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In Christ, a New Creation

In Christ, a New Creature

September 21, 1958

Now, in the fifth chapter of Second Corinthians, beginning with verse fourteen, for the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge, that if One died for all, then were all dead. And that He died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them and rose again. Wherefore, henceforth know we no man after the flesh: yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now, henceforth, know we Him no more. Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature. Old things are passed away, behold, all things are become new.

Now, Paul says here that he once knew Christ after the flesh. And this is not meant to be an answer to the scholar’s dilemma, the problem of whether Christ and Paul had ever met in the flesh. He said that though we have known Christ after the flesh, and Paul’s predilection for the use of the plural “we” for “I” has led some people to think that this was a testimony on Paul’s part that he had known Christ while Christ was alive, yet before His crucifixion. Now, this is one of the things that we will have to leave unsettled until the day when we know a little more than we know now. But it is not important, because what is considered here hasn’t anything to do with personal acquaintance or even friendship. For Paul saying we once knew Christ after the flesh means we once regarded Him from a human point of view. Whether he had ever met Him or not, I do not know. I would be inclined to doubt that. But whether he had or not, what Paul said here is, though we once regarded Jesus as a man and tried to appraise Him as a man and think about Him as a man, now we do so no more.

This appraising our Lord or this attempt to do it has provided rather vain employment for natural men who are with a religious bent all down the centuries. They try to capture the essence of the Master or they try to explain His person or appraise His genius or by some technique of analysis, they try to understand Him. What was He, a Jew? They say, well, no. Yes and no. He was born of the seed of Abraham and of the line of David, and his mother was a Jewess whose lineage could be traced. So that makes Jesus a Jew according to the flesh. That much we know. But the religion of Jesus, the religion of Judaism as it was practiced in Jesus’ time, was as far apart as the poles. So, it is not proper to say that Jesus was a Jew, meaning that Jesus was part and parcel of the Judaism of the time of Jesus. He was not. But He was a Jew in that He was a Jew in the flesh of Abraham.

There are those who say Christ was not a Jew. And of course, that’s a great mistake. It’s a modern heresy and an error, but yet, He was not a Jew. There was nothing about Jesus like the Pharisees or the Herodians, Sadducees, the Essenes, or any of those who were the Jews of Christ’s day. Neither did He have about Him anything of the Greek philosophies. They’ve wondered what was, did He learn from the Greek? The answer is no. Our Lord God, Jesus, being God, knew of course everything the Greeks knew and infinitely more. But His doctrines partake not of the Greek’s doctrine. There’s no trace nor flavor of Greek philosophy in the teachings of our Lord. Neither was he an oriental. They sometimes try to classify the Jews as Orientals and the Bible is an oriental book. But anybody who has read even in the most cursory manner in the religions of the Orient know, that there is a flavor in the gospels completely absent. And there is something in the Oriental religions wholly different from the teachings of our Savior. There is no likeness at all.

So, this Jesus has been the despair of Adam’s race. A few have worshipped Him and had their hearts satisfied. But the others have tried to explain Him and have run upon the rocks. They can’t do it and so they go into despair. The man Paul said, henceforth know we Him no more. Henceforth, we consider Him not according to the flesh. We regard Him not from a mere human point of view. You see, Paul had met the triumphant Christ on the road. The result had been conversion, illumination and transformation. The man Paul was completely changed. And he fully accepted Christ as God and Redeemer. And this complete change of viewpoint resulted concerning Christ.

So, Paul said, that I see Him no more as a mere man. I see Him as the redeeming God, the Head of a new race, whose death has doomed the old life. For said Paul, if He died for all and are all dead. His resurrection had established the new life. The inadequacy of a merely earthly Christ, we can’t over emphasize it or overstate it. This is the time when Christ is very chummy for everybody. But the Christ of homey companionability is not the Christ of the New Testament. He’s not the Christ of the throne or the Christ of the glory. The Christ of the feminine charm who is sweet but helpless and bewildered among real men. Christ who is the idealist who died for His ideal but failed, and whose religion can never be lived. Christ the martyr who gave all and died in a noble and praiseworthy attempt to change man. And Christ the wonderful one by comparison and by some pulpit orators spend half their time drawing comparisons between Christ and somebody else, Christ and Shakespeare, Christ and Plato, Christ and Caesar.

I believe that all this fawning upon the human Christ is little short of an insult to His Majesty, because you see, we cannot compare the incomparable. We dare not attempt it. Comparing that which cannot be compared, that’s what we’re trying to do. Jesus Christ stands alone. We compare Him with nobody for His is the incomparable Christ.

Now, the man of God said, though we once knew Him after their flesh, we know not only Christ no more after the flesh, but we know no man after the flesh. Now, what did he mean there? He didn’t mean he had no human acquaintances. He meant in the kingdom of God, mere human standards are no longer valid. Human standards are valid on Earth, but they’re not valid in the kingdom of God. The standards of race, they are not valid standards. We cannot separate races into colors and say this is superior, this is a little further down the scale, this is higher. We cannot do that. We dare not do that because there is no superior race.

We’re all made of one blood. There’s no superior color. In the kingdom of God, there’s no such thing as race or color. There is neither Jew or Gentile or Scythian or bondman nor freeman. We are all one in Christ Jesus and new people that has been raised above race and color, physical beauty, size and strength and cultural levels and wealth and education and position. Not one of these counts in the kingdom of God, not one. Even in James day, the church had forgotten that. At least parts of the church had forgotten it. And they were busy praising some men who wore big rings and had much gold and looking down upon those who are poor. And James wrote a very scathing chapter in which he told him to cut that out. That God’s people were judged by their faith. They were rich according to faith. And that men should in the church of Christ not be judged according to their bank account, their education, their social level or color. They should be judged according to the faith they had.

And so we must judge, and the church of Christ must judge. And as men differ from men and men do differ from each other in the church, we’re not all alike. The church of Christ does not consist of one dead level of conformity. In the church of Christ, we differ from each other. The star differs from another star in glory yonder. And in the great day when Christ shall come back to judge the world, we’ll find that we’re not all alike. Some are 60-fold, some 30-fold, some 100-fold, never a man shall be rewarded according as he hath done. So, the church should remember that.

But the difference in the church of Christ is not a difference by the old standards, by the old judgments of mortal flesh. According to the flesh are the key words there, key phrase. The church should put a different estimate upon men. We should judge men according to their faith and the man of God said the church should do that. We should judge them according to their love. We should appraise them according to the purity of their lives. We should judge them according to their generosity, according to their unselfishness, according to their unselfish Christ’s likeness. And we should not judge them according to the flesh.

Nothing else comes in the kingdom of God Paul says so, nothing else comes. The church I suppose, is still having a hard time to remember that her Savior was a peasant. Still having a hard time to remember that her Savior never had a degree from any college. It is still very difficult for us to keep in mind that our Savior was born in a manger among cattle. That the first voice you heard after the crooning voice of His mother was the sound of the lowing of oxen or the braying of donkeys.

It’s very hard for us to remember that he was born, not born in the beautiful, softly colored manger and stable of the Christmas cards. He was born in a dirty, smelly, stable, in the manger part no doubt on the straw. But He was born there nevertheless in that dirty place. The world doesn’t like to believe it and the church doesn’t like to believe it, but it is so. If He had been born up on a high level, it would have instantaneously condemned everybody beneath him. But He was born so low down, and anybody can come down. If we had to have a million dollars to be saved, it would rule out practically everybody except a handful. But if you don’t have to have a cent, anybody can come. Because that’s a simple matter. Anybody can have nothing, but not everybody can have a million dollars.

So, if we had to have an IQ of 180 and been able to appreciate all the great philosophy and art of the world; if Christ had been born on that kind of level, it would have discouraged every common man in all the wide world who read the story of the gospel. But the Man was born in a manger among the lowing cattle. He had nothing. And he grew up helping His father in a carpenter shop, his supposed father. So, that settles it for everybody. That’s why you can preach Christianity in a coal mine or among the naked savages of New Guinea. We know no more any man after the flesh. Our judgments are not earthly judgments. They’re heavenly judgments and spiritual judgments.

If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature, he continues. Old things have passed away and all things have become new. Redemption, you see, is not an improvement of the old order. Christ never attempts to improve Adam’s flesh. If we could only remember that. This closely ties in with what I said last Sunday morning, that the old vessel was always with us. And if you could improve yourself and you were consciously improved, it would be a source of pride to you and like the seraphim and cherub rather that covers, perhaps you would fall in sin, because you would regard yourself, you’d become self-regarding.

In psychology they call that narcissism. The looking in and on upon and admiring yourself, from the old legend that a god by the name of Narcissus looked at his image in the glass or in the water, flowing water or still water, and admired himself so he turned into a flower. That’s where we got the narcissus. Those old Greeks having gods and reasons for everything. But narcissism, looking in on yourself, that marrying yourself, that’s what would happen to you and me if God improved the own flesh, but he doesn’t. He just lets the old flesh lie around but inside the flesh, he puts a jewel.

You know, they used to have a saying back in the days, oh, even in the days of Shakespeare, that in the head of every toad there was a diamond. A jewel in the head of the toad. I don’t know why some sharp-eyed fellow didn’t run that down and gather a few toads and disprove it, but they believed it. They believed the toad carried a jewel in his forehead. Now, that isn’t true unless you first put the jewel there. But I do know it’s true that in every Christian there is a jewel and redemption doesn’t improve the old order, it creates a new order. And it incorporates the personality, the individuality, the soul, the spirit, of the old order into the new and thus completely displaces it. It’s supersedence of the old by the new. And all things become new; a new origin, we are born of the Spirit; a new Father, God is now our Father; a new heart, I will take the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh; new thoughts, new values, new desires, new ambitions, new pleasures.

Every Christian ought to about every, say every six months, take a few hours off, go alone and say don’t bother me now unless it’s a matter of life and death. Get down before God with his open Bible and appraise himself and see whether he is indeed a new man, whether his old values are changing, whether his old desires are going and new ones are forming, whether old ambitions are passing away, whether their old pleasures are passing. You ought to do that. We ought to do that.

And if we find that we’ve slowed down, and looking ourselves over we find there’s no improvement in our spiritual lives over a year ago or six months ago, we ought to do something about it. Not the improvement, understand, of you, but the improvement of your spiritual life, of your desires, ambitions, love, faith. Forgiveness, patience, meekness, modesty, generosity, all these should improve. They’re the growth of the new creature in you.

So these are the new people. And God is getting ready for a new day. Behold He says in Revelation, God maketh all things new. And so, God is getting a new people ready for a new day, to inhabit a new kingdom, to inhabit new heavens and new earth. And we shall be in the new heaven and new earth and shall sing a new song before the throne, a new song, Worthy is the Lamb. A song that never has been composed yet. Palestrina, Handel, nobody has composed that song yet. We get a little trace of what it is going to be like and we know the theme. The theme is going to be the Worthy Lamb beside the throne. That’s the theme, but the song hasn’t been composed. And they sang a new song. A song that not even David with all his genius ever composed.

So, there’s new people on the earth. We ought to remember that more and more now as we see the day approaching and more and more, cause we’re all mixed up. Religion is now all mixed up. What I saw coming is now pretty much on us, that liberalism and tolerance and the broad religious latitude and Aryan spirit that takes in everything is pretty much on this now. And we’re going to have to grit our teeth and set our jaw and trust God and stand, and stand for New Testament Christianity in the midst of the whirling billows of mixed-up religion.

I heard a interview on the air the other day. A man was being interviewed. He is going to call together a conference of world religions, and they’re going to come from everywhere. Buddhists are going to send representatives, Muhamadins, Shintoists, Persians, Catholic, Jew, Protestant, and all the other minor religions of the world are going to send representatives. The National Council of Churches is having representatives there, I think, and the Jews and all. He’s calling them together. And they’re going to try to work something out where we can get together instead of being apart; we can be united instead of separated.

Well, I could have told them that long ago, if they would just let me read a chapter from the Book of Revelation to them. I knew that was coming. But now, hear it boldly declared, learned man, geniuses, religious geniuses, going to bring us all together. There to stand and say, I believe in God, the Father Almighty, and I don’t believe in the god of the heathen. I believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and I don’t believe in any of your synthetic saviors. I do not believe in Adam’s flesh. I believe in a new creation. You’re going to be just about as popular at that convention as a communist would be at a tea party of the Daughters of the American Revolution. They won’t be in the world be welcome, but I don’t suppose any of them will be there. I know one that won’t be.

No, my brethren, we are, the religions getting together now. We’re stroking each other’s back. And here’s the man of God with his sword and he cut sharp down through the middle and says, on this side, after the flesh, on this side, the new creation created in Christ Jesus. They are as far apart as the gulf that separated the rich man and Lazarus. So, we want to be loving and charitable, and we don’t want to join the crowd of those who condemn.

Years ago, a brother wrote a tract, “Come to Jesus.” It was a beautiful, tender appeal to sinners to come to Jesus. Then, he got into a religious controversy, and he wrote a hot blistering attack on somebody. He had it all finished except the title. And, a friend of his, he showed the manuscript to a friend. He said, here’s the manuscript of my new attack on so and so. And he said, I have got everything finished but the title. I can’t think of a title. Could you help me? His friend read it. Yes, he said, I think I could tell you a good title, something that would cover the subject pretty well. He said, well, alright, what is it? He says, call it, “Go to Hell by the author of Come to Jesus.” Well, that’s been told, and I rather understand that. I never want to adopt a go to hell attitude. Who am I to send men off. Only the Lord God can send men there. But I do know my testimony. I know what I’m supposed to say. I know what I’m supposed to stand for, what I’m supposed to believe. And so, we take our stand, and we take it solidly. They’ll come our way, still we stand. They turn their backs on us, still we stand. They’ll praise us when they’re in the right mood, we stand. Then they’ll turn their backs and condemn, still we stand. 

