grows by the aid of every contributory ligament with power proportioned to the need of each individual part, so as to build itself up in the Spirit of love.

And he wrote to another, not a group this time, but to one of his boys. He wasn’t going to be around too long, and he wanted to get everything straightened out, so he said, now, begins now, doesn’t he, about every time, says, Now the Spirit speaketh, or expressly declares, that in later times some will fall away from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and the teachings of demons.

Paul, obviously, had not been taught not to offend. This is offensive language, that some people are listening to deceiving spirits and the teachings of demons, and this through the hypocrisy of men who teach falsely and have their own consciences seared as with a hot iron, forbidding people to marry and insisting on abstinence from foods which God has created to be partaken of with thankfulness by those who believe and know the truth.

Paul wasn’t married, but he was determined that nobody was going to lay the yoke of celibacy upon anybody. They could marry if they wanted to, as far as he was concerned. He told them that they would have double trouble, but he said, If you want to get married, it’s natural. He told them that somewhere else.

And then he was a man who wasn’t a great eater. He was a frugal, careful man, practicing fasting in long cryings and tears, but he was determined that nobody was going to lay compulsory fasting on anybody. So, he says, these false teachers are forbidding people to marry and insisting on abstinence from foods which God has created to be partaken of with thankfulness by those who believe and know the truth.

For everything that God has created is good, and nothing is to be rejected if only it is received with thanksgiving. It is made holy by the Word of God and prayer.

Now he said, If you put this to the brethren, you will be a good servant of Jesus Christ, nourished on the lessons of the faith and of the good teaching which you have faithfully followed. But profane stories, fit only for old women, have nothing to do with them. Train yourself for godliness. Exercise for the body is not useless, but godliness is useful in every respect. Physical exercise helps you, a little, but godliness helps you in every way, possessing the promise of the present and the future life.

Faithful is this saying and deserving of universal acceptance, and this is the motive of our toiling and wrestling that we have our hopes fixed on the living God who is the Savior of all mankind and especially of believers. Command this and teach this. Let no one think slightingly of you because you are a young man. I don’t need that. But in speech, conduct, love, faith, and purity, be an example to your fellow Christians. Until I come, pay attention to public reading.

Now what do you suppose he wanted them to publicly read? Scriptures. Exhortation and teaching. Whether that says public reading or not, I don’t know. We’d have to look it up in the Greek, and mostly it simply says reading. But he says public reading in this translation.

Do not neglect the gifts with which you are endowed, which were conferred on you by prophetic indication when the hands of the elders were placed upon you. Practice these duties and be absorbed in them, so that your progress in them may be evident to all. Take pains with yourself and your teaching. Persevere in these things, for by doing this you will secure your own and your hearer’s salvation. Well, now, of course, I read from 1 Corinthians 12, from Ephesians 4, and from 1 Timothy 4.

Now, it is my duty and my high Christian privilege first to pray for this church. No man has any right to talk to a crowd he hasn’t prayed for. No man. So, it is my duty, if you want to allow the word “duty” in your Christian thinking, most people don’t. I think the old word duty might well come back again.

A colt out in the pasture field knows no such word as duty. But his well-trained, hard-working mother in the harness, pulling the wagon of the plow, she knows duty. The colt only knows freedom, but the mother knows duty.

And I wonder if our inordinate desire for freedom and our strange fear of duty, may not be one thing that’s wrong with us now. But it is a duty nevertheless, but a privilege, certainly a high privilege, to pray for this church. And it is another, though perhaps not such a high duty and privilege, to preach to the people who foregather here. And by church I do not mean this organization. Strictly speaking, you cannot organize a church, and the church is not a church by organization.

We live in society and we live under laws, and therefore, being what we are, it is necessary for us to organize. I believe in organization, a free, loose organization. I think it’s necessary. Paul told Titus to set things in order and to appoint men. That meant organization. It could have meant nothing else.

But I say you can’t organize a church, the same as you can’t organize a ball club. You can have a ball club which has a captain and so many pitchers and so many catchers and so many outfielders and so many infielders and so many basemen, but that doesn’t make a club as a certain Chicago club proves. It’s just an organization. And so, you can’t organize a church.

You can have your pastor, elders, deacons, deaconesses, and all the rest, and under law, a constitution, but you don’t have a church. The church is something else altogether. The church is within that organization, maybe, but that organization is not the church. The church is the assembly of the saints. And wherever the saints meet, you have the church. And wherever they habitually meet, then you come to name the church, maybe, and thus you have a church, such as this one or some other church.

And so, it’s a joy to preach to those who have over the past years and who do now and who will preach or foregather in this place, and it’s a privilege to preach to them and to guide and to plan for the future.

Now I try to see the church whole. I want to see you as a part of something vastly bigger. I’d like you to think of yourself as part of something bigger than you are. You know, the sociologists and psychologists talk about the need for belonging. They say that a rejected child is, maybe, developed dangerous mental or nervous traits because he has no sense of belonging.

And they explain the clubs of youngsters, the wolf packs that tramp our streets, as those who in the main come from homes where they have been rejected, where the father drinks, the mother too, and where they’re out nights, and where they’re not loved after they’re five years old or six, and where they feel they don’t belong to anything, and they want to join something in order to feel that they belong. There’s strength, there’s human strength in a sense of belonging to something. That’s why we have secret orders.

Men who are pushed around by their wives and pulled off by their bosses until they get the feeling, they have no soul they can call their own, not a tattered shred of self-respect is left, they go join a lodge. And as the cartoon had it, the wife is speaking to her husband, and she says, the high exalted potentate can’t go tonight because I won’t let him.

And they become high exalted potentates and name themselves big names, but the point is, little men want to belong to something. And that is not a bad thing, that’s a good thing, because we’re gregarious by nature. We’re not wolves to go alone or travel in narrow packs which break up immediately, but we’re sheep to travel in flocks that stay together a lifetime.

So, when I talk about the church, I talk about the whole church. Unless I say this church, because I want you to know that this church is a part of a great church. I can imagine how lonely, now I’m talking in the presence of a young soldier who’s just back, and he may contradict me for this good-naturedly afterward, but I don’t think he will. I can imagine how lonely a soldier would feel in a foreign land among a people whose language he can’t speak except for his uniform, that identifies him with a vast crowd of such fellows all over the world, and particularly with his homeland and his flag.

The sense of belonging is necessary. The young fellow somewhere in some remote corner of the earth wearing an American uniform received a cable or word somewhere from the commander-in-chief that he’d received a dishonorable discharge and was no longer a part of the army. I can imagine what an utter collapse it would be to him, psychologically he’d break down, and half his manhood would leak away from his broken heart.

Belonging to something is what matters, my brethren. Belonging to something that’s going to last, and something that’s worthy, something that’s valuable. I couldn’t belong to a man-made society; I couldn’t possibly do it.

Imagine me getting on my knees and swearing to follow the order of this and that lodge. God made my knees hard to bend, and my American upbringing has made them impossible to bend, unless God bends them. Now imagine that I could ever do that, I never could, but I want to belong to something.

No man is ever individualistic enough to go it alone, no man. The man who does is sick, the hermit is sick. A man who lives alone in his attic, and who refuses even to answer the door, and who sneaks out in the dark, and buys something at a delicatessen, and sneaks back, that man’s sick.

He’s not a normal man. A normal man, good or bad, sinner or saint, wants to walk out and look around at others of his kind and say, I belong. This is my race. These are my people. This is my language I hear spoken there. That’s my flag flying there on top of that school building. I belong here.

That is necessary to our welfare, necessary to our health, our mental health. And that is why rejection, unwanted children, and persons who feel themselves rejected, can sometimes develop very serious and dangerous trends. I want to think of this church then as its relation to the whole church of Christ.

That’s why I like to sing songs about the church, the church of Jesus Christ, which He purchased with His own blood, part in heaven and part on earth, and of every color and tribe and nation and tongue around the world, as the Bible says. And we’re a part of that.

We didn’t begin when Dr. A. B. Simpson organized the Society for Christian Missions back in New York in 1884. If I thought that for a second. I’d never finish this sentence. I’d break off with a semicolon, and I’d close this Bible and leave and resign, and find the church that went back to Pentecost.

But I believe that we’re a part of that which does go back to Pentecost. I believe in the apostolic succession. And I believe that it’s not a succession of bishops and men with names and organizations. I believe it’s a group, it’s a living organism. Just as I believe that my organism goes back to my great-great grandfather Adam, and that I’m a part that the living stream floated down the centuries, and ties me organically and racially and vitally with the first man.

So, I believe that this church is organically and vitally a part of the true church of Christ that began when the Holy Ghost fell on a body of believers and made them one, and baptized them into one body and made them God’s people in a way that no people ever had been before. And therefore, every Christian is a part of us, and we’re a part of every Christian group around the world.

When I hear a good thing or read a good thing that’s said or done by some great man or good man or good woman anywhere in the world for Christ’s sake, I have a good feeling in my heart that’s part of me. That’s part of me. That belongs to me, and I belong to that. And whether I ever meet that person on earth or not doesn’t matter. The church of our Lord Jesus Christ is one. She’s one around the whole earth.

So, I want to think of her that way, and I want to think of you as belonging to the great Church of our Lord Jesus around the earth.  And I want to think of you and your relation to God first of all. Your relation to God first of all. A man got into the papers here the other day by starting a little campaign to get all of his people to vote. Whether you vote or not is your business. I expect to. If you do or don’t, I’m not going to needle you about that.

I’m only going to tell you that every country has the kind of leaders it deserves. But I’m not concerned so much with whether you’re a Democrat or for a Republican, or I’m not concerned so much for whom you’re going to vote. But I’m deeply concerned about your relation to God. That’s first. That’s first.

Before there were any Tories or Whigs or Democrats or Socialists or Republicans or what have you around the world, there was God. Before man ever knew the privilege of the ballot, there was God. And your relation to God is absolutely first.

And then your relation to others is very important too. And your habits and your tastes and your service, all this is very important. And so, we’re going to think about what a church must do and what it’s our privilege to do and what God will give us power to do, and the gifts of the Spirit and all this over the next weeks. And to do all this requires itself a gift of the Spirit.

Now, back in the book of Isaiah, if I can find it without keeping you waiting too long, in the book of Isaiah there’s a passage which I love very much. There shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. Now that, of course, is Jesus.

And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord, and shall make him a quick understanding in the fear of the Lord. And he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears, but with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth.

Now, that’s said about Jesus, but that’s true, or ought to be true of the members of the body of Christ. For just as the oil was put upon the high priest’s head, and it ran down to the skirts of his garment, and cleared down to his feet, and gave fragrance and sweetness to his whole body, so the mighty power that was poured upon the head of Jesus must trickle down and flow down to every member of the body. And so what was true of him can be true of his ministers. The Spirit of wisdom shall rest upon him, and the Spirit of understanding, and the Spirit of counsel and might, and the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of Jehovah and shall make him a quick understanding.

And he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes. The curse of modern leadership is looking around and getting your bearings from what you see. Neither shall he reprove after the hearing of his ears, listening carefully to see which way things are moving, and then judging accordingly. No, he’ll never make that mistake.

But with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and with equity the meek of the earth. And righteousness shall be the girdle of his loins, and faithfulness the girdle of his reins. And he’ll always be right in his spirit, and right in his wisdom, and right in his judgment. And he’ll not be judged, nor allow himself to be judged by what’s going on round about.

Now, my dear friends, I’m going to break this off here within five minutes. This is Communion Sunday, and I’ve got lots more to say developing this thesis, perhaps until Brother Reidhead comes. But it takes a lot of patience and a lot of persistence and a lot of courage in this day in which we live to find the will of God and to take it.

And I believe that God wants to help us. I believe that He wants to do something new for us here in this church, in our fellowship, I believe it. He’s doing something new for me, and I can’t see why it should not flow out and down and over and up and around until we’re all swimming in it. And I can’t see why God should omit any of us in the breaking of the bread nor in the pouring of the oil.

You and I stand here and mingle together here and foregather here as an assembly of the saints, with all of the obligation resting upon us that rested upon them at Pentecost. It has not diminished one little bit, and there is not anywhere one sentence of Scripture to be found, nowhere is there any proof or a line that could be twisted nor tortured into teaching that the organic, living, vibrating church of Jesus Christ, just before He comes, won’t have every obligation and every privilege and every right and every power at her disposal that she had when she first was born in the early part of the book of Acts.

You know, there is such a thing as being tough about this, my brethren. There is such a thing as saying to God and to yourself, and at times maybe over your shoulder, to the devil, that you’re not going to give up to the times. And that you’re not going to give up to the ways of the world, or even to the common ways of religion round about you. And that you’re not going to judge yourself by others, and you’re not going to allow your Church to be judged by others. And if it looks a little better or a little worse, then worry about it or be glad.

But you’re going to take the New Testament’s standards as your standard. And just as sure as God sits in His high heaven, unless Christ comes within the next twenty-five years, unless He comes within the next twenty-five years, the Christian Missionary Alliance and all such groups as we are, fundamentalists generally, are going to have to recall and have back upon us a revival that will eventuate in a new moral power, and a new separation, and a new cleanness, and a new bestowment of the mighty enablings of the Spirit, or God will have to raise up from somewhere a new group to carry the torch.

Now, I prophesied twelve years ago about something, and it came to pass that my only mistake was I didn’t go far enough in what I said. I’ll tell you about that next Sunday, if you honor me by appearing here, or honor your own soul by coming to the house of the Lord. And I’m prophesying this without fear.

If we do not do something, if the church doesn’t do something, if we don’t make a hard swing back to the roots of Christianity and beginning over again to seek the face of God, God is going to pass us up, as a farmer passes up, eggshells that are empty, throws them out and buries them. As you throw away tin cans that have been emptied and their contents taken, and they’re thrown out to be carried away in the refuse. As we bury dead men whose spirit has left them, and who can no longer stand up or talk or hear.

We reverently lay away the shell where they were. There was a day when Israel, believing in the perpetuity of her place in the sun, said to Jesus, we be not born of fornication, we be the seed of Abraham, and this temple is the temple of God. And Jesus said, they are the children of Abraham who do the works of Abraham, and as for this temple, there’ll be a day when not one stone will be upon another.

And that came to pass literally, and the Roman emperor sent his plows and plowed the foundation with plows. To fulfill, he’d never heard it said, and he didn’t know Jesus had ever said it. But Jesus said, not one stone will stand on another. And they plowed up the foundations after knocking every stone down level with the ground. The very sacred temple, God will leave it when it ceases to fulfill His purpose and do His will. There isn’t an organization in the world God won’t desert.

The Salvation Army, the Christian Missionary Alliance, the Nazarenes, the Mariners, Christian Businessmen’s Committee, any group anywhere, God will desert them in the hour that they cease to fulfill His will. There isn’t a denomination on this wide earth anywhere, you can’t make your robes long enough, nor your chains heavy enough, nor your titles long enough to say the church, when once she ceases to fulfill the will of God. There isn’t a group anywhere, God will raise them up in 1884 and desert them in 1964, unless they continue to fulfill the will of God.

There isn’t a group like this anywhere, my brethren, unless we follow on to know the Lord and humbly and meekly follow Jesus Christ in fear and godly reverence and in faith and in love and charity. There isn’t a church, I say, anywhere that God won’t turn away from and go to some colored mission or some group somewhere of simple-hearted people that don’t know too much and don’t have too much, but that do love God and want to obey him. I say, God will desert a crowd anywhere.

It doesn’t mean the individual members of that group who are Christian people will be deserted, but it does mean that the cloud will lift from that assembly. Dear God, I pray that if it ever lifts from this church, God will tell me twenty-four hours before the tragedy occurs, for I want time to get out of town. I want time to get away where I don’t have to stand and look at the despoiling of a church.

Only when the cloud is there and the fire, only when the Holy Ghost is present, and the Shekinah glows is a church a true church. And then if you lack everything else, you still have a true church. Now I’ve read from Paul about the possibilities, the privileges, the obligation, the commission that is ours, the job we’ve got to do, our future, what we’ve got to do right here and to the ends of the earth.

I’ve read to you about the power that God gives to enable us to do it. Then I have read of the strange teachings that come in from everywhere to spoil that holy oil. So, over the next weeks we’re going to talk about it, God willing. But that will be all for now.

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Tozer Talks

A Call for a Return to God

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

July 29, 1956

Now I hold in my hand a book, and it says Holy Bible on it. And this book has so many virtues, that no one can ever say, this is the virtue of the Scriptures. It has so many crowns on its head, that no one can point to one and say, this is the crown. It has so many functions, that no one can say, this is the function of the Scripture. You can never say this, that, always it’s they, because there are so many.

So, I would say tonight and using for the subject matter that 30th chapter of Isaiah which we read, that one mission of the Holy Scriptures, is to find us. It’s to find us. When the Bible says a man is lost, it is exquisitely accurate in what it says. We’re lost. People are lost. The world is lost. And we don’t know where we are.

Once in the city of Pittsburgh, I was staying at the Roosevelt Hotel, and if you’ve ever been in the Golden Triangle, it’s a golden labyrinth to me. I got lost. And I couldn’t find my hotel. And I told them afterward about it, that I wasn’t lost, the hotel was lost. But somebody was lost there that day, all right. And it’s easy to get lost in the world and not know where you are. Not know what times you’re living in. Not know what events mean. Not know the mood of the hour or the spiritual temperature of the hour.

Now, the one mission of the Word of God is to find us. It is to locate us and to identify us and identify our times. And it’s to show us what’s wrong with us and also to show us what’s right with us. And I’d like to stop there and accent that, that mostly in our eagerness to make things better, we’re inclined to overlook what is right with us. And this is never good. Always we should acknowledge anything that is right with us, that God says is right with us.  And whereunto we have attained, there abide, when cast not away your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward.

There is no virtue in digging at yourself all the time with a pick. There is no virtue in always condemning yourself, because the Word of God shows us what is right with us as well as what is wrong with us. Now, I say us, meaning Christians, because it is well known that there is nothing right about a sinner. There is nothing right about a lost man. There is nothing right about a rebel.

And I think it’s safe to say that there is nothing right about popular religion as we know it today. But the Word of God is very quick to say, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel.

And I saw His eyes shining as He pointed to that man and said, well, look at this man. And when the woman, the woman of Sarepta came to Him, He said there were many, many lepers in Israel in the days of Elijah, and yet to none, to none did faith come. This woman, this foreign woman had faith.

The Lord always approves whatever He sees that He can approve. But, of course, the technique of the evangelist who is not led by the Spirit is to go into a church assuming that everybody, from the pastor to the janitor, is a thoroughgoing scoundrel, and then begin there with that presumption. But that’s not the way the Word of God does it. The Word of God always finds you.

The business of a good doctor is not only to tell you what’s wrong, but to slap you back and tell you when you’re all right. And so, the business of the Word of God is not only to tell me when I’m wrong, but the business of the Scripture also is to tell me when I’m right, and say, well done, and go ahead, you’re My child.

Now it finds us, it locates us, and it brings our time into focus, so that we can, or God can, pronounce upon us either judgment or a proof. And there is a unique felicity in the Word of God, a wonderful ability to find parallels, moral parallels, and spiritual parallels. I am somewhat delighted as I get around a bit, and read the mail, and meet and talk with people, that the old ironclad, rigid, dispensationalism that put every verse in one pigeonhole, another verse in another pigeonhole, and said do not disturb until Christmas, is pretty well passing away.

While we all believe in the dispensations of the Scripture, there is coming from everywhere onto the church of Christ, the fundamental element, the evangelical element of the church of Christ, a feeling that while we recognize the dispensations, we do not allow them to draw iron curtains around us, but that the Holy Spirit, through the Scriptures, draws parallel, moral and spiritual parallels, between different dispensations, between peoples, and times, and situations, and dangers, and opportunities.

For instance, the New Testament parallels the Old, so that when you read the Old, and then read the New, you begin to find yourself. And then, when you look at your own times, you will find they parallel the Old Testament and the New Testament. So that regardless of, and going across, the dispensational lines, there are the moral and spiritual parallels, the deep principles that underlie all dispensations, and all the works of God, so that we can locate ourselves, and know where we are.

And brethren, I’d like to say to this little congregation tonight, that you could do yourself a wonderful world of good, if you would take some time out, just as you take a week or two weeks out for a vacation, to sort of get hold of yourself physically, and get off the strain. If you’d take a little time out, and it wouldn’t hurt you if you missed a meal, some of you are worried about calories.

I ate breakfast with a man this morning, a very handsome young man, and he said, I’ll take the 400-calorie breakfast, please. And he worried, the people worry about their calories, and worry about their weight. And that’s good, I suppose, but brethren, there’s something that’s more profounder than that, something profounder than our health. And that is our relation to God, where we are in God’s will for us, where we are at this moment, in the overall purpose of God for our lives in this day.

And I say it wouldn’t hurt you at all, if you were to take a day off, and perhaps miss a good dinner, and get a little lean once, and let the things of this world kind of fade out on you and get a little empty. You’ll feel bad, and your stomach will protest, but it won’t kill you. Nobody died from missing a meal. I’m not a faster, and I’m not pushing that on the people, but it might be a good idea sometimes, take a day or so, and examine yourself in the light of God.

Now introspection, if it’s carried too far, becomes a hindrance to the very thing we’re trying to do. Everlastingly digging up the corn to see if it is growing, is one way to be sure we’ll have no corn. And everlastingly digging at our own spiritual life, to see if we’re making progress, is one way of arresting all progress, and bringing it to a dead stop. So that I do not recommend a continual digging at ourselves, but I do recommend that since one mission of the Holy Scriptures is to find us, locate us, take our pulse, settle on our spiritual health and a pronounce on it, and prove or condemn or command or warn or encourage.

I recommend that between now and, say, the next ten days, or between now and the next two weeks, take a little time out before God, not just the hasty morning devotions, but take a longer time out, and search the Scriptures and read them, and get on your knees and put all commentaries aside, and all these, what do you call them, marginal notes, and get a plain text Bible, and get on your knees and let the Holy Ghost talk to you.

You know, brethren, it’s possible even to have too many translations around, possible I got so many that sometimes I get bored with them, and they bother me. Just get a good one, it doesn’t make too much difference which one, but the King James is always a good, safe one, and with plain text, just read the Word of God and let it talk to you. And it’s wonderful how it’ll find you. 

Now, the New Testament, I say, parallels the Old, and the Old and the New find a parallel in the day in which we live. Israel’s condition in 700 B.C., as sketched here in Isaiah 31 to 33. Notice the condition they were in. Now, we read all this, so it’ll be familiar and fresh in your mind. They were in a state of rebellion. They rebelled against God, and rebelling against God is like walking against a cold, fierce wind. Always walking against a cold, fierce wind. Going ahead against the will of God is like flying a little, light, one-motored plane against a tempest, hardly making any headway at all, barely staying up and getting nowhere. Rebelling against the will of God, going one way and God wanting you to go another.

Now, search yourself tonight and think this over. Is there any rebellion in your heart? Do you want something which you’re afraid, if you sought the will of God, you’d find He wouldn’t let you have? Or do you want to avoid something which you know and have reason to believe God wants you to have or do? Well, now that’s rebellion, and rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft. Let’s not take it lightly. Let’s take it seriously.

The will of God is the health of the universe. The will of God is the harmony of heaven. It is the peace of paradise. The will of God is salvation itself. The will of God is life. The will of God is everything a moral being can want, and bucking the will of God even on anything, even on any little thing, and in trying so hard.

