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The Word of God is Quick, Powerful and Sharp

The Word of God is Quick, Powerful and Sharp

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

July 26, 1959

Summary

In this message, Pastor A.W. Tozer emphasizes the transformative power of God’s Word in exposing and convicting individuals of their sinful nature, and the omniscience and omnipotence of God. Mr. Tozer shares personal experiences and biblical references to illustrate how God has protected and cared for him and his family, encouraging us to trust in God’s sovereignty and believe that He is always working for their good. Throughout the sermon, Mr. Tozer emphasizes the significance of God’s care and protection in our lives.

Message

Now, in the fourth chapter of Hebrews, verses twelve and thirteen: For the word of God is quick, that is, living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in His sight, but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of Him with whom we have to do. It takes the Holy Ghost to pack powerful words into short sentences. Notice, quick, that is, living, powerful, sharp, piercing, dividing asunder discerner, naked and open unto God’s eyes. These are the words of the text, and I want to talk a little bit about the Word.

Now one of the great realities, there aren’t very many, but one of the great realities with Whom and with which we have to do is God’s Word. I have been a great advocate of realities. I suppose I have kept myself back a little, in some ways before the eyes of men, by my stubborn refusal to fool with things that are not real, or to spend any time with them before a congregation. I have asked my congregations to confront reality. And I asked you this morning to confront one of the great realities, the living Word of God.

Now, the word of God is real. It doesn’t seem to be. There are lots of things that seem real, but actually they are not real at all. And there are things that are relatively important. They are important all right, but they’re not so important that if you lose them, the world will cave in on you. They’re relatively important. But the Word of God is a thing that is, and when I say the word of God, of course I mean the Scriptures, but I mean that which is a little more than the Scriptures. I mean the breath of God in the Scriptures. And when we read of the Word, we’re reading not only a written text, we’re reading of written texts, pulsating and vibrating with the life of God in them.

And here is a reality that we can’t escape. Men run away from things that they should take care of; and they run away for a lifetime, but there’s no escaping here, there’s no evading here. There is no possibility of compromise and there’s no bargaining, but God will reckon with this. The Word of God is. And we’ve got to reckon with this either now or later or at last.

Always, there are those three tenses for anyone who faces up to and confronts reality, or who is confronted by reality. They’ve got to reckon with it either now, not yesterday, that’s impossible, you can’t go back. They’ve got to reckon with it now or a little later, or at last. God in His patience allows us to insult Him and reckon later instead of now. But there will be a time when later will be last. And then we’ll find that it’s too late.

Now, the reality of which I speak, I repeat, is the Word of God plus the Living Word of God, the One who is called the Word in capital letters and that which is called the word in lowercase letters. Not a black book or a red book, not letters, not texts, not ink and paper, but the expression of the mind of God in revelation, the breath of God, the mighty breath of God, filling the world and taking shape in the sacred Scriptures, written by men who were moved by the Holy Ghost. Now, that’s the sacred Scriptures, and it’s God’s living thoughts.

Jesus Christ is God’s Living Word, but the Scriptures are God’s living voice. John 6:63, Jesus said, the words I speak unto you they are Spirit, and they are life. And they are addressed to fallen man for a judgment or salvation, or judgment and salvation, I’d better say, because there can be no salvation until there has been judgment. We stand before the bar of God.

I tremble when I read books written by men who have brought the Word of God before them for judgment. They bring what they call historical, critical techniques to the Word of God. And thus, they sit on the Word of God as though the sacred scriptures were judged by them. No, they are judged by the sacred Scriptures. And God brings every man, all men, fallen men, before the Word for judgment and or for salvation.

There is in the old apocryphal books that some people never read but that I get a lot of blessing out of, it’s called, the Wisdom of Solomon. When Solomon was there, or whoever wrote that book, I presume Solomon, was describing the children of Israel in Egypt and God Almighty leading them through, you come to these two verses. And I think they’re so beautiful and so wonderful, that I want to read them to you, though I do not claim them to be inspired in the sense that the Scriptures are inspired. Here’s what the old man said in telling another generation the story of Israel in Egypt. He said, while things were in quiet silence, and the night was in the midst of her swift course, thine almighty Word leaped down from heaven out of the royal throne as a fierce man of war into the midst of the land of destruction. Thine almighty Word leaped down from heaven out of thy royal throne as a fierce man of war.

This is the power of the Word of God. The most powerful force in nature, without any doubt, is the Word of God. If you will look back through the Scriptures, the Old and the New Testament, you will see how God had but to speak and things came to pass. He spoke to nothing and there came something. For it’s written in Hebrews 11 that the things that we are made, were brought out by the Word of God and were not made by the things which do appear. The things didn’t come from themselves, but they came from a living Voice.

And in Genesis one and two, God spoke to this order, and order came into darkness and the light came. He said, let there be light and there was light. He said, let the waters be gathered into one place, and it was so, and the dry land appeared. He spoke to the barren earth and fields became fruitful. In Exodus 14, He spoke to the sea, and it opened. And He spoke in Joshua to the river, and it opened, and to dry bones in Ezekiel and they lived, and then to death and Lazarus came forth bound hand and foot.

God has but to speak the living Word. I wish that you might see that you never ought to pick the Bible up without realizing, that while it’s only paper and ink, that God Almighty has breathed into the words there His own living breath. And those words can become like the release of atomic particles, tremendous either for destruction or for construction, either for judgment or salvation. And God has spoken and is speaking.

I could not, I couldn’t bring myself mentally to think of the Bible as God’s last letter to mankind; to think that God wrote the book and then died, or at least went away beyond into some far imperium, and now we have God’s letter. God did write the Book. He did breathe into man, and they did write the book. And He did end the Canon. And He did say that nobody add anything to this Book. But what I mean is that God did not only speak in the Bible, He is speaking in the Bible. It is a now voice. It is a present voice. It is as real as the voice that you might hear over the radio that you are tuned in now.

God spoke and is speaking and He’s speaking to human life. And when He speaks to human life, we know our mortality. We know that we’ve got to die. The living man knows he’s got to die. The voice of God there speaks to him and speaks to human conscience, and the conscience starts awaking. And the blind, insensible death conscience that lay for half a lifetime, full of self-pride and confidence and assurance, now suddenly sees and hears and feels and knows, because the living voice of God has waked that conscience up. And the voice of God is speaking to human sin, and it knows itself and it is naked.

You only have to listen to people praying at an altar and you will know that they have not been reasoned into their sin, you know that. You know that a Word has been spoken, that they’ve been confronted by the mighty Word of God, and that the Living Word has stripped their conscience bare, and they know that they are sinners, and they know that they are personally, individually guilty before God.

Now, I want you to notice that God’s Word in judgment brings not a charge; it brings a demonstration. The man is charged with a crime and taken up before a court that charge, that indictment they call it, is not synonymous with a guilty verdict. It’s only a charge. You are charged with .  .  . How do you plead? So, a man stands charged, but the Word of God is not a charge; Paul said, we have before proved both Jew and Gentile to be under condemnation. The Word of the living God is not a charge, it’s a verdict and a demonstration on lust and hate and lies and greed and pride and envy, and all other sins. And it distills like a living mist of vital essence wherever the Word of God is heard, wherever the human conscience confronts the Living Word. And the Living Word brings the human conscience before it as though suddenly there had come upon the man a living mist, a vital essence had descended, and the heart knows its own guilt.

Now, men may deny, because we’re very smooth reasoners, and they may cover, and they may resist. They may resent that the Word of God has given the mortal wound. And until the end, there will never be any deliverance, completely. There might be a temporary healing over and hiding, but there will never be full deliverance until He who is the Living Word pulls out the sword. Because the Word of God is quick and powerful, piercing even to the dividing asunder. And when the heart has been pierced by the Word of God, not the cold steel mind you, but the Living Blade alive and terrible.

And I, for my part, don’t want it any other way. I want the living Word of God to be just what it is. I want it to confront me, and I want to face up to it and I want it to do to me what has to be done. And I want to do what It has ordered me to do and believe what It charges me to believe in order that there may be no resistance and no struggle there but complete rest in God. The Word of God reveals, I say, it’s a great revealer. It strips the life bare before the eyes of God, this wonderful, this terrible thought. Man always thinks he can hide.

There are those Bible teachers who believe that the words of God to Cain, thy brother’s blood cries from the ground, indicated that Abel had been buried after he was murdered. At least the earth had been thrown over him hoping against hope this mad murderer Cain, this jealous man, that his guilt would not find him out. But God said that the blood of Abel cried out of the ground. And they found him and pinned it on him and marked him with a mark of the murderer.

So, the eyes of God see everything. You and I can hide from each other. We can do a lot of little tricks. Men who have only a little hair can let it grow long on one side and smooth it across. They imagine that that tells people that they are not bald, but it doesn’t. Everybody knows they’re bald, but they’ve got to try to cover it up. And women have a way of covering up. Drugstores prosper on women’s duplicity and man’s pride. We try to cover up. But we’re open before the eyes of God. God sees and there’s no fooling at all. There’s no secrecy. There’s no dissembling and there’s no distance that can make any difference for the man David said, if we should go to the uttermost parts of the sea, wherever that is, God would still see us there. And there isn’t any deed that isn’t known.

And that Word persists, persists. The words of God do not relax at death, but they are persistent out there where the dead live again and where heaven and hell waits. The words that I speak unto you, they shall judge you in the last day. We read in Revelation where the books are opened and the book of words and the book of deeds and the book of life, all these are open. And God’s Living Word is there. But that is only the negative side of it, my friends, only the negative side.

There’s no door that is closed. All doors stand ajar before the Word of God. All hearts are wide open before the Word of God and there isn’t a closed book anywhere. But all books are open, all before the eyes of God. And not a thought, not a thought that wears a garment, but all our thoughts are naked, naked and open before the eyes of Him with Whom we have to do. When men invented clothing he invented secrecy. And it’s right and proper up to a measure that he should, but he’s carried that secrecy to his thoughts, to his heart, to his mind, to his plans, to his intentions, to his guilt. The Scripture says no human thought wears a garment. Nobody can cloth his thoughts so God can’t see them.

There’s another side and I want briefly now to mention that and that is the Saving Word. I say that the sacred Scriptures, God’s living Voice are addressed to fallen men for judgment or for salvation, for judgment and for salvation. They must judge you first before they can save you. God never saved a man nor pronounced him innocent who came with a not guilty plea before the bar of the Scriptures. It’s only when we bring our, guilty, Your Honor, before the great God and throw ourselves on the mercy of the court for Jesus’ sake, that the Advocate above, the Savior by the throne of love rises and speaks for us and says, Jesus paid it all, all the debt I owe. Sin had left a guilty stain, but He washed it white as snow.

Here’s the saving Word, Psalm 71 says, thou has given commandment to save me. I’m glad that I get in trouble. That is, my heart gets in trouble. I am never really very much trouble. God knew that I being a sensitive person, am inclined to be more vulnerable than the average person. But I could get my troubles mainly from the inside. So, he didn’t send me all the miseries that he sent some people on the outside. Some fellows are always in trouble for getting kicked out of one place and into another. But I have never had that experience up to now.

But the Lord knew I didn’t need it from the outside, because I was so sensitive and vulnerable that He could trust me to get in lots of trouble inside my own heart and I have. And some of the times that I’ve been in trouble, God said to me, or I found these words, thou has given commandment to save me. And I like to think that the mighty Living Word of God has gone forth.

And the Christian man, the born man, the man who’s born of the Living Word, for it’s written that the Word of God is the seed out of which men are born. And that Word can never die, that it’s jot or tittle can never pass away, that the living man, the living woman who’s been born out of the life of God and is called a Christian, that person has been marked out by God. Just as God sent His fear into all the land of Canaan, and His fear went ahead and He marked out these strange people of another tongue coming out of Egypt, the Israelites, and the fear fell on them wherever they went. Some allowed the fear to make them arm and fight Israel and some surrendered. And some let them respectfully pass. But God said these are my peculiar, special people. Everybody that’s been born of the Living Word of the Spirit is a special object of God’s care.

And God tells all of His world, I’m saving this man. You keep your hands off of him. Do my prophet no harm. Lay not your hand on my child. Don’t imagine you can harm any child of mine. Old Job back there in the Old Testament, he didn’t know it, but he’d been living behind an iron curtain. God Almighty’s curtain had been all the way around him. A hedge is a better word, for that’s the word the Bible used. He was hedged in, and God Almighty had that hedge electrified and the devil couldn’t pass over until God allowed him, for a little while, to bless and benefit his man, Job. Then he sent him away again. Thou has given commandment to save me.

I haven’t a doubt in all the world but that there isn’t an atom of matter in this world, but what has been charged by great God Almighty to look after me and you and all of his children. We lay them away. We bury them out of our sight with grief and tears. But the Earth can no more hold them than the earth could hold the body of Jesus or of Lazarus. Thou has given commandment to save me. If you knew all that disease germs around you. And if you knew all the demons that were set to destroy you. But they can’t get to you. Because God has given commandment to save me. And He’s charged everything. He has charged the stars in their courses.

That’s why I smile at the Space Age and laugh at their Sputniks and their Explorers. Long before man invented the thrust that would cause a missile to escape the gravitational pull and fall into free space, long centuries before that, God Almighty had spoken to every star that shines and every planet that revolves, every angel before the throne, save these people. These are my people. My people marked by the blood of My Son, saved by my life, redeemed by the death of My Son. Save these people.

Physically I don’t like floating around in space. I flew out to Vancouver and down to Portland and back to Chicago, and you can have it. You can have it. I don’t like it. I never did like it. I thought maybe if it took that long, roundabout flight, I’d get to liking it. And I liked it less when I landed here in the airport than I did when I started. I don’t like it, but I do know this, that all space and all creation and the stars in their courses and the moon in its phases and the sun in its strength and the lovely earth and all the rivers and seas our mine. Thou has given commandment to save me. God’s Word, like a mighty armed man leaped out from the royal throne and commanded, no man can pluck you out of My hand.

I grieve that men have turned this doctrine into a hard-case, hardened shell of doctrine that divides the church. Do you believe in eternal security? Do you not believe in eternal security? All that believe, get over here and all that don’t believe get over there and glare at each other. I grieve at this because it’s making a doctrine out of what is a wonderful truth and not a doctrine at all. But God has spoken for His children, all of His children, my children, and they are dear to Him. They’re dear to Him because they belong to His Son because His Son gave His life.

In the war, the boys say, at least one of my boys told me, the hardest thing they had to do in the Navy Air Wing where he was for three years, a flyer. He said, the hardest thing we have to do is to come back home after when one of the boys have been killed and gather up his things and send them to his widow or to his mother. He said, they die, they die all around us, but it isn’t so bad until you have to gather up their things, an old wristwatch and a picture and extra clothing and an old watch chain, maybe that belonged to his dad and an old penknife with one blade broken. The few things that he couldn’t take with him out there but headed back and go get that and wrap it all up. Send it and then write a letter. He said, that’s hard. Don’t you think that when that package arrived. Thank God, this church, though we had during the Second World War about 75 of our boys in uniform, not one of them was killed, not one.

We had, my wife and I, five, and not one of them was killed. So, we never had to do, but don’t you think that when that package came back, that that would have been laid aside and cherished as long as memory kept verdant. I sometimes look up on, my wife has pictures everywhere, she doesn’t have flowers. And here, pictures all around there and I sometimes look at the picture of our boy Bud who was a Marine. All but lost his life. He’s still hobbling around, but he is able to make it alright. In the picture, a good-looking young fellow in his early 20s, grinning with that uniform, that marine uniform. And I said, if he died over there instead of coming home, wouldn’t this be a sacred thing? A sacred thing, for the sake of another, for the love of another, some things become infinitely precious.

And God looked down and saw the children that God had given to Jesus, saw that for the Christ’s blood had run, Christ had died. Christ had cried, Father, forgive them. Christ had said, why hast Thou forsaken me? And God said, whatever He sends Me. Whatever He sends Me will be dearer to Me than the apple of mine eye, dearer than the jewels that are on my throne, dearer than the unredeemed seraphim and cherubim, the burners that cry, holy, holy, holy before the Majesty on High. You are a blood-bought treasure, bought by the blood of Jesus Christ, and the Father loved His Son in death and loved Him in life. And for His sake, He loves you beyond all the Scripture.

Nobody knows how intensely, how deeply, how persistently, how perpetually, how everlastingly, God loves you. He loves you with an angry love. A love that’s angry with anything that would hurt you. He loves you with a tender love, if you belong to Him. The Living Word leaps down, leaped out of the throne of God like a man armed for a war, and God says, I will be with you, and I will go before you and I will keep you, and fear thou not, I am with thee. And no man can pluck thee out of my hand, and the foundation of God standeth sure. Ye are My sheep and know my voice. Goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

The Word of God is quick and powerful, quick for judgment and salvation, judgment first, salvation second. Judgment for all those whose conscience start awaking before the Living Voice and who cry, my God, my God, I have sinned. Have mercy upon me. And for salvation for all such, the Voice goes forth. Save these people. They’re My people, precious to Me more precious than the apple of my eye.

Ah, yes, the Son of Man has power on earth to forgive sin. The Son of Man has power on earth to bestow life. The Son of Man has power on earth to raise the dead. The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of Man, and they that hear shall come forth.

Well, I want you to hear the Word. I want you to go to this Book reverently. Open its pages and read it and remember that while you’re not a bibliolater and you’re not worshiping a text, you recognize here, not the last words of a dead man, but the living voice of the Living God; the persistent, vibrant sounding Voice that’s still alive. And everything that God says, He is still saying.

You know, when you go anyplace to speak, they come and want your autograph. Now, not because it’s me, but just because it’s anybody. No matter who you are if you’re the speaker, they think that they’d like to have your autograph. So, I don’t know how many I signed while I was at Canby Camp, and I, just to save myself I think a little bit of mental exercise as much as anything else, I signed one Scripture verse on practically all of them I hope they didn’t compare notes. The same Scripture verse nearly on all I signed, a few I have varied to Galatians 2:20. But most all of them I signed, Jeremiah 29:11, God’s speaking. And God says, I know the thoughts that I think toward you says the Lord. Thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you an end and an expectation. I know the thoughts I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace.

God’s peaceful thoughts are coming down to us, peaceful thoughts. Not occultism, not spiritism, not Pealeism, but God speaking in the Word and in His Son, speaking thoughts of kindness and peace and good intention. And God is pleased when you are pleased, if you’re pleased with what He’s pleased with. Why can’t we be better Christians? Why must we drag on and drag on in an old bumpy wagon when God Almighty has the angels and spirits at our disposal and the Holy Ghost within us and the Word of God before our eyes.

Yes, the Word is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword. Let us believe it. Let us love it. Let us read it. Let us trust it. Let us live by it and let us die by it and all will be well. Amen.

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“Inspiration of God’s Word Versus Tradition”

Inspiration of God’s Word Versus Tradition

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

March 23, 1958

Now, I want to read the rest of chapter one of Titus beginning with verse 14. Well, I better read 13 too because I don’t want to break into a semicolon. Paul says, this witness is true. Wherefore rebuke them sharply. that they may be sound in the faith not giving heed to Jewish fables and commandments of men that turned from the truth. Because unto the pure, all things are pure. But unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure: but even their mind and conscience is defiled. They profess that they know God, but in works, they deny him, being abominable and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate.

Now, I am sorry that this isn’t going to be what they call an inspirational sermon. In preaching the Bible, if you stay close to the Bible, it’s like staying close to the score of a musical composition. You can’t take too many liberties or else you’re not playing Bach, you’re playing somebody else. And if I’m giving expository sermons on Paul and I take too many liberties with Paul, then I’m preaching Tozer and not Paul, which isn’t a good thing. So, I have to stay by Paul. I don’t apologize for Paul, he doesn’t need my defense. But it so happens that this Crete crowd was a bit rambunctious and they needed some pretty severe apostolic correction, and they got it. But this is instructive if it’s not inspiring, and you will find after all, that inspiration comes out of information.

Now, he says in verse ten above he said, there were vain talkers and deceivers, and I talked about those last week. And then he added this melancholy little phrase, especially they of the circumcision–poor Jews. I am not antisemitic. I love the Jews. I love them for Christ’s sake. The blood that flowed on Calvary, from its human side and standpoint, was a Jewish blood. Jesus our Lord, was the son of a Jewish maiden, as well as of God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth. And my love for the Jews cannot be challenged. But the poor sons of Sarah and Abraham, never seem to keep out of trouble, especially they of the circumcision, said Paul–too bad. 

This island of Crete had a very large Jewish population as I’ve explained, and of course, they travel a lot. Jews get around a lot. And some of them got converted to Christ, while they were elsewhere on around over the country, or around over the world. And some of them were converted there in Crete no doubt. And they had become Christians, at least by profession. But they had made the mistake of bringing their Judaism over into the church with them. And they were still strongly influenced by Judaism. That was so strong in Palestine, of course, it would be strong there, that they had to have a conference, a council, we call them now, and decide on whether they did or did not have to go through the Jewish ritual before they could be a Christian. And they decided they did not. The fathers had met, James Peter, and the rest of them, and they decided that for the sake of not offending the Jews, they were to do four things. For God’s sake and Christ’s sake, they were not to commit fornication, but also, they weren’t to eat things offered to idols. That was a concession to the standards of the Jewish people, so they would not offend them. But they said, you do not have to keep the Law of Moses. By faith, our hearts are purified even as the rest. But these Jews, the circumcision, they followed the church around, everywhere, causing trouble. And Paul said, they were vain teachers. And they were teachers, these are Jewish Christians.

Now, I’ll have to explain how this was and then we’ll be informed and we hope that we’ll get some inspiration out of information. These Jewish Christians taught this. They said there was a written law. And that law consisted of two things. It consisted of the ten words written on stone by the finger of God. And it consisted then of the additional which was inspired by God through Moses. It was the Pentateuch, the five books: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy we say now. But they said also that there was another law called the law of the lip. And that was an oral law. And they believed in that oral law just as certainly as they believed in the Ten Commandments. I don’t know if they had been put up to take their choice which they would have chosen. But at any rate, they taught the oral law, the traditions, just as vigorously as they taught the law of Moses. But they said this oral law of the lip was passed on by memory, and it was passed on by memory. We know that it was tradition. That’s the difference between tradition and written Scripture, or written beliefs, if they pass it on by tradition.

In some countries I’m told, in certain Arabic countries and Oriental countries, a great deal of their literature is passed down by memory. Education consists of memorizing the great classics in China, at least for many years until the modernization of China. And if they destroyed all their books overnight, all the books in China had been destroyed at certain times, they could have all been reproduced out of the memory of the scholars. And they say the same is true in Arabia, that the book of the Mohamadan Qur’an could have been reproduced out of the memories of the people. And so, they had here these Jews, an oral law many, many times larger than the Old Testament itself. And it was passed on by memory by tradition, and each family gave it to their children, they grew up and gave it to their children, along with the written law, which we believe to be the inspired Word of God.

Now this grew in volume through the years. The great rabbis added to it. And it became part of the canonical law. And it regulated every act and every day and every relation, almost every thought, where God had left men free to do as they pleased within the framework of righteousness and truth. They insisted on following that man and putting yoke on every minute of his time. And these regulations took the character of the law, and they even superseded the law of God in some people’s minds.

Now, those were the vain talkers of which Paul writes. The Jewish fables and commandments of men that turned from the truth. And this later on was reduced to writing, this oral law was reduced to writing about the time of Christ or a little bit later. And it’s known now as the Talmud. Oh, for thirty years I’ve been a little bit acquainted. I’ve had nodding acquaintance with the Jewish Talmud. I bought their books and read them, and I know what they have. They’re special, there’s much good in it incidentally. There’s much good in the Jewish Talmud, much good. But they have a strange way of interpreting Scripture. They make jots and tittles mean things. They take a certain sentence, which is obviously means just what it means, and they add a certain, strange interpretation to that that makes it mean something else. And then that became part of the tradition and part of the Law. And these brethren were coming to the Christians and saying to them, now, it’s nice, I’m a Christian too, of a Jewish extraction. But you must understand that you can’t just come roaring in out of paganism and become a Christian, believe in Jesus Christ and be saved just like that. You have to come by way of the law of the lip, the Jewish tradition, because salvation is of the Jews. Jesus himself said it was, and you’ve got to listen to us.

So, they began to lay these Talmudic, rabbinical laws upon the Jews. About the sixth century, it was collected and written down, so we now have it as the Talmud. And one man said about it, it consists of countless ceremonies and the practice of elaborate ritual which never was written in the book of the Bible at all. And to these Talmudists, righteousness, or a holy life, lay in living according to these rabbinical laws or rules. And when our Lord Jesus Christ came to Jewry, He found that the Law of Moses, the Old Testament Law, which was inspired of God, had been pushed into the background, and that this, this oral law or tradition had taken over and the Jews were under what Peter called yoke of bondage which neither we nor our fathers could bear.

Now, let me give you an example of it from the 15th chapter of the book of Matthew. Here’s a perfect example of how Christ met this head-on. He didn’t fool with it. He didn’t try to find the common ground and do all that they tell us now we should do. He simply butted into it head-on.

Then came to Jesus, Scribes and Pharisees. And they of course were the rabinists, the Talmudists, those who were traditionalists. Then came to Jesus, Scribes and Pharisees which are of Jerusalem saying, why do thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? There it is, the tradition of the elders, the law of the lip, the Talmud? Why do they transgress the tradition of the elders, for they wash not their hands, when they eat bread?

