A Living Sacrifice - Watchman Nee
A Living Sacrifice - Watchman Nee
A Living Sacrifice - Watchman Nee
Lesson Series—Volume 1
A Living Sacrifice
WATCHMAN NEE
New York
Copyright ©1972
New York
(ISBN 0-935008-08-X)
Available from the Publishers at:
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
CONTENTS
1. BAPTISM
3. SELLING ALL 35
4. CONSECRATION 49
6. PRAYER 77
7. EARLY RISING 91
BASIC LESSONS
ON
These messages on practical Christian living have now been translated from the
Chinese language and will be published in a series of six books, bearing the
various titles of. (1) A Living Sacrifice; (2) The Good Confession; (3) Assembling
Together; (4) Not I, But Christ; (5) Do All to the Glory of God; and (6) Love One
Another.
of the apostle Paul. May our hearts be so exercised by God’s Word as to give the
Holy Spirit opportunity to perfect the new creation.
All quotations of the Scriptures, unless otherwise indicated, are from the
American Standard Version of the Bible (1901).
BAPTISM
Realizing the comprehensiveness of baptism in the
its aspects which, we are convinced, every new believer must know. These two
aspects are: (1) What can
meaning of baptism? Before the believer is baptized, he should look ahead and
ask: Now that I am going into the water, what will baptism do for me? This is
viewing baptism in advance. But after baptism, the believer needs to cast a
backward look and ask the second question: What is the meaning of this which I
have undergone? The first is foresight, an understanding before baptism; the
second is hindsight, an ascertaining following baptism.
Two Sets of Scriptures On Baptism
Set 1:
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that disbelieveth shall be
condemned.
Mk. 16:16
And Peter said unto them, Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ unto the remission of your sins; and ye shall receive the gift
of the Holy Spirit.
Acts 2:38
And now why tarriest thou? arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins,
calling on his name.
Acts 22:16
That aforetime were disobedient, when the longsuffering of God waited in the
days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls,
were saved through water: which also after a true likeness doth now save you,
even baptism, not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the interrogation 6
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I Pet. 3:20-21
Set 2:
Or are ye ignorant that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized
into his death? We were buried therefore with him through baptism into death:
that like as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so
we also might walk in newness of life.
Rom. 6:3-4
Having been buried with him in baptism, wherein ye were also raised with him
through faith in the working of God, who raised him from the dead.
Col. 2:12
The first set of Scriptures above is concerned with what baptism will do to the
one baptized, while the second set explains the meaning of baptism. The one
deals with what the believer ought to know on this side of the water, that is, in
advance of baptism; the other treats of what he should know on the farther side
of the water, after baptism. Let us look at these respectively.
“He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that disbelieveth shall
be condemned.”
Mk. 16:16
1. SHALL BE SAVED.
apprehensive over this verse. When they see it, they change it in their mind to
read “He that believeth and is saved shall be baptized.” The Lord, however, has
not so said. In order to escape the error of the Roman Catholic Church,
Protestants unwittingly alter God’s Word BAPTISM
and thus fall into another error. The Lord speaks clearly that “he that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved.” No one is authorized to change it to “he that
believeth and is saved shall be baptized.”
Now let us be clear as to the meaning of the word “salvation” in the Bible. What
is the objective of salvation? This may not be easily understood by new believers
because they lack an accurate knowledge of what salvation is. According to the
Bible, salvation is related to the world, not to hell. The opposite of eternal life is
perdition, while the opposite of salvation is the world. We are to be saved out of
the world. As long as we belong to the world, we are in the state of perdition.
People of the world today need not do anything to cause them to perish. No one
is required to kill in order to perish; nor by not killing will any be spared from
perdition. The whole world is perishing, but God is pulling out some from
among the perishing. So far as the whole world is concerned, it is already
damned; but so far as individuals are concerned, this one and that one are being
saved. It is not separating a flock of one hundred into fifty sheep and fifty goats;
rather, it is netting some fish out of a sea of fish. All those that are caught in the
net are saved while those that remain in the sea are yet lost.
Therefore, in answering the question of whether one is saved or lost, the issue
does not rest on one’s personal conduct; it is instead settled by the person’s
whereabouts. If he is in the boat, he is saved; if he is still in the sea, he is lost. It
makes no difference if one is good or bad, a gentleman or a villain, with or
without conscience. As long as he is in the world, he is lost. If he has not come
out, has not left that place which is under judgment, he is a condemned sinner.
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“For as through the one man’s disobedience (Adam’s) the many were made
sinners” (Rom. 5:19). It is not necessary for a person to
sin in order to be qualified as a sinner. Because of one man’s sin, all have been
constituted sinners. As long as the person is in Adam, that is, in the world, he
stands opposite to God, and is therefore an enemy of God. His position is wrong,
for it is a lost position. This, then, is the story of the unsaved.
Let us notice the four cardinal facts concerning the world as shown in the Bible:
(a) The world is condemned or judged before God, (b) the world lies in the evil
one, (c) the world crucified the Lord Jesus, and (d) the world is an enemy to
God. Please note that the world not only sins, but crucified the Lord Jesus as
well. It is therefore God’s enemy. These are the four cardinal facts of the world
BAPTISM
as God sees it. All who are in the world, irrespective of their personal conduct,
are already judged and thus in perdition.
What is wrong with people in this world is far more than personal unrighteous
acts of behavior. Their very position is wrong before God. How can a person
forsake the world if he is still keenly aware of its loveliness? But one day he is
made to see the wrong position of the world before God. However lovely the
world may be, it has to be forsaken. So salvation deals with deliverance from an
improper relationship with and position in the world.
The Jewish people once cried out, “His blood be on us, and on our
children” (Matt. 27:25). Although I am not directly responsible for the slaying of
the Lord Jesus, my forefathers did murder Him. Even though I am not personally
engaged in the act, yet I belong to that brotherhood which has slain the Lord.
The brotherhood I am with is God’s enemy and it is condemned. Whether I
myself am right or wrong is another question. What lies before me is this: I need
God to enlighten me that I may see that the brotherhood to which I belong is
wrong. The world I am in is wrong in that it has killed the Lord Jesus and is
therefore constituted God’s enemy. It is already judged by God. I need to be
released from such a relationship; I need to be delivered from that position.
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There is not the slightest doubt that whosoever believes in the Lord Jesus has
eternal life. We have preached this glad news for many years. As soon as one
believes in the Lord Jesus, whoever he may be, he receives eternal life and is
thereby forever favored by God. But let us remember: believing without being
baptized is not yet salvation. Indeed, you have believed; indeed, you have eternal
life; but you are not yet reckoned as a saved person in the eyes of the world. As
long as you are not baptized, you will not be recognized as saved. Why? Because
no one knows your difference from the rest of the world. You must rise up and
be baptized, declaring the termination of your relationship with the world; then
and only then are you saved.
What is baptism? It is your emancipation from the world. It frees you from the
brotherhood to which you once belonged. The world knew that you were one
with it, but the moment you are baptized, it immediately becomes aware of the
fact that you are finished with it.
The friendship which you had maintained so many years has now come to an
end. You were buried in the tomb, you terminated your course in the world.
Before baptism, you knew you had eternal life; after baptism, you know you are
saved. Everybody recognizes that you are the Lord’s, for you belong to Him.
“He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved.” Why? Because having
believed and been baptized, it is now an open fact where one stands. Were there
no faith, there would not be that inward fact which alone makes things real. But
with that inward reality, baptism puts one outside of the world and terminates the
former relationship with the world. Baptism, therefore, is separation.
NO BAPTISM, NO TESTIMONY
11
who believes must be baptized, for as long as he is not baptized, he has not come
out of the world in outward testimony.
(a) Judaism persecutes the baptized. Among the Jews, a person may be a secret
Christian without being persecuted. The greatest difficulty with many hundreds
and thousands of Jews is not in believing the Lord Jesus but rather in being
baptized. Once the person is baptized he is liable to be cast out and disowned.
(b) Hinduism ostracizes the baptized. In India, no one will lay hands on you if
you remain unbaptized. But as soon as you are baptized, you will be ostracized.
It is as if the world permits you to have eternal life but stands against anyone
being baptized.
(c) Islamism murders the baptized. The reaction of Islamism is more severe. It is
rare to find a living Mohammedan who has turned Christian, for the Moslems
kill those that do. One of the most successful workers among the
Mohammedans, Dr. Zwemer, once declared that his work would never be big
since the results of his labor all ended in death; no one lived on. Among the
Mohammedans, those who believe must immediately be sent away or else within
two or three days after baptism they will be murdered.
Baptism is a public announcement that declares, “I have come out of the world.”
Never take the word “salvation” purely in the personal sense. According to the
Bible, it is more a matter of coming out of the world than of escaping hell.
“And Peter said unto them, Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ unto the remission of your sins”
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(Acts 2:38). Does the word of the apostle sound strange in our ears?
Again, many Protestants seem to have difficulty with this verse so plainly
spoken by the apostle. In what way can baptism lead to the forgiveness of sins?
Is it not strange that the apostle does not lay stress on “believing” in his
message?
Why is it that Peter speaks only of baptism? It is because all of his hearers were
participants in the killing of the Lord Jesus. Fifty days ago they had cried out:
“Away with this man!” (Luke 23:18) They
had been in the crowd shouting their rejection. Now, though, some of them
desired to be separated from the crowd. How? By being baptized. Through
baptism they would come out of the world and sever their relationship with that
brotherhood. As soon as I step into the water to be baptized, my sins are
remitted, that is, I come out of the brotherhood to which I once belonged. This is
why Peter on Pentecost tells them to be baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus
that their sins may be remitted. This single act of baptism causes them to come
out of the world.
Do you now see that you who originally were of the world and therefore were
enemies of the Lord will be saved if you come out of it? You need to confess
before God and man that you have come out BAPTISM
13
and are today no longer associated with the world. This is the greatest teaching
of Pentecost. Let our minds be molded by God’s record instead of by any system
of Protestant theology.
“Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on his name” (Acts
22:16).
Paul is universally accepted as the foremost teacher and prophet and apostle in
Christianity. What if there were some flaw in his experience as well as in his
teaching? He is told not to tarry but to arise and be baptized. Why? To wash
away his sins. The Roman Catholic Church errs here in changing this verse into
a personal experience before God. They fail to see that this Scripture deals with
the question of the world. Consequently they baptize dying people in order to
wash away their sins. They do not recognize that baptism is related to the world
instead of to God. But Protestants equally err in attempting to hide the verse.
Being formerly a person of the world, Paul, now that he has both believed and
seen the Lord Jesus, should arise and be baptized. Thus baptized, his sins are
washed away, for he has severed his relationship with the world. If one becomes
a Christian secretly without being baptized, the world will still consider him one
of its own. The believer may say he is saved, but the world will not accept his
statement. Not until he is baptized does he compel the world to see his salvation.
Who would be so foolish as to go into the water unless there were a good reason
for it? Yes, as soon as a Christian is baptized he is freed from the world. Hence
this water is linked to the world.
The world will still reckon a person one of its own if he does not give an
outward expression of his inward faith. For example, in 14 A
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But some believers suggest that in order to avoid confusion there should not be
too many spectators in a baptismal service. Well then, does this mean that John
the Baptist has yet something to learn at their feet, for without doubt the scene at
the Jordan River was quite disorganized! No, let the world witness what we are
doing!
21 “. . . in the days of Noah . . . wherein few, that is, eight souls, were saved
through water.” This gives a slightly different angle to salvation. The Lord states
that “he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved”; Peter declares on the Day
of Pentecost, “Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus
Christ unto the remission of your sins; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy
Spirit”; Paul is told to “arise and be baptized, and wash away (his) sins, calling
on his (Christ’s) name”; but Peter here shows us how to be saved through (“dia”
in the original) water.
Whatever cannot pass through water is not saved but is drowned.
At the time of Noah all were baptized, but only eight souls came safely out of
the water. Except for the eight, all were washed down and failed to come up. In
other words, to them the water became the water of death. But to us, this water is
the water of salvation. They BAPTISM
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were immersed by the water and sank to the bottom, but we emerged from it. Do
you not notice that there is something positive in Peter’s word? It is quite true
that when the flood came, all mankind was drowned. There were nevertheless
eight persons in the ark who emerged from the water. The water could not retain
them. These eight were saved while the remainder all perished. Today the whole
world lies under the wrath of God. Yet if I am baptized, I have passed through
God’s wrath and have come out from the condemned world. This is the meaning
of baptism.
Baptism is immersion on the one side and emergence on the other side. It speaks
of passing through the water and of coming out of it.
Let us emphasize the side of emergence. All went into the water, but only eight
persons came out. Today we too are saved by baptism.
How is this? Because we have entered into the water and have then emerged
from it. No person who has not yet believed in the Lord Jesus should be
baptized, for he will not be able to emerge from the water. But we believers can
testify to the world that we have found the way out.
From this first set of four Scripture passages, we now ought to be clear as to
what baptism can do for us. As we are baptized, we are delivered from the
world. The new believer should not let many years pass before he is liberated
from the world. The first thing he should do is be baptized. He must understand
what the state of the world is before God. What is it to be saved? It is to be
dissociated from one’s former state. It is to have one’s relationship with the
world cleanly dissolved. Henceforth the believer is on the other side of the
world. The newly converted needs to be shown this way.
Soon after one has believed in the Lord, he should be shown that he is one who
stands outside the world. His baptism is a definite expression of his being
delivered from the world. Hereafter he abides 16 A
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in the ark and therefore has gone over to the other side. Many things he cannot
do, not only for the sake of his having believed in the Lord Jesus but also
because of his having been baptized. He has crossed over a bridge to the other
side. This makes baptism most meaningful.
Now that the Christian is baptized, he needs to look back and assess the real
meaning of baptism. “Or are ye ignorant that all we who were baptized into
Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?”
(Rom. 6:3). “Having been buried with him in baptism, wherein ye were also
raised with him through faith in the working of God, who raised him from the
dead” (Col. 2:12). This is a looking backward,
not forward. Remember that the words in Mark 16, Acts 2, Acts 22,
and 1 Peter 3 were words spoken before baptism, while the words in
Romans 6 and Colossians 2 were spoken after baptism. After baptism, we are
notified by God that in our baptism we were actually baptized into the Lord’s
death and were buried with Him, and so also we were raised with Him in
resurrection.
BAPTISM
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1. SO GREAT A GOSPEL
Perhaps one time when you sensed the heaviness of your sins, you heard of the
death of the Lord Jesus. Such news was truly the gospel to you. Or, perhaps at a
time when you were conscious of how wicked you are and, tried your best to
free yourself from the dominion of sin and yet couldn’t—perhaps at that time
you learned that you were already dead. That indeed was the gospel to you.
Praise be to God, for such is the gospel of Jesus Christ. As the death of the Lord
is a great gospel, so our death in Christ is also a great gospel. It is a joyous thing
to know of the Lord’s death; it is equally joyous to know of one’s own death in
the Lord. What is your first thought upon hearing of the news of death? Like
Joseph of Arimathea, you think of burial, for burial is the first human reaction to
death. The gospel proclaims today that you are dead in Christ. The first thing to
do thereafter is to prepare for burial.
Therefore, beloved, when you step into the water of baptism or when you look
back to your baptism after the lapse of many years, you need to remember that
you are one already dead. You ask people to bury you because you believe you
are dead. You would no doubt vigorously object if anyone should want to bury
you before your death. Even if you were too weak to voice your objection, you
would certainly resist being buried before you had breathed your last breath.
Death is therefore the prerequisite of burial.
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New believers should be instructed that at the time of the crucifixion of the Lord
Jesus they too were crucified. It is on this basis that they request to be buried in
water. But just as the Lord Jesus was raised from among the dead, they too shall
be raised through the working of the same power of resurrection within them.