I heard today about a man. I personally know that that man has gone against the will of God, tragically and shamefully. He has flouted and violated the will of God, not and repented of it, no, but is living in it and has crystallized it and hardened it so he’ll never get out of it. And yet they say, I heard only today, that that man is present at the pre-Sunday school Bible class. He’s present at the Sunday school. He’s present at the morning service. He’s present at the evening service. He’s trying desperately by being present and searching the Scriptures and being pious to make up for the fact that he has violated the will of God against his own life and that he’s bucking the cold, tempestuous wind of the will of God.

My brethren, the will of God is the health of your life. It’s your safety, and we’re not safe any other place. And if you are anywhere in a controversy with God, on any line, holding anything against God, then remember this, that all your Bible reading and all your prayers and all your faithful attendance at church won’t mean a thing. It won’t mean a thing. It’s simply whistling by the cemetery. It is simply talking big to hide our shameful fears.

Get right with God, and you can sleep another hour. Get right with God, and you can relax. Get right with God, and peace will come to your heart.

But they were rebellious in that day. It says they were rebellious people, and they were self-confident people. They trusted in themselves, and they were a people who misplaced their confidence, and put their confidence somewhere else. And they were seeking advisors and counselors and having conferences, and they had their princes and ambassadors running all around but finding no help. And God said tartly that they were ashamed. They found no help at all.

Now, I don’t want to enter even close to that deep, dismal swamp of politics, but it sounds a little like a parallel with the United States of America here, all of this self-confidence and rebellion against the will of God, and this, seeking advisors and counselors and Secretaries of State and plenipotentiaries and having conferences and princes and ambassadors traveling about.

If everybody would ground himself for exactly ten days and think and get straightened out and give his soul a chance to settle and the dust a chance to settle and the fumes of burning gasoline a chance to settle, we’d find the air would begin to clear and we’d find the will of God.

But conferences, Will Rogers used to say that peace conferences were the direct cause of war, and if we could stop all peace conferences, we’d end wars. Of course, he said it with tongue-in-cheek as Will would, but there was more to it, you know, more than there was a certain amount of sly truth in his humor that peace conferences, people are conferring too much, and there you can’t flip your dial anymore on the radio, but there’ll be somebody on their asking somebody else questions.

Questions reminds me of the Irishman’s definition of metaphysics. He said it’s a blind man in a dark basement looking for a black cat that isn’t there. And metaphysics has its parallel in the modern effort to find peace of mind. If a man can hit a home run, we promptly interview him and ask him what he thinks of the international situation. And if he can sing and so, as to bring the teenagers to their knees with rapture, why, we ask him what he thinks of the atom bomb.

And we’re interviewing and conferring. There are too many conferences, brethren. When God Almighty made the heaven and the earth, it didn’t come out of a conference. And when Jesus Christ died on the cross, it wasn’t by any action of a council.

Now I know that a certain number of conferences have to be held, I suppose, just the same as there have to be certain visits to the dentist and certain banquets and after-dinner speakers. I know that. We have to shave, and nobody likes it. There are certain things that have to be.

Oh, my district superintendent is here. I forgot. But I must go on anyhow and say that these things are necessary. Board meetings are necessary, I know.

But brethren, after all, if we get to God first, we could cut down the length of time it takes to find that we don’t know anything about it anyhow. A committee, you know, is a group of people which singly can do nothing. But when met as a committee, can officially vote that they know not how to do it. That’s the difference.

Now, brethren, I believe in committees and conferences and boards, and we never fail here to have our board meeting and I go to all conferences except I miss one once in a while. But remember this, dear friends, that if the members of the conferences and board meetings and young people’s groups and all the rest who decide on how things go would get to God first, we’d have some light when we get to talking with one another. But we meet without light and pool our darkness and then go away again. That’s often the way it is in these conferences, these political conferences.

These political conferences, if Secretary of State would stay at home, we could push war years into the distance, into the future. But if he continues to run around, he’ll get his in it yet. He’s a Republican too, God help him. But if he continues running around and shooting off, we’ll get into it, somebody will get mad and assassinate somebody and then hell will break out on the earth.

God says, you’ll find no help wherever you go. You’re looking for help and you’re holding your political conferences and you’re running about and you’re asking questions of people who don’t know and then they ask you and you don’t know.

A Episcopalian rector that I spoke of this morning came to me over to Highland Lake. He said, there are some questions I want to ask you, Brother Tozer, or two of them. So, he asked me the first one. He said, how do you resolve that problem? Well, I said, Brother, I don’t know how to resolve the problem and to answer the question, I don’t even have the problem. I haven’t yet got far enough along. I don’t even have the problem, not let alone the answer. Well, that was a dry well. He came to a dry well that time.

Then he asked me a second question and he was on my territory, and I had the answer, but not the first one. The first one had to do with the relation of time and eternity, how Christ could step out of eternity into time and the historic, all that old neo-Orthodox stuff. And Brother, I don’t even have the problem, let alone the answer. But there are answers, and God has the answers and we’ll not find them running about asking questions because bpeople don’t know.

And so, God says now here, put this in the Book. Put this in the Book. Think of the irony there. Write this down, He says. Put this in a Book. Put this in a Book that my people are rebellious people, that they want My protection, but they don’t want My will. They want My blessing, but they don’t want to obey Me. They want My heaven, but they don’t want My walk on earth.

And put this in a book that they’re an untruthful people, that they’re a lying people, an untruthful people. You know that there must be an awful lot of liars among evangelicals. I don’t know any. Now remember that. I’m not accusing anybody and I can’t think of any except those who say they have 1,000 when the church seats 208. But outside of that I don’t know where the liars are but there must be because I hear things about myself. Never happened in the wide world.

I heard at Highland Park that I had done something that was all right and I don’t know nothing wrong but something that I was supposed to have done, Billy Graham, and I hadn’t seen Billy Graham in five years so what couldn’t have happened, yet somebody started that it had happened. Somebody told a lie to their brother. I don’t know who it was but somebody. My people are untruthful people, My people, and unbelieving as well. And they insist on hearing religious talk.

I have a note which I want to write on sometime. I learn more from myself by the grace of God than I do from anybody else. And when I get an idea it pops into my head when I pray or when I read about it I take a note on it and then later on I develop. Maybe it will lie three years.

And I have a little note that says this. Why is it that some Christian people are always at the church, always at the prayer meeting, always asking prayer requests, always carrying their Bible, always eager for orthodoxy, always ready to defend the truth, and yet they’re the sourest, grouchiest, and meanest, and nastiest, and hardest to live with people in the world. Now I haven’t settled that question yet. Can you help me, Brother Thomas? I don’t know why.

I asked old brother M.A. Dean. Do you remember old M.A. Dean? Ma Dean they called him. M.A. Dean. I asked Brother Dean about that. And Brother Dean said, young fellow, and I was a young fellow then, he said, young brother, it’s like this. He said, some people are spiritually cross-eyed. And he said, they look two directions and they’re looking one way and going another.

Now he said, that’s the way I’ve resolved it. I doubt whether that would be accepted out in Fuller Seminary among the great brains there or in any other of the great seminaries where great minds are. But it seems to us simple people to be the truth that people are just spiritually cross-eyed. And they’re untruthful and they’re unbelieving and yet they’re some of the most pious people in the wide world. And they insist on hearing religious talk all the time. And yet there’s no humility there. Humility is a beautiful thing. Simplicity is a beautiful thing.

I told Brother McAfee about a Latvian woman. Now my brother Bill is here, Petlov. He’ll know about Latvia. I don’t know where Latvia is exactly. I know it’s one of those middle European arrangements there that’s always a kinder box. But there was a woman at Highland Lake, maybe 35, though I would have not told her that, but she’s probably 35, a blondish, high cheekbone, the typical Slav type, you know, square-faced.

And she came so modestly and said, Mr. Tozer, there is something I would like to ask you. And I said, all right. She said, I am a Latvian refugee. I was a teacher in my own land and I fled before the Russians and I’m here in the United States and I am a Christian. I have been born again and I’d like to ask you a question. And I said, all right.

She said, you talk about a spirit-filled life and the question I want to ask you, she said, is the spirit-filled life for plain people like me? Isn’t the spirit-filled life for apostles and great evangelists and great people like that that need it? She said, do you think that a simple woman like me, she was not a simple woman, she was a brilliant woman, had been a teacher in her own land and spoke English except for she couldn’t get the diphthong, beautifully.

Well, here she was, humble and meek and so humble that she was willing to forego the full walk in the Holy Spirit because she just thought it wasn’t for her. God looks on people like that and loves them, don’t you think? The Lord may surprise her by giving her a Christmas present and giving her that which she feels she’s not worthy to receive.

Ah, brother, humility’s a beautiful thing wherever it is found, and pride is just as heinous wherever it is found. And yet there’s the religious talk all the time. People are wanting to hear religious talk and more religious talk and more religious talk and yet never hear the real voice of God. Isn’t this an ironic thing here? Sometimes I get blamed for being a bit sarcastic but, brother, the Word of God is so sarcastic sometimes you can shave with it. It’s so sharp.

Listen to this. He says, if I can find it here now, he says, they say, prophesy not unto us right things, speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits. He says, don’t tell the truth to us, prophesy unto us smooth things and prophesy deceits. Do you know what I would do if I were a layman, if I delivered milk or dug ditches or ran a streetcar or was in any other profession and wasn’t a preacher? Do you know what I’d do when I entered a church and I sensed the pastor was giving me smooth things? I would get up, scoop up my hat and leave the building. And as I went, I’d scrape both feet and get out of there. I’d never want to stay in that church where men speak smooth things.

If I go to a doctor, I don’t want that doctor to lie to me. I want to know the worst that I can prepare for. And I don’t want to be cheered up. I want to be told the truth. Speak unto us smooth things. Men make reputations of being old smoothies. You can ask them a question and you don’t know. It says about Paul, thou hast fully known my doctrine. But there are a lot of people that you ask them a question and you don’t know when they’re finished, whether they believe or don’t believe.

They start in and talk all around and when they come back you still have your question but you don’t have the answer. And you can’t say whether they’re for it or against it. Paul says, you’ve fully known my doctrine. He delivered his soul. He wasn’t afraid of people. He told everybody what he believed.

Now what was the sentence on all this smooth deceit? This religious talk. This rebellion. This lying. This unbelieving business. This running to Egypt and trying to get help there. Running to psychiatry and getting help there and running to somewhere else for help.

Well, God says, the sentence is that you’re going to go down like a wall. You’re going down like a wall. And being a farmer, I’ve seen walls. And I know what it is for a great wall to go down. And as it goes down, rodents run every direction that have been hiding in it. And the dust begins to rise. But your wall is down. He says, you’re going down like a bowing wall. You’re going down like a potter’s vessel that will be smashed on the cobblestones.

Now what about we and our times? I wish, I wish that I could tell you the truth and tell you that I believe that we are in times of great revival. I wish that I could tell you that I thought things were looking up. I wish. But I cannot. Not for a moment can I.

A brother who runs Highland Lake Conference in his mighty praying reminded me of Leonard Ravenhill in his intensity of prayer. And as he prayed, he said, O God, the evangelicals have a God that is no God. And they don’t know the true God much anymore. And the young people have been cheated and sold downriver. We must see again the glory of God for this generation. And the burden of his prayer was, O God, this poor generation deserves to see Thy glory. Show us Thy glory once more.

Now, there is a remnant that according to the election of grace, and if we parallel the rebellion and the self-confidence and the misplaced confidence and the seeking of counselors and princes and ambassadors and dashing about and looking for things and not listening to God, then how are we to escape this sentence, ye shall go down as a bowing wall and fall as a potter’s vessel? I don’t think we can.

Remember that it’s not good exegesis to go through the Bible taking all the blessings and giving all the curses to Israel. Remember that it’s not good exegesis to underline all the promises and ignore all the warnings. Remember it, and yet it’s been done. A whole generation has grown up on that kind of thing. A whole generation that never put a line under the warnings but tenderly underlined all the promises.

If you’d take the average fellow’s Bible and reprint only the underlying passages, you’d think that God was a soft, spongy, spineless, moral Santa Claus who was just as full of self-pity and had no justice or judgment in his nature at all. That’s because we choose the passages that please us.

A heretic, as you know, is a man who selects That’s what the word means. He selects. He selects the passages that he wants. And if you go through your Bible selecting the passages that cheer you up, why, you’re a heretic in that measure. Not you’re teaching false doctrine, but you’re not giving the whole Word of God a chance at you. It’s like living all the time on upside-down cake. You’ve got to have some other things or there’s something going wrong with you.

Now, I want you to notice over here, though, that the goodness of God came in and saved Israel and pushed judgment away 100 years. The good grace of God, even though they deserved all this. The good grace of God came, and in verse 18 he says, The Lord will wait that He may be gracious unto you, and He will be exalted that He may have mercy upon you.

For the Lord is a God of judgment, and blessed are they that wait for Him. And he says, you shall hear a voice, and He will be very gracious unto you at the voice of thy cry, and your teachers will not be removed into a corner anymore. And you will hear a voice saying, This is the way, walk ye in it, when you turn to the right hand and when you turn to the left.

I wonder now if we can’t parallel this. I wonder if evangelicalism, and we, starting in this church, can’t parallel this. Can’t we listen for a voice? Do you notice that it doesn’t say you’ll hear a voice ahead of you? Why? All these other times it says He goes before his people and leads them. When He putteth forth His own He goeth before them, and the voice of the Shepherd is ahead.

Why is it? Can anybody tell me? Answer me back. Why does he say you shall hear a voice behind you? Why? When you turn to the right hand or when you turn to the left, you’ll hear that voice. Why? Because the Lord never leaves the path.

And as long as you’re behind Him and He’s ahead and you’re following Him, His voice is ahead of you. Calling you along, come on sheep, come on. But as soon as you turn away from the path, then the Voice is behind you. No matter which way you turn, the Voice is behind you. You shall hear a voice behind you saying, this is the way, come back here, you’re off the way, this is the way, come on back here.

And I pray that to fundamentalism and to all others there may come a willingness to listen, for God is waiting. We’ve deserved. What have we deserved? We’ve deserved judgment. We’ve deserved it. We’ve deserved to go down in a welter of dust and rubble. But God said, I won’t do it now, I’ll wait, I’ll be gracious. I’ll exalt myself and show mercy upon you.

This church has done enough. We’ve committed enough sins here to bring the building down on us. And our society has committed enough sins. Evangelicalism has committed enough. But God says, I’ll wait, that I might be gracious. I’m going to judge you, but I’ll wait and give you a chance and you’ll hear my voice saying, this is the way, walk ye in it.

Then he says these encouraging things, that in these days there shall be upon every high mountain and upon every high hill, rivers and streams of waters in the day of the great slaughter when the towers fall. Isn’t this the day of the great slaughter? And did we not go just now through, a few years ago, one of the most disastrous and bloody and deadly wars in history? And have we ever had an hour when the guns weren’t shooting?

They celebrated the end of the Korean War, but there’s never been a moment the echo of a gun hasn’t been heard somewhere around the world. And we’re still hearing it in this terrible day when everything that is good and all that we’ve stood for has gone down and the nobility of manhood and the purity of womanhood and the dignity of childhood and the desirability of integrity in government and patriotism.

The patriot used to stand beside the flag and preach God and country and the people wept, but now a man doesn’t dare have a flag. They call it flag-waving. And patriotism has become a corny thing for young people to laugh at.

And young people in, I think, Brooklyn the other day, girls, mind you, girls, girls, a group of girls fell on other girls and beat them until they had to be taken into the hospital and when a policeman came to rescue the girls that were being beaten up, they beat him until he was wounded. We have produced a generation like that, a smart aleck, fresh, self-assured, rebellious, sarcastic generation. Everything good is corny or square.

My friends, the only hope we have is that God says I’ll exalt myself, I’ll lift myself up, not to throw a thunderbolt but to show mercy on a poor, miserable people. And I wonder if we can’t begin to listen. It’s happening. It’s coming. I hear it. It’s coming.

I talk to this one and that one, Reformed church man, Episcopal man, Baptist people. I hear them all around and they are saying pretty much the same thing. They’re saying we’ve been sold downriver and over the last few years Christianity has become a show, and we want God back again. We’re sorry we went along with it and we want God back again. And you’ll hear it everywhere. And people that used to be so sure of themselves come tenderly.

I remember one time hearing Dr. Jatterquist. He said, Dr. Jatterquist, he said, now I recommend this book, this so-and-so’s book. He said, now I don’t believe every degree with everything in it. He said, if I agreed with everything in it, I’d have to have written it. And he said, furthermore, by the time I wrote the last page I might not be so sure of something I’d written on the first.

Well, I know how he meant it and everybody else did, but one young preacher present, he rushed up to me and he said, did you hear that? And he was positively, he was steaming hot. He said, did you hear that? What kind of talk is that? What kind of talk is that? Why, he said, Mr. Tozer, I haven’t changed my mind on a thing in ten years. He probably hasn’t yet and that’s been ten years ago. He’s static. He’s probably frozen. He’s frozen. But I don’t mean change your mind about Bible doctrine, but I mean go ahead.

But you know that spirit, that spirit of surefire dogmatism is pretty well lifting. And I find, and I don’t say it because this brother’s a Baptist. I would have said this and did say it in Highland Lake and I’ve said to my friends, I find probably the hungriest people now in the North American continent are Baptists. They’re eager, tender people. I find them, all sorts of Baptists too. And they’re eager, they’ve got that sound, solid, fundamental doctrine.

But please don’t all even go to the Baptists. Maybe I don’t mean to lose my church here. But I am saying that I find that that happened to be a Baptist pastor that told me that. I haven’t changed my mind in anything in ten years, he said.

But his kind is sort of fading away. And people find that their doctrine isn’t enough, that their doctrine’s got to lead them to God. And if it doesn’t lead you to God, it might as well be Mohammedanism. If the doctrines you hold don’t lead you to God, then they are no doctrine to you. And I find a tenderness coming on people.

I find Bible church brethren calling me up, coming to see me, asking me if I’d seen such and such an old book. Eager, hungry people all over. And if we can get together, Dr. Maxwell calls it, the order of the burning heart. You know that? I thought you and I invented that. We called it the fellowship of the burning heart. And we don’t care your denomination, but the fellowship of the burning heart.

Those who love the Lord speak often one to another. And God says that in that terrible day when out in the great world the towers are falling and it’s the day of slaughter, there shall be upon every high mountain and hill, rivers and streams of water. Rivers on high mountains? They don’t belong up there. They belong in the valleys.

Well, God said if they muddy the streams in the valleys and my people pray and hear my voice, I’ll put rivers up on the mountains for them. And I’ll put streams up on high hills for them where they don’t belong. I’ll do a miracle for my people. And my dear friends, it is yet to be known what God will do with us here and thus in our society and with evangelicalism if we’ll only believe God.

And he says in verse 26, Moreover, the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun seven times. And the light of the sun shall be sevenfold as the light of seven days in the day that the Lord bindeth up the breach of His people and healeth the stroke of their wounds. In that day, God will make our light brighter than it ever was before. We have been, this society, this missionary society, fifth largest now, I think, in the world with three million dollars and over for missions in a year’s time, going in where nobody else goes and all of that.

And we’ve criticized each other a lot, but I wonder, I wonder, Brother Thomas, if we listen for the voice, we won’t yet hear a voice saying, come on, you’ve slipped a little, but this is the way and I’m waiting. And I’ll give you rivers and high places and I’ll give you streams on high hilltops where you didn’t know they could be. And I’ll make you brighter in the world of religion seven times brighter than you were. And I’ll make your day seven times as bright, and I will multiply seven days on one. I’m hearing, I’m waiting, wondering if we won’t hear this from God. And I wonder for our own church.

Not more than about a month ago, I came back from the East. In fact, I even talked seriously about a home in Mount Vernon, New York, and thought maybe that it might be in the will of God that I should leave here and leave the pastor and go to writing and editing. And I said, God, if you’ll show me over the next weeks a sign, a fleece, a light, a bit of light in the darkness in my church, I’ll take it that that isn’t Thy will for me yet. And we’ve never had better meetings, and we’ve never had warmer, warmer meetings and better times, even in this hot summer of vacationing.

And I wonder if God isn’t saying to this church, all right, church, dear Brother Jones, I don’t know whether he’s here this evening or not, but he wrote me, oh, on vacation, he wrote me a letter and marked it personal. I’m almost done, marked it personal.

And he said, you were talking about the ministry of this church, and I just sat down and went over the records and he said, I wrote up, and then here it was. He said, now here are the old people that have gone. And he mentioned them. Many of them, Brother Snapp and Mrs. Snapp used to know. The Gramlichs and the Moors and oh, he named a great many of them. He said, they’ve gone by reason of age.

And then he said, there are others. And then he named a whole list and they’ve gone because they’ve moved. And he said about 40 families have left this church in the last few years.

I think he’s low on count, about 40 families to move to all parts of the country, east and west, west and south and north. And a great many have gone out as preachers and gone to the far parts of the earth. Missionaries from here and preachers from here probably running up to 50, all told 29 missionaries.

Well, brethren, a few weeks back, I wondered maybe if the old, if the light wasn’t moving, but I’ve heard the Lord say, the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun and the light of the sun shall be seven times as the light of seven days in the day when the Lord bindeth up the breach of His people and healeth the stroke of their wounds.

Now, there’s only this question, two of them I want to ask briefly. One of them is, on whose side are we in this day? Are we on the side of take it easy, easy believism, or are we on the side of those who have been found and located and prophetically situated so we know where we are? We found ourselves and we’re looking away from the poor dead churches and poor dead entertainmentism, away to God and expecting that we shall see, this church shall see, rivers where they hadn’t been and streams where they hadn’t been before and the light multiplied seven times.

I don’t know for you, my friends, but I’m not dead yet and for myself, I want God to multiply me seven times to His church, not only to this church, not even only to the Alliance, but to His church throughout the whole earth seven times yet before I die. I want God to let something happen that He can use me seven times. If it’s a book or whatever it is, I have a prayer in my little prayer book that I carry, Oh God, I have been the worst of men, therefore let grace triumph to the chief of sinners and make me the most useful of men.

And I said once across the table, I think at a Chinese restaurant, to Brother Thomas, Brother Thomas, I want to love God more than any man in my generation. And Brother Thomas said, all right, but if you do, prepare yourself for a lot of suffering. And he’s dead, right? I don’t know that it’ll be suffering that we hear so much about.

The house burns down, or somebody gets killed. I don’t know. God never has been able to do much with me that way. He wounds my heart. That’s the way I suffer. He wounds my heart. He wounds my heart and I grieve and bleed over things, over things maybe that are none of my business, His business and so mine.

And so, I want God to wound me, wound me. The man in the East who said, Brother, I walk around with a wound. I’m happy in Jesus, but I walk around with a wound. I want that wound and thus the multiplication of the ministry.

What about you? What about you? This church, it’s not the biggest church by any means, but I think it’s an important one. And what about you? Can’t we yet ask God and expect God to come on us with a new wave of power? Those rivers will begin to trickle down from the high places where we didn’t think they were and that light that we thought was getting dim will begin to blaze up like a beacon and maybe the 29 missionaries we have out now will be multiplied twice and maybe the over 40,000 we gave to missions last year can be 75,000 in a couple more years. Do you believe that? Are you ready for that kind of thing? Or do you want to take it easy? Do you want to take it easy? Are you ready for that thing?

Well, it’s time to quit and I want everybody present here tonight that says, Mr. Tozer, I’m willing two things. I’m willing to take on me the judgment of God. I have been rebellious. I haven’t been all I should have been, and I have been cold, and I have kind of muddled along and been careless, but oh, I want to admit it. I do admit it tonight.