So, there’s a new people. And my friends, nothing else matters, but that you belong to that company of people. Nothing else matters. That you are a fundamentalists doesn’t mean a snap of your fingers. That you’re an evangelical, doesn’t mean that. That you belong to the Christian Missionary Alliance, doesn’t mean that, whether you’re a new creature or not. Whether you’ve been born of the Spirit and washed in the blood, or that you’ve entered that Kingdom, it’s everlasting whether God is indeed your Father, Jesus Christ, indeed your Savior. Whether the Holy Ghost does indeed abide in you, that’s all that matters. Nothing else matters.

There’s a new people and they don’t judge each other according to Adam standards. They’ve left Adam in his ways. And while the old tabernacle is still Adamic and they have still to dwell in it, it still has all the weaknesses of Adam’s lost fallen flesh. A new man in Christ Jesus had nothing to do with it. He stands aloof and dwells apart as a star in the firmament, new in Christ.

This is a new Savior, new kingdom, new people, new heaven, new earth, new race, new world. It’s all before us and our dear God only knows how near it is to us. We will not set dates. We’ll only say it can’t be too far off seeing the situation the world is in. And may God grant that it may come up soon and reveal itself soon and the two shall be sleeping in one bed, one shall be taken and the other left. Two shall be working in the field, one shall be taken and the other left.

In all of these passages about which, over which controversy now rages, shall fulfill themselves and prove themselves by fulfillment. Always remember, fulfillment is the last final interpretation. Men can interpret Scriptures differently on the Second Coming and prophetic themes, but fulfillment will be the last final answer. When our Lord returns and the dead rise and the living are changed, the book will become then wide open for everybody. It won’t be a question then of arguments. It will be a question of wide-eyed wonder in the presence of fulfilled promises. And that I’m looking for and hoping for.

I don’t know where else to turn, do you? Is there any place else to look? Do you know of anywhere else to go? Does modern education got it? Does modern politics got anything for you? Do you think they have? Does modern science got anything? I don’t know a place in all the wide world to look. Sociology, do they got anything, sociologists that got us in the mess we’re in now between races. Politicians have got us in the mess we’re in now between nations. And the liberals and the synthetic religions, they’ve got us in the mess we’re in now between religions. Only one direction my brother—UP! There is only one place to look and that’s up. Amen.

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Tozer Talks

“A Look at our Worship of God”

October 27, 1957

Tonight I want to draw to a conclusion a series of talks on worship which I have been trying to give. And you know the text has been one from the old and one from the new. So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty. For he is thy Lord, worship thou him. Then, Peter’s words in the tenth chapter of Acts. He is Lord of all. Tonight, I want to read from the Song of Solomon, Solomon’s song, chapter five, verse eight and following. I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my beloved that you tell him I am sick of love. That is, I’m lovesick. And they asked her, what is thy beloved more than another beloved O thou fairest among women? What is thy beloved more than another beloved that thou does so charge us? She replies, my beloved is white and ruddy, chiefest among 10,000. His head is as the most fine gold. His locks are bushy and black as a raven. His eyes are the eyes of doves by the rivers of water washed with milk and fitly set. His cheeks are as a bed of spices and sweet flowers, his lips like lilies dropping sweet-smelling myrrh. His hands are as gold rings set with the beryl: his belly is as bright ivory overlaid with sapphires. His legs are as pillars of marble set with sockets of fine gold. His countenance is as Lebanon, excellent as the cedars. His mouth is most sweet, yay, he is all together love. This is my beloved. And this is my friend, O daughters of Jerusalem.

Now, the Song of Solomon, sometimes called canticles, another word for song, is a song of love. It is the song of the shepherd and his fair young bride to be, and a rich and worldly rival is seeking to draw her away from her shepherd lover. And then after much dialogue in unutterably beautiful poetry, it is summed up in 8:7. It says many waters cannot quench love. Neither can the floods drown him. If a man would give all the substance of his house for love, it would utterly be contempt. That is the sum of it. The strong melody of love that runs through this is heard sounding all through to the climax.

Now, our Lord Jesus Christ is the Shepherd. This has been believed by the church from the beginning, and the redeemed church is the fair bride. And in an hour of distress, she tells the daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my beloved, tell him that I am sick of yearning for him. And of course, they asked her the question, why, why do you come to us like this? We we have boyfriends too. We know lots of fine young men. What is it about your beloved more than any other beloved, that you’d send us out over the country hunting him up to tell him the bride is sick of love. Then she answered, my beloved is white and ruddy. I’ve read it. And this is my beloved and he is all together lovely. This is my beloved and this is my friend, O daughters of Jerusalem.

And to that question, what is thy beloved more than another? David also answers in the 45th Psalm. He says he’s fairer than the children of men. Grace is poured forth from his lips. And he rides forth in might and glory and majesty and prosperity and meekness and righteousness. And his throne is forever and ever. He goes on to describe him in what he calls a good matter touching the king. His pen is the pen or a ready writer; his tongue is the pen of a ready writer. Then Peter rises higher than all of them put together, this apostle, and simply says in one great broad sweep, He is Lord of all. Now, this is our beloved. This is the one that we have been born to worship. This is the one that God made us to worship. And let’s talk a little bit about what He is the Lord of. I have already over the nights preceding this have talked about His being Lord of Life and Lord of Being and so on.

And now, I speak of His being Lord of wisdom, briefly.  He is Lord of wisdom and in Him is hidden all wisdom, and all knowledge, and it’s hidden away. And all the deep, eternal purposes are His. Because of His perfect wisdom, He is enabled to play the checkers across the board of the universe, and across the board of time and eternity, making everything work out right. I don’t mind saying to you dear people that if all I knew of Christianity was what I’m hearing these days mostly, I don’t think I’d be too interested. I don’t think I’d be much interested in the Christ that we were always trying to get something out of. Always something and if you don’t have it and he had it, you go to Him to get it. Well, now that is a part of the Bible of course. But it’s rather, the lower side of it. The higher side of it is, who He is and who we’re called to worship. What is thy beloved? Not a word was said there about what He had for, but just the fact that He was something. She described him in language that could be indelicate in her passionate out pouring. What is your beloved? Why she said, he’s white and ruddy. He’s chiefest among 10,000 and his eyes are like the eyes of doves by the rivers of water washed with milk, and fitly set. And his cheeks are a bed of spices and his lips like lilies dropping sweet smelling myrrh. His mouth is sweet, yay is all together lovely.

And she didn’t say, why, don’t you know why I love him? Because when I’m tired, he rescues me. And when I’m afraid, he takes my fear away. And when I want a job, he gets it for me. When I want a bigger car, I ask him. When I want to have health, he heals me. And now He helps His people, and I believe. And a young man here tonight who prayed a year for a car and God gave to him. I believe in that. I believe that God does those things for people. The first few years of my ministry, if I couldn’t pray and ask God for things, I would have starved to death and not only that, but dragged my wife down with me.

So, I believe in answered prayer, alright. But then, that’s not all. Certainly, that’s not even, that’s the lowest section of it. He is the Lord of all wisdom. And He is the Lord of the Father of the everlasting ages. Not the Everlasting Father as it says in our King James Version, the Father of the everlasting ages. He lays out the ages as an architect lays out his blueprint. He lays out the ages as a developed real estate development man lays out a small town and then builds as our friend Buckles did down here. He lays it out and then builds hundreds of houses on it. And so, He is not dealing with buildings and local developments. He’s dealing with the ages. And He is the Lord of all wisdom. And because He’s perfect in wisdom, He is able to do this. And history is the slow development of His purposes you see.

You take a house that’s being built, the architect has drawn it down to the last tiny little dot and the tiny little x. He knows everything about it, written his name at the bottom, and turned it over to the contractor. And he has farmed it out to the electrician and the plumber and all the rest. And you go down by there some time and you say casually, I wonder what that’s going to be. It’s a mess now. There it is. There’s a steam shovel in there with its great ugly nose plowing out a hole and throwing it up on the bank or into trucks to haul away. And they’re unloading bricks there. It’s just a confused conglomeration of this and that. And you say, what’s this? And then, you come back by their six or eight to ten months later and you see a charming house there. The landscapers have even been in and the trees, the evergreens are standing there with little green spikes beside the windows, and it’s a beautiful thing. And a child playing on the lawn.

Well, we ask you to believe my friends that the Father of the everlasting ages, the Lord of all wisdom, has laid out His plans and He is working toward them. And you and I go by and we see a church all mixed up and we see her sore distressed by schisms rent asunder by heresy distress. We see her backslidden in one part of the world and we see confusion in another part of the world and we shrug our shoulders and say, what is thy beloved anyway? What is all this? And the answer is, He is the Lord of the wise ages and He’s laying it all out. And what you’re seeing now is only the steam shovel working. That’s all, only the truck backed up with bricks. That’s what you’re seeing. You’re only seeing workman in overalls going about killing time. That’s all you’re seeing. You’re just seeing people, and people make you sick because of the way we do, the way we backslide and tumble around and get mixed up and run after will-o’-the-wisps and think it’s the Shekinah glory. And hear an owl hoot and think it’s the silver trumpet and take off in the wrong directions, and spend a century catching up on ourselves and backing out.

And history smiles at us, but don’t be too sure brother. Come back in another millennium or so and see what the Lord of all wisdom has done with what He’s got. See then what He’s done. He’s the Lord of all wisdom, and history is the slow development of His purposes. And He’s the Lord of all righteousness. You know what? I’m glad I’m attached to something good. That there’s something good somewhere in the universe. Now I couldn’t possibly be, I couldn’t possibly be a Pollyanna optimist. I was born wrong. I would have had to have a different father and mother and a different ancestral line back at least ten generations if I could for me to have been a Pollyanna, plum pudding philosopher that believed that everything was good. And I can’t believe that. I don’t think it’s true. There’s so much that isn’t right everywhere and we might as well admit it. We just might as well admit it. If you don’t believe it, leave your car unlocked out there and then go out and see you get a bigger sermon than I can preach to you, It will be gone.

Righteousness, then we imagine that we’ve got the Pharisees who think they’re righteous and they’re not. They’re just self-righteous hypocrites. And we’ve got politicians that lie and make all kinds of promises which they don’t intend to keep. And the only honest one that I’ve known of in my lifetime has been Wendell Wilkie. When somebody challenged him with a promise that he made during a campaign, he said those were just campaign promises. He was the only one that I know of honest enough to admit he lied to get elected. He didn’t get elected, but he lied anyhow and admitted it, which was something. Righteousness is not found. If you think it is, get on a bus somewhere when there’s a crowd, and you will find that no matter how old and feeble you are, you’ll get the rib or two cracked or at least badly dinged by the elbow of some housewife on our way home. And we’re just not good. People are just not good. Among the first things we learned to do is something bad and something mean. Sin is everywhere. I don’t know whether Brother McAfee’s song, I told him I never cared much for that song but he loves it and sings it and has other people singing it. And I have begun to like it myself. I want a principle within. To cry to God for a principle of holiness within us to make us strong against the world and the evil outside of us. I’m beginning to see John must have had something there.

And you know brother and sister that this is reformation Sunday? Well you know that there’s iniquity are everywhere and I want to be joined to something good. You say well, I’m an American, I’m an American too. I was born here didn’t cost me a dime to become an American because my father little and my mother but didn’t cost me a dime. I’m an American, and I’ll never be anything else, but an American. And when they bury me there’ll be a little bit of America as the poet said, wherever I may be placed.

But, you have got to be pretty much of a, you gotta be an awful sissy to believe in the total righteousness of the United States of America. Don’t you? You’ve got to be an awful fool, really an awful fool. That buzzard’s nest up there at Washington. God bless them. It doesn’t make any difference whether they’re Democrats or Republicans are in there. They’re a bunch, of a lot of them at least, a bunch of crooks. And they mean alright, but they’re Adam’s fallen brood doing the best they can. We’d probably do worse, so we can pray for them and ask God to have mercy on them, but that’s about it.

But here we go and turn on the radio to try to get something educational, or something cultural and all you get is songs sung about automobiles and cigarettes. Well, it’s not a good world we live in, it’s a bad world. And you can become a Protestant, all right, that doesn’t help much. You can become an American, or be an American and that doesn’t help too much. But when you attach yourself to the Lord of Glory, you’re connected with something righteous, something that’s really righteous, not pollyannish, but something really righteous. He is Righteousness itself. The call of the concept of righteousness, and all the possibility of righteousness, are all summed up in Him. But unto the Lord, unto the Son he said, Thy throne, O God is forever and ever, a scepter of righteousness is the scepter of Thy kingdom. Thou hast loved righteousness and hated iniquity. Therefore God, Thy God hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness above Thy fellows.

So, we have there a perfectly righteous Savior, a perfectly righteous Savior. They spied on Him. They sent the enemy to search into His life. Can you imagine if Jesus had made a mistake anywhere down the line. Can you imagine if Jesus’ foot had slipped once, even once down the line? Can you imagine if Jesus had lost His temper once, or if Jesus had been selfish once? Can you imagine if Jesus had done one thing that you and I take for granted even once? Can you imagine that all the sharp, beady eyes of hell were following Him trying to catch something out of his mouth? And when the end of His days had almost come, He turned on them and said, which of you convicteth me of sin? Not a one of you.