In coming out of the water, they become resurrected ones; they are no longer
their former selves.
Having believed that they were dead, they asked to be buried. Now having
emerged from the water, they thus shall walk in newness of life. They are now
on the resurrection side.
2. WE ARE IN CHRIST
Once there was a heading in a newspaper which read: “One Person, Three
Lives.” The story was this: after a pregnant woman had been murdered, the
medical authorities subsequently discovered that there were twins in her womb.
Hence, the peculiar headline!
May we draw your attention to the fact that in the case of our Lord, it is one
Person but countless lives. This is actually the meaning of the scriptural phrase,
“in Christ.” Outwardly the murderer killed only the mother, but since twins were
in the mother’s womb, they too died when the mother died. Likewise, this
happens to those who are in Christ. When Christ died, we too died.
God that we are in Christ, and the fact is we are in Christ. Since one died, we all
died. Were we ignorant of the meaning of being in Christ, we could never
understand what co-death with Him is. The twins could die, together with the
mother, because they were in the mother’s womb. Spiritual truth is even more
real than physical fact.
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We have already died in Christ. Let us believe this fact. In being immersed in
and emerging from the water, we declare that we are on the other side of the
tomb. This is resurrection. The reckoning in
Romans 6 is to reckon to our being alive to God in Christ Jesus as well as to our
being dead to sin in Christ Jesus. Though in ourselves we may not feel any
difference, yet this glorious experience is in Christ.
We sincerely hope that all new believers will be brought into this exercise. In
realizing they are dead, they allow themselves to be buried in water. By seeing
they are resurrected, they come out of the water to serve God.
them?
They only deal with what we should do hereafter. The same is true in the letters
to the Thessalonians. They too recall the past without specifying how to
conclude it, for the emphasis again is on the future, as if the past were no longer
a problem.
However, there is no doubt that the past needs to be properly concluded. Many
revivalists preach relentlessly on the conclusion of the past by new believers.
Can it be that they overstress this matter?
In studying the word of God, it seems the apostles and even John the Baptist
paid little attention to it.
When the multitudes asked the question, “What then must we do?” John the
Baptist, answering, said to them, “He that hath two 22 A
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coats, let him impart to him that hath none; and he that hath food, let him do
likewise.” You see, he referred not to the past but to the hereafter. And there also
came publicans asking, “Teacher, what must we do?” He said to them, “Extort
no more than that which is appointed you.” And soldiers also asked him, saying
“And we, what must we do?” And he said to them, “Extort from no man by
violence, neither accuse any one wrongfully; and be content with your wages”
(See Lk. 3:10-14). All these show us that even John, who preached repentance,
did not stress the past but rather emphasized the future.
Why? Because the past is all under the precious blood. A slight deviation in this
matter would corrupt the gospel, pervert the teaching of repentance and even
spoil the way of restitution. Hence, we must carefully, before God, solve this
problem. It is true that there are certain things from the past which require an
ending, but there are special reasons for these. We should be very clear as to our
standing on this matter.
“Or know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be
not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate,
nor abusers of themselves with men, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards,
nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God. And such were
some of you: but ye were washed, but ye were sanctified, but ye were justified in
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the Spirit of our God” (1 Cor.
6:9-11). Though Paul mentioned what the Corinthians were like and what they
had done, yet he made no suggestion as how to solve those things. His emphasis
on their being washed and sanctified and justified in the name of the Lord Jesus
and in the Spirit of God surely CONCLUDING
THE
PAST
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was not directed toward the concluding of the past. Our Savior has already dealt
with our past; hence, the point to stress today is on life from now on. One who is
saved is washed, sanctified and justified.
“And you did he make alive, when ye were dead through your trespasses and
sins, wherein ye once walked according to the course of this world, according to
the prince of the powers of the air, of the spirit that now worketh in the sons of
disobedience; among whom we also all once lived in the lusts of our flesh, doing
the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath,
even as the rest:—but God, being rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he
loved us, even when we were dead through our trespasses, made us alive
together with Christ” (Eph. 2:1-5). Nothing is taught here as
to how we may best conclude all those things of the flesh, for the one all-
inclusive conclusion is that our Lord, by the great love and rich mercy of God,
has completely solved our past.
“This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye no longer walk as the
Gentiles also walk, in the vanity of their mind, being darkened in their
understanding, alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in
them, because of the hardening of their heart; who being past feeling gave
themselves up to lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness. . . that
ye put away, as concerning your former manner of life, the old man, that waxeth
corrupt after the lusts of deceit; and that ye be renewed in the spirit of your
mind, and put on the new man, that after God hath been created in righteousness
and holiness of truth” (Eph. 4:17-24). These
deals with the future. However, he only says to put away falsehood hereafter
without telling how to deal with the past lies. “Speak ye truth each one with his
neighbor . . . Be ye angry, and sin not: let not 24 A
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the sun go down upon your wrath: neither give place to the devil”
(vv.25b-27). Nothing is said of the past but only of the future. “Let him that stole
steal no more” (v.28a). Again the emphasis is on the hereafter; he does not deal
with the problem of how to return what was stolen. “But rather let him labor,
working with his hands the thing that is good . . . Let no corrupt speech proceed
out of your mouth, but such as is good for edifying as the need may be, that it
may give grace to them that hear. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God . . . Let
all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and railing, be put away from
you, with all malice” (vv.28b-31). All these
instructions follow the same tenor of touching only on one’s life from now on.
“But fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, let it not even be named
among you, as becometh saints; nor filthiness, nor foolish talking, or jesting,
which are not befitting: but rather giving
of thanks” (Eph. 5:3-4). Still following the same principle, these words are
related to the believer’s conduct in the days to come, rather than to the
concluding of the past during the time of unbelief.
From the epistles, we may discover a marvelous truth—what God stresses is the
future of the believer. He is not concerned with the past life nor does He labor
over what we should do about the past.
Due to some mistaken concepts of the gospel, dealing with the past is sometimes
stressed to such an excess that it puts people into bondage. We are not suggesting
that the past needs no dealing, for there are a few things which do require such
dealing. However, we have to maintain that this is not foundational. God tells us
that all our past sins are under the blood. We are completely forgiven because the
Lord Jesus has died for us. We are saved through Christ our Substitute, not on
the ground of our dealing with the past. No one is saved by his past good
conduct, nor is anyone saved because of repentance for his past evil. We are
saved through the redemption CONCLUDING
THE
PAST
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accomplished by the Lord Jesus on the cross. This alone is the foundation on
which we firmly stand.
What, then, should we do about the past? After searching the New Testament
carefully, we find a few places where this matter of concluding the past is
mentioned. But all these cases are examples, none of them is a teaching. Our
Lord has thus left us a few examples for our guidance in solving the past.
to idols are not as simple as many think. Remember, we are the temple of the
Holy Spirit. What agreement has the temple of God with idols? Even the apostle
John, in writing to the believers, exhorts, “My little children, guard yourselves
from idols” (I John
5:21).
We must understand the way Scripture views idolatry. God forbids the making of
any graven image or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above or in the
earth beneath or in the water; He also prohibits the entertaining of any thought
that these images are alive. As soon as such a thought is cherished, these images
become idols. The images in themselves are nothing, but if they are reckoned as
alive, they turn diabolic. Hence the worship of these images is strictly forbidden;
no heart is allowed to turn towards them. One of the ten commandments bans the
making of images (see Deut. 5:8).
serve their gods?” (Deut. 12:30b). Do not inquire after other gods through
curiosity. Do not ask how the nations serve their gods. God forbids us to make
such investigations for this will only lead to following the ways of the nations.
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application is clear: Christians are not to visit heathen temples except for special
reasons, such as spending the night in the mountains where no other provision
can be found.∗ They are not supposed to visit these temples for recreational
purposes. It is not fitting for them to get too close to idols. “Guard yourselves
from idols” means do not get too close to them.
“Nor take their names (other gods) upon my lips” (Ps. 16:4). Even
in the pulpit we should be careful not to mention the names of other gods unless
it is absolutely necessary for illustration. We should also put an end to all
superstitions, not even entertaining any fear of fate.
Too many believers still trust luck and pay attention to their fortunes as governed
by their facial or palm configurations. Such things are prohibited. Whatever has
anything at all to do with idolatry must be completely forfeited, once and for all,
before God.
Starting from the very first day of his life of faith in Christ, a believer must be
separated from idols and things pertaining to idolatry. He must not any more
mention the names of idols, nor consult with fortunetellers. He should keep
himself away from heathen temples, from entertaining any thought of
worshipping images. He should not inquire into how other religions worship.
The past must be totally concluded. Any idolatrous objects he may have should
be smashed, not sold; they should be destroyed. This is very serious, for God is
extremely jealous of idols.
If believers today are not wholly separated from idols, how can they escape the
greatest idol of the future, even the image of anti-Christ? Not only that which is
carved or molded should not be worshipped; likewise nothing living may be
worshipped. The day is coming when the man of sin shall have a living image.
No image can
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We must not serve in the flesh; we ought to serve in the spirit, for God is seeking
for those who serve Him in spirit and not in flesh.
God is a Spirit; He is not an image. Knowing this will deliver many believers
from falling into the Roman Catholic Church, whose influence will greatly
increase at the coming of the anti-Christ.
Hence, the first thing in concluding the past is to reject all former idols. We must
turn from idols to wait for the Son of God at His second coming. We should not
keep any image of the Lord Jesus; none is His true likeness and therefore is
worthless. In the Vatican Museum there are over two thousand different images
of the Lord Jesus. These are all the products of artists’ imaginations. Many artists
roam the world paying people to pose for them. Let us tell you, this is
blasphemy. God is a jealous God, and He will not tolerate such a thing. All
superstitions must be rejected; even every tinge of idolatry should be thoroughly
cleared away.
“And not a few of them that practised magical arts brought their books together
and burned them in the sight of all: and they counted the price of them, and
found it fifty thousand pieces of silver” (Acts
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could have been used to aid the poor. The Lord, however, was pleased to have
the books burned.
Images are one, books on magic are another. The principle is clear: all images
must be rejected and all doubtful things must be dealt with. We have the
scriptural example that things that have a definite connection with sin, such as
gambling instruments or obscene books, must be burned.
How about things which are unbecoming to the saints? In an unbeliever’s home,
it would be quite natural to find things connected with sin and things not
befitting the saint. Thus, after one has believed in the Lord, he should go home
and look over his belongings. Things connected with sin should be destroyed,
not sold.
Things unbefitting the saint may be altered where possible, as with clothing, or
may be sold.
A new believer needs to learn this lesson well at the outset, so that he will not be
able to forget it throughout his life. He should be made to realize that to be a
Christian is a very real thing. It involves much more than merely going to church
and listening to sermons.
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“And Zacchaeus stood, and said unto the Lord, Behold, Lord, the half of my
goods I give to the poor; and if I have wrongfully exacted aught of any man, I
restore fourfold” (Lk. 19:8). Zacchaeus sets us a
good example. Strangely there is no teaching on this subject but each believer
acts as he is moved by the Holy Spirit. Hence a little more here and a little less
there, each doing as he is led by the Holy Spirit.
If this were something merely of doctrine or teaching, then all would be done
uniformly.
The power of the Lord was so strong upon Zacchaeus that he was willing to
restore fourfold whatever he had wrongfully exacted from any man. Actually we
would consider a twofold compensation as quite sufficient. The principle in
Leviticus is to “add the fifth part
dollars; then the reimbursement would be a thousand two hundred dollars. But
when one is moved by the Holy Spirit, he must follow that moving, whether it be
fourfold or even tenfold. Therefore, let us remember that the Bible does not give
us any teaching on this matter; all that is given is simply the principle, the
application of which is according to the leading of the Holy Spirit.
If a new believer has in the past extorted or cheated anybody or has stolen or
taken possession of anything unrighteously, we believe he should deal with these
things as the Lord works in him.
Though this will not affect his being forgiven by God, it will have a definite
bearing on his testimony.
For example: If I have stolen from a certain person a thousand dollars before I
am saved, I cannot possibly preach the gospel to him if I have not cleared up that
fraud. I may try to preach to him, but his mind most likely will only be occupied
with that thousand dollars.
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before that particular person. I cannot excuse myself from repaying him by
saying, “Am I not forgiven by God?” This matter has much to do with my
testimony.
Please remember: Zacchaeus returned fourfold for the sake of his testimony. At a
time when people were all murmuring saying, “He (Jesus) is gone into lodge
with a man that is a sinner,” when they complained how much this man had
extorted and wrongfully exacted of many, Zacchaeus stood and said, “. . . if I
have wrongfully exacted aught of any man, I restore fourfold.” This fourfold
indemnity was not a condition for becoming a son of Abraham nor was it a
requirement for receiving the salvation of God. But it was nonetheless the result
of being a son of Abraham and the result of having salvation come to his house.
His fourfold restoration sealed the mouths of his critics, for it was much more
than he had defrauded. Due to this restoration of conduct, he had a testimony
before men. This, then, is the ground for testimony.
I know a brother in the Lord who, before he was saved, was unrighteous in
money matters and also sinful in certain conduct. He had many schoolmates,
most of whom belonged to the upper middle class. After he was saved, he was
quite zealous in trying to win his schoolmates to Christ, but he failed terribly.
Though he earnestly preached the gospel to them, they could not believe him and
wondered about his past fraud and misdemeanor. They had not forgotten his
past, for he had never restored as Zacchaeus had done.
His past sins were forgiven before God, but they remained a problem to men.
Had he confessed his fault and paid back his debt, his testimony could have been
received.
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ordinary repentance which simply involves a change of conduct. For example: if,
as a worldling I often lost my temper in the past, it would be enough for me to
show my repentance by not repeating it.
But as a Christian, in addition to the change in conduct, I must also confess that
losing my temper was wrong. I must not only control my temper before God but
also I must confess to men my former fault of losing my temper. Thus shall this
matter be concluded.
If one used to steal, he is clear now before God if he stops stealing. Yet this does
not clear him before men. Even if for three consecutive years he steals nothing,
men will still consider him as a thief. So, for the sake of testimony, not only must
he stop stealing, but also he must confess to men his past fault. He is able to do
this because he has been saved by grace.
A COMPLICATED PROBLEM
Here is a complicated problem: Suppose I have stolen ten thousand dollars, but
now do not have even a thousand dollars with me. How then shall I solve this
problem? In principle, I must confess candidly my fraud and concede that I am
presently unable to repay.
In the special situation of there having been killing involved, what should be
done in order to conclude the past? The Bible records two such incidents, one in
which the person is directly involved with the killing, the other in which he is
indirectly involved. The first incident concerns the robber on the cross. The word
“robber” in the Greek does not mean an ordinary robber but one who murders
people, not a common thief but one who kills for money. But after this robber
believed in the Lord, his sins were forgiven, for there is no sin which cannot be
cleansed by the precious blood. The Lord said to him, 32 A
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(Lk. 23:43). This robber did not deal with his past nor did he have the
opportunity to do so. The Scripture mentions no more of his past, as if letting
bygones be bygones. The second incident concerns Paul who was indirectly
involved in a killing. He did not personally kill anybody, yet he was an
accomplice in the murder of Stephen as he watched over the cloaks of those who
stoned Stephen to death.
Scripture, though, is just as silent on the dealing of the past in this case as in the
former case.
Some believers, however, may not have peace in their conscience due to the
working of the Holy Spirit within them. This is different from ordinary
accusation. If they can express their regrets to the afflicted families, surely this is
not something to be forbidden.
When a person becomes saved, he undoubtedly has many worldly affairs in his
hands that are still unfinished. These may easily hamper his following the Lord.