And then I’m willing to believe with you that God will be gracious to me and hear my voice and that he will be willing to multiply my testimony and my spiritual abilities yet seven times before the end, before the Lord returns. And I’m going to ask Brother Thomas to come up to pray and we’ll have a closing prayer. Are there such who will say, I take both the judgment and claim the promise for a new thing in my life? Will you stand where you are? Come on up, Brother Thomas, please.

Well, everybody stood. Maybe I’m not clear or else maybe you’re better people than I thought you were. But anyway, oh, may God make this real to you while our brother leads us in prayer.

Now, Lord, if we know our hearts tonight, we do want thee. We want God. We want to walk in thy way. We want not only Thy blessing, but we want Thee more than anything in this life. And as the man of God was exhorting us tonight, Lord, this thought came to me.

Here we are bound with the mechanics of running the church and the work of God. Here we are in the straitjacket of laws and bylaws and rules and regulations and methods and traditions until, Lord, we stand stiffly bound and with no power to reach out and spread our wings because we are in the straitjacket of all of these things. We would, O Lord, that thou wouldst unwrap us even as Lazarus of old was able to cast aside the grave clothes. He was loosed and let go.

Lord, help us to know how that we may be loosed from all of the things that are holding us, whatever those things may be. And let us once more know a gracious visitation of the Holy Spirit’s presence and the very God Himself, not only upon us, but within us. And give us a new sense of the heartfelt love and compassion and urgency and all that accompanies the coming of God upon His people.

Let us experience Thee once more in this age before Jesus doth return. Lord, we’re thinking of these places of the ends of the earth, especially the places where we so recently have been, out there where the need is so great and where the message must be given. Lord, here we are, handcuffed, as it were, with our feet in chains, our spirits locked up because of the many things that we’ve already mentioned.

O God, deliver thy people and visit us again with thyself. Visit us even, Lord, as we have never been visited before. And come upon us and move within us. As has been mentioned, there’s a ministry that the church here may have. There’s a ministry this great District across the vast expanses of seven states may have. There’s a new ministry that the society can have. Lord, let us have that ministry. We don’t want to be selfish, but we want God. And we feel that we’re bound.

Lord, loose us, we pray, and let us go. This we call upon thee for in earnestness tonight, Lord, in all sincerity, in heart hunger, in our soul, and in sincere desire.

O God, like the locust that comes out of its shell, spreads its wings and lifts itself and goes, Lord, let us, let us, let us in the sunshine, under the sunshine, the evaporating and the drying out of the sunshine of thy very self and the penetrating power of the Holy Spirit, just dry off all of these things with which we’re bound, Lord, and let there come about a new sense of liberation and joy and freedom in the Holy Spirit and new love to God and new sense of thy Spirit upon us.

O God, don’t allow us to get any farther complicated with the complexities of life. Deliver us, we pray, in Jesus’ name, Amen.

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Tozer Talks

Laying Up Treasures

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

June 3, 1956

The sixth chapter of Matthew, verses 19 to 21. Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth where moth and rust doth corrupt and where thieves break through and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt and where thieves do not break through nor steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

Now we hear a voice here speaking to us who are His professed followers. There are many sounds, many sounds abroad, not only the sound of the motors of cars but of planes overhead and the squeal of the jet plane leaving its vapor trail through the skies, barking of dogs and the laughter of children, and the noise of traffic and the bellowing of the radio. These are all sounds.

But the alert mind, the alert man and woman whose mind is keen, will be conscious that they are trying to get through to us, that there are many voices trying to get through to us. They want to communicate with us. They want to reach us and control our thinking and change our habits and bend our wills and capture our loyalties and shape our tastes and fix our values.

But there is a fraud behind all this, and your love and charity must not make you blind to the fact that there is a fraud back of it. That after these whose clamorous voices are being heard everywhere in print and on the air, after they have attracted us and used us and exploited us for all the market will bear and gotten rich off of us or gotten elected by us or gotten the offering from us or advanced by means of us, then they have no further use for us.

This week I have been hearing another kind of voice altogether, and I want to talk to you about it a little. I have part of it here in the text. For you see, this clamorous effort to make us listen, these people don’t care what happens to you at last. When you no longer can advance them, you are in a position where you can’t do them any good. When you can’t buy from them, nor support them, nor vote from them, nor sponsor them, then they will leave you and nature and death and the worms. They have no interest in you beyond what they can get out of you.

But here, my brethren, in the text this morning, is the voice of our great unselfish Friend. He doesn’t want to get rich off of us because it’s written that He was rich and for our sakes He became poor, that we through His poverty might be rich. He doesn’t want to advance by means of us, for who can advance Him who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God, but made Himself of no reputation, and humbled Himself, and was made in the form of a servant and the likeness of man, and being found in fashion as man, He humbled Himself still further and became obedient unto death, even the ignominious death of the cross.

How can you advance anybody that has taken a low place from the world and the heavens’ highest place? And He doesn’t want to sell us anything. The Lord Jesus Christ has nothing for sale, He only wants our love, and He doesn’t need our support. The politician kisses our baby and probably disinfects himself afterwards because he doesn’t love the baby, he loves the vote of the father and the mother.

But our Lord Jesus doesn’t need our support. All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth, and He is the head over all things to the church. And in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was with God, and all things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made that is made. And He upholdeth all things with the word of His power, and in Him all things consist.

Now you ask how He needs our support. He doesn’t, so let’s imagine for a moment it’s an unhealthy frame of mind to conceive of Jesus standing by the highwayside with His arms stretched up like a begging friar of the Middle Ages, wanting something from you and me. My brethren, you don’t have anything He wants. Only as He might want to separate you from that which is hurting you, He doesn’t want anything you have except your heart. My son, give me thine heart is the only cry that God has ever made to mankind that of anything that He wants.

He wants our love, but that’s all He wants. And so, what He says is all for our good. His was the loss, and ours is the gain. His was the pain, and ours is the peace, and His was the dying, and ours is the life eternal. So, I want you to listen to that voice today, not to mine, because I can be mistaken, I can be prejudiced, and no doubt I am. I can be partial, and no doubt I am, though I strive very earnestly not to be as you do. But we can be mistaken, we can be partial, we can be prejudiced, but here is One who speaks only for our good, and the man who will die for me can talk to me.

The man who wants to exploit me, I’ll resist. The man who wants me to buy his goods, I’ll dismiss. And the man who wants to use me, I’ll dismiss. But the Man who will die for me has my confidence, and that is the Voice I am hearing today, that long Eternal Voice which began before the world was and continues vibrating through all the universe.

And the wise are hearing it, and those whose ears are opened, and those who have been touched by the Holy Spirit, they hear. And that Man has my confidence, and He has my loyalty without asking for it. If He will die for me, He can have my loyalty.

I never was much for demanding loyalty. I never was much for getting up and saying, now you owe it to your denomination to do so-and-so. It’s a pretty low-grade love that has to be demanded, and it’s a pretty low-grade worship that we have to demand.

My brethren, the only loyalty I want is the loyalty I may have without asking for it, and the only loyalty He wants is the loyalty He may have without asking for it. Can you be loyal to a politician? I can’t. I have every reason to believe that he has sold out a part of his manhood to get his present job. Can you be loyal to any one political party? I couldn’t.

I have a predilection and a bent toward one of the major parties, but I couldn’t be loyal to it if it went wrong. I couldn’t even subscribe to that famous or infamous statement, that my country may she always be right, but right her wrong, my country. It is not a proof of great patriotism to say, right her wrong, my country, for to support your country when she’s wrong is to aid and abet her evil. It is the business of a patriot to love his country and try to make her right, so my loyalty is with right, and not with this or that political party, and not even to a flag when the flag goes wrong.

It was the necessity for Martin Niemöller and many others to rise and say, God is my Fuehrer, in the day when they were demanding loyalty. And if our leaders only knew it, they would make patriots out of us by making our country such a country that we could be proud of it and loyal to it without being demanded that we should.

So, I can’t be loyal to people, loyal to a denomination, loyal to the Alliance. There are those who say, if they want to dismiss a man, really want to get rid of him, they say, why, he’s not Alliance, as much as to say he’s never seen the face of God. Well, there are a lot of good people that are not Alliance, and there are a lot of Alliance people that are not good. I’m working with a society, get along all right with it, but it’s a long, long way in my heart from saying, why, whatever the Alliance teaches, that is it.

My brethren, if we teach the Bible, that is it. But if we vary from the Bible, I have no loyalty to error, regardless of where it emanates from. The man who will die for me doesn’t have to ask me for my loyalty, he can have it without asking. The man who will die for me has a right to counsel me. Now, there are counselors abroad. In fact, we’re developing a whole army of counselors. People are going to school now to learn how to be counselors, and they sit and counsel you.

Well, all right, but brethren, the only one who has a right to counsel you now, if you want to buy a camera, well, then you go to a man who knows cameras, and you say, I’d like to have a little word with you. I want to buy a camera, and I’d like to know what’s a good buy today. If you want to paint your house, you have a right to go to a painter and say, would you give me a bid on my house, I’d like to have it painted. If you are sick and you want to go to a doctor, you want to go to a good one and he’ll counsel you on diet and all the rest. That kind of counsel is one thing.

But I’m thinking about moral counsel and spiritual counsel. Counsel that has to do with my moral life, my spiritual life, and my life with my family, and my life with my country, and my life with my people. Nobody has a right to counsel me unless he is ready to give his all for me. And this Man was, this Jesus.

And so here’s what He said. Now, I want you to hear that, Voice. Remember that there’s no reason for you to resist nor brace yourself and say, I won’t hear that because it isn’t coming from me. And it isn’t coming from somebody that wants to sell you anything. The smooth, soft, velvet voice of the man who wants to sell you toothpaste.

No, don’t resist yourself now. Don’t resist this nor brace yourself because this is Jesus, our unselfish friend who was rich and became poor, who was in the form of God and became in the form of a corpse for our sakes and ours only. His was the pain and our is the joy. So, He says, lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth.

Now, what is a treasure? Well, a treasure is this. It’s whatever has your attention when you’re free to give attention to whatever you will. Now, you say my job gets my attention, but it’s not my treasure. Well, you see, it gets your attention because you have to give it to it. But your treasure is that to which you give attention when you’re not forced to.

The mother and her baby, for instance, she’s away on vacation, say, and she doesn’t have to. Her baby’s been left in the hand of a babysitter in good, good hands, and he or she’s safe. But before she sleeps at night and early in the morning and all during the day, her mind goes back to her treasure, her little treasure. It’s that that gets your attention when you’re free to give your attention to what you will. And it is that which gives you pleasure and satisfaction. That’s your treasure. And it is that by which you live. And it is what you think about when you’re alone.

Now, if you will just check on yourself sometime when you’re not being influenced by somebody, a radio on or something, and you’re alone, and for a little time it’s still, and then check on your thoughts. Whatever you’re thinking about is likely to be your treasure, unless you’re scared, and you’re thinking, or fear has hold of you, or jealousy. But if your mind’s running free, then whatever it gravitates to with pleasure, that’s your treasure too. Pleasure and treasure rhyme, and they are together because the one gives the other.

And your treasure is what you fear most to lose. What is it you fear most to lose? That’s your treasure. It’s whatever masters you, and it’s whatever gives you a feeling of confidence and well-being. Now, it may not do all of these things, but it does some of these things, and probably most of these things. So that is your treasure.

It may be money and property, or it may be any source of confidence and assurance. It may be anything that your heart gravitates to. It may be anything that gives you trust and delight. It may not be money only, but it may be whatever is precious to you and whatever you love the most. That is your treasure.

Now, where is your treasure? That’s the next question. Well, Jesus said, where your treasure is, there your heart will be. Find out where your heart is, and you’ll know where your treasure is, for your heart is always with your treasure.

Now, somebody says, but Mr. Tozer, I am a mother, and my treasure is my child. I am a young man, and my treasure is my wife, is my fiancé. I am a young woman, and my treasure is my husband. Well, you’re going to say that I can’t have any pleasure in my baby or in my wife or in my husband or in any nice thing I have. No, I’m not saying it, because, you see, treasures are relative, and there are treasures in degree.

For instance, I have a knife here that I’ve carried for a great many years. It is pure Swedish steel, and it has the Swedish coat of arms on one side. It was given to one of my boys by a Swedish politician, and he gave it to me, and I’ve carried it, chiefly because it’s quite a nice little thing, very beautiful to look at, but also because I need it occasionally, and I carry it.

Now, that’s quite a treasure, and I often show it to people and say, do you ever see one like that? That’s a treasure, but then that’s a long way from what I think about when I’m free to think about anything I will. That doesn’t give me a source of great delight or joy. I’m glad I have it. My son Wendell gave it to me, and I appreciate it, but I could lose it, and I probably wouldn’t weep, and I have no great source of pleasure here, no great confidence. I have some other treasures, too.

I have some books that I treasure. I have relatives and close people that I love and cherish, and you are perfectly free to have that kind of secondary and relative treasures, because God has said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, soul, strength, mind, and thy neighbor as thyself. There is your secondary treasure. God allows that, but he’s talking here about your primary treasure.

Now, what is that which you live for? If a man’s business keeps him from church, then he’s put his business first and his church second. He may treasure his church, but he treasures his business most. If his relatives come to visit him and he skips a prayer meeting to stay home with them, then he may treasure his church, but his relatives are above his church. If a man skips his job and ducks out of responsibility in the house of God to do something that gives him pleasure somewhere, then the house of God is second and the other thing first. Lay not up for yourselves treasures.

If you have few diamonds as I have here in your pocket, they are treasures. But Jesus didn’t mean that, because my mind doesn’t run to those diamonds I have in my pocket. There are secondary treasures, relative, down the scale. They don’t mean anything. But the treasure, the final supreme treasure, what is it? I say that it is whatever gets your major attention, gives you the most pleasure and satisfaction, gives you a sense of well-being and assurance, and draws your mind to it.

And finally, it masters you. That’s your treasure, for where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. You can know, then, where your treasure is.

Now, it’s vitally important that I know where my treasure is, because where my treasure is, as I’ve said, the heart will be also. Did you ever stop to think that to the man whose treasure is on earth, dying will be a kind of hell, because he will be violently torn away from his treasure. To the actor who loves the footlights and the applause, when he dies, he’s torn violently away from that which he lived for and gave him his highest enjoyment.

To the musician who lives for music and nothing else, the dying musician who dies out of Christ will be and suffer a kind of permanent bereavement, a kind of perpetual misery, because that which he enjoyed the most he is being torn away from. Never to hear a harmony where he’s going, never to hear the sound of singing, for there’s no singing in hell. There was singing when the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy, and God laid the foundations in the deep.

But there’s no singing in hell. There’s singing yonder when the Saints come marching home and when the beasts and elders and all the ransomed gather and join their voices in saying, Worthy is the Lamb. But the only picture of hell we have shows it without a song.

There cannot but be melody in heaven because God has made this a musical universe. He has built it upon mathematics and music is built upon mathematics, and out of it flows and comes the music of the spheres.

And so, the harmonious musical God, the composer of the universe, heaven is bound to be a place of music because it’s a place of harmony. And there can be no music in hell because it’s eternal dissonance, it’s eternal disharmony, it’s eternal discord, and there can be no music there. So the musician who has loved and lived for his music, it’ll be bereavement without end when he dies and leaves it.

The man who’s lived for his money will not take it with him, and so at the last moment he’ll die surrounded by evidences of his wealth, but he’ll be ripped away from it, torn from it like a ligament’s torn loose, and he’ll leave it. And so I say perpetual misery and permanent bereavement, if a man’s heart is one place and he’s forced to go another. But to the man whose treasure is in heaven, dying will be a joyous fulfillment, for it will be going where his treasure is. It will be perpetual delight because where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

I have often quoted the old preacher, or the preacher now old, whom I heard testify some years ago, and he said briefly this. He said, there was a day when I had so much on earth that I loved it, but he said, now I have so much over there and so little down here that my biggest stake is over there, and so it’s easy for me to keep my face set that way.

And the man who has his treasures piled up above is going to go where his treasures are. Now please don’t let’s ruin this wondrous golden truth by thinking about stacks of money or a high pile of gold yonder. Who wants gold in heaven when he’s walking around on streets of gold? Who wants strings of pearl when the gates are made of pearls? Who wants jasper when the walls are jasper? Who wants silver pendants when silver and gold and all the diamonds and all the precious stones make up the four square city? Don’t think of that kind of treasure, please, for the treasure we lay up above is another thing altogether.

And so you must see to it, I must see to it, that my treasure is laid up in heaven. Lay up in heaven treasures for yourself. The only place where it won’t be torn away from us or we torn away from it. The man who is going to heaven but has sent his treasure ahead will rejoin his treasures there, and what will they be?

I see the Roses down in the congregation. They’re working up in that hard, hard field. I think they’ve said there’s not been a convert there, but there will be one of these times. The groundwork is being laid, and one of these days they’ll learn how to say Jesus died for sinners in the language of those aborigines. And somebody, somebody will have a flash of light from God, and it’ll be said in the New Book of Acts, the Lord opened her heart, and she’ll believe; that’ll be a treasure.

And that man who lies on the hillside out yonder, never even have been able to take his body down, broken remnant of what was a fine, happy man once. He’s lying out there with his machine on the hillside, but because he lived and flew his plane, there are people in New Guinea that believed in Christ, and there will be those who will. And my brethren, those are treasures, the people that helped.

I don’t like to talk about it, for I certainly don’t want to know my right hand to know what my left hand does, but I’m thinking about a little girl over in Germany. Irene Trattner is her name, and I took her when she was a wee little doll of a thing. Now she’s big enough to stand up and have her picture took to send back to the man in America, that’s keeping her. I never saw little Irene, I don’t know her parents, but I only heard of her, and so every once in a while, I send her the amount that keeps her.

Oh brother, I’ll never meet little Irene. She’s probably four now, and a fine-looking, high-cheeked, bone-slavic type, but a pretty little girl. I’ll never see Irene on this earth, likely. But don’t you suppose that the little it takes, it doesn’t take much. Ten dollars a month, you know that? You can keep a little one somewhere all over the earth, and almost anywhere for eight to ten dollars a month. They can live and have their clothing and grow up, and she even had a rag doll on her arm.

Well, brethren, those are treasures, and those are things you send ahead. Everybody that ever got down on his knees and said, thank God for Sister Smith, thank God for Brother Jones, thank God Father that you ever sent Mr. So-and-so or Miss So-and-so to me. That’s your treasures, brethren. That’s your treasures.

Those with the strange names and funny eyes and strange complexions all over the earth that you’ve helped, and those who are saved because you lived and were a medium through which God could work, those are treasures. Lay up your treasure above, and it may be money, it may be time, it may be your abilities, it may be your power in prayer, it may just be your affection. I don’t know what it may be with you, but whatever it is, see that God gets it. Above all things, see that God is your treasure. Jesus Christ is your treasure.

I read this text years ago in Isaiah 33.6, the fear of the Lord is his treasure. For days, and I think as I recall, weeks, that kept coming back to me as a wonderful illumination. To fear God is your treasure, to fear God. My brethren, the fear of God, the love of God, the worship of God, the desire to help humanity, that’s the treasure we lay up above. And though we may die poor as a church mouse, we’ll take our treasure with us above.

Could I tell you this story? It will take me two minutes, and then we’ll be through for the morning. I’ve told this in a sermon maybe five or ten years ago, but I want to repeat it this morning to close this little word. There lived in a town, a small town somewhere in the United States years ago, maybe a generation or more ago, a very rich man, and he owned the town, as George Jost just about owned not only the town, but everything around it, in the little town where I came from, La Jose, in Pennsylvania.

Well, he owned about everything, and one night he had a dream that he was going to die at midnight. But there was another man in that town, too, and he was known as Brother John, and he lived in a tar paper shack by the railroad track. And he did odd jobs and gave out tracts and talked to people about God and sang as he went along and patted babies on the head and cheered people as they were dying and helped the widow in her distress and then went back to his little shack, slept overnight and spent another day doing the same thing. Everybody knew Brother John and liked him.

But everybody, of course, knew and respected, if they didn’t like, this great tycoon who won’t have the town. But one night this irreligious man in love with his money had a dream. At midnight he said, I’m going to die, and was it so vivid. But the angel had said to him this, the richest man in town will die at midnight. And he said, that’s me.

So, he went down and said to his wife, I’ve had a terrible dream. He couldn’t eat breakfast. It’s a horrible, disconcerting dream. The richest man in this town, it can be nobody but me, to die at midnight, and I’m not ready.

Well, she tried to wave it off and laugh it off, but no laughing at all. And the day went by, and as the sun set, he grew more terrified. He tried his best, nobody could help him apparently, and his wife didn’t know how. And as he grew nearer to the midnight hour, his face was gray and his hands were tense, and he clutched the arms of the chair until his knuckles were white. And it was the angel’s voice had been so real, and he knew, though practical man that he was, this was too real to doubt. The town’s richest man would die at midnight.

And finally, bong, bong, went the old-fashioned clock, and he jumped like a man in the electric chair, but his heart still beat on, and he was still breathing. He looked around and waited a little until it struck itself out and gone on around past twelve. Then he began to breathe for the first time quietly, and said to his wife, I guess I was a fool, I guess I was a fool.

Well, he went back to bed and slept. Oh, how he slept for the first time since that awful night when the rich man was to die at midnight. The next morning the sun was shining brightly on his great big front porch, and he was standing out snapping his suspenders back in the old groove again. The world was his oyster. He owned it all.

Somebody went by and waited and said, good morning. He said, did you hear the news? He said, No. He said, Poor old brother John has left us. The old man said, when did he die? He said, just as the clock struck twelve last night brother John smiled and went away. The old rich man bowed his head and went slowly back into his house.

The angel hadn’t failed him. The richest man in town had died at midnight, but he lived in a tar paper shack beside the railroad. But the man who had the biggest bank account had the heaviest heart. And if he lived on, unsaved, once he was ripped away from all that and went where his reputation didn’t amount to a hill of beans. While he lived in his town, he was the big man. When he went out into eternity, he was one more speck of dust in the universe.

Brethren, hear the voice of the kind, selfless Jesus. Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. Amen.

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Tozer Talks

God and Man–The Duality of Jesus Christ

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 27, 1955

The 11th verse, and the 17th and 18th, where our Lord Jesus says, I am the Good Shepherd. The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. Verses 17 and 18, Therefore does my Father love Me, because I lay down My life that I might take it again. No man taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of My Father. Let us pray.

Dear Lord Jesus, Thou art the Good Shepherd. In ancient days Thou didst lead Israel and Joseph like a flock. And Thou art the same unchanged Lord. And Thou art leading them that trust in Thee. We pray that tonight Thou wilt add at least one sheep to thy flock who is lost now but will be found.

O Lord Jesus, encourage us on the hard, heavy, rough way. Make the clouds to roll back and the skies be a little brighter, our hope a little sharper, our faith a little brighter. Help us tonight. Bless these friends who have come out here this cold winter night and will now listen while thy word is being expounded. O Lord, Thou hast said, preach the word. We pray thou grant that we might rightly and worthily expound Thy truth this evening. In Christ’s name, amen.

Here in these verses, we have wonderful, lofty truth. Truth that is beautiful and inspiring, but we also have profound difficulties for the intellect. But I do not apologize, nor do I admit that there is any problem for faith. There is none. I remember the little stanza by Faber when He says, How thou canst love me as thou dost, and be the God thou art, is darkness to the intellect, but sunshine to the heart. What is darkness to the intellect may be sunshine to the heart. The effort to simplify and explain all the profundities of the Christian faith, are ill-timed and ill-considered. There will always be that which is blindness and darkness to the mind, but joy and sunshine to the soul.

