I'm kind of out of time today so I pulled the fourth chapter of Murray's little book The Master's Indwelling from my ebook copy.
ENTRANCE INTO REST.
IV.
Hebrews 4: 1.--_Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise being
left us of entering into His rest, any of you should seem to come short of it._
Hebrews 4: 11.--_Let us labor therefore to enter into that
rest, lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief_.
I want, in the simplest way possible, to answer the
question: "How does a man enter into that rest?" and to point out the
simple steps that he takes, all included in the one act of surrender and faith.
And the first step, I think, is this: that a man learns to
say, "I believe, heartily, there is rest in a life of faith." Israel
passed through two stages. This is beautifully expressed in the fifth of
Deuteronomy: "He brought us out, that He might bring us in"--two
parts of God's work of redemption--"He brought us out from Egypt, that He
might bring us into Canaan." And that is applicable to every believer. At
your conversion, God brought you out of Egypt, and the same almighty God is
longing to bring you into the Canaan life. You know how God brought the
Israelites out, but they would not let Him bring them in and they had to wander
for forty years in the wilderness--the type, alas! of so many Christians. God
brings them out in conversion, but they will not let Him bring them in into all
that He has prepared for them. To a man who asks me, "How can I enter into
the rest?" I say, first of all, speak this word, "I do believe that
there is a rest into which Jesus, our Joshua, can bring a trusting soul."
And if you would know what the difference is between the two lives--the life
you have been leading, and the life you now want to lead, just look at the
wilderness and Canaan. What are the points of difference? In the wilderness,
wandering for forty years, backward and forward; in Canaan, perfect rest in the
land that God gave them. That is the difference between the life of a Christian
who has, and one who has not entered into Canaan. In wandering backward and
forward; going after the world, and coming back and repenting; led astray by
temptation, and returning only to go off again;--a life of ups and downs. In
Canaan, on the other hand, a life of rest, because the soul has learned to
trust: "God keeps me every hour in His mighty power." There is the
second difference: the life in the wilderness was a life of want; in Canaan, a
life of plenty. In