And He answered them by asking them a question. Why do ye transgress the commandments of God by your traditions? They said, why do you transgress the tradition? And He said, why do you transgress the law of God by your tradition? There we have it. So long as there are human beings alive in the world, we’ll be, at least, under the shadow of traditions. There’s great deal of tradition in this church, a great deal of tradition. We do things because our fathers did, and we’re too lazy to change it. And after a while, it begins to take on a certain form. Because we do it a certain way, there are churches, where if you didn’t have an altar call with people kneeling at the front of the church, they think you’d backslidden. And yet, you go back as far as the Wesleys, and you will find no altars, no place for people to kneel. Finney, when he came along, had to argue and fight to have a anxious seat. That was the front row for people to come and sit if they wanted to be saved. That’s how tradition takes over. Now, there are people that come to this church and because I don’t give an altar call every Sunday night, and say now, come down here and kneel, walk out and say they’re backslidden there. You don’t baptize nine, three or four weeks ago, and eight or nine tonight, and not have God doing something in people’s lives. And yet, because we don’t follow the tradition, they don’t like it.

Well, they said, why do you transgress the commandment of God by your tradition? Then He said in verse nine, in vain they do worship me teaching for doctrines, the commandments of men. Now, they carried that same tradition, you’d think a crucified Christ, the risen Christ and the coming of the Holy Ghost, would have swept that away as a wind sweeps away the mist, but it didn’t. Those Talmudic Christians followed along, believing in the traditions of the elders, the love the lip.

Now in Paul’s mind, and in the mind of Jesus our Lord, there’s a line sharply drawn between those who believe that righteousness is a formal thing. And those who believe that righteousness springs out of the heart. The Talmudists, the traditionalist believed it to be a formal thing. Now, I’m not condemning. I’m not scolding, I’m not adding anything. I am explaining what sound scholarship will confirm, that the Pharisees and Scribes of Jesus’ day, the Judaizing brethren of Paul’s day, which Paul writes here, call them circumcision, they believe as all religions believe that there has to be righteousness, that you’ve got to be righteous to please God. But now the question is, what is righteousness and what does righteousness consist in?

Well, they believe that righteousness was dietary, seasonal, ceremonial, and maybe ascetical. And there were four words here: what, when, how and how much. The dietary, that is what men eat or do not eat. And Paul said, they come and try to bother you with their eating and not eating. And he said, rather, I wouldn’t say angrily, but sharply in verse fifteen, unto the pure all things are pure. But unto them that are defiled unbelieving, nothing is pure. But their minds and consciences are defiled.

So Paul said, now, I want you to appoint elders and appoint bishops in Crete in order that they might by bringing the sound Word of God to bear, they might clear the air and deliver these new Christians in Crete from dietary traditions. You’re good if you eat this. You’re not good if you eat that. I won’t say it because I want to be kind, but can you think as we go along about certain great church or two, that are also under bondage or traditions, diets and times and seasons. Well, here we have the seasons that was when. What men do or do not eat, that’s a dietary. When they’re supposed to eat or not to eat that seasonal. How they dress and kneel and hold their hands and when they wash their hands or don’t wash their hands, that ceremony. And how much they suffer and give, and how often they pray, and how long, and how often they fast and deprive themselves and punish themselves, that’s ascetical.

So these four things, they all sprang out of self-righteousness and a misunderstanding of the grace of God: dietary, what men eat and what they don’t eat; season, when they eat it and when they don’t eat it; ceremonial, how they dress, how they kneel, how they stand, how they rise, how they get up; ascetical, how much they punish themselves. All of this was a part of the law of the lip, the tradition of the elders. And Jesus broke it, right and left. And they said, why do ye break our traditions? He said, why do you break God’s law with your traditions?

Now, some examples, by way of illustration from the Pharisees. You remember that passage where the disciples walked through the field on the Sabbath day. And as they walked, they reached out, the King James Version says corn, but it was wheat, they reached out and the heavy heads of wheat are hanging there. I can just see them from my boyhood days, heavy and yellow, ready to cut. And they just reached out as I’ve done a thousand times as a boy, took a couple of head roll, blew the chaff off and ate the wheat. That’s the way to get it, you know, with none of the vitamins taken out. And those disciples did that.

And the Pharisees saw them do it. They should have been somewhere praying or helping the sick, but they were out spying on Jesus and His disciples to see if they could catch them on the breaking of the tradition. They said, now wait a minute here. We have a law that says you shan’t thresh wheat on Sabbath day, and your threshing wheat. And Jesus turned on them and said the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath, and He defended his poor, hungry disciples who had rubbed out some wheat and eaten it. But there you have it. They weren’t interested in hungry disciples, they were interested in not breaking that law of the lip that says you can’t rub, they actually went so far as to say, some of them did, I don’t know whether it was universal or not. But some did, go so far as to say that you’re not to walk on the grass on the Sabbath day because you’re likely to trample on a head of grass and the seed will be crushed out of the head and that will be threshing. Therefore, stay off the grass and walk on the concrete on the Sabbath day, lest you thrash and if you’re thrash, you’re a sinner. You’re ceremonially unclean, you’re broken the tradition of the elders. Now that to you and me sounds silly. But to somebody brought up in that, it isn’t as silly as it sounds. And they followed over the creek, mind you, and taught this kind of crazy business.

Then, Jesus here, you’ll remember, He and his disciples didn’t eat, didn’t wash. I’ve seen men working in factories. They only had half an hour to eat, and they wanted to read a little or chat a little and they’d sit down, their hands are all covered with grease. I’ve seen fellows eat their lunch with greasy hands, perfectly harmless. To a Jew, it was terrible. They said, why, according not to the law of Moses, mind you, but according to the law of tradition, you’re supposed to wash your hands before they eat. Jesus said, I don’t want to recognize your traditions. I recognize the law of my Father and you’re breaking the law of God all the time with your tradition. That’s my answer to our friends over on the other side, the Catholics, I’m not against them. I love them. I’d cut their lawns. Lend them my hose. I’d do anything for them. But I am not going to allow them to put a yoke on my neck.

Now, remember another time, Jesus sat down with some sinners. Now, who were the sinners? Were the sinners. men who committed adultery, stole, lied, cheated widows out of their property and had bad tempers? No, those weren’t considered sinners by the Pharisees. The sinners were those who didn’t wash their hands before they ate. Who walked on the grass on Sunday. Who rubbed wheat in their hands and thrashed, and thus broke the love of fathers. Who didn’t tie their clothing as they said they should have and who thus broke the law of the tradition, their law of the lip, the oral law, they were sinners.

But the Pharisee, who hated with a black hate that finally crucified Jesus, he was ceremonially clean, and that’s a holy man. He kept a lot of the fathers. And a evil man who would rather a poor sick man would lie and suffered and died a tortured death than to be healed on the Sabbath day, he was not a sinner. He was a good man. He was a holy man because he kept the law of the fathers. And the men who finally crucified Jesus as Billy Sunday’s old song used to say, passed off for moral men too. Righteousness to them, were those who are clean according to the ceremony. They did the thing they were supposed to do. They got up when they’re supposed to get up, sat when they’re supposed to sit, put their hands up like this when they were told to, appeared when they were told to and did everything just as they were told to. They said, that’s the tradition of the fathers.

Well, we have it on our hands today. It isn’t affecting us here much. But wherever I see it, I like to leave the main path and go out and hew it down. We used to have a weed when I was a boy. My father called Wild Parsnip, but it was really a wild carrot. And he hated it so bad that if he was driving along the road, along the lane, and he saw one over in the field, he’d stopped the wagon, jump off, jump over the fence, go out, take an axe and cut it out at the roots, throw it up, and then drive on. And I feel that way about all these traditional laws they want to put on God’s people and place righteousness where it doesn’t belong.

I say there’s a sharp line of demarcation drawn between those who believe that righteousness lies in formal law keeping and those who believe that righteousness springs out of faith, that it’s a moral thing. That a liar can’t be holy a man no matter how often he goes to church or makes his confession or gets confirmed, or how much he avoids meet on Friday or how he keeps the traditions of the elders. He’s not a good man, if he’s a liar. He’s not a good man if he has hate in his heart. He’s not a good man. If he has a churlish temper. He’s not a good man. Let him be baptized anyway he wants to be baptized, sprinkle, poured, three times once, simmers, anyway, and he’s not a good man if he’s an evil man.

For faith, righteousness comes out of faith and out of love. And it has its source in the heart. That was the teaching of our Lord Jesus Christ. That’s worshiping in spirit and in truth. And such have only one question. Those who worship in spirit and in truth have only one question. It isn’t what shall I eat? When shall I do this? How shall I dress? How much shall I deprive myself? I’ve never asked those questions. That belongs to the traditions. You ask only one question and that is, why, why. That’s motive, you see? Why? Why do I do this? Why? What’s your motive for it? If you do it out of love, it’s right. If you do it out of hate, it’s wrong. If you do it out of faith, it’s right. If you do it out of self-righteousness, it’s wrong. What’s the motive for this?

There’s the liberty of the Christian my brethren. You can walk upright on the earth and look at God’s sunshine, seeing the spacious firmament on high, and worship God and delight in his world and everything His hands has made. And you’ll be all right before God as long as you keep your motive, right. Your motive is to do the will of God, to follow Jesus Christ as best you know how and to love everybody and to love God, your motive is alright. The question to not how much shall you eat but why, what shall I eat, but why? Not shall I go to church so many times a week, but why do I go to church? Motive is everything.

Now, by placing sin and holiness in formal ceremonies, these people destroyed the true meaning of both sin and righteousness. Because just as soon as I believe that I can cheat in a real estate deal, lie, abuse my wife, and do other things that are not right, hate my enemy, and yet I’m right with God provided I am baptized, fast at stated times, appear at the church at certain times, wash my hands before I eat and follow the ceremonial laws of the tradition of my church, I’m all right. I don’t do that, I’m a sinner.

Who were the sinners in Jesus’ day? They were the people who neglected the, they were the men on the street, the people who neglected the ceremonies of the Talmud. And Jesus said He came to save sinners. They were the ones that came to Him, the common people heard Him gladly and flocked to him. But the people who stood by the traditions, the law of the lip that over shadowed the love of God, couldn’t reach them.

Now, in a climate, in a climate such as the Pharisees had and as these traditionalists tried to take to Crete, Christianity couldn’t grow. The conscience couldn’t live. It had to die because the conscience tells you, not what you’re doing, but why you’re doing it. Some little lady doesn’t show up at church. Now I believe we ought to go to church every Sunday, I think it’s the day, the first day of the week. And I think nothing short of sickness should keep us away from the church of God. I believe that. But many a person has been condemned for not being at church. Who is obeying the higher call of love? Who stayed by the bedside of an ailing aged father or mother? Or who did some other kindly deed for Christ’s sake?

Now I think the wise thing to do is to try to do that at other times and get to church anyhow. I think the wise thing to do is to appear at church because the Scripture said to forsake not the assembling of yourselves together. I think God has given us the first day of the week as a time to appear, not as we’re compelled to do it, but we do it voluntarily. But at the same time, there are occasions where a higher law of love keeps me from being at my wanted place. And God recognizes that higher law of love.

I’ve told it I suppose a hundred times, but old Meister Eckhart, somebody asked him, he said, how about praying and how do you how do you manage to harmonize prayer and service for the poor? Well, he said, here’s the way I harmonize it. He said, if I’m in prayer, and I’m even caught away like Paul to the third heavens, and I happen to remember that I had forgotten to take a widow some food, I break off my prayer and go take her the food. He said, God will see you don’t lose the thing. He said, when you come back, you can start right in where you left off and the Lord will see you don’t lose thing. I believe in that. The law of love my brother, dictates that I do out of love, deeds that may not be written, may not be prescribed, may not be found at all in the law of the church, but there are the obvious wise, right good thing to do, and I do them for Christ’s sake. That’s the righteous man.

Now, Paul said I want to read that I’m about finished. He said that these Jewish fables and commandments of men that turn from the Truth, he said unto the pure all things are pure, to the pure person, everything’s pure. They came and said, now you can’t eat this kind of meat and Paul said, don’t you believe it. To the pure everything’s pure. But unto them that are defiled and unbelieving in their heart, you see, nothing’s pure. To the Pharisee, he fasted but his fasting was impure. He prayed, but his prayers came back and slapped his own face. He deprived himself but his deep privation was a sin because his motives were rotten. They profess they know God but in words they deny Him being abominable and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate, that’s terrible. That’s terrible.

And spoken about the poor Jews, they of the circumcision. Do you often pray for Israel. Do you often pray for the Jews. You should. You should often pray for the Jews. Remember, they gave us our Bible. They preserved that Bible and died defending it down the years. Remember it? Remember, they carefully preserved it and went over it and put every jot and every title in place, the old scribes. We use the word scribe almost as an epithet of opprobrium. But those scribes, we owe them a lot just as we owe are translators a lot. Careful scholars who spend days over sentences. We owe them a lot. We thank God for Moses and Isaiah and Daniel and Jeremiah and Ezekiel and sweet David with his harp. We’re grateful for the Jews. We’re grateful for those twelve apostles, all Jews who went out to the four corners of the earth to preach the Truth. We’re grateful for Paul that great Jew. We’re glad. We ought to pray for them, and pray for them off, and much and pity them. And don’t feel superior to them.

Because after all, you’re a gentile grafted into the wild, to the olive tree. Paul would have none of this stuff in Crete. None of this, none of this tradition out of which he escaped by the skin of his teeth. It took a knock-down and drag-out conversion on Damascus Road to save him from it. Now that God had taken him out of it, I’ve been getting letters recently. Some time ago, we published an article, “How to win, one of our missionaries, “How to Win Roman Catholics to Christ.” I suppose I’d get skinned for that. My poor hides all spotted with what I get. But I’ve got nothing but the most gracious, the most enthusiastic letters from people saying, some of them saying to this effect, Oh, you don’t know how glad we were to read this, that your people are interested in winning Catholics to Christ. And they have written articles for me about how to win them, all the kind things they said and gracious things they said. How never to offend them, but how always to take the word of God and your own testimony and go to them and try to win them. But almost all of them said the same thing. How we thank God we escaped. It was almost like a concentration camp. And when they got out into the liberty of the gospel of Jesus Christ, they only could use one word and that was the word escape. They said we escaped.

And how we thank God we escaped. So, I’m glad I’ve escaped, that I have escaped from the laws of the elders. But we must pray for those who haven’t. And we must by love and faith and grace and careful walk, not to offend people. We must live such lives as shall be worthy of the liberty we claim to hold and not use liberty as a license for the flesh. But in meekness and humility, follow our Lord Jesus Christ. If we do that, God will bless us and we may be used by Him to deliver some who are now in bondage.

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The Power of the Word

The Power of the Word

Pastor and author A.W. Tozer

October 28, 1956

I spoke last Sunday night, on the 119th Psalm as the Word; the Word and the Word, the written word, the speaking word, the Living word, the Incarnate Word. And I want to talk tonight a little again from that same Psalm using some of the verses as I come to them. And I want to talk about the power of the Word and say to you that if we’re going to have the power of the Word released to us, that we’re going to have to be convinced beyond argument that it is true. For a great many years, probably millions of years in the creation and certainly at least 6,000 in the history of mankind, the little invisible atom was all about us. And then, when men learned to break down the atom and get at it and release its energy, we had the terrifying atom bomb.

Now, the word of the Lord God is not destructive primarily, though it can be that. It is primarily created. For it is written that He by the Word created things. And it is written that He by the word begets us and brings us into the new birth. And we’ve got to be concerned or convinced above all things that this word is God’s Word and that this Word is true.

Now, in verse 128, the writer; I’ll probably say, David as I go along, but really, I don’t know whether David wrote this or not. He probably didn’t. But a Psalmist wrote it. I esteem all thy precepts concerning all things to be right; and I hate every false way. Now, that’s nailing it down there where there isn’t any equivocating. There isn’t any, this saying, well now, you don’t quite understand me, and as I see it, it is thus and thus. But the man of God said, I esteem all thy precepts concerning all things to be right, and I hate every false way.

Now, let me say to you my friend, that to come to the Word of God, testing and tasting and tempting and experimenting, is to assure yourself that you will not see anything or learn anything or feel anything. And in this skeptical age, many people come to the Word of God as they came to Jesus, the Living Word, the Incarnate Word, when He walked among men to catch something out of His mouth or sneaking in a back way through the alley by night to ask Him questions. Now, you may be sure of one thing, that nobody that comes thus, unconvinced, will ever receive anything from the Lord. There is an act of pure faith necessary, that reason hasn’t anything to do with; an act of pure faith, an act of faith as simple, as real, as true, as the faith that the Catholic Church requires of the dogmas of the church.

Now, I believe in the faith that asks no questions and takes what it’s told and accepts it. It so happens that I don’t believe in faith in dogmas. If we were required to have faith in whatever some church leader told us, then we’d be required to go crazy in 24 hours if we tried also to have faith in the Word. You’ve got to take one or the other. But the Living Word is settled in heaven forever. And in all things, it is right and it is good the Psalmist says in other verses, good and true and righteous and very pure, good and very pure.

I read this insufferable bit of hogwash in the press the other day that somebody said that the Bible should not be taught to children; that it’s filled full of questionable stories and embarrassing things and that it’s not good at all; that it’s on borderline, its stories are borderline.

Well now, the difference between the Bible and any other book is this, that the Bible tells the truth about people, and naturally it involves sex and murder and lying and robbery and all those things, and it tells the truth about people. But in telling the truth about people, it tells it in a way that makes everybody hate the thing it’s talking about. But the worldly press tell their stories, and they tell them in a less serious and drooling way that tempts everybody to go out and do likewise.

And you will not find one lone instance anywhere in the world where the Bible ever lead anybody into sin. You’ll find the devil did, and you’ll find instances where the devil quoted a verse of Scripture somewhere in order to ruin somebody. But the Bible itself is very pure, and it’s righteous and true and good. And he says elsewhere, that it is like silver purified in a furnace seven times. So don’t be afraid to let your tiniest child read the Word. It won’t hurt the child. As soon as he’s old enough to know what it means it will begin to purify him.

Now, there are a lot of people who come to the Word of God testing and tasting and experimenting, and that just builds the ego up. That puts not only, saves face, that puts four faces on the impenitent ego because always you will find the impenitent man or woman, particularly young men or women, that doesn’t tend to give up his iniquity. He just doesn’t intend to give up his iniquity. You will find him saying, I am searching, I am searching. Pardon me for not being sympathetic with these solemn owls who look at you and say, I am searching.

Well, now I’d like to believe that is true. But Jesus Christ said one time that he that is willing to do My will, he shall know the doctrine. And all we need to do is stop sinning, and our search will be over. It’s not searching, it’s sinning that people are doing. And so, we build up our ego. Let me remind you, my brethren that the Word of God is not on trial before men, but men are on trial before the Word of God. And this patronizing attitude that we are searching, I am reading Buddhism, and I’m reading what Swami so and so said, and I am searching. What unconscionable hypocrisy. They are sinning somewhere, and they don’t want to give up their sin. And buried somewhere, in some closet, you will find a skeleton that will roll out when the door is open. Hidden somewhere, you will find some festering sore of iniquity.

And so, they cover the whole thing up by saying in a very learned way, I am searching. My brethren, the Word of God stands very pure, and all its precepts concerning all things are right. And there is no more trying or testing; here it stands the Book of God. And remember this, that God has given assurance to all men, in that, He has raised Jesus Christ from the dead, and has made Him to be the judge of the living and the dead. And the Scripture and Jesus Himself said, in the Scripture, that the words that I speak unto you, the same shall judge you in the last day.

Now what’s our part? Well, in going through this variously now and I don’t always tell you where it’s found. I don’t think I’m trying to slip modernism over on you. I just don’t want to talk about numbers all the time. It wasn’t numbered in the beginning, some people who get number crazy. And if you can’t give the verse and chapter, they think you don’t know it. But remember, the verses and chapters are put in there by men for convenience. They weren’t inspired of the Holy Ghost. But meditate, that’s one thing. I will meditate on thy precepts he said,

Now, what is it to meditate? Well, like the brother that defined unction, talking one time to a brother preacher he said, what’s unction. He said, unction is that which you don’t have, and meditate is that which nobody does anymore, or at least very, very little meditation. For meditation means to muse. It means to reflect and ponder.

Now my brethren, the heart is like a photographic plate and the Word is light. And when the light of the Word hits the photographic plate of your heart, it makes its image there. And remember this, that what is in the Word comes to the heart by meditation, for God never take snapshots. Some people try to give God His minute. I saw a book somewhere, “God Minute.” What an insult to Almighty God. We have 24 hours a day and live 70 years and give God a minute of the day. God never takes snapshots. God always takes time exposures.

And so, when the Word of God is there as light and you come and expose your heart to the Word of God by long meditation, you will find that what’s in the Book will come to your heart. And there will be help to your heart if you muse and reflect and ponder. But you say, that was written for a slower day. We’re a faster moving people. We’re going to hell faster than they went to hell that sure enough. But don’t boast about doing anything fast. We boast about breaking through the sound barrier. Well, what have we gotten by breaking through it?

These serious old men of God meditated. They weren’t so nervous and scared that they wanted to get someplace else. They meditated. They had time to meditate. And he says, my eyes prevent the night watching and I prevented the dawning of the morning by waiting on the Word of God. So many of us cheat ourselves by not giving the Word of God time to get to our hearts. Well, he said, not only do I meditate, but he said, I choose. I have chosen the way of truth.

Now, the heart must make its choice. There’s no way God can help us until we do. The Lord can’t help an experimenter. The Lord can’t help one of these searchers. The Lord can’t help somebody that is tasting and testing. The Lord can only help a man who’s convinced that this is the book and he needs look nowhere else, and then choose. When a man’s heart, when that in a man we call volition, the will, bites and snaps shut like a bear trap and it’s all over. He’s not testing now and choosing and looking around and acting wise. But he’s decided this is the book and Christ is the Son of God, and God is the one who speaks and the living and written and speaking Word come to my heart. And the heart closes down with a snap on it and says, this is it, this is it.

Some people don’t like sudden conversions, and they don’t like instantaneous conversions. But my brethren, when the heart of a man closes down tight on the Word of God, he says, I have chosen the way of truth. A heart has to make its choice you see, for if you don’t make your choice, you will never get in. Some think they’ll get in by osmosis, a kind of a leaking through the walls and the kingdom of God. And some think they’ll get holy by brushing somebody. And so, they run around after preachers and praying men and good men, and they sit and talk with them and think it’ll come off.

No, my friend, it won’t come off that way. Your heart has to make a choice. This is the Book. God is the God. Christ is His Son. The gospel is the message, and my heart shuts on it like a bear trap. And He said I have chosen. Now, that man you see must aim itself and does aim himself. His heart aims itself like an arrow and sets its seal and burns its bridges so there’s no retreat, and then you have the beginning of a Christian on your hand. Then I have a little word here that I kind of like in the 34th verse, the 31st Verse, it’s as quaint as can be. He says, I have stuck unto thy testimony. Did you hear that, I have stuck unto thy testimonies. O Lord, put me not to shame.

Now, here’s a young fellow in high school, and he’s surrounded by quick-witted, quip artists who don’t care whether it’s true or not, and it’s funny and cute. And he tries to be a Christian surrounded by a crowd like that, or he’s in an office of grown-up people who also are trying to give Bob Hope a run for his money. And it’s all got to be funny and cute, and maybe a little off center. And a certain psychological pressure comes on to ease up a bit; not be so religious, and they grab ahold of every excuse imaginable not to be quite the Christian they are. And so, they keep still about it.

Now, this man of God says, I have stuck unto thy testimonies. And I recommend tonight, that instead of you young people easing up on your Christian testimony, stick to thy testimonies. I have stuck on unto them he said. Because the determined soul always wins, remember that. Daniel set his face that he would not eat of the king’s dainties. And Jesus set His face to go to Jerusalem. And Paul said this one thing I do, and Luther said, Here I stand, I can do nothing else so help me God and the Reformation was born.

My brethren, there’s got to be such a thing as sticking unto thy testimonies. And then what’s the result? Well, the result he says, I will walk at liberty. Verse 45, I will walk at liberty, there’s liberty. That’s one thing that comes to the heart, and that’s about all I’ll talk about for the remaining times tonight. I will walk at liberty, verse 45, because I’ve kept thy precepts.

Now, one of the fallacies of the unbeliever is that the Christian must surrender his freedom to be a Christian. That’s one of the greatest fallacies that I know and I think I know who invented it. Now, I’m not sure. But I think I know who invented it, brother. Just as when a good politician is smeared from one end of the country to the other, I’m pretty sure I know what he’s been smeared with. I think it’s old Bulganin’s paint pot. And when the story gets out that a Christian is in shackles, that he’s in chains, that he is bound up, a little narrow-minded, fenced in and boxed up, and that he can’t get away, I think I know who invented that. Can you tell me in three guesses? I think it’s that old serpent, the devil and Satan.

Now, a sinner imagines he’s free and he ponders and searches and says, now I’m going to search and I’m going to ponder this over. Do you think that I can give up my freedom to become a Christian? Do you think I can give up my liberty to become a Christian?

Well, let’s look at the liberty of the Christian. He has liberty to do what? Does he have liberty to be free from his temper? I wonder how many sinners in Englewood are free from their tempers, free from blowing up like a fire cracker and ruining their home for a week? How many? Is that what they want freedom from, their temper? Do they, have it? No, they don’t have it. How many of them are free from their cigarettes? I am not an anti-tobacco man exactly, but I have had just about enough of this business of the fool on one end of a little stick and a fire on the other and blowing the result of it in my face. I’ve had about enough of it. We spend millions of dollars on air conditioning and in three minutes, you can stink up and foul up the finest air-conditioned room in the world. And the expensive air conditioning labors and groans and blows and puffs but it can’t beat the fool on the one end of the stick and the fire on the other.