Righteousness was His and He’s the High Priest and if you go back to the Old Testament, you will find that when the high priest went into the holy place, he wore on his shoulders and on his breast, certain affairs that were prescribed. But upon his forehead, he wore a miter and who knows what was on that miter? Holiness unto the Lord. He was saying the best he could. Even that man had to have a sacrifice made for him. But he was trying to say in symbol what has been fulfilled in fact, that when He the High Priest of all high priests came, He would wear on His forehead, Holiness unto the Lord. And when they in mockery crashed down that crown of thorns upon His brow; if they’d had the eyes of a prophet, they could have seen a miter there, holiness unto the Lord. He is the Lord of all righteousness and the Lord of all mercy, because He establishes His kingdom of reclaimed rebels, Jesus does. He redeemed them and he won them and he renews the right spirit within them. But every body in this kingdom is a redeemed rebel.

Do you know what we think about people that have betrayed our country? We scarcely forgive them. We forgive them, but we always look askance upon them, those who have fallen in as some have into communism, and have spied for the, or at least have helped the communistic scheme. And then they’ve gotten their eyes open, and have turned away from it and gone to the FBI, admitted it and straighten their lives out, and even them we look at with a bit of doubt.

But did you ever stop to think that Jesus Christ hasn’t got a single member of His kingdom anywhere that wasn’t a former spy and rebel for the enemy. Have you ever thought of it? If it’s bad for a man in Washington, or Oak Hill or University of Chicago to get secrets, and take them and tell them to the enemy. If that is bad, and it is bad, and they hang him for it, why, how much worse to be over on the side of the enemy against the Lord of Glory as all sinners are. And don’t forget, at all sinners are.

And that’s why I smile when I see an old self-satisfied Deacon, sitting with his hands crossed looking like a statue of St. Francis. He is a very godly man indeed, and very conscious of it. All right, Deacon Jones, don’t you know what you were? You were a rebel and a spy. And you sold out the secrets of the kingdom of God and collaborated with the enemy and lived to overthrow the holy kingdom of God. And that’s all of us. And there is not one of us it doesn’t include, not a one of those. And if you don’t like that, then you’re no theologian. If you knew your Bible, you would agree with me. Because that’s what we all were. But mercy, oh the mercy, Lord of all mercy.

Sometime, I want to preach a sermon on mercy. I don’t think I ever have. Of course, I’ve woven it into all of my preaching. But think of the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ, in utter mercy, utter mercy, mercy of our Lord. He is the Lord of all mercy. He is the Lord of all righteousness, and He sees how bad we are. But He’s the Lord of all mercy, and he doesn’t care. So, in His great kindness, He takes rebels and unrighteous persons, sinners, and makes them His own and establishes them in righteousness and renews a right spirit within them. And then we have a church. We have a cell, a company of believers meet together and He’s their Lord. And he’s the Lord of all power.

Now, here’s some Scripture. Just let me give it to you. After these things, I heard a great voice a great voice of much people in heaven saying, and what do you suppose they were saying? All salvation and glory and honor and power unto the Lord our God. This isn’t hysteria, but it’s ecstasy. There’s a difference. Hysteria is one thing, but ecstasy is another. And this was ecstasy. They said, alleluia and left the “H” off, and said, salvation and glory and honor and power unto the Lord our God. For true and righteous are His judgments. For He has judged the great whore which did corrupt the earth and with her fornication, and has avenged the blood of His servants at her hand. And again they said, alleluia and their smoke rose up forever and ever. And the four and twenty elders and the four beasts fell down and worshiped God that sat on the throne saying, amen, alleluia. Here we have it again, no hysteria, but a lot of ecstasy. And a voice came out of the throne saying, praise our God, all ye His servants, and ye that fear Him both small and great, said John.

Do you know, it’ll be worthwhile getting put in a salt mine on the Isle of Patmos to have a vision like that, wouldn’t it? It really would. It would be better to get on to a salt mine and say they had him in a salt mine over there on the Isle of Patmos. That fella who’d lived out on the sea catching fish and walked the sandy shores and smelled the fresh air. Now he’s in a mine, and it’s dark in there and suddenly the Lord lifts him into the Spirit on the Lord’s day. And he hears a voice saying, alleluia, for the Lord God omnipotent reineth. Let us be glad and rejoice and give honor to Him for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready. Do you see, there’s the Song of Solomon in New Testament garb.

To her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints. And He said unto me, write, blessed are they which are called of the marriage supper of the Lamb. Blessed are they. And he said, these are the true sayings of God, and I fell on my feet to worship Him. And He said, don’t you worship me. I am thy fellow servant of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus. Worship God. I saw heaven open. I’m waiting around brethren, I’m waiting around. I saw heaven open. Moses did and Isaiah did and Ezekiel did and John did, and I’m waiting around. Paul did. I saw heaven open and behold a white horse. And He that sat upon him was called Faithful and True. And in righteousness, He is the judge and will make war, and His eyes were as a flame of fire; and on His head where many crowns. And He had a name written that no man knew but He Himself. He was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood and his name is called the Word of God.

There we have this victorious Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of all power. He is the Lord of all power. Do you know, sin has scarred the world. Back in the state of Pennsylvania, they do what they call strip mining. And I was angry in my heart when I saw what they have done to our lovely Pennsylvania hills. These greedy dogs had gone and with their great machinery, they had stripped away the foliage and gone down into the bowels of the beautiful hillsides and taken out a cheap coal; anything to get a little money. And the government says, when you take it and strip mine, you got to fill it up again or it will cost you $100 an acre. And they grinned and said, it will cost us more than $100 a acre to fill it up, so they pay their fine and leave it there. And when I was back this last summer I drove up, they drove me up back past the old place, and I looked out for when I was there four to five years before. It had lain there like a wounded man. Lain there all gouged and ugly. Where in my boyhood days, it had been beautiful to see as the green trees met the blue sky above. But now, it was scarred and they paid their fine because it was cheaper than to fulfill their promise. And they left her there, that lovely hillside, all gouged and cut and bruised. And when I was back, I could have wept to see how kindly mother nature had gone to work. And where four or five years before it was just an ugly hole. Now the sun and the rain and the wind and the waves and the beautiful rain that God sent down in sheets upon that hillside as I’ve seen it fall many times, had begun to bring out the blossoms that I didn’t know were there, and now nature is covering up her wounds, her scars, her ugliness.

God made the world beautiful and if you go out and make it ugly, God in five years will make it beautiful again. The human race is ugly, ugly though made in the image of God and the potentialities of beauty, ugly in its sin. I think my brethren that the ugliest place in the world is hell. The ugliest place in the universe is hell. And when a man says “ugly as hell,” he’s using a proper and valid comparison. For there is nothing as ugly as hell. But surely Hell is the ugliest place in the universe. It is that against which all other ugliness can be compared. And surely Heaven is the most beautiful place, the place of supreme beauty, with its power that knows no limit and wisdom free from bound, the beatific vision shall glad the saints around. And the peace of all the faithful in the calm of all the blessed inviolet and very divineness, sweetest best, it shall all be there.

So like hell is the ugliest place in the universe. Surely, the most beautiful place will be heaven, for all harmony will be there and all fragrance and all its charm. But between heaven, which is the epitome of all supreme beauty and hell which is the essence of all ugliness, there lies the poor scarred world. The poor earth lies like a pitiful dying woman clothed in rags, that wants was a beauty that could have stood and been admired by the ages, now sin has cut her down and she’s tattered and torn. And from the Nile to the Mississippi and from California to Bangkok, and from the North Pole to the South Pole, wherever human beings go, we find moral ugliness and sin and hatred and suspicion, name calling and all the rest. And the beautiful grace that the Lord made to be His bride, now in her pathetic ugliness, lies, dying, clothed in rags. But Jesus Christ, the Lord of mercy came to save here and took upon Himself her flesh, her own flesh, and was made in the likeness of man and for sin He gave Himself to die. And there’s going to be a restoration and that poor, bruised, dying thing, that poor bruised, dying thing.

Years ago, I read that great book, that great book, I suppose that it’s one of the greatest book ever written of its kind, Les MisĂ©rables, the great book by Victor Hugo. And in it, there was one of the most tender and pathetic passages that I think I have ever read in all literature. You would have to go to the Bible to find anything as deeply moving. Here was this young man one of the upper class, the nobles, and here was the woman that he was in love with, you know, they weave that all in. And here in the middle, was a pale-faced little urchin girl from the streets of Paris, who, with her poor rags and her pale, tubercular face, she also loved the nobleman, but didn’t dare say so. So he used her to carry notes. They used her to carry notes back and forth. And this great fellow never dreamed that this poor, sallow-faced girl dressed in rags, had lost her heart to him in his nobility. So, he went to find her and see what he could do to help her, and found her lying on the bed of rags in the tenement house in the low section of Paris. And this time she can’t get up to greet him nor carry a note to his fiancĂ©. So, he says to her, what can I do for you? And she said, well, I’m dying. I’ll be gone in a moment. And he said, what can I do? Tell me, anything. And she said, would you do one thing for me before I close my eyes for the last time? And she said, would you, when I’m dead, would you kiss my forehead?

I don’t know. I know it was only Victor Hugo brilliant imagination, but I know Victor Hugo had seen that in Paris. He’d gone through the sewers there and he had seen, and he knew about it. He knew that you can beat a girl down and you can beat her down and you can clothe her in rags, and you can fill her with tuberculosis and you can make her so thin that the wind will blow her off course when she walks down a dirty street. She can’t take out of her heart that thing that makes her want to love a man. You can’t take that out. God said, Adam, you can’t be alone, it isn’t right. And he made a woman meet for him. You can’t take that out. And Victor Hugo knew it. And he wrote that thing in. I rarely quote from a fiction, but I thought that was worth it.

My dear friends, our Lord Jesus Christ came down and found, found the race like that, consumptive and long and pale-faced and died, and took on Himself all her death, and rose the third day and took all the pathos out, and all the pity out, and now she comes walking on the arm of her, leaning on the arm of her Beloved, walking into the presence of God and He presents her, not a poor, pitiful wreck who he kissed when she was dead. But His happy, bright-eyed bride meet to be a partaker of the saints in light. Worthy to stand beside Him and be His bride in the glory yonder. What is her authority and what is her right and by what authority does she walk into the presence of the Father?

You remember back in that chapter in the book of Genesis where Abraham calls his servant and sends his servant to get a bride for Isaac his son. He goes to the well and finds Rebecca, and says to Rebecca. It makes me homesick just pronounce the name, but says to Rebecca, my master’s son has sent me, and I’ve come for you if you will go. And she said, what are the terms? Well, that you go without waiting around. Now, go with me across the desert and be a bride for my master’s son. She said, I’ll go and when she said I’ll go, he reached into the saddle bag of the great, old camel that he’d ridden out, that swaying ship of the desert. And he took out jewelry and he put it around her neck and put it on her arms and fingers and ankles and he decked her out after the time.

And when she arrived, it was a long trip back there across the desert, you know. The old servant, he wasn’t fooling around. He’d been sent after a bride and he got her, and he was on his way back. And I imagine he was slapping the side of that old bobbing camel as they went across that desert. And Isaac was bothered, he was bothered. His father said, what’s the matter Isaac? And he said, well, I don’t know. I guess I just didn’t get enough sleep last night. And his father winked at his mother and said that he’s got it alrighty. He has it. And he went out it says in a kind of a nice, biblical, dignified way, half humorous, you know it says he was out walking in the twilight at the cool of the day. What was he out there for? He knew that he’d hear in the distance, the tinkling of camel bells. And he know when he heard the tinkling of the camel bells, that there’d be a bride, and a worthy one. She had to be worthy. And he knew something else. How was he going to know her? He’s going to know her by the jewelry she had on. He’d sent it. And when she came back with it. He said that this is her. She would have been English but heard what he probably said, this is her alright. And he knew his bride by the jewelry she wore.

And I don’t know my friends. I don’t want to go get too emotional, but I just think that maybe the Lord of Glory who sent the Holy Ghost of Pentecost to get a bride, I don’t know but what sometimes He may get up from the throne and take a walk and say, I’m listening for the sound of the camel bells. For the bride is getting ready and He will know her. And how will He know her? We sing, we’ll know Him by the prints of the nails. How will He know us? By the jewelry we wear. His, that He sent down. And what is it? The fruits of the Spirit. It’s love and joy and peace, temperance and kindness and all that. We’ll know Him and He’ll know us. And so it says in brusk simplicity. And Isaac took Rebecca and she became his bride. None of this big show stuff, organ blowing. You know, and people walking lockstep down there. He just walked over and said, Honey, I know you by what you got on. Come on over here. And she went to be with him and became his bride. And our Lord Jesus Christ, He’ll know who they are. Don’t you worry. You say nobody knows me. I’m a Christian alright, but I’ve never been heard of out of my block. If you go beyond my block, I’m a stranger. I wouldn’t worry about that. He knows you. He knows who you are and He knows you by the jewelry of the Word. He is thy Lord and He shall greatly desire thy beauty. Worship thou Him!

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“A Definition of Worship”

October 20, 1957

Now, let me read what the Holy Ghost said through the mouth of the prophet David. Psalm 8, O Lord, Our Lord, O Jehovah Our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth. Who hath set Thy glory above the heavens. Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings has Thou ordained strength. Because of thine enemies, Thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger. When I consider Thy heavens, and the work of Thy fingers, the moon, the stars which thou hast ordained, what is man that thou art mindful of him, and the Son of Man that thou visitest him? But thou has made him a little lower than the angels, and has crowned him with glory and honor. Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet:  All sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field;  The fowl of the air, and the fish of the sea, and whatsoever passeth through the paths of the seas.  O Jehovah our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth!. And there is that verse in Psalm 45:11, which I have used every night on this series, “So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty. He is thy Lord, worship thou Him.