What is the scriptural way of concluding these things? When someone in the
New Testament went to the Lord and said, “Lord, suffer me first to go and bury
my father,” the Lord Jesus answered him saying, “Follow me; and leave the dead
to bury their own dead” (Matt. 8:21-22). So, in matters which are concerned with
earthly responsibilities, the word of the Lord is: follow Me and let the dead bury
the dead.
Here is an unbelieving father who is yet alive. The thought of the disciple is to
go home and wait till his father is dead and buried before he comes to follow the
Lord. But the Lord counteracts with CONCLUDING
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the principle of letting the dead bury the dead. The first, “the dead,”
refers to the people of this world who are spiritually dead. The second, “the
dead,” refers to the physically dead. The Lord beckons him to follow and leave
the burial to the worldlings. This is in no way to suggest to new believers that
they should not perform filial and also funereal duties to their parents; rather, it
is a principle on which to lay hold. Let the people of this world continue on with
all the unfinished business. If we must finish these affairs ourselves, we may not
have time to be Christians at all.
There is always the possibility the father will not die. Hence we must let the
dead bury the dead. This does not mean that we will not take care of things; it
simply denotes that we will not allow such things to hinder us. Who can be a
Christian if he must first take care of the thousand and one affairs of the family
and of making a livelihood? Let us not wait until all these earthly affairs are
taken care of before coming to Christ. If we do, we will never follow the Lord.
Who would ever have the chance to believe the Lord if he had to finish all of his
business first? Therefore, do not let these things of the dead bind us. To us, these
things can be left unfinished. They can just be left behind as we start to follow
the Lord.
From what we can find in the Word of God, these four items discussed above are
the main things of the past which need to be concluded. A new believer should
learn how to deal with each.
A Question
A question is raised: what if the person who has been wronged is not aware of it?
Should such sin be confessed to him too?
The answer is: is there any physical indebtedness involved? If there is, it must be
confessed. The best way to do this, though, is together with the church. For
example: if I have caused you to incur a loss of a thousand dollars, I should be
willing to confess this and 34 A
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reimburse you. But I must do it in the way that will be most profitable to you. A
new believer tends to go to extremes and thus may spoil things. It is best to bring
the matter to the church and let the more experienced brethren help decide. This
is because the new believer may easily either come under excessive accusation
of his conscience or he may desist from dealing with anything due to the
difficulties involved. What is done in revival meetings can never be compared
with what is done in the church. In the former case the new believer has to strike
out alone; in the latter case he has the benefit of the fellowship of the church.
SELLING ALL
And a certain ruler asked him, saying, Good Teacher, what shall I do to inherit
eternal life? And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? none is good,
save one, even God. Thou knowest the commandments, Do not commit adultery,
Do not kill, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Honor thy father and
mother. And he said, All these things have I observed from my youth up. And
when Jesus heard it, he said unto him, One thing thou lackest yet: sell all that
thou hast, and distribute unto the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven:
and come, follow me. But when he heard these things, he became exceeding
sorrowful; for he was very rich. And Jesus seeing him said, How hardly shall
they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God! For it is easier for a camel
to enter in through a needle’s eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom
of God. And they that heard it said, Then who can be saved? But he said, The
things which are impossible with men are possible with God. And Peter said, Lo,
we have left our own, and followed thee. And he said unto them, Verily I say unto
you, There is no man that hath left house, or wife, or brethren, or parents, or
children, for the kingdom of God’s sake, who shall not receive manifold more in
this time, and in the world to come eternal life.
Luke 18:18-30
And he entered and was passing through Jericho. And behold, a man called by
name Zacchaeus; and he was a chief publican, and he was rich. And he sought
to see Jesus who he was; and could not for the crowd, because he was little of
stature. And he ran on before, and climbed up into a sycomore tree to see him:
for he was to pass that way. And when Jesus came to the place, he looked up,
and said unto him, Zacchaeus, make haste, and come down; for to-day I must
abide at thy house. And he made haste, and came down, and received him
joyfully. And when they saw it, they all murmured, saying, He is gone in to lodge
with a man that is a sinner. And Zacchaeus stood, and said unto the Lord,
Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have wrongfully
exacted aught of any man, I restore fourfold.
And Jesus said unto him, To-day is salvation come to this house, 36 A
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forasmuch as he also is a son of Abraham. For the Son of man came to seek and
to save that which was lost.
Luke 19:1-10
And all that believed were together, and had all things common; and they sold
their possessions and goods, and parted them to all, according as any man had
need.
Acts 2:44-45
And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and soul: and not one
of them said that aught of the things which he possessed was his own; but they
had all things common. And with great power gave the apostles their witness of
the resurrection of the Lord Jesus: and great grace was upon them all. For
neither was there among them any that lacked: for as many as were possessors
of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold,
and laid them at the apostles’ feet: and distribution was made unto each,
according as any one had need.
Acts 4:32-35
Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the earth, where moth and rust
consume, and where thieves break through and steal: but lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth consume, and where
thieves do not break through nor steal: for where thy treasure is, there will thy
heart be also. The lamp of the body is the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy
whole body shall be full of light. But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be
full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is the
darkness! No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and
love the other; or else he will hold to one, and despise the other.
Matt. 6:19-24
The Prerequisite
To help young believers walk in this path of selling all, the church herself needs
to be living in such a state. It would be most difficult for young ones to be told to
walk one way and yet to be shown SELLING
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another way. If the church is not a consecrated church, she has no right to speak
of consecration. If she is not separated from the world, she is not entitled to
mention baptism or separation. If the brethren do not sell all and follow the Lord,
what good is it to instruct young believers to sell all? God’s children need to live
in the way wherewith they wish to help others. This does not rule out the
possibility that some of God’s specially chosen souls may yet walk in this way
even though the church does not take such a position, but it does mean it will be
impossible for the most to go along. Should most of the brethren be wholly
abandoned to God, it will be easier for newcomers to do likewise. But if we do
not give all, how can we expect beginners to lay their all on the altar? For this
path of selling all to be carried through, the local assembly itself must be strong
in this respect.
Let us start with the example of the young ruler in Luke 18. He
was a man of good conduct, not a bad person before God. He had kept all the
commandments and had shown due respect to the Lord Jesus by calling Him a
good teacher. And the Lord Jesus considered him quite precious, for to meet
such a person was rare. Looking upon him, Jesus loved him.
However, the Lord set down one requirement. If anyone desires to serve Him, he
must be perfect. Notice what the Lord said: “If thou
wouldst be perfect. . . . One thing thou lackest yet” (Matt. 19:21; Lk.
18:22). In other words, the Lord wants those who follow Him to follow Him
perfectly, not lacking in anything. People cannot follow God if they have solved
ninety and nine of their problems but have yet one problem unsolved. To follow
God demands the whole being.
Indeed, this young ruler had kept the commandments from his youth up. He
habitually feared God. Yet he lacked one thing. He 38 A
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needed to sell all his property and distribute the proceeds to the poor; then the
way would be clear for him to come and follow the Lord.
1. TO FOLLOW THE LORD MEANS TO SELL ALL
Have you seen that no one can possibly follow the Lord if he does not sell all
that he has? This exacting demand must be clearly understood. According to the
record of the Bible, when the young man heard the saying, he went away
sorrowful, for he was one who had great possessions. Having come so near to
the Lord and having seen so clearly too, he yet kept his sorrow even as he
determined to keep his wealth. “For the love of money . . . have pierced
themselves through with many sorrows” (I Tim. 6:10). Men may hoard wealth
but they cannot hoard happiness. As they accumulate wealth, they also
accumulate trouble. In gathering wealth, they gather sorrows and problems. Here
was a young man who kept his wealth but was unable to follow the Lord. If
wealth is what you want, then you need not think of following the Lord. To keep
wealth is also to keep your sorrow, for wealth and sorrow always go together.
He who gives up his wealth is a happy man, whereas he who is reluctant to part
with it is a sad person. This statement is always true.
Those who are greedy of material things dwell in sorrows. May the newly saved
Christian seek happiness by laying aside all and following the Lord.
Having watched the young ruler depart sorrowfully, the Lord added a comment:
“How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God!” The
question at first was: “What shall I do to inherit eternal life?” Now it is related to
the matter of entering into the kingdom of God. In connection with this, Peter
then asks who can be saved? To be saved, to have eternal life, and to enter into
the kingdom of God are all three put together. If you wish to have eternal life,
you must forsake all that you have or else you will be hindered.
Remember, a rich man (that is, one who trusts in riches) has no way SELLING
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to enter into the kingdom of God. Indeed, the Lord would save such a one if he
asked for it. But being saved, he would resign all. This does not mean that he
was saved by forsaking his wealth. It simply affirms that once saved he will
naturally abandon all.
As it is absolutely impossible for a camel to enter through a needle’s eye, so is it
equally impossible for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God. We
Christians are all like camels, big or small camels, but nevertheless camels. Thus
when Peter heard those words, he was frightened and therefore remonstrated,
“Then who can be saved?” Peter after all was a Bible teacher. He combined the
statement our Lord said to the young ruler with His latter comment and
concluded that the rich cannot enter into the kingdom of God and that only those
who have sold all can have eternal life. Peter did not feel easy with this teaching.
If eternal life is to be obtained by works and not by faith, if the rich must sell all
before he can enter into the kingdom of God, who then can be saved? Who is
able to sell first and then obtain eternal life? Who is able to make himself poor
before he is saved?
The Lord Jesus answered with one sentence, and in this one sentence is the crux
of the whole problem. Let us too hold onto this word: “The things which are
impossible with men are possible with God.” It is quite clear that such a thing as
abandoning all to enter into the kingdom of God is unheard of in this world. The
Lord acknowledges this as humanly impossible. What was wrong with the young
ruler was not his inability to sell all, but rather his sorrowful departure. God
knows it is impossible for men to sell and distribute all to the poor. But when the
young man sadly left, he seemed to conclude that this was also impossible with
God. Of course it is wrong for me not to forsake my all, but does not the Lord
know all about it? Therefore the Lord declares: what is impossible with men is
possible with God. How can anyone get a camel through a needle’s 40 A
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eye? Impossible. Similarly, people on this earth all love wealth and to ask them
to sell all is to ask for the impossible. But if I go away with sorrow, then I am
really wrong, for I have limited the power of God.
The young ruler could not abandon all, but God can do it. In other words, the
Lord was prepared to give grace to the young man if he had only cried, “O Lord,
I cannot abandon my wealth, but give me grace. What is impossible with me is
possible with You. Enable me to do what I am unable to do. Lord, I just am too
attached to my wealth to give it up and distribute it to the poor and then come
and follow You, but You can make me to be what You want me to be.”
The mistake he made was to not pray, ask, and believe. He ought not to have
sorrowfully departed. Man’s failure is not due to his weakness, but to his not
accepting God’s strength. It is not in his inability but in not allowing God to
enable him. He cannot do it, but why not let God deliver him? This is what the
Lord stresses here.
The things which are impossible with men are possible with God.
Our Lord wanted to prove to the young ruler what God can do, but he, instead,
went away with the conclusion that the thing was impossible to him.
Let us therefore see that there is always a way for us. If we can gladly forsake
all, as Peter did, then we should thank God for that.
But if we feel hesitant, as the young ruler did, then there is yet a way open to us.
We merely need to bow our heads and say to the Lord, “I cannot,” and He will
undertake for us.
Peter, after hearing what the Lord said, asked: “Lo, we have left our own, and
followed thee,” as if to say, “What then will happen to us?” The Lord’s answer
shows it is well to leave all, for He said: anyone who has left house or wife or
brethren or parents or children for My sake and for the sake of the gospel shall
receive manifold SELLING
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more in this time, and in the world to come, eternal life. He does desire us to
follow Him and to forsake all for His sake and the gospel’s sake. This clearly
indicates the absolute necessity for a Christian to forsake all and follow the Lord.
Young believers need to know that unless they forsake all they cannot follow the
Lord. We have a good example of this in the twelve apostles. When they were
called by the Lord, they gladly and promptly left their boats, nets, and all and
followed Him. They forsook without hesitancy. How we thank God for new
believers like them. Nevertheless, even if some, like the young ruler, feel
hesitant to sell all, they still are shown a way to follow the Lord. With men it is
impossible, but with God all things are possible.
Let us remember: of the thirteen who were called, eleven followed eagerly, one
pretended to follow, and one hesitated. The one who pretended was Judas and
the one who hesitated was the young ruler.
When the word of the Lord is proclaimed, do not imagine that of those who
respond, there will be only one who truly follows the Lord. No, the Bible tells us
there was only one who was afraid to follow. If the whole church walks in this
way, there need be no fear of having too many young rulers. Such people do
exist, but they are only occasionally encountered. Of the thirteen, eleven were
quite absolute.
From the Jewish standpoint, he was a traitor, because he cooperated with the
Roman Empire. He helped the Roman Empire collect taxes from his own people.
Furthermore, he was a sinner. He did not have a good character like the young
ruler who kept the commandments from his youth. Like other tax collectors, he
was greedy and extorted as much as he could. He certainly had earned his poor
reputation.
Yet, the Lord Jesus passed by. Great is His power to attract people to 42 A
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Him. “No man can come to me, except the Father that sent me draw him” (John
6:44). So this tax collector was drawn by God to His Son.
Due to his short stature, Zacchaeus climbed a tree to see Jesus. The Lord looked
at him but did not preach a sermon to him. He did not say, “You must repent and
confess your sins,” nor did He reproach him for extortion and greediness; neither
did He require him to sell all, give to the poor, and follow Him. No sermon was
preached, just a few simple words were said: “Zacchaeus, make haste, and come
down; for to-day I must abide at thy house.” Not a single word of exhortation.
How strange that the Lord should speak nothing of the
The people standing around at that time began to murmur. They thought it highly
unfair for Jesus of Nazareth to go to no house but that of such a sinner. They all
knew Zacchaeus and what sort of a person he was. As soon as they heard what
the Lord said, they felt hurt.
Take note of the point of emphasis here. The Lord did not preach any doctrine,
but simply said, “I must abide at thy house.” That simple word, however, was
sufficient. Actually, He had not yet come to Zacchaeus’ house; He merely
suggested His coming. But this was enough, for wherever the Lord is, there the
love of money departs.
When He comes, all those problems are solved. His desiring to go to Zacchaeus’
house was as powerful as if He were already there. Just that simple statement, “I
must abide at thy house,” made Zacchaeus bankrupt, for he stood and declared,
“Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have wrongfully
exacted aught of any man, I restore fourfold.”
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The young ruler was exhorted by the Lord, but he failed to obey; Zacchaeus was
not even persuaded and yet he fully followed the Lord’s wish. Both were rich,
and generally speaking, the older a person is the more he loves money. But here
it was the older one who let go his money. The young ruler represents
“impossible with men,”
whereas Zacchaeus represents “possible with God.” To sell all and follow the
Lord is not a small matter. To do so is not easy, for who would be willing to
forsake his wealth? Unless he had gone mad, no man would part with all his
possessions at once. But the story of Zacchaeus demonstrates to us that what is
impossible for man is possible for God. Zacchaeus did what the Lord wished
without hearing or accepting any doctrine. This illustrates how easily it can be
done.
When God is at work, the camel passes through the needle’s eye.
through the eye of the needle. Chapter 18 tells us it is impossible with men;
chapter 19 shows us all things are possible with God. For the world, selling all is
madness, but for those looking to the Lord it can be quickly done.
How could Zacchaeus do this? Because, first, he was a son of Abraham, and
second, salvation had come to his house that day. He did it, not because he
himself was able to nor because he had cried and prayed and meditated in his
heart on all that the Lord had said, and thus had finally with gnashing teeth given
in. He did not surrender a bit today and a bit tomorrow until he was forced to
surrender all. Neither by determination nor by struggling nor by consideration
did he do it. Then how was it that he could dissolve his house in such a way?