And they’re always inventing a new one. I see the newest one out now. I’ve heard it on the radio and it’s got an anthem attached to it too.  You know, they sing anthems now to sell cigarettes. They used to, just, a line or two but they’ve developed whole anthems now to sell that dirt.

Brethren, how many say, oh, I don’t smoke. Well, I wish I didn’t. You wish you didn’t? Why do you brother, you’re a sinner and you’re a slave. All right. All right. You’re free, free to leave that alone? When I am walking around there and I hear him riding along or he comes on the radio. This one won’t hurt your throat as bad as the other one. I say to myself, none of them are going to hurt my throat if I can help it. I don’t have to take my choice. I just don’t want anything to do with any of them. And you can make them as long as you want to and make them emperor size and still, I don’t want them.

All right Bud, you say you don’t want to be a Christian because you don’t want to give up your freedom. Are you free from alcohol? Are you free from blue, gloom and discouragement on Monday morning? Are you free from fiery, heartbreaking jealousies? Are you free from disappointed hopes? Are you free from the fear of death? Are you free from the fear of hell? Is that the freedom you have? No, you know you don’t have it.

All right, what freedom do you have? You have freedom to sin. You have freedom to sin and pile up condemnation, mountain upon mountain, and hill upon the hill to the clouds. You have freedom to sin. You have freedom to get old, and you have freedom to get disillusioned, and you have freedom to die and you have freedom to go to judgment, and you have freedom to go to hell. Is that the freedom you have brother? That’s the freedom the unsaved man has. And he looks at us happy Christians who are as free as birds, I will walk at liberty he says, walk at liberty. What did the rest of it go? Because I seek thy precepts. I’m looking after thy precepts, and walking and I’m meditating and choosing and sticking to thy precepts, and I walk at liberty. And the only free people in the world are the people that God has set free. Whom the Son has set free is free indeed.

So that, don’t let any of you young people now, don’t let anybody fool you. Don’t you let anybody lead you aside and say, well, now, do you think you can give up your liberty? Liberty to sin? Liberty to get old and die and go to hell? If that’s liberty, I don’t want it. And yet, that’s the liberty of the sinner.

Well, what’s the Christian’s liberty? I will walk at liberty. Well, he has freedom. He has freedom from his past, that’s one thing. And I don’t know about you, but I don’t want anything to do with my past, up to here. I want the blood of Jesus Christ to flow like a river and like boundless salvation in the song, to roar like ocean billows over my past and put it where the devil can’t get to it and where God won’t look at. Now we have freedom from our past, and we have freedom from our sin, and we have freedom from the fear of judgment to come. And we have freedom from fear of death and hell, and we have freedom to do good. Now a sinner has freedom to do evil, but the Christian has freedom to do good. He has freedom to love and to serve and to worship, and he has freedom to develop and has freedom to gain immortality at last.

And then verse 47, he’s got freedom to do the thing that delights him the most. Somebody came up to me recently and said, Mr. Tozer, was it Luther that said, love God and do as you please? Well, I think it was Augustine who originally said, love God and do as you please. I believe he’s the man who said it. Luther could easily have quoted it because of course, he was a learned man who knew what all these old brethren had said. But that’s shocked some people terribly. Love God and do as you please. But you know, if you love God enough, you’ll only please to do what God wants you to do, and that’s what that expression means; love God and do as you please. For if you love God, you will please to do the will of God.

So, this man, David, or whoever wrote it. It wasn’t David. I’ve said forty times it was somebody many years after David. And he said he had freedom to do what delighted him. Now the man that is free from fear of death and free from fear of sin, and free from sin itself, and free to do anything he wants to do, and then is delighted with his freedom, do you pity that man, brother? Say, poor sinner, can it be that my heart should pity, the heart should pity me, or I should envy thee? Never, never, never, for the Christian is free. He walks at liberty, freedom to do what delights him.

And so, in this Psalm, we have the mighty Word, the mighty Word. I said, it’s all mixed up. When the Bible talks about the Word sometimes, we don’t know whether it means the Person who is the Word whether it means the speaking Word or whether it means the written Word. So, we have the Word and that mighty Word that made the world, that made man. You know how you came into being? Not as the preacher said in that famous piece that I often quote, for it’s delightful and wonderful, but it’s materialistic of course. And it says, you know, that the Lord sat down on the bank of the river and took a piece of clay and rolled it in His hands until he made a man and into that man, he blew the breath of life and man became a living soul. Amen, amen. It’s beautiful. But it’s just a little too physical to be true. The fact is, God’s spoke and it was done. And out of the creative, dynamic, living voice of God, creation came into being. And it was God’s Word that created man. God said you were to be and that’s why you were.

So that mighty Word that made the world and that made man, now speaks to us in an invitation. It speaks to us in an invitation, come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden. The Spirit says come and let all that hear-say come, and the bride says come. And that mighty Word speaks in invitation. But you know, some people have not believed it to be valid. And some have not the courtesy even to reply. God sent His invitation with an RSVP and some people never even care enough to send God word they won’t be there. They just do nothing about it at all.

Well, I want to read to you in closing the prodigal’s prayer, the latter part, the latter section of the Psalm. And I recommend that if you’re not right with God tonight, and there is grief in your heart, there is sin or sorrow or self-accusation or remorse, or fear, I recommend that you pray this prayer. Let my cry come near before thee, O Lord, and give me understanding according to Thy Word. Then he slips down a verse and says, let my supplication come before me and deliver me according to thy word. Deliver me from what? Deliver me from the bondage of iniquity and deliver me from a record I don’t dare face. Deliver me from judgment, which can only condemn me. And deliver me from the grave and from hell. Deliver me. My lips shall utter praise, and my tongue show speak of thy word. Let thine hand help me for I have chosen thy precepts.

Would you have the heart to go to Jesus Christ tonight and pray that prayer, let thine hand help me? You remember that wonderful hand that healed so many people? That wonderful hand you remember it, let thine hand help me for I have chosen thy word. I have longed for thy salvation O Lord, and thy law is my delight. Do you long for the salvation of the Lord? Then make God’s law your delight. God will hear you. And he says, verse 175, let my soul live and it shall praise thee. There’s the quickening of the new birth, and let thy judgments help me.

And then this tender, lovely little verse at the close, I have gone astray like a lost sheep, poor lost sheep. I have gone astray like a lost sheep, seek thy servant. He knew the servant really couldn’t do much. It’s seeking Him, we think we can, and the Lord lets us try. But the Lord has to seek thy servant, he said. And I wonder, I wonder if our Lord had this in mind when He gave us His great 10th chapter of John, when He told us that He was the shepherd, and the people were sheep, and they were lost, and they heard the voice of the shepherd and that if they’d been taught of the Father they’d come and come back home. And then he said, If you’ll do this, O God, I’ll never forget thy commandment. I do not forget thy commandments.

Why not this evening, before you go to bed tonight, before you let another day or even an hour pass, why not do something about this? Comeback, like a lost sheep. The mighty creative Word has now become the invitational word to call you back, two little written and living and speaking Words, Jesus Christ the Son of God. And He calls in and wants you to come.

Now, we’re going to release you. We’ve discovered that pressure at altar services may result in occasionally somebody meeting God but more frequently results only in confusion, so we’re not going to do it. We’re only going to tell you, you won’t be able to get away from it tonight, the laughter at the soda content, the noisy planes and their automobiles and stoplights and all the rest, nothing can take that out of your ear, the sound of invitation or voice. Come on back home boy, come on back home daughter. Come on, come on back home, the mighty, living Voice is calling you back. You have only to believe and say, I consider it to be true of God and right in every detail. And therefore, my heart will stick unto thy Word. If you do that, you will find your life will begin to marvelously change, wonderfully change. The things you hated before, you love; and the thing you loved before, you will now hate and you will become a new creature in Christ Jesus by trusting in His son.

Will you stand with me please? Brother Ray, lead us in old sweet wonder. Jesus the Son of God, how I love thee, how I adore thee, Jesus the Son of God.

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Messages

Tozer Talks

“Whosover Will May Come

January 27, 1957

You will notice in the foyer on your way out that the Bible Memory Association has a desk there, and this will be the last Sunday for registration. You will kindly inquire at the desk and see what this is all about. It has to do with memorizing the Scriptures, systematically and toward an end. And it is well worth your investigating. So, see the desk please at the door you go out. Don’t forget tonight and for some weeks ahead, I plan to speak on the Four Stages in the Christian’s Path Towards Spiritual Perfection. Tonight, I want to talk about the Special Christian.

Today will be one of two talks on the same text. Revelation 22:16, 17. I Jesus, have sent Mine angel to testify unto you those things in the churches. I am the Root and the offspring of David, and the Bright and Morning Star. And the Spirit and the Bride say, come. And let him that heareth say, come. And let him that is athirst, come. And whosoever will, let him take of the Water of Life freely.

I want to sum up a truth which is not new to you certainly and which no doubt I’ve preached many times before along with the other preachers. But that I want to set in a new light, and lay before you this morning and next Sunday morning I want to express the teachings of the Word that if we are saved it is because we will to be. And then how we can know that we will to be, to a point where we know we are saved.

Now, in the text we find here the full-hearted, joyous and final call of God to men and women who wander in the hot, sandy deserts of sin. The Bible rarely shows the sinner’s way to be a pleasant way. It may look pleasant for the moment, but mostly, it is a heavy way if for no other reason that it ends finally in death. But the writer here, among the very last words of the Bible itself, shows a clear, cool spring within reach.

And then he invites everyone to come and drink freely of that Living Water. Jesus says, I am the Root and the offspring of David, the Bright and Morning Star. And the Spirit says, come and the Bride says, come. And so, so exciting and wonderful is it that everybody that hears should start saying, come and let him that is athirst, let him come. And whosoever will, that’s why he comes, let him take of the Water of Life freely. The Water of Life and Living Water meaning the same things, simply a change in wording, is found throughout the Bible, particularly in the New Testament.

Now, you will notice that our Lord makes this invitation to be conditioned. Everything is conditioned in the Bible. I have a question now waiting to be answered. Somebody writes and says, if I pray and add the words, “Thy will be done,” does not that cancel out my prayer? Hasn’t God committed Himself so fully that He must answer every prayer? And therefore, why should I say, Thy will be done?

Well, all that error arises and from, and is part of the modern idea that God is to be used rather than to be obeyed. The simple truth is, God never makes anything unconditional. He conditions even His call to the Living Water. Even when he sees that procession of straggling, weary, discouraged persons, dehydrated and in various stages of death, as the result of dehydration, and He knows that there is water within reach, He still makes His invitation conditional. He says, it is universal, whosoever, and that means anyone and anywhere.

But then, He says that it is particular, him that will, and that makes it particular. A specific choice must be made. And that’s the point that I want to make this morning. That the Christian is one who has made a specific choice sometime, somewhere back down the years, maybe five minutes ago, maybe five days ago, maybe five years ago. But, he has made a specific choice, whosoever will, let him. Whosoever will, then let him. 

So, this whosoever broadens it to the wide world, long before the modern bandwagon started to roll for social equality and integration. Long before any of these moderns ever had been born, the Church of Jesus Christ believed that all men on the face of the earth were within the call of God, and that they were atoned for by the blood of the Son of God. And He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world. Go ye therefore, and preach the gospel to every creature and make disciples among all nations, teaching them. Now that’s been the belief of the church all down the years. And yet to hear the big boom, boom drum today, you would think that it had just been found out the day before yesterday and Mrs. Roosevelt had found it out. When the simple fact is, and I don’t mean to be insulting and certainly I don’t mean to enter into politics. I just know she’s one who has talked loudly about it and there are plenty of others, and it’s the big band that rolling now.

But brethren, the Bible tells us that we were made of one blood. And the Bible tells us that we are all strung from the loins of a fallen man named Adam, and that we are all descendants of a famous old admiral that once sailed the sea in a little boat with windows at the top looking up to God. His name was Admiral Noah. And we’re taught this. We’ve known this all the time. And I was sitting up here in my study this morning thinking it over, and I thought isn’t it funny that for 80 years, the Christian and Missionary Alliance has sent its missionaries out and we are spending in the neighborhood of, and this year, more than $3 million a year to carry the gospel to the Aborigines, to the pygmies, to the naked stone-agers, to the Black and the slant-eyed and the yellow and all colored.

And we have missionaries now walking around, ready to drop over, who’ve spent the better part of their lives living in little, plain homes among people different from themselves who didn’t know their language at first, whose language they didn’t know and have given up all the privileges of civilization and all the pleasures of living among people of their own kind, and have gone and have gotten old and gray and bald. And some of them have dropped over quietly by their desks and died there. And yet they’re making us feel that we haven’t got the race question settled.

Brethren, we settled it the right way. We send men to all races of the world and call them our brothers and offer them the gospel of Jesus Christ, and say whosoever will, whosoever will come, let him come and all that hear, say, come and the Bride says, come, and the missionary says, come, and the church says, come and the  bell rings in the steeple all around the world. So, don’t feel bad my brother, you’ve been giving to a cause that has done something practical about this race business all down these last years. And you’re a part of the great universal church that has done something practical about this business all down the years. Not offer them a job at a desk beside you necessarily, but offer them that everlasting life which makes us one round the world.

I am not as easily shamed out as some people. Some people get red-faced awful quickly. Once that’s begun and they beat the drum and they get red-faced and walk away and say, that’s true, we poor Christians. We poor Christians, nothing! The church of Christ has been awake all these centuries and years and knowing what she was doing. And we’ve been telling the world that He is the Root and the Offspring of David and the Bright and Morning Star, and the Spirit and the Bride say, come, and let him that heareth and say, come, and let him that is athirst come, and whosoever will, let him take the Water of Life freely and they’ve come. They’ve come from the North and the South and the East and the West.

When the letter came about that cannibal feast in the Baliem Valley to which Ed Maxey and the other minister. What was his name, Bozeman? Why, when I heard it, I said, can these people, can such beasts ever become Christians. And then I remembered the story. I think it was from the China Inland Mission, not from our society of, there couldn’t have been China Inland because there never were cannibals in China. But it must have been in African. Anyway, one of the great and recognized missionary societies, the man went in and was killed and eaten. And a generation later, the son of the missionary that had been eaten by the cannibals, baptized the man who had killed his own father. And when led out into the water, he said, do you know that I was the chief and caused your father to die. And he said, I know it. In the name of the Father, Son, and the Holy Ghost I know baptize you. Rise to walk in newness of life.

Brother and sister, that’s Christianity. That’s Christianity. Sure, there’s hope for them. You can eat human flesh today and be in the kingdom of God the day after tomorrow. That’s the wonder and the glory of the gospel of Christ. It has in it more power than all the hydrogen bonds ever stockpiled anywhere by the nations of the world. It has the creative power that made the stars. The gospel of Christ and the call of God have in them the power that made angels and seraphim and created Adam and Eve, and blew into them the breath of life. So, this is the call of God, saying, come, it’s a universal invitation. It’s to whosoever, but it’s also to whosoever will, and that is a limit, a particular invitation. Only those that will may come.

Now, I have said this 100 times, I repeated now, that true religion lies in the will. A man’s total destiny depends upon his act of will. Peace or misery depends upon what a man wills concerning a certain question. Saved or lost, depends upon a decision a man makes on a certain question. Heaven or Hell, is not going to be an accident. No one is going to accidentally fall through the floorboard somewhere in the world and land in hell. Nobody’s going to happily get in the wrong crowd in the elevator and find that he’s in heaven and can’t do anything about it? There are going to be no accidents in heaven, and no accidents in hell.

Man’s total destiny depends upon his act of will. The Bible everywhere makes this plain. The Bible repeats it, declares it, assumes it, repeats it, assumes it, and declares it again all the way through the Scriptures. That the benefits of Christ’s redeeming work, whose benefits wait on our act of decision and faith; Christ’s redeeming work waits on nothing. It is done, the great transactions done, He died, He rose, He lives, He pleads, and the blood is there on the altar, or on the mercy seat. And nothing can be added to the totality and perfection of that work of redeeming grace. It is done. It is done.

That’s why I love to sing the Easter songs better than I love the Christmas songs. For lots could have happened between Christmas and Easter. But after Easter nothing can happen but what is good. For Christ the Lord is risen today, let all men and angels say. His redeeming work is done, fought the fight, the battle won. And Christ is at the right hand of God the Father, there to appear in the presence of God for us. So, that His redeeming work is finished and there’s nothing that can be added. No supernumerary merits on the part of anybody. No angels, no cherubim with little wings and heads at the bottom of pictures. No men with illuminated hoops, men with illuminated hoops round their heads; and no gaunt-looking, half-starved fellows dressed in black, running up and down their beats. They can’t add anything, anything, it’s done.

And when He said it’s finished, it was finished. And when He died, the sun was blackened and then the earth shook and the graves were opened and men walked into Jerusalem out of their graves; as though three worlds were concerned with its astonishment, that a work of redemption had taken place, and was finished and settled and done.

But, this benefit. the benefits of this work weighed on the voluntary choice of men. And no one can be coerced into being a Christian. You can catch a man and squirt him with water and make a Catholic out of him. They used to take a sword and hold it up to a fellow’s solar plexus and said, do you believe in Mohammed. Well, sure he was a believer, why, certainly. And so, he became a believer. You could become a believer that way. You can coerce a man into being this or that. Pressure can come so you vote Democratic or Republican.

One of our Alliance preachers was down in a little town in the South here a couple, two or three elections ago. And when he went to register, they found that he was the only Republican in the whole town. He was the only one. But, if he’d been a weakling, he would have gone Democratic, but he was Republican. So, he registered Republican. They didn’t want to believe it, but it was so. So, just before election, they call him up and said, Reverend, the law requires that we have one person of each party present at the polls and watch the polls. And you’re the only Republican in town. Would you come down and watch the polls? He said sure, and they paid him for it.

But you can get under pressure, you know, and join a party under pressure; that can happen. And you can you can join a union you don’t want to join, or get out of one you don’t want to get out of, or move from a piece of property you want to stay in. You can be forced to do a thousand things. You can even marry a man you don’t want to marry; or live in a house you don’t like to live in; or have a job you don’t like. But nobody ever became a Christian that way. You can’t be coerced into becoming a Christian. You may be coerced into saying that you are. Many a man got off by saying he was a Christian, as many a man has gotten off by denying that he was one. But that doesn’t make a Christian.

No one can coerce a man into being a Christian and no one can cancel his choice. No matter what you do with a man, take his Bible away, put him in jail, refuse to let him go to church. Beat him if he gets on his knees to pray, shut him away from every religious influence imaginable. And if he’s a Christian, he’s still a Christian. There’s nothing you can do about it. He’s a Christian. He is one because he made a choice. And if he is a Christian, that act was voluntary. And if he is a Christian, that act will be exclusive. That is, it will exclude all opposing factors, and everything that would hinder him will be excluded by that one act of his will, when he says, when he comes and drinks of the Water of Life freely. The Spirit and the Bride, the church, I would assume say, come. And let him that heareth say, come. And whoever will, let him take the Water of Life freely.

And then, that act also will be inclusive. It will embrace God, or Christ, and God’s good pleasure. You know, if you’re interested in insurance, say, just as an illustration, you can get all sorts of insurance. You can get insurance that will cover you if you bump somebody, and if somebody bumps you. But, if you have another kind of accident, it may not, may not cover you. You can get insurance that if you’re sick in a certain way, you will get help. But, if you’re sick in a certain other way, you won’t.

I have a miserable little policy on hospitalization with a little rider that says, this is not effective if he dies of so and so. The only thing that is wrong with me is one they won’t work, won’t give me anything for. So, you can get all sorts of insurance policies. You can, you can take part of a thing and not take the rest of the thing. But you can’t take part of Christ and not take all of Christ. For the choice, the will to life, the choice that takes salvation, is a choice that is exclusive of everything that God refuses and inclusive of everything that God gives.

So, it is also a final act. There’s no alternative, no possible alternative. They say there’s an old proverb that says that he’s a wise rabbit that has two holes. He gets into one and he can get out of the other. And, as a boy on the farm I knew that there never was a groundhog, never a groundhog that ever got into a blind alley. He always had another way out. And when you were a dog and you were digging and barking, that is, the dog was barking, and you were digging and helping the dog dig at one place, your groundhog would be half a mile away sitting up on a log looking down at you. He’d had another way out.

And a lot of Christians are like that. They are never quite willing to be final about it. They’re tentative and experimental. And like the woman that was baptized by three different modes, so that if one didn’t work, the other one would. They’re never sure of anything. They’re experimenting, and the whole thing is tentative, and I can back out if it doesn’t work.

Like the Irishman that feuded with his neighbor. And the time came that he thought he was going to die and he called his neighbor over and asked him to forgive him and said, I’m a dying man. I can’t afford to die with enmity in my heart. He said, would you forgive me? I’m sorry. And so they hugged each other and shook hands. And as the fellow was leaving the Irishman called him back and said, now, if I get well, this business is all off, remember that. It’s a question of a tentative and experimental religious act. It’s not told for fun, but many a man who has a deathbed repentance, if it wasn’t his death bed repentance, he’d be back to his knees in the wallow in twenty-four hours.

They used to have a rather cynical saying down where I used to preach in the South, that the only way you could be sure some people ever got to heaven was to get them to the altar and then knock him in the head. Because, sure enough, if you gave them three weeks, they’d backslide. People like that never were converted, they simply never knew what it was to make a decision that was a final decision. It was neither exclusive nor inclusive nor final. It was a tentative nibbling at the bait of salvation. A lot of people are like that; they nibble at the bait.

But our Lord Jesus Christ addresses Himself to the will all through the Bible, all through the New Testament and here of course at the close, the Bright and Morning Star addresses Himself to the will of mankind. And the whole work of the Spirit is to get people to be willing or, that’s not it. No, willing is passive. It’s not that I mean at all. I mean, to get people to will to follow Christ. A person might be willing to follow Christ and yet do nothing about it. But to will to follow Christ puts teeth and activity in it, and takes it out of the passive into the active.

And the hard job of the Spirit all down the years is to get people to be willing to follow Christ. The ethics of Christ, lots of people talk about that. And the hardest work of the church and of the Christian worker and the preachers always has been to get people to make a complete, inclusive, exclusive and final decision to be a Christian. And get them to do religious work, that’s not hard. It’s never difficult to get people to have religious interest.

Religious interest may be found almost anywhere, and where it isn’t found it can be created. I don’t want to be silly, but I’m sure that I can think up forty different, crazy notions that I could get people interested in. I am convinced that if I had a little money and a little time, that I could get a lot of tender-faced, loving people in Chicago interested in providing knit sweaters for squirrels. And sure enough, an old folks home for starlings that didn’t fly south in the Fall. I’m sure of it, because they’ll do anything.

Do you remember the dear old lady that went down to Springfield and worried the lawmakers to death until they finally passed the law to put bells on all cats. And Adlai Stevenson vetoed it and said you can’t change the nature of a cat by law. But you can get people interested in almost anything, just almost anything. Anything at all, there’ll be somebody sit around and knit and sip soda, or tea and talk about it and get all thrilled about it. You can even get people interested in good things. The Gray Ladies and the Boy Scouts and all, doing excellent work and don’t think that I’m knocking, all doing excellent work.

If it wasn’t for people who are willing to go all out and do good things in a bad world, what kind of a hell would the world be in a short time? If it wasn’t for good-hearted, honest sinners who go out and roll bandages and do good and why, I don’t say all of them certainly are sinners. And I know a lot of Christians that do it. But the point is, it’s religious activity and it’s no problem to get people interested in religious activity. How long did it take them to raise the money to pay off the Grime’s home? No time. They burnt the mortgage the day before yesterday.

How long did it take to get homes for the Hungarian refugees? No time at all. American people are the most generous people in the world because we’ve got it. And we pity people that don’t. And so, anything at all, we’ve got money back of it, that’s easy. To get people to become interested in religious projects. That’s easy. But to get people to make that all-inclusive, all-exclusive, final decision from which there is no retreat, that’s absolutely impossible. And only the Holy Ghost, who majors in impossibilities can do it. And that’s why soul winning can’t be learned in a book.

Some fellow is selling a book called, Now, Soul Winning is Easy. He’d better be selling insurance. Soul winning is not easy. It never was easy, never was easy. Easy to get people to say yes, I accept Christ. Easy to get people to say, sure, I’ll join your church. Easy to get people to say, certainly, I’ll join your club for the betterment of tulips. You can get people to do that. But to get them to exclude everything that God hates, and include everything that God loves, and commit themselves to Jesus Christ forever with no bridges to go back, that takes the Holy Ghost who specializes in impossibilities. And it isn’t done by reading a seventeen-cent book.

And yet, without this act, without this act of will, this sudden, all-embracing decision for Jesus Christ, I hate to use the word decision because it’s used so much. People can stand up with no more emotion than a wooden Indian and make their decision. But they’ve not made their decision, really. Because the decision that is made for Christ, this will, whosoever will and when that will actually gears in and engages the cross of Jesus, there is a change in the life more radical than when we come out of jail into freedom; more radical than when we go from the single state to marriage; more radical than when we come from sickness to abounding health; more radical than when we come from poverty to abounding riches; more radical than when we go from ignorance to a good education. It is a change that is radical and exclusive and revolutionary. And yet, until we’ve made that decision, we’re not Christians at all, because religion lies in the will.

A dear little lady, I have a daughter old enough now that I like high school kids, and I get letters, slangy little letters from them. I enjoy them. I got a letter from someone named Judy somebody in a university out in the East. And, dear Mr. Tozer, and it was all slangy and funny and she said, I’m a Christian, and I love Jesus, but I am afraid I don’t love Him as much as I should. What shall I do? And I wrote back and said, you love him some or you wouldn’t be writing me to know what the trouble is. And I said again, Judy, remember, the love of God is not the love of feeling, but the love of willing. We love him because we will to love Him, not because we feel as if we love Him. Willing is a byproduct of obedience, and obedience is a direct result of willing to obey.