Now the difficulty lies in verse 17. Therefore, doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life that I might take it again. Now there is the difficulty. That God’s love for the Son arose and arises from His willingness to lay down His life for His sheep. Because you remember that our Lord Jesus also said in praying to His Father, Thou lovest Me before the foundation of the world, back before time was, the Father loved His Son. Then, therefore doth the Father love Me, because I lay down My life for My sheep.

Now there lies the difficulty. You might simply pass that over, but if you’ll do a little bit of thinking, and certainly if ever there was a time when God’s people ought to think, now is the time. If ever there was a time when we ought to consider deeply the things pertaining to our faith, now is the time. If we think deeply, we would say, well, how could it be that if the teachings of the Christian faith are right, how could it be that God loved His Son only because He was willing to die on a cross and rise again? Well, it’s darkness, or rather it’s twilight to the intellect, but I do not think that it’s beyond our explaining.

You see, my friends, the Christian faith teaches, because the Bible teaches, the two natures of Christ. Christ is not two persons, but the two natures of Christ. This is taught in Christian theology. It has been taught down the years in Christian theology that Jesus has a divine and the human nature. Let me read to you from the ancient creed.

You that are of Dutch extraction and know something about the Dutch Reformed Church, the Dutch Reformed hymnal, you will find this somewhere in the back of your Dutch Reformed hymnal, and you’ll find it also very many other places. It says this in a long explanation of the mystery of the Trinity. It says this, furthermore, it is necessary to everlasting salvation that we also believe rightly the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Now remember, this dates back to the fourth century and is called the Athanasian Creed. This is part of it. For the right faith is that we believe and confess that our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God and man. God of the substance of his Father, begotten before all worlds. Man of the substance of his Mother, born into the world. Perfect God and perfect man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh subsisting. Equal to the Father as touching his Godhead, inferior to the Father as touching his manhood. Who, although He is God and man, yet is He not two, but one Christ. One, not by the conversion of the Godhead into flesh, but by the taking of the manhood into God. One altogether, not by the confusion of substance, but by the unity of person. For as the reasonable soul and flesh is one man, so God and man is one Christ.

Now that is the teaching of the Church. Down the centuries she has believed that Jesus Christ was born or begotten of the Father before all worlds but born of the substance of His Mother into the world, being perfect God and perfect man. Equal to the Father as touching His Godhead, inferior to the Father as touching His manhood.

Now we’ll explain that as we go along, because that says it for us. You know, part of learning is not getting new information, but having somebody that’s smarter than you say things for you that you wish you would have said. That’s part of learning, brethren. It isn’t that you get new information so much as you get it said for you so you can get right hold of it, so it fits into your head and into your heart.

This says for me what I never could have thought of if I lived to be 118 years old, I never could have said it. But now that somebody smarter than I am said it for me, and I realize that it’s Scriptural and fits the word of God to a tee, I can quote it and say, Now I wish I had said that. That’s it.

Now, the two natures of Christ, that’s where we find the explanation here. That He was a man and that He is man is not hard to prove. He was born as other men are born. That is, He was born of a woman. He was baby-sized when He came into the world. I don’t know how much He weighed. I don’t know how much Jewish babies weigh, but I suppose they weigh average, maybe eight, nine, six, eight, nine pounds, boys a little more than girls. But I guess maybe, say that this man, Jesus, say weighed eight pounds. Let’s say He weighed eight pounds, nine pounds, when He was born of a Jewish mother into the world.

And as soon as He was born, He began to eat and cry and grow. And He drank, of course, His mother’s milk. And when He got older, He drank the milk that they provided Him and ate food. And He worked in His supposed father’s shop and He slept. And they had to wake Him in the morning and imagine come and pull Him out of bed as they do little boys. For He was a boy among boys.

Remember it always. He was a man. And sin accepted, He lived like other men. Sin accepted. And the weaknesses contingent upon sin, He had none of them. But He was a man. And I’m sure that Mary, His mother, had to come lots of times and wake Him twice. I never knew a boy to get up the first time. The boy that gets up the first time he’s waked, unless it’s Christmas morning, never was born. And so, huh? Never, never. Nobody, no boy ever gets up. And I don’t think any girl when they’re first waked.

I mention this not to cheapen our conception of Christ, but to humanize it and to show you that this Jesus was born a baby and cried like a baby and ate like a baby and was looked after like a baby and grew like a little boy and ate and drank and worked and slept and finally died. He was a man.

And He called Himself the Son of Man. He loved that title. He was the only person that ever called Himself that. I do not think that, if I think I’m right, that anybody in the New Testament ever called Jesus the Son of Man. But He called Himself the Son of Man. Just as Abraham never said, God is the God of Abraham, but God said, I am the God of Abraham. And Jacob, surely Jacob never would have said, God is the God of Jacob, but God said, I am the God of Jacob.

So, nobody ever said, thou art the Son of Man, but Jesus said, I am the Son of Man and talked about Himself as the Son of Man. And Pilate, when the great old judge there or king, when He saw Him standing before Him the day before the crucifixion or the morning of the crucifixion, He said, ex homo, behold the man. There’s the man. He was struck with the manhood of the man Christ Jesus.

Now we know that He was a man. I don’t think that anybody would doubt that. Our Jewish friends admit that and say that He was. And some of their leaders say that He was the flower of Jewish manhood. So we all agree, Jew and Gentile and Catholic, on this, that Jesus was a man.

Now that He was and is also God is also shown in the Scriptures. He said, for instance, before Abraham was, I am, and I am is the name of Jehovah. Therefore, when He said before Abraham was, I am, He was using the same words, title, I am, as Jehovah had used, though Jesus was not Jehovah, but the son of Jehovah by eternal generation.

And He said, I saw Satan as lightning fall from heaven. Now that was before the foundation of the earth. And therefore He said it, and He must have been God. And He said, destroy this temple and I will raise it up the third day. And He said, the Son of Man has power on earth to forgive sin. And He said, the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of Man and they that hear shall live. And He said, He that has seen Me has seen the Heavenly Father. And He said, whatever ye ask the Father in My name, the Father will give you. And He said in prayer, the glory that I had with Thee before the world was, and Thou lovest Me before the foundation of the world.

So, He claimed here that He went back of creation, claimed that He went back before the world was, claimed that He had such power that the Father would give anything in His name, claimed that He had power on earth to forgive sin, claimed that He had power to raise the dead, claimed that if they destroyed His body He would rise again the third day, claimed that He antedated Abraham and saw Satan in the ancient beginnings fall from heaven.

Now there’s what He claimed for Himself, this Man of whom I’ve spoken. And I say bluntly to you, my listening people, that He was either God or lunatic and there is no middle ground. We do Him no honor and we do not complement our own intellects when we say that He was a good man only. If He was but a good man and not God, then He was a frightfully deceived man to the point of being psychopathic. He was either God or He was lunatic.

Now let us pick out the best men that the world ever knew and let us put in their mouths the words that He spoke so quietly, so calmly. For remember this man Jesus was not a raving maniac. He was not a flaming-eyed, long-haired dreamer that walked about a demagogue rousing the multitudes. He did not lift up His voice nor make his voice heard loudly in the streets, but He walked quietly among the people and only His deeds of power and His wonderful quiet words made Him any different from other men.

He looked so much like all the other Jews that walked up and down in Jerusalem that the very Roman soldier did not know which one He was. The only way they could know which one to crucify was if Judas planted a kiss on Him. He said, I know him. I have been with Him three years and I will kiss Him and then you grab Him. That will be the one.

So, He was betrayed with a kiss. If He had stood out a noble, strong, tall, shining face, beautiful one, they would not have had to go to plant a kiss on His cheek to tell which one He was. There was no beauty in Him that men should desire Him. He looked like other men. And yet the things that He said put in the mouth of any other man that ever lived would turn that man into a blasphemer and a lunatic.

Let us imagine Abraham or Moses. Let us take Moses, the lawgiver. Let us hear Moses say, Before Abraham was, I am. Well, do we know He could not have said that? We know the mother of Moses, and we know that Moses was in descent from Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. We know that Moses would have been a lunatic if He had said, Before Abraham was, I am.

Let us imagine David saying, destroy my body and I will raise it up the third day. Imagine Daniel saying, I have power on earth to forgive sin. Imagine Paul saying, The dead shall hear my voice and they that hear shall live. Imagine John saying, He that has seen me has seen the Father. Imagine Augustine saying, whatever ye ask the Father in my name He will give it you. Imagine Martin Luther saying, the glory that I had with thee before the world was. Imagine it if you can. It would make lunatics out of those men.

Not a one of them dared say it. Not the sweet singer of Israel, not the mighty harpist Isaiah, not the strong seer Ezekiel. No man dared say it, and no man could say it. And the man who said it was either right in saying it and therefore was God, or He was wrong in saying it and was mentally deranged.

But now I ask you, my brethren, could a man who thought He was God and who thought He had seen Abraham and before Abraham was, He was, who thought He could forgive sins only and was deceived, who thought that if He died He’d rise again, who thought that He had been with God before the foundation of the world, who thought that He had power in His name that prayers could be answered, who thought only that the dead should hear His voice and should rise. Suppose He only thought that, and it wasn’t true?

How then, I want to ask you, could He have done the wonderful deeds that He did? Why did the mothers bring their baby to have Him bless them? Why did the poor harlot crawl to His feet and be forgiven? Why did the publican and sinner come to Him and receive words of mercy? Why did that group, that group composed of the finest, some of the finest of the Jewish nation, why did they turn their eyes upon Him and love Him and see Him go into heaven and hear Him say that He would come back again? And why did they rise and in His name go forth to preach Him to the nations?

And why is it that wherever He is preached, men are better for it? You cannot preach a lunatic and make men better. You cannot go to Skid Row and tell a drunkard, here, believe in this lunatic, and the drunkard believes and gets free from his drunkenness. You cannot go into a death cell and preach a lunatic and have that man ready to die, die happy and singing hymns. You cannot go to a man who is bound in the throes of drink and gambling and say to that man, here, believe on this lunatic, and have him get up and believe in that man.

You cannot sit down at the bedside of a dying man and read to him out of the letters of a lunatic and that man smile and raise his feeble hand and mutter the sweet name as he goes off into the next world. You cannot take the name of a lunatic to Borneo and have them turn from head hunting and head shrinking and cannibalism to be hymn singing, joyful, happy people loving each other and living and working and doing fine deeds for other men. You cannot go to the depths of Africa and there among the mud huts and the thatched roof shacks, talk to people who eat their own relatives or eat those of other tribes.

You cannot go and preach to them a lunatic and have them stop their cannibalism and stop their idolatry and burn their idols and turn their eyes toward God in heaven and believe and stop their drinking and stop their taking of drugs and live good, happy, restful, blessed lives. No, no, my friend.

You cannot preach a lunatic and for two thousand years have people come from every clime and nation and tribe and tongue and people around the world and come and give of their substance to help the church. You cannot preach a lunatic to a young man and have him go and give up all and go to the ends of the world for nothing, for a cheap, poor little salary that you couldn’t live on in America one month. No, no, no.

These are not the words of a lunatic. Before Abraham was, I am. All a lunatic can do is make other lunatics. All a man who is a psychopathic case can do when he talks is make other people like himself.

But this quiet, peaceful, peace-loving, loving Man makes others like Himself. And the man of bad temper quiets down, and the man who beats his wife stops beating his wife, and the man who gambles begins to spend his money for groceries and good furniture, and the man who lies around drunk comes home now nights and sleeps in his own bed, and the thief stops stealing, and the liar stops lying, and the drunkard stops drinking, and the jealous person begins to hate his jealousy and seek to be freed from it. And the mean man starts being sweet-tempered, and the evil woman starts being friendly and kind.

This Man does it, and He does it because He is God. He does it because He is of the substance of His Father begotten before the world was, and of the substance of His mother born into the world. A reasonable soul and human flesh consisting, who though He is both God and man, yet is He not two but one Christ. One not by the degrading of His Godhead into flesh, but by the lifting up of manhood into God.

Oh, the nobility of this kind of truth, my brother. You don’t have to apologize for this. You don’t have to go among men looking down at the ground and wishing you were a modernist. You don’t have to go anywhere in the world and take a back seat and say, I’m sorry, but I want the lowest place because I’m just a poor Christian. The noblest, loftiest truths that ever crowned the mountain peaks of thought are found in the New Testament.

And He says, Therefore doth my Father love Me because if the Father had loved Him without any cause from the foundation of the world, if He had been with the Father before a star shone or a mountain reared its head, if He had been with God before there was an angel or a seraphim or an archangel by the sea of God, why did He have to say, Therefore my Father loves Me because I laid down my life for the sheep?

There were two natures there, my brethren. Equal to His Father as touching His godhood, less than His Father as touching His manhood. When He talked about Himself as God and equal with God, He spoke these wonderful words. But when He talked about himself as man, He humbled himself and spoke meekly as man.

Now let’s give you some examples here to illustrate what I have in mind. His two natures are here. He spoke sometimes of His godhead and sometimes of His manhood. When He said, I and my Father are one, He spoke of His ancient and unborn godhead. When He said, My Father is greater than I, He spoke of His manhood. When He said, Thou lovest me before the foundation of the world, He spoke of His godhood. When He said, therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life, He spoke of His manhood. When He said, all men should honor the Son as they honor the Father, He spoke of His godhood. When He said, The Son can do nothing of Himself, He spoke of His manhood.

So, the Son is God in Himself, but not God of Himself, but of the Father alone. So, there’s the darkness of it, but I think there’s a little light in that darkness.

A man wrote me a five-page letter and accused me, among other things, of being too metaphysical. He heard me preach once and said He didn’t like it. But He accused me of being metaphysical. I don’t know whether He called this metaphysics or not, but I know that it has gotten into our hymnbooks, and we have sung it, and the simple people who don’t know what the word metaphysics means have sung it. Little, black-robed ladies down the years and noble bearded men as well as fine young people have risen and sung of the deity of Jesus and of the wonders of God. They have sung the psalms of David and the golden sentences of Paul set to sweet music by a Bernard or a Montgomery or a Watts or a Wesley.

So we have here the Good Shepherd. So, when you read in the Bible and it sounds humble and lowly, and He disclaims any credit or any power or any wisdom or any goodness, no, He’s talking about His manhood.

And then when wonderfully He speaks boldly as though He were God—remember He’s speaking about His Godhood—who though He be both God and man, yet is He not two but one Christ, God that He might represent God the Father, man that He might represent us, and that He might unite God and man in one holy Person, that He might take God by His right hand and man by His right hand and clasp them together and acquaint them one with another and introduce the wandering sheep to the Heavenly Father. And He said here, the Good Shepherd giveth His life for His sheep. No man taketh it from Me. He was not a martyr.

Let us not listen to those who paint a picture of Jesus as a good man who went too far, a good man that was so extreme and so zealous that they finally slew Him and He became a martyr to a noble idea. He said, No man taketh it from Me. Not all of Jewry could have done it. Not all the armies of Rome could have done it. In the Old Testament we read of Elijah, and they sent out fifty men to take Elijah. Elijah looked up casually and said, look down there, God. He said, Fifty men. Fire came down and destroyed those men. It was repeated over and finally one man came crawling on his hands and knees and said, Please, Elijah, please.

He said, don’t burn me. How much more could this man? He said, If I wanted to, twelve legions of angels would come to My help now. Legion, they tell me, a thousand. He said, these could have come to my aid. No, no man taketh it from Me. Because He could say, Before Abraham was, I am. Destroy my body and I’ll raise it again. I have power to forgive sin. I will speak and the dead shall rise. I will sit on the throne of My great glory and before Me shall all nations come for judgment.

No man could have taken His life away from Him. A Stephen they could kill. A James they could kill with the sword. But Jesus they could not have touched. No man taketh it from Me. He wasn’t a martyr. The man who wrote about the martyr and the maid and all, He was wise enough to begin with Stephen and not with Jesus. He said, that martyr first whose eagle eye could scan beyond the blue.

That was Stephen, not Jesus. Jesus was not a martyr. No martyr lays his life down. They take away from him. But He said, I lay it down of Myself. He was a sacrifice, not a martyr. John the Baptist said, Behold the Lamb of God. And the Lamb is dear to the heart of every Jew, dear to the heart of every Jewish family from the days of Moses and the Passover. The Lamb, the Passover Lamb, they all had the Lamb. And I still guess in some Jewish circles they still do have the Passover Lamb or go through some kind of ceremony that dates back there.

But when John saw Jesus, He said, Behold the Lamb. It wasn’t a Gentile that said, Behold the Lamb. It was a Jew that said it. And He didn’t say it about a Gentile. He said it about another Jew, for Jesus was a Jew. Behold the Lamb of God. So, He was a sacrifice, not a martyr.

Now, it was by the covenant between the Father and the Son. I have power to lay My life down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father. There was the covenant and the full agreement between the Father and the Son. He came from the heart of the Father to take flesh by the agreement of the Father and by the agreement of His own heart in covenant with the Father that He might die for His sheep.

Now, the Shepherd has three offices. The Good Shepherd, John 10:11, we’ve talked about, dies for His sheep. And the Great Shepherd in Hebrews 13 lives for His sheep. And the Chief Shepherd in 1 Peter 5 comes for His sheep. Notice that Hebrew passage, a very wonderful passage. It says, Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that Great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you perfect in every good work to do His will, working in you that which is well-pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. He is here called the Great Shepherd of the sheep. What is He as a Great Shepherd doing? As a Great Shepherd He is at the right hand of the Father, caring for His sheep, praying for His sheep.

Arise, my soul, arise, we sang tonight. Shake off thy guilty fear as the Bleeding Sacrifice that in thy behalf appears. Who is that bleeding sacrifice? The man, Christ Jesus.

That Great Shepherd is a good, faithful, loyal Shepherd. He voluntarily laid down His life for His sheep. And you know He laid down His life for you, whether you believe it or not. He laid down His life for you, whether you knew it or not up to tonight. He laid down His life for you, whether you ever do anything about it or not. He did it. He put you everlastingly in debt, this shepherd, by laying down His life for the sheep. And if you turn against Him and smite the very cheek that was once dead on a cross for you, it’s still true. The Shepherd laid down His life for the sheep, the good, faithful Shepherd.

Now the Great Shepherd, above all man’s hate, and above death, and above sickness, and above time, and above space, and at the right hand of the Almighty God, He sits and advocates above, the Savior by the throne of love. And on His hands are the names of His people, and on His shoulders and cut into His bosom, like the high priest of the ancient temple, He carries the names of His people. My poor little name, so little known in this world, but there engraven on the stone carried by the great high priest, Jesus Christ, at the right hand of God, the Good Shepherd, the Great Shepherd, the Shepherd of Israel, and the Shepherd of His people.

So, He’s there, the Great Shepherd. But that’s not all. First Peter 5 says, feed the flock of God which is among you. You see, He had this in mind. Peter had heard this 10th chapter of John spoken by Jesus himself, and so He said, feed the flock of God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof, willingly, not for filthy lucre’s sake, but of a ready mind, neither as being lords over God’s heritage, but being ensamples to the flock.

And when the Chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away. Here He’s called the Chief Shepherd. As the Good Shepherd, He dies for His sheep. As the Great Shepherd, He lives for His sheep. And as the Chief Shepherd, He comes for His sheep.

Brethren, the next major event in the history of the world will not be the dropping of a cobalt bomb on Moscow or New York. It will not be the defeat or the victory of Russia. It will not be common commercial supersonic travel. It will not be any of the scientific wonders that will certainly develop within the next few years. It will not be any of those things. The next major event in the history of the world will be when the Chief Shepherd appears to crown His faithful people and take His flock out of a dingy, sin-blasted world to take them to be with Him. That’s the next major event of the world.

Now, I don’t know when it’ll happen. Don’t you dare to interpret what I say as being that I teach that the Lord will come tonight or tomorrow. I don’t know when He’ll come. I’m not that close to the secret counsels of the Almighty. I only know that there’ll never be an event as major as that event when He does come. If it’s a thousand years or a hundred or ten or five or one, when it comes, it’ll be an event second only to His first coming.

When the Chief Shepherd appears, then He shall crown those who have been faithful to Him. There’s a motive, you see. There is an objective. There’s something to drive at. There’s a reason for being a Christian.

I want to close now by asking, He is the Good Shepherd and He died for you. And He is the Great Shepherd and He is pleading for His sheep. And He is the Chief Shepherd and He’s coming for His sheep. But I want to ask you, are you one of His found sheep? Are you one of His found sheep? The Good Shepherd.

I heard the voice of Jesus say, come unto me and rest. Lay down, thou weary one, lay down thy head upon My breast. I came to Jesus as I was weary and worn and sad. I found in Him a resting place and He has made me glad. I heard the voice of Jesus say, I am this dark world light. Come unto me, thy morn shall rise and all thy days be bright. I came to Jesus and I found in Him my star, my sun. And in His light of life, I’ll walk till traveling days are done.

Have you heard His voice calling you home? Have you come? Will you come? Will you come now? The Good Shepherd who claims you by right of life laid down. If He wanted your money or wanted your vote, I wouldn’t represent Him. If He wanted to make you a victim and a blind follower, I wouldn’t represent Him. But He proved that He had nothing to claim from you by giving you all He had. He poured out His life for you, wonderful love.

And when the Good Shepherd gave His life for the sheep surely, He wasn’t out to get anything from the sheep. He doesn’t want anything you have; He wants your love. Remember that the shepherd-sheep relationship is a relationship of faith and love, not a relationship of law, but of faith and love and loyalty and trust.

So, you can right now, where you are, turn your faith and love to the Shepherd of the sheep. And right where you are, you can this minute believe and put your trust in the great Good Shepherd who died for you. And from the right hand of the Father, He’ll be your Great Shepherd. And when He comes as the Chief Shepherd of the world, He’ll receive you and take you to Himself. Are you, His sheep?

Oh, I think of myself as being a pretty scrubby sheep. Sheep come in with cockleburrs in their wool and Spanish needles and chunks torn out where they sneaked under a barbed wire fence, and bruises where they carelessly batted up against a sharp rock. But they’re still sheep, and they’re still recognized by the shepherd, and they’re still known by him, and they still know his voice.

And that’s what He meant when He had David write, The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures, and He leadeth me beside the still waters, and He restoreth my soul. What does that mean, He restoreth my soul? Why, his soul got bit out of quack, and the Great Shepherd restores his soul again.

And He anointeth my head with oil, and only one person out of ten thousand knows what it meant. He anointeth my head with oil. But the old Jewish shepherds used to call their sheep in at the cool of the day, when the night birds were beginning to croak in the dark shadows of the trees, when the first stars were appearing.

As He stood in the door, and they passed by him, and He grabbed each head and pulled it up and looked down at the face. And if there were any scars or rather new, fresh wounds where maybe they’d gotten bumped or some old sheep had batted them or they had bumped into a rock or had gotten scratched, He had a horn of oil, and He carefully poured this oil and rubbed it into the sore. The next morning it was beginning to heal, and in a day or two it was all right. He anointeth my head with oil.

My cup runneth over, and how many know what that means? The shepherd not only had his horn of oil for the sheep that had a bruised head, but He had a bit of water there for the sheep that had been too slow or too stupid or too stubborn. When the Lord let them beside the still water, the sheep was too busy and didn’t get a drink.

And so, when the shepherd looked at him, He notices he’s thirsty, and so He has some water for him. My cup runneth over. He gives him a cup of water, not a little stingy, grudging cup, but runs it over. The sheep gets all He wants.

Well, all I want to know is, tonight, is He your Shepherd? If He isn’t, this would be the night, the very night.

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Tozer Talks

Five Rules for Christian Living

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 21, 1954

There was a time in the development of the Church of Christ on Earth when the saints spoke very much of what they called rules for holy living. And various spiritual treasures were said to have accrued to those who adhered to these rules. They were not always the same. Each Christian had to work out his rules for himself. And many holy souls there have been who have left us in their writings, particularly in their autobiographies, these rules which they followed.