Had he not hoarded for decades, braved many dangers and fallen into great
disrepute in order to build up his house?
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come to his house. He did not save himself, it was the Lord who saved him.
When salvation comes to a house, the power of the Lord also comes to it. Read
together the two places where Zacchaeus’ house is mentioned: “To-day I must
abide at thy house,” and “To-day is salvation come to this house.” It is clear that
the Lord is the salvation. The coming of the Lord to our house is the coming of
salvation to us. When the Lord comes, salvation comes and power comes too.
“For the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which was
lost” (Lk. 19:10). This is a famous verse in Christianity. The Son of Man came to
do one thing, to seek those who are lost in wealth. All who love money are lost
persons. The Lord today is seeking for such lost ones. He found Zacchaeus and
He found us too. We were once lost, but now the Lord has found us. Therefore,
our problems likewise can be solved. Money will lose its power over us.
Take note of these two chapters, Luke 18 and 19: in the one the
young ruler was charged by the Lord to sell all, but went away sadly; in the other
Zacchaeus abandoned all without even being asked. In His days on this earth our
Lord required people to forsake all and follow Him. Likewise the church, shortly
after its founding, did the same thing. In Acts 2 and 4 we find that at the
beginning of the church all things are held in common; that is, not one of the
believers said that any of the things he possessed was his own. In other words,
the hand of the Lord was upon all those who were saved. Once they had gained
eternal life, their possessions began to lose their grip, and, in quite a natural way,
they sold their houses and properties.
Applying this principle to those of us today who come to follow the Lord, it
should also be quite natural to us that our many SELLING
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This is the attitude one must have towards possessions. From my own personal
life let me tell you something which may sound like a joke. For nearly twenty
years, I have had the habit of purchasing a dozen or half dozen of anything I buy.
Some brothers wonder why I buy so much. For example: I need a pair of
sunglasses. So I say to the Lord, “O God, if You really want to give me a pair of
sunglasses, then You must give me six pair.” Why? Because I feel more peaceful
wearing my sunglasses after I have given away five pair to the brethren. Or if I
buy a safety razor, I usually buy a dozen; razor blades, a gross. Why do I do this?
Because if I buy only one safety razor, it would be exclusively for my own use.
Of course, I cannot give a razor to each and everyone of a thousand or two
thousand brothers. But it does bring a different flavor if I give to some brothers
before I use mine. Otherwise, I would tend to feel that this razor belongs
exclusively to me. Those brothers and sisters who have known me over the years
will, I think, know this habit of mine.
Usually I purchase in dozens, though I only use one. Thus shall we be delivered
from things.
maybe the Lord does not want me to have it permanently; maybe it should be
given away tomorrow. Therefore it is better that I make two or three garments
instead of one. This is the flavor that we should maintain. Everytime we buy
things, we should not think only of ourselves but of others as well. This is not to
say that we should not buy anything new; it simply suggests that there must
always be the savor of having all things in common. Of course I am not talking
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about any particular thing or action; I only stress the particular principle. We
should never think of ourselves only but should always maintain the principle of
holding all things in common.
What, then, is the lesson God would have us learn? First of all, let us learn not to
be rooted in this world, but to hold all things loosely.
How stingy are the people of this world! How many are the miserly people!
They are close-fisted not only in big things but in small things as well. They
actually pennypinch in everything.
The more we read the second and fourth chapters of Acts, the more we are
convinced that we should not hold on to anything, but should rather hold all
things in common. God’s children must be liberal towards others of God’s
children. Whether or not we actually sell our property and give to the poor, the
sentiment is the same. We must be willing to share with others. Let us not hold
onto anything, even to such a small article as a knife or a pen. We need to let all
things go. If we obey in this, God will not suffer us to have less; yea, He will
even give us more.
So, this is the example of the early church. In the beginning, the twelve disciples
said to the Lord, “We have left our own, and followed thee.” During Pentecost,
at the first revival, the three thousand and the five thousand quite naturally did
the same thing.
First, it was the twelve who forsook all and followed the Lord without hearing
any teaching on it. The Lord did not tell them to sell all; He merely said, “Come
ye after me” (Matt. 4:19). They
responded to the call by abandoning all. In like manner, the apostles did not
instruct the three thousand or the five thousand to sell their possessions; those
believers just did it spontaneously. This is what the church has been practicing
throughout the centuries. And this is what we too must do today. It would be
tragic if such a practice were not continued.
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God or Mammon
Let us return to Matthew 6 where it says we can only serve one
master. We cannot serve God and mammon. Mammon (or riches) is an idol
which many have served over the past years. Such service gets a firm grip on the
heart. Now, though, if we are going to serve God, we must choose whom to
serve—God or mammon. We cannot serve both. What does the Lord say? “For
where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also” (Matt. 6:21). Once a brother
told me: “My treasure is on earth but my heart is in heaven.” Such a brother
should be exhibited in a Christian museum as a rarity! The Lord says it cannot
be, but he invents a can be. Is it not greater than a miracle?
However, the word of the Lord is candid and sure. One’s heart always follows
the treasure. There is no escape from it. No matter how one reasons, his heart
goes after his treasure.
“Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the earth” (Matt. 6:19).
If you do, you will end up serving mammon and not God. You cannot serve both
God and mammon. You must choose either one or the other. How detrimental it
would be to choose mammon, for such treasure is subject to moth and rust and
thieves. Let us, therefore, learn to serve God. Let us give all that we have to God
and maintain the simplest kind of life here on this earth.
CONSECRATION
And for Aaron’s sons thou shalt make coats, and
thou shalt make for them girdles, and head-tires shalt thou make for them, for
glory and beauty. And thou shalt put them upon Aaron thy brother, and upon his
sons
with him, and shalt anoint them, and consecrate them, and sanctify them, that
they may minister unto me in the priest’s office. And thou shalt make them linen
breeches to cover the flesh of their nakedness; from the loins even unto the
thighs they shall reach: and they shall be upon Aaron, and upon his sons, when
they go in unto the tent of meeting, or when they come near unto the altar to
minister in the holy place; that they bear not iniquity, and die: it shall be a
statute for ever unto him and unto his seed after him.
Ex. 28:40-43
And he presented the ram of the burnt-offering: and Aaron and his sons laid
their hands upon the head of the ram. And he killed it; and Moses sprinkled the
blood upon the altar round about. And he cut the ram into its pieces; and Moses
burnt the head, and the pieces, and the fat. And he washed the inwards and the
legs with water; and Moses burnt the whole ram upon the altar: it was a burnt-
offering for a sweet savor: it was an offering made by fire unto Jehovah; as
Jehovah commanded Moses. And he presented the other ram, the ram of
consecration: and Aaron and his sons laid their hands upon the head of the ram.
And he slew it; and Moses took of the blood thereof, and put it upon the tip of
Aaron’s right ear, and upon the thumb of his right hand, and upon the great toe
of his right foot. And he brought Aaron’s sons; and Moses put of the blood upon
the tip of their right ear, and upon the thumb of their right hand, and upon the
great toe of their right foot: and Moses sprinkled the blood upon the altar round
about. And he took the fat, and the fat tail, and all the fat that was upon the
inwards, and the caul of the liver, and the two kidneys, and their fat, and the
right thigh: and out of the basket of unleavened bread, that was before Jehovah,
he took one unleavened cake, and one cake of oiled bread, and one wafer, and
placed them on the fat, and upon the right thigh: and he put the whole upon the
hands of Aaron, and upon the hands of his sons, 50 A
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and waved them for a wave-offering before Jehovah. And Moses took them from
off their hands, and burnt them on the altar upon the burnt-offering: they were a
consecration for a sweet savor: it was an offering made by fire unto Jehovah.
Lev. 8:18-28
Neither present your members unto sin as instruments of unrighteousness; but
present yourselves unto God, as alive from the dead, and your members as
instruments of righteousness unto God. Know ye not, that to whom ye present
yourselves as servants unto obedience, his servants ye are whom ye obey;
whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness? I speak after the
manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh: for as ye presented your
members as servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity, even so now
present your members as servants to righteousness unto sanctification.
Rom. 6:13,16,19
I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies
a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service. And
be not fashioned according to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing
of your mind, that ye may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect will
of God. For I say, through the grace that was given me, to every man that is
among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but so to
think as to think soberly, according as God hath dealt to each man a measure of
faith.
Rom. 12:1-3
Or know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you,
which ye have from God? and ye are not your own; for ye were bought with a
price: glorify God therefore in your body.
I Cor. 6:19-20
For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that one died for
all, therefore all died; and he died for all, that they that live should no longer
live unto themselves, but unto him who for their sakes died and rose again.
II Cor. 5:14-15
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In order to build up a new believer, the first problem to solve is the matter of
consecration. But whether or not he can take in this lesson depends largely on
how well he has been saved. If the gospel has not been well presented, the one
who comes to the Lord Jesus may consider himself as doing God a great favor.
For a person like him to be a Christian adds much glory to Christianity! Under
such an illusion how can any one speak to him about consecration? Even a queen
has to be brought to the place where she gladly lays her crown at the Lord’s feet.
We need to all realize that it is we who are favored by the Lord in being loved
and saved. Only then can we willingly lay down everything.
However, consecration is one of the most difficult doctrines in the Bible. The
doctrines of sanctification, of righteousness, and of justification are all clearly
defined in the Word of God; but the teaching of consecration seems to be
vaguely taught. Almost two thousand years have passed and the subject of
consecration has yet to be mastered.
The Word of God seldom touches directly on the subject of consecration. In the
New Testament we have Romans 6 and 12; in
the Old Testament, Exodus 28 and 29 and Leviticus 8. The New Testament refers
to presenting our bodies and the members of our body to God, while the Old
Testament deals exclusively with the setting apart for holy service of Aaron and
his family. These are the only passages in the entire Bible where consecration is
directly mentioned. We do not know why the Word of God touches so little on
this first Christian experience of service. But we do know that it is therefore
imperative that we understand clearly what little the Bible does directly teach.
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died and rose again for them (2 Cor. 5:14). The word “constrained”
know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which
ye have from God? and ye are not your own; for you have been bought with a
price: glorify God therefore in your body.”
Today among Christians this matter of being bought with a price may not be
clearly understood. But to the Corinthians at the time of the Roman Empire, it
was perfectly clear. Why? Because at that time they had human markets. just as
one could go to the market to buy chicken or duck, so one could buy human
beings in the human market. The only difference was that whereas food prices
were more or less established, in the human market the price of each soul was
established by bidding at auction. Whoever bid the highest price got the man,
and whoever owned the slave had absolute power over him.
Paul uses this metaphor to show us what our Lord has done for us and how He
gave His life as the ransom to purchase us back to God.
The Lord paid a great price—even His own life. And today, because of this work
of redemption, we give up our rights and forfeit our sovereignty. We are no
longer our own, for we belong to the Lord; therefore we must glorify God in our
bodies. We are bought with a price, even the blood of the cross. Since we are
bought, we become His by right, by divine prerogative.
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On the one hand, for the sake of love we choose to serve Him; and on the other
hand, by right we are not our own: we must follow Him; we cannot do
otherwise. According to the right of redemption, we are His; and according to
the love which redemption generates in us, we must live for Him. One basis for
consecration is legal right and the other basis is responsive love. Consecration is
thus based on the love which surpasses human feeling as well as on right
according to law.
Young believers should thoroughly understand this. You are bought back by the
Lord. You are like a slave whom the Lord purchased with the highest bid. Hence
for you to be a free person is totally out of the question. Christ, the Son of God
has bought you not with silver and gold, but with His precious blood. Herein is
love; such love ought to constrain all the young ones not to live for themselves
from this day forward.
After one has been constrained by love and has seen the Lord’s prerogative, he
needs to do something additional. This extra step puts him in the position of
consecration. Being constrained by the Lord’s love and knowing that he has been
purchased, he quietly sets himself apart from everything in order to be wholly
the Lord’s. This is the consecration depicted in the Old Testament. It is the
acceptance of a holy office, the office of serving the Lord. “O Lord, being loved,
what else can I do than to separate myself from everything that I may serve You?
Hereafter no one may use my hands or feet or mouth or ears, for these my two
hands are to do Your works, my two feet to walk in Your way, my mouth to sing
Your praise, and my ears to listen to Your voice.” This is consecration.
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Suppose you purchase a slave and bring him home. At the door of your house,
the man kneels and does you homage, saying, “Master, you have bought me.
Today I gladly hearken to your words.” For you to have purchased him is one
thing, but his kneeling before you and proclaiming his desire to serve you is
something else. Because you have purchased him, he acknowledges your right.
But because you have loved him even though he is such a man, he proclaims
himself wholly yours. This alone is consecration. Consecration is more than
love, more than purchasing; it is the action which follows love and purchasing.
Henceforth the one who consecrates himself is separated from everything in this
world, from all his former masters. Hereafter he will do nothing but what his
Master commands. He restricts himself to doing only the things of that one
Master. This is what consecration really means.
When we read these passages, we are immediately touched by the fact that
consecration is something very special. There are so many people in this world,
yet no one is able to consecrate himself to the Lord. The entire nation of Israel
was chosen by God, but not the entire nation became a consecrated nation. Not
all the twelve tribes of Israel were able to enter into consecration, for only the
tribe of Levi was chosen. And not even the whole tribe of Levi was consecrated;
one family alone, the family of Aaron was consecrated.
This indicates that consecration is not a matter for the world, for the chosen
people, for the twelve tribes, or for the Levites; it belongs exclusively to one
family. One has to be of that family before he may be consecrated. If he does not
belong to that particular family, he has no way to consecrate himself. Only those
of this one family, the house of Aaron, may become priests.
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Thank God, today we belong to this family, for all who believe in the Lord are of
this household (see Revelation 1:5-6). Today all the redeemed ones are priests,
chosen by God to be priests. Formerly, only those of the house of Aaron were
consecrated; anyone else who dared to intrude was immediately cut off. Today,
too, remember that only those chosen by God can be consecrated; only people of
the one family may be consecrated. But, thank God, today we do belong to this
family, for God has chosen us to be priests.
One thing is clear: men do not choose to consecrate themselves to God; it is God
who chooses men to be consecrated to Him. All who consider themselves as
doing a favor for God by forsaking all to serve Him are actually strangers to
consecration. Let them beat a hasty retreat, for they are not the chosen. No one
who thinks of service as rendering God a favor and an honor is a chosen one.
Who can set himself apart to do the Lord’s work? It is God who favors us to
have a part in His exclusive work. It is God who gives glory and beauty to us.
The Old Testament priest wore two garments, one for glory and one for beauty.
In consecration, God clothes us with glory and with beauty. It is God who selects
us to serve Him. Let us boastingly declare what a Lord we have. This is what
consecration is.
May we realize that consecration means we are chosen for the honor of serving
God. Consecration is God granting us glory. We should kneel and pray: “Thank
God that I may have a part in His service. Yes, there are many things in the
world, but in this one thing I am really privileged to participate.” In
consecration, we are being exalted; we are not making a sacrifice. Indeed, we do
sacrifice, but there is not the consciousness of making any sacrifice.
Consecration demands the highest sacrifice, yet it is filled with the sense of glory
and not with the awareness of sacrifice.
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This is a clear picture of the way of consecration. The first problem which faces
one who is to be consecrated to God is atonement. The matter of atonement is a
big one, so it requires a big animal, a bullock to solve it. Whoever is to be
consecrated must be saved, must belong to the Lord. This, being the foundation
of consecration, is a tremendous work and therefore requires a big sacrifice like
a bullock to accomplish it.