The man who was willing to obey Christ, and who will still love Christ, he loves Christ. And it’s so recorded in the high annals yonder, here’s another soul that loves Christ. But that he or she may grieve that they don’t love more, that’s another matter. And I say, let’s go on to love Him until our love becomes a burning fire. But remember that you’re not a Christian because you feel like one. And you’re not a sinner, because you don’t feel as if you’re a Christian. You either are or you are not. And it’s a matter of your will, whether you have willed to follow Jesus or whether you have not.

And now how about you? All the grace of God can never reach you until you’ve made that final decision. Yes, Lord, yes, Lord, I take Thee blessed Lord, I give myself to Thee and Thou according to Thy Word does give Thyself to me. So, if you have made that decision forever and forever, and there’s no bridges back of you that you can retreat, no second hiding place, nowhere to look, but at Jesus Christ or blackness forever and you know, and you’ve set your will to love God and be obedient, you love God alright. And don’t you let a bad liver or jumpy nerves make you think otherwise. Love is of the will, not of the feeling. But as the little girl said in her testimony I once heard, she knew that salvation wasn’t by feeling, but she thanks God for the feeling. It’s a kind of a dessert to go along with her salvation and it’s true.

So, if we will be obedient Christians, and will to love God, why, there will be some happy emotions come along with it too, many happy emotions. Moody, had such a sunburst of happy emotion fall on him as he walked down the street in Philadelphia or New York, whichever it was, he crawled up an alley and prayed that God would stay His hand lest he die under the joy of it.

So, there’s joy in serving Jesus. But you don’t start there. You start with willing to serve Jesus. Lord, this day I will be a Christian. Let it cost me what it will. I will to believe in Thee. I do believe in Thee Lord Jesus. This is the prayer to make. I do believe in Thee Lord Jesus. And Thou hath said, whoever loves Me, he will keep My commandments. And therefore, I now dedicate myself to obeying Thy Word as I understand it. Teach me O God and I will be obedient. And then, following hard upon that, there will come the joy of the Christian. But it’s the willing and the obeying first. What about you? Have you made your decision?

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“The Rock that is Higher than I

January 20, 1957

Now, to help us this morning, I want to read four verses of the sixty-first Psalm. About two years ago, I gave a little prayer meeting talk about this one Wednesday night, but I want to develop it more fully today in the form of a sermon. The man of God says, Hear my cry O God; attend unto my prayer. From the end of the earth will I cry under Thee. When my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the Rock that is higher than I. Now, the punctuation there can be shifted around. Probably, he said this, from the end of the earth will I cry unto Thee when my heart is overwhelmed, or he could have said, from the end of the earth will I cry unto thee, because he had just said he was crying unto the Lord. And then added, lead me to the rock that is higher than I, for thou hath been a shelter for me and a strong tower from the enemy. I will abide in Thy tabernacle forever. I will trust in the covert of Thy wings.

I asked you to notice just as a matter of intellectual curiosity only, that this man in four verses here, has packed so many figures of speech, that it’s a joyous confusion. It is like the Christmas tree on Christmas morning. Everything’s delightful, but everything’s badly mixed up. When my heart is overwhelmed, that could only mean a boat. And then the rock, lead me to the rock. For Thou hast been a shelter and Thou hast been a strong tower. And I will abide in Thy tabernacle, and I will trust in the covets of thy wings. There is the daring of genius, shifting figures and metaphors as he pleases.

Now, I asked you to notice that this was written a great many hundred years before Christ was born, before He had ever uttered those wonderful words, God is Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in Spirit and in truth. And yet, here is a Jew, who has been taught that there is only one land properly, and that’s Israel; only one people and that’s the Jewish people; only one place to pray, and that is Jerusalem; only one direction to face and that is toward Jerusalem. And yet here is this Jew breaking through this form to the mercy of God. And he tells us and anticipates by many hundred years, what the New Testament taught, and what a lot of Christians have forgotten, that God is everywhere. Not only in the temple in Jerusalem between the wings of the cherubim, but that God is everywhere and that the church is anywhere where two people meet in the name of Jesus, and that help may be found wherever it is needed.

Now, this was learned by this Jew under pressure. He doesn’t tell us what pressure it was. And I have read the commentators on this and various translators to try to get some help, but they never give you any help, never. The thing to do is read the Bible and leave the commentators to their infinitive splitting. But God is everywhere and the church is anywhere and help may be found everywhere. Now, that is in this text lying dormant, lying as an oak tree lies in an acorn. Ready, if it’s given time to break out into a mighty oak, inviting the birds and sheltering the beast and living and outliving generations of men.

I might say here though it’s not properly, I suppose part of the sermon, that’s the best theology you’ll ever learn will be learned under pressure. And the least useful theology you’ll ever learn is that which you learn the easiest way, that is, by Bible classes. I believe in Bible classes and teach them all the time. But, that’s the least important thing that you can learn. A man will learn more philosophy, spiritual philosophy and more truth when he gets under pressure if he prays and seeks God than he can never learn any other way. I think that not all the rabbis in Israel could have taught David to pray from the ends of the earth will I cry under Thee, but David’s troubles taught him to say that. Or, if it was David. Some scholars think it was David when Absalom drove him out of Jerusalem and he was far away and felt that he was literally at the ends of the earth, though he wasn’t too far away as we look at such things.

Now, the man said this, and this is really what I’m interested in. When my heart is overwhelmed, he said. I want to ask this question. Of what does man consists? You know that we are not like a diamond, all one piece. We’re not like God, unitary, in the sense that we have no parts. We are thrown together. And, I want to know, what is that, that is the man? What is it? Now, is it his body? It can’t be the body that’s the man, because when the man dies, we talk about the man and his body. We say John Smith was a fine Christian and the church owes a lot to his godliness and his prayer. He was, John Smith was, we say. And the body can be viewed at such and such an undertakers. We distinguish unconsciously between the man and his body. And well we might, and it’s the wisdom of the ages that has given us this language to distinguish the man from his body, bone and muscle. Bone and muscle don’t constitute the man. And therefore, we when we say, the man, we do not mean his muscle or his blood even, because the man is not there. That’s not the man. You can separate the man from his muscle and blood and you still have the man. Well, certainly then, if his body is not the man, his goods wouldn’t be the man. What we have as property is all right, and we’re glad for anything the Lord allows us to have if we haven it honestly and give generously. But, that’s not us. That’s not the man.

We say when a man dies, how much was he worth? And we mean, how much did he have? Well, he’s worth 90 cents the chemists say. Probably with this inflation he’s worth about $1.06. But, they used to say he’s worth 90 cents. That is, that you could buy a 160-pound man at the drugstore for about 96 cents. I don’t want to give any of you ladies any wrong ideas, but the body of a man, the body of the man can be had for about that amount. So how ridiculous it is to say he’s worth 96 cents. No, that’s the tabernacle in which he lived. He is worth what God paid for him in blood and tears. The man is worth everything. Ten thousand worlds could not be compared with him.

And it’s not the man’s goods. I was thinking how we judge each other by our clothing. An ad says 90% of us is covered up and the most we all see is our face. Well, that’s true, face in hand, that’s true, and clothing means a lot. And now in these days, lots of money, a great deal is made of clothing. But you know one of the most pitiful, touching things in the wide world is a very fine garment after it’s been discarded. It has a miserable, deserted, rundown, discouraged look that nothing else I know of has, unless it is an expensive automobile after it’s been put out on the back lot. If you want to experience a feeling that’s a bit different, just stop sometime when you pass one of these graveyards for forgotten automobiles and go out and look them over. There with so much rust that you can scrape it off with your thumb. They’re passing back into the elements there. Weather-beaten and forgotten is an automobile. And, if you walk around to the front you’ll see the proud name, Packard or Lincoln. Proud names they are, but how unutterably pitiful when they’re pushed out to rot away or rust away and be forgotten. Surely your goods are not you? Surely, no matter how large the car, how big the house, how wonderful is the property, it isn’t you.

When my heart, said the man of God, and there he got through to what a man is. A man is heart. It is a heart living in a body. And our thoughts and fears and hopes and aspirations and loves and joys and worship. And in faith, all this is the man. That’s the man, that’s the heart. Think of Jacob. Jacob had cattle, lots of cattle, but his cattle and his herds were not Jacob. But when his son was killed, or he thought he had been killed, and was shown as proof, the bloody garment, he said, I will go down now into the grave mourning for my son. There was Jacob. Jacob was found when he was mourning for his son. And that same Jacob would have mourned in the same way, if he had nothing but one little ewe lamb to his name. And if all the herds and sheep and camels that he possessed had not been his, Jacob would have still been there saying, I will go down to the grave mourning for my son. There we have the grave. There we have tears. There we have love. There we have relationship. There we have father and son. And there we have death. That’s the man my brother.

David, when David was driven from his throne, and some say he wrote this when he was driven from his throne, as I’ve said. David, driven from his throne across the river, and that wicked man cursing him every inch of the way. Why that was not David. David with his crown off his head and his scepter out of his hand and wearing the common business clothes of his time, no longer king. That was not David. No, no. But when Solomon who had driven him from the, not Solomon, Absalom, who had driven him from his throne, was killed. Then, David went in and knelt down by the coffin and said, Oh, Solomon, Solomon, ah, Absalom, Absalom, my son. Oh, that I had died for thee! Would God that I had died for thee. There you found David mourning for Absalom. But when David was simply being chased through the mountains, that was not David. And when David was driven from his throne and gave it up, that was not David. But when David’s heart was broken over the death of a bad boy that he still loved, Absalom, that was David.

Then there’s Peter. Peter left his nets you remember and went along and he got whipped, and he got thrown into jail, and he got taken out and all. That wasn’t really Peter. Peter was living in there, and I suppose feeling it, but a whipping. You can’t whip a man really. You can only whip his body. You can’t really put a man in jail.

The famous Madam Guyon wrote a little hymn when she was in prison. And she said a little bird am I shut in these walls. Well, she was just a bird in the cage. And yet, she could soar and sing and worship and walk with God. And the man in the prison, his imagination can range, and his heart can rise to God. So, that wasn’t Peter when he was in jail. But later when Peter was crucified for his faith, and out of the joy of loyalty of his heart and remembering his failure at the time of his Lord’s crucifixion, he begged them to crucify him upside down because he wasn’t worthy to be crucified right side up. That was Peter. Then you got through to the man. You got through to the heart of the man.

You might go down through all the Bible, and through all Foxe’s “Book of Martyrs” and through all biography and church history, and show that the man is never the external. The man is never his office, or his clothes. The Pope over on the throne sitting there that gaunt-faced, serious-minded, old chap with all of his thrones and his hats and all the rest. That’s not the man. But, one of these days, that heart of his that’s beated so long will suddenly stop and he’ll face his Maker. There you’ll have the man. That’s the man, the heart of the man, and so with every bishop, and so with every pastor, and so with all of us together.

My heart, that’s the man my friends. And you will find that your heart is always you. And that these other things are not you at all. And we Christians are called to the cultivation of the heart. And it’s a sad thing to me that Christianity in our day, even evangelical Christianity has forgotten that people have hearts. Our magazines have gone statistical, and how to do it, and surveys, and all the rest. And we’re talking about ecumenisity and percentages and numbers, and architecture and all that.

We’re living on the outside where it’s said in the book that man, God is Spirit and they that worship Him must worship him in Spirit. And we’re called to be internal men and women, living within. But, instead of that, we have gotten out. And so now, books are written, magazines published, and lectures and sermons all the time, and the heart is never mentioned. We turned the heart over to Hollywood. And the only time the heart is mentioned much anymore, is when some sultry gal from out there moans about her heart. I’ve heard cows in the same tone of voice and with the same thing wrong with them, bellowing in the pasture field.

But when our hearts have been turned over to the world, and the only meaning it has is sex love, we Christians have voided our responsibility and forgotten our religion. For Christianity is the religion of the heart. God has made us to be men and women of the heart, of spirit, of soul, of loyalty and faith and love and memory and worship. This is the heart of the man. And David said when my heart is overwhelmed. Now, I don’t know what happened. But I know that David’s life was was hit hard, very hard. And that the three parts of the man that we usually say make up the personality, the mental, the volitionally, emotion, all of them had been overwhelmed.

And overwhelmed of course is like the capsizing of a boat. It is like the landslide that buries the cars and the trains. It is just liked the avalanche in the mountains that buries whole villages sometimes. And so, when the heart is overwhelmed, life has its earthquakes and life has its avalanches and life has its overwhelming experiences; mental experiences where you stand perplexed, volitional experiences where you stand in a state of indecision. And one of our harshest, harshest situations that life presents us with, is to find a man fleeing at a crossroad and not knowing which road to take. He’s compelled by fear behind him to flee. And he’s compelled by uncertainty and indecision to stand still not knowing which of a half dozen directions he might take. And that’s to be overwhelmed.

And then, what can a man say about the pain? We talked about physical pain, but it’s still my belief, after all the years, that the greatest pain is not physical pain at all. The greatest pain is the pain of the heart.

There was an old saying down in one of the southern states where I used to preach sometimes, about children. When they’re little they tramp on your feet. But when they get big, they tramp on your heart. That came out of the bitterness of practical experience. That was not a cynical conclusion reached by a grouch. That was the wisdom of the countryside; the knowledge that when your little one is a little one, he can tramp on your feet. He can make you frightened by getting suddenly sick in the night. Or, he can come in with a bump that you’re afraid a fracture. That’s tramping on your feet. But when he gets to be 25 or 30 years old, he or she and, or younger even, run out on you and turn their back on you. That’s tramping on your heart.

And so we have these earthquakes, these avalanches that overwhelm us. But I think we should stay by David’s figure, because he talked about being overwhelmed and that means by water. And evidently, he had a boat in mind. When I am overwhelmed. When my boat capsizes, oh, my God, lead me to the rock that is higher than I. Now, when your capsized out on a lake or on an ocean, it’s too far back to the shore. There’s no use even hoping to get back. The only hope is that there may be a rock within swimming distance. A rock that you can get to and await rescue.

Now, when the heart of mankind was overwhelmed at the fall, when Adam and Eve took hand in hand and walked out from the garden, and when their children were born out there and when Cain became a fugitive and with a mark on his brow, there was over whelming grief. There was a capsized boat. And the old man of God says lead me to a Rock that is higher than I.

Now, I want to warn you against certain rocks. Because there are rocks that are found everywhere and, in every age, they’re turning up in some form. There is the stoical rock, it says live hard and kill your feeling and cultivate reason. One of the old folk songs that would hardly rate as a folk song, but at least it’s one of the people songs. You will find it in all the books that have Annie Laurie and the rest. It is this. It starts out this way, love not, the one you will love may die. That’s the first line. That’s about as far as I’m interested in it. Love not, the one you love might die. That’s stoicism. Never let yourself get attached to any human being because that human being may betray you.

There is the philosophy of the cynic. That’s the philosophy of the devil. God allowed Himself to get attached to the human race and endured the broken heart when that race betrayed Him. Jesus loved John and Peter and James and endured the heartache along with the crucifixion when his disciples deserted him and fled. So that’s an unworthy sentence, love not for who you love may die. Men become cold hard clods and murder their humanity. Not many are like that in our time, but there are the stoics. They will always turn up everywhere saying, be hard.

Then over on the other side, the Epicureans who say the opposite. You were born for pleasure therefore get all you can out of it. Paul quoted the Epicureans without approval of course in one of his epistles when he said eat drink and be merry for tomorrow, we die. Eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die. That is the language of Epicureanism. And then, there is the rock of education. There’s the rock of religion. And I could name are many rocks that come up and appear there but they’re not rocks at all. They’re simply illusions.

Now, is there a rock when my heart is overwhelmed? Lead me to the rock that is higher than. Is there a rock that is high enough?  Oh, my friend, there is a Rock that can be seen above the waves. We used to sing in the Methodist church this song, which way shall I take, shouts a voice in the night. I’m a pilgrim a wearied and spent is my life. And I look for a palace that shines on the hill, but between us a stream lieth solemn and chilled. And then, another part of the chorus would come in. Near, near thee, my son, is the old wayside cross, like a gray friar cowled, in lichens and moss; And its crossbeam will point to the bright golden span that bridges the water so safely for man. And that was a good song for that was the song of the cross that points with one of its, one of its hands, it points to the rock and the bridge and the strand that brings man and God together. There is a rock my brethren, there is a rock. Rock of ages cleft for me. Let me hide myself in thee.

Now, the main thing is to reach that Rock. Some people are so concerned about the age of the rock and the kind of rock and all, but that’s not important. Security is what is important when you’re perishing in the waves. When life is churning you about and you’re soon to go down, we can’t afford to go into details and reason about Christianity. God presents Jesus Christ and says, here is a Rock that’s high enough for you. Here is a Rock that is high enough. And it’s our business to take that Rock and then later on, we may think all we will. I have no objection to thinking. In fact, I’m for it. I’m going to give a, don’t laugh now, but I’m going to give a lecture out at Wheaton here after a while on the Christian thinker. I don’t know why but I am, if live it out. But I believe in thinking. But there was an old church father who said that we get to know things by faith, and then we figure them out as far as we can by reason. And he said, we are busy thinking, not because we can ever get to know God that way, but because we already know God, we’re letting our happy reason fly and search and gaze and look like a bird that’s been kept in a cage now looking over all the landscape. I added of course that figure of speech. But that’s what St. Anselm said, in his great work on God. So, I believe that we ought to think, but I don’t believe that we ought to allow our skeptical, dubious thinking to keep us away from the Rock when we’re perishing. There’s only one thing to do, and that’s to get to the Rock or you’ll be dead in a little while.

So, Jesus Christ is the Rock in a weary land, a shelter in the time of storm. That was a great gospel song in the days of Moody. Christ is a Rock in a weary land. So, by reason, we reflect upon the Rock, but by faith we reached the Rock and are safe. If we’d only humble ourselves, just humble ourselves and dare to believe that the dear Lord God has made a way for us, and that the Rock there is big enough and high enough. The other rocks aren’t high enough. They only fool you. They fool you, that’s all. Like a man who at low tide gets on a rock, but at high tide finds that the water is higher than his neck, higher than his head. And so, he perishes, but it just prolongs his dying.

And so, it is with philosophy and religion without Christ, and education and all the rest. They’re simply little rocks, but it’s low tide, and when high tide comes, you will find the rock isn’t high enough. So, God, Jesus Christ, God has given us a Rock that is high enough.

Then he changes the figure without asking our permission. Suddenly, he changed the figure and says, in the covert of Thy wings, I will abide in Thy tabernacle. I will trust in the covert of Thy wings. He becomes a worshiper now and goes to a tabernacle and he becomes a little chick and goes to the covert of his mother’s wings. David there is a bold figure here. And yet, it is a figure that Jesus picked up and used and repeated for the same Jesus that repeated it in Galilee in the flesh had inspired David to say it. He spake by the mouth, the Holy Ghost spake by the mouth of David when he said in the covert of Thy wings.

Now, I’ve seen this myself as a boy on the farm. I’ve seen the chickens everywhere, running about, running about, and tiny little balls of fur, dashing about looking, pecking away, and making that tiny little peep, peep, peep, which gave them their name. They were always known as peeps on our farm. They’re known as chicks; I think in a more scientific terminology. But they were peeps then because they peeped and they’re always peeping around there looking for things. And the mother was busy, busy scratching away for them, busy paying no attention to anything, and then the whistle would come, so high that for me, it was beyond my hearing. It was supersonic. I couldn’t hear the thing. But she could hear it. And she would, you know, a chicken has to turn this way to look up. Some of the old farmers know that. And they have to turn up that way. They can’t look straight up for some reason.

So, she turned and look up. And then she would utter a gurgling sort of excited sound. And every one of those little fellas would dash to her. And she throws out her wings and make an assuring sound. And then, if you wait a little while and watched, you’d see between every feather in the front part of the wing and beside the tail and back part of the wing everywhere, you’d see two little beady round eyes, looking out with a little yellow beak in the middle. They knew they were safe, because no hawk is going to come down and attack a brooding hen.

And David had seen that. And he said, in the covert of Thy wing will I make my, will I take my refuge. I will trust in the covert of Thy wings. And later on, Jesus said, O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how oft would I have gathered you as a hen gathers her chicks, but she would not. David would and you and I can, and I will abide in Thy tabernacle forever. I will abide in Thy tabernacle forever. And then he says, Selah, Selah. I’ve tried for thirty-some years to discover what selah means and I don’t quite know yet. And I’ve never met anybody that was sure. But I sort of think God puts it in as a little bit of a lullaby. It’s sort of God making those little sounds of assurance to us. He says, I will trust in the covert of Thy wings, Selah.

I listened to a program last night on the radio–Brahms, dedicate to, devoted, that particular program devoted to the great composer, Brahms. What was he German? German. And they had a man from one of the universities there commenting. These evidently were records, commenting on these different records. A very scholarly sounding man with a strong accent. And they said to him, what about Brahms? Well, he said, Brahms didn’t write for the violin he wrote against. And he said, It’s so with every instrument. He said, the violinists complain, and the singers complain, and the horn players complain, and even the conductors complain. He is so very difficult.

Well, I was lying there listening to him, resting up a bit, and I remembered Brahms under another setting. I remembered years ago hearing Schumann-Heink sing Brahms Lullaby. There’s nothing difficult there. Nobody’s complaining there. That’s Brahms, the father; Brahms, when he isn’t quite such a genius. That was the other side of Brahms.

Now, we come to theology and there’s lots of it. And we come to spiritual philosophy, and it’s heavy and it’s hard. And it demands time and attention. But when I’m reading such a verse as this, and it says, I will abide in Thy tabernacle forever. I will trust in the covert of Thy wings, Selah. I am listening to a lullaby. I am listening to God, by the Holy Ghost speaking to us through a man and saying now, you’re in a world where there’s a lot of trouble; and there’s difficulty and there are problems. And you will sometimes be overwhelmed in your heart. The boat will sink and your heart will start down, but don’t worry, there is a Rock, and there is a tabernacle, and there is a covert, and there is a God, Selah. So don’t let it get you down.

I am preaching to you. I don’t know what may be wrong with you. It is amazing how much we can get wrong with us. How people will write and come to see me and tell me things. What problems we do have. We make them mostly, but sometimes the devil sends them collect. But here they are these problems of ours, these little ticking things that we don’t know whether it’s a Christmas present or a bomb. And we don’t know what to do with it. My God, my heart is overwhelmed. My heart aches and I feel the weight of an avalanche on my soul. And God says Selah. You’re my child and you belong to me. And don’t be bothered by anything. My Son went down that far too, and the avalanche killed Him, and killed Him for your sake. And He came out of the grave alive forevermore and you’re going to too.

So, don’t worry about it. We Christians ought to be the happiest people in the world. And there never ought to be a mouth turned down in the whole kingdom of God. They all ought to be turned up. There never should be a human, Christian face without little crow tracks up here which show that there’s a smile, because God’s people ought to be a smiling people, because they ought to be a happy people. And they ought to be a happy people, because they dwell in the tabernacle of God and have full access to the covert of His wings. Selah

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Tozer Talks

“The Treachery of Hope Without Faith

“The Treachery of Hope Without Faith”

June 10, 1956 Evening Service

This morning I talked on a subject that I must deal with again tonight. You might call this little two sermon series, “Hope, the Universal Treasure.” And this morning I talked on the blessedness of hope and showed that hope in the natural world is universal, and that it made life livable here below.

Tonight, I want to talk about the treachery of hope, and show that if hope does not have a valid object, its blessing can be turned into a curse. And that which is meant to be a nurse and a guide to lead us home, can become a false teacher to lead us astray.

Now, in the book of Job, the 11th chapter, a man said, if iniquity be in thine hand, put it far away. And let not wickedness dwell in thy tabernacles. Then shalt thou lift up thy face without spot; yea, thou shalt be steadfast and shalt not fear. Because thou shalt forget thy misery and remember it only as waters that pass away. And thine age shall be clearer than the noonday: thou shalt shine forth, thou shalt be as the morning. And thou shalt be secure, because there is hope; yea, thou shalt dig about thee, and thou shalt take thy rest in safety. Also thou shalt lie down, and none shall make thee afraid; yea, many shall make suit unto thee. But here is that terrible swivel word, which we turn about face on, but the eyes of the wicked shall fail, and they shall not escape. And their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost, or as the margin says, their hope shall be as a puff of breath.

Now there are two classes mentioned here. Those that put iniquity far away, stretch out their hands toward God and verse 13, put iniquity far away, put wickedness out of our tabernacles. Then, we shall be secure and rest in hope. But, the eyes of the wicked in contrast, shall fail. They shall not escape. And their hope shall be as a puff of breath.

Now, hope is natural to us, and universal. And if grounded in God, hope is a treasure beyond compare. But, when it rests on nothing more substantial than wishes and fear and unbelief and error, then it is treacherous and betrays our lives to death.

I’ve been interested to learn that secular thinkers, the great poets and philosophers of mankind, have found hope to be a treacherous thing. Of course, they speak not from the standpoint of God, nobody who has divine inspiration in his hand. Nobody who places his trust in Jacob’s God, ever holds hope to be treacherous. But, the secular thinkers, the men of this world, Adams brood, the wise of this world, those who are filled with science, falsely so-called, they are keen and sharp and observant, and they notice, and the bitterness creeps into their voice when they talk about hope.

Sir Philip Sidney says that hope is the fawning traitor of the mind. And another poet says this, hope tells a flattering tale, delusive, vain and hollow. Ah, let not hope prevail less disappointment follow. And old Henry Constable says, hope like the hyena, coming to be old, alters his shape and is turned into despair.