And I have been developing a thesis. It is that God made us to worship. That is why we were created. Everything has its reason for being here. We have this reason that we might worship the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth. And we sinned and lost the glory and fell; and the light went out in our hearts. And we stopped worshipping God and set our affections on things below. But God sent His only begotten Son. He was born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried, and rose the third day from the dead, and sitteth at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens in order that He might restore us again to worship. Indeed, not only restore us again to worship, but put us so much higher, as much higher as Christ is higher than Adam. For all we could do in Adam was to be equal to Adam. But in Christ, He raises us until we shall be like Him. So that actually redemption is an improvement upon creation.

Now, what is it to worship? Usually, I can’t find definitions; I am unable to define them. I don’t know anybody that said what I want to say. Probably, somebody did say it and say it better. But I define the word worship as I see it. It probably is an imperfect definition, but it is close and it’s what my heart said, that to worship is to feel in the heart. Now to feel in the heart, not to strike a certain pose necessarily, and not to go through a form of a word necessarily, but to feel in the heart and express in some appropriate manner. It may be through a form of words. It may be through song or the sounding of the Scriptures, the sound of the reading of the Scriptures. It may be in awesome silence. It may be in loud praise. But, it is to feel in the heart and express in some manner, a humbling, a humbling. There’s no pride in worship. Never.

A fellow who leaps up when he’s announced, rushes over, slaps the pulpit and begins to talk fast, he’s not worshiping. He belongs on Broadway, not in a pulpit. A humbling, to feel in the heart and express a humbling, but delightful sense of admiring awe, and astonished wonder, and overwhelming love in the Presence of that most ancient mystery, that unspeakable Majesty which the philosophers have called the mysterium tremendum, but which the prophets call, the Lord our God.

Now, that is the definition which I have given for worship. And it is for this reason that we are redeemed. We are not redeemed that we might not drink, though the redeemed man will not be a drinker. We are not redeemed that we might not smoke, though the redeemed man is not likely to smoke, unless he’s been brought up in an atmosphere where he doesn’t know any better. I think some Christians have used the weed because they’ve been brought up in an atmosphere where they never were taught anything else and they love God and puff their pride. If that shocks any of you are hyper fundamentalist, it’s a good for you to get all shook up. Well, that’s true. I believe it’s true, nevertheless.

But God does not redeem us that He might stop our smoking, though He certainly will get the fire out, that kind of fire if we are redeemed. And He doesn’t save us that we might escape hell, though we will escape hell. For we shall not perish but have everlasting life. But He redeems us that we might worship again. That we might take our place again, even on earth, with the angels in heaven, and the beasts, and the living creatures. And we might feel in our heart and express in our own way, that humbling, but nevertheless, delightful sense of admiring awe and astonished wonder and overwhelming love in the presence of that Ancient Mystery, that unspeakable Majesty, the Ancient of Days.

Now my brethren, that’s a definition. And I want you to notice, as you probably have, that I had said “that, that, that.” Why did I not say He? Why did I say “that” most Ancient Mystery, that unspeakable Majesty? Why did I not say He instead of that? Because the human heart in its present state, in the presence of mystery, always says some thing before it says some one.

In the book of 1 John, I’ll notice that later, but I wanted to call attention to it now. The Holy Ghost says, That which was from the beginning. That which we have heard. That which we have seen with our eyes. That which we have looked upon and our hands have handled and the Word of Life. For the Life was manifested and we have seen it and bear witness and show unto you that Eternal Life, that Eternal Life which was with the Father and was manifest unto us. That which we have seen and heard declare we unto to you.

Now, that was an inspired apostle speaking, and he said, that, that, that, which, which, not who, whom, He, but “that which.” And in the presence of the Overarching Mystery, the human heart reaches up and leans out and feels and says, “some thing.” And it always says some thing before it can say some one. Why did John say “that” instead of He? Because, at the root of human thought, there is an “it.” In the root in human thought there is that, that. The human heart searches for the original substance, for being, for empathy.

Do you remember the little word essentia in Latin, which means to be actual being. And it’s this the human heart struggles for. In the midst of the whirling waters of humanity and sin and time and space, man’s heart struggles for the rock of being. The rock of essentia of the essential, that actual being. And our fathers knew that when they talked about the substance of God, or when they talked about the essence of God, or when they said that the sun was of the essence of the Father, or when they said, the Spirit was of the same substance as the Father and the Son. Back to the personality, back of the “He” was the “That” which was with the Father. And then as we go on, God’s personality emerges, as God manifests Himself. But the first thrust of the human heart out, the first leap of the human spirit out of the swirling waters is for that rock of being, where he says, “that which was with the Father.” And as we reason and pray and meditate and read the Word of God, “that” becomes He. He says, When you pray, say our Father which art in heaven.

There lived once in the 17th century. A man by the name of Blaise Pascal. Pascal was probably the greatest mind of the 17th century, and I personally think the greatest mind France ever produced, though I am probably not in position to pronounce on that. It would take a great deal of scholarship to say for certain. But this man goes down in history and is found in all the books and in the encyclopedias and in the histories of science and mathematics as probably the greatest thinker of the 17th century. He was a scientist. He was a mathematician, and he was a philosopher. He didn’t write much, but what he wrote has been seminal. It has come like the seed of God in the minds of men. Well, this man astonish the learned world by his works on mathematics, particularly geometry, when he was only in his early 20s.

But later on, Pascal became interested in theology, and then found God and became a Christian. And while he went on with His scientific work, he began to write about God and Christ and redemption and revelation. He wrote with such wondrous clarity and insight that he startled the learned of the universities of his time. And Pascal wrote a little testimony, and he folded that testimony up and put it in close to his heart. And all his life he carried it here close to his heart. And I think died with it close to his heart. And this is only part of it. It isn’t very long, but I’m giving you only part of it. A little of it’s written in Latin and the rest was translated into English and here it is. Pascal said, from about half past ten at night, to about half after midnight, fire. He cuts it off there. He doesn’t go on. He just cuts it off and then prays, O God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob, not of the philosophers, nor the wise. Security, security, feeling joy, peace, God of Jesus Christ, thy God shall be my God. Imagine one of the greatest minds of the last 1000 years carrying this against his heart. Forgetfulness of the world and of all, save God. He can be found only in the ways taught in the Gospel. O Righteous Father, the world hath not known thee, but I have known thee, joy, joy, joy, tears of joy. He kept that in against his heart while he studied the heavens and wrote his great books. But he repudiated the God of the thinker and of the philosopher, and sought the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who can be found only in the ways of the gospel. Fire, Fire, he said, from 10:30 to 12:30, for His sake, I repudiate the world.

My brethren there was worship. In Luke 2:11, the Holy Ghost said, or the angel said, it was all God’s revelation. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior which is Christ the Lord. Now comes the bliss and wonder of revelation and manifestation. And to the thirsting, searching mind that is crying for that, and it and substance and essence and being, the angels sing, behold, there is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. He is thy Lord, worship thou Him.

Now, God has given us this object of our worship. He is person, but He’s also Being. He is One, but He’s also that, that Ancient Mystery, that unutterable Majesty in whose presence angels tremble and the creatures that have gazed for centuries on the sea of fire, fold their wings and cry, holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty. He is Lord of all. I want to speak of only two things of which He is Lord this night. I’ll finish it two weeks from tonight if I can. I think I will be able to.

Well, He is Lord of all, and you will find that over in the book of Acts. He is Lord of all, said the man Peter. And He is the Lord of all Being. And that line is borrowed out of a hymn which we’re going to sing later. But He is the Lord of all Being. What I’ve said tonight is just as orthodox as Augustine, and just as evangelical as Dwight Moody. So don’t imagine because I’m using language you’re not familiar with, that I am off the deep end somewhere. But He is Lord of all Being. That is, He’s the Lord of not all being. that would have been a poor, cheap way to say, Lord of all beings, a kind of boss over the beings. No, He’s that, but that wasn’t what the man meant, nor what he said, He is the Lord of all Being. He is the Lord of all the concept of being. He’s the Lord of all possibility of being. He is that and that is He. And He’s the Lord of all actual existence. This is the Lord.

And so my friends, when we worship Him, we encompass all science and all philosophy. You know it, all science and all philosophy. Science is great, philosophy is greater, theology is greater still, and worship is greater than all. For worship goes back of what science can go, back of where human thought can penetrate, and back of all the wordings of theology, and back to the reality. And when the Christian gets on his knees, I’ve said before and repeat, that he’s having a meeting at the summit. He can’t get beyond that. There isn’t an archangel that can go higher than he can go. There isn’t a cherub that can burn his way higher than he can go. For he is worshiping that Awful Mystery, that Overwhelming Majesty, in humbling, but delightful love. He’s worshipping his God.

And so I tell you, that when we’re called to be Christians, were simply not called only to give up a few little things and to be saved from doing a few bad things. All of that is, simply; it’s what a bird is to a Spring day. It’s what a swallow is to the Summer. And one swallow doesn’t make a Summer. Neither does giving up beer make a Christian. The swallow will come with the Summer, and the giving up of all this trash will come with the Christian’s new birth. He’s been born again that he might push through, and press in and pass the blood sprinkled way, and find that after which the minds of men sought and seeked. Whether it be the most superstitious creature that knows nothing, eat human flesh and wears no clothes and cries after that some thing. Whether it be the learned theologian, He leads us into that. For “That” is none other than He who came and was born of the Virgin Mary, to suffer under Pontius Pilate. He is no lately come One. No new One to add to Buddha and Mohammedan, Zoroaster. He goes back of all.

So, no Christian ever has to be ashamed and say I’m no philosopher. Don’t be foolish, you are. You say, I’m no scientist. Don’t be foolish. You are. The man who pushes back past where science can go and on through past where minds can think, into the presence of the Lord of all, and in meek devotion and in holy rapture and awestruck admiration, cries, holy, holy, holy. He’s vaster than the philosopher, wider, bigger, grander than the science.

Were you greatly moved by the little satellite that they shot into the air the other night? To tell you the truth I was bored and I’m bored now. They shot it into the air 350 miles up and it’s going at 17,000 miles an hour, giving of a beep, beep, beep. Poor little thing. But everybody got excited and said, oh, what have we done?

I remember when an old man came down from the hills of Tishbe, dressed in camel’s hair and girded about the loin with a golden girdle. He had never, not a golden, leather girdle. He had never seen a king, and the palace was unknown to him.  The pine trees had been his temple. The sound of the wind had been his work. And the stars at night had spoken to him and whispered of the Lord God of his fathers. And he knew the Word. But, he walked boldly into the presence of a degenerate, decadent king and said, I am Elijah. I stand before God. He was bored with royal, red tape. Bored with scepters and crowns and cheap little barber chairs set up and called thrones. He was bored and said, I’ve spent my years standing in the presence of the Ancient of Days and I’m not afraid of kings. I’ve come with a message, there will be no rain. Then he disappeared, walking in rustic dignity out of the presence of that puppet king, hen-pecked mouse that he was. A cheap utensil used by a Baal-likish woman by the name of Jezebel.

So when the whole world exploded, oh, they’ve sent up a satellite. Well, they’re good at satellites, they’ve gotta love it. And I’m bored with it. I’ve stood in the presence of Him Who encompasses the universe and holds it in His hands. He calls the stars by name and leadeth them forth as a shepherd leads forth his sheep across the green blue heavens above. Am I therefore going to fall down and worship and say how wonderful? I worship the Lord of the sun and the stars and of all space and all time and of all matter and all motion. Therefore, I am not too excited.

He is the Lord of all beings, not of the philosophers, not of the wise man, but the revealed God, the God who reveals Himself, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. And since He is the God of all being, He is the enemy of all not being. Therefore, when some fellow with a highly illustrated book, rushes up your sidewalk and wants to play you a little disk, shut the door, shut it kindly like a Christian but shut it. For he wants to talk to you about annihilation. There’s no such concept in the whole Bible as annihilation. The Lord of all Being is the enemy of all not being. God knows nothing of not be; He only knows be.

The second and last, He is the Lord of Life. Turn to John, That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, and which we with our eyes have you seen which we looked upon and our hands have handled the Word of Life. For the Life was manifested and we have seen it and bear witness and show unto you that Eternal Life which was with the Father. And was manifested unto us, that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye also may have fellowship with us, and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.

So there He is the Lord of all life. He is the Lord of all says Peter. He is thy Lord, worship thou Him, said David. His is of Light, the sole Fountain. There isn’t any other Light. He is the fountain of that Light. It’s all the light we know comes from the sun, that is all we know I suppose, the stars give off light and all that, but we’re thinking as plain people now looking up at the sun. It comes from the sun, and so all light comes from God, from Jesus Christ, the Son.

And when the man of God said, Thou of life the Fountain art, freely let me take of thee, he was like Elijah in the mountains of Tishbe. He had gone past Shakespeare and past Homer. He’d gone past all the philosophers and the wise, and was worshipping in the presence of the Lord of Life. Thou of life the fountain art, freely let me take of thee; spring thou up within my heart, rise to all eternity.

You can go into the average library; I say this with great care. You can go into the average library and you will not find an whole shelf, whole shelves as big as the side of the wall of this church. Almost anywhere you want to go on the writings of man. You’ll not find anything as magnificent as those four lines, Thou of life the fountain art, freely let me take of thee, spring Thou up within my heart, and rise to all eternity. For the books stop when the undertaker comes. The books and the plays and all the celebrities, it all stops when the undertaker come. This man says spring thou up within my heart, rise to all eternity. And when the stars have faded out and all the suns have burnt themselves away, we’ll still be with Him. For He is the Lord life. He is the Lord of the essence of life. He is the Lord of all the possibility of life. He is the Lord of all kinds of life. And there is no life of which He is not found. Since He is the Lord of life, He is the enemy of death.