What follows are the two rams: one as a burnt-offering to be burnt, the other as a
consecration-offering to enable Aaron to serve God hereafter. A burnt-offering
has to be wholly burnt. The priests are not allowed to eat of its flesh since every
part of it must be burnt.
Hence it is a step further than the sin-offering. The sin-offering merely solves the
problem of our sins, but the burnt-offering gives us acceptance before God. The
Lord Jesus bore our sins on the cross; this is the atoning work of our Lord. He
rent the veil of the temple in His death, rent it from top to bottom so that He
might bring us to the Holiest of all; this is the burnt-offering. Both offerings start
at the same place, both beginning with sinners. But sin-offering only atones our
sins, while burnt-offering brings sinners to God for acceptance.
So burnt-offering makes us accepted in the beloved Son. It goes further than sin-
offering, for it speaks of the fragrance of the Lord Jesus in God’s presence and
hence His acceptance by the Father.
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After the slaying of the first ram, the second ram was slain. The blood of the
second ram was put upon the tip of the right ear of Aaron and his sons, and upon
the thumb of their right hand, and upon the great toe of their right foot. This was
called the offering of consecration and was not completely burnt as the burnt-
offering ram was. This ram’s blood was first put on the tip of the right ear, the
thumb of the right hand, and the great toe of the right foot of the person
consecrated. This means that according to the acceptance which Christ has
before God, I now stand in the position of a servant who hearkens to God’s
voice, does His will, and walks in His path.
Since I have been accepted in Christ, I present my whole being to the Lord.
Where the mark of blood is, there is the ground of God’s prerogative. Where the
sign of blood is, there is the call of love. The blood both testifies that I am
purchased by the Lord and bears witness that He has loved me. The blood here is
the price which Christ paid for my redemption and it is also the love of which
the New Testament speaks. The ram has been slain, so I offer up my whole
being. Thus I become a living sacrifice, for blood is upon me.
Though I am alive, yet have I been wholly consecrated. I have presented myself
as a living sacrifice to God.
Note especially the wave-offering which follows the killing of the second ram.
The putting of blood on the tip of the right ear, the thumb of the right hand, and
the great toe of the right foot of the one to be consecrated is still a preparation
for consecration. Consecration comes when Moses
took the fat, and the fat tail, and all the fat that was upon the inwards, and the
caul of the liver, and the two kidneys, and their fat, and the right thigh (or
shoulder): and out of the basket of unleavened bread, that was before Jehovah,
he took one unleavened cake, and one cake of oiled bread, and one wafer, and
placed them on the fat, and upon the right thigh: and he put the 58 A
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whole upon the hands of Aaron, and upon the hands of his sons, and waved them
for a wave-offering before Jehovah. And Moses took them from off their hands,
and burnt them on the altar upon the burnt-offering: they were a consecration
for a sweet savor: it was an offering made by fire unto Jehovah.
Lev. 8:25-28
All who study typology agree that the shoulder and the bread represent two
different aspects of the Lord Jesus. Shoulder is where strength is. The shoulder
of the ram shows us the divine character of the Lord Jesus just as the fat points
to the glory of God. Bread reveals His humanity. He is an unleavened, spotless,
perfect man. He is full of the Holy Spirit, most sensitive and most tender. His
inward feeling and spiritual sense are exceedingly fine. He is not rude but gentle,
like a thin cake or wafer which can be broken by a mere touch. These were put
in Aaron’s hands to be waved before God.
First Aaron’s hands were filled and then the things from his hands were burnt on
the burnt-offering. This is called consecration.
“consecration,” actually means, “to fill the hands.” The hands were at first
empty, but then they are filled. At the time that Aaron’s hands were filled, that
was the time of his consecration. His hands were so full that he could not hold
anything else; this is consecration. In his hands he held the shoulder and fat of
the ram and the unleavened bread; this too is consecration. To be fully occupied
with the divinity as well as the humanity of the Lord, with the divine strength
and the unleavened life of the Lord, with the Holy Spirit and with the Lord’s
sensitivity—this is the time of consecration.
God called Aaron and his family to serve Him as priests. But Aaron could not
come imprudently. He must have his sins solved and he himself must be
accepted in Christ. His hands must do God’s bidding, his feet must walk God’s
way, and his ears must hear God’s word. Further, his hands, being the highest
expression of service, needed to be filled with Christ. Only then was he
consecrated. What CONSECRATION
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In order to serve God, I present my whole body. Hereafter no one can borrow my
ears to listen to another’s voice, or my hands to do another’s bidding, or my feet
to walk another’s path. Aside from the Lord, no one can use me any more. I am
here for the service of God.
My whole body is devoted to His service. I have handed myself over like a
sacrifice; I am wholly devoted to Him. I even take a further step: I have my two
hands filled with Christ (here the ears, hands and feet are joined in one); I wave
and I heave what are in my hands.
Formerly I was under the table hoping to eat of the crumbs that fell down, but
hereafter, O God, do not let me serve You under the table.
Once I received grace like a dog, but now I cannot serve You at the door as a
dog. I today choose to serve You. I know I am accepted in Christ. May I not be
permitted to have a little part in Your service? I ask for Your mercy that I may be
allowed to serve You. You did not pass over me but You saved me. Now I
request of You once again, do not pass me by but let me be among the many who
serve You.”
Thus we come to the Lord and are accepted. Thus have we laid everything
before Him to be for His use. Romans 12 tells us our
whole bodies must be presented; this coincides with the ears, hands and feet of
the Old Testament. So now the Old and the New Testament join in one.
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Consecration does not necessarily involve incessant labor, for its aim is to wait
upon God. If He wishes us to stand, we stand; if He wants us to wait, we wait;
and if He desires us to run, we run. This is the true meaning of “waiting on”
Him.
What God requires of us is to present our bodies to Him, not for the purpose of
ascending the pulpit or of evangelizing far distant lands, but of waiting upon
Him. Some may indeed have to accept the pulpit, because they are sent there by
God. Some may be constrained to go to distant lands, for they are commissioned
by God to go. The work itself varies but the time consumed remains the same—
our lifetime. We need to learn to wait on God. We offer our bodies that we may
be those who serve.
Once we become Christians, we must serve God for life. As soon as a medical
doctor becomes a Christian, medicine recedes from being his vocation to being
his avocation. So will it be for the engineer. The Lord’s demand occupies the
first priority; serving God becomes the major job. Should the Lord permit, I can
do some medical or engineering work to maintain a living, but I will not be able
to make either of them my life work. Some of the early disciples were fishermen,
but after they followed the Lord they did not hope any more to be great and
successful fishermen. They might be allowed to fish occasionally, but their
destiny was altered.
May God be gracious to us, especially to young believers, that we may all see
how our vocation has been changed. Let all the professors, doctors, nurses,
engineers, and industrialists see that their vocation is now to serve God. Their
past vocations have receded to avocations. They should not be too ambitious in
their special fields, CONSECRATION
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though the Lord may still give some of them special positions. We who serve
God cannot expect to be prosperous in the world, for these two are contradictory.
Hereafter we are to serve God alone; we have no other way or destiny.
In consecration, our prayer is: “O Lord, You have given me the opportunity and
privilege to come before You and serve You. Lord, I am Yours. Henceforth my
ears, hands, and feet, being bought by the blood, are exclusively Yours. The
world can no longer use them, nor will I use them either.” What, then, is the
result? The result will be holiness, for the fruit of consecration is holiness. In
Exodus 28 we
have consecration on the one hand and holiness to the Lord on the other.
We need to be brought to see that after we become Christians, we are spoiled for
everything else. This does not mean we will be less faithful in our secular jobs.
No, we must be subject to authorities and faithfully fulfill our tasks. But we have
seen before God that our life must be spent in the way of serving God; all other
jobs are side lines.
I feel strongly during these years that the way consecration is preached is wrong.
It should not be preached as if we were begging people to consecrate; we should
tell people instead that the way is now open for consecration. If I hang out a
placard, announcing that I am commissioned to find those with ability to work
for the president, I suppose many will invite me for dinner; many will seek for
the job of serving the president. Is it not strange that we beg people to come 62 A
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to serve God? Let me tell you: there is a way open for you to serve the Lord of
Hosts. You come to serve God, not to do God a favor.
The New Testament confirms this by saying that by the compassions of God I
should present myself to Him, for it is my spiritual service.
5
5 STUDYING THE BIBLE
The Importance of Studying the Bible
reiterate the words He has already spoken. It is extremely rare to find God
speaking to anyone with words that are not found in the Bible.
Although at times God does speak directly to some who have gone on far with
the Lord, yet even these utterances are largely words which He has already set
forth in the Scriptures. God’s speaking, then, is His repeating what He has said
before. Young believers, if unfamiliar with what God has already spoken, create
a problem for God in that they do not have the foundation for God to speak to
them.
The Bible is the Word of God. It reveals to us all that God has done for us in the
past. It also shows us in what ways God has led men to know Him in days gone
by. In order to know the richness and fullness of God’s provision for us, we must
study the Bible. And to understand by what steps God will lead us to Himself,
we also need to study the Bible.
Furthermore, when God desires to use us to speak for Him, He usually uses the
words He already has spoken. Should we be ignorant of these words, it is
difficult for God to speak through us. We then will be useless persons before
Him. Thus we need to store the Word of Christ richly in our hearts that we may
hear those words which God wants to speak to us now and also that we may
know how God has walked in the past.
The Bible is a big book and a serious one. If we were to spend the whole of our
life in the study of it, we would but touch its fringes.
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is absolutely impossible. Thus young people especially ought to be diligent in
studying God’s Word so that as they reach middle age and then old age, they will
have a rich supply of the Word for the needs both of themselves and of others.
Every new believer needs to recognize the importance of studying God’s Word
at the very start of his Christian life. Let me be very frank with you: there are too
few who really know the Bible. This generation is far inferior in the study of the
Word. We do not see many of those giants of the Word of four or five decades
ago. Today we mostly meet superficial readers. Where can we find people who
have thoroughly studied the Bible? This generation is way behind in
understanding of the Word. We are not talking here about spiritual life but rather
about understanding. People may be able to get something of a devotional nature
out of the Book, but few today really study the Bible.
The hope now is in the young people. We expect to have within these five or ten
years a number of people who have really studied the Bible. This is not as simple
as it sounds, for it requires lots of time. There must be a solid foundation in
God’s Word; otherwise nothing can be built. The expounding of the Bible that
we hear today is wholly inadequate. Such a shallow life in the church is a
disgrace before God.
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However varied may be the external methods, the basic principles of studying
the Word remain unchanged. And the order given above should also be kept:
first fact finding, next memorizing, then analyzing, and finally receiving
enlightenment.
The Bible contains many spiritual facts which to the spiritually blind are hidden.
If one discovers any fact in the Bible, he already has half the light and hence has
fulfilled half of the study purpose. It is therefore absolutely necessary to find
facts; otherwise we will not be able to receive God’s enlightenment, for the light
of God shines only on the facts in His Word. Why does God speak in this way or
in that way? Through analysis, comparison, and deduction we are open to
enlightenment. Thus shall we be fed and thus shall we be able to feed others. If
we study the Bible carelessly, God’s Word will leak away and we will not know
what is in it.
For example: the earth’s gravitational force is a fact. It is a universal law, yet it
awaited Newton to discover this law of gravitation. Before the time of Newton,
though for thousands of years the force of gravitation had been there, yet the law
had remained undiscovered. One day Newton was resting underneath an apple
tree and an apple fell on his head. Through this incident he discovered the law of
gravitation. The question was not whether there was or was not such a fact; the
question was simply the discovery of the fact.
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For the above reasons, one who studies the Bible must be a careful person before
God. He cannot afford to be inattentive. He must be a single-minded individual,
for the Word of God is pure. As soon as he hears God’s Word, he should know
where the emphasis lies. But many Christians read the Word without hearing
anything. They find neither its facts nor its keys.
“IN CHRIST”
In studying God’s Word, we will see that the New Testament only uses terms
such as “in the Lord,” “in Christ,” “in Christ Jesus,” never does it say “in Jesus”
or “in Jesus Christ.” This is what we call the discovery of fact. We should try to
remember all instances where these terms are employed. Then we should
compare them with the terms that are not used. Why in a certain place is the
phrase “in Christ” used but not “in Jesus”? Why does it say “in Christ Jesus”
but not “in Jesus Christ”? Why does the Bible never once use the term “in Jesus
Christ”? As we analyze and compare the Word, we can expect God to give us
light that we may see.
We now are shown that “Jesus” is the earthly name of our Lord.
“Jesus Christ” means this Jesus will one day be Christ. “Christ” is the name
given to Him after His resurrection and anointing by God. “Let all the house of
Israel therefore know assuredly, that God has made Him both Lord and Christ,
this Jesus whom ye crucified” (Acts
“Christ Jesus,” which means the Christ of today is the Jesus of yesterday. Christ
Jesus has become His name now. The term “Jesus Christ” is quite different from
that of “Christ Jesus.” Christ is formerly Jesus, and Jesus later will be Christ. We
can only be in
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Christ but never in Jesus. We can be in the Lord or in Christ Jesus, but not in
Jesus Christ.
When our Lord lived on earth, we could not be in Him. For if we were, we
would share His cross and the work of redemption. No, He alone is God’s only
begotten Son; we have no part in it. His birth in Bethlehem is something we
cannot share. Then why is it we can be in Christ? “But of Him are ye in Christ
Jesus” (1 Cor. 1:30). It does not say in Jesus, but in Christ Jesus. For we are
actively united with Him in His resurrection after He died and was raised from
among the dead. There God has made Him Christ; and there by His Spirit God
has joined us to Him.
work of the Lord. These eight chapters are further divided into two
parts: chapters 1-5:11 form one part and chapters 5:12 through
chapter 8 another part. All who study the Bible are amazed by the fact that in the
first part the cross is not mentioned whereas in the second part the blood is never
referred to. The first part speaks only of the blood but not of the cross; the
second part focuses on the cross and not on the blood.
After knowing and memorizing what it is God has spoken and what it is He has
not spoken, we can then start to analyze. Basically there are two methods of
analysis: one is to dissect in order to scrutinize more carefully; the other is to
gather together in order to have a more comprehensive picture. As we
individually consider
Romans 1-8, maybe within an hour or half an hour we will be given light to see
that the forgiveness of sins and justification are by the blood but that deliverance
from the power of sin must be through the cross. Deliverance comes not from
the blood but from the cross, while forgiveness comes not from the cross but
from the blood.
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Having memorized sufficient Bible verses, one may attempt to analyze them
before God. He may not be able to understand them at first, but after trying for a
month or even half a year he may be given understanding. I have mentioned
before that if anyone is able to find facts, he has already received half of the
light. If one is unable to discover facts, it only proves he has an eye ailment.
Young people, therefore should start out as careful readers. He is a careless
person who does not seek for facts. He will not know either what God has said
or what God has not said. How can this be called the study of the Word of God?
Let us now turn from the comparative method to the analytical method. For an
example, let us use John’s record concerning the sending of the Holy Spirit. In
reading chapters 14 and 16, we find the
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may
be with you for ever, even the Spirit of truth: whom the world cannot receive, for
it beholdeth him not, neither knoweth him: ye know him; for he abideth with you,
and shall be in you. I will not leave you desolate: I come unto you. Yet a little
while, and the world beholdeth me no more; but ye behold me: because I live, ye
shall live also. In that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me,
and I in you.
What fact do we here discover? In the first part of this passage, we find the word
“he” or “him” is used, but in the second part the pronoun is changed to “I” or
“me.” There is a shift from “him” to
“me.”