And now, why do worldly men fear hope? And why do they warn us that hope is the poor man’s riches and that we dare not trust it. They’re talking from the human standpoint, and they’re not believing in God. And therefore, what they say is true. Experience has proved the treachery of hope. Hope without faith is precarious. You see, hope is not wholly false or else we would recognize it for what it is and reject it. And yet it cannot be relied on, because out of God and out of Christ, we rarely attain to our hopes. Or, if we do attain to them, we find they’re disappointing at last. And hope is likely to betray our confidence and violate our trust and leave us at last, betrayed, disappointed and filled with despair.

Now, I point out that human hope rarely fulfills its promises. It offers a gold, but it gives only clay instead. It offers centuries and gives only years. It offers years and perhaps gives only days. And sometimes it is false, cruelly, sadistically false. I said this morning that without hope in the world, the human race would die out and all the zest for living would go. That we could not survive adversity or endure pain if we did not have the hope that they would end. And I said that hope would enable the shipwrecked sailor to endure long days that seemed years, out on the bosom of the sea, floating in a boat or on a raft, hoping, always hoping that help would come, and keeps him alive until help does come.

But candor and realism will compel me also to say that a hope has left many a man after telling him for days that help would come, and whispering in his ears that surely, he could not die there on the bosom of the deep. Hope has left him and watched his eyes grow dim and his tongue grows thick and his whole frame grows weaker, until at last he gave up the ghost and his hope was but a puff of breath. I said that the man who was injured or ill might lie in a hospital somewhere, and hope would whisper that he would be better and would keep him alive and keep him sane, until returning health should restore again his strength and drive away the pain. But I must say also that there’s many a man and many a woman, there have been, who have, say, had cancer or tuberculosis or some other dreaded disease, and have listened to the fawning flatterer hope and have believed that they should get better and live a long life and be useful upon the earth. When at the same time those people never saw another well day and never got out of the bed whereon, they laid dreaming of a bright tomorrow.

Faith is a fawning flatterer of the mind. And if faith has no foundation to rest upon, she is a liar and a deceiver and a Judas who leads the mind of men astray. Hope has whispered to many a mother, that her son missing in action would surely be found and would turn up all right, alive and well. That it was only a mistake and that he would return. And hope has kept that mother waiting for a letter that never came and kept her until she died, waiting for a letter every day. She went and looked every weekday to see whether the letter had come. And she died waiting for a letter that never came and that never could come, because hope had been deceiving her. And the boy that was to have written the letter had long been sleeping in an unmarked grave on a foreign shore.

Hope has told the traveler, if you will travel a little faster and walk a little faster, you will get there before the loved one dies. And the feet that weigh a hundred pounds apiece and the body that’s exhausted and ready to fall, by the strength of hope managed to stagger on to the cottage and open the door and find the loved one long gone that he had hoped to see. That’s why they say that hope is a fawning flatterer of the mind. And that’s why the poet says hope tells a flattering tale, delusive, vain and hollow. Ah, let not hope prevail, lest disappointment follow.

Now, when is hope trustworthy? When can this become a treasure to us, this universal blessed gift of God to man that keeps him from despair? When is this trustworthy? Hope is trustworthy when it walks with faith. Faith rests on the character of God. Let God be true though every man be a liar. And hope relies on God’s revealed promise. Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord, whose hope the Lord is, said Jeremiah. And Isaac Watts said, happy the man whose hopes rely on Israel’s God. He made the sky, the earth, the sea and all therein.

And when we hope in Israel’s God, in the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, then hope is a blessed nurse and comforter. Hope is a guide and a shield, and hope strengthens us and enables us to endure. Hope takes the sting out of fear. Hope takes the pain out of illness. Hope enables us to go on fighting against hopeless odds, and believing that God has spoken and it shall be so. But, when hope, like the dove of Noah’s ark, flies out of our heart and finds no place for the sole of his feet to rest and comes fluttering weakly back again and rests upon us. Then I say, hope is a flatterer and the Hindu proverb is justified which says there is no disease like hope. But, I can understand why the Hindu can say there is no disease like hope.

Imagine, if you will, the Hindu making his way like in the inchworm from some far part of India to the Ganges River, Old Mother Ganga whose waters were supposed to be able to cleanse sin from the heart of a man. From somewhere, from that light that lighted every man that cometh into the world. From that inbuilt conscience and moral perception, some Indian man became deeply conscious of his sins. And he was told to hope and that if he would punish himself enough, and if he would go and make a trip of pilgrimage to the Ganges River, he’d be delivered from the great crushing burden of sin.

And so, he started from his home and marked a chalk line put his toes toward fell full length, then marked the chalk line where his forehead was and stepped forward to that chalk line on the ground or that mark on the ground, fell full length again. And so, inched himself through hundreds of miles of heat and sand and flies and stinging insects and thirst and hunger and fatigue, until at last, he smelled the waters of the Ganges there. And hope, the fawning flatterer said, now your troubles are all over and the burden of your sin will roll away, washed in the Ganges.

And so, he took that painful, emaciated form and dragged it into the sacred waters of Mother Ganga and when plunging into the filthy waters, submerged himself, immersed himself in its sacred waves. He crawled back to the bank, drank a bit of water and ate a little food, believing now that his sins would roll away. But as he slowly went back retreating or retracing his steps in the direction from whence he came, he found the sense of sin and the consciousness of iniquity still on his heart like a great crushing burden. In his disappointment and bitterness, he said, hope is the worst disease of all.

When hope has no place to rest. When there is no revealed truth back of it, when there is no, thus saith God. When there is no blood of the Lamb, no cross, no atonement, no mighty speaking voice of God to hold it up, then faith can be their worst deceiver and the worst disease of all. And there are religious-minded people and church people by the thousands who are hoping against hopeless, hope that will betray them at last.

There is that hope that says my sins are not so bad after all. I’ve been a reasonably good man. And certainly, I’m not a murderer. Certainly, I’m not a robber. I’ve had my faults, but I’m a decent fellow. And there’s many a church member that has joined the church and been baptized and takes the Lord’s Supper, and all the hope he has in the wide world is that he is a reasonably good fellow. Every cannon of God is trained on that man’s soul. And every sword of justice in heaven above and earth beneath is waiting to cut that man down. And every threatened warning and admonition of a holy God is aimed against that man’s head like a gun. And that man, though he may be a deacon or an elder or a pastor indeed, he has not the remotest reason to hope in all the wide world. Hope is a fawning, flatterer and whispers to his unborn-again soul that he doesn’t need to repent and be born again like bums in a rescue mission. That he’s a decent fellow, comes from a good family, drives a good car and lives on a good street. My brother, such hope is but a disease worse than all and a flatterer that fawns and betrays and lies and damns at last.

And then there’s the hope that says, my good deeds will justify me. I’ve been a bad man, but if I turn and do good now and give of my money and go to church and pray and have family prayer and read my Bible and do good, I shall surely be saved at last. And when God balances my evil deeds against my good deeds in the great balance scale of justice in eternity, surely my good deeds will outweigh my bad deeds. And you’d be surprised how many people raised under the sound of the gospel still believe that ancient heresy. And hope whispers the lie that says your good deeds will get you in. My brother, your good deeds can’t get you in and your bad deeds can’t keep you out if Jesus Christ our Lord becomes your Advocate, and Savior.

Jesus Christ is your hope and should be your hope. God says that except a man repent, he shall perish. And Jesus Christ says that there’s no name under heaven given among men, save the name of Jesus, whereby men should be saved. And the Scripture says that men are not saved by works, but by grace through faith, and it’s a gift of God. And all of Romans and all of Galatians and all of Colossians and all of John and all of the teachings of Jesus and all of the teachings of the Apostles are aimed like a gun against the man that says, I’ll let my good deeds outweigh my bad deeds. I have lied and stolen and committed adultery and tramped around nights, but I’ve stopped all that. And I’ll try to undo it, and make the water run uphill and make the iron swim and reverse the course of justice. And I will be a good boy now and God will overlook my sins. My brother, if you were to suddenly turn into an archangel and shine with iridescent beauty as the angels above, you’d still go to hell unless sin has been washed from your soul by the blood of the Lamb.

And then, hope says to some that God will be merciful to them, and that God isn’t as bad as He’s made out to be. That He’s a good fellow and ’twill all be well, as Omar Khayyam said. He’s a good fellow and ’twill all be well. Why be so excited about religion? Why take it all so seriously. Everything will be alright. God’s a good fellow. And He understands our frame, and He knows we’re dust; and everything will be all right. My brother, mercy is a stream, and mercy flows within its banks. And we’ll come to that stream and bathe or we’ll perish.

Mercy does not hunt a sinner that’s running away. Mercy does not run down a back alley and into a whore’s den and dig a man out against his will and wash him and make him clean against his will. No, we must confess our sins. If we confess our sins, then He has mercy upon us. And He’s merciful and just and righteous and forgives our sins and cleanses us from iniquity. But an uncleansed sinner is a lost man. Let hope flatter and whisper and fawn, and breath her moist breath on our neck and pat our shoulders and tell us it’s all right. Hope lies. For wherever there is sin, that man belongs below, and none above; not with a holy God, but with an unholy devil.

And then hope says, I can continue on in sin and still be alright. Hope says, everybody has sinned and therefore I don’t need to be delivered from sin. I can still hold black malice in my heart and still be a member of the kingdom of God. I can be a liar when I need to be and steal into the kingdom of God. I can still practice impurity and enter the kingdom of God. I can still hold grudges against my brother. I can still gossip and assassinate character. I can still practice worldliness and love worldly pleasures, and still be a child of the Eternal Father and a brother of the Eternal King.

Oh, my brother, the man of God who knows what he’s talking about, says, my children, I have warned you and I warn you again that they that practice such things shall not enter the kingdom of God. Only the blood-washed, only those who have put malice from their heart, only those who have stopped lying, not the liar can enter the kingdom of God. But the ex-liar can. Not the impure man, but the ex-libertine can. Not the man who holds a grudge, but the man who used to hold a grudge. Not the woman who gossips can enter heaven, but the woman who used to gossip, but has been washed in the blood of the Lamb.

And then hope whispers and says, show the good side of your life and don’t cause others to stumble. And even if you do live an impure or a wicked or dishonest life in secret, what will be the difference? Well, the man of God said bluntly, the hope of the hypocrite shall perish. And what shall be the hope of the hypocrite when God taketh away his soul? The public may not know, but the Judge of all the earth knows. The church may not know, but the Head of the church knows. Your family may not know, but the great God, the Most High God, Maker of heaven and earth whose fiery eyes sees through the souls of men, He knows.

Don’t imagine that you can have two faces and God will save one of them. God never saves two faces. No two-faced man was ever been converted or saved since the world began. A two-faced man is as much of a monstrosity in heaven as a two-headed baby is in a hospital. And God Almighty will never take a man with two faces into the kingdom. Only one face, that’s all, only one. And though your face is black with gazing, lined with sin from looking upon evil; if you will believe and turn away from that evil gaze and fix the gaze of your soul on the dying Lamb whose precious blood has never lost its power, God will save that one face of yours. But, if you look at God with one face and at sin with another and hide the face that looks at sin and never let your neighbor know you have it, you’ll perish as sure as the sparks fly upward. And as sure as the lead goes down, and as sure as God is holy and as sure as heaven is high, and as sure as hell is low, the hypocrite will perish. For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he hath gained, when God taketh away his soul.

My brethren, there are three worlds. We live in one of them now. And this earth is bearable because there is hope. And I said this morning and repeat, that for no other reason, is this world bearable. The man who lies in pain in a hospital tonight wouldn’t get off that bed; he would commit suicide lying there if he didn’t believe there was hope. The man in prison would go crazy and become completely demented if he didn’t believe there was hope. Even the man who is going to die in the electric chair or at the end of a rope, still keeps sane because he believes until the trap is sprung or the switch is thrown, that there’s hope and he’s going to be saved.

Earth is bearable because there is hope. And hell is unendurable because there is no hope. Old Dante knew too well, and built with theological precision into his shocking and terrifying picture of the inferno. He built this thought, and said in the deepest lowest hell from which there was no escape, on the entablature over the door, there was deeply engravened these words, “All hope abandon ye who enter here.”

Earth, I say, is bearable because there is hope. And when the baby’s temperature flares, and the little eyes shine too bright and the cheeks are too red, the mother hopes that it’s only a passing thing and the baby will be better tomorrow. A shipwrecked sailor hopes and awaits his rescue. The man in his cell hopes and sometimes receives his pardon. The man in the sick room hopes and sometimes, health returns. But in hell there is no hope. And that’s why hell is unendurable. Nobody can go to another there in that terrible place and say, we’ll be better tomorrow. For it will never be better. No one can ever hum, there’s a better day coming, I know I know, ’twill not always, not always be so. No, no, nobody can ever go to another and say cheer up, the worst is past. For the Bible says that there is no hope in hell. All hope abandon ye who enter here.

And while earth is bearable because there is hope and hell unendurable because there is no hope, heaven is eternal beatitude, because there, hope is in radiant fulfillment. All the dreams of the race are fulfilled in wonderous, generous fulfillment. Don’t you imagine that any poet or any humanists or any psalmist ever dreamed a dream that cannot out-soar God’s reality? No, no, let not a David who talks about seeing God in the morning. Not at John who saw the Holy City coming down clothed as a bride adorned for her husband. Not John in all of his high dreams could ever dream a heaven as great as heaven will be. Not all the language used in the Bible to describe that glorious shining place can do justice to that place itself.

For no human being, no mortal, no finite mind, can ever grasp the wide-ranging, out-soaring glories that belong to God Almighty. I say that in heaven, there is glorious fulfillment. And that’s why Heaven is eternal beatitude. And we say well, when we see heaven, we’ll have seen it. We will have seen the whole thing. It’ll be like standing at Niagara after dreaming about it for a long time and seeing it rolling there. And after an hour’s gazing, we would shrug and walk away. Heaven won’t be one thing to be seen or tasted or touched or smelled or enjoyed. Heaven will be an infinite fold within fold, height upon height, pile upon pile, story upon story, glory upon glory while the ages roll. Heaven will be eternal beatitude, because there I say, hope is in radiant fulfillment.

But there is no hope in hell. These terrible, wonderful words, if thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands toward God, and if iniquity be in thine hand and now put it far away, and let not wickedness dwell in thy tabernacles, then thou shalt be secure because there is hope. And thou shalt take thy rest in safety and thou shalt lie down, and none shall make thee afraid; But the eyes of the wicked shall fail, and they shall not escape, and their hope shall be as the puff of a breath. How terrible my brother!

Hope without Christ is a leaky boat. Hope without Christ is a weak bridge. Hope without Christ is the worst disease of all. And how foolish to nourish a groundless hope tonight when there is hope in God. Happy the man whose hope relies on Israel’s God. He made the skies. And he sent his Son to save from sin and darkness and the grave. And tonight, he calls you. And Peter calls this hope, a living hope as I pointed out. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Which according to His abundant mercy, hath begotten us again unto a living hope, of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance, incorruptible, undefiled that faded not away, reserved in heaven for you, incorruptible, undefiled and unfading. It can’t rot. It can’t become impure, and it can’t fade away. And there isn’t a treasure on earth, not even the diamond, not the pearl, not the silver, not the gold, can this be said of. 

We’re kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. Wherein ye greatly rejoice, thou now for a season, if need be, you’re in heaviness through manifold temptations. Now brethren, you need not go out of here trusting in a vain hope. You need not be the fool of that treacherous siren that lies about your future. You can put your hope in the cross of Jesus. And he who dies believing, dies safely through His love. And you cannot only die believing, you can live believing. And the hope of the Christian is a safe hope. And the Christian is the only one who has any right to hope. For it’s the only one whose hope relies on God.

So, you can tonight know that you can go out of this place with a hope that’s as big as the world and as long as eternity, and as deep as hell and as high as heaven, and know that you don’t have to apologize nor wonder about it. Thou shalt lie down in safety because thou hast hope. Hope in God, for I shall yet praise Him.

What about it this evening? Are you hoping now in Jesus’ blood? Are you hoping in God’s spoken Word, thy sins be forgiven thee. Are you hoping now in the merits of the blood of the Lamb? If you are, happy are you. Happy are you. But, if you’re not, you have no right to be happy and no right to hope. For the man in Adam, hope is a treacherous siren. To the man in Christ, hope is a precious treasure. Don’t let your hope betray you to death. Jesus calls us o’er the tumult, and He calls us to His heart, into His cross, into His feet. And He calls us not to come on our feet, but in our hearts, a journey for the heart to Jesus Christ.

Why not tonight? I know this is a rather small crowd for us. And maybe that not many are here this evening who are out of Christ. But, if there should even be one, I beg of you, start your inner feet in motion and turn away from all that’s wrong and face toward the cross of Jesus. Put your hope in God’s Eternal Son. And thou shalt lie down in peace and well shall it be with thee. Let us pray.

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“The Treasures of Hope”

June 10, 1956

The treasures of hope. In this day, this morning, I want to talk on the preciousness of hope, and tonight, The Treachery of Hope. Because hope is both the most precious, and the most treacherous gift which God has given to the sons of men. The two texts, Psalm 146:5, we’ve already read it, happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help, who’s hope is in Jehovah his God. Then in the New Testament, 2 Thessalonians 2:16, 17. Now our Lord Jesus Christ Himself and God, even our Father which hath loved us and has given us ever lasting consolation and good hope through grace, comfort your hearts and establish you in every good work and worth.

Now, the Old Testament is full of hope and its synonyms. And also, we find the New Testament full of it. The Holy Spirit in the first text has pronounced that man happy who has the God of Jacob for his present help, and who has God also for his hope for the future. You see, there’s a difference between help and hope. Our God is a very present help in trouble. But it doesn’t say a very present hope in trouble, because help has to do with the past or the present and hope has to do with the future. The very essence of hope is in its futurity. Watts caught the distinction here when he said, our God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come. Our help in the past and our hope for years to come. Now, there is a difference in tense you see, and Paul explains that in the eighth chapter of Romans, I think it is, the eighth chapter of Romans. Paul explains the difference between hope and help. He says, for we are saved by hope. But hope that is seen is not hope. For what a man seeth, why doth he hope for it? But, if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it. If you are hoping for a letter, you hope until you get the letter in your hand. And then you smile and walk in the house, opening it as you walk from the mailbox. Why hope for what you have in your hand. But if you don’t have it yet, but believe you may receive it, then you will with patience wait for it.

Now hope, as I have said is a universal treasure and it is native to mankind. It’s a gift of God to the human breast. It’s native there. It’s indigenous as the missionaries like to say. It wasn’t carted in from the outside; it grew there. It was native to the human soil. It’s indigenous, the hope which God puts in the human breast. And it is probably the most precious, I said before without a qualifying word that it was the most precious, but I would say that it is among the very most precious things the human heart can entertain or enjoy, depending upon its object. But because it springs from within and doesn’t need an outer object to fix upon, it therefore may be a parasite that grows on itself and nourishes itself on itself with no object to fix upon. In which case, it is the most treacherous thing in the world, and I will preach about that tonight.

But this morning, I want to talk about the blessedness of hope. Hope you know, is an expectation of things desired. It is an anticipation of better times ahead. It is the belief that those better times are going to be ours. And there’s scarcely a human being anywhere in the world that hasn’t felt the lifting encouragement of hope when he was in a difficulty. Hope said to him, now things will be better, and if you just wait with patience, things will turn out all right. And you know, mostly they do.

And thus, hope cheers us along the way. Without hope, that is, if hope were suddenly to take wings and fly away from the human breast, and sweet anticipation of better times, never visit again, the human heart, life in a fallen world like this, would be totally unbearable. Adversity would break our spirits and drive us to suicide. Why do men bear up under adversity? Because hope whispers to them that it can’t last forever. That there will be better times ahead. But if there was no hope to whisper, I’d say that a little adversity, even an hour’s adversity would break our hearts, because we would imagine that that adversity was to be forever. And the fallen sons of men who hoped not in God would die by the millions by their own hand. And I believe that the race would die out in a few years. Not even the ever-present procreational drive, nor the instinct for self-preservation, could possibly save a race from extinction when one’s hope had fled forever from the hearts of mankind. Hope is both a nurse and a comforter.

I think of the shipwrecked sailor out there on the sea floating in a little boat or on a raft. He’s been there for days, and his throat is parched, and he’s hungry, and he’s in discouragement. But, always hope whispers, they’ll find you, they’ll find you. You won’t perish, they’ll find you. And thus enables the man to endure through the days that seem like long years until at last, a plane flying overhead drops supplies and later they land and pick him up. The prisoner who is in his cell and has been there for long months, is able to wait it out and not go insane or commit suicide, because he marks off the years and the months and the days and last, even the hours on his homemade calendar when he shall be free. And it enables a man who otherwise would go insane with loneliness, to wait it out and hope for the day when the great iron gates will yield. And he will walk into the free sunshine and breathe once more the air of liberty.

And the sick or injured man who lies in his home or in a hospital bed, injured or sick and suffering from pain, it enables him. Hope enables him to wait for the day when returning health shall once more drive the pain away, and the sickness that turns him inside out shall leave, and he’ll be able to eat again and live on the nourishing food. And that returning traveler who has come from a long distance because he has heard that some dear one lies ill. That returning traveler is able to lift those feet which every mile get heavier and heavier and though near exhaustion, hope whispers, a little longer and you will see the face of your loved one. And he believes hope and moves on and arrives and sees before too late the one who lies on the bed of sickness. Now, I’ve noticed that hope, I’ve talked about hope among the sons of men. But I have noticed how hope in God’s dealings with those men, how much sweeter it becomes.

We go back and find Noah hoping against hope. God told him to build an ark and he builds an ark, and it rained and the waters of the great deep roared up and floated his ark and Noah there between the waters and the rains above, waited and hoped. And all was able to hope it out and wait for the waters to assuage. And Abraham years later, left his home in Ur of the Chaldees and started to a land which he knew not, except that he knew the God who knew the land and was willing to follow Him. And Abraham hoped against hope and considered not his body as good as dead, neither the deadness of Sarah’s womb, and hoped and God gave him a son from whose loins was born the Messiah.

I think of Israel in Egypt under the taskmaster’s lash, when for 400 years she felt the sting and watched the blood ooze and made bricks without straw and was cursed and oppressed by the slave drivers of Pharaoh. But she still could believe on, because the memory of her promises, the promises God had given to the Father Abraham, Isaac and Jacob still stayed with Israel and later in Babylon. When the Jews were captive there and they hung their harps on the willows and said, we cannot sing the songs of Zion in a strange land, yet they did not despair. Neither did they turn away. In fact, they were cured of all idolatry in Babylon, and they say there has not been a Jew worship an idol since. They were cured there even though in the land itself they had been tempted to run to idolatry sometimes. But the terror of the Babylonish captivity soured them on all men-made gods. And they could wait it out a generation and a half long until Ezra and Zerubbabel and Nehemiah and the rest, lead them back to the land of promise.

And then, we think of that which we call the Messianic hope, the hope of the Messiah. It still burns like fire in the breasts of ten thousands of Jews around the whole world. And when our Lord Jesus Christ came to the temple, you’ll remember, two old people, old Simeon, and old Anna. I tried to figure her out today. She had lived with her husband seven years from the time she was married, then he died and she lived eighty-four more years in the temple. I figured that say, she was seventeen or eighteen, maybe twenty when she was married and twenty-seven when she was widowed and lived eighty-four more years. You’ve got her 111 years old there if my mathematics is correct. That’s the time when Jesus was brought into the temple. And Simeon, who had been waiting for the consolation of Israel, and Anna, who had been hoping for salvation in Israel. They made their little speeches and went home because at last, hope had turned to fruition. And that which they had hoped for through their long lives, was now before them in the form of a little pink baby. Thus, hope has enabled God to deal with His people, and enabled His people to stand every kind of pressure and persecution down the years.

Then, the church. We have three sacred sisters in the church. They are called faith and hope and charity. And faith is first. She reckons God to be true. And hope is next. She expects and anticipates that God will fulfill His promises. And charity surrounds them all with an aura of divinity, enables faith and hope to wait without impatience while the slow wheels of God’s clock move the hands across the face; so big that we can’t see it or some big it never seems to move, and yet it’s moving.

It says in Romans 5:5 that hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost. They have laughed at the church all down the centuries and there are even Christian people laughing at us today. They say you’re still believing in the second coming of Christ? Don’t you know they believed in this coming of Christ when Paul was here? Don’t you know they believed in the coming of Christ in the days of the church Fathers? Don’t you know that a few people in the dark eclipse we call the Dark Ages still believed that Jesus would come again? Don’t you know that when the reformers were saving the church back in the 16th century, they believed that Christ would come. And don’t you know that in the 19th century they believed that Christ would come and still He didn’t come and you’re believing He will come again. And in 1,000 years, people will look back and say, you believed that He would come and He didn’t come. And thus the scoffer is saying all things as they were from the beginning.

What is it? How is it we can look without being red-faced? How is it that we can walk up to our enemies and say, I still hope for His coming? It is because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts and maketh our hope not ashamed. You can be not ashamed of a deferred hope if the love of God’s in your heart.

Well, now I want you to notice what the apostles say about hope. In Romans 15:4 it says that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope. Thus, faith is nourished by the Scriptures. Our brother Paul told us this morning about that young fellow who got converted awfully quick and who made a big move towards the things of God, and then went away and it withered. Well, it’s possible for your hope to wither on the vine and never ripen. It’s possible, if you don’t nourish it on the Scriptures. We through patience and comfort of the Scriptures have hope. So, if you will nourish your hope on the Scriptures, it’ll keep alive in your heart.