And let me read again. Now is Christ risen from the dead and become the firstfruits of them that slept. For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But every man in his own order, Christ the first fruits afterwards, they that are Christ’s that is coming. Then cometh the end when He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father. All He shall put down all rule and all authority and power, for He must reign until He hath put all enemies under His feet. And the last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.

Since He is the Lord of life, He is the enemy of death. And He came down and went into this cave where death snarled and snapped its jaws. He went in there with it, in the darkness. They called it a cross on a hill, but it was a cave where the snarling dragon lay and broke its filthy jaw, and rose again the third day from the dead, and threw teeth in all directions never to be gathered again together.

And He is the enemy of death. The enemy of my death and the enemy of yours. He is the Lord of life. What does that mean to us? I ran into this written by an old German man many years ago. Jesus lives and so shall I, death by sting is gone forever. He who deign for me to die, lived the band to settle. He shall raise me with the just, Jesus is my hope and trust. That’s what it means. Jesus lives and death is now but an entrance into glory. Courage then my soul for thou hast a crown of life before thee. Thou shalt find thy hopes were just, Jesus is the Christian’s trust. But the old brother was evangelical and evangelistic, and he couldn’t closes his hymn without giving the poor sinner outside there a chance to come in. So he said, Jesus lives and God extends grace to each returning sinner. Rebels, He receives as friends and exalts the highest honor. God is true as He is just, Jesus is my hope and trust. Jesus lives and God extends, grace to each returning sinner, and rebels He receives as friends and exalts the highest honor.

That’s what it’s all about my brethren. I wish the world could hear it. I wish the world could hear it. I’d like to tell it to the whole world. I’d like to write it into books. I’d like to have it circulated. I like these ideas to get hold of the minds of men until a new day would dawn in evangelical circles. But I don’t know. I remember that Keats said, when I have fears that I may cease to be before my pen has gleaned my teeming brain. And he did. Teeming brain into which he dipped his pen and wrote his imperishable poems.  This same Pascal of whom I have, from whom I’ve quoted tonight, Fire fire, joy, joy, tears of joy, he said. And he said, I’m going to write. I’m going to write so that the world will get it. He took notes madly, but he died before he got to print. So, all we’ve got is his notes.

I would like to be able to write a book or two. I’d like to be able to make my voice heard all over the world, to the poor, poor church living on cheap fiction with the name of Jesus in it. Living on the smiles and bows of converted celebrities. Living to sing cheap songs about once I smoked and now I don’t. Once I drank beer, now I don’t. Thank God you don’t brother. It’s cheaper not to and healthier. But, if that’s your concept of Christianity, you haven’t even seen the door of the outer chambers, let alone the Holy of Holies, or the Sanctum Sanctorum. Let’s push all in. Let’s move on and let’s tell the world why He died and why He lived. That a people once made to worship Him, who had lost their harp and lost their tongue and lost their desire even to worship; now caught and renewed and quickened and made live and enabled to worship again. And it works my brethren, it works.

In 1935 I think it was, I recall, Jaffrey moved down from Indo-China to the country they call Borneo, now called Kalimantan. There he found headhunters. Men with poisoned little arrows which they shot through long blowguns. You can see one of them downstairs in the missionary room. And they hunt those heads, shrink them and hang them up. And He went in there and prayed through, and almost died one night, and praying through, God began to work. Headhunters began to get converted.  Older men everywhere all over that era began to get converted. They built their chapels with joy. They threw their idols away and then with joy, they gathered up the shrunken heads they had themselves taken, threw them into the boiling river and they were carried away out into the sea. And they built their chapels. Now in their language they talk about Jesu, Jesus Christ the Son of God. It works my brethren. It works. It works. Of course, He saved them from headhunting, and that’s what He saved them from. What did He save them to? To kneel in a simple bamboo chapel and worship the Lord God Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth and Jesus Christ his only son. That’s what He saved them too, and that’s all that matters.

Jesus lives and offers to returning sinners a place in His heart. He might restring your harp and give you back your organ again. The organ that can play the anthems and join with the hosts of others. Dear God, how far the church has wandered and how far from being the kind of Christians we ought to be. Put away fleshly things. Put away worldly things. Put away the cheap twaddle of fallen Adam’s brood and turn your eyes upon Jesus, the Lamb of God. Your mind will be cleansed and your heart will be cleansed and trust the Holy Spirit to fill you with a spirit of worship again that you may join the angels and the redeemed, and prophets and saints and martyrs singing the songs of the Father who loved you and the Son who loved you, and the Holy Ghost who is the Spirit of the Father and the Son.

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Tozer Talks

“Worship the Lord of Glory and Meekness”

October 6, 1957
Now I’ve been preaching on worship over the last weeks thou missing last Sunday when I was in New York of course. And my, they say, overall text has been Psalm 45:11. So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty. For He is thy Lord, worship thou Him.

Tonight, I want to add these words, at least tonight’s sermon is going to be chiefly scripture. So, if you are allergic to a lot of Scripture, you would have better to stay at home. These words from the 45th Psalm, Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, O most mighty, with thy glory and thy majesty. And in thy majesty ride prosperously because of truth and meekness and righteousness. Now, that’s strange, glory and majesty and meekness here all together, but here they are.

Now previously, I have talked to you over the last nights, Sunday nights, about worship. We were created to worship God, that’s why we’re born. We fell, lost the glory and the worship. Christ came to redeem us that we might worship. That’s why we were redeemed. Then, I went on from there to talk about the Lord. And I reminded you of the text where Peter said, He is Lord of all. And David said, He is thy Lord, worship thou Him. Then I talked on the Lord of all beings and the Lord of all light. Tonight, I want to talk about the Lord of Glory, and if I get to it, the Lord in meekness.

Now, the inspired Psalmist here wrote, and I want to give you what the Holy Ghost said through the mouth of the Psalmist. He said, Jehovah reigns. Jehovah reigneth. Let the earth rejoice; let the multitude of isles be glad thereof. Clouds and darkness are round about him: righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne. Wonderful to know that somewhere in the universe, there is something that’s sound and right.

I often quote, with a bit of good humor, the saying of the serious-minded old man of God who said, if you would to be peaceful and have peace in your heart, don’t inquire into people’s lives too closely. The idea is, you will be shocked if you do. And I suppose there isn’t a throne, but what there’s a rat knawing somewhere in the throne. Maybe he’s got the crown on his head. But here’s a throne that’s filled with righteousness and judgment. And a fire goes before Him. And lightning enlightens the world. And the hills melt like wax at the presence of the Lord, at the presence of the Lord of the whole earth. The heavens declare His righteousness. And you can search until you die in search for a million years beyond and you’ll not find anything wrong there. The throne of God stands Right and the God who sits on that throne is Right. He is the God of Righteousness. And the heavens declare His righteousness. And all the people shall see His glory. For Thou Lord, art high above all the earth. Thou art exalted far above all gods. Now, that’s what part of what the 97th Psalm says about Him.

Now, after man had fallen and lost the vision of the Glory and lost it. That’s what’s the matter with us, my friends. That’s what’s the matter with us. We’ve lost the vision of the Glory. But after we had fallen and lost it, the man of God, the martyr Steven said, and began his great sermon, the God of Glory appeared under Abraham. The God of Glory appeared unto Abraham and God began to reveal the glory that had been in eclipse. Now, you know, that when a thing is in eclipse, it doesn’t mean that its light has diminished any, nor that its glory has in any wise diminished. It means merely that there is some body between us and that shining frame there that is said to be eclipsed. When the sun is eclipsed, the sun is not one degree cooler than it was before. Nor does its flames flash out from its surface one inch shorter than it did before. It is still as hot and still as big and still as powerful and free as before it went into eclipse, because it’s not the sun that’s eclipsed, it’s us that’s eclipsed. And we ought to get that straight. The eclipse of the sun means, the eclipse of us. The sun’s alright, and so, the great God Almighty.

I have a book. I haven’t read it yet, written by the great Jewish theologian Buber, and it’s called, “The Eclipse of God. ” I haven’t read it, so there’s nothing I am saying tonight out of it. Someday when I get time, I’m going to read it I hope, “The Eclipse of God.” Well, all he could mean being a Jewish theologian and knowing his Old Testament is that there has been a shadow between us and God. God is not in eclipse. The glory of God shines as bright as ever. And the God of glory began to appear to people. He appeared unto Abraham. And in the development of His redemptive purpose, He began to show what He was. You see, we were in pretty bad shape. Read the first chapter Romans if you want to know how bad we were, the world was. We had gotten down to where we not only worshipped a man, which was bad enough, but we worshipped a beast, which was worse. Not only did we worship beast as a human race, but we worshipped birds and fish and serpents, crawling, slithery serpents, we worshipped them. If that wasn’t bad enough, we worshipped bugs and beetles. We worshipped clear down as far as with anything that could wiggle or crawl. They got down on their knees and said, Lord, my God. Now, that was how bad our minds were in eclipse, for it was our minds and not God. Then, God began to appear out from behind the cloud, and the God of glory appeared to Abraham, and he revealed His Oneness.

Now, that was the first thing God revealed about Himself. He didn’t reveal His holiness first. He revealed His Oneness first. It was an insult to the great God Almighty to think that there were two or three God Almighties. Did you ever stopped to think, and this reminds me, I’ve got to get around to writing on the attributes of God before I die. So, I leave this to remind the people that there can’t be two Almighties. And there can’t be two Infinites. And there can’t be two Omnipotents. Did you ever think about that? Yeah, I don’t know. You know, shake your head a little bit and see if you can get the cells to functioning and think about it. Is it possible for two beings to be Almighty? For if one Being had all the power there is, then where would the second being come in? He couldn’t have all the power there is. He couldn’t have two beings having all the power there is.

Then when we come to infinitude; infinitude means boundless, limitlessness in its complete, absolute sense. So how could there be two beings who were absolute. There could be one, but there couldn’t be two. You see, it is metaphysically impossible even to think of two beings who were absolute or infinite, or who were Almighty, who were omnipotent, or any of the other attributes of God. But, we didn’t know that, and so we worshiped everything that would move; and if it didn’t move, we got down in front of it and worshipped it anyway. They worshipped everything. They worshipped trees, and they worshipped the sun, and the stars, and they had gods everywhere, worshipping them. It seems strange and almost humorous to you and me, but it’s a long way from being humorous when God Almighty told the people, hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one Lord, and Him only shalt thou worship. That was the Oneness.

Now, the scholars call that monotheism of course. That is their way of hiding the meaning of it from the people and giving the people the impression that they are very learned. But all monotheism means, is there is one God. And there is one God and we thought there were many. The human race thought there were many. I have a book on the gods by Cicero. A great book on the gods, but Cicero, mighty man he was, thought that there’s more than one god.

So God said, now first thing you’re going to have to get straight is that I’ve got no rival. There is no other God but Me. Hear O Israel, hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one Lord and Him only shalt thou worship. And centuries later, a Christian sang this and you can’t sing it. I don’t think anybody could write music to it, but he sang it anyhow in his heart and I sing it in mine. One God, one Majesty, there is no God but Thee, unextended, unbounded unity. Awful in unity, O God, we worship Thee more simply One, because supremely Three. Unfathomable sea, all life is out of Thee and Thy Life is Thy blissful unity.

The Christians knew this: all things that from Thee run allwards that Thou has done Thou doest in honor of Thy being One. Blessed be Thy Unity. All joys are one to me. The joy that there can be no God but Thee. This was what the Christian sang, and this is what Christians believe. This is what Jesus taught. And little by little, God came out from behind that eclipse.

And I tell you, I like to go back to the book of Exodus if I feel I amount to anything, or I get awestruck a little by a queen or a president or somebody. I like to go back here to the book of Exodus where it says, The Lord said unto Moses, lo, I come in a thick cloud. I’m coming in a thick cloud, that the people may hear what I speak unto thee and believe they forever, Moses told the people. And the Lord said to Moses, go unto the people and sanctify them today. Get them all clean and ready. You didn’t come rushing into that awesome Presence. You had to get ready and get sanctified, he said; and let them wash their clothes and be ready the third day. For the third day Jehovah will come down in the sight of all the people upon Mount Sinai. And Brethren, I don’t know what Life magazine would have done about this. I suppose they’d have wanted to photograph it. But thou shalt set bounds unto the people around about saying, Take heed to yourselves that ye come not near the mountain nor touch the border of it. Whosoever touches the Mount shall be surely put to death. What a contrast between this great God and the gods that they could handle and lug around and put them under their pillow, and put them up on the front part of their automobile to keep them out of accidents, which they don’t. And there shall not a hand touch it, He said, but he will surely be stoned or shot through, nor shall beast or man shan’t leave. And when the trumpet sounded long, then you come up to the Mount.

Now my friend, there, there was something, there was something. When the trumpet sounded long, you come up to the Mount. If anybody is presented before a queen or a king, they practice for days and days exactly how to say and how to approach. But here, he says, this great God, you’re coming up before Him, and nobody else can come and if He comes and even touches this mountain, he’ll drop dead and shrivel. Moses went down and sanctified the people and they all washed their clothes. And he said, now, be ready. It came to pass on the third day in the morning.

Have you ever stopped to think how many things God did in the morning? He said in the morning that there was thunder and lightning and a thick cloud upon the mountain. The voice of the trumpet exceeding loud, and all the people that was in the camp trembled. And Mount Sinai was all together under smoke because the Lord descended upon it in fire. And the smoke thereof ascended as the smoke of a furnace. And the whole Mount quaked greatly. And the Lord said unto Moses, go down and charge the people lest they break through and gaze and many of them perish. And let the priests also which come near to the Lord, sanctify themselves lest the Lord breakthrough on them.

There was God coming out from behind, coming out from behind that cloud. Then He began to reveal other things about Himself. And listen now, He said, The Lord your God is one Lord and He’s the Lord of Lords, and He’s a great God, and He’s the God of Gods and He’s mighty and He’s terrible.