Having noticed that fact and memorized all these verses, we should now proceed
to analyze them. The Lord mentions another Comforter. “Another” implies that
this is a second one. For instance,
“I will give you another cup,” simply means, “I will give you a second cup.” “I
will ask another one to help you,” invariably refers to a second helper. The
Father will send you another Comforter, that is, the second Comforter. Since
there will be the second Comforter, there must previously have been the first
Comforter, just as another helper implies the presence of the first helper, and
another cup a first one.
The fact has thus been established that there are two Comforters.
What does the Lord say about the second Comforter? “He may be with you for
ever.” Who is He? We do not seem to know Him, and yet the Lord says, “Whom
the world cannot receive; for it beholdeth him not, neither knoweth him: ye
know him.” Why? “For he abideth with you.” Had I been one of the twelve
disciples on that day, I would certainly ask: “O Lord! You say the Comforter
abides with me, but I neither see Him when I am asleep nor when I am awake. I
do not see Him when eating or when walking. In fact, I have never known Him.
How can you say that I know Him?”
But notice: immediately following the word, “For he abideth with you and shall
be in you,” he continues with, “I will not leave you desolate: I come unto you.”
In analysis, we discover the “he” has changed to “I.” In other words, “I” am
“he.” While the Lord Jesus is on the earth, He is the Comforter; that is, the Holy
Spirit in Him is the Comforter. This is seeing light. On earth, the Lord and the
Holy Spirit are one, for the latter abides in Him. He is seen and known by the
disciples, because He abides with them.
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But now, another Comforter is given. The Lord is to die, to be resurrected and to
come again. How will He come? He will come in the Holy Spirit so that He may
not leave His disciples desolate. “Yet a little while, and the world beholdeth me
no more; but ye behold me: because I live, ye shall live also.” For a little while
you do not see Me, yet after a while you shall see Me again and I will live in
you. In verse 17, “he shall be in you,” but now in verse 20, “I in you.” The “he”
above is therefore the “I” of the following verses.
The first time it is the Holy Spirit in Christ, the latter time it is Christ in the Holy
Spirit. Who is the Holy Spirit? The Holy Spirit is the second self of the Lord
Jesus. As the Son is the Father’s second self, so the Holy Spirit is the second self
of the Son. The form alone is changed.
It is therefore evident that the basic principle in studying the Bible is to find
facts. It really does not depend on how many chapters one has read or how much
he has memorized. If he cannot find facts, he will receive no light from God. For
a worker, the ability to find facts in the Bible is a foundational requirement. Paul
was one who had great ability in finding facts. Listen to what he says in the third
chapter of Galatians. When he read Genesis, he found in God’s promise to
Abraham, “in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be
blessed” (Gen. 22:18), that seed there is singular, not plural, and therefore points
to Christ. Paul had discovered a fact in the Bible.
Now there are tens of thousands of facts like the one just mentioned.
Whether or not one is rich in God’s Word depends largely on his ability to find
out facts.
Let us turn to illustrate the deductive method: take for instance the matter of
making images. Exodus 20:4 commands: “Thou shalt not make unto thee a
graven image, nor any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in
the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.” But in Genesis, God
Himself says, “Let us make
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man in our image, after our likeness. . . . And God created man in his own
image” (Gen. 1:26-27). Also in Exodus 26, God ordered the
people of Israel to “make a veil of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined
linen: with cherubim the work of the skilful workman shall it be made” (v.31).
The cherubim have the likeness of a man; and every one has four faces—that of
a man, a lion, an ox and an
eagle (Ez. 1:5,10). This veil is to separate the Holiest from the Holy
Place.
After gathering together these passages, the question will naturally be asked: did
God contradict Himself? On the one hand He commanded not to make any
image and He judged Israel because they made the image of the golden calf; on
the other hand He Himself ordered them to make the image of the cherubim.
Why does the Bible both permit and forbid the making of images? Why is no
image permitted except that of cherubim? To what does the image of the
cherubim point? This will lead us to Hebrews. Hebrews 10:20
indicates that the veil typifies the flesh of Christ, meaning the Lord Jesus
Himself. In other words, all images are idols except the One who is the image of
God. Notice what Genesis 1:26-27 said. When the Godhead was in council, it
was decided to make “a man in our image.” But when it came to actual creative
work, “God created man in his own image.” In verse 26 it is the plural “our,”
while in verse 27
it becomes the singular “his.” Such transfer from the plural pronoun to the
singular is a fact to be reckoned with. It reveals that in the Godhead only one
Person has an image, and that Person is Christ. By combining all these passages,
we conclude that God rejects all images except the one image—His own Son.
∗Editor's Note: In reading this section, it must be kept in mind that these
messages were given in 1948. However, the principles still retain their value and
thus the message has been left in its original form.
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Through the centuries many children of God have spent time on the Word of
God. Some of the best brains of these two thousand years have been engaged in
God’s Word. Indeed, God has chosen first rank minds from this world for His
Word. This is part of the heritage of the Church.
First, let us mention the lower critics, those who scrutinize the letter of the Bible.
People such as Tregelles, Dean Alford, Wordsworth and Westcott are giants
among thousands of such critics. Why was such a task necessary? Because there
was no printing press when the Bible was first written, and it was a forbidden
book too. If anyone was found with a Bible, he could be thrown to the wild
beasts. In order to read the Bible, he had to copy it himself. He could only copy a
little at a time and he had to copy in a great hurry lest he be found by the police.
Under such circumstances, error in copying was inevitable. Even with today’s
typesetting, mistakes are unavoidable; how much more was the possibility of
making mistakes when every word had to be copied by hand? It would be
extremely easy to miss a stroke or add a dot. People in the first century copied in
a hurry, and people in the later centuries copied from hand to hand. Today we
have a great number of hand-copied manuscripts with some variations in letters.
Hence, God has raised up many who specialize in criticizing the letters of the
Bible. They gather many manuscripts and compare them word by word, stroke
by stroke. It is a time consuming job, for every letter in the Old and New
Testaments has to be verified. Some experts have traveled to several countries,
visiting many museums for the sake of verifying just one letter. Their devotion
ought to move us to tears. They are the great scholars of Hebrew and Greek.
They spend all their life on such research. How we thank God for raising them
up for this difficult task.
Then we have the translators of the Bible. Many people all over the world have
spent a great deal of time in carefully translating the
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Bible. For example, J. N. Darby was used of God to translate the Bible into
French, German and English. The popular edition of the Chinese Bible is the
combined work of a number of scholars.
Next there are those who write Bible dictionaries. God has raised up many in
different countries to study words, animals, plants, beasts and cattle. They have
given us Bible dictionaries which greatly help us in understanding. Otherwise
how could we know what cedar and hyssop are? Everything in the Bible has
been studied, even the difference between a body coat and a cloak. Among the
writers of Bible dictionaries are Philip Schaff and William Smith. Schaff’s
dictionary, written a century ago, is considered one of the best.
Next comes the compilers of concordances. Since the Bible is such a large book,
it is not easy for us to find a particular verse: hence the need of a concordance.
As a matter of fact, the Bible is the only book that has a concordance. The first
concordance ever compiled was Cruden’s. Cruden spent many years in
compiling his concordance. While undertaking this tremendous task for such a
long time, his mind became deranged and the work had to be stopped.
However, he resumed the compiling after his recovery six years later.
He literally gave his life for the compilation. It is now simple and easy for us to
find a principal word in the Bible, but many were the hours spent gathering all
the verses in the Bible where that particular word occurs. It required almost a
superhuman memory and a prodigious painstaking effort to arrange all the
principal words in order. After Cruden, there came Strong’s, Young’s, and
Wiggram’s concordances, but all of them are based on Cruden’s work. Each
concordance has its own specialty and all four are quite reliable.
Following the above compilers are those who do research on Biblical
chronology. They scrupulously try to compute the years from the creation of man
to Christ. Among these are Archbishop Ussher and Philip Mauro. The wonder of
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scriptural verses which connect without any interruption from the creation of the
world to the time of Christ. God has preserved this chronology by giving us a
verse here and a verse there. At times it seems as if some verses are missing, yet
by diligent searching we can always find the missing links. The years from the
creation of Adam to the birth of Christ are like a chain without a break.
Next are the people who study the numerical structure of the Bible. Of these,
there are two different schools: one is represented by F. W. Grant, and the other
by the Jewish scholars called Massorites.
Thirty years ago, a Russian by the name of Ivan Panin also did computation on
numerical structure.
It is marvelous to know that each number in Scripture has its particular structure.
For example, consider the number twelve: we have twelve tribes, twelve
apostles, twelve foundations, twelve months, and twelve fruits. God uses the
number twelve with consistency. He intends to manifest His work in that
number. Grant in his Numerical Bible has opened this up to God’s children.
Another school has tried to add up the alphabet of the scriptural words. We know
neither Hebrew nor Greek has numerical numbers such as the Arabic 1, 2, 3 and
4. They use their alphabets to represent numbers. Each Hebrew or Greek letter
has a numerical value. Ivan Panin, the famous mathematician during the Czarist
regime, and his students have added up the letters of all the Bible.
Another school has counted the alphabet in the Old Testament according to
paragraphs and verses. This was to help copyists of later generations from
making mistakes. For instance, suppose there are 504 letters in a certain
paragraph. If the paragraph comes out with 505 letters, it means the copyist has
written one word too many. The five books of Moses are made up of 187
chapters, 5845 verses, 63,467 words, and over 300,000 letters. I am not trying to
say that
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such computation has any special value; I simply wish to show young believers
how people have spent their time on the Bible.
words are used once, 654 words twice, 383 words three times, 2176
words used more than three times. The grand total of the words used in the Old
and the New Testaments amounts to 11,284 words. That is to say, the Bible in its
original language was formed by using these 11,284 words.
that it was said to them of old time . . . but I say unto you,” is on the word “I”;
that in Matthew 6: “They have received their reward . . .
“they have” and “Thy Father shall.” Rotherham spent his whole life in finding
these emphases.
George Muller before his death thanked God for enabling him to read the Bible
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the number of times they have read through the Bible. Begin with Matthew in
the New Testament and Genesis in the Old Testament, and read through both
Testaments. Mark down the number of times in your Bible. We hope every
believer will be able to read through one hundred times. If a person lives to be a
Christian for fifty years, he should have read the Bible at least twice each year
for him to reach one hundred times.
In studying the Bible, two different times should be set apart and two Bibles
should be used. The morning time of reading should be accompanied by prayer.
It is for the purpose of building up one’s own spiritual life. Only three or four
verses each morning are enough. Prayers with meditation should be mixed with
the reading.
The afternoon Bible should record the light received in the reading; hence
everything of value can be written in, and circles, straight lines, or colored lines
can be drawn all over the pages.
knowledge of the Bible will be increased. If possible, try to memorize one or two
verses each day. This may be difficult in the beginning, but it will be a great help
later on.
PRAYER
Learning to pray follows studying the Bible. Prayer
prayer.
“Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your
joy may be made full” (John 16:24). He who prays
often and has his prayers answered often will be a happy Christian.
This is a fundamental experience that every believer must have. One may be
careless in other spiritual matters, but in this matter of answered prayer a
Christian cannot afford to deceive himself. It is either yes or no. He must seek to
have prayers answered.
Ask a new believer if he has prayed today. Ask him if God has heard his prayer,
for prayer is not beating the air, nor something done casually. The aim of prayer
is its answer. If no answer to the prayer is forthcoming, the prayer is in vain. One
must learn to have his prayers answered. Prayer is not just for spiritual devotion;
it is also for being heard. If it is solely for devotion, one may pray for hours
without expecting any answer. But if prayer is for an answer, then one must pray
until the answer comes.
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It is therefore imperative for beginners to learn this lesson well so that they may
have their prayers answered. It would be a difficult task to correct this
foundational lack if one has perhaps been praying three to five years without
receiving an answer.
1. ASK
To pray one must really ask. “Ye have not, because ye ask not”
(Jas. 4:2). “And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek,
and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that
asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that
When I was newly saved, I professed that I prayed daily. One day a sister in the
Lord asked me, “Have your prayers been answered by God?” I was surprised
because to me prayer was simply praying and nothing more. I prayed but I never
thought of whether or not I was heard. Since that time, however, I have prayed to
be heard. After she asked me I first examined my prayers to see how many God
had answered. I discovered that I had not prayed many prayers of the type that
required answers. My prayers were mostly general, so the answers really did not
matter too much. It was like asking God for the sun to rise tomorrow; it would
rise whether one prayed or not!
After having been a Christian for a whole year, I could not find a single instance
of answered prayer. Yes, I had knelt before God and uttered many words, but I
had not really asked for anything.
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“Knock, and it shall be opened unto you,” says the Lord. But I had been
knocking on the wall! The Lord will not open the wall for you, for He does not
know what you really want. If you are truly knocking on the door, He will surely
open it for you. If you ask for one thing, the Lord will give that thing to you.
Suppose there are several things here: a hymn book, a cup, a Bible, a table cloth
and a fountain pen.
What do you really want? “Seek,” says the Lord. You cannot ask God for a
department store; you must ask for something definite.
This is what both seeking and knocking signify. It is seeking for one particular
object; it is knocking on the door, not on the wall. Many may pray for a whole
week and yet not have asked for a single thing.
They do not receive because they have not asked. They have the form of prayer,
but they lack the object of asking.
Young Christians should learn how to pray specifically. Do not imitate some
brothers who stand and pray in the church for twenty minutes or half an hour
but, when asked later what have they prayed for, are at a loss to answer. Many
learn to pray long prayers, but yet do not know how to pray for definite things.
Suppose you ask your father or husband or wife or child to get you something.
You must tell him or her what it is that you want.
How strange it is for men to come to God’s presence without anything definite in
mind—just as if anything will do. The difficulty or hindrance to prayer lies in
this particular respect. We must ask specifically, not just generally.
Otherwise, in times of difficulty they will not be able to pray through. General
prayer does not meet a specific need. It may do for ordinary days, but it will not
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prayer is general in nature, we shall find no help in our hour of need, for then our
problems and happenings are all very specific. Only by learning to pray
specifically can we have specific experience to meet specific difficulty.
Men ought to ask of God. Scripture, however, lays down a second condition: do
not ask amiss. “Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss” (Jas. 4:3). Men
may ask God for their needs, but they are not supposed to ask unreasonably or
beyond their measure. It requires a few years of learning before anyone can pray
so-called “big prayers”
before God.
In the early days of our spiritual life, it is rather difficult for us to differentiate
between big prayers and praying amiss. It is best for us at the beginning not to
ask according to our lusts nor to ask wantonly for what we are not in need of.
God will only supply our need and give us that which is necessary. Many times,
though, God does grant us exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask. But if
the young ask wrongly they will not be heard.
What is meant by asking amiss? It means asking beyond your measure, beyond
your need, beyond your actual want. For instance, I have a certain need and I ask
God to supply it. I ask according to the amount of my need. If I ask beyond my
need, I will be asking amiss.
If my need is great, I can ask God to supply that great need. But I should not ask
for more, for God has no delight in hearing flippant prayer. Prayer ought to be
measured by need; it should not be offered recklessly.
To ask amiss is like a four year old child asking for the moon in heaven. It is far
beyond his need. Likewise, young believers should learn to keep their place in
prayer. Only after they have more spiritual experience should they pray big
prayers. But for now, let PRAYER
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them pray within measure. Let them not open their mouths too wide lest they
exceed the limit of actual need.
It may be that men have asked and have not asked wrongly, yet still are not
heard. Why? Perhaps it is because there is a basic hindrance—sin standing
between God and man.
“If I regard iniquity in my heart, The Lord will not hear” (Ps.