The baby that’s born into the home must be nourished. I went Thursday or Friday to see a little fellow by the name of Stanley Wilson Tozer who was born at 6:45, Friday morning down here at, what do you call it–on the Midway. And one thing they’re doing for him, they’re nourishing him. He has to be nourished or he’ll die, and so with every living thing. If you want to keep your hope alive and keep it happy, keep it nourished on the Scriptures. Then, it says that hope says that Christ and righteousness must win. For he talks about the hope of righteousness through faith.

There’s one thing about a Christian, he’s not very vulnerable. He’s hard to kill brother. If he’s a real Christian, he’s awfully hard to kill. Because when everything turns against him, he can rise and say, I still believe that Christ and righteousness shall triumph. When Hitler and Mussolini, the Fascists and the Nazis, had conquered half of Europe or more, and had England rocked back on her heels, and it looked as if that great braggart and big mouth enemy of humanity over there in Berlin, was not only able to beat the good people, but continue to beat them, and make righteousness look silly and make sin look right. I remember preaching in this pulpit. And I said, now, I have a word for you. At the moment, evil is winning and righteousness is cowering in her corner. But don’t you dare to believe that it’s going to stay like that. God and righteousness are going to win!

Where is Hitler now, outside of being in hell? And where is Mussolini now? And where are the heil shooters now? All gone the way of history. And righteousness and liberty won in that instance. And they will win every time until that dark hour called, The Tribulation, when for a short period, God allows sin to take over in the person of the Antichrist and fling itself and spread and prosper like a green bay tree. And it will imagine as it grows unnaturally fast to fill the whole earth with its inequity, it will imagine that it has made even God ashamed and that sin is going to win at last. But it won’t know that in every root and rootlet, there are the cutworms and borers working.

And the day will be when that great tree of iniquity, that great, green bay tree that has spread itself and filled the earth shall come crashing down, never to rise again. And Jesus Christ will take over and there will be righteousness from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth. And hope tells us this and whispers it to us. And hope looks forward to salvation for a helmet, a hope of salvation. What keeps you from going insane these days? What keeps your mind right? As you look around about on the world? What is it?

Somebody sent me, you get this later if you read the Alliance Weekly, I don’t know whether anybody here does, but they do other places. But I have a word to say about this. There used to be an organization in the United States during the 30s and 40s called the Four As. The Association for the Advancement of Atheism in America. And I used to read their literature. They’re a pretty strong bunch. They had little cells in the cities all over and they had a magazine with quite a circulation. The advancement of atheism in America; that was their job. And they were fighting the preachers and fighting the Bible.

The other day, the head of that organization, what’s left of it, was interviewed by a newspaper man. And the newspaper man said, how’s your organization doing? He said not doing good at all? He said, what happened to it? Well, he said, it is not needed much anymore. He said, do you got any organizations? No, we don’t have any left. We had quite a number, but they’re all gone, all petered out. He said, how’s your magazine? Well, he said, the circulation has fallen off to 2,000. Well, he said, where’s your preachers that used to go out and preach this atheism? He said, they don’t have any anymore. And he said, well, you’re failing. No, he said, we’re not failing. He said, there was a day when preachers believed in God and hell and sin and the fall of man and miracles and the new birth and repentance and preached it. And they believed the Jonah was swallowed by a whale and that Lazarus was raised from the dead. And we fought that because we didn’t believe it. But he said, now, there’s no battle line. There’s no issues. He said, they don’t preach that those things anymore. They preach peace of mind and how to comfort yourself and how to be happy though married and how to be nice and how to be kind. And he said, that’s what we always preached. And he said, we’ve no fight with a church that doesn’t preach the Bible. Isn’t that a horrible thing brother? That’s too horrible to let alone. I’ve got to wool that a while yet. And let the world know!

Now, Brother Dave Enloe said in conversation about this, that man didn’t know there are some people that still preach those things. That’s true, but before the eyes of the world they don’t count. And the atheists know that the churches that have the numbers and that count, don’t preach those things. Even those who pretend to, usually peter it out to come and accept Jesus and have peace of mind. And then he said this cynical thing. I think this was the unkindest cut of all. He said, why these Christians are as good as atheist now, that they believe the same thing.

Now, brother and sister, how can you keep your head from swimming in times like these I tell you. The helmet, the hope of salvation. Wear that helmet and the bullets will fly in all directions, and there’ll be a bomb when it hits you. But outside of a little jarring, you won’t mind it. You got a helmet on, all right? Hope expects Christ’s coming and hope is a purifying hope, for every man that hath this hope in Him does what? Purifies himself, what, even as He is pure.

Now I’ll close by reminding you that the Christian’s hope is sound. It is sound because it’s grounded on the character of God. And because it is grounded on the atonement in God’s Son, and Peter calls it a living hope. Why did he call it a living hope? Because there’s so much dead hope. He called it a living hope because it rests on realism and not on fancy. Because the hope of the Christian is not wishful dreaming. It’s a valid expectation. And the Christian expects and he has a right to expect, for he’s got the character of God back of him.

If I had a piece of paper with the Continental Illinois Bank back of it, I could sleep comfortably knowing that I had the famous and honored institution whose very future required and necessitated that they keep their promises. I wouldn’t worry. I could hope if I knew that the character that was back of that hope was sound. If I had a government bond, I wouldn’t worry as long as Washington is still in the hands of Americans. And as long as the President still sits in the White House, that bond is good. And as long as the glory-circled throne, still sees dimly, dimly there, the great God Almighty, the Most High God maker of heaven and earth, my hope is all right and so is yours a valid expectation. Once, one of the Old Testament writers felt a little impatient with God. He was in trouble he was getting kicked around. And then he comforted himself with these words. It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord.

So, brother it’s good. Don’t let things get you down. Of course, you’ll get in trouble, of course you will. In Chicago, there’s not three days it seems to me, or not thirty out of the whole year when you can be comfortable. The weather is always too hot, too wet, too dry, too cold, too something. And today, it’s too hot. Next week, it may be too cold. I went to the East and took along, my wife suggestion but might have easily been mine. I didn’t know what to do. Took along one of those little plastic raincoats, and brother it got so cold I needed an overcoat. And all I had was a plastic raincoat and some nice summer clothes. You never know weather or what weather it’s going to do. You never know what the economic system is going to do. You never know what Buggana is going to do. And you never know what polio is going to do. You never know, you never know. You never know what some wild, young fellow driving a hot rod is going to do, smash into you and wreck your car and hurt your family, you never know. But you do know one thing brother, it’s good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of God. God will bring it out all right.

Now, I leave you with this lovely little benediction of Paul in Romans 15:13. The God of hope, says Paul, may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost. He is the God of hope says Paul. May he fill you full with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope. Not have a little pale hope but abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

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Tozer Talks

“The Inner Illumination We Need”

August 26, 1956

In the book of Colossians, the first chapter, chapter one of Paul’s Epistle to the Christians at Colossae. He tells them that he’s writing to them and giving thanks for them because he had heard about their faith and Christian love and the hope which they held which had come unto them. And then he said, he had heard about it from his dear fellow servant Epaphras who is evidently either one of them or a teacher or preacher or a pastor working among them who also declared unto Paul, the love of the Colossians in the Spirit.

Now, instead of that calling for a celebration and a lot of back patting, he called for prayer on the part of the man that all of these Colossians might still be better Christians than they were. In verses nine and ten he says, for this cause, we also since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you. And to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of His will, that is Christ’s will, in all wisdom and spiritual understanding, that you might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God.

Now, this is Paul’s prayer, not all of it, but there’s too much for us to go through this morning. This is Paul’s prayer for the Colossian brethren. He began by complimenting them and assuring them that he believed in them. And in spite of their confused lives, and in spite of the fact that they are on the brink of false doctrine which the book of Colossians was written to save them from. He knew that their final problem was a spiritual one and their final needs spiritual, so his prayer preceded his reproof. And he prayed that they might be filled with all the knowledge of His will. And this will of God, the knowledge of which he prays they might have, might be summarized like this. It has to do with what God reveals about Himself and about ourselves and about our relation to Him through His Son; and the past and the future, and our responsibility to God, because of who He is and because of our relation to him, and because of the place we hold in the world, our responsibility.

Now, that is all found in the Word of God. But here is the peculiar thing. You can read the Word of God and not find it. That’s the strange thing, that you can read the Word of God and memorize it by the yard, and yet come up as dry as you went down and know as little about God and the Son of God and what He is and who He is, and our relation to Him and our responsibility toward Him and toward fellow Christians and our fellow men. I say, you can be a Bible student and still not know very much about these things. You can’t and daren’t leave the Bible to hunt any light because this is the book. And glory gilds the sacred page and this is it.

But this knowledge is more than an intellectual grasp of doctrine. It is a lofty spiritual thing, and it transcends our mere intellect. Now, this is what we’re missing today and what I try to point out here and there, that wisdom and spiritual understanding are more than a mere mental grasp of the doctrine. There’s a sharp cleavage between the world’s values and those of Christ. The world is committed to natural reason. And it is the cheap pride and glory of mankind. No man can be prouder of anything than a man who is intellectually proud, proud of how sharp he is, how high his IQ is and how much he knows. And that, I say, is the chief of man’s pride and glory. He wears it as a crown upon his head.

But here is an odd thing too, that the Bible has a low opinion of human reason. God gave us our brains, and he’s not angry when we use them. He gave us our intellects, and they have a definite part in our lives. But, the Bible’s view of man’s ability to find his way around out of his own intelligence, is a very low and a dim one. The word brain doesn’t occur, and the word intellect doesn’t occur, and the word mentality or mental doesn’t occur, I think, in our King James. And certainly, the word genius does not. You know, they talk about religious geniuses, that a man they say, well, Wesley was a religious genius. And they use that word genius. Nobody can quite define the word. But it just means a fellow who is a little bit smarter than the average smart man. And there’s nothing like that in the Scriptures at all. It is simply not in the Bible. Reason is scarcely ever found in the Scriptures. And when it is, it’s usually, I mean a reference to reason, it’s usually not used in a good way.

From the time that God looked down on ways of man and saw that the thoughts of his heart and all his imaginations were evil continually down to Paul in the first Corinthian epistle when he took all proud, egotistical reasoners apart and showed that only the Holy Ghost could teach a man real truth. All through the Scriptures, human reason, a particularly unsaved and untouched unsanctified human reason, doesn’t have a good place in the Scriptures. But you say, does not the Bible have a lot to say about the mind? Yes, it has a lot to say about the mind, but it seldom if ever means the brain, or the intellect. It means that the will, the feeling, the desire and the bent. And when it says the carnal mind is enmity against God, it doesn’t mean the carnal brain, though that might be true. That doesn’t mean the carnal intellect, though that also might be true. It means the carnal bent, the drift or the direction of your life.

You read Paul’s epistles and you’ll always find the word “mind”, I say always. Let me modify that. Possibly, he may even use it once or twice in another way that I can’t at the moment recall, but I don’t know where it is. Every time he talks about the minding of the flesh and the mind of the flesh, he always means the bent, the pull, the direction of the flesh, and not the intellect at all.

Now, Jesus Christ, our Lord, makes no attempt at compromising with human beings. And His position is the right one. And there is no room in anybody’s heart for Christ and man’s own reason. It has to yield to Jesus Christ and be sanctified and cleansed and come under the direction of the Lord Jesus Christ, and every thought be brought down and subjected to the will of God, or else it’s contrary to the mind and will of Christ. And the Christian was told this truth, that the most precious knowledge is the knowledge of His will, and the highest wisdom is spiritual wisdom, and the soundest understanding is always spiritual understanding.

Now, the quality of this wisdom for which the man of God prayed that they might have, the quality of this wisdom, isn’t a wisdom or a knowledge that would get him a fur coat or a Cadillac on a quiz program. It isn’t that kind of intellect at all. It isn’t the kind even that would get him in who’s who in America. It is another kind of wisdom, something different. It is wisdom and spiritual understanding. It is a supernatural enduement and opening of sealed eyes, and an opening of deaf ears, and a waking up of hearts that have previously had no feeling in them. It’s an anointing of inner vision and awakening of spiritual instincts and arousing of the powers that lie in the soul. It’s putting up the antenna so as to catch the waves that come from God. It is all that, and it is more. And it embraces the whole moral life. Would you say then Mr. Tozer, how do you harmonize this with the oft-repeated word that the Bible is the sole source book for life and conduct and creed and belief and practice? They are perfectly harmonized my brother, because the illumination of the Holy Spirit never gives you anything that isn’t in the Scriptures or according to the Scriptures. The illumination of the Spirit of God that I’m talking about here, that anointing of the inner vision, helps you to understand the spiritual meaning of the Scriptures, and gives you light on the Scriptures. And it’s that glory that gilds the sacred page which is brighter than the sun.

So, there’s never any contrariety and never Is there any contradiction. The Spirit of God never told anybody to do anything contrary to the Word of God. He only enables a man spiritually to understand the Word of God. That is all. And it embraces the whole moral life. It’s not intellect merely. It is a moral thing. It’s a spiritual thing. And we Christians ought to know that the church fathers knew it. The Quakers knew it. The Friends of God knew it in the Middle Ages. And the Methodist knew it and the Salvation Army knew it and the Moravians knew it. And it’s only been lately that it has died in fundamental circles that the knowledge and wisdom of God, the spiritual understanding, is a spiritual thing that is not of the mind only, but it is profounder than that. Haven’t you seen this happen, Brethren? Haven’t you seen two people converted about, say, the same time, maybe the same night they came to know God. They were converted, truly converted. And you would have to say they were converted, the evidence was there, and obviously they were. They went on and were baptized and they got into the church. And one of them moved along very slowly and blunderingly, and the other one suddenly was imbued with a baptism of liquid light. And the inner light was immediately illuminated. And information, they took it up as rapidly as a young animal drinks its milk. And they seemed to make progress so fast, or rapidly, that they were a delight to the whole church. Their zeal and enthusiasm as well as their warmth and their spiritual aspirations were talked about among all the congregation. One young man maybe, another young man who got converted at the same time, moved, if he moved at all, very slowly along and seemed to be unable quite to make, see the line of demarcation between the world and the kingdom of God. The other man bounced over, way out over, on the side of God and separated from the things of the world so completely.

Why my brethren, I was just talking the other day to a friend in the church here who reminded me of a couple of boys who were converted in this church not too long ago, maybe not more than two years ago. And when they met God, it was such a wonderfully illuminating thing. And their eyes were open so wonderfully that they went straight home and smashed all of their boogie records and burned every bridge they knew about and everything that would draw them back or drag them down. They got rid of it. They threw it off. Nobody told them to do that. Nobody got them aside and instructed them. They didn’t hear it from this platform. They had an illumination.

And I have met them like that, and once in a while, one will come bouncing into the kingdom of God alive and illuminated. And it’s wonderful how they grow in grace from that time right straight along, but the average person doesn’t. They simply don’t. And when they have a feeling of some sort and urge in their heart they want to know God better, they take a course in something or other. They say, well, I’ll take a course in Bible introduction. And after I’ve had Bible introduction, I’ll surely know more about it. Yes, you will know more about Bible introduction. And I’m sure you shouldn’t take a course in Bible introduction. I think you should read constantly. I believe we should. I believe we should read the theologians, that we should read those who’ve written doctrine for us. I recommend such books as what the Bible teaches by Torrey. I recommend those books; they’re great books. And if you have the intellect for it, I recommend the systematic theologians.

But the point is, you can have all that and not know what I’m talking about. The point is that you can know the doctrine and yet not have illumination. For there is a wisdom and a knowledge which is of God. That you might be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding that you might walk worthy of the Lord, unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good work and so on.

Now, that’s the quality of that wisdom. And remember, notice what it leads to. It isn’t that we might become superior saints and wear a halo. It is that we might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, and that we should be fruitful in every good work. For remember, there is no such thing in the Bible known as spirituality detached from morality. Remember that. There is no such thing known in the Scripture as divine illumination detached from divine obedience. Remember that. And remember that every light God gives and every flash of illumination that God gives to the human spirit, He gives it in order that it might eventuate in a worthy walk, a pleasing life and a fruitful work.

God is extremely practical. Go out in nature and gaze around about you and see how very practical and downright God is. God made the heavens and we can look away at the stars that shine at night and feel a poetic lift in our spirits. And we can listen to music and roam through the interstellar spaces in our imagination and imagine that is spirituality. No, my brother, that’s not spirituality, that’s just imagination. Anybody could do that, anybody. An atheist can do that. The illumination of the Spirit is given that we might know the Truth in order that through the Truth we might walk a worthy life and have a worthy walk and lead a pleasing life and a life fruitful in all good works.

Now to secure this, to secure this illumination of God. I don’t know whether, maybe I’d better stay by my script, as they say in the Democratic Convention. But somebody is going to have to come back and say to the world again, or to the church again in the world that we’re going to have to have the gifts of the Spirit back in the church once more. Over the last fifty years, the gifts of the Spirit have been glorified by one small segment of the church, Pentecostal people and trampled upon and trampled underfoot by a larger segment, we fundamentalists.

Now it’s time my brethren, that we evangelicals wake up to the fact there isn’t one line anywhere and the Word of God, not one line, not one word, not one word that teaches that the gifts of the Spirit where for one period in the church or not for the rest of the church. The church of Christ should have the gifts of the Spirit present right down through to this moment. And I believe that one of those gifts is the gift of discernment, the gift of illumination, the gift of the prophetic gift, the gift of seeing, the gift of moral seeing and spiritual insight that our fathers had in such measure and we have in such small measure. I do not believe that the gifts of the Spirit were ever given as rattles for the unsanctified children of God to play with. I do not believe they were ever given as proofs of anything. I believe they were given as weapons, as tools, as glasses to scan the horizon with, as hammers to pound in the nails with. They were given, the Holy Spirit gave them to His church that we might be a spiritual people and a wise people.

And I don’t mind telling you that that gift which I’m praying that the church might have, is that same gift of prophecy. By prophecy I do not mean prediction. I do not have any reason in the world for anybody to want to predict anything for me. Anything that ought to be predicted is in the Bible itself. And I can go and study prophecy and find out anything I want to know about God’s tomorrows. And I don’t want to know anything about my own life. Therefore, I’m not going to any so-called prophet or prophetess or necromancer or clairvoyant person and say, what will be happening to me two years from now? I don’t want to know. I am in the hands of God. One step is enough for me. I do not ask to see the distant scene, only to be in the hands of God, that is enough. And therefore, I do not have anything but an attitude of repugnance toward those who would come about giving prophecies, and come up and say I saw a vision Mr. Tozer that the Lord told me about you. I will rebuke that. I will not listen to it, because I’m in the hands of God and my telephone between me and Gods up. And anytime God wants me to know anything, he can talk to me direct and I don’t need any body, neither virgin nor angel, nor anybody living today to come and say, now God told me this about you. God and I are friends, we’ve been friends since the day I learned to love His son. And God can tell me anything He wants to tell me. And therefore I don’t need any prophets. And I don’t think that kind of prophecy is necessary.

But there is another kind of spirit of prophecy. It is the spirit of insight, of understanding of inward illumination, of “inly” intuition that enables us to know and see and understand and appraise and know where we are. And see where we are and what latitude and longitude and what times we’re living in, and be able to smell out the things that are false and scent out the things that are right and follow them. And that gift of prophecy ought to be on the church of Christ. And the gift of discernment so that we’ll know what’s wrong.

I’ve been preaching now for quite a number of years, quite a number of years. Everybody’s telling me I ought not talk about how old I am. One man says, even worried about me and praying about it. A District Superintendent says he’s bothered. But I know how old I am. My mother told me when I was born. And so I know that I’ve been preaching around quite a while and the number of things that I have seen come up and like a comet, get the attention of the Christian public for a while and bring the wheels of spiritual progress to a halt while we all stood gape-mouthed and watch some great fellow perform. And then he passes into forgotten limbo and then we have to crank the thing up and get started again.

Where are the men of discernment? Where are the prophets in the church? Where are the wise saints who know what is of God and what isn’t? Where are they? But you say, what are you talking about? Oh, well, just in case I’m too general, let me be specific. I remember it wasn’t so very long ago that the British Israelism came along with its, we were, who was it? England was Joseph I think and his two sons, we were divided and all that sort of stuff. Well, I didn’t have to read their literature. All I had to do was to exercise a sense of spiritual smell which the Holy Ghost gave me and I knew they were wrong, but it didn’t know why. So, I went downtown and bought a basket full of their literature and read through it. And then I knew why they were wrong Scripturally. I had known they were wrong before. And I’ve lived through little boy preachers and little girl preachers. And those little girl preachers are now middle aged women with children. And those little boy preachers are now having to get a bigger belt every year to take care of the expansion. And those wonders and prodigies that were, have gone and cease to be. Samuel began when he was a little boy, but he kept right on. Nobody said much about him and as he grew up right down until he was an old tottering man with a beard four feet long. He still went on with God. But a lot of these modern boy and girl wonders, what happened to them and where are they? You don’t even know their address.

Not very long ago, one of them came to me. She’d been a girl wonder when she was a little girl. She knew just how to talk to everybody’s heart. And then, she grew up, she married with two or three children. And I was at a certain convention preaching and lo and behold, she hunted me up. What a disappointment. What an emptiness. What a dissatisfaction. What failure. What blindness. And yet, she had been a prodigy in her day. And I remember years ago, a little boy, just a nice little boy. I like him. You know I love children, and they’re lovely little fellas if we put them where they belong. You know, in the kindergarten and let them play with rubber toys, but to bring them to the pulpit. And I remember years ago that one of them was celebrated as being the boy, who had as a little chap, two or three or four years old, won a swimming prize and had been decorated by then President Woodrow Wilson.

Well, I’ve walked with God and I’ve fellowshipped with prophets. And in the Scriptures and in great books and in prayer, I’ve known a little of the mighty and the great. And like Elijah, I can say, I am Elijah that stands before God. And so, how would you hope ever to get me interested in anybody whose only claim to fame was, that he’d been decorated by a president of the United States. Oh, my brother, how mortal the presidents are, and how human the presidents are, and how small the great men are. And how vulnerable kings are and how mortal queens are.

And when the child of God has walked with his heavenly Father long enough, he gets used to Royal company. And anything less than that is small to him. But anyway, the church runs after that kind of thing. In the pyramids of Egypt, do you remember the pyramids of Egypt, when everybody was preaching about a pyramid? Men whose names nobody could pronounce that built pyramids in Egypt, and in it was embodied all the prophecies and telling the time of the Lord’s return. I knew that was wrong of course. And what I knew twenty-five years ago by a spiritual sense of smell, everybody else found out later by reading up a little that it was wrong.

My brethren, to keep our values right, to keep aimed in the right direction, to not run after a rabbit when God sends you out to chase a deer. Do you hunters know that when you’re training a dog to hunt deer, and one of the great difficulties is to keep them from running after rabbits. In fact, they have the great game and they use dogs to find them. And when they’re first training them, their big problem is to keep them from running after a woodchuck or a striped squirrel or something else. And God’s people need to have illumination and light and a salty, inward sense of seeing in order that they might not run sideways and all down all the little alleys, but go straightaway in the direction that God has sent them.

In the few minutes I have remaining I want to point out to you what it is that keeps us in the dark and prevents us from having this sense of sight. This illumination, which gives eyesight to the blind. Brethren, honesty compels us to say that there isn’t very much of it these days. Honesty compels us to admit it. Among Christians you find so very little of it. What is it that keeps the inner shrines so dimly lighted? What is it that keeps our spiritual IQ so low? What is it that keeps our spiritual feelings so dull? Well, I’ll give you three things that’s wrong with us. Self-seeking is one. That deadly “I,” that deadly “I.” Self-seeking, the man who’s seeking anything for himself can never have eyesight poured on his blind eyes. The man’s very self-seeking drives God from him. And his very desire for honor and praise and recognition blinds him to the Higher Light and prevents him from ever knowing the will of God with spiritual understanding. And the cure is, to renounce self and dedicate our hearts to the honor of God, and dedicate ourselves to the honor of God.

If there’s any one thing more than another that I have to do, it is to go to God day after day and week after week, times without number, and keep rededicating my whole life to the high honor of God and ruling out any possibility of self-seeking. For as soon as we’re seekers after self, we renounce the Light, that lighteth every man that cometh into the world. We renounce that inward illumination of the Holy Ghost and will make it impossible for God to engift us and prepare us for high and eternal service.

And the second thing that causes our inner lives to be dark is selfish possessions. That deadly “mine.” It belongs to me we say. And the cure is a complete renunciation of all ownership. If you have a sense of possessing anything, and there’s any controversy anywhere in your heart that God can’t have it, you’ll never have the illumination. The Spirit of God can never answer this prayer. There can never come to you a knowledge of His will and all spiritual understanding unto all good works and pleasing life. For You have ruined your inner life by desiring to possess something.

Every one of us should be cut off from possessing anything. You say, how about my little baby, that darling little baby of mine. Well, God has honored you by giving you a little baby to rear, to educate, to care for and to love. But He’s never given that to you to say, this is mine, and God can’t have it. And don’t forget that the moment you ever raise a hand and say no to God about your baby, the baby’s a curse and not a blessing. You say, what about my new wife. She’s everything from Sarah on down to Suzanna Wesley and more, and she’s wonderful. I don’t doubt that son. I don’t doubt that at all. You wouldn’t have married any other kind. But just as soon as she becomes yours and there’s any feeling that God can’t have her if he wants her, she’s a hindrance to you. I’ve got to be delivered from everything in every body, completely delivered. You’ll be criticized for that.