Now I have been dealing with that now these two Sundays. Last week I presented to you a set of five rules to govern our attitude toward five basic relationships on Earth. I only got as far as the first two and I promised that I would finish now, today. God has mercifully permitted me to live this week out and to begin at least to finish these rules.

I said that we were to do five things. First, our attitude toward all created things, that we were to venerate them because they are the flowing garments of the Deity. God cannot be seen with the naked eye, so God veils Himself in His creation. And walks forth and rides forth upon the wings of the wind with the garments trailing and we call those trailing garments, nature, His creation.

Then, our attitude toward all men, we are to honor them because they are made in the image of God. I think not too much emphasis can ever be placed upon the doctrine of the divine image as originally given. Just as you can have an inspired Bible as originally given and yet have translations that are so inaccurate and unscholarly and confuse that they give but an imperfect concept of the perfection of the original.

So, we, because of sin, personal sin, sins of nature and of conduct and our sin in Adam, we are but a grotesque, badly distorted and imperfect representation of what must have been meant by the original image of God. But for the sake of that image, we are to honor all men.

Then the next is all Christians. Our attitude toward them is that we are to love them because they are children of God.

Our attitude toward God, fourthly, we are to fear him in that he is the high and lofty one that inhabits eternity, the Ancient of Days dwelling in unapproachable light.

And then since we are here on earth, we are for the time being within the framework of human government, therefore we have certain attitudes that we must make or hold toward constituted authority, called the king here. And that is we are to honor them because they are ordained of God.

The first two I dealt with, venerate all created things and honor all men.

Now we come to, love the brotherhood, that is the brotherhood of the redeemed Christians. This cannot mean, cannot possibly mean, love the people of your denomination. Thus to interpret it is to violate it. It cannot mean love the members of your church. That is, it does mean that, but it cannot possibly stop there. And it does not certainly mean love the group that holds with you on some mute questions, such as baptism or interpretations of prophecy.

It means love the brotherhood of the redeemed. It means love the born-again brother who wears a robe on the hot days and preaches in it. It means love the man who is a careful addict to Lent and Holy Week, even though we of a more liberal interpretation of things smile at it and know that every Friday is Good Friday, and every Sunday is Easter. But he is in the brotherhood and therefore we are to love him.

It means to love every Christian, whoever there is a scrap of evidence that he is a Christian indeed. And our attitude therefore is expressed in these two words, really one word, love, love them. But I am forced to say here that that word love may mean a score of things and it does mean a score of things, depending upon who uses it and the association in which it is found.

Love is a chameleon word. It changes its color with the association. Wherever it is, it takes on the color of the persons who use it. And here it means a principle of goodwill and it means more but we will start there. Love all Christians means to hold toward them an attitude of complete goodwill, desiring always and only their highest welfare.

Now that is a kind of love, that is not all there is to it. But that is a kind of love, it is a principle of goodwill. I think that is too well known to need repeating. But this principle of goodwill is a strong thing, and it is a determining thing. And it is like a set of steel rails that keeps the Christian on the track, the right track with the regard to his brethren. And it means that as long as he is on that track and is loving the brotherhood, he cannot possibly wish to any Christian anything but good.

And then it means more than that. If we make love only a principle, then we rob it of all its enjoyable qualities. Because love is more than that, it is an emotional heat as well, a heat that desires to be nearer its object.

For instance, the Scripture says, draw nigh to me and I will draw nigh to you. Why is God saying to us, draw nigh? Obviously because He wants us near him. And we are always being exhorted to come to Him, to live with Him, to stay by Him, to be where He is and to let Him be where we are.

And why did God go looking for Adam in the cool of the day, back yonder in the tragic circumstances that surrounded the fall of man? It was because God wanted to be where Adam is. And love may be detected by the fact that it desires to be near its object. And if it does not desire to be near its object, then it may be some kind of an ethical principle, a negative ethical principle that does not wish anybody any harm. But it is not love in the biblical sense of the term.

And then it is an emotional heat which will overlook flaws and weaknesses. Even God says that He knows our frame and He remembers that we are dust. There may be on earth a saint. I say there may be on earth a saint somewhere. No, I won’t even go that far. But it’s conceivable that we could imagine there being somewhere on earth a saint that could walk straight into the presence of God and fellowship with Him without embarrassment and know that God saw no fault in him. But I have never met one. And if ever I met one who said it was true of him, I would know that I hadn’t met one. We have never seen one, never heard of one.

Saint Augustine and all the rest knew that their right to fellowship the most holy God was purchased by the blood of Jesus. And it was only through the blood of the everlasting covenant that they dared enter and that they fellowshipped God.

So that God is forced to overlook certain flaws in us. He’s bound to do it, otherwise he’d have no friends among the sons of men. Even Abraham, his friend, he had to overlook flaws and weaknesses in that friend, so that love will overlook weaknesses.

No homely daughter was ever known to be homely by her mother or her father because love covers up homeliness. And no woman ever yet married a homely man. And no man ever yet married a homely woman, though strangely enough there are lots of homely men and women who are married. The reason is that the emotional glow that came upon them completely hid from each other what everybody else knew.

Now God never yet saw anybody that didn’t look good to Him. He never looked on a face that wasn’t sweet. He never heard a voice that wasn’t soft. Never, because God’s great blazing heat of love disguises the harshness of our voices and the homeliness of our faces and the flaws of our characters and hides them from Himself, knowing that He, by grace and through the blood of the Lamb, is in process, for they are in process of perfection.

There will be a day when He’ll look at them unembarrassed and they look in His face unembarrassed and His nature will be on their foreheads, and they will fellowship God as the angels. But that time is not now. We can fellowship with God as the angels, but always God must wink at the fact that we are but dust. And love always does that.

And extending that now to the brethren, love naturally overlooks faults and blemishes in our brethren, in those who are true Christian brethren. And then, love also is an emotional heat that will lead to sacrifice and suffering on the part of the one who feels it for the person that they love.

When we sacrifice and suffer, we need go no further back than the cross or even before the cross when our Lord Jesus Christ, for the joy that was set before Him and for the completion of the work that He had come to do, allowed Himself to be mistreated and maligned and cursed and called a devil. He suffered, not that He had to do it, but He suffered.

I remember hearing a great preacher, one of the greatest ever to touch American shores when he was going in the days of his great preaching, Paul Rader. I remember his preaching on the text, He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter. He took that verb brought and said what brought him. And then he raced speedily over the powers of earth and the things that could bring and compel and showed that none of them could have brought Him. And then said what brought Him and answered it, love brought Him. And nothing else could bring him. Love brought Him out with a constraining power that He couldn’t resist and didn’t want to resist.

And so, love will lead people to do things that nothing else in the wide world will lead them to do. And then continue to do it and want to do it. And wonder why they are wanting to do it. And then it will go so far as to give its life for its object. It would be a cliché for me to remind you that there are tens of thousands of mothers who have given their lives for their children. And not only mothers but fathers too. And Jesus Christ said that we were friends, who laid down His life for His brethren; greater love has no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.

Now this love is the attitude we are to take toward our Christian brethren, we are to hold it toward them all the time. And it’s never to be varied. And it’s a love that is impossible to feel toward the person out of Christ. Because it is a love given particularly to God’s children. Because they are God’s children. He that loveth Him that beget love also them that are begotten of Him.

Now the next is, fear God. Now this is that astonished reverence of which the great Faber writes. And it may grade up from its basic elements the terror of the guilty soul before a holy God. It may grade up from there to the fascinated rapture of the worshiping saint.

I don’t want to be dealing in superlatives. I used to deal in superlatives altogether. I doubt whether up until I was well on into my ministry I ever modified anything. Or put in anywhere a qualifying phrase. Everything was emphatically what it was without a qualifier. But I have long learned that that isn’t a wise way to look at the world or anything else for that matter. And there are very few unqualified things.

But I’d like to say that I believe that I can testify that the reverential fear of God mixed with love and fascination and astonishment and admiration, and devotion is the most enjoyable thing and the most purifying emotion a human soul can know. Without it I could not exist long a Christian.

I guess there are persons who without any spiritual experience are strong enough simply to live by ethics. I remember Benjamin Franklin. He was a deist and no Christian at all, never was. Whitfield prayed for him and told him he was praying for him, but he said, I guess it did no good because I’m not saved yet. That was when he wrote his autobiography.

But Benjamin Franklin drew what we call now graphs or a chart, a square, and then he divided that into many little squares and on those little squares he wrote virtues. Honesty, faithfulness, charity. I guess there were a dozen or maybe 25 of these virtues, I remember in his chart. And he had that worked into a calendar somehow or other.

And when he would violate one of these virtues, he’d write that down and they’re in the square. And when he had gone a day or a month or a year without having broken any of his self-imposed commandments why then he considered that he was pretty well along. He had no spiritual experience, no sense of the divine, no mystic overtone, no worship, no reverence, no fear of God before his eyes, according to his own testimony and yet he lived like that.

All I can say is more power to you Ben, because I don’t belong to that breed of man. I can only keep right by keeping the fear of God on my soul and the fascinated rapture of worship. Apart from that I don’t know any rules at all.

Now it may, I say, grade up from the trembling and hiding of the guilty man to the ecstasy of the saint. But this fear of God is a missing quality in the Church today and its absence is a portent and a sign. There are those who are trying very desperately bad to reintroduce the fear of God into the Church and they’re doing it by threatening man and by pointing to physical dangers that assail us.

May I repeat what I think I must have said somewhere back down the weeks as we dealt with all this? May I repeat that the fear of God never can be induced by fear of danger? That the fear of God can never be induced by threats of punishment. It is totally impossible to induce the biblical fear of God by threatening a man. You can scare a man white, and you can make him do right.

Any thief will behave in the presence of the policeman, but the fear of God is another thing altogether. It has absolutely no relation, or if so, a remote ancient relation with the fear that comes as a threat of danger. You see, my friend, a great many repentances spring up out of fear of punishment. And as soon as the danger is removed, the repentance is removed along with it.

As the old Omar Khayyam said somewhere that he had repented so many times, but when spring came, rose in hand, he tore his garments of repentance and said, was I sober when I swore that I would obey God?

In an hour of fear, or in a threat of danger, or the apprehension of punishment, it’s one thing to be morally afraid, that’s one thing. But it’s quite something else to know the fear of God.

When the Bible says there’s no fear of God before their eyes, it doesn’t mean that they’re not scared of punishment. It’s not accusing them of being cowards. Or is he saying that they are so brave that they have no fear? He is saying there’s no fear of God before their eyes. There may be fear of the corner policeman. There may be fear of death. There may even be fear of hell. But that’s not the fear of God.

The astonished reverence, the breathless adoration, the awesome fascination, the lofty admiration of the attributes of God, the sense of hushed reverence, breathless silence, when we know that God is near. That’s the fear of God. And it hovers like the cloud over Israel. It lies upon us like a sweet invisible mantle. It conditions our inner emotional life. It gives meaning to every text of Scripture. It makes every Sunday and every Wednesday and every Saturday and every Monday a holy day. It makes every spot of ground a holy ground, this fear of God. But this is what we do not have today.

There’s a great deal of preaching that is using as its fulcrum to get leverage on man, using the fear of communism or the fear of the collapse of civilization or the fear of invasion from some other planet by the mysterious saucers. This fear is upon man, and it is upon man. And Jesus even said, men’s hearts shall be failing them because of fear of things that are coming on the earth, but that’s not fear of God. The fear of God is a spiritual thing and can only be brought by the presence of God. When the Holy Ghost came at Pentecost, there was great fear upon all people, yet they weren’t afraid of anything.

The child of God that is made perfect in love has no fear because perfect love casts out fear, and yet he is the man of all men who most fears God. For the fear of God is not to be afraid of God. It is to be so awestruck in His presence that we bite our tongues, and we say, silence becometh my soul before thee, O God, my Help and my Redeemer.

Now this accompanies a person. So far as I know, John wasn’t much afraid of anything except when he ran away from Jesus when he was arrested. He was scared and ran. He was afraid of the officers and afraid of getting chucked into jail or maybe crucified. So he ran away. That was the fear of punishment, the fear of danger.

But when he saw a man standing with a white robe and girded round the breast with a golden girdle and with feet like under burnished brass and with a sword proceeding from His mouth and His hair as white as snow and His face shining like the sun in His strength, the awe and reverence and fascination and fear concentrated in his life so completely that it knocked him unconscious. And this Holy Priest of the Most High God whom he later found was Jesus Christ who had the keys of death and hell. He had to come and lift him up and bring life back into him.

I don’t know, but John might have lain there, maybe died there out of shock. And yet he wasn’t afraid. He wasn’t afraid in the sense that he feared punishment. No punishment was threatening. It was another kind of fear. It was godly fear. It was a holy thing, and John felt it. And this is what’s missing in our terrible day. You can’t induce it by soft organ music and light streaming through artistically designed windows.

Ah, brethren, the fear of God is a beautiful thing. For it is worship. It is love. It is veneration. It is a high moral happiness that God exists. It is a delight that God is, that’s so great, that the soul feels that if God were not, it would cease to be. It could easily pray, O my God, continue to be as Thou art or let me die. It could easily pray, O my God, continue to be the God Thou art or annihilate me. I can’t think of any other God but Thee. It is to be so personally and hopelessly in love with the person of God that the idea of a transfer of affection could never even remotely exist in the human mind. That’s the fear of God.

And I say that it’s missing in our terrible day. And because it’s missing, we’re sewing up the veil of the temple again. And artificially, they’re trying artificially to induce some kind of worship. And to get people scared, we threaten them with atom bombs, cobalt bombs, and flying saucers. I think the devil in hell must laugh and God must grieve. For there’s no fear of God before their eyes.

Lastly, honor the king. And here the reason for everything appears. See, everything is so logical, so well laid out in the kingdom of God. Every little plot of ground is like a beautifully laid out garden. No confusion, it’s not a wilderness but a beautiful garden. It is seen here that we venerate all things because they are God’s creation. We honor all men because they were made in God’s image. We love all Christians because they are God’s children, and we are in the ties of kin, make us love Christians. And we fear God just because God is God. And we honor the king.

Now I must talk a minute on that and close. What does it mean, honor the king? I thought maybe the word honor all men and honor the king were two different words, but I find in the Greek they’re the same word. Honor all men, honor the king. How can it be, that we are told to honor the king and then we are told to honor all men? That would include the king, therefore why waste words?

The answer is that there are two different degrees and kinds of honor. Honor is given for something, you see. There is some reason back of honor. Honor is bestowed not arbitrarily but for a cause. And the honor we give to men is given to them for the cause that they are men. The honor that we give to kings, those in authority, is an honor that’s bestowed on them for the reason that they are rulers in a God-ordained society.

So, it’s two different kinds of honor. It’s honored on a different level. We give a king two honors. By a king, of course, I do not mean only a king called by that name. I mean any appointed, elected, or otherwise constituted authority. We honor the king first as a man.

We honor President Eisenhower. You can’t look at his smiling picture without loving the man. We honor him because, first of all, he’s a man. God made Eisenhower. I think He did a good job of it, myself. But He made him. And He made his brothers. And He made his parents. He made Eisenhower, all right? We honor Eisenhower because he’s a man.

That is one degree of honor we give him, and that’s the highest degree. And in the long run, that’s the last honor and the highest honor we can give him. But because he is in the framework of constituted society, ordained of God, because he is our, not ruler, but leader, its chief executive, we honor him as such.

So, kings are honored, not because they intrinsically have anything any other person doesn’t have. The little housewife, lovely little woman with the two pretty kids there in England, we honor the queen. But any mother in the wide world of any skin color, we honor also.

But we honor Queen Elizabeth because she happens to be head of a great commonwealth. So she gets two honors. We honor her as a woman. We honor her as a queen. We honor Governor Stratton as a man among men. We honor him as a governor, temporarily serving over us. So, we honor constituted authority because God ordained it to be so. I don’t think there’s much else to say. There we have it.

These are the five rules, and they’re not a yoke on our neck. They’re not a burden on our hearts. They are the kind words of God telling us how we are to live: Toward creation, veneration. Toward men, honor. Toward God, fear. Toward our Christian brethren, love. Toward established government, honor that eventuates in obedience.

Personally, I think that if we trusted God Almighty and the power of the inmoving Holy Ghost to fulfill this in us, we’d show an example of Christianity in the 20th century such as hasn’t been seen for a long time.

Isn’t it worth our praying then and yielding and surrendering? Isn’t it worth our asking God at any cost to help us to so be in tune with His universe that the raindrop or the trembling leaf or the cry of the bird thrills us with a veneration for all God’s world?

That the sound of a human voice, though speaking a language we don’t understand, thrills us with the thought, here’s a man once made in God’s image. The sight of a Christian face, whether of our denomination or not, thrills us with the thought, here is one born of the Father, my own kinfolk. And the presence of the law reminds us of the goodness of God in organizing society for us and helping it to hold together so our houses are safe, and we can walk the streets with a relatively high degree of safety.

Amen. May God help us to live by these five rules.

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Messages

Tozer Talks

Venerate all God’s Creation

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 14, 1954

First Peter, the second chapter, the seventeenth verse, Peter says, honor all men, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the king. Now he’s writing in a flowing rhythm of ideas, but what he says is so compact, so profound that I have to break it up into pieces, and I will simply break out verse 17 there, as though it stood alone, and let the admonition of the Apostle come home to us, honor all men, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the king.

Now, we’ll never understand anything very well until we learn that the right understanding of existence is theological, that it’s only as things are seen from the sanctuary that they are seen in focus.

We can see bits of disconnected truth here and there, and call it by various names, botany, astronomy, geology, and several dozen others. They are the study of bits, shattered fragments of truth, broken off from the main sphere of truth. But we’ll never understand them, and we’ll never understand their relation to each other, or their relation to us, until we go into the sanctuary, and there in the presence of the Holy God, recognize that the key to the meaning of existence is a theological key. It is the Theos, the God who gives meaning to life, and to all things that we know.

Now, there are two very prominent and bold branches of study which have claimed to understand life, or at least have tried to understand it, and are trying to understand it. One is philosophy, and the other is science.

Philosophy is reason, searching for the answer to the riddle of existence in its own head. For that’s where men begin, you know, in their own heads. There are two, the philosophers have two ideas. One is that all ideas originate when inside your head, and that if you were born into a vacuum and spent your life in a vacuum, and never had any contact with your five senses with the outside world, you’d still generate ideas, because ideas generate inside your head. Now that’s one school of thought.

The other school of thought is that an idea never generated inside your head since the beginning of time. They only are there because they have been put there by something on the outside. You have felt something, smelled something, touched something, heard something, seen something. Your five senses have gotten in contact with the outside world, and so you’ll get an idea. If they can’t agree, I don’t know how they’re going to help me. They don’t even know where their ideas originate.

But nevertheless, they’re trying to understand, and I’m not speaking slightingly of them, because I suppose it’s better to sit down and try to think your way to an answer to the riddle of existence than it would be to attend a horse race or do something else that would harm you. But they, because they’re forced to go inside their own heads, they have never learned the answer to the riddle of existence.

And of course, the other major answer, or attempted answer, is science. And science is reason searching for the riddle of existence, the answer to it, not in ideas and in their own heads, but out in nature. It is knowledge obtained by observation and experiment. They do not begin with their heads; they begin with the nature outside. They weigh, and they measure, and they analyze, and they experiment, and they observe, and they put it down, and they check it against other observations and other experiments, and then they arrive at some kind of truth. And this, as long as it touches nature, it’s a valid truth.

Science gave us these lights, they had to know what they were doing. Science put your automobile on wheels, they had to know what they were doing. Science built the bridges across which you will go on your way home, they had to know something.

So, we’re not saying they don’t know, we’re only saying that what they know is a shattered fragment of truth, not the truth itself. The key is God. Hence, the godly man is the real sage.

I’ve said this before, but I must say it again, both for emphasis and because it fits in here like a hand in a glove, that you and I, as evangelical Christians, must get over a bad habit we have. And that bad habit is looking up respectfully to the man who is supposed to be very learned.

My friend, the wisest man in the world is the man who knows the most about God. And the only real sage worthy of the name is the one who realizes that the answer to life is a theological answer and not a scientific one or a philosophical one. It is a theological one. You begin with God, and when you begin with God, then you understand everything in its proper context, and everything fits into shape and form when you begin with God.

So instead of our humbling ourselves and looking up with meek deference to the man of learning, we should remember that he is only learned in shattered fragments of truth, whereas the simplest Christian that came into the kingdom day before yesterday is learned at the center of truth. He knows God. And in knowing God, he knows potentially more than all the teachers could ever teach us, because they’re on the outside looking in and he’s on the inside looking out.

Now, Peter wrote here some practical things, and I want to talk about them with the understanding that the understanding of it all has got to be a theological one. We’ve got to begin with God and put God in there and recognize that God belongs in the middle of all this, and that all doors must be opened with the key called God, faith in God, and that any understanding at all of life must be divinely given and must have God as the great central pillar that bears up the universe.

Peter gave us here four things to do, and I want, in order to get it before you, I want to prefix one which I draw from the entire Scripture. I will take the four that Peter has given us here, prefix one to have five for the reasons that will appear and talk to you about the five things that the Christian should do if he is to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. The five things are to venerate all things, honor all men, love all Christians, fear God, and honor the authorities.

Now, those are the five things. We’ll begin with the one that I borrow from the Old Testament, and I’m sure Peter wouldn’t care because he quotes from that Old Testament, too, venerate all things.

Now, the Old Testament is literally a rhapsody on the natural creation. You go to Moses and get away from the Levitical order and let Moses begin to soar, as he does in the Book of Deuteronomy, and you will find that Moses was acutely conscious of the presence of God in all creation. Go on to the Book of Job and go to the latter sections of the book of Job, and in the mouth of God they have placed language there that is sublime as descriptions of the world around us.

Then go on to the Book of Psalms, and you’ll find David literally dancing with ecstatic delight as he gazes out upon the wonder of God’s world. And go on into the Book of Isaiah, and you will find such lofty imagery there, and yet imagery that is not fanciful nor flighty, but that sticks very close to the natural facts as Isaiah observed them.

And come on into the New Testament and soar on through the Epistles and on to the Book of Revelation itself, and you will find a creation from the creatures and beasts and elders and angels around the throne of God, down to the simplest believer, all engaged in admiring God and the works of God.

Take for instance that 104th Psalm. I do not suppose that there is in all collected literature anything that is so rhapsodic, so ecstatic, so elevated, so glowing with religious rapture as the 104th Psalm, as the man of God contemplates nature. He begins, Bless the Lord, O my soul, O Lord, my God, Thou art very great, Thou art clothed with honor and majesty. Thou surroundest Thyself with light as with a garment.

Then from there on he begins to describe all in divine context with God in the center of it, like a shining light, he begins to describe all the world that he knew around about him. He said that God had planted the earth in the pillars of the earth deep, and that the waters had rushed up so high they had gone over the mountains, and God had rebuked the waters, and they had been frightened and fled away and collected themselves together into seas, and the dry land had appeared. And that water then had gone into the sky as mists, and those very clouds were the chariots of God in which He rode as He went round the earth, looking at His creation and admiring the works of His own hand.

And then up at the tops of the mountain and out in the blue, blue sky, the chill winds chill the mists, and they come down, watering the hills below from the chambers of God, pouring out the bottles of His refreshing waters upon the thirsty ground below. And that water then seeps away and little trickles and then into larger streams and then on out into rivers and out to the sea.