Do you know what we’ve done? Do you know what we’ve done? We’ve brought God down until nobody can respect Him anymore. We’ve brought Him down. In New York City, I said last week, when I was preaching there. I said, I’m on a quiet little crusade, not as big as the one over at Madison Square Garden, but a quiet little crusade to bring worship back to the church. And a fine-looking English gentleman said to me as we were moving out of church, he said, Brother Tozer, I want to be a member of your crusade. He said, for twenty-seven years, I’ve been a missionary in the Far East. And he said, I’m old now, and I think we ought to get back to worshiping God again. That mighty and that terrible God.

And the gospel has gone down now to the place where it’s only good for what you can get out of it. When we forget that the Lord said, when you pray, say our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. And I don’t hesitate to say this to you, sir, that God Almighty would rather glorify His name than save a world. That God would rather that His name should be hallowed before all the myriads of created intelligences, than a sinner should be saved, or that a world should be redeemed. In the mercy and wisdom of God He so arranged things, that He can redeem the world and magnify His own glory.

But you and I have the first duty and obligation to honor God. Not the first duty and obligation to help people. That’s modernism, and they’ve had that thrown in on us. And our puritanic forefathers and our Dutch and Scotch fathers who said, let God be right if the world falls; they have been shoved aside now. And they tell us that God is so very kind and lowly and humble and meek and approachable, that we’ve taken all the meaning out of it. Think of this, fear this glorious and fearful name, Jehovah thy God. Shall not His Excellency make you afraid and His dread fall upon you? And with God is a terrible Majesty. And darkness is around Him and His pavilion roundabout were dark waters and thick clouds of the sky. And who is this King of Glory, Jehovah, strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle? He’s the King of Glory and blessed be His glorious Name forever. And when you pray, say, Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Honor and majesty are before Him. Strength and beauty are in His sanctuary. And the glory of the Lord shall endure forever. And I will speak of the glorious honor of Thy majesty and Thy wondrous works. I’m just giving you what the Bible says about Him. God is coming out from behind the cloud, or bringing us out from behind the cloud to show how great He is. A glorious voice He said, shall cause to be heard, and shall show the lightning down in each arm with the indignation of His anger and with the flame of a devouring fire.

Now that’s Old Testament, but somebody says in the New Testament, we have the meek and lowly Jesus. Well, we do, and I want to talk in closing about the lowly Jesus too, and the meek Jesus, but I want you to know that the meek Jesus is a long way from being the Jesus of Salman’s bearded, feminine head. Now I’ll tell you this, I don’t know why, why I preach like this I don’t know. I preach my congregation down to the bone, and nobody comes here unless he’s dead in earnest to do the will of God. Everybody else passes us by and goes somewhere else. But anyhow, I’ll say this to you, that I don’t believe in these feminine heads of Christ. I wouldn’t have one in my home any more than I would have a statue of the Virgin Mary. I wouldn’t have one around, because that’s not Jesus. That bearded, weak-looking, plaintive fellow that’s looking around for somewhere to hide or somebody to bless. At the name of Jesus says the Holy Ghost, every knee shall bow, of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth and every tongue shall confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father. And our Lord Jesus Christ, which in His time, He shall show who is the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of Lords, and only had immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto and whom no man has seen nor can see. To Him be honor and power everlasting, amen. That’s New Testament brother, the only wise God our Savior be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and ever. Amen.

That’s New Testament, then this Jesus Christ, the of Whom we speak, He is Lord of all. He is Lord of all being and He’s Lord of all life, and He’s the Lord of all majesty and all glory. And I understand the Quakers perfectly well when they had what they called “an opening.” A Quaker believed in an opening. Do you know what an opening is? It meant that there had been an opening, in that the light of God had flashed into their hearts, and that they had seen something. We don’t now, we take a course, but in those days, they had an opening; they got an opening from God. Some older brother would get up and say, “Well, I was in prayer last evening, and I think I had an opening. And I saw the Scripture says this about God,” and he gave his little testimony and sat down, rearranged his beard and sat quiet, and we make fun of them, but they had openings, my brethren.

And heaven is closed to the average one of us now, because this mighty God who makes the lightning down in His arm to be heard is gone completely and in His place, we have a stream-lined sack of a weakness, and we call that God. But God says, “When you pray, say, hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom come, thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven. That’s first. That’s more important my friends. It’s more important that the church of Christ should honor the God of glory, than that they should even preach the gospel to the heathen. But it is so in the will of God that preaching the gospel to the heathen and getting them saved will, as Paul said, bring more people to praise Him, so that we glorify God by winning more people. But, if you had to take your choice, honoring God would be first.

I don’t know who’s going to do it. I talked with James Stewart of the European missions, and with Stacy Woods of the Intervarsity, and with some of the other brethren. And we pretty much agreed; we stood around there and looked at each other and said, well, when is this thing going to get together and start to flow. When is there going to be enough of these people who see as we do and believe in the high honor of God and the need for the exalting of God and the bringing of worship back to the world again? When is there going to be enough that we can be more than a little puddle here and the little puddle there? When can we get together and become a flowing river? Nobody had the answer yet. But one of these days, God is going to give us the answer all right.

And if there’s anything that we’ve got to have in the Church of Christ, it is that we should get back to the God of our fathers, known of old, Lord of our far-flung battle line. Back again to the holy, holy, holy God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and not to the God of our imagination. Not to the weak God who we push around, but to the great God Almighty.

Well, He’s that great God. And if I had to stop, I’d stop right there. But I’m glad to tell you also that in this 45th Psalm, there is not only majesty, but there is meekness here. And Thy majesty, in Thy majesty ride prosperously, because of truth and meekness. He meeked Himself. That’s no verb anymore. Meek is an adjective now and meekness a noun, but there’s no verb anymore. Meek isn’t a verb, but it ought to be a verb and it used to be and from now on is going to be. And He meeked Himself down. He meeked Himself down.

Listen, while I show you what the Holy Ghost said about Him. Christ Jesus, who being in the form of God, thought not His position in the form of God something to be hung on to, but made Himself of no reputation. Do you see, the only person that dare make himself of no reputation is somebody who is sure of his reputation. He could void His reputation because He knew it was safe. The fellow who isn’t sure of himself has to defend it all the time and run about defending his reputation. And if he hears anybody saying anything about him that might sully his reputation, why, he writes a hot letter. But He made Himself of no reputation. Why? Because He knew who He was. He knew that He was this mighty Lord God that made the mountain to quake. He knew He was this mighty Lord God whose pavilions round about Him were dark water and thick clouds in the sky. He knew He was the King of Glory, the Lord of majesty and blessed be His Glorious Name forever. He wasn’t afraid to void His reputation for the sake of redeeming a lost world.

So, He made Himself of no reputation. Now, that’s one thing, but it’s quite another thing to take on Himself the form of a man, the form of a servant. And that’s something, look, the Great God who had given orders all His life, all His life, and He had lived before the world was and had Being before creation was. And now, He becomes a servant. Not only no reputation, but a servant, and was made in the likeness of men. And after He had become a man, He humbled Himself still further and became obedient under death. And then, that was not low enough, so He died, even the death of the cross. If He had come from glory down, and had lived His lifetime out and gotten old and died in His bed, surrounded by weeping friends, it would have been terrible to think that the great Lord God Almighty, whose strength and beauty were in His sanctuary, that that Great God Almighty, He should die. But, He died in the worst form known to the time. He died on a Roman cross; nailed up there on a Roman cross to wriggle and sweat, and His bones pulled out a joint and His lips cracked and His eyes glazed. He died like that, even says the Holy Ghost, the death on the cross. What wonderous, wondrous condescension that He should be so meek.

My dear friend, I want to tell you this. If you ever get saved, and if you ever move into that heaven of God and walk through those holy gates and look upon the Silver Sea, it will not be because of anything you are. And it won’t be because He changed His mind, or because He lost His crown or His power. It will make some of you mad I suppose, but you’d get over it. But you know, this nice, little housewife that’s running around over in Washington. They have trimmed her down and trimmed it down and trimmed it down and taken away her dominion. She has no power. She’s a nice little woman. I like her. I like her two kids. But, they trimmed her sails. And it’s not the old kings, George and the rest that could say,have his head off! She never says, have his head off. She said, I’m so glad I’m here.

And you see, the majesty is gone brethren. The majesty is gone. The glory is gone. And they keep pumping it up. And it’s all right. If it’s all they have got, they might as well make the most of it. But brethren, I say to you that nobody has ever trimmed down the majesty of the Great God Almighty. And when Jesus Christ became a man, He didn’t lose anything. The theologian Lightfoot said, He’s veiled His glory, but He did not void it. The man who walked about in Jerusalem dust-covered feet and disheveled hair, walking in the wind from one place to another, was the same Lord God who could make the mighty liking down of His voice to sound throughout the world.

This is our Christ, this is our Jesus. And I recommend to you, my friend, that you seek to know Him as He is in His Majesty in order that you might know how mighty fortunate you are. If He had stood by His Majesty and had not been willing to meek Himself down, you would have been in bad shape. You would have been along with angels that sinned and the demons that sinned and left their first habitation. You would have gone down, and there wasn’t anything in you that could save you. When you started down toward the pit, there wasn’t an angel voice raised round the throne of God, not one.
When you started down toward the pit, the day you took your first step or before and started down toward the pit, not an angelic voice said, God, what are you doing? Don’t let that fellow perish. Don’t let that woman die. Not a one for justice. Justice and glory and majesty demanded that we all perish together, and go to the hell were the devil and the fallen angels are. And to save us from that, God would not have voided His Majesty. Keep that in mind, sir.

To save us from that, God would not have diminished His glory by one candlepower. To save us from that, God would never have unhallowed His hallowed name. And that’s why He taught us to say the very first thing when you pray, say, hallowed be Thy Name. And if you haven’t time to pray anything else, pray, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. And, if you don’t have time, at least pray that. To rush into God’s presence, and begin to beg, I think is a shoddy thing, when the Great God Almighty meeked Himself. Such Majesty meeked itself downward.

So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty. Why did He do it? Because He greatly desires thy beauty. And the beauty in you is not the beauty you have, but the beauty that He could make you and put in you. It was what Shakespeare called the borrowed majesty, the borrowed majesty that belongs to you. Even the poor tramp who stumbles tonight, bleary-eyed and unshaven on Skid Row, has within buried some of the the borrowed majesty. For God made us in His own image. That doesn’t save us, but there was something there that God called beauty. And so, He came down. He didn’t come down because He had to.

Never think you can put God in a fix or get God in a tight spot. Never. Never. God never gets into tight spots. And God never allows Himself in any wise to be taken over by a man and get into a tight corner and have to do something because He doesn’t want to do. Never. The Great God came down because He desired us. And He desired us because He made us in His image. That’s all. He made us in His image. And He saw the poor, tattered relics of the family resemblance. And He knew that there was that in us which could respond. He knew, that though fallen and lost and certainly doomed, there was that in us which could respond. For that, you ought to thank God for every day you live.

If anybody here grumbles and complains and doesn’t keep thanking God, I’m sorry for you and I hope you’ll repent. For no matter what happens to us we ought to be able to thank God that there was something in us that could respond. Aren’t you glad there was something in us that could respond? And, I’m not even sure that if God hadn’t put it there in the first place, that you could have responded and at all. Because, if I understand the book of John correctly and the book of Romans correctly, I think I do, I don’t believe there’s anything in mankind that can respond except that is has first been moved upon by the Holy Ghost. Brother, I believe in the prevenient workings of the Holy Ghost. If that isn’t election and predestination I don’t know what it is, but it must be, though I’m not supposed to teach either. But, Jesus my Lord said that no man can come to me except the Father draw him. No man can come, and we say, “come on, come on, come on. And He said no man can come except the Father draw him. And if the Father draw him, he’ll come and I’ll give him life, and I won’t cast him out.

So, he said, you believe not because you’re not my sheep. And He didn’t say you’re not my sheep because you don’t believe. We’ve turned it around because we’re scared. We’re afraid to face up to the Sovereign Majesty of the God of our fathers. And so, we say the reason you’re not God’s sheep is you don’t believe, but He said, the reason you don’t believe is because you’re not my sheep. I have not chosen you.

Now, I realize that there has been an awful lot of abuse as the Queen said, O Liberty, what sins have been committed in thy name. We can only say John Calvin, what crimes have been committed in thy name. But nevertheless my brethren, we are a snooty bunch of self-satisfied sinners. We think when we get good and ready of whatever God thinks of it, we’ll come back home and it’ll be God’s business to receive us and he can’t help Himself. Brother, we had better get away from that. You can walk out of here and down the steps, and sin against the Holy Ghost, and be as cold as an icicle from this time till you’re dark, and God doesn’t owe you one thing. We so preach the gospel as to make grace cheap and God cheap, and make God oh that’s something.

A man in this church years ago, he’s not here now, was quite put out because I said God didn’t owe us anything. He came down to the front and argued with me and said God did. What does God owe you except damnation? What does God owe me except damnation? What is it He owes the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Pope, except damnation. We have sinned. We have sinned. We have veiled the glory of God and we’ve taken our place with the fallen crew and the black bats and the squirming serpents, and if we’re ever saved it will be because Majesty meeked itself down to find us. And Majesty didn’t have to do it because Majesty wasn’t afraid of itself. We rush to defend God.