A dear man of God who has a wife and a lovely family and such harmonious living in such fellowship I have scarcely known said to me one time, he said, Brother Tozer, I’ll tell you, he said, God is blessing me, God’s blessing me. He said, I’m moving along with God in a wonderful way. He said, now, I wouldn’t want my wife to know this, but he said, you know, I’ve even put her on the altar where God is closer to me than she is. And I’m not holding on to her. God can have her. Well, it’s been about four years ago he’s been living with here and ever since and are raising a happy family. But I don’t know whether wives like to hear that or not, or husbands like to hear it, but don’t be jealous of God young fellow. There is one closer to you than your wife. There is one closer to you madam than your husband. There is one closer to you than your baby or your happy growing child. And if you don’t keep it that way, darkness of mind and dullness and intellect will result.

And you well know that both Paul in 1 Corinthians and the writer to the Hebrews in five and six of Hebrews wrote mournfully and lamented the suspended growth among certain Christians. Why? Self-seeking, self-possession, and unlawful attachment to this world. Christ’s condition of discipleship is, that we renounce everything in this world, even down to our very lives also, and take our cross and follow Him. And if we do not do it, we’ll be where the Christians were in Corinth and where the Hebrew Christians were. Not dead, but certainly not very alive. Not on their way to hell, but certainly not happily on their way to heaven. But in the strange twilight zone of spiritual uncertainty. Up one day and down the next day. Preaching sermons and reading books to justify their upness and their downness, up and down, up and down. I hear it. Even I hear it on the air. Preachers want to harmonize the Bible with their spiritual experience, and their spiritual experience has been up one day and down the next so they harmonize the Scriptures with it. And drag the high level of the Word of God down to their low level or carnality and blindness.

My brethren, it should not be so. If we’re attached to the world in any measure, you’re attached to money. How about your bank account? It’s getting big, isn’t it under the Republicans. You want to vote for Ike because you have a big bank account. If we vote for Ike because we have a big bank account, we’re unworthy to be Americans, or if we vote for anybody else for that reason, we’re unworthy to be called Americans. If you’re attached to your bank account, God can’t take you on. We must lay aside all weights and everything that hinders us and all that holds us down, and strip like a racer and run like a track man with nothing on, but the bare necessity in order that we might free, be free to race down the road.

Well, these are thine enemies, children of God: self-seeking, self-admiration, self-esteem, self-possession and unlawful attachment to the world. These are thine enemies. The old man of God prayed for the Christians and for us that we might be filled with the knowledge of God’s will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding. When we block every effort of God to answer that prayer by the way we live, these are thine enemies, O Christian.

Now we can admit the truth of this and do something about it, or we can tolerate ourselves and go on as we are. Or we can seek comfort instead of help. The Lord deliver us from seeking comfort. Go to the average man’s Bible or women’s Bible and you’ll find all the comforting verses underscored. It’s not good friends. God wrote the book to comfort you provided you were in a position where comfort wouldn’t hurt you. But he also wrote the Book to correct you and rebuke you and chastise you and discipline you if you’re going in the wrong direction. So, let the Word of God have its disciplinary work in your life. Let it hurt you. This idea abroad today that the church is a place where we all sit down and commune with our ancestors and rest and relax and avoid a nervous breakdown. It hasn’t any place in the Scriptures at all. You go to church to find out what’s wrong with you and how you can do something about it. And then, of course, to worship God too. We worship God, but we’re here to hear what’s wrong with us.

This morning, I’ve pointed out our ideal, an illuminated mind and an illuminated heart. Why don’t we have it? Because, self-possession, self-love, self-admiration, self-possession, detachment to the world, all of these things prevent us. And I’m boldly asking you, take today and do something about it. You don’t have to come to an altar here. Take today and do something about it. Don’t go home and flip on the TV and waste the afternoon. Go before God somewhere. If you have to go to your own bedroom, go somewhere and with open Bible, seek from God deliverance from these things that bring scales on your mind and prevent you from enjoying the inward illumination. Will you do it? If you won’t do it, you’ve wasted your time this morning. But if you’ll do it, you may look back whether you’re one of our own friends here, or whether you are strangers from afar. You may look back on this morning as the time in your life when you took a step toward the right and decided to do something about this miserable, retarded growth, this slow growth or no growth at all that’s kept you so many years stunted and frosted and held back. God wants you to be illuminated and filled and enlightened in order that you might live right and be fruitful. And may God grant it to be so.

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“A Life of Victory in the Midst of Trouble”

February 6, 1955

Now, the 25th Psalm is the text for the morning. I do not intend to attempt anything like careful exposition, but simply let our minds play over the psalm. We have read it previously. If I were to pick a text out, maybe it might be the twenty-first. Let integrity and uprightness preserve me, for I wait on Thee.

Now in this psalm, we have a little section of a great spiritual autobiography where the man David is writing himself into this. He is telling us about himself and his relation to God and the world. And we see and hear in this 25th Psalm, a living man engaged in the business of living. We see here a good man living in a bad world. A right man living in a wrong world. And naturally, here it’s not a smooth psalm.

My brethren, nothing is ever smooth if it is a realistic, fair reflection of life. The life of our Lord Jesus Christ was not a smooth life. He had great inward tranquility, for he knew He was in the bosom of the Father. And He knew that not even His incarnation took Him out of the bosom of the Father. For He knew that the Persons of the Godhead are indivisible. You cannot divide the Son from the Father by incarnation or by crucifixion or by death. He knew that He could never be separated from the Father’s heart, though as a man among men He lived his turbulent life, his life surrounded by enemies so that I think it’s fair to say that if you’re living too smooth a life, you may well question whether you’re living in the will of God or not.

David served his generation by the will of God before he fell on sleep. And David was a man after God’s own heart. So, I think it fair to take him for an example. And David did not live a smooth, tranquil life. He had periods of tranquility. He had times when his heart soared away like a lark and sang in heaven’s gate. But he soon found himself down on the earth again, back in the in the turbulent and disturbed world where he had to live.

Now, we do not find here what we find in much modern religion, a man in a classroom learning and analyzing. We have taken on the classroom psychology too much in Christian religion in these days. Classrooms are necessary and this is not intended to be any reflection upon the classroom. It is only to say that the classroom is an abnormal situation. It is something apart from the stream of life, hoping that it will teach those who are in that classroom when they do go back into the stream of life to live better, more wisely. But it is for the moment, not a part of life really. It is the ivory tower of life.

Christianity is never to be understood, the faith of our fathers is never to be thought of from the classroom. It is not someone looking over heavy glasses, telling them the facts of Christianity or using a chart to illustrate. But, the faith of our fathers is the faith of the plain people, the faith of men living in the world.

The faith of our fathers is fitted to the marketplace where men argue and debate and cheat. The man of God won’t cheat, but he’ll likely be cheated. The faith of our fathers is geared to the kitchen and the home where the Christian housewife answers the phone and the doorbell a dozen times every morning and the baby suddenly runs the temperature and the doctor is out of town and she’s in distress and then the doorbell rings again. And then the phone and it’s a wrong number. And that’s her life. She’s got to have something that’ll go down there. The classroom can’t help her there. Nothing abstract and theoretical can do her any good there. The faith of our fathers has to get into the kitchen, into the home, into the nursery, into the basement, and where people are engaged in the downright, tough business of living right in a wrong world. The faith of our father has to get into the cab of the truck as it bowls down the highway, around the curves until the arms ache. And out on the long straight away stretches until the monotony puts us to sleep, and trouble everywhere and angry horns honking from the rear, and blowouts and difficulties. There is no classroom there. There is no theory there. No ivory tower there. Christianity has to get into that cab and behind that wheel and into the heart of that man so that he can do that like a Christian and drive his big truck like a Christian. The faith of our fathers has to get into the machine shop, where the smell of hot oil and dirty gloves and dirty overalls and cursing men and hard to please customers; and it’s got to be there and it’s got to prove itself there and live right there and be right there.

And so, the 25th Psalm is an illustration of all this, a man in the midst of life, a good man living in a bad world, a right man living in a wrong world, God’s man living in the devil’s world. And he has to come through that; and has to live it through and suffer it out and come out all right. And that’s why I like the Bible. It’s a book of a high philosophy and lofty theology and brilliant metaphysics. But, it’s as practical as your shoes you wear around the house or your bedroom slippers right down where you live and get into it and it doesn’t fail you. And you don’t have to know a million things and you don’t have to rise in the scale of culture, nor study from Emily post where to put your spoon. Plain people that don’t know what to do with a spoon.

A man told me one time that he went to a banquet that was so ritzy that it was one o’clock in the morning before it was through, and he found at one o’clock in the morning all he had left was a tablespoon. He’d evidentially used up the wrong one at the wrong place and the snooty waiter wouldn’t take it away, so there he was. He said, at one o’clock and they were through eating and he had just a tablespoon lying by his plate. Well, that would chagrin some people and drive them to suicide. But, the plain fellow who lives in this bad world trying to live right with God isn’t so much worried, because he knows that Christianity meets all situations, social situations, political situations, industrial situations.

So, here was the man David engaged in living, a living man living in a bad world. It was H.G. Wells, you know who said that Buddhism was the best religion, but that it wouldn’t thrive except in a warm climate. Christianity will thrive in any climate at all. Just let Christ get into the heart of a man, and whether he is living in an igloo hut somewhere in the far Arctic, or whether he’s living with but a G-string on somewhere in Africa. If he’s a true sincere man, whether it’s his grass hut or his snow igloo, Christianity will work. It will work in the mountains and it will work on the plains and it will work in the midst of the great city where we never see real sunshine for the smoke and the fumes. The faith of our fathers will work anywhere.

And H.G. Wells didn’t mean to be funny, but it was a humorous thing to say that God Almighty should give the world a religion that will only work in a warm climate. If that was true, and that might be true of Buddhism, then what would we do in cold weather? Our spirituality would rise with the temperature. Every morning, you’d have to go out on the porch and say to your wife, I wonder how spiritual I can be today? And if it is a little too cold, you’d say, well, I’ll be a sinner this day. I can’t live for God today because it’s too cold. Christianity is found everywhere. And it’s found in the hearts of men.

You know, we’ve had some errors in the church, and one of them has been, of course, to make Christianity consist of theological dogma. Now, I’m a theological dogmatist, and I believe in theology. I believe in the faith of our fathers, and I can define it for you and put it down. And I could write a book of discipline if I had been forced to do it, telling what I believe and what people ought to believe. And I believe in doctrine. But what good is it going to do you to know that the Trinity is composed of three persons or that there are three persons in the Trinity is a better way of expressing it if you don’t live pleasing to the Trinity. I borrowed that from an old saint who lived centuries ago. What does it profit thee to be able to discourse learnedly about the Trinity if I live such a life as to be displeasing to the Trinity? What difference does it make that you know that God made the heaven in the earth if you will live an ungodly life. Doctrine doesn’t mean anything until it gets inside you until it seeps by osmosis into the bloodstream of your life. Leaks through the walls of your soul and gets into your bloodstream and gets out into the cells of your spirit and changes you. Any doctrine that doesn’t change a man has never reached that man.

Too often we have a Christianity that consists merely of a lot of creeds held; doctrines that are believed. That’s not Christianity. That is only the raw material of Christianity. Until the fire of the Holy Ghost comes upon that raw material, or changing the figure, that is but the food, that is but the meat of Christianity. But until that meat enters the soul of a man by faith and repentance, it can’t do the man any good. Objective Christianity is not the Christianity of the Bible. The faith of our fathers is objective truths having become subjective reality within the soul by pertinence and faith and prayer.

Old John Ruskin, the famous art critic and philosopher and Christian, who a century ago or so wrote very eloquently about the error of calling this a church service. I still use it because I know what I mean by the word. But he says, watch that we’re not mistaken about it. He said, we meet together and sing a few hymns and listen to moral or spiritual truth being expounded and go home and say we have been to a service. And he says that not necessarily true. For service is more than singing hymns and going home again. Service is living for God and serving your generation and living like a Christian after the church doors are locked and the janitor is asleep. And it is living for Christ between Sunday night and Sunday morning; all week long as well as on Sunday. I think Ruskin was right though I do not follow him in throwing out the word church service as a result. It can be a service.

We can with giving our money to the Lord, we can do a service. We can by expounding the Scriptures, do a service. We can by singing hymns, do a service. But the danger is that it’s possible to render that kind of service, aloof and in a vacuum all together unrelated to the rest of our lives. That’s where the danger lies. And I agree with Ruskin there. So, let’s watch it. If your Christianity, your Christian faith, does not affect every part of your being, you have a reason to wonder whether you have the faith of our fathers really in your heart or not.

Now, look at David. David here was a man in the midst of life. Here he was surrounded by, look at them: verse two to nineteen, enemies; verse nineteen, hatred; verse eighteen, affliction; verse seventeen, troubles; verse eighteen, pain; verse seventeen, distress; verse sixteen, desolation, and perplexities all the way through and sin mentioned three or four times. Now, there was a man, no ivory tower there. No monk sitting on top of a high pole letting somebody else feed him. No hermit hidden away in a cave going barefooted for a walk at sundown when the birds were singing. No impractical dreamer, but a man who lived in the midst of all of these enemies were surrounding him. Verses two to nineteen talk about his enemies.

Now, I might say that a man is known by his friends. I think that’s generally understood. But the opposite is also true, a man is known by his enemies. No man worth his salt but will have enemies. If he does not have enemies, then he’s not doing anything. If he does anything, he’ll have enemies. If he does anything, he will have 100 telling him that he could have done it better if he had done it his way. And then we say what have you done? And the answer is, well, nothing but I’ve been observing. He hasn’t done a thing, but he’s been watching somebody else. You’ll have kibitzers, fault finders, critics and enemies and opposers and ill-wishers no matter what you do, if you do something. The way to have no enemies is to have no convictions, and do nothing at all. The man without a conviction has only one enemy, and that’s God. But, the man of conviction is bound to have enemies. And you will now be known by your enemies.

You should never worry if you’ll get an enemy. But you should be very concerned with what kind of an enemy that is. If I knew that a communist lived down on Longwood Drive two doors from me. Now, I don’t think there are any down, that Republican territory. But, if I knew there was a communist living down there, and he should turn out to be my enemy, I’d thank God to have a communist for my enemy. But, if he’s a good man and full of the Holy Ghost and he’s my enemy, I ought to be distressed about that. If you have the wrong kind of enemies, woe be to you. But if you have the right kind of enemies, blessed art thou for so the prophets fared before thee.

I might digress, as the preachers call it, from my sermon long enough to say to you young people, watch out who your pals are. You may never have done anything wrong. Nobody would ever, could be able to charge you with having done anything wrong. But, if you fall in with, and make pals of young fellows who are borderline delinquents, you’ll be blamed for being a delinquent too and you will have a hard time proving you’re not. If I don’t know who you are, your name is John Doe, Jr. and somebody says, Pastor, do you know young John Doe, Jr., sixteen years old and I say I don’t think I know John Doe. Well, he comes to our church sometimes, attends Sunday school class and goes to the, plays baseball Tuesday nights during the summer. Well, what about John Doe Jr? What kind of fella is he? Well, my friend says, I can’t tell you I don’t want to commit myself, but I’ll tell you who his friends are. And then he names some cigarette sucking, dirty tongue, borderline hoodlums, and says he runs around with them. I’ve got my opinion of John Doe Jr. without ever having anybody telling me anything. Somebody says that’s guilt by association. Sure, it’s guilt by association and the addled-headed egghead whoever said we shouldn’t be able to attribute guilt by association, ought to go somewhere and have his head examined.

Birds of a feather flock together. And a bird that flocks with buzzards is bound to be a buzzard or smell like one. And if I see a necked creature flocking with buzzards and I go along and say stay away from that creature. What has he done? You can’t prove anything on him. You haven’t got a bit of proof he’s done anything wrong? No, I have never seen him do anything wrong, but I know his crowd. So watch it you young people. But you say how can I win them if I don’t go where they are? Did you ever hear of a fellow going to hell to win a man who wouldn’t go to heaven? No. There’s a place to stop. You can win them, but you don’t have to win them by running with them. And if you run with them, you will not win them, they’ll win you. If we had all the young people in this church now that have come to make some kind of Christian testimony, or at least been interested over the last twenty-five years, and then who’ve been lost to us through bad friendships, we couldn’t contain them. They would fill every room in the building. They’re gone. They do fall from churches because they get into wrong friendships. But that’s only a side. That really is not part of the sermon.

This man was surrounded by enemies. And he was surrounded by hatred. Now that’s an ugly thing. I don’t like the word hatred. There it is, verse nineteen, bitter hatred. And always remember sin hates righteousness. Always remember that. And the better you are, the more sin will hate you.

And then here was affliction. Now that’s verse eight and verse eighteen. Now, Job’s experience interprets the word affliction here. In James, we have it. If any man is afflicted, let him pray. That doesn’t mean sick. That means if anybody is in trouble, like Job was. He may be sick, but that’s only a part of his affliction. You can get afflicted without being sick and you can be sick without really being afflicted because affliction means loss or bereavement, or having Job’s comforters comfort you. That was the kind of trouble Job had. He had a sickness too temporarily. But that was affliction. Well, Job had it and here it was. You say, will faith operate? Is the faith of our fathers good at a time when we have enemies, at a time when there’s hatred, at a time when there’s affliction? The answer is yes. Here was a man living in the middle of it and triumphant.

And there’s troubles, verse seventeen. I don’t know all the troubles. And a man that isn’t significant enough in the universe for God to let him have troubles is too insignificant for God to find. If you’re significant, if you signify, if you mean anything in the world, you will have troubles all right. Paul’s experience shows that. Read Second Corinthians and see what a time of it Paul had. Poor old Paul, his brethren and his enemies and the Jews and the Gentiles and everybody was after him.

And then there’s pain, verse eighteen. Do you know what I would like to be able to do? I wish I could stand here and say, believe on Jesus Christ, live as a Christian should, and thou shalt be free from pain. I wish I could do that, but I can’t do that. As He was, so are we in this world. And as my Father has sent Me, so send I you. And in one sense, Jesus is living over again His life in each one of us. And He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with pain and He bore it and He knew it.

Now, you might as well brace yourself for it. You’re going to suffer some pain in your lifetime. And there never has been a place in the human body yet found that was convenient for pain to lodge. Wherever you’re hurt, you wish it was somewhere else. And you say that’s always the most inconvenient place, and I could stand it if it was somewhere else. And then if it got to the other place, you’d want it somewhere else. There is no place where you can bear pain conveniently. Pain is always a rude, uncouth, barbarian, sadistic thing. And it’ll come all right. You can figure on it.

It was Shakespeare that said, no man is a philosopher when he has a toothache. It’s alright to sit back in our ivory tower and philosophize about the heaven and earth and the things that are therein. But, when you get a toothache, you don’t have so much success in your ivory tower. But Christianity is good where there is pain. Oh, the pain of the people of God down the years. Read Foxes “Book of Martyrs.” Read any good biography and see if it’s not true that the people of God have known pain. And our Lord said oh so tenderly to His suffering church, fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer. He didn’t say pray to Me and I’ll deliver you from your suffering. He said fear none of those things which thou can suffer. Always remember, you can suffer. You can. And when the human organism won’t take it anymore, you’ll die. But you can suffer. So, brace yourself and thank God for the privilege of feeling a little bit of the sting and the gall and the bitterness that our Lord felt when He was on earth.

David had it. Verse eighteen talked about pain, verse seventeen talked about distress. Now, distress of course is pain, mental and physical, mainly psychological or mental. And you know how distressing mental pain is. It’s more distressing than physical pain. I think it can be proved that rarely does it happen that a man commits suicide because of physical pain. Almost always it’s because of mental distress.

And then there’s desolation, verse sixteen. Desolation, the grief of loneliness. I saw a picture in the newspaper here I think yesterday of a man being held back by policemen. And I’ll never, I think, for many long months, forget that face. Five of his children were just burned to death in the building. But, it was gone to a point where no living organism could exist a second in that awful furnace. And this man was going to rush in there and try to rescue at least one. And they were holding him, and that face I’ll never forget it, I think. Brother, when the fire was out, and the hashes were being raked and that man sat alone, you know what desolation meant.

Some of you had a husband that has walked out of the house and left you. Poor thing. The worst part about it was when he went. He took part of you along with him. He took the part that lives and vibrates. He took your heart with him. And you scolded yourself for it but you can’t help it. Like the mother whose son has been nothing but a rascal from the time he was ten years old, a scoundrel. Now, he’s in prison. She can’t help it. Her mind doesn’t function. It’s her emotions, her nerves, her heart. She loves that no-good boy until she’s in prison. When they walk lockstep, she’s walking. When the clank of the door goes shut and the great iron key turns, it’s turned on her. And when he wears the prison gray, she wears that prison gray. She can’t help it. Her heart has been so tied up with that no-good boy, and yet, I don’t know why I should use the word no-good. Jesus died for him. And so, Jesus died for him, he is worth praying for and maybe will be saved. But anyway, she loves that boy.

So, some of you have had that happen to you and you’ve been desolate. I’ve had them come to me like that and sit with gray faces and tell me in a voice that was not a normal voice that everything was gone. That the only one that meant anything to me in the world has forsaken me. And I’ve had men come to me and sit embarrassed and twist their gloves in their hands and tell me about the wife that had walked out. Poor guy, if he could do something if there was something there you could clip. If he had a pair of scissors he would clip the umbilical cord and cut himself loose but he can’t. He can’t and he sees the face and hears the voice and remembers the little things? He can’t. And so, we, he has a desolation. Desolation requires loneliness.

Then, there are perplexities and the uncertainties and the confusion and the fear that we’re not pleasing God in all this and then sin. David said here four times; I think that he said about sin and he prayed to God to deliver him from his sin. He said, O God, don’t remember my boyhood, my youth when I was wild and did these things. Remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions. According to thy mercy, remember me O God. For Thy goodness sake. His sin bothered him. David knew whatever an instructed person ought to know. That the only real enemy in the world is your sin. That’s the only real enemy. As long as you can lock the door on sin and will lock it out, you haven’t an enemy that you need to worry about it. Hell or earth, nothing can separate you from the love of God. It’s only sin that’s your enemy. And when sin gives the key to the enemy, in comes the invader and takes over, then it’s too bad for you.

Then there’s distress and heartache and grief and sorrow and loss of communion and loss of fruit and loss of joy. Sin does this. Let’s be sure there’s no sin any place, because sin weakened David and almost destroyed his confidence here in this Psalm and gave to his enemies their only real power. Because I repeat, the only real danger is within. If you keep anything outside, you’re alright. As soon as it gets inside, trouble starts.

And so, David began to destroy the enemy within. The only enemy really that he had, really, sin. So, he prayed and confessed and he admitted and he trusted God and he pleaded and he forced it on God. But, he made God listen. And he didn’t grab at every hope that everything was all right. He insisted on knowing it. He wanted God to deliver him completely. So, David began to hope in God. Verse six, remember O Lord, Thy tender mercies and Thy loving kindnesses.

I read a passage in a version, I forgot what version it was. I have just rearranged my books up here and I have translations that go clear across a bookcase and leak down over the other side, four or five of them and I don’t always remember which translation it was. But one of them said, O God, Thou art loyal to me. And immediately I got on my knees and thanked God He’s loyal. God is loyal to His people. The loyalty of love and the loyalty of wisdom. He’s loyal, and David knew it. And so David trusted God and say, Lord, you’re loyal. Your faithfulness and your tender mercies have been ever of old. Good and upright is the Lord. Verse nine, the meek, He will guide in judgment the meek. He will teach his way. Verse fourteen, the secret of the Lord is within the fearing. And verse fifteen, He shall pluck my feet out of the net. That’s one thing we didn’t remember, a net, a booby trap. They had set booby traps for David. And David said, I can’t see the booby traps. I don’t know where they are. And you know how David escaped them. He escaped them by not looking for them at all. He escaped them by looking to the Lord. And as he looked to the Lord, the Lord plucked his feet out of the net and he didn’t get into any booby traps.

A lot of you, dear people, you’re developing myopia of the soul. You’re always afraid. People are always calling me or writing me or coming to see me and there’s always some little pimple on the body. And they forget all about the cancer in the soul. It’s some little old thing, afraid of some booby trap. Can I do this? May I do that? What do you think I should do about this? Do you think I ought to take in a play? What do you think about the opera Mr. Tozer? What do you think about television? What do you think Mr. Tozer about baseball? Oh my, don’t bother me about such things. Those aren’t the things that matters sir. There’s something bigger than that. If they should pull booby traps through you, the way to escape them is look straight to the Lord Jesus Christ, straight to Him, straight to Him. And as you see Jesus, He will lead you out of the net, and you will escape the net.

So, here we have a man. We have a man living in the middle of life, a living man in a dead world, a good man in a bad world, a right man in a wrong world, a man of God in a world filled with men of flesh. And he was living in the middle of it. Living right in the middle of it, and thanking God in the middle of it, and fruitful and useful in the middle of it, serving his generation by the will of God. So, here was a living man believing and praying. After all, the old song “Trust and Obey” says it. He believed and he prayed. The devil can silence you so you can’t pray anymore. That’s one of the first things he has to do. When an enemy comes into a country, one of the first things he wants to do is to destroy communication. A burglar comes to your home, if he’s a wise burglar, that is, wise in the ways of the devil, he cuts the telephone wires before he comes in. If he can break communication with help, the source of help, then you are an easy victim.

So, prayer is the source of communication between you and help. And if the devil can cut the wires and discourage you so you don’t pray, you’re an easy victim after that. In God’s name, I beseech you, begin to pray. You’ve had a rough time of it. Maybe some of you have and I suppose I don’t even know how rough it’s been with you. You’ve been treated rough this last week. You’ve gone through hard things.

