Chapter 20
GOD'S KEEPING
"I pray
God your whole spirit, soul and body be preserved entire . . . faithful
is he that
calleth you who also will do it" (1 Thess. 5:23 R. V.)
He will
keep the feet of his saints" (1 Sam. 2:9).
"He will
give his angels charge over thee in all thy ways" (Psa. 91:11).
"He that
keepeth thee will not slumber" (Psa. 121:3).
"That good thing that was
committed unto thee, guard through the Holy Spirit which
dwelleth in us" (2 Tim. 1:47, R.V.).
"But ye, beloved, building up
yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy
Spirit, keep yourselves in the love of God" (Jude 20, R. V.) .
"My little children, keep [R. V.
guard] yourselves from idols" (1 John 5:21).
God undertakes and promises to
keep us, but He tells us to guard and keep ourselves. What
can it mean? Manifestly this: He does not force His keeping grace upon
us. He will use divine
agencies and even the help of angels; but He will not do it without our
hearty co-operation and
willing, cheerful consent.
I have been a profoundly
interested, and often deeply grieved observer of the spiritual life
of those professing holiness in this community for some eight years. It
has made me somewhat
qualified to speak.
I am compelled to say that there
has been a vast deal of backsliding. I certainly have seen
very many come to the altar in ten different series of meetings, many
in twenty series of meetings;
and not a few, I am persuaded, in as many as thirty series of meetings!
Now this is not normal. It is not
God's plan! This is not in harmony with what He has said
about His keeping power. It certainly does not measure up to our
privileges in Christ. I would
write a few lines to Stop, if possible, this chronic backsliding. It is
too dangerous to be permitted
to go on unnoticed and uncorrected.
1. Jesus proposes to guard us from
stumbling (R. V.); but our corresponding attitude of soul
is constant trust, and deepest dependence upon God. The Lord has made
our heart His temple, and
purposely comes in to keep it clean and holy; but He does it only by
our consent and assistance.
There is no compulsion in a life of grace. Always remember that God
never does anything to
subvert, or set aside, or override your own self-sovereignty.
He made us free moral agents to be
masters of ourselves, and arbiters of our own destiny,
and He will forever leave us free. God has no slaves in heaven. The
home of the blessed is not a
slave pen into which people are stampeded as cattle are driven into a
corral. Only those are there
who choose to be; and it was an ever-repeated and irrevocable choice.
II. Jesus can and will keep us in
the blessing only as He gave it to us by our faith. Jesus
says, "Sanctified by faith in me." -- Therefore do not be forever
consulting your feelings, and
keeping your fingers on the pulse of your emotional nature, and your
sensibilities . but keep up your
devotions and keep on believing. Let it never be forgotten that a state
of purity is never dependent
on emotions, but on faith in Christ as our sanctification. Emotions and
feelings are mere attendants,
and depend largely on the temperament, and the flow of animal spirits
and the nervous
sensibilities. Disease, infirmities, weaknesses, aches and pains, and
weather may depress the
emotions. St. Peter knew that. He wrote of the incorruptible
inheritance, "reserved in heaven for
you, who by the power of God are guarded through faith unto salvation .
. . Wherein ye greatly
rejoice, though now for a little while, if need be, ye have been put to
grief in manifold trials, that
the proof of your faith -- might be found unto praise and glory" (1
Peter 1:4-7, R. V.).
But if you will
have ecstasies, and are more concerned about them than about a clean
heart,
remember that the devil can give ecstasies and tongues, and has done it
times without count to vile
spiritualistic mediums.
Do not seek for
emotions. Let them come as they will; but tell Satan that, feelings or
no
feelings, by faith in Jesus, you are still under the blood "that
cleanseth from all sin."
III. There is
the duty of constant watchfulness. In the course of five verses (Mark
13:33-37), Jesus bade His disciples four times to watch. "What I say
unto you, I say unto all,
Watch." No Christian is ever relieved from this necessity of constant
watchfulness.
Those of us who
have crossed the ocean in a steamship, have always gone to our berths on
a dark night with a greater sense of security because we knew that high
up in the crow's nest, over
the bow of the steamer, was a "look out" sailor. It was his particular
business to do two things,
viz., to keep constant watch and report any glimpse of a vessel or an
iceberg in the steamer's path,
and to signal to the engine room below. So it is in our spiritual life.
There are always perils about
us. It is the careless souls who are foolhardy and presumptuous, and
will not believe that there is
any danger, who are the easy victims of Satan's wiles. -- This leads me
to observe:
IV. Conscience
is that "lookout" sailor aloft over the bow, in the voyage of life.