And beside those rivers, says the enraptured psalmist, the green grass grows, and the wild ass goes stomping in of a hot noon day and slakes his thirst in the moving stream and drinks of the cooling waters, and then gets up lazily and goes out to crop the succulent grass or lie by the hedge somewhere and just enjoy the works of God. But he doesn’t stop there. He tells us that and raises our sights until we see standing on the rocks in the hills yonder the wild goat, which is his home.

And we see him silhouetted against the sky yonder, standing majestic and alone, looking down like a monarch upon all the valleys and the little hills below. And then he lowers our sights and lets us see and we smile as we see the little tailless conies as they run into the rocks for their hiding place. Then he says that the pine tree grows and the fir and the cedar and in the branches of the cedar the birds build their nest and sing among the boughs and that the creatures get up at night.

When the moon rides high in the sky, the nocturnal beasts come out of their dens and move out and roar their defiance to the wide world and hunt their prey. And then when the moon goes down and the sun begins to come up like a bridegroom adorned, then the beasts slink back away into their cooled dens and lazily sleep away the hot day. But, he says half humorously, man ariseth and goes forth unto his work until the evening.

Then when the evening shades prevail, the moon takes up its wondrous tale, then man goes back and lazes away the long cool night and the beasts walk around and search for their prey. He gives us these pictures and then goes on to tell us of the creatures that cry to God and God gives them their food. The ravens croak and God gives them the grain and the young lions roar and God gives them their meat.

That 104th Psalm, I say, is a rhapsodic description of nature. The man who wrote it was intensely in love with everything around about him, the very leaf that quivers there on the branch and the very bug that lays eggs under its green fold, everything the man of God loved. And therefore, I say that the Old Testament would teach us, and we can properly introduce here this prefixed point, venerate all things.

My friend, it is a sad and lamentable fact that you and I are like zoo lions born in captivity and that we of this 20th century that are born in hospitals, walk on sidewalks, die again in hospitals, and are taken out by machinery and laid away in memorial parks by morticians. We never get our feet in the soil, we never get down where we can feel the impulses of nature getting into us, and we rarely lift our eyes to look at God’s city above, except when an airplane goes by or we wonder whether we ought to wear our overshoes, whether it’s going to rain or not. We have lost the capacity to wonder, and that is what’s wrong with us.

Do you know what I believe, my friends? I believe that if the Holy Ghost would come again upon people as of ancient times and congregations were visited by the sweet, hot, fiery breath of Pentecost once more, that we would not only be greater Christians and holier souls, but we would be greater poets and greater artists and greater lovers of God and of his universe. And instead of living in a zoo and eating out of a can, we would feel ourselves a part of God Almighty’s great universe, and we would enjoy the return of the birds and the cloud that sails across the sky. And like the simple, naive king of Israel, when we see the cloud, we would not say it’s going to rain, we would say there goes God riding in His cloudy chariot.

And when the blue sky shuts down, we would say He clothes Himself with a garment, and we would see God in everything. But we don’t see God in anything anymore, only Bible institutes and Bibles. We don’t see God in anything but the saints and the mystics and those who walked with God and wrote our great hymns and our great books of devotion and blessed mankind with their holy presences and left behind them trails of light and beauty.

They were all enraptured with everything around them. They venerated everything. There wasn’t a common bush that was anywhere. There wasn’t a common hill. They were all hills of God. There wasn’t a common mountain. They were mountains of the Almighty. There wasn’t a common cloud. They were the chariots of God. There wasn’t a common wind. It was the panoply where God Almighty walked, the vast beauty where God walked on the wings of the wind. We’ve lost it, and I tell you we ought to go back to it again.

I think what we need, ladies and gentlemen, is a compound of Quakerism, Pentecostalism, Methodism, and Calvinism. And I believe that if we had them all shaken together and took a good dose three times a day before our God, we’d be a better Christian than we are. But instead of our venerating all things, we take everything as something usable.

The utilitarian philosophy has grabbed the world. There lies that great hill out yonder, beautiful as can be. Down where below where I was born, you could see it from the little house and barn that were my little world when I was a little boy. And you could see those great blue hills there, and sometimes they would be blue and hazy, and other times the mist would lift and the sun would shine so brightly on them that you could almost make out the leaves across yonder hill and the green patches that lay between. Nobody ever paid any attention to it so far as I know. I don’t think anybody ever took a photograph of it.

In all my fourteen years of living around there, as a boy, I never heard one lone man say, isn’t that a beautiful thing? Glory be to God, never a man. I don’t think any artist ever painted it. I don’t think anybody ever wrote a sonnet about it. It just lay there in its green beauty and caught the moving shades and lights as the sun passed along in the clouds between.

And then one day they discovered that underneath that green carpet of beauty there was coal, and they could get that coal by stripping off the top. And so the strippers went in there, coal strippers, and with their huge earth-moving machinery that’s got so much attention in later times, they went in and stripped the whole top off the beautiful hills, knocked down the lovely trees and ripped up the green bushes and destroyed the birds’ nests and the rabbit warrens, and they turned into a huge desert, whole thousands of acres of beauty so beautiful, so gracious, that the heart of a Christian man ought to beat high by looking at it.

And if I were to go back, as the animal is said to do, to go back to the place where he was born to die, if I were to go back to the little farm above La Jose, Pennsylvania, the town that nobody knows, I would be forced to look not upon the green and brown beauty that once was the hills beyond the little creek, but I would be forced to look at a desert of obscenity and vandalism.

Man has only one interest in life, and that is utility. Can I use it? Will it turn into money? Will it mean money in the bank to me? Will it mean more money and property? And he’ll go in and violate the sanctuary of God together. He’ll send his machinery in and rip God’s beautiful world apart in order to get at some poor and low-grade coal that lies just below the surface.

Well, that’s only an example, and I’m not mad, I’m just grieved. And I don’t know there isn’t some indignation there, too. When God makes it, it’s lovely. When man comes in, he always turns it into a dump, because God Almighty puts it there first for its beauty and then for its usefulness. But man cares nothing for its beauty. He thinks only of its usefulness and ruins its beauty to get it.

But we Christians oughtn’t to live like that, and we oughtn’t to think like that. I don’t say it’s a moral crime. I don’t say that it is a sin to strip a whole countryside to get coal. But I do say that it is a symptom of a tragic lack of appreciation. Nobody’s wondering about anything. Nobody looks up in happy surprise.

As little as I think of Christmas, as we have degraded it in our day, it’s been a never-failing delight to me all the years to see little children on Christmas morning. Something that you bought and paid for and brought home and rather more or less took as a matter of course. It is a source of sudden spontaneous and wonderful delight to a child. And to see the incredible look on their face, the incredulous look, rather, on their face, it’s incredible that they should have a thing like that. Everything is full of wonder and beauty.

I wonder if Jesus might not have included that in His idea when He said, except you be converted and become as little children, you shall never enter the kingdom of God. There is the ability to wonder and worship. For worship is wonder, and wonder is worship. And when we turn our worshiping wonder toward God, then we’re worshiping God in the right sense of the word. O Lord, my God, thou art very great. Thou art clothed with majesty. Garment of the light is thy garment. Thou clothest thyself with light as with robe and rightest upon the wings of the wind.

So therefore, we Christians ought to live in a fairer land. We ought to live in a wonderful world. And as Thomas Traherne says, we ought to rise every morning in heaven and we ought to see the very dew on the grass as something of absolutely wonderful to behold.

Mr. McAfee and I were eating out here in the far south side after the broadcast yesterday and we saw a robin, a great big upholstered, beautiful, fresh robin with a breast as red as a tangerine or redder. And hopping around there just, I don’t know where she’d come from or whether she’d stayed all winter, but she sure had on her best Easter gown. And I got a lot of joy out of that. I said, now there’s so many things I can’t enjoy.

Playing games drives me completely to distraction. And many things that people invent that they want me to, “will you sit down and play Scrabble with me, Mr. Tozer?” No, of course not. I wouldn’t play Scrabble with you because Scrabble has been invented by, it is popped out of somebody’s empty head, I wouldn’t be bothered with it.

But I got relaxed and felt younger as I sat and watched that big bird. And then there were two gray squirrels and they also were fat, just, I suppose, ready for the spring and spring mating. And they chased each other like two kids, round and round and round. And one would run up a pole and literally spring out and lie on his feet and spring up. But he wasn’t doing anything. He was just exercising, letting off steam. He was delighted that God Almighty had ever made him. And he didn’t know enough to say so. He couldn’t have joined in singing a hymn. But in his little squirrelish heart, he was glorifying God the Father Almighty and Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord.

So, we ought to venerate everything and walk around in the world as those who are in the palace of the King. And everywhere we look, everywhere we look, we see something new and fresh. God put it there, so venerate all things as part of the text.

Godless philosophies create godless worlds. And when we forget that God made us, then down we go. And we forget our second point, honor all men. For here we have it, honor all men.

Why do we honor all men? You say, I know men that don’t deserve any honor. Well, yes and no. They do and they don’t. Let me explain. We honor all men because they were originally made in the image of God. And faith knows their true value.

The godly chaplain who sees that savage, vicious, snarling killer, hard as nails, shut away there waiting the one moment when he shall go out to die a few weeks hence. If he had no faith, he’d turn his back in cold disdain and leave the snarling killer to turn in on his own heart and eat himself to death.

But the man of God, if he’s a true man of God, and thank God we have many of them as chaplains, the man of God knows what the poor, snarling man doesn’t know. He knows that even though his hands are stained with human blood, he was once made in the image of God. He knows that even though the dirt and silt and unspeakable filth of sin has washed over his soul and left its marks there, he was still made in the image of God.

And the chaplain honors the man about to die because he was once made in God’s image. And he was in the mind of God when God said, let us make man in our image and in the image of God made he him. I say the godless philosophies forget this and they make the state everything and the individual nothing. Christianity reverses the order altogether and makes the individual everything and the state to be the servant of the individual.

Honor all men, low concepts of humanity always turn us into beasts. Hitler never could have led his Nazi Germany to victory, temporary victory, if he had not first had his propagandists to instill into the minds of the people the thought that Christianity was false and that there was no God, or if there were a God, he was some ancient god of some Germanic Valhalla. And because they had no high opinion of man, they built their Nazi state, which thank God crashed down under the hammering guns of the West.

And now in communist China and communist Russia, and in her many poor slave satellites, we have the philosophy that makes man nothing and the state everything. That’s why they can invent the idea of the wave upon wave business. That is, because they have unlimited manpower in China and in Russia, and China was, but could be in Russia if we ever go to war, they forget those are human beings, they forget they were made in the image of God, they’re simply gunpowder, they’re bullets.

And so, they throw them in wave upon wave. And I’ve talked to those who have seen them, to one particularly who went through the hell and horror of it, and he said, I cannot describe the coming in of those Chinese soldiers in any other language than that of a snowstorm in a wind, a windy blizzard. There would be waves of them, thousands of them move in like a blizzard, and then a little in another wave move in.

And he said, our men with their machine guns mowed them down like grass, and they piled in the next wave over that pile, and they were mowed down, and the next over that, and the next over that, each mown down as they moved in. And the strategy behind all that grew out of the philosophy behind that. And the philosophy was, men are nothing. Pour them in and kill them. The idea that they were made in the image of God is ancient poppycock. And that’s the strategy behind all statism and totalitarianism. It is the individual’s nothing–he’s expendable.

But oh, what a difference. When our loving Savior took a little baby in his arm, a little baby, maybe with a runny nose and certainly with a drooling lip, I never saw one that wasn’t drooling, until he was a year old; Jesus took that little baby and patted his little head and blessed him. He was an individual. He wasn’t blessing humanity. To God there’s no such thing as humanity, they’re just people.

And people taken together is what we call humanity, and they’re people. And Jesus picked out the little fellows and blessed them. And the happy-faced, timid mothers brought them and looked at each other and grinned in delight as Jesus put his hands on their little bald heads and said, God bless you, sonny, or God bless you, daughter. He was saying to the whole world, people are worthwhile. I love people. God made people.

And every individual, whether he be red or yellow, black or white around the world, whether he be a poor Chinese communist or a man in a death cell waiting in the electric chair, whether she be a harlot walking the streets of the ghetto, or the colonel’s lady sleeping in her silken bed, she’s a microcosm, a little world all by herself, all by himself, man or woman, boy or girl, old or young, little microcosms, the sum of the world in that individual man. That’s what you’re worth to God. And that’s what they’re all worth to God.

And that’s why Peter said, honor all men. You don’t honor them because they’re liars, you grieve because they’re liars. You don’t honor them because they’re robbers, you grieve that they’re robbers.  You don’t honor them because they live for the world and gamble and drink, and you honor them in spite of it, but you honor them because they have in their souls, the little microcosm, the little world. Honor all men.

Communists can’t tell us anything about racial equality. Mrs. Roosevelt can’t tell me anything about racial equality. We Christians have known all down the centuries that there isn’t a deformed black boy lying half-starved in a mud hut deep in the Kisidugi regions of Africa, but what is more valuable than all the stars that shine? We’ve known that all the time. We Christians have valued the individual. We’ve honored men because God made them.

And they’ve turned on us because we have white churches. And they’ve said, you’re violating the teachings of your savior because you’re looking down on people. I look down on nobody. I don’t look up to very many either. I look out on everybody because God made them all.

And red or yellow, black or white, they’re God’s handiwork. But God’s helped me from ever looking down on a man because his skin is black or because his eyes slant differently from mine or because his hair is tight and curly. God forbid it. We’re all alike. And God has made of one blood all men to dwell on the earth.

And that’s why I always feel embarrassed when a maid, colored maid, comes in when I’m staying in hotels or when I come in unexpectedly and find a humble, cringing, colored maid telling me, she’s so sorry, she’s so sorry, she’d be right out, sir, she’d be right out, sir. Just a moment, sir, and she’d be right out. Why should she be sorry at me? Who am I? God made that colored maid too. She has much education. She probably lives in a hut someplace. She’s just as worthy as I am just as worthy as you.

And that’s why I can’t for the life of me ever feel good when I’m being served by somebody. A beautiful Spanish Mexican type of woman down in McAllen, Texas, in the Las Palmas Hotel, where I stayed for numbers of times, came to the door and I wasn’t ready to leave. And I tried to tell her I’ll be out in 10 minutes. And she said, no sabe, senor, no sabe, senor, no sabe, senor. And she went away embarrassed, and I was embarrassed too.

So, somebody said if they ever, she ever says no sabe again, say poco tempo, and that means a little time yet. And I remembered that, and I’m very prudent. Poco tempo. And they said, if you want a little time, just say poco tempo, senorita.

So she said, she’s going to come back later, so I have poco tempo the next time. I don’t know whether she understood or not with my Dutch accent, but anyway, I don’t feel good being waited on, and I don’t feel good waiting on anybody. Except, of course, as we in love wait on each other. That’s something else again.

Jesus our Lord waited on folks and ministered to them and loved them, and He knew in His deep holy heart that He was so exalted above them as exalted as the mountain peak above the lowly anthill below, and yet He stooped and washed their feet. So, if we serve, we do not serve because we think we’re beneath anybody. We serve because we love God and people for God’s sake.

And our fine missionaries from this very church, cultured, well-educated, fine people that have been brought up in good homes in this city, are over there washing sores, our Lois Benke, brought up in a fine Christian cultured home, washing sores over there.

Does she do it because she feels she’s beneath them? No, but because they were made in the image of God, and she loves them for God’s sake. And yet does she stoop, I wonder? I wonder if she thinks she stoops. I don’t think she does. I believe she considers, as I’ve said this morning, that we’re all one, and God has made of all blood men to dwell on the face of the earth, and it’s a privilege in Jesus Christ to wait on each other for Christ’s sake.

That is one thing. It’s quite another to take a lick, spittle, hand-licking attitude that I am beneath this big man, or a supercilious, proud attitude, he is beneath me. So, either one’s dangerous, and I don’t want to fall into either trap. More on this next week. Amen.

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Tozer Talks

Who Is He That Will Harm You?

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

May 16, 1954

And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good?

Now that is a rhetorical question, and a rhetorical question, as you know, is one that carries its answer in itself, you don’t have to answer it. For the answer that this question carries, who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? The answer is simply, no one. It answers itself.

Now Paul says something about the same in Romans 8.35, let me read. He says, verse 33, who, verse 34, who, verse 35, who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us, for I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

I emphasize the personal pronoun, who, three times, in order that you might see how the Holy Spirit uses language. He says, who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect? Who is he that condemneth? Who shall separate us? Those are personal pronouns implying personality. But then he uses neutral things here. For I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor principalities, nor things, showing that when he says who, he includes not only the persons who might want to harm us, but things that might want to harm us.

And this gives me my thesis for the morning hour. I will state it, and then at least hope that I may be able to prove it. It is simply that nothing can harm a good man, neither persons, nor things, nor circumstances. Nothing can harm a good man, or woman. Now, if you want to take down the gist of the sermon, and for any reason at all you feel you must go now, you will have had the sermon. That is it. Nothing can harm a good man.

Now I want to talk a little about what it means to be harmed. Because I never like to use words that I am not sure my hearers understand. If I use a word meaning one thing and you hear it and give it some other meaning, you and I might as well be talking Chinese.

So, I define the word harm, or harmed, in my own language. I didn’t even look in Webster. I thought this up myself for purposes of this sermon, that to harm is to debase in quality. That is one meaning of the word harm.

Harm is done to gold, for instance, if it were possible to do it. If gold could be debased by being made silver, that would be harming the gold. And if the silver could be debased by being made iron, that, on the other hand, would be harming the silver. And if we went on to debase the iron by making it lead, that would be debasing the iron. And then if we made the lead clay, that would be debasing it still more. It would be a deterioration in quality. That would be to harm a thing or a person.

And then the second definition I will give it is that harm would mean to reduce in dimension or amount. A building, for instance, say an office building that has a thousand offices in it, had a fire or a bombing or an earthquake, and great sections, wings of the building were destroyed so that it was reduced to say a hundred offices or fifty offices, that would be harming the building in that it would be reducing its dimensions and its numbers or amount.

Then when we come to human beings, we would say that harm means to prevent the fulfillment of our destiny. Most people don’t know it, but you amount to something. God made you in His image, and you have a destiny to fulfill. And harming you would mean to stymie that destiny somehow and to block its fulfillment.

And secondly, it would mean to block the accomplishment of our appointed task. God has appointed a task for all of us, and if somehow you can be cheated out of the fulfilling of your task, you’ve been harmed, or it means lowering in value. If somehow or other, someone or something can get hold of me and debase me and devaluate me so that I no longer signify in the eternal scheme of things as high as I did before, but that I am reduced in value, I am cheapened like money, devaluated, then I have been harmed.

Now, on that definition, I say that nothing can harm a good man or woman that follows that which is good. Nothing can debase his quality, nothing can reduce his dimensions, nothing can prevent the fulfillment of his destiny, nothing can block the accomplishment of his appointed task, and nothing can lower his value before God and the universe.

Now I say these things cannot harm a good man. They cannot happen to him. Only sin can debase us, only sin can deteriorate us, and if we deal with sin, we may be perfectly sure that nothing else can get to us. That is, nobody can be reduced in size by anything that anybody can do to him. You can’t get any smaller.

I remember years ago the sharp-tongued MacArthur said about a certain man, he said he’s getting smaller and smaller every day trying to get big enough to fill his job. And you can make yourself smaller and smaller if you want to do it. You can debase yourself. You can reduce your size and your moral dimensions, but nobody can do it to you, and nothing or a combination of things can reduce you.

And then think of our destiny as a human being made in the image of God. We have a higher position. I have often said and repeated that there is a morbid humility that is dishonoring to God Almighty. God made me in His image, and outside of sin I have absolutely nothing to apologize for.

This belly-scraping kind of humility that crawls like a paddle spaniel over the sidewalk and says, excuse me for living, I’ll die as soon as I get around to it.  I’m no good, I’m no body; that kind of thing dishonors God Almighty. Who art thou, O man, to speak against the Potter that made thee, and the carpenter that build a house? Who art thou to find fault with the house? God made you, and He made you higher than the angels, in that He said about you what He never said about an angel, that He made you in His own image. You have only one thing to be sorry for and ashamed of, and that is the sin that marred that image.

So you have a destiny and a high moral calling as a human being, and I ask you, who can change that? Who can unmake that image in you? Who can make you anything less than God intended you to be, except your own self and sin?

Then there is our appointed task. Everybody has an appointed task. I never believed in this little orphan Annie conception of a human being. I never believed that we were orphaned in childhood and that somehow cut loose from our moorings we float, driven by one wind and another, and changed and twisted by all cross currents, and that we have no home and no beginning and no ending and no certain dwelling place. All that is deism or agnosticism, but it isn’t Christianity and it isn’t in the Bible.

The Bible teaches there is a sovereign God who has appointed the ways of man, and it teaches that you and I are dearer to God than the apple of His eye, and it teaches that God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, and it teaches that the very second Person of the Triune God came down and was made in the image of mortal flesh that He might redeem us.

God would not do that for a creature that was any less than infinitely valuable. And if you imagine that anybody can take away from that value, can make you anything less than you are, you are tragically and sadly mistaken. And the purpose of this sermon is to try to correct your error. No, lowering us in value can’t be. Nobody can do it. Here we stand.

And you say, all right, then what is this, Mr. Tozer, universalism? Do you believe that all men everywhere are lost or saved, that are lost will be saved? Now how did you get that idea? I don’t believe anything of the sort, but I believe that no external circumstance can harm me, and I believe that nobody outside me can reduce me in value nor in any wise hurt me, but I believe that I can hurt myself. I believe that I can harm my own soul, and the very things I’ve said nobody on the outside can do, I can do inside my own heart if I don’t watch myself.

Now I not only believe that nobody can harm me, I believe that nobody can harm anybody else. We use language very foolishly. One man cheats another man, we say he did him an injury. One man starts a slander about another man, we say he harmed that man’s reputation, but we’re using words very carelessly, my friends. The simple fact is nobody can harm anybody else. All he can do is to put temptation in his way and make it possible for him to harm himself.

Now I’ll give you Bible illustrations of this. You remember there was Adam and Eve way back in the garden, and someone will be thinking out ahead of me and say, how do you get that way, sir? The devil harmed Adam and Eve. I reply, the devil did nothing of the sort. He did not harm Adam and Eve. The devil simply told Adam and Eve how they could harm themselves, and they were fools enough to accept the proposition.

If they had stood on their own piety and believed their God, there would have been no harm done to either one of them, and it would not have been said the devil harmed them, and they would not have been harmed. But they accepted the proposition that they should harm themselves, and so they harmed themselves. But unless you open the gate and let the devil in, he is totally harmless, and he can’t injure anybody except as he is allowed to get in.

Now later on that same devil, remembering that he had succeeded in tempting the first Adam to harm himself, he came to the second Adam and started the same nefarious scheme. But how far did he get with the second Adam? He didn’t get anywhere, for the first Adam would not harm himself. The second Adam, I mean, the first one did, but our Lord Jesus Christ refused to do it, and He stood on His own spirituality and His own faith and said, it is written. And the devil went away red-faced because he had not succeeded in causing the second and last Adam to harm Himself. Jesus Christ knew better. He would not do it, and so nobody harmed Him, and nobody could harm Him, and the devil couldn’t harm Him.

I have never been a very devil-conscious preacher. I have always been a wee bit afraid of these people who are in rapport with the dark world. I don’t believe in visiting the underworld, not even for purposes of writing an article. I think we ought to stay out away from the underworld. Well, that old madam so-and-so with the rag around her head telling fortunes in a dirty hole under the sidewalk, let her alone. Stay away from her. What do you want to go in there for?