Well, if you’ve come through all right, then I say thank God and I wouldn’t have had it otherwise. But if you’re discouraged and your prayers are cut off, then woe be to you and watch out. You better get your communications established. You better get into God again. You say, I can’t pray. I’m blue and gloomy and I have failed and I can’t pray. Oh, you can say Abba. You can say that much can’t you? If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. And He gives forth the Spirit of His Son saying, Abba Father. And Abba, you know, is the Arabic, and one Arabic word for father and various other languages have it, Abba. And they tell me that Abba is a word you can speak without teeth. You can take your teeth out and still say, Abba. But if it was a difficult thing, you’d have to get your teeth in. But you can say Alba before you have any teeth. A little fellow I see back there now, I can see through the glass. Somebody’s holding a little chap. He can’t talk yet probably, but he can say Abba. And so we can say that. If you feel so little and hopeless and useless that you can’t pray, if you can’t pray like a Baptist deacon, pray like a newborn babe and say Abba. Keep saying that and God will hear your prayer and know what you mean.

I always think of Sidney Smith, that great English writer of several generations ago. He never knew what to do with punctuation–never. He was a brilliant writer, a stylist to perfection, but he never knew how to punctuate. So, he wrote a manuscript and then he wrote one page. And on that page, he put all the punctuation marks that were in the English language, and said, note, sprinkle these around where they’ll do the most good. He didn’t know where they belonged, but he hoped somebody did. And so, I say to you this morning, just tell God, O God, I don’t know how to pray. I don’t know what to say, but hear my heart and sprinkle it around where it’ll do the most good. Make it fit where it ought to be. I’m too dumb. I don’t even know how to pray God. Ah, God loves people like that. The meek He will guide in judgment. The meek He will teach His way. And if you will simply and meekly say, Abba Father, for Jesus sake, pretty soon you will get help from above, and then, the communications are established and everything’s all right again.

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Messages

Tozer Talks

“Danger of Propaganda”

“Message #6 in Dangers in the Way and How to Avoid Them

May 22, 1955

The fifth chapter of Ephesians, see then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time because the days are evil. And I have been pointing out that we as Christians must walk circumspectly, that is, watching and looking around lest we fall into the booby traps placed by our enemy the devil. And today, I want to talk about only one and recommend that we very carefully watch lest we fall into the snare of propagandism. I’ll explain what I mean as I go along.

Everybody knows what propaganda is, or as our British brethren say, propaganda. It became a familiar word during the First World War and was intensified by the Second World War, and is still a very popular English American word almost used to the point where it is a cliche, worn out.

And now there is an enemy in the universe that believes in slavery. He is opposed to God who believes in freedom. And there are two kinds of slavery. There is the slavery of the body, which seeks to control the conduct by physical force. And that slavery, once of course, we had in the United States much to our everlasting historical shame. That there was a day when men, otherwise good men, thought nothing of owning another man. Owning him as you own your car. He could sell him or trade him, own part interested in him, owning partly and be paying on him the same as you do your automobile or your house. That I say was a blot on our history that we never can quite get freed from. We helped to free ourselves from the disgrace of it by abolishing it. And this is not to speak against those who were themselves partakers in this chain. Because they had been brainwashed and properly conditioned psychologically to believe in it. Even the church has helped out there.

But there is the slavery of the body I say, where the control of the conduct is achieved by physical force and where obedience is rendered unwillingly. And the slaves know they’re rendering obedience, and are seeking and longing to be free from the yoke of slavery.

Now, with that we have nothing to do this morning. It’s only an illustration and for the sake of being as broad as we can and making our talks as educational as possible, I mention it. But there is another kind of slavery and that is the slavery of the mind. And the slavery of the mind is achieved, that control is achieved by means of ideas supplied to the mind. And obedience is rendered willingly. And the victims are unaware that they are rendering obedience and are quite satisfied and have no desire to be free from.

Now, there are the two kinds of slavery when you put chains on a man’s ankles and wrists, and he is a slave and knows it. And you’ll look deep into his eyes and you’ll find there the deep solemn revolt of the free human spirit against the bonds of slavery. And there is the slavery that is achieved by conditioning the mind so those who are seeking to make us slaves gets us, make us slaves and get their will over us by feeding us ideas which we adopt and learn to believe in and think are all right, and ignorantly adopt and follow not knowing that we are being conditioned by keen, sharp, unscrupulous minds who are making us slaves. We don’t know that and we render obedience rather willingly and are unaware that we are being controlled.

Now, the greatest war today is the war to win the control of our minds. The greatest war that ever was fought is not in the history books anywhere. It was not fought during the Second World War and nor in Korea nor in the First World War nor the revolutionary nor the Civil nor any of the wars that bloody the pages of history. That those wars were wars of body against body, gun against guns, sword against sword, battalion against battalion. But the greatest war in the world is the war, the battle for our minds. And that is being waged today by every modern, effective technique. It is being waged by the press. And if you could suddenly standoff objectively and look at your own mind and see how much the press has fed into your mind and how you have come to be more or less a creature of the press, you’d be shocked, I’m sure, and you’d spend days in fasting and prayer to get free from it. And of course, another technique being used is that of the school system. Without a school system of course, we would be barbarians and heathen. They must, it must exist; we must have our schools. And then there is the radio which is a new technique for the dissemination of ideas. And it is also being used to help control our mind. And of course, there is the drama which has always been in its various forms, an effective technique for the controlling of the minds of the people.

And then we have developed over the last years, perhaps over the last fifty or sixty years in America, one of the most potent techniques ever devised by the mind of man for the control of the mass thinking of the people, and that is advertising. The advertisers are the best educators in the world. And they’re busy educating us by every means that they know, expensive and carefully thought out means. They are busy controlling our thinking.

Now, the object of course, is to win everyone to think the same. And to think the same on certain subjects, certain great topics on life and love and money and pleasure and marriage and values and religion and the future and God and our relation to God and all the rest. We are being influenced very strongly by these means which I have mentioned, to think the same about life.

Everybody’s a philosopher, only some get the reputation for being philosophers, but everybody’s a philosopher, everybody. The gangster is a philosopher. And the kid who carries a switch knife and attacks another innocent kid on the street and kills him or cuts him up, he’s a philosopher too. If you press him and push him into a corner, he’ll come through with reasons why he did what he did. Reason is philosophy. Whatever you have reason for doing and do, that makes you a philosopher. So, everybody’s a philosopher.

And we have certain philosophies of life or a certain philosophy of life. And we look out upon life and see it from a certain viewpoint, that is philosophy, and that makes us philosophers. And whether we write great big books and call ourselves by that name or whether we’re simple people who would smile at a thought we’re philosophers. We are all philosophers nevertheless.

Now who’s going to control our philosophy? Who is going to determine our outlook upon life? Who’s going to decide? You say, I do that myself. Oh, don’t make me laugh brother. You don’t do that yourself at all. You only think you do. And I only think I do if I indeed didn’t know that I didn’t.

And then we have to have our viewpoint on love. What is this love business anyhow? All you have to do is switch a button and they will be telling you what it is and what it isn’t. And we get our ideas about human love; love between the sexes and love in the society. We get that from the radio. We get it from the newspaper and from the press generally, and from advertising.

And then, when comes such thing as money, we think of money what the press tells us to think of money, what the radio suggests we think of money, what we have learned at school about money. And then when it comes to pleasures, our attitude toward life, toward pleasures, say toward just almost anything, innocent and harmful, either one or both, we learn from the world. They control our mind. And they get us to thinking about it the way they want us to think. And they do it I say, by means of the press, school, radio, drama, and advertising and perhaps a few other minor techniques. And about religion and values and the future and God, those are of course the most important. What I think about money is important, but what I think about God is still more important. And there has not been a time probably since the Great Awakening under Jonathan Edwards, when there was more religion in the country than there is now, when more people talk about religion. We are now being bombarded by persons who are trying to persuade us to think a certain way about religion and God and human values and the future life and our relation to God in the future life.

Now, we’re going to be what they make us, unless of course we stage a revolt, which I trust I may stir you up to today. Now of course, the strategy to achieve these objectives is to control our conduct by disseminating ideas, and to gain acceptance for the counsel of the ungodly. The Bible talks about the counsel of the ungodly and pronounces a blessing upon the man who walketh not in it. We always must keep in mind this is a fallen world. And whatever originates in the world is bound to be bad and godless. That is, whatever originates in organized society. What originates in nature, the grass, the birds, the flowers, the simple appetites of life, they’re not bad. But whatever originates in fallen minds and fallen hearts and gets acceptance by society is godless. And the word of God was given to us to counteract the godless counsel of ungodly men, and to form our minds, not by all these techniques, but by God Himself.

The God who made us gave us a Bible and sent the Holy Ghost to interpret it to us in order that He may control our minds. And He who made our minds might mold them again. And he who made them once might remake them from their fall. And He who is the source and object of all are blessing and love, that that God wants to control our minds. He has no hesitation in saying that we’re to have the mind of Christ. Somebody is going to control my mind. Who is it? Is it going to be the advertiser? Is it going to be the public school? Is it going to be drama or the press or the radio? Or is it going to be God? You’ve got to make up your mind on that my friend, whether you want to or not, somebody is going to control your mind. Now, who is it?

And the Bible has given us that our minds might be directed. Wherewith, says the Holy Ghost, shall young men cleanse his way, by taking heed according to Thy word. How shall my ignorance become wisdom–by the Word of God? How shall my false notions become right notions–by being corrected by the Word of God? How shall my darkness become light–by this Book which is a light into my pathway. And it is from this Book, and from the Book interpreted by the Spirit that I gain the heavenly and final and right ideas about love and marriage and life and money and pleasures and values and God, and my relation to God and the future life and my status in that life is from the Word of God that I get.

So, the warfare is on between the counsel of the ungodly and the counsel of God. And now, which is it shall control our minds? My brother, you are a pawn and a puppet caught in between. And if you’re not awakened to it, you will learn the ways of Babylon and Egypt and pick up their notions and think the way they think, and value what they value, and love what they love, and ignore what they ignore. Be not foolish, but wise know what the will of the Lord is. Let him that is asleep, wake out of his sleep and God will give him life says the Holy Ghost.

Now, the Christian receives another mind and it is the mind of the redeemed. It’s a redeemed mind, a recreated mind, and it is committed to Christ. You say, is not that another kind of slavery? That is the slavery of love. That is the slavery of worship. That is the slavery of extreme joy. That is the slavery of the highest ecstasy. Paul, who lived in a slave state where slaves were common sights on the street, Paul said, I am a slave of Jesus Christ. Wherever the word servant occurs in the New Testament, you can write slave in. Well, that’s what he meant. He had no thought of a paid servant who comes at nine and leaves at five and get their pay and go. That’s unknown in the Bible I think. The word is slave there. And Paul told the people openly all the time, that he was a slave to God Almighty and a slave to Jesus Christ, but there is the freedom.

Let me ask the young mother, who with shining eyes looks upon her little baby. Let me ask that young mother, are you as free as you used to be? And she smiles and says no, I have to stay in a lot now. I used to be able to go everywhere with my husband, but I can’t now. He goes and I have to stay home. And you say to her, are you sorry? And she smiles and says, sorry? Would you like to have it all undone? Would like to get rid of the little monkey? Don’t you want him around? And she laughs and says, oh, don’t talk like that. Why, the slavery to this little fellow is nothing. I love it.

Love never feels slavery. And love never knows bondage. And that obedience to Jesus Christ which Paul calls slavery, is not the slavery that imposes itself from the outside by laws, nor imposes itself by the introduction of alien ideas into the mind. It is the happy joy of bondage of freedom and love. And the holiest and freest creature in heaven above is the angel that is the nearest the throne of God. And those creatures that bow and spread their wings, and run swift as light to do the will of God, and have no mind but God’s, no will but His, they’re the freest creatures in all the universe. And those that try to be free from the will of God, succeed only in becoming victims to the propagandists. Those who propagandize us into slavery and make us think the same as they think and feel the same as they feel about things and they’re slaves.

And it is the psychology of the servile slave, the vehicle and utensil of the master that cannot call his mind his own. The bird that flies in the air is free, and yet it is bound by the laws of aerodynamics. The stars that move in around their ancient and unmeasured orbits are free because they’re doing the will of God. And wherever we do the will of God, we’re free. And wherever we break from the will of God, we’re slaves. And it says in Romans that he that sins, is a slave of sin. That he that does the will of God, it elsewhere tells us, is the free happy servant of God.

So, let’s beware of the propagandists. And let’s be aware propagandism. For the world is trying to capture, and it’s a startling and shocking thing. The world is trying to capture the mind of the saints, and they are being captured. And we’re being made victims of the world’s propaganda. And the sad thing is, we don’t know it.

If there was a law passed in the halls in Washington that said, you can’t go to church at 70th and Union, and if you do, you shall be fined. And if you shall repeat the offense, you shall be jailed. We would know where we stood. And every last one of you Protestant Americans would stand up and put your chin high, and say if God helps me, I’ll never come under that decree. I go to church when I please. And I will pray to God as I want to. My fathers founded this nation dedicated to the proposition that every man should worship God according to the dictates of his own heart and I will not stay away from church because Congress said I should and the President signed it. That would never happen while we have our present set up in Washington. I’m using an illustration merely, but I say, if they ever got there, we know where we stood. And we draw the line sharp and we’d say, who’s on the Lord side? Let him come over. And there would be a tread of men’s feet, an army that would shake the earth, of free Protestant American men who would say, I will not bow to the state.

But they’re not doing it that way. It’s sharper and wiser. The devil is too much of a strategist to treat us like that. So, he’s busy brainwashing us, and conditioning us little by little, and feeding his ideas into the church, the counsel of the ungodly. And as the ideas of the ungodly enter the church, the ideas of God go out. And as the counsel of the ungodly come in, the counsel of the God goes out. And my crusade in the day in which I live, is to wake the church and rouse it to the fact that it’s being brainwashed and propagandized into accepting that which it would never accept if it was a law in Washington. We won’t bow a supple knee to any man who says you worship the way I tell you. But little by little, we’re getting their ideas; willing and unaware and satisfied, we’re being brainwashed.

Do you remember old Lot back in in Sodom? He had his whole family there. He went down for economic reasons because the grass was green. He rapidly rose to be, they say, the mayor of the city. He sat in the gate and they say the mayor was the one who sat in the gate. And his family was quite well known in the city. And they were slowly propagandized, brainwashed. Old Lot resisted it. He had enough of contact with Abraham. He had sat where Abraham sat. He’d walked with Abraham. He’d heard Abraham pray. And after having heard Abraham the Hebrew offer prayers to God, you never could quite accept the brainwashing of Sodom.

So, Lot vexed his righteous soul. Thank God for those words, vexed and righteous, in the same man’s heart. He vexed his righteous soul. He was a part of it, but he hated it. When Sodom put on her big shows, he heard the voice of Abraham raised in prayer. In memory, he heard it, and it still rang in his ears and it poisoned all of the pleasures of Sodom. But he wasn’t big enough to get up and walk out. For economic reasons he stayed in Sodom and hated it. And remembered the prayers of his old uncle and loved them and was caught in the middle. But his family wasn’t so strong and they weren’t so lucky. They got poisoned, his sons in law. They were propagandized into becoming Sodomites. And when God Almighty raised his mighty atom bomb to hurl on Sodom and sent fire out from His fingertips to destroy that city. Lot fled, fled with these two daughters. His wife never quite made it. She’d been brainwashed. She never quite made it. And a Lot escaped with his two daughters; that even his two daughters had been poisoned. For the sake of common social decency, I’ll not go into it, but you know what happened?

Well, then there was Israel. Israel went down into Egypt and for 400 years, they were subjected to the propaganda of the Egyptians. They kept themselves aloof, but they learned the ways of Egypt and came back out idolaters. And they were idolaters until Moses brought down the law from the Mount and corrected their wrong thinking and put away their idolatry and laid the law down for them and gave them the Word of God. And then slowly they got among the nations and the nations got among them over in Palestine after they had entered across the sea or river and had gone into the Holy Land as we call it. And there they learned the ways of the heathen, the Jebusites and the Hittites and the rest of them that should have been purged out of the land, were left in the land, and Israel learned the evil ways of the nations. You know the result was the Babylonian captivity, the captivity that finally destroyed idolatry. Israel had never worshipped idols since she spent 70 years in captivity in Babylon.

I wonder what it’s going to take to wake the church up. I wonder what kind of Babylon and beside what waters we’re going to sit bitterly and hang our harps and refuse to sing. I wonder what Ezra or Nehemiah will be sent to lead us back to the land again, purged of our idolatry and our brains that were washed, washed again, by this time by the blood of the Lamb. And the way the world is using the church in our day, to achieve its ends, I think of the fate of the scarlet woman.

I don’t preach on prophecy much, though I believe in it. And I believe on the coming of Jesus to the world again. But here was the scarlet woman and the world used her. And they exalted her to sit upon many waters. And they used her to achieve their ends. And then when they had done what they wanted to do, they turned on her says the Scripture and they hated her and made her desolate and naked, then they burned her with fire. And as long as religious people can be the pawns and cat paws of the propagandists, and can be made useful, they’ll put up with us. But if ever we cross them in anything, or oppose them or dare to stand up as free men in God and say that isn’t the way I see it, we’ll be branded as another sect and despised and given the silent treatment. The Press gives space to those it can use and the silent treatment to those it cannot.

Now, the only way to help the world, my brethren, is to stay free from its brainwashing. The man who has adopted its ways can never help it. It is by standing aloof from it that we can help it. The man who is aloof is the only man that can do any good. In the day when Hitler was taking over Germany there was only one man with any prominence who dared stand and say God is mein fuhrer. And you know who he was. He was not perfect. I’m not here giving a blanket approval of everything Niemoller stands for, or Niemoller. I’m only saying that there was a man who dared to stand and say, God is my leader, whatever you think. And said the public press, He stood in such spiritual dignity that he turned the tables on the court that was trying him. And the man of God with nothing but his Bible became the judge. And the judge that sentenced him became the defendant. They turned around and put him under what they called protective custody, the liars. They put him in prison, and there in his prison, so nervous, so sick, that he couldn’t even take communion because the passion and joy of it affected him so nervously, He said, Don’t bring it anymore. I can’t take it. He isn’t perfect, and he’s not an Alliance man by any means, but he was God’s man to stand in an awful hour.

The sycophants and brainwashed camp followers of Hitler could do no good in that hour. And the prophets hiding in caves could do no good. But the man who stood before a court knowing that he might easily be shot against the wall, he did some good. And he gave heart to the heartless and hope to the hopeless and strength to the weak and wobbly. And what little there is left of godliness back yonder in Germany may have easily be attributed to the man who was free and would not come under the yoke.

They say that you can only help it by staying above it. And if need be, go on contrary to it. Funny, isn’t it? That you can only help a sinner by going contrary to him. You wives will find that out. Many a wife with a testimony who was a real Christian, she listened to her husband’s blandishments. And he said to her, Honey, I am not against your religion at all. But I just want to think that if I go to your church, you ought to go with me. And so little by little she went and her testimony went to the dogs. Pretty soon instead of her standing out, clean and bold and opposed to all of his doings, she went with him and pretty soon lost her testimony. And now they’re back where they were. And she has nothing but a sick memory inside of her heart, and he’s had his way.

Now, sir, we help people not by going with him. You gamble with me Honey tonight and I’ll go to church with you tomorrow morning. So, until three o’clock they play their games. And the next morning, tired and weary with a hangover, they get up and go to church. She’s sick inside, but too weak to say anything about it. That’s happened so often.

And the young fellow sees that pretty girl. Ah, they can be so attractive. They can knock the young fellow clear off his feet. And he’s a Christian, a Christian. He’s given his heart to Jesus. But he likes the look of that girl. And so, they go out together. Pretty soon she’s brainwashed him. And he says, well, maybe they are a bit radical down at my church, maybe they are. And when she gets him doing things she does and going to places she goes and looking at life as she looks at it and adopting her philosophy of values and all, he’s lost his testimony. And they married, bring up a family without God and without the church. And all he has is a sick memory. And when he hears a hymn, he feels like a dog. And when he hears a church bell, he feels like a dog. He’s been propagandized, caught in the net of the world.

Do you know there’s only one way to help the world, and that is, stand clean of it. There’s only one way to bless mankind and that is, oppose mankind. Wherever he’s wrong and wherever he’s different from God, oppose him. It means that brother must be divided from brother and husband from wife and children from parents. Jesus said, if anybody come to me and hate not father and mother and home and life and everything, he’s not worthy to be my disciple. That’s why we don’t have crowds rushing in here and filling the balcony and hanging out the window. Nobody, not many people want to hear this. But my days of talking to people may not be as many as some younger fellows, so I’m not going to let you down. I’m telling you, you must walk circumspectly and beware of the propagandists and look out. Don’t sell yourself. And don’t allow yourself slowly to be reasoned into wrong by the counsel of the ungodly. Better to be radical on the right side than weak on the wrong side. Better go too far than not far enough. If there’s a atom bomb or hydrogen bomb going to break over the loop, if I can go down five stories that may be four too many, but it’s better to go down five than your risk dying, by only going down one. And incidentally, you can go down five stories. You know it’s underground down, yeah; I’ve been down. I went into a building. I think it is the building where Mr. Sandrock used to have a high position. And I went down and down and down. I think it was five stories below the ground if I remember. They took me down, four at least. And if when the atom bomb breaks, I get scared and run down four stories, somebody will laugh and say that’s three more than you needed to go. I say all right, better be safe by going too far, than being imperiled but not going far enough.

So, we’d better say to the world. I’m sorry. The world says, oh, you’re narrow. You say, maybe I am narrow. But the way is narrow and the path to heaven isn’t as broad as a sixteen-lane highway. And thou I am too narrow; I’m walking with my God. Maybe our pilgrim fathers were too narrow. I rather think that were. I think they went too far when they told the children that they could not laugh on the Sabbath. I think so. I think they went too far when they said a man could not kiss his wife on the Sabbath. I think they went too far. I think they went too far when they said you could not walk down the lane in your garden, pick up an onion and eat it, or any fruit. They couldn’t stand their eyes to look at the sun and said that’s harvesting and it can’t be done. I think they went too far. But better to have a strong testimony in the right direction, even if it goes too far, then to have all this weak compromise that’s cursing us today.

I was over in last year about a year ago now. No, it wasn’t, just about, yes, about a year ago, I was over in Grantham, Pennsylvania. At Messiah college, they asked me to come over and speak three times. I told you about it then. You’ve forgotten it now. They wanted me to speak to the publication department, to the Sunday school department. And what else was it? I forgotten, but there were three departments. I knew nothing about any, so I spoke on all three. And I said to them, now, I’m not going to speak to you as a writer nor editor, and I’m not going to speak to you as a Sunday school man. I’m not going to speak to you as whatever this other thing was. I said, I’m going to speak to you as a preacher preaching to your hearts. They said, we’d love it. That’s just what we want. So, I tied it in and somehow got away with it.

Well, there were 900 people there at that council. And they were packed into that building listening while I talked to them. And they were the plain people. You know what they, are the plain people? The women dress in plain garments. They keep a covering on their head all the time, white or black or both. I stopped a woman and I said to her, she’s nice looking, middle-aged woman. And I said, excuse me, but I’d like to know why do some of you wear white on top of your head and some black. She took the black off and showed me the white. She said, well, the white’s always got to be there, but the black you put on for when you go out. Very kind, very friendly and joy, jolly about everything. And I said to one of their leaders. The men wear uniforms, and they’re plain people. Some of the older fellows have long, silky beards. No ties. I had a tie on there as loud as ever. And I was dressed just the way we preachers dress. And I didn’t apologize nor even refer to it. I just figured they’d invited me there; that I wasn’t going to wear old for them.

So, I got to talk to one of their leaders, the brother of the president of their society, or their bishop or whatever he calls himself. They’ve got a lot of bishops. And he said you know Mr. Tozer, we’re wondering whether perhaps we’re not extreme. We’re not going too far and our separation from the world and being plain people.  We’re wondering whether we’re not carrying it too far. And there’s a strong movement toward conformity with the world.

And I said to him, Mr. Hostetter, I’d like to give you some advice as a Gentile; as a man from the outside your little room and I’d like to give you some advice. Don’t change. Even though you’re extreme. And even though what you’ve done is wrong. Even though wearing beards and head coverings is in Scripture. At least stand as a testimony in this terrible hour to something godly, even if it’s a hat on your hand or the beard on your chin. I said stand. Don’t let them make another little worldly denomination out of you. If you got any conviction, stand by your convictions. Wash the feet of the saints with water. They wash feet. He invited me down. But I was tired and didn’t go. I went to bed and let them wash feet. But if you want to wash feet, and if you want to dress plain, and if they want to do these simple, old fashioned plain things in God’s name, let them do it. I said stick by your guns and don’t surrender, even though you’re extreme, and even though it doesn’t have much value, be a testimony to something in this terrible hour. And that was my advice. I don’t know whether it’ll do any good or not. That’s what I told them.

So, let’s stand out even if it we’re wrong. I mean even if it’s extreme. Let’s stand out. Let’s be known as Christians separated unto God.  And if the world laughs, and the other churches laugh and say what’s the matter with you Alliance people. Are you a holy roller? Say no. I’m not as holy as I want to be. I’m too stiff to roll. I can’t do much good rolling. So, I’m not a holy roller. I’m just a believer in the Word of God. And if I go too far, you will forgive me. But I’d rather go too far than not far enough. Amen. The only slavery I recommend is the sweet slavery of His yoke which is easy and his burden is light. The yoke of Jesus is a love yoke. The yoke that binds us to the essence and center and Son of all that’s desirable and loving and wonderful and good. Put His yoke upon you and the yoke of the world will drop away. Amen, and amen. All right.