66:18). If anyone has a known sin in his heart and his heart clings to it, he shall
not be heard. What is meant by regarding iniquity in the heart? It simply means
there is a sin which one in his heart will not give up. Though a person may have
great weaknesses, God will forgive them. But if one has a sin of which he is
aware and yet still desires it in his heart, then it is more than a weakness in
outward conduct; it is regarding iniquity in his heart.
It is important that young believers drive away all iniquities from their heart.
Every sin must be confessed and be put under the blood.
Though it may not be easy to overcome all one’s sins, yet one must not regard
iniquity in his heart. God may forgive our weaknesses, but He will not permit us
to regard iniquity in our heart. It is of no avail to be outwardly delivered from sin
and still be inwardly attached to it. Therefore, young Christians should at the
start of their Christian life ask God to be gracious to them that they may be holy
in their heart as well as in their conduct. There must be a thorough dealing in the
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love or regard one single iniquity. If there is sin in the heart, it is futile to pray
because the Lord will not hear.
“He that covereth his transgressions shall not prosper; But whoso confesseth and
forsaketh them shall obtain mercy” (Prov. 28:13). Sin
must be confessed. After it is confessed, the Lord will forgive and forget. One
should go to the Lord saying: “Here is a sin which my heart does regard and
finds hard to give up, but now I ask for your forgiveness. I am willing to forsake
it; I ask you to deliver me from it that it may not remain with me. I do not want it
and I resist it.” The Lord will pass over your sin if you so confess before Him.
Then your prayer will be heard. This is a matter that should not be overlooked.
4. MUST BELIEVE
There is yet a positive condition that must be fulfilled, and that is, one must
believe. Otherwise prayer will not be effectual. The
incident in Mark 11:12-24 shows us clearly the necessity of faith in prayer. The
Lord with His disciples came out from Bethany. He hungered on the way. Seeing
a fig tree afar off, He approached that He might find some figs, but He found
nothing except leaves. So He cursed the tree, saying, “No man eat fruit from thee
henceforward for ever.” The next morning they passed by and saw the fig tree
withered away from the roots. The disciples were astonished. And the Lord
answered, “Have faith in God. Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall say unto
this mountain, Be thou taken up and cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his
heart, but shall believe that what he saith cometh to pass; he shall have it.
Therefore I say unto you, All things whatsoever ye pray and ask for, believe that
ye receive them, and ye shall have them.”
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We Christians often have a wrong concept of faith. The Lord says, he who
believes that he receives shall receive; but we Christians maintain, he who
believes that he will receive shall have it. Thus we have here two different kinds
of faith. The Lord uses the word
“receive” twice (Chinese version): once “he receives,” then he “shall receive.”
Many believers, however, fasten their faith to “shall receive.” We pray to the
Lord, believing that we shall receive what we ask. We believe the mountain will
be removed to the sea. Great seems to be our faith. But we have disassociated
faith from “he receives” to he “shall receive.” This is not the kind of faith our
Lord is talking about. The faith of which Scripture speaks is associated with “he
receives.” It is far more exact than “shall receive.”
I was brought to the Lord through the instrumentality of Miss Dora Yu. Years
later she got sick, having cancer of the breast. She heard that I had recently been
healed of my tuberculosis. So she wrote and asked me to visit her in Kiang-wan,
Shanghai. She thought she showed great faith by saying to me, “I believe God
will heal me.”
I told her that this could not be reckoned as faith, for the Lord Jesus never
associates faith with “shall receive.” So we had a long conversation that day.
As you know, cancer is a disease which destroys many cells and eats away the
flesh. It is most painful and gives off a bad odor. At first the doctor suggested an
operation, but later on surgery was useless. Miss Yu, however, maintained that
God would heal her.
When I tried to show her that merely believing God would heal was not faith, the
missionaries who were by her side remonstrated with me and reminded me of
Miss Yu’s great faith. I answered: “She must believe that God has healed her.
Only this is faith. It is not believing God will heal, rather it is believing God has
healed. To believe that God will heal or even that God must heal is mere
expectation, for faith deals with God’s past and present while hope deals with
God’s future. If I believe God will heal me tomorrow, then I am only expecting
God to heal me.”
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Two months later, I received a letter from her. She wrote in her letter, “I have
decided today to get out of bed within two or three days, for I believe that God
will heal me.” As I was rather busy that day and could not visit her at once, I
wrote her saying, “First faith, then work. Such work is living. If work precedes
faith, it is dead.
This is a basic principle. If you believe that you are healed, then your getting out
of bed is living; otherwise it is dead.”
The next day I hurried to her place. I pleaded with her not to get up. I said to her
again: “If you are healed, you can get up; but you cannot get up in order to be
healed.” She did not get up that day, and she passed away to be with the Lord
later on.
So, what is faith? Faith is when you are brought to the place whereby you can
claim God has already heard your prayer. It is not when you say God will hear
you. You kneel down to pray, and somehow you are able to say: Thank God, He
has heard my prayer.
Thank God, this is done. Now, this is faith, for it adheres to “he receives.” If you
rise from your knees and proclaim that you believe God will hear you or God
must hear you, however insistent you are, nothing will happen. Your decision
does not produce any result.
The Lord says, “Believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.” He did
not say: “Believe that ye will receive them, and ye shall have them.” Brethren,
do you get the key? True faith knows “it is done” already. Thank God, for He has
heard my prayer.
To new believers, permit me to say something out of my
experience. Prayer may be divided into two parts: the first part is praying
without any promise until the promise is given, praying without God’s word to
having God’s word. All prayers begin this way. Pray by asking God, and keep on
asking. In George Muller’s case, some prayers were answered in one minute
while some were not yet heard even after seven years. This part is the praying
part.
The second part is praying from the point at which the promise is PRAYER
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given to the realization of the promise, from having God’s word to the
fulfillment of His word. During this period, there should be praise, not prayer.
So, the first part is prayer and the second part is praise. Pray in the first part from
no word to God’s word. Praise in the second part from having the promise till the
promise is fulfilled.
To the people of this world, prayer has only two focal points: I have not, so I
pray; after I pray, God gives to me. For example: I prayed yesterday for a watch.
After several days, the Lord does give me a watch. This is from nothing to
something. But to Christians, there is a third point, a point in between these two:
faith. If I pray for a watch and one day am able to claim that God has heard my
prayer, then I have reached the point of faith, I know inwardly that I have the
watch though my two hands are still empty. A few days later, the watch arrives.
Christians need to know how to receive in the spirit; otherwise they have neither
faith nor spiritual insight.
Men ought to pray earnestly; they should pray till faith is given.
We may say that the first part is praying from no faith to faith; the second part is
praising from faith to actual possession. Why should we divide prayer into these
two parts? Because once having faith, one can only praise, not pray. If he
continues to pray, his faith will be lost. He should use praise to remind God, to
speed up the fulfillment.
God has already promised to give, what more can he ask? Brothers and sisters all
over the world have had such experiences—after faith is given, further prayer is
impossible The one thing to do is to say, “I praise you, Lord.” Alas, some
brothers do not have this knowledge.
God has already promised, yet they keep on praying; and so they pray till they
lose everything. This, indeed, is a great loss.
Lord, I praise You, for You have heard my prayer. You heard me a
month ago.” How precious are the words in Mark 11:24. Nowhere in
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verse. “All things whatsoever ye pray and ask for, believe that ye receive them,
and ye shall have them.” There are three main points here: (a) pray, with nothing
in hand, (b) believe, still with nothing, and (c) believe, and the thing is in hand.
May new believers really understand what prayer is and know how great a part
prayer plays in their lives.
5. KEEP ON PRAYING
There is another side of prayer which may seem contradictory to what we have
just said but which is equally real; it is, men “ought always to pray, and not to
faint” (Lk. 18:1). The Lord shows us that
some prayers require persistency. We must keep on praying till the Lord is worn
out, as it were, by our continual coming. This is not a sign of unbelief, rather it is
just another kind of faith, “Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he
find faith on the earth?” says the Lord. This is the kind of faith which believes
that by praying persistently God will eventually answer, with or without a
previous promise.
Oftentimes we neither do nor can pray the second time for we have not actually
asked for anything. How many of our prayers have we prayed two, three, five or
ten times? Many prayers once we offer them are forgotten. Need we wonder that
God also forgets them? We can pray and keep on praying only when there is a
real need. Then we are under a sort of environment which presses us and moves
us to pray. After fifty years have gone by, we may still remember that prayer. O
Lord, if you do not act, I will keep on praying.
Such prayer does not conflict with that in Mark 11. Mark tells us
that we ought to pray till we are given faith; here it tells us that we ought to pray
always and not to faint. Many of our prayers are so without heart that they are
soon forgotten by the offerers. How can we expect God to hear such heartless
prayers? We ourselves have forgotten and yet we wish God would remember.
There is no such a PRAYER
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thing. Therefore, young brothers and sisters should learn how to pray and how to
pray till they have received what they have asked for.
A certain sister prayed many years for her brother. God did not seem to hear and
the situation grew worse. However, one day she declared that she knew her
brother would be saved. She looked as if she had great assurance. From where
did she get this assurance? It was because she had read the story of the widow
pleading with an unjust judge to avenge her of her adversary. She said, “God has
shown me that I have never troubled Him enough. Early in the morning I will
ask God to save my brother, at noon I will ask again for the salvation of my
brother, and in the evening I will remind Him again of the same. If I pray day
and night, from dawn to dusk, then one day God will be so worn out by me that
He will say, ‘All right, I will grant salvation to your brother!’ I have determined
to pray in this way. Therefore I know my brother will be saved.” This sister had
really mastered Luke 18:5.
Naturally speaking this sister was a timid person, but now she became
exceedingly bold. She troubled God to the extent that God could do nothing but
save her brother. After a week her brother was saved! The light she received
from the Bible was terrific. What nature could not make of her, light from
heaven did; she was transformed into a “violent” person.
Therefore, if you are asking for something, you must learn to trouble God. How
can you expect Him to hear you if you yourself have forgotten what you have
asked for? If your need is real, you will pray always and faint not. Pray till God
has to hear you.
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First, each one should prepare a prayer-book, a book of prayer accounts. All
prayers are to be recorded in this book. Each page should be divided into four
items: for example, in my prayer-book of 1948, the first item is the date; the
second the subject matter, that which one prays for on a certain date; the third the
date of the answer; and the fourth how God answered the prayer. Thus, one is
able to know how many things he has asked of God, how many times God has
answered his prayers, and how many prayers are still waiting to be heard. In this
way one’s prayers can be accounted for.
During one year, God answered George Muller’s prayers three thousand times.
How would he know that figure if he had not recorded them? It is a pity that I
threw away my old prayer-books.
To look over those old books would be most interesting. Once I was rather
ambitious; I wrote down one hundred and forty names in my prayer-book.
Eighteen months later, all except two were saved. Some names were entered in
the morning and the people saved that very afternoon; others were saved after
seven or eight months. Once the things are recorded in the book, they become
business items to be seriously transacted before God. There can be no let-up.
They must be prayed for over and over again, day by day till the transactions are
completed.
The chief advantage of a prayer-book is that it enables one to know how many
prayers are answered and how many are not. If our prayers are not heard, not
answered, something must be drastically wrong. The old as well as the young
should keep a prayer-book.
Zealousness alone is futile if prayers are not heard. Unless the way to God is
clear, the way to men is blocked. He who is powerless before God is powerless
before men. Men ought to seek to have power in prayer before God; otherwise
they will be useless persons.
Several matters should be recorded in the book and prayed over daily: (a) All
children of God should pray daily for the people of the world that they may be
saved. (b) God’s children should pray for the PRAYER
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full restoration of Israel for they are God’s chosen people. Whoever blesses them
shall be blessed. (c) Believers should ask the Head of the church to give light,
grace, gifts and life to the church. How the church today needs these things. And
(d) Christians ought to pray for their countries, that they may lead a tranquil and
quiet life in all godliness and purity. These are four big items for which we must
pray as well as for other things recorded in our prayer-book.
In using the prayer-book, let it be observed that some subjects in the book need
to be prayed over daily, while others may be prayed for once a week. This
depends largely on how many things are recorded. If there are not too many, all
can be covered by prayer each day. If there are a large number, they can be so
arranged that each day of the week certain ones will be covered. I myself for two
years set apart each Saturday for a whole day of prayer.
If young brothers and sisters learn the lesson of prayer from the outset as well as
learn the lesson of studying the Bible, the church will be greatly strengthened.
God will grant a glorious future which will far surpass our past.
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Let us get up early to the vineyards; Let us see
whether the vine hath budded, And its blossom is open, And the pomegranates
are in flower: There will I give thee my love.
S.S. 7:12
Awake up, my glory; awake, psaltery and harp: I myself will awake right early. I
will give thanks unto thee, O Lord, among the peoples: I will sing praises unto
thee among the nations.
Ps. 57:8-9
Awake, psaltery and harp: I myself will awake right early. I will give thanks unto
thee, O Jehovah, among the peoples; And I will sing praises unto thee among the
nations.
Ps. 108:2-3
according to his eating: and when the sun waxed hot, it melted.
Ex. 16:21
O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee. My soul thirsteth for thee, my
flesh languisheth for thee, In a dry and weary land without water.
Oh satisfy us in the morning with thy loving-kindness, That we may rejoice and
be glad all our days.
Ps. 90:14
That which we wish to lay before new believers now is extremely simple: we
must rise early from our bed each day.
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E. Barber, who has helped us greatly. She stated that the first choice giving
evidence of one’s love towards the Lord is the choice between one’s bed and the
Lord. If one chooses to love his bed more, he sleeps longer; but if he chooses to
love his Lord more, he will rise up a little earlier. She spoke these words to me in
1921, but I still sense the freshness of them even today. Yes, a man has to choose
between the bed and the Lord. If you love your bed more, sleep on longer; but if
you love the Lord more, you must rise up earlier.
Why must we rise early? Because the early morning is the best time to meet the
Lord. Other than those few who have organic diseases of the body, all brothers
and sisters should be encouraged to rise early. Most of us do not have organic
diseases, but are sick only from loving ourselves too much! If the doctors advise
us that we have some organic disease such as tuberculosis or heart trouble, then
we should not rise up early. We do not want to go to extremes. Those who are
sick, we persuade to rest more. But for most, we wish them to rise as early as
possible. Dawn is the best time to meet the Lord, the best opportunity to
commune with Him.
Many of God’s servants in the Bible had the habit of early rising.
Manna has to be gathered before the sun rises. Anyone who wishes to eat the
food God has promised for him must rise up early. As the sun gets hot the manna
melts, and then there will be none. Every young believer needs to know that to
receive spiritual nourishment before God, to obtain spiritual food, to be
spiritually uplifted and to enjoy spiritual communion, he has to rise up a little
earlier. If he rises too late, he will lose his food. The sickly Christian life which
prevails among God’s children today is less due to any serious spiritual problem
than it is to rising up too late in the morning. Do not, therefore, count this a small
matter. The spiritual problem of many actually lies in their failure to rise up early
in the morning.
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It is as if in the early morning before or just as the day begins to dawn, God
dispenses His provision of spiritual food and holy communion to His children.
Whoever rises late will miss it. Many of God’s children do not lack in
consecration, zeal and love, and yet they fail to be good Christians because of
getting up too late. Rising early has much to do with spiritual life. I have never
met a prayer warrior who rises late, nor have I known anyone close to the Lord
who gets up late. All who know God at the very least go to God early in the
morning.
“As the door turneth upon its hinges, So doth the sluggard upon
his bed” (Prov. 26:14). How does the sluggard act on his bed? He is like a door
turning upon its hinges. The slothful person will turn in his bed, but will never
leave it. He will turn this way and that way but yet remain in bed. Many people
simply cling to their beds.