I wouldn’t write one line in defense of God. When old Zerubabel was it? When Gideon tore the altar down. Wasn’t his father’s name Zerubabel? If I’m wrong, excuse me names, you know. A name by any other name would be just as bad. But when when Gideon pull the altars down, somebody said, kill Gideon, kill Gideon. He’s pulled down the altars of Baal and Gideon’s father said, that’s a weird one. He said if Baal’s a god, why didn’t he look after himself. He said, do you have to run out there and defend him. He said, let Baal plea, and if Baal is what he claims is, let him punish my son. He said, I’m not going to defend him, and I won’t defend God. I won’t write a line in defensive of God. A God I have to defend can’t take me across the dark river. He can’t save my soul from the magnetic tug of hell. If the God I have to defend can’t deliver me from the machinations of the devil, can’t do it. Ah, my God doesn’t need my defense. He’s the Lord of Glory, mighty and great is He. And He meeked Himself down.

You ought to thank God every day in red-face chagrin that you ever sinned and God had to meek Himself down to help you. He became meek because He was Majesty. And why did He do it? Listen and I’ll read these few verses in closing. I saw no temple therein for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it. The city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine in it, for the glory of God, did lighten it, and the Lamb is the Light thereof.

I have no doubt but there are many Christians running around over the country right now that believe that when they go to heaven, there will be a brass band a mile long to meet them. But I see here that they didn’t even need moon or sun, but the glory of God lightened all heaven and the Lamb is the Light thereof. And as the poet said before, Thine ever-blazing throne, we asked no lustre of our own. And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it. And kings of the earth do bring their glory into it. The kings of the earth bring their glory, throw down their crowns, toss their scepters, take off their purple robes, and throw them at the feet of the One who was Majesty and is Majesty, but in His infinite love, meeked Himself to save us. And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day; and there’s no night there, and they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into it. Isn’t it awful that this passage like this has been given the funerals nothing else? Nobody ever reads it unless he’s at a funeral. And I Jesus, have sent mine angel to testify unto you that these things in churches. I’m the root and the offspring of David, the bright and the Morning Star.

When you look up Brother, don’t look for the Sputnik. I am the root and the offspring of David the bright and the Morning Star. And the Spirit and the Bride say come, and him that heareth say, come and let him that is athirst, come. And whosoever will, let him come. Here’s the Root of David and the offspring of David and the bright and Morning Start meeking Himself down to call you to Him. You deserve nothing but death, but He died that you might be called to Him. Wonderful, wonderful. Was it any wonder that David said, my heart is inditing a good matter. I speak of the things which I have made touching the king. Thou art fairer than the children of men. Grace is poured forth by thy lips. Is it any wonder, what a wonderful, gracious God He is. He’s a God of sovereignty before He’s the God of grace. And if the church in America would restore again the teaching of the sovereignty of God back into the churches, sinners would be converted, not half-converted. And this that the missionaries told us, I believe in it. I believe in it. They said they postpone their baptism until they get delivered from their temper. They postpone their baptism until they can find a sin in their life. But we stampede the baptismal waters, careless and unconcerned because our God is not the sovereign God of our fathers. He’s a home-made God put together out of pieces of poetry and stories and ideas preached to us by people who don’t know better. The God and Father of our Lord Jesus, when he said, Jesus said when you pray, say, Father, first of all, help us. Thy name should be hallowed and that Thy Kingdom should come. That Thy will should be done all over the universe, down here as it is up there. Let that be first, and the other things fall in line. Blessed be God and blessed be His holy Son, Jesus Christ. This way we ask in Jesus’ name.

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Tozer Talks

“God’s Great Purpose in Redemption-Worship”

September 29, 1957

So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty, for He is thy Lord, worship thou Him. As you can see, there’s desire on both sides, the King greatly desires the beauty of his bride. And the bride is exhorted to worship Him who is the Lord. He is thy Lord worship thou Him.

Now, I’d like to say that I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible, and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who was begotten of Him before all worlds, who is God of God, the Light of Light and the very God of very God and begotten and not made. I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and giver of life, which proceeded from the Father and the Son, in which with the Father and Son together, is worshipped and glorified. And I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ, who for us men, and for our salvation, came down from heaven and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary. And He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, and was buried. On the third day, He rose again from the dead, and sitteth at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens.

Now, why was this? This we all believe, but why was? It had a purpose. Not to give you peace of mind, though that’s part of it. Not to deliver you from bad habits, though, that’s part of it. But what was the great central purpose of the Great God who never does anything without a purpose in all this rich, gold and glorious odyssey of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

It was that He might make worshipers out of enemies. It was that He might take those whose backs were to Him, backs to Him and turn their faces to Him. It was that He might persuade those moral beings who had forgotten how to worship, to turn around again and bow in ecstatic adoration before the presence of the Triune God. So, the purpose of Christ in redemption was not to save us from hell primarily, but it was to save us unto worship, that we might become again worshipers of the living God.

Now, I’d like to state that worship is the normal employment of moral beings. That moral beings worship God normally as a bird sings. Normal beings worship God; that’s their normal employment. And if you look in your Bible you will find that every glimpse of heaven shows the people there, the persons, the beings there, worshipping God.

Let me take the time to do what I know sometimes bores some people, and that is read a little from the Scriptures. Listen to this. It came to pass in the thirtieth year, in the fourth month, in the fifth day of the month, as I was among the captives by the river Kebar, that the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God. In the fifth day of the month, the word of the Lord came expressly unto Ezekiel the priest, the son of Buzi, in the land of the Chaldeans by the river Kebar and the hand of the Lord was there upon him. And I looked and behold a whirlwind came out of the North, a great cloud, and the fire unfolding itself. And the brightness was about it. And out of the midst of it thereof is the color of amber. Out of the midst of the fire, also out of the midst thereof there all came the likeness of four living creatures. And the likeness of the firmament upon the heads of the living creatures was as the color of the terrible crystal stretched from over their heads above. And under the firmament were their wings straight and one toward the other. Everyone had two which covered on this side and everyone had two which covered on that side their body. And when they went I heard the noise of their wings like the noise of great waters as the voice of the Almighty, the voice of speech as the noise of an host. When they stood, they let down their wings, and above the firmament that was over their head was the likeness of a throne as the appearance of a sapphire stone. And upon the likeness of the throne was the likeness of the appearance of a Man upon it. And I saw as the color of amber as the appearance of fire round about within from the appearance of his loins, even upward. From the appearance of his loins, even downward, I saw as it were, the appearance of fire, and the brightness round about. As the appearance of the bowl that is in the cloud in the day of rain, so is the appearance of the brightness round about. This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord. And when I saw it, I fell upon my face, and I heard a voice of One that spake.

That’s the Old Testament, come to the new. After this, I looked, and behold, the door was opened in heaven. And immediately, I was in the Spirit and behold, a throne was set in heaven, and One sat on the throne. And He that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardin stone and there was a rainbow round about the throne in sight like unto an emerald. And I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in white rainment and they had on their heads crowns of gold. And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings and voices, and there were seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, which are the seven Spirits of God, and the beasts and those give glory and honor and thanks to Him that sat on the throne Who liveth forever and ever. The four and twenty elders fell down and worshiped Him that liveth forever and ever, and cast their crowns before the throne saying, Thou art worthy O Lord, to receive glory and honor and power. For thou hast created all things, and for Thy pleasure they are, and were created. And I beheld, and lo, in the midst of the throne and of the four beasts. And in the midst of the elders stood a Lamb as it had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven Spirits of God. And He came and took the book, and they sang a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals thereof, for Thou wast slain, and has redeemed us to God by that blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people and nation. And behold, I heard the voice of many angels round about the throne and the Beast and the elders. And the number of them was 10,000 times 10,000 and thousands of thousands, saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and blessing. Every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I, saying, blessing and honor and glory and power belong to Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever. And the four beasts said, amen. And the four and twenty elders fell down and worshiped Him that liveth forever and ever.

Now, there my brethren is a picture of heaven, just a little peep into heaven. Just cup our ear and listen and we hear it for it’s going on now. It’s not something that’s prophetic only. It’s prophetic in the sense that it will be in the future, but it’s present in the sense that it also is now. And my friends, our Lord taught that worship is a moral imperative.

Now, let me read to your brief passage only, from the book of Luke. Listen, And when He was come nigh, even now at the descent of the mount of Olives, the whole multitude of the disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works that they had seen; Saying, Blessed be the King that cometh in the name of the Lord: peace in heaven, and glory in the highest. And some of the Pharisees from among the multitude said unto him, Master, rebuke thy disciples. And he answered and said unto them, I tell you that, if these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out. It’s a moral imperative my brethren, and God will have somebody worshiping him if He has to raise up a talking, shouting, singing stone.

Now, we have a little song we sing some times, and I want you to note it. I just want you to note it. It says, bless, Oh my soul, the living God. Call home thy thoughts that are roam abroad. The old man of God believed as I believe tonight. That when our thoughts are roaming all over the face of the earth, and are not centered on God, that they’re away. They’re like a stray dog out in the alley. They’re roaming away from home. Call home thy thoughts that are roam abroad. Let all the powers within me join to work in worship so divine. What work is there? What worship is there so divine as worshiping God. Bless oh my soul that the God of grace, His favor claims the highest praise? Why should the wonders He hath wrought be lost in silence and forgot. Another one tells us that it is a guilty silence and cries break to his tongue, break my tongue thy guilty silence. That when a man or a woman born to worship God is not worshiping God, the very silence of his tongue denotes guilt in his heart. And the man who did not worship God today has a guilty tongue. For worship is a moral imperative. Worship belongs to heaven and to all beings that are moral beings, not to the beasts. Not to the birds that fly and the worms that crawl, but all beings with moral perception and intelligence. It is the business of our tongues to be worshipping God and when we do not we are guilty.

Now, I would like to tell you this, that worship is the missing jewel in evangelicalism today. The church has decked herself with everything. I read yesterday in the newspaper that the churches have been building all this summer, and that we were running into a whole welter of dedications. Now, God bless them, and I’m glad for every building that went up this Summer. We happen to be in a boom. You’ve heard about it. Everybody has more money than is good for him. And so the churches are building, and that’s all right. We’ve decked ourselves with every kind of ornament. We have everything. But there is one shining gem that has been lost to the church. And it has been lost even to the evangelical church.

I got a letter this week, I don’t know whether those friends are present tonight or not. And if they are they will understand. I got a letter from a woman. And she said Mr. Tozer, we were out to hear the sermon on worship, and I’d like to tell you this, that my husband who was a Parsi, that is, Zoroaster fire worshiper, had to teach me to worship the Savior, even though I was brought up in a certain denomination. I had to learn from my converted Parsi husband to worship God. Worship, my friends is the missing jewel in evangelicalism. And the awesome and wonderful jewell with its mysterious luster has been all but lost to us. We meet together and we go through rituals and forms, but worshipping God is something else and we’ve forgotten to worship God.

There was once a noble being and it disturbs me. I don’t know too much about this now, and don’t press me for a very careful exegis, because I’m not sure I know who this is. But, I read about it in the inspired Word of God. He forgot to worship. Listen, thou hast been in Eden the garden of God. Every precious stone was thy covering. The workmanship of thy tablets and of thy pipes was prepared in thee in the day the tower was created. Why did he have tablets and pipes, which are of course musical instruments? Why did this creature, this anointed cherub that covereth; why did he have in his divine workmanship, these instruments built-in? He was a walking organ, a walking harp. God made him so. I have set thee so, it goes on to say. Thou wast upon the holy mountain of God. Thou hast walked up and down in the midst of the stones of fire. I read quite a little about fire tonight. But don’t forget my brethren, that when we come to try to understand what God is like, the best we can do is to talk about spirit and fire. Now, physical fire is not God. And God warned against that and said, when thou gazes up into the sky and sees the sun, or the stars by night, do not fall down and worship them. For that is an abomination unto Jehovah thy God for so did the nations around thee.

So, we’re not fire worshippers, but we recognize that God dwells in fire and these creatures came out of the fire and stood with their six wings. With twain they covered their faces, and with twain they covered their feet, and with twain they did fly. When the Holy Spirit came upon them at Pentecost, He came with fire, and sat upon each one of them. It is as near as God can get to telling us what He’s like, that strange, mysterious, lustrous, shining, beautiful thing. And thou wast perfect in thy ways, from the day that thou was created till iniquity was found in thee. And he who had come beautiful beyond all description, with his worship built-in, and who is permitted to walk up and down amidst in the shining holy stones of fire, now finds iniquity there. God finds iniquity in him, therefore I will cast thee as profane out of the mountain of God. And I will destroy thee old covering cherub from the midst of the stones of fire. I believe that’s Satan if I should be wrong in my exegis, it’s some being, for I read from Ezekiel 28. And if a great being like that, should could be cast out, and would be and was cast out of heaven because he forgot the purpose of his creation. If he forgot that his tongue was made to sing the praises of his Creator. If he could be cast out, hurled down from heaven, shear over the crystal battlements, then I asked you, is it not possible the church that forgets to worship God is in danger of losing her place among the stones of fire?

Is it not possible that the church that doesn’t worship, that only meets and knits or only meets and reads, or only meets and things, or only meets and fellowships, or only meets and eats? Is it not possible that that church may lose her candlestick? Jesus said at one time, you remember, to the Ephesian church, I will pluck out thy candlestick. I’ll remove it. I don’t know what that means exactly, but I don’t want it to happen to me. If God were to wake me tonight at two, or tomorrow morning at two or three o’clock wide, stark awake and say to me, I am removing the Alliance candlestick from the corner of 70th and Union. I wouldn’t have to write to Moody Monthly to find out what it meant. I wouldn’t have to look up the various commentators to see what it meant. I’d be terrorized. And I’d fall on my face and cry, O God, these are Thy people. These are Thy people. Turn not away, my God from these Thy people, for they belong to Thee. And what will the heathen say if you destroy Thy people? I don’t have to know all that means. I only know that it’s terrible enough just to read it. I will take thy candlestick out of its place.