"Some
people with sinful infatuation, put conscience at the stern; it may
utter its cry of remorse after the
sin has been committed, and the craft has struck the peril which stove
in the bow. But a conscience
that does no more than weep and moan over sins already committed is of
little worth. It is the duty
of a healthy conscience to detect sin in advance, and to sound the
alarm to the will, that has its
hand on the helm. The truly righteous man has temptations floating
across his way, as really as the
ungodly or the backslider has. The difference is that the righteous
man's conscience detects the
danger ahead, and gives the signal to the will to "steer clear of the
temptation." Yea, it reports the
danger to God in prayer, and help comes from above.
April 15, 1912,
the greatest ship that had ever plowed the waves, 882 feet long, -- the
Titantic, was crossing the Atlantic. It had nearly 2,400 lives on
board, and was making its maiden
trip at record speed. Her commander, Captain Smith, had won a name for
care and skill, and was
at the summit of renown among English naval officers, and then lost his
"patient continuance in
well-doing." That star-lit Sunday night he was feasting to intoxication
with millionaires -- six of
them worth in the aggregate, $400,000,000. Other members of the crew
were stupid from
champagne, and the lookout in the crow's nest was thus asleep. Three
other ships sent wireless
warnings to them, and alarms were rung, but all in vain. With utter
infatuation they crowded her
spend to the limit, and drove on in a race with death. Death won the
race. The ship crashed into an
iceberg and tore out its side. The captain saw his own ruin, drew his
revolver and shot himself. A
survivor says he will never forget, to his dying day, how the sixteen
hundred clung to the ship's
rail, shrieking and moaning and groaning, as the sinking Titantic
carried them down to a needless
death.
That is a perfect picture of
a neglected and drugged conscience, despising all God's
warnings, and waking up in remorse, when it is forever too late.
V. Our religious safety
depends on Our being dead to the world. God says, "Love not the
world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the
world, the love of the Father is
not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, the
lust of the eyes, and the vainglory of
life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth
away, and the lusts thereof; but
he that doeth the will of God abideth forever."
Now we may ask what is meant
by "the world" in this wonderful passage? Bishop Gore of
England defines it thus: "The world is human society organizing itself
apart from God." Bishop
Ellicott of England defines the world as: "The sum total of all that is
opposed to the spiritual reign
of Christ." Enlarging that definition, I define as follows: "Those
habits, fashions, customs, laws --
those principles of conduct, ambitions, pleasures and aims of godless
people -- which constitute,
in the aggregate, that old hag called the world, that is forever
opposed to God and Christ and all
righteousness." That is the thing which crucified Jesus and still
crucifies Him and His cause afresh,
and puts Him to an open shame before our eyes continually.
Now what I am saying is
this: those who would keep their piety and grow in grace must die
out to this whole damning and damnable worldliness. We cannot seek its
approbation. We cannot
practice the most of its pleasures. We cannot slavishly follow its
fashions. We cannot bow to its
opinions, or court its favors, or love its applause. Above all, we
cannot adopt its moral principles
as our standard of conduct, or imitate its customs, or worship at its
idolatrous shrines.
St. Paul said, "By whom
[Christ] the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world."
Nobody has a very serious case of religion, who has not thus been
crucified to the world and by
the world, and dissolved partnership with it forever.
I am free to admit that what
I am now saying has special reference to women. Multitudes of
professedly Christian women, and altogether too many of them in the
ranks of holiness, seem to act
as if they were the bond-slaves of fashion, and the fashion magazines
were their Bible, the
dressmaking shops were their churches, and the dressmakers priestesses
to direct their devotions
and guide their prayers.
I believe God is trying by
the Holiness Movement to produce a generation of women who
are dead to the fashionable follies and idiotic fooleries of this
hell-bent world. And if you women
fail Him, farewell all hopes of a redeemed humanity.
Some worldly, fashionable
females in our churches ask, "What harm is there in cards, and
dancing and theaters?" Many of these people are not amenable to
argument. They are beyond all
rational persuasion! They are a thousand times more afraid of not being
in the fashion than they are
afraid of sin. They have drugged consciences. Worldliness has befogged
their brains, and reduced
their moral-backbones to the limpness of a cotton string. To seem to be
aristocratic, they will have
intoxicants on their tables, even though it does engulf their husbands
and sons in hopeless ruin.
They must patronize the dance, even if it is likely to make their sons
drones, and their daughters
harlots. "O Fashion! Fashion! what power hast thou to brow-beat holy
nature so that she dare not
speak to assert her sacred claims against thy imperious sway!"
I am not writing
for such people. It would be useless. They are abandoned to the
pleasures
of Sin. They are strangers to Jesus. They "love the world, and the love
of the Father is not in them."
But there are others not utterly committed to a career of Christless
worldliness. They are toying
with these fashionable pleasures which so many church members run
after. They are troubled about
it because the Spirit of God has not wholly left them; they are still
willing to listen to the voice
divine. For them I write. To them the Spirit speaks; "Oh, do not this
abominable thing that I hate"
(Jer. 44:4).
THE END