Turning to one side, they find the bed lovely; turning to the other side, they find
it still lovely! They love to sleep, to sleep a little longer, and to linger more in
bed. Let brothers and sisters notice, however, that if they desire to serve God
they must daily rise early.
Whoever purposes before God to rise early will soon experience manifold
spiritual profit. His prayer at other times of the day cannot be compared with his
early morning prayer. His Bible study at other hours cannot equal that of the
morning hour; and his communion with the Lord is never as sweet at other
moments as at daybreak.
Remember well that the early morning is the best time of the day.
We ought to present our best time to God, not to men or to the affairs of the
world. He is a fool who spends his whole day in the world and then in the
evening, when he is dog-tired, kneels down to pray and read the Bible before
retiring to bed. Who can wonder if his prayer, his Bible study and his
communion with the Lord are defective? His problem is one of getting up too
late in the morning.
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God’s servants in the Bible were all early risers. Let us note some of them:
1. Abraham
And Abraham gat up early in the morning to the place where he had stood before
Jehovah.
Gen. 19:27
Gen. 21:14
Gen. 22:3
2. Jacob
And Jacob rose up early in the morning . . .
Gen. 28:18
3. Moses
And Jehovah said unto Moses, Rise up early in the morning, and stand before
Pharaoh . . .
Ex. 8:20
Ex. 9:13
And Moses wrote all the words of Jehovah, and rose up early in the morning . . .
Ex. 24:4
. . . and Moses rose up early in the morning, and went up unto mount Sinai . . .
Ex. 34:4
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4. Joshua
Josh. 3:1
Josh. 6:12
Josh. 8:10
5. Gideon
Judg. 6:38
6. Hannah
And they rose up in the morning early, and worshipped before Jehovah . . .
I Sam. 1:19
7. Samuel
I Sam. 15:12
8. David
I Sam. 17:20
9. Job
. . . Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning, and offered
burnt-offerings . . .
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Job 1:5
Acts 5:21
11. Mary
Moreover certain women of our company amazed us, having been early at the
tomb . . .
Lk. 24:22
Now when he was risen early on the first day of the week, he appeared first to
Mary Magdalene . . .
Mk. 16:9
Now on the first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, while it was yet
dark, unto the tomb .
John 20:1
And in the morning, a great while before day, he rose up and went out, and
departed into a desert place, and there prayed.
Mk. 1:35
These scriptural verses all mention about early rising; it was during this time that
many things in relation to God’s work and consecration were transacted. God’s
best servants both in the Old and in the New Testaments were all early risers.
They all had the habit of communing with God, dealing with God, and working
for God in the early morning. Although we do not find in the Bible any direct
command of God to bid us rise early, we nonetheless have sufficient examples of
many faithful servants of God who were all early risers.
Therefore new brothers and sisters who wish to follow the Lord must not
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Early rising is a great blessing. It is our desire that as he begins his Christian life,
not one would miss this blessing of early rising.
During the first three years of my Christian life, at least fifty times people asked
me how early did I rise. It is such a great blessing, they did not want me to miss
it. The world may see no difference in rising two hours earlier or two hours later;
such a thing might not make any difference in the things of the world. But let me
tell you, in spiritual things, it actually makes a great difference.
Not only were so many of God’s servants early risers, even the Lord Jesus
Himself rose early. He got up before dawn to pray; He called the twelve disciples
early in the day. If we do not rise early enough, we no doubt will become
exceedingly poor spiritually.
All of whom I have known or read, who have been of some use in God’s hand,
pay attention to this matter of early rising. They call it morning watch. Have you
ever heard of people keeping watch after the sun is up? No, they keep watch
until the sun arises. So morning watch must be kept quite early, or otherwise it
will not be reckoned as a watch.
Morning watch is truly our Christian heritage; God’s children should not throw it
away. Even as the church has practiced this morning watch for so many years, so
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on to the next generation. We will keep the name, calling it morning watch, and
exhort the younger generation to rise early in the morning to meet God.
I have known some missionaries greatly used of the Lord, such as Miss M. E.
Barber and Miss Groves. They were both early risers. For many decades, Miss
Groves always got up before five in the morning and Miss Barber between four
and five in the morning. They told me that they dared not sleep too warmly lest
they could not get up in the early morn.
George Muller rose early; so did John Wesley. Many great servants of God got
up early. And thus we also expect young brothers and sisters to get up early and
not allow time to glide away in sleep.
Our aim is not just to get people out of bed in the early morning.
We are seeking for spiritual value and spiritual content. So here are a few things
which people should do after rising:
Men rise early in the morning that they may commune with the Lord. “Let us get
up early . . . There will I give thee my love” (S.S.
7:12). Being the best time of the day, it should be spent in holding fellowship
with God, in waiting quietly before God, in meditating in God’s presence, in
receiving guidance and impressions from God, and in allowing God to speak to
us, our spirits being open to Him.
Communion means having one’s spirit opened to God. As the spirit is opened to
God, so is one’s mind opened. This gives God opportunity to confer light, to
supply a word, to grant an impression, and to render a living touch; it also gives
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learning to touch God, to meditate and contemplate, and to draw nigh in heart to
God. This, in short, is communion with God.
The morning hour is the best hour to sing praises unto the Lord.
This is the time to gather our manna. What is our manna? (Of course, manna
points to Christ, but this is not our emphasis here.) It is the Word of God which
we daily enjoy and through which we receive strength to walk in the wilderness.
Manna is food in the wilderness and has to be collected in the early morning.
How can one be satisfied and nourished if he spends the early morning in
attending to other affairs?
We have mentioned before that every person should have two Bibles: one to be
read at leisure in the afternoon in which many things may be written, and one to
be used in the morning in which nothing should be written for it is purely for the
gathering of manna.
For the morning, do not read long portions; rather open a short passage of the
Bible before God and mix prayer with the Word, singing with reading, and
communion with the Bible.
We assert that we rise up early for communion. This does not mean that
communion is the first step, praise the second step, reading the Bible the third
step and prayer the fourth step. Actually it is combining all these, having them
mixed together before God. You may appear in God’s presence with His Word
open before you as suggested in Malachi (“Remember ye the law of Moses my
servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, even statutes
and ordinances” Mal. 4:4), or you may join your prayer with the reading of the
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Word, or you may thank God for specific grace you have received; you may
make a special request according to the Word you have read, or you may simply
tell the Lord that this particular thing mentioned in the Scripture is just what you
lack. To many words, you can say “Lord, I believe”; to many promises you can
respond with “Lord, I receive.” Sometimes you feel you want to thank the Lord,
for His promise is so great; sometimes you are constrained to pray for your
brothers and sisters as well as for yourself because you find their condition and
yours contrary to what the Bible affirms. No, you are not criticizing or accusing
anyone before God; you are merely asking God to fulfill His word in your
brethren as well as in you. You, therefore, are confessing both your own sins and
the sins of the church. You pray for your own self and for others. You believe on
your own behalf and on the behalf of others. You give thanks for both yourself
and others.
For this purpose, Bible reading in the early morning should not cover too long a
portion. Three to five verses ought to be sufficient for an hour’s prayer and
communion. Pray and commune with God over everything. There are good
examples of this in Nehemiah and David, of how they knew God and knew how
to commune with Him.
In the psalms of David, we find he often shifts in the persons he addresses from
“you” to “He.” At one moment he is talking with men, and at the next moment
he has turned it into prayer to God. In the same psalm, he may speak a few
words before men and then direct his next words to God. If we do not know how
to read the psalms, we will be at a loss to know at what he is aiming. But these
very psalms prove that David was one who had communion with God. For
myself I cannot speak to the brethren and to God at the same time; yet David’s
psalms were written with these two mingled.
Such also was Nehemiah. He mixed the managing of earthly affairs with prayer.
As he was engaged in his task, he would say a few words and offer a short
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he was talking with the Lord as well as with the King. Blending is an important
principle in a believer’s life.
A similar feature is found in Paul’s epistles. For instance, the Letter to the
Romans is addressed to the believers in Rome, yet time and again we find Paul’s
words run to the Lord as if he had quite forgotten the Romans.
Many readers may have read the life of Madame Guyon. Her autobiography has
one special feature: whereas most biographies are written for men to read, hers is
both for God and for men. In one instant she speaks to LaCombe (for it was
LaCombe who bid her write her autobiography); at the next she talks with the
Lord. This is what we call communion. Where it begins and where it ends are
indefinite. As soon as one’s spirit rises up, he or she goes forth to meet the Lord.
It is not necessary to lay down the affairs of the world in order to pray, nor to
take them up only after prayer is finished.
Learn to blend prayer and praise and communion into the Word of God. For a
while you are on the earth and in the next moment in heaven; you are in your
own presence for a second and then move on to God’s presence the next instant.
In so spending your time each morning before God, you will be daily satisfied.
You will have fed on the Word of Christ, for Christ is the Word of God. You will
also have allowed the Word of Christ to dwell in you richly. This way of reading
the Word of God, of feeding on the manna, is indispensable.
To the many weak brothers and sisters staggering in the wilderness, we would
like to ask whether they have eaten. They cannot run because what they have
eaten is not sufficient to nourish them.
Manna must be gathered in the early morning; therefore get up a little earlier lest
you miss your food.
Let there be communion, praise, manna and prayer in the early morning. “O
God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee” (Ps. 63:1
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Darby). “And returned and sought early after God” (Ps. 78:34
Early in the morning is the time for prayer. After having communed with God
and fed on manna, one is strengthened to lay all things before God and to
carefully pray over them. It takes strength to pray; the weak cannot pray. With
the new strength gathered from communion and from feeding on the manna, one
is able to pray—for himself, for the church and for the whole world.
So every new believer needs to know the four things he ought to attentively do
before God each morning: communion, praise, Bible reading and prayer. If he
neglects these four, the day will declare it.
Even a person like George Muller confessed that whether or not he was fully fed
before God in the morning determined his spiritual condition for the whole day.
His early morning foretold the day.
Many Christians find their days hard because their mornings are ill spent. (I
acknowledge that a person would not be easily affected by outward
circumstances if he knew the separation of spirit and soul and thus the
consumption of the outward man. This, however, is a totally different aspect.) To
new believers, the exhortation must be directed towards early rising, for once
they become careless about this, they will be careless about almost everything.
The difference it makes in the day is exceedingly great, whether one has had
nourishment in the morning or has gone hungry.
I remember a well-known pianist once remarked: “If I do not practice for one
day, I notice something wrong; if I do not practice for two days, my wife notices
something wrong; and if I do not practice for three days, the whole world notices
something wrong.”
Let us not forget that if we fail to have a good morning with the Lord, not only
ourselves and our wives but the whole world will surely know it. Why? Because
we have failed to reach the source of our spiritual life. Young believers ought to
discipline themselves very strictly and get up early in the morning to practice
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praise, Bible reading and prayer before God that thus they may be well
nourished.
Finally, we would like to mention a few things which are related to the practice
of early rising:
a) To rise early, one needs to go to sleep early. All early risers have the habit of
going to bed early. It is improper to expect to retire late and rise up early. That
would be like burning the candle on both ends.
b) Do not set too high a standard for rising early. Some decide to rise up at three
or four o’clock in the morning. They try it for a few days and quit. Trying to rise
too early will end up in failure. Let us rather take a moderate course—say,
around five and six o’clock, just before or at the dawning of the day. If the time
is set too early, it will be difficult to sustain. To set too high a standard will
produce a bad conscience and we need to maintain a conscience without offence.
Thus we do not advocate extremes. Let us each consider the matter carefully
before God, taking into consideration the physical and environmental conditions
of our lives, and then set a standard for ourselves as to what is the appropriate
time for us to rise.
c) Cultivate the habit of early rising. It is inevitable that one will meet some
difficulty in the first few days of early rising. He will love his bed and find it
hard to climb out. It takes some time to establish a habit. In the beginning one
has to force oneself to rise, but after a while he can get up early without effort.
Human nerves are like the tree on the hilltop that bends in the direction of the
wind. If it is blown always in one direction, it develops the habit of leaning in
that direction. Suppose you have the habit of rising late. It is like having your
nerve bent northward. But 104 A
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after you try to rise up early many times, your nerve will begin to turn its
direction southward. Then, instead of it being difficult to get up early, you will
find it hard to get up late, for you cannot sleep any longer! Until that habit is
formed, though, ask God to give you grace that this good habit of early rising
may be developed. Try it many times; do it again and again. Daily learn to desert
your bed and get up early until you have formed the habit of rising early to enjoy
the grace of morning communion with God.
d) Our sleep should not exceed eight hours. Pardon me for bypassing physicians
in speaking directly to new believers. I think few people need more than eight
hours of sleep. Do not make yourself an exception. Unless your doctor
prescribes more rest because of some organic disease, eight hours is quite
sufficient for the ordinary person. Do not worry about your health in rising early.
The average need for an ordinary person is six to eight hours of sleep. So long as
you keep to the average, you will have enough rest.
e) The sluggard needs a little push. We are now in the Church, being members of
the Body of Christ. How, then, can we be careless? The sluggard among us
needs a little pushing, a little pulling, a little shaking. Likewise, those who sleep
only three or four hours need a little correction too, for the lack of rest may
become the cause of sickness. The average is eight hours; too much is
unnecessary, too little is insufficient.
I hope that those who are more advanced in the Lord and have some weight
before God will take up the responsibility of maintaining the practice of morning
watch in the church. They themselves should both rise early and should help the
young into this blessed state. Whenever there is opportunity, they should ask the
young: “Brother, at what time do you get up these days?” Many rise EARLY
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up at eight, eat breakfast in five minutes and then have five minutes to hurry
through the Bible. They spend too much time in bed. So older ones in the Lord
should inquire of the younger ones, perhaps continuing such inquiry for as long
as a year.
Gathering on the Lord’s Day is also a habit. The young ought to form both these
habits, but the responsibility for helping them is with the older believers. How
very many have never enjoyed the blessing of early rising!
If the church makes progress in this exercise, if many brothers and sisters learn
to rise early, if each one goes to God and receives a little more light each day,
how rich the whole church will become and how full of light she will be. If the
church is poor it is only because too few are receiving anything from the Head.
Should we learn to receive from the Head, even though each one of us receives
only a little, the result will be that the church will become exceedingly rich.
Our way lies not in having ten or a hundred special workers or ministers to labor
among us. We expect all the members of the Body to rise up before God to
receive riches and grace. If all the brothers and sisters go this way, the riches
among us will be without measure.
I often think what we are able to give to the brethren must be far inferior to what
God could give. But what each member does receive from the Head is for the
gain of the whole Body. May there be many, many such receptive vessels before
God, each one gaining his little portion to share with the Body. Therefore, let us
not despise early rising as a small thing. Let us all keep the morning watch, and
then we shall all together advance one more step.
Document Outline
Main Menu
1. BAPTISM
Two Sets of Scriptures On Baptism
What Can Baptism Do for a Person?
What Is the Real Meaning of Baptism?
2. CONCLUDING THE PAST
The Teaching of the Bible
What Needs to be Dealt With
A Question
3. SELLING ALL
The Prerequisite
The Lesson of the Young Ruler
The Lesson of Zacchaeus
God's Way for Today
God or Mammon
4. CONSECRATION
The Bases of Consecration
The Real Meaning of Consecration
They Who Are Consecrated
The Way of Consecration
The Aim of Consecration
The Song of Consecration
5. STUDYING THE BIBLE
The Importance of Studying the Bible
How to Study the Bible
Practical Hints in Studying the Bible
6. PRAYER
The Conditions for Answered Prayer
Prayer as a Work to Be Done
Prayer Has Two Ends
7. EARLY RISING
Why Must We Rise Early?
Examples of Early Rising in the Bible
What to Do After Rising Early
Things to Be Observed in Early Rising
Give Help to the Young Believers