And unless you’re taking the gospel and having services, what do you want to be down on West Madison Street for? What do you want to be down there for in the first place? Why hang around with cutthroats and bums and droppers and gunmen. Stay away from them. And don’t be jittery and jumpy about them. Since we’ve had Council here, we’ve had one gang murder and two kidnappings. But they didn’t bother me, and they didn’t bother you, and they wouldn’t bother you.

So why should we be always devil-conscious? I’ve met people that were in such contact with the devil that he was breathing on their neck all the time. And they were always praying, and almost frantically praying, O Lord, deliver me and help me. I conceive that sometime during your lifetime you might have a run-in with the devil where you would have to really get down and pray, but for the most part, if you will forget about the devil and focus your attention on the eternal, everlasting, victorious Son of God, you’ll break the devil’s heart and render him powerless.

So, nobody outside can hurt you. You go around looking over your shoulders, thinking the devil is catching up with you. He’ll never catch up with you if your faith will believe that nothing can harm a good man. And who is he and what is that will harm you if ye be followers of that which is good.

I want to point out here a few things that people mistakenly believe harm them. You may have to do a little thinking here, and if you’re not used to it, you may get a charley horse in your head. But if you will follow along with me, it’ll do you some good, I think.

I want to point out here, brethren, that some people imagine a physical injury harms a man, and I don’t believe it. I have here a little thing I want to read, it’s only about nine lines long and brief.

An old fellow by the name of Epictetus, he had a name, I’d have changed if I’d had it, but Epictetus was a crippled Roman philosopher. And he was, of course, stoic, but he did have some ideas. He never had seen the New Testament, but he got further without a New Testament than some of you do with one.

But he said, what’s the use of worrying about external injuries and harms? He said, I must die? Well, must I die groaning? Said I must be fettered? Well, must I be lamenting too? I must be exiled. Well, what hinders me then from going smiling and cheerful and serene? The emperor said, betray a secret, and he said, I’ll not betray a secret. They said, well, if you don’t betray your secret, I’ll fetter you. He said, what do you mean, man? Fetter me? No, he said, you can fetter my leg, but not even Zeus himself can get the better of my free spirit.

Well, he said, I’ll throw you into prison. And Epictetus had the answer. Then he said, I’ll behead that paltry body of yours. And Epictetus said, did I ever tell you that I was the only man on earth that had a head that couldn’t be taken off his body? Well, what can you do with a man like that, brethren? You see, he’s gotten loose from kings and emperors and prisons and chains.

But we Christians don’t have that much sense. If we hear that somebody in Indochina or Columbia has been thrown into jail, we write a big tract about it, and we say they’ve been harmed, they haven’t been harmed at all. Their building blown up, well, that’s not part of them. That doesn’t reduce them in value in the universe. That doesn’t devaluate their currency to have their building blown up under them. That doesn’t make them any smaller. That doesn’t hinder their manifest destiny. That doesn’t prevent them from doing the work of God, not the slightest. We imagine the physical injury harms people. It does not.

Take Abel, way back in the early part of the world’s history. The fellow didn’t like Abel because he was a spiritual fellow, so he took him out and beat him up. It doesn’t say how it happened. He probably didn’t mean to kill him. He just meant to give him a good beating, I would guess. But he didn’t know his own strength, and when he walked away, his brother was dead.

So, he kicked a few leaves over him, and there he lay, his blood crying unto God for vengeance. But I want to ask you, was Abel harmed? Was he any less dear to God? Were there any of the mansions of his soul closed and a sign out of order put over them? No. He was the same great, big, believing Abel that he had been before. And though his poor body lay there among the leaves and the dirt, he still was as great a man and as strong a man and as big a man and as significant a man as he ever was.

Take that man Stephen, when they stoned him to death there. Do you think that when the rocks began to wham into the ribs and head of the man Stephen and he finally died, did they harm Stephen? No, they didn’t. They injured his body, but they didn’t harm the man. They killed his body, but they never touched his soul. Who is he that can harm Stephen? He was a follower of that which was good. He was a man full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, and you can’t harm the Holy Ghost and you can’t harm wisdom. So, Stephen was just as valuable in the scheme of things, just as wonderful, and just as big as he was before they killed him.

This man that we read about in the Twelfth Acts, the man James, says that they cut off his head, or at least they slew him with a sword. Did that harm him? Not at all. The only thing it did was separate his head from his body, and he had no need for his head then. Anyhow, and if we only knew how little need we have of our head, we wouldn’t be so careful of the poor empty thing, because really our heads don’t amount to an awful lot.

God Almighty makes us to run by heart power and live by heart power. God did not say He blew in him the breath of life and he became a living head. It said He blew into him the breath of life and he became a living soul. In your head, God gave you as a kind of steering wheel to keep you out of trouble and help you along while you’re down here, but you are spirit. God made you spirit, and that’s the part nobody can get to.  Well, you might talk about Paul also and Peter and all the rest, then there’s persecution.

Now we groan and cry about being persecuted. I personally never was persecuted, any. Maybe I’ve not been good enough Christian to deserve the honor, but I’ve not been persecuted much. I’ve been called some very eloquent names, but sticks and stones can break my bones, but names can never hurt you. So persecution. Now, it says, they wandered about in goatskin, destitute, in deserts, mountains, dens, and caves.

Now, those were the persecuted ones, but you see, the persecution came to the outside. It couldn’t get to the inside at all. The genius of Christianity is internalism, you know that? The genius of Christianity is that the kingdom of God is within you, and it is inside of you that you matter. It’s inside of you that you signify, and the persecutor can only get to the external. The persecutor can’t get in to the mansion of your soul. He can’t get to you.

Here they were wandering about, they had no homes, wearing goatskins, they had no clothing. Destitute, they had no money. In deserts, they had no friends, mountains, dens, and caves, and yet all these were external things, and you couldn’t get to them.

Were these persons dressed in goatskins any less valuable than the king in his palace dressed in his silks? No, because silk and goatskin belonged to the body, whereas the value of a man lies inside of him. They weren’t persecuted.

I think we waste a great deal of sympathy on people. I remember some missionary was killed, not in our society, some years ago, and it gave printing presses and old-maid poets and tear-jerking preachers ammunition for the next five years. And we built that up and built it up and built it up. It was an amazing, astonishing, wonderful, world-shaking event.

Two missionaries were killed for Christ’s sake. Oh, brother, they weren’t hurt at all. They just made them kneel down, lean over, and they cut their heads off. But they didn’t get to them. They didn’t get to the spirit of them, the soul of them. They only cut their heads off. And now they’re with the Lord, and the souls of the righteous are in the hands of God, and no evil shall harm them. And though it seemed for a season that they have been injured, actually God has taken them away from the troubles to come.

So, it was a victory that they went home, not a defeat. And because we’re earthbound and our faith won’t penetrate the blue, but we think as men think and we evaluate as men evaluate, and our scale of values is that of Adam and not of God. We make a great to-do if somebody in the course of his duty dies on the battlefield of the faith.

My brethren, that ought to be taken in stride as a matter of course. And when a man goes, we ought to sing, Hosanna to Jesus on high, another has entered his rest, another has escaped to the sky and is lodged in Emmanuel’s breast. Nobody is harmed when he’s killed, nobody is injured when he dies, if he’s a Christian.

And then slander, I notice. Some people are so desperately jittery, they fear somebody will slander them. Now Christ was slandered, but did it do Him any harm, I want to ask you? They said He had a devil, and they said a great many other terrible things about Him. But it never hurt Jesus any, it never changed the love of God for His Son, it never took away the crown from the heart and head of the Savior, it never made Him any less than He was, it never closed up a single mansion in the mansion of His soul, it never in any wise harmed Him. Slander never hurt anybody, and it’ll never hurt anybody down the years.

And there is abuse. People have suffered abuse. Now that is one thing the good of all the ages have had to suffer, they’ve had to suffer abuse. I suppose before Cain killed Abel, he told him off plenty. He abused him before he slew him. And all down the years the righteous have had to be abused by the unrighteous. The twice-born have had to take a tongue-lashing from the first-born, or once-born.

And you know that sin has taken away a great many things from humanity, but it’s not taken away the power of speech. A sinner can be just as eloquent as a saint, and he can be a whole lot more effective because he’s more uninhibited in his use of words. A saint, you see, when he starts to answer a sinner, has to be awfully careful and sound like a Christian.

But when a sinner starts working on a saint, no holds are barred. And the names that we get called are simply something lovely to behold and to hear. I say to you, my brethren, that sin does not take away the power of speech. The sinner can still curse and still does. But the man of faith sees it and knows that it’s simply the raven sitting on the dead limb of a blasted oak, croaking imprecations against the dove.

And the dove can’t answer because he’s a dove. And so, he looks modestly down at his pink feet and makes little tender noises like the dove that he is. And because he doesn’t answer back, the raven thinks he’s won the debate. But all he’s done is prove he’s a raven.

And so, when you get abused, if you don’t get abused, God help you, you’re not where you should be. And if you do get abused, just think of that fellow that’s abusing you as one of Adam’s ravens, a fallen raven sitting on a dead limb, croaking his displeasure with your spirituality. You can afford to take it, brother, for the day will come when God will avenge all of His people.

But it doesn’t hurt you, you see, it only gets to your ear, and your ear isn’t you. Cursing doesn’t get past your ear, unless it gets past your ear. Suppose that the man that curses you tempts you to hate him, then you’ve injured yourself.

Suppose the man that persecutes you tempts you to malice, you’ve injured yourself then. Suppose you carry sulky spirit in your breast, you’re harmed, but the devil didn’t do it, but you did it. Keep the persecutor out of your bosom, keep hate out of your heart, keep malice out of your spirit, and you’re as sound as gold, and nothing can harm you or get to you.

Well, the last, and I’m finished, is death. Death, we all generally agree down here among the sons of Adam, that to kill a man is the last, dirtiest trick you can do to him. And even the law is based upon the fear of death. The law says if you murder, we’ll kill you. And the theory is that if that restrains men, they’re afraid of death. And we generally agree that to die is to incur the greatest damage, the greatest harm.

I say to you, brethren, that this is Adam’s philosophy, this is not God’s. This terrible fear of death is not the teaching of the Scripture. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.

Now I wouldn’t underestimate, nor would I in any way try to rise poetically above death or show that death is not something to shock us and startle us and frighten us. I wouldn’t. I would be a liar if I tried it. But I believe that death is the devil’s last indignity. It’s the last ferocious, obscene attack he makes upon the tabernacle of the Holy Ghost. But he can only reach the tabernacle.

Fear not them that can kill the body, said Jesus. That’s only the tabernacle. And the devil is not only bad, he’s dirty. And he’s not only dirty, he’s obscene. And he hates the people of God with a hatred as old as the centuries and as black as the pit where he will go. And so, the devil wants to kill the people of God. And he’ll heap all the indignities he can upon them. And he’ll twist them and break them and make their bodies look terrible.

One of the holiest men that I have ever known, I saw the other day, he has been to me an outstanding example of spirituality in this degenerate hour. He has lived a long and useful life, not too long, but a useful life. He has been persecuted. He has endured a great deal of suffering. But he has never as much as opened his mouth once to answer back. He is as humble as a rug, and in his prayers as lofty as the eagle, and a great preacher of truth. I hadn’t seen him for about a year.

I saw him recently. To say that I was shocked wouldn’t be to tell all the truth. Those fiery eyes were now looking dully out through hollow sockets. That fine, rather homely, but strong, good-looking face had gone away to a shadow. That well-set-up body now bent, and the arms and legs showing through the clothing like sticks, sitting looking at the floor.

Death sits like a buzzard, or circles over him and waits, and unless God Almighty performs a miracle within the next three months, that tired, sick, holy body will be the plaything of the forces of death, and they’ll destroy it, and they’ll make it pale and gaunt and worse-looking than now, and shut up the eloquent tongue and pull down the blind over those bright eyes, and they’ll carry him out, and the devil will laugh and say, I’ve enjoyed this indignity, this profane act of indignity against the temple that I’ve hated.

But listen, brethren, he hasn’t harmed the man of God at all, and not all the devil’s tricks can do it, and not the undertaker can do it, nor the embalmer can do it, nor the gravedigger can do it, and not the slow forces of nature that will dissolve his mortal body back to dust can harm the man. For the man was made in the image of God, redeemed by the blood of the Holy Son of God, and indwelt by the Holy Ghost.

And so, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost have made his soul their habitation. And death can’t get to that habitation. He’s as young as when he was twenty-five years old, and he’s as sound and healthy as at the healthiest moment of his life, only the body’s suffering, that is all.

John Adams was a godly old man too, getting pretty old, and he was the sort of emeritus elder statesman walking around the streets of Washington. And some friend met him and said, Mr. Adams, how are you? Well, he said, I’m all right, I never was better in my life. But he said, my dwelling place is on mortgage, and I understand they’re going to foreclose before long, and I’ll be thrown out.

Oh, his friend said, how terrible for a man like you. And he started a little affair, what do you call it, to get money, a subscription, to buy a house for this fellow. And when it came back around to him, he laughed, he said, oh, you misunderstood me entirely. He said, I was talking about this old carcass of mine. He said, you asked how I was, and I said I was all right, but there was a mortgage on my home. He said, this old place where I’ve lived for these 70-some-odd years, he said, well, nature has got a mortgage and it’s going to foreclose, but he said, it doesn’t bother me any. Now you see what I mean, don’t you?

Now, my brethren, here’s my thesis. No one, no thing, no circumstance can harm a good man, and if you will believe that, you can relax. If you can believe that, you can start worrying for fear somebody will do you harm. Nobody can do that. They can try it. Nobody can block you. Nobody can hinder your manifest destiny. Nobody can reduce the size of the mansions of your soul. Nobody can make you any less valuable to God or dearer to the Father. Nobody can block your ministry or stop your forward progress. Nobody can do it. Nothing can do it. Only you can do it.

Keep sin out of your heart. Walk under the blood. Keep in contact with Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and you can be as free as an angel that walks the streets of God, for nothing can harm a good man.

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Tozer Talks

False Teachings on Obscure Passages

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

June 13, 1954

Now we are continuing in 1 Peter, and I am trying to be honest and teach all of it, and not do like the commentaries do, skip the hard places. This that I bring to you today is a hard passage of Scripture. Peter might very well have had himself in mind when he said that Paul was in the habit of writing things very hard to be understood, in which the unstable and the unlearned wrested it to their own destruction.

Peter said that about Paul, but he might have said it about himself, because he did give us something very difficult here. Let me read it. Verse 18 of chapter 3, For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit, by which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison, which sometimes were disobedient, when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark of God was apreparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls were saved by water.

The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ; Who is gone into heaven and is on the right hand of God; angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto him.

Verse 6 of chapter 4, For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit. Now, verses 21 and 22, where it tells us about baptism being a figure and a good conscience toward God and the resurrection of Christ, verse 22 that tells us of Christ’s ascension and His high place of authority over angels and powers, these I am not going to mention inasmuch as we have dealt with this quite fully.

So, I am to speak about Christ preaching to the spirits in prison, verse 6, to them that are dead. And I will say that there is more in this this morning for the curious than there is for the spiritually hungry. But I am still not going to pass it up for a number of reasons.

One is that the passage is here by divine inspiration. And if it had not been intended that we should expound it, or attempt to expound it, or attempt to understand it, it would not have been put here. There are obscure passages in the Scripture, but even those obscure passages were divinely inspired and for that reason need to be treated with respect, even if we are not able fully to understand them.

Now, the second reason that I am going to courageously attempt an exposition here is that I want our people to be fully informed. We cannot be informed fully if we skip the hard places, and major only in the Scriptures it can be understood.

And third, and I think this is the most important of the three, that false teachers specialize on difficult texts. Heresy always thrives in obscurity or on obscure passages and dies when the full light of God reaches it.

Let us take such a passage as 1 Corinthians, where it talks about the baptizing for the dead. Now, it tells us there that, verse 29, “…else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead? If the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptized for the dead?”

Now, Paul put that there, and nobody knows exactly what is meant by it. And certainly, he did not approve it. He only used it casually as an arguing point for a future life. But there are those who practice baptism for the dead. And if you object to it as being unscriptural, they quote you that obscure and difficult passage from 1 Corinthians 15. And they say, why would you object when there were those in Corinth that baptized for the dead? So, they make a whole doctrine to rest upon one verse.

Let me give you a good working rule for the understanding of Scripture. If you haven’t more than one verse to support it, don’t teach it. Because if it isn’t found in more than one verse of the Bible, the chances are it isn’t found there either. And that what you think is a passage teaching a certain thing does not teach it at all.

Now, suppose that I were going to argue for the future life, and I were writing to people who practice masses for the dead, and I were to say to them, how can you deny the future life when you practice saying mass for the dead? I would be saying to them, in effect, now you yourself admit a future life because you are acting as though those persons who had died were still in existence. Therefore, you yourself believe in a future life, and your very practice of saying masses proves it. But that wouldn’t mean that I approved saying masses for the dead. It would only show that I was arguing that they believed in a future life by the fact that they attempted to help people in the future life.

Now, that’s all Paul meant here. Paul did not in any wise practice baptism for the dead, nor did he exhort anybody to do it, nor is there one line in the Bible that teaches it. But he appeals to something they already, some of them at least, did and believed to show how inconsistent they were in saying that there was no resurrection. And it’s obvious that the same persons who said there was no resurrection were the same ones who practiced baptism for the dead.

And then take that famous passage, I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Now, that’s obviously an obscure passage. I have never heard it satisfactorily explained, I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you open will stay open, whatever you close will be closed.

Now, isn’t it queer that our Roman Catholic friends will deny that the Bible has any authority over the Church on the grounds that the Bible came out of the Church and not the Church out of the Bible? And they will deny whole sections of Scripture because they say, well, you don’t understand it, and beside that it isn’t binding upon us because the Bible is a daughter of the Church and not the Church a daughter of the Bible, therefore the Bible has no authority over the Church.

But if you complain that the Pope is not Christ’s vicegerent on earth, they will run to that obscure passage, I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom, and they say, how dare you deny the Bible? Why, the Bible says, I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom, and that was Peter, and this Pope is a descendant of Peter. I don’t know how we get that way, but false teaching always hunts an obscure passage, always hunts an obscure passage.

Which reminds me of the Mormon missionary that was traveling, and somebody said, you believe in a plurality of wives, how do you do with that passage that says let a bishop be the husband of one wife? He said that means at least one. He had it explained anyhow. Well, heresy always hunts obscurity, and false teaching always hunts the difficult text.

You see, my brethren, it is like if I were to take you to my farm, if I had a farm, and I would say to you, now here you will find apples and peaches and grapes, and here are watermelons and cantaloupes and sweet potatoes. And I would name 15 or 20 edible fruits or vegetables or grains and say, now this is all yours, take over. And I would come back a month later and find my guests half starved, and when I would say to them, what’s the matter, you look undernourished? They would say, well, we are undernourished because we have found a plant that we can’t identify. There is a plant behind the old oak stump back there near the end of the far field just over the hill, and we have spent one month trying to identify this plant.

But I would say, you’re starving, you look sick, you’ll get TB. What’s the matter with you? And they would say, well, we’re worried about this one verse, this one plant. And that’s exactly what a lot of God’s children do. They starve themselves to death knee-deep in clover because there’s one little old plant back of a stump in the rear end of the field that they can’t identify.

And heretics always starve you to death while they worry you to death about that one obscure passage of Scripture. So I’m going to root out this passage in order that nobody will come and worry you with it and say that they know what it means and therefore try to prove that you’re wrong.

Now, what this verse doesn’t teach, or these verses does and do not teach, they do not teach universalism. You know universalism is the belief in the restitution of all fallen beings to a state of blessedness. Some of them believe only in the restoration of all human beings to blessedness, not only Christians, but all human beings finally to blessedness.

Then there is another kind of more exhaustive universalism which teaches not only the restitution of all human beings, but the devil and all the fallen angels. They’re very generous and take in everything, every human and every creature that has fallen and sinned against God.

Now this is a dream born of desire. And this universalism, the teaching that every moral creature would finally be saved, is a dream born of desire. And it springs from humanitarian motives, no doubt. Humanitarian feelings within the breast lead us to desire the salvation of all, but it is not taught in the Scriptures. The Bible specifically states that except we repent we shall all likewise perish. And it pictures us a hell where the devil and his angels are, and where all that are not found in the Book of Life are finally consigned.

So, the teaching of the Bible is definitely not universalism. And whatever this passage teaches, which I have read in your hearing, it does not teach universalism. And second, it does not teach a second chance.

Now the Russellites, I do not call them Jehovah’s Witnesses because I do not want to soil that Holy Name by identifying it with any false teachers. But the Russellites teach that there is a second chance. They say that everybody that dies will have a chance in the future world. And then if he turns down that chance, he will be annihilated. He will cease to be.

When a sinner dies, he sleeps in the earth, body and soul, in a state of deep unconsciousness. And then when the resurrection comes, he will be raised and given another chance. If he turns down that chance, then he will be annihilated and cease to be, and there will be no hell. Now that is what the Russellites teach. And of course they will hold up in passages like this.

But this error thrives on difficult texts. It cannot stand the full white light of the Bible. It cannot stand the teachings of Jesus. It cannot stand the book of Romans. It cannot stand the book of Hebrews. It cannot stand the book of Revelation. It cannot stand the four Gospels. This heresy cannot possibly stand up under all the light of the Bible. It is a night-blooming plant and blooms in the shadows of human thought. But as soon as we turn the whole Bible loose on it, it withers and dies.

Now what it does mean? It means that there are lost souls, which the Scripture calls spirits in prison, them that are dead. And some of these in the passage are identified as being the earth’s population at the time of Noah’s flood. They heard the message preached and they denied or refused it, rejected it. And the result was that they perished along with their evil deeds at the coming of the flood.

And it teaches us that these all went to the place of the dead; Hades in the New Testament, Sheol in the Old, the place of the dead, and that Christ’s body, when He died, lay three days in Joseph’s new tomb. But that His spirit was not in His body, but separated temporarily from His body. And in that spirit, He went and preached to the spirits that were in Hades, the spirits in prison.

Do you remember the Apostles’ Creed that we used to quote it around here sometimes, but we’ve sort of quit. We all believe in the Apostles’ Creed. It says this about our Lord, that He was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born to the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried. And the third day, He arose again from the dead.

Now that’s the way we Protestants have it. But the old Apostles’ Creed reads like this, that Jesus Christ was born to the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried, and descended into Hades. And the third day, He arose again from the dead.

Now that was only saying what Peter said here, and what Paul said, as we’ll notice later. That when Jesus Christ’s spirit was free from the crucified body, that spirit did not lie quiescent or hover over the tomb. Jesus Christ, the Eternal Son, in His spirit, had a work to do. And so the work He had to do was to go, descend into hell, that is, descend not into the fires of hell for punishment, but descend to the place of the dead, and there preach the word to those that had died, and whose spirits were confined there.

And so, He preached the soundness of Noah’s position, and He told them why judgment had come, and He justified the ways of God to man, and explained what had taken place, in order that they might know that they were being treated as intelligent beings.

Always remember, brethren, that God treats every human being as an intelligent being. You may not be as bright as Einstein, but you’re morally intelligent, and God will never violate your intelligence. And He never means that you should simply shut your eyes and gulp and swallow what’s ever given to you. He means that you’re an intelligent, moral being, and therefore He will not violate your intelligence, nor will He treat you like a moron.

There’s a certain healing evangelist who goes up and down the country, and when anybody comes, he says, they’ve got a demon in them, and he wants to pray for the demon to go out. He tells everybody in the congregation, now don’t you open your eyes and look, for if you do, the demon will go on you. That kind of intimidation, that kind of trickery.