So, there’s danger that we Christians should simply be utilitarian Christians, using Jesus Christ as an escape hatch from hell. That we should simply use the Lord as we use insurance and social security, and whatever else fits into our scheme of self-promotion. But worship, worship my brethren, God has made us to worship. And the man who doesn’t know how to worship, doesn’t know, doesn’t know the purpose of his creation. I’d like to analyze worship if I could a little bit. It can’t be done. It lies beyond. It lies beyond the intellect. But we can we can stand and at least admire, and walk around her holy battlements, and see the Gates of Jerusalem and look a little.

Now, what is it? I think that worship is an attitude. It is a state of mind, a sustained act, if you could allow that, subject to degrees of perfection and intensity certainly. Because, not even the Apostles could worship God always with the same degree of intensity. And all the great mystics and devotional writers that I have heard of during the years, and have read about, and seen their hymns and their devotional works. They all claim that the intensity and degree of worship rises and falls; that it’s impossible to sustain it too long. Even on the mountaintop there, they could not stay too long. The Lord said, go on down the hill. So, I do not claim that this is to be a continuous, unbroken, and yet it is to be unbroken in some measure, because it embodies a number of factors; mental, spiritual, and emotional; worship does.

And let me let me point to some of the factors. One is boundless confidence in the character of God, and nobody can worship God unless he has this boundless confidence in the character of God. You see, confidence is necessary to respect. You cannot respect anybody you have no confidence in. And of course, you cannot worship anyone you do not respect. So that we have to have respect raised to the nth degree. We must have respect that believes with absolute confidence in God, in the character of God, in the being of God. And worship rises or falls, depending upon the idea that the church has of God, whether it’s high or low.

Now, it so happens that the evangelical concept of God is very low today. An Englishman by the name of Philips, the man who has made the translations, wrote a little book that somebody put in my hand called, “Your God is Too Small.” Well, it’s true, the God of the evangelical is too small. We can put Him in our pocket, or put Him up by the way some of our friends do to keep us from having accidents. I threatened to buy brother Ericson a plastic saint put up in front of his car to keep him from having accidents. It doesn’t protect you from policemen, because I saw a policeman tagging a car that had a plastic saint on it one time. And I said to the cop, well, I’ve learned one thing saints don’t protect you from cops. He said, No, they don’t. I’ve got so many to tag and I’m out tagging them. And he said they’re following me around. If I don’t do it, they will get me.

So, this God we have now, this God isn’t much bigger than St. Christopher, and the God of popular Christianity can’t be worshiped, because He isn’t respected. And He isn’t respected, because He’s not big enough. And the Sovereign God of our fathers that we sing about, the God of Abraham that the Jews sang about, the God of Abraham praise. And that Mighty God, that Mighty God, brought men to their knees with great respect. And so, boundless confidence is first, and the second is admiration.

Now, admiration is the appreciation of the excellency of anything. And man is made capable of appreciating excellency. If you were to bring a canary or a nightingale or a mockingbird in here, and play this piano to it, I suppose it would, I’ve understood the canaries will sing when you turn the radio on. I guess they do appreciate a little but they certainly wouldn’t be able to appreciate as much as an audience like this. They certainly wouldn’t be able to understand the beauty of music, and certainly the lower creatures have not in them the ability to appreciate or to admire, as we do. God has made us with ability to admire.

And then, He has given Himself to us as the object of our boundless unlimited admiration. And this can grow, this admiration. It can grow in knowledge and in depth until it fills the heart with wonder and delight, to admire God, just to admire God, not to admire people. I quite agree with the young man’s prayer here tonight, “O God save us from people and from big shots.” He didn’t use that, he won’t use slang the way I do, but save us O Lord from people. We’re always hearing, the big fellow did this, another big fellow did that, another big fellow did that. And I feel like crying, O God, we have heard man’s voice and we’re weary.

Speak Thou to us, O Lord, for I want to admire God. I can admire man who was made in the image of God, but my admiration for man is only because he was made in the image of God. God is the object of our admiration, my brethren. And when we admire, did you ever hear music? You know, there are some things that are so wonderful that you can’t use them. Matthew Arnold said about the poetry of Burns. He said that some of the poetry of Burns is so piercingly, piercingly, so penetratingly pathetic, such piercing pathos in it that it hurts you. You can’t read it. You can’t read it. And have you ever heard a piece of music that hurt you? Hurt you that you bent over with pain when you admired it to a point where it got the better of you. And there are certain great works of literature like that, certain great passages in Milton and Shakespeare are so great that the average rank and file can’t rise to take it. It is too grief and wonderful.

So, when we admire enough, it becomes a delightful pain. It becomes an enjoyable agony within the bosom. Agony? Why? Because we’re not big enough inside. God is going to make us bigger, He’s going to make us. Paul cried, “Be thou enlarged. Thou art constricted,” he said within your heart. Be enlarged. And He wants to make us big enough to admire God, and admire Him with wonder and delight.

And then, following in this analysis, is fascination. That is, it’s to be filled with a moral excitement. I have never have been able to understand, and I can’t to this day, the solemn, sad, long face, composed, poised, self-possessed, temperate, and cold people who sing hymns, and are not affected by them. Who hear the Scripture, but are not affected. Who pray in a monotonous drone. I have not been able to understand them because the fascination of worship is a moral excitement. And it excites us inside. And by excitement, I use the word means when I say excitement. There’s an excitement about love, an excitement about adoration. And this fascination, it captivates and it charms, and it entrances. And the Christian who’s ever seen God in holy worship, I’d say he’s been struck with astonished wonder at the inconceivable elevation, at the magnitude and splendor of the being we call God.

And I pray that God will send to us again. I pray that he will send to us again men out of the fire. Men who’ve walked up and down in the midst of the stones of fire. Who can come back to the world, not to be great founders or great promoters or great mixers, but whose presence with us, is as the presence of an angel. When they looked upon the face of Stephen, they saw his face as the face of an angel, because he said, I see Jesus lifted up. I see him standing. And his face shone. And the shining of the face of Stephen has done more to illuminate the church of the living God than 10,000 theologians and cold teachers of the Law.

My brethren, we need men out of the fire again. We need bold, terrible men. We need men and women who have fought their way, and prayed their way, and been scorned maybe and called fanatics and scoffed at, and named every name, as the song says, the colored song, when they’ve called me everything but a Christian. They were Christians, but they called them everything but a Christian. And some of these will have to go through the fire and be called everything but a Christian to push in and beat their way past the flesh and the world and the devil and cold Christians and dead deacons and elders that are cold, and the general level of things. And they’ll have to push themselves in until they’re fascinated by what they see and find there.

Elijah came down from the mountains of Tishbe girded about the loins with a leather girdle and walked into the presence of the king and said, “you don’t know who I am, but I am Elijah. I stand in the presence of God.” And that’s why he could command fire when the occasion required it. And Ezekiel, before God ever allowed him to be a preacher at all had to have this first chapter experience that I read part of tonight. Isaiah before he could ever write his great book, had to see God high and lifted up with His train filling the temple and had to hear the vibrant voice of the seraphim crying, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty. And so it was with some of the other prophets, Jeremiah. And so it was with some of the apostles. Paul could never, that stiff, cold, hard man of theology and logic. He never would have been the blazing apostle surific in his feet, except he had that experience on Damascus Road when God’s light shone round about him, brighter than midday and blinded him for three days.

Oh, that we might raise up some people. I don’t care whether they’re Baptist, Presbyterians, Reformed, or what they call themselves, I wouldn’t ask God to let them come out of this society of ours. If we have lost our worship, then our candlestick will be removed. I would only pray that God would raise them up, that his all. As old brother MacArthur used to say, “I’ll follow the man with oil on his forehead.” And I’ll follow the man with the flame that sits there. And I don’t care what denomination he calls himself.

So fascination, the inconceivable brightness, the unbelievable elevation, the magnitude and the splendor of God. When it shines in upon a human heart, it changes things brethren. And we’re not what we used to be. He doesn’t kill our sense of humor, but it chastens. It doesn’t destroy all fun, but it takes levity out of the system. So, we never can again be anything but serious-minded men and women. And I pray God it may be so.

But passing on to adoration, adoration. Adoration of course, is the state of adoring. It is to love with all the power within us. It is to love with fear, and with wonder, and with yearning, and with awe. Our trouble is, dear people, we have hearts as big as the world, and the object of our love is small as little peas in a pod. That’s our difficulty. That’s what’s the matter with the people out on the highways tonight. That’s what’s the matter with the women who keep the houses down here. That’s what the matter with the men who stand and belch over the bar and drink their beer in some saloon tonight. That’s what’s the matter with the women who go into weird cults up on the Gold Coast because they have too much of their husband’s money to know what to do with. That’s what’s the matter with the people who are out tonight raising hell all over the world. God has given them ability to love, and they can’t find anything worthy of their love.

Out in Hollywood, it leaps like a drunk bird from one bow to another. It jumps here and then shuts it off, and jumps there and shuts it off, and jumps there until they’re married as much as three and four and eight to ten times because they’re trying to find something to love and they can’t find anything worthy of their love. God made them too big inside. Thou hast set eternity in their heart. Even a fallen man. Even the fallen cherub never found again an object worthy of his love. And all the devils that have fallen in the being, the angels that fell out of heaven, have never found an object worthy of their love. Never. Never. That’s why I grieve when I see someone made in the image of God off on a little sidetrack doing silly things, foolish things. Little, spending their lives doing little things.

There died some year or so ago, a great woman, the greatest women athlete probably that ever lived, Babe Didrikson. And I was discussing Babe Didrikson with one of the men of the church. Penetrating mind he has and he said, “well, she was a great woman, unquestionably. But it seems too bad that she should have dedicated her greatness to jumping over things and knocking little balls and doing little things that were unworthy of her affection.” If you want to do that and keep you in good shape, all right. I stretch a rubber bands in order to keep healthy. And so, you’ll go ahead and do that if you want to. I don’t mind, to dedicate your life to it, my friends, to dedicate your life to it. There are men who start the last of April and end the first week in October, and every day except when they’re traveling, they’re looking at ballgames.

Well, it seems to me this is an awful, when God has made our heart as big as the world that we should pick out a tiny little object and kneel before it and worship, or at least love it so much. And Jesus when they came to Him and said, what is the great commandment of the Law, He said, this is the greatest commandment, thou shalt love the Lord that God with all thy heart and with all thy mind and strength and with all the power in you, you are to love God. So, adoration is love with fear and wonder and yearning and awe. When Jesus walked among men, He affected them two ways, and sometimes, two ways at once. He affected them with a magnetic drawing, and He affected them with a fear that repulsed. And the same heart that yearned for God with a great yearning, also an awesome fear, might have been repulsed by the greatness and elevation and magnitude of the being we call God.

This is not only to love, but it’s to feel a possessiveness, a crying mind. Go through your Bible and see how many times that men say mine to God, my, mine, to God. They tell us the personal pronoun shouldn’t be used in religion. That’s the difficulty with it. We’re using it about ourselves, and about what we’ve done, and about where we’ve been, and about who we know, and about what we own. But we’re afraid to use it about our relation to God. And one of the great theologians, who was it, Luther that said, the whole heart of religion lies in its personal pronoun.

And when the human heart cries with the Psalmist, or a prophet or an apostle or a mystic, “mine, mine, mine, God is mine.” And when the human heart worships God and says, mine. God says, Yes, I’m, I’m yours. So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty? For He is thy lord, worship thou Him. And the times all this rises to the place of breathless silence, wrapped in deep adoring, silence, Jesus, Lord, I dare not move, lest I lose the smallest saying meant to catch and hear love.

Now, when all these are present, these mental, emotional, and spiritual factors are present continually; they’re present in varying degrees, but when they’re present, they’re present in song and in praise and in prayer, and in mental prayer, in inward prayer, and the ejaculatory prayer, kept blazing by long seasons of prayer. They condition our thoughts, and our words and our deeds. And they give us a philosophy of life. They give us an outlook, a vantage point. They give us what the moderns like to call a scale of values. That’s all right, because the liberals use it, don’t throw it away. But they give us a scale of values. We value some things more than others and we learn what is valuable and what isn’t. And it hallows every place and every time and every task. And it can do that for all of us. And it gives back the glory which Jesus had with the Father before the world was. It prepares the heart to worship.

When Jesus said come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest. He talked about a burden. And what was that burden? It was the burden of the tuneless heart. It was the burden of the voiceless nightingale. It was the burden of the heart that was capable of tremendous, all but infinite love that couldn’t find an object. It was the burden of the man whose tongue was made to praise God, but it had been guilty in his mouth for all the years. And what is the rest? The rest is among other things, the rest of adoration.

My brethren, you will learn more in a half hour of adoring silence in the presence of God with your Bible than you will learn in all the schools, and I believe in the schools. I’ve supported the schools. I’ve promoted them. I preached to their people. I have done everything possible and I’ve never talked them down. But you will learn more of God, Wesley said it, Augustine said it, Thomas Ă  Kempis said it, and I’ve repeated it a thousand times; but a little while spent adoring, a little while spent caught between fear and fascination, between joy and repentance, or the sharp pangs of repentance, adoring God, you will learn more, more of light, more, more of light than you will ever find at any other time.

O Father, we beseech thee for all of these. Take them through the fire and through the flood, but above all things, to the blood. And if they have to sit by the river Kebar as Ezekiel did, or be thrown down into a pit as Jeremiah was. or be surrounded by dancing, fanatical foes as Elijah was, or be on the Isle of Patmos as John was, or to fall flat down in a faint as Daniel did, oh, whatever the cost we pray Thee, make Christian worshipers out of these men and women. This we ask in Jesus’ name.

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