Why the average magician who does tricks for money on a stage wouldn’t be so cheap. That if Jesus Christ is casting out devils and healing the sick, I don’t dare look lest the demon will jump on me. Where do you find that in your Bible? Where is that in the New Testament? Where is that any place within the confines of the Word of God? Nowhere. That’s cheap trickery. And I’d have no hesitation to look in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Jesus said, I never did anything in a corner. I never did anything with people’s eyes shut. I never had to do anything and hide. All religious activity should be an open book. Everything from the treasurer’s receipt book up and down the scale in the church of Christ should be open to the eyes of mankind.

And there’s never any place in the Bible where God treats me as if I didn’t have good sense. So that even the spirits that were in prison, even those who died and are in the place of the dead, our Lord went to them in His spirit and preached to them and explained how things were, in order that justice might be done.

You take an ordinary English or American court, something like this goes on. The evidence has been heard. The jury goes out and deliberates. They come back in. They pronounce the defendant guilty. And the judge says, will the defendant please rise and face the court? The defendant rises and the judge says something to this effect. Mr. So-and-so, the evidence has been heard, and a jury of your peers have decided from the evidence that you have been guilty of such and such a crime. Before you are sentenced, is there anything you want to say?

In other words, we’re about to sentence you, but we’re not abrogating your intelligence. We’re not treating you like a robot. You are an intelligent human being, and you’re able to judge us. And if we as a judge and jury are wrong you, you’ll judge us. Therefore, we want to clear this whole matter up. Have you anything to say? Usually, they don’t have.

But if there was anything that this intelligent sinner could say to the judge, the judge would give it respectful consideration. For in theory at least, American and English courts are not going to railroad a man to the electric chair nor to prison. They’re going to do it according to the rules of justice, with all the gears showing and all the processes open before the eyes of mankind.

So, God says that all the wicked were swept away by a flood and hurled to the place of the dead, and they will never see the blessedness of heaven or know God. But we’re not simply going to sweep them out as if they were inert bits of filth, they’re human, they’re intelligent, they’re moral creatures. They’re capable of exercising judgment on their own right.

And therefore, the everlasting Son of God went before the spirits in prison and preached to them there. Preached to them though they were living and because they were spirits, they were alive in their spirit. They had sinned in the flesh, and they were to be judged for the days they lived in the flesh. And their whole heart said, amen, to the judgment of God.

Now, my brethren, if you don’t believe this, let me give you some Scripture to show why Christ descended into the place of the dead, into hell, as it says. Ephesians 4:8-10. Turn to that, if you will, for a moment. It says, wherefore, he saith, when Christ descended upon high, he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto man. Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also first descended into the lower parts of the earth? He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all things that he might fill, all things.

We are told here that when Jesus Christ’s body lay in the grave, His spirit went to those captives in the place of the dead and preached release to them. And when He arose, He took with Him all the redeemed spirits of ransomed men that had been shut in the place of the dead, Hades.

You remember, Jacob said, I will go down unto Sheol, Hades, down unto Sheol, mourning for my son. And when Samuel the dead man came back from the dead, he came up out of the earth. But after the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and after Christ had taken the redeemed ones with Him to heaven, to the place of Paradise, Paul said, I was caught up into Paradise, to the third heaven. It was no longer down, but up.

The Lord Himself, the Lord of life and glory, had taken His ransomed ones out of the place of the dead. But that place of the dead contained not only the redeemed ones, but it contained also those that were not redeemed, separated, however, by a gulf, a great gulf that was fixed. Lazarus and the rich man explain that. When the rich man died, he went to the place of the dead. And when Lazarus died, he went to the place of the dead, this time Abraham’s bosom, with a great gulf fixed between.

So, when our Lord descended after His death, He descended into Hades. He took all in Abraham’s bosom with Him up to heaven and left the rest there. But in doing it, He explained it and preached in His spirit to all those that were in the place of the dead.

Now, if that isn’t enough, let me give you Philippians 2:9 & 11. Wherefore, God also hath highly exalted Jesus, and given him a name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth. And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. So that not only those in heaven and those on earth, but those in hell are forced to confess with their tongue that Jesus Christ is Lord. And this they do to the glory of God the Father.

So, you see, my brethren, that passage that Peter gives us here doesn’t teach universalism. It teaches only that Jesus Christ, our Lord, while His body lay in the grave, went in the spirit to Sheol, the place of the dead. There He preached deliverance to the ransomed, and judgment to the lost, took His ransomed ones with Him and left the lost for the judgment of the Great Day.

But everyone, those under the earth and those on the earth, and all creatures everywhere, admit that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. This Jesus Christ, our Lord, is not going to rule over any that do not willingly submit to His rule. He will not enforce His rule over one human being or one moral creature.

But he will force from the unwilling tongues of even lost ones the fact that He’s right. True and righteous are thy judgments, O Lord, will be the only text in hell. The only text in hell, and I’m not sure it won’t be cut in tablatures of that terrible place. True and righteous are thy judgments, O Lord.

In order that that might be known through all the three worlds above and on the earth and beneath, there had to be a declaration of the whole just plan of God to those that are dead as well as those that live. But there is not one sentence, not one phrase, not one word, not one letter in the Bible that teaches that Jesus ever preached the gospel to the dead and said, come unto me. He said, Come unto me to the living. But he never preached a gospel of redemption and gave an invitation and said, Come.

It is appointed unto men once to die and after that, the judgement. The preaching to the dead was done in order that the dead, as well as the living, the lost as well as the saved, might know how true and just and righteous our God is, and how impeccable is His character, how holy are His ways, and that He doeth all things well.

Now, I admit that this is not the kind of a message to send you out with moist eyes, but you need to hear this, and we needed to know this, so the next time someone comes pushing your doorbell with a phonograph record to play to you, you will be able to smile and say, I know what the Bible teaches. Thank you. Goodbye. Quietly close, never slam it. Don’t slam it. That’s not nice. Christians never slam doors. But close it rather crisply, I would suggest, because their false teachers are growing, and their numbers are growing by leaps and bounds.

Last month we had in Chicago our 57th annual missionary council. We had about 1100 of us. Last summer when I was preaching at Keswick, out in the east, we were held up 45 minutes getting through Lincoln Tunnel. You know why? The traffic was so heavy on the road, and you know why it was so heavy on the road? Jehovah’s Witnesses were gathering at Yankee Stadium. 100,000 strong! After 57 years of missionary enterprise, we get 1100. They had 100,000 present.

So you need to know these things even if they don’t bless you at the time, so you will have a shield of truth to raise against the fiery darts of error.

Father, bless Thy Word. We pray Thee that Thou wilt help us to see how wondrous are Thy judgments and Thy ways past finding out, to receive with bowed heads and reverent minds the hard, obscure things as well as the easy, plain things.

We thank Thee, Lord, that the easy, plain things outnumber the others perhaps a thousand to one. Bless Thou the word given this morning, for Jesus’ sake. Amen..

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Tozer Talks

Eternity’s Values in View

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 3, 1957

It came to pass as Jesus went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees. Commentators don’t know whether this was a ruler of the synagogue or one of the Sanhedrin. But our Lord went into his house to eat bread on the Sabbath day, and they watched Him.

Then, verse 7, he put forth a parable to those that were bidden, when he marked how they chose out the chief rooms, that is, the closest seats, saying to them, when you are bidden of any man to a wedding, sit not down in the highest room, lest a more honorable man than thou be bidden. And he that bade thee and him come and say to thee, give this man place, thou begin with shame to take the lowest room. But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in the lowest room, that when he that bade thee cometh, he may say unto thee, Friend, go up higher.

Then, Jesus said, you will have honor in the presence of them that sit at meet with thee. For whosoever exalted himself shall be abased, and he that humbled himself shall be exalted.

Now, I talked about that last week. And the rest of this story is that while he thus sat at meet, he said also to him that bade him, that is, to the host, When thou makest a dinner or a supper, call not thy friends, nor thy brethren, nor neither thy kinsmen, nor thy rich neighbors, lest they also bid thee again, and a recompense be made thee. But when thou makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind, and thou shalt be blessed, for they cannot recompense thee. Then thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the just.

Now, the presence of our Lord Jesus at this dinner did not imply that He approved everything that He saw there. He went as the custom was in His time, but His being present didn’t mean that He accepted it, fell into it in spirit, and took part in it in every way. Because, you see, having the dinner was not wrong, and His accepting the invitation, of course, was not wrong.

But nevertheless, in this social gathering, wrong was present, both on the part of the guests and the host. And our Lord pointed out to them, as we saw above and in last week’s sermon, why or where the wrong was among the guests. The guests accepted it as an opportunity to exploit their own fame and to show off. Now, Christ pointed to sin, even the sin of his host.

Now, I want to say something that I know will be shocking to some of you, because you just don’t think such a thing should be said, even though it’s true. And it is simply this, that in doing what He did at this dinner, our Lord violated one of the first rules of civility.

Now, my friends, the rules of civility, the hollow rules of politeness, forbade that a man should sit down to a dinner and yet, while sitting there, quietly expose the evil of his host’s motive in giving the dinner. Now, this transgressed all the rules of good manners and of good breeding. You see, my friends, Adam’s fallen race has not been able to live with itself except by practicing hypocrisy, insincerity and intellectual dishonesty.

And this intellectual dishonesty and this deep insincerity has been codified and made into rules of etiquette and put down in books as marks of good breeding and evidences of good manners. But this Jesus, being Truth itself and being holiness incarnated and thinking as God thought and seeing through the facade of culture and etiquette, dared to transgress one of the first rules of civility, that you don’t accept a host’s hospitality and yet expose the host’s sin.

Now, my brethren, according to society’s standards, Christ was not a gentleman. This is the shocking thing. A seeing man among the blind is never a gentleman to the blind. And an honest man among the intellectually dishonest is never a gentleman to the dishonest. And a bold man among the timid is never a gentleman to the fearful.

So, Jesus brought upon Him the odium here and all down the centuries of violating the taboo of the salt, the code of hospitality. But it was not God’s code. It was man’s effort to cover his sin. It was and is to this day a taken for granted and rarely written but sometimes written set of rules which enables us to get along with ourselves and to live in a twisted, dishonest world like ours with the least possible friction. And our Lord Jesus cared not at all about the friction and cared not at all about their codes. He had come from God and what He had saw and heard He spake and no man received His testimony.

Now, having said this, and you will understand that when I say Christ was no gentleman, I mean to say that Christ did not feel that in order to be right, he had to fit in to the artificial rules which had at the bottom of them dishonesty and hypocrisy. And the dishonesty and hypocrisy that is practiced in society today and even in the church today will burn as fuel in hell below and the Lord would have nothing to do with it and neither should we.

Now, he said this to the host. And of course, the host’s face reddened, and he knew that he had been seen through. Our Lord said, when thou makest a dinner, call not thy friends nor thy brethren nor thy kinsmen nor thy rich neighbors. Now, does this mean that I, under the Lord’s commandment, cannot entertain my relatives? Does this mean that when my son, Bud, comes in from Park Forest to have Sunday dinner with us, as they do sometimes, that I were transgressing these commandments of Jesus? Does that mean that when your relatives come in from afar and you go to extra and joyful effort to give them a nice meal, that this is forbidden by our Lord? No.

So, to believe would contradict the acts of Bible saints and Christ Himself often ate with His friends. Therefore, He could not mean that. You see, the easiest way to obey this is the wrong way. And that’s often true in the teachings of Jesus. The easiest way to duck out of it is just to obey it according to the letter.

Christ was never much of a letter man. He was all for the spirit of things, all for the spirit. And therefore, the easiest way is to do what you’re told according to the letter. As I said a year or so ago in preaching on John 13, that the easiest and less expensive way to obey the foot washing commandment is to wash your foot. The easiest way for me to do would be to wash my feet right after he’d carefully washed it and perfumed it. That would be the easiest possible way to get out of that commandment. And often to do literally what we’re told to do without a thought of the spirit of the teaching is the easiest way out. Tithe, give your tenth. That’s the easiest thing that you can do. And go to church and go home. That’s the easiest way and the least effective and the least meaningful.

Now, the easiest way to fulfill this would be to withdraw from your friends and relatives and show no love for them and renounce the tithes of blood and friendship and never invite your father-in-law or your aunt to a dinner and never show any interest in your kin and your friends and neighbors.

Now, our Lord never taught that here because He didn’t practice it Himself. And the saints haven’t practiced it and the holiest of them haven’t. And He taught hospitality back from the day of Abraham and they showed it from that day down. And the Lord placed His tender approval upon it.

Now, what is the true meaning and what did our Lord say? Well, you see, the Pharisees sought religious merit, and this was not a social gathering here at all. It’s entirely possible to have a social gathering and not expect it to be a religious thing, and not intend it to be a matter of reward or merit, and not expect a crown or recompense for it.

It’s perfectly easy for us down home to, when the doorbell begins to almost come off a wall or the chimes, why, to run and open the door and have a lot of kids bounce in and fall over everything, begin to yell, we enjoy it. And we love to have them, and it is not a question of religious reward or merit. Not a question of showing off or doing something with the smug belief that we shall be recompensed in the judgment.

No, but the Pharisees did it for that very reason. They sought reward and their dinner had religious meaning, and it was given to discharge the obligation of hospitality as taught in their Scriptures and they smugly and self-righteously believed that in doing this, they would get a crown and that there would be a reward and recompense come to them in time to be.

Now the catch, Jesus said, is here. He said the catch is, that if you throw a dinner that costs $100, over the next year, you will be invited often enough to eat up that so that actually, you will get as much out of it as you put in it and you’re back where you started from.

How simple that is. He said if you hope to have reward, $100 worth of reward in heaven, by giving a dinner that costs $100 and inviting people in that will give a dinner that will cost them $100 and so you’ll get recompense. He said if you expect that, why, you’re all wrong because you’ll get your reward right now. You’ll eat your reward at a half-dozen tables over the next two weeks, He said.

Now he said if this had been just a social thing, if it had just been simply a matter of friendly greeting, saying come over and have lunch with us, stop by and have coffee, that had been something else, but this was a religious thing, and they expected a reward.

So, here’s what Christ said in effect. Christ said in effect, you are to inhabit eternity and it’s unworthy of you to seek reward in time. It’s unworthy of you to do that, hoping for reward which doesn’t cost you anything, for you get out as much as you put in. And He said you trade gifts with only this world in view or if you expect reward in the coming time, you have already traded and bartered to a point where you get all you put into it.

Always remember that there has to be an over plus before there can be any reward or recompense. And He said, you must live for the resurrection of the just. Now unbelieving men are never willing to do this. You can tell where unbelief is because it is not willing to wait for the resurrection of the just.

What amazes me is the almost universal misunderstanding of Hebrews 11. Hebrews 11 is the Westminster Abbey of the Bible where God has buried His great saints, where their monuments are there with their names inscribed and a little bit telling why they’re there. They were all men of faith.

But have you noticed that the kind of faith they had was not the kind that gets the immediate answer? The only kind of faith that is recognized now among a lot of Christians is the kind that can reach up and pull down the apples of paradise, reach up in faith and pull them down, reach up and pull them down and have them and eat them and use them and use them up.

But in the 11th chapter of Hebrews it concludes by saying, just in case you aren’t familiar as you might be, it concludes by saying they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, they were tempted, they were slain with the sword, they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented, of whom the world was not worthy. They wandered in deserts and in mountains and in dens and caves of the earth, and these all, having obtained a good report through faith, received not the fulfillment of the promise, God having provided some better thing for us, that they without us should not be made perfect.

Their faith, the faith that God honored in that magnificent 11th of Hebrews, was in every instance a faith that had no present evidence except the inner evidence of things hoped for and the evidence of things to come. It was all an inward matter. They looked forward to that hour when a just and faithful God should make up to them and make good on all his promises, but they died without seeing the fulfillment of those promises.

This, you see, is upside down and backwards to the modern faith, which, if you have faith, you get instantly what you want. Well, there is a kind of faith that’ll get what you want at once, and I believe, as you well know, in praying and getting answers to prayer. This building is a monument to the fact that you can drop on your knees and ask God for something and get it.

Once we had $5,000 due Monday morning, Monday morning, and we had nothing, nothing, and we called the friends together and we prayed, and when Monday morning came, we had our $5,000. Where it came from, only God knows. I don’t know. The people didn’t know much about it, only a few that prayed.

So I believe that it is such a thing as getting an answer now, but God loves more that kind of long-range faith that can look down the years and wait for the resurrection of the just and can live now with eternity’s values in view, to quote the song.

Now, He said, you must live for the resurrection of the just, and unbelief is always revealed by our desire to have it now, get the reward now. And that’s even true of religious people who talk much of eternity and write songs about eternity and talk much of heaven and all the rest, but heaven to them is a sort of a faraway, remote paradise, light years distance, which they expect sometime to inhabit, but living for now.

Well, Jesus said, that’s what’s the matter with you, Pharisees. He said, you’re hoping to get religious merit by throwing a banquet. But have you noticed, He said, that everybody here happens to be by some queer trick, somebody that can invite you back. And when they invite you back, you eat up your reward with your teeth.

And the Lord said, now a man of faith is deeply convinced that there will be a resurrection. So he counts on it. He counts on it. He’s deeply convinced that there will be a resurrection. And he gives up present recompense and lives for that Day. Spell it with capital letters. That Day. Paul talked about it, that Day.

Now, true faith, I say, is a firm conviction that God will perform His promises. If He’s promised it now, He’ll get it now. But He’s promised more in the world to come and at the resurrection of the just. And the man of true faith will not insist on getting his presents now, he will wait. And the man of true faith says, I shall awake. I shall awake to memory, to life and to recompense.

And all the liberals and all the modernists and all the false cultists and all the annihilationists and all the unbelievers in the world can’t shake the man’s faith. He can rise in the morning and say with St. Patrick, I awake today to a mighty faith, the faith in the belief in the Trinity. And he says, I shall awake to the memory. I shall awake to life. I shall awake to recompense. And so for that reason, I am going to see to it that my good deeds aren’t reciprocal. For where they’re reciprocal, they’re canceled out.

McAfee sometimes, before we come down, will reach up and grab a little sheepskin affair and rub my shoes. But I rub his sometimes. So, if he thinks he’s going to get any reward for brushing a prophet’s shoes, why, he’ll have to think again. He isn’t. I’ve brushed his.

So, if you do a deed and you know somebody will return it and reciprocate it, you might as well not have done it, at least as far as any merit is concerned. There’s no merit in reciprocation. And that’s what these were doing. And that’s why Jesus said, Now, you people, if you want your reward, don’t call your rich friends and the people that will call you again. Oh, who is it? The poor and the maimed and the lame and the blind. And these, He said, cannot recompense you again.

I think that’s a tender sentence there. These, He said, cannot recompense you again. And these cannot enhance your social standing. These may not be so easy to be around. The maimed man is not the easy man to be around, the lame man, the blind man. But Jesus seemed to love their company, and He tells us too.

So today, today we declare, we believe in a redeeming death. We do show forth His death. Today we declare we believe in a redeeming death. And we believe in the resurrection. We believe in His resurrection and ours. And because He lives, we shall live also. That’s what we mean.

Now you say, I don’t like the way you have your communion. Well, really, friends, Jesus didn’t tell us how to have it. That’s the odd thing. The Greek church thought it out one way. The Roman church thought it out another way. The Baptists do it one way and the Methodists did it another. And the different groups do it in different ways. Obviously, there was no rule of thumb telling us just how the communion should be observed. Only that we should observe it, and in doing it, remember His death till He come. That’s all.

So that’s all we’re asking this morning. It’s all we’re doing. We’re going to think of His being present, His death till he come. The man that’s dead isn’t coming anywhere. The man that’s dead isn’t coming. You couldn’t say, I put a flower on my dead husband’s grave until he come. Dead men don’t come. You can leave the light burning from now till the trumpet and he’ll not come back. Dead men don’t come. What did the apostle mean? We do show forth His death till He come. He’s not dead.

That’s what he means. He died, but he’s not dead. He liveth forevermore. And now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruits of all that slept and sleep, and we do show His death and take for granted His glorious resurrection and wait for His return. And in doing this, we believe in a resurrection, and we believe in the resurrection of the just. And we believe that all good deeds done on earth that can be repaid again will cancel each other out. They’re not bad deeds, they’re good deeds. But they have no merit for the day to come.

But we believe that if we, according to the teaching of Jesus, see to it that we serve those who can’t serve us in return and help those who cannot help in return, and help to feed those that can never even know our names, maybe, then He said, you shall be recompensed at the resurrection of the just. Oh, what strong words. You shall be recompensed at the resurrection of the just. Who said it? Jesus said it. Jesus said it. You shall be recompensed at the resurrection of the just.

Now, I hope I can be skillful enough in this that I may not that I may not embarrass anybody. But I heard something that I can’t let go. In our young people’s work, in our girls’ side of it, plans were made and carried through to, sort of as the old Methodists used to do, get somebody, some established Christian woman who would take into her heart and into her prayer life some little girl and sort of mother her. Not interfere, but just sort of mother her. Look after her. Maybe have her out to the house. Maybe pray with her. Maybe send her a little card and thus keep in touch with her. Now, that’s a very lovely thing and quite Christian in its spirit and quite right.

Well, of course, these girls had to be assigned. So, the lady in charge assigned to one certain woman in our church a certain little girl. And this woman called up the one who’s in charge and said, Mrs. Moore, you have assigned me such and such a girl.

Now, I’m paraphrasing this. I wouldn’t guarantee verbatim, but this is the gist of it. You have assigned me little Miss So-and-so as my little charge. And that’s all good except for one thing. She comes from a good home. She has good parents. She dresses well. She doesn’t need me. Would you please assign to me a little girl that doesn’t have any Christian background or any good home? A little girl that comes in Friday evening or Saturday, whenever it is, with torn blouse and dirty face. Would you assign that girl, some girl like that to me? Because that’s the kind I want to help.

I’ve preached the gospel since I was 19 years old. But before my God above, I know that with all my preaching of the deeper life that I’ve never risen to that height of pure spirituality. Brethren, that’s what Jesus taught. That’s what Jesus taught.

Let me help the one that can’t help me. And let me help the one who may be dirty when she comes to my house. Let me help the little girl whose parents probably drink and swear and smoke and look at television and cuss each other and fight and kick her out on the sidewalk to play.

And so, the little urchin off the street who comes in here. And that’s what’s happening here. They’re coming in and these good folks, Clara and Meryl and their helpers are looking after them. But this woman didn’t want a nice one that had a good home and came clean. She wanted one that nobody else wanted.

There is an illustration of what Jesus taught, brethren, that is it. In the resurrection of the just, there will be bishops and cardinals and reverends and pastors and reformers who will not have the reward nor the recompense that people like that have. A meek, self-effacing person who never pushes to the front but wants to help those who can’t help back.

The reward such persons will get will infinitely outweigh the reward that a man gets for merely standing up and doing what he likes to do best in the world, except pray. Best in the world, preaching to me I’ll never get any reward for preaching. In fact, I have long ago given up any hope of a crown because I’m doing what I love to do and would weep if I was forced to quit it.

But dear friends, shall not we, you and I, go to the Lord in tender prayer and ask Him to help us quietly to find deeds and people that cannot recompense us here. And with our money, and God knows we’ve got a lot of it these days of inflation and prosperity. With our money and with our hands, don’t buy your way out, use your hands sometimes too, help those who can’t recompense, who have no social standing, maybe no education, and maybe not the sanitary standards that you are used to, but who need you.

So said Jesus tenderly, these cannot recompense you again, but you shall be recompensed at the resurrection of the just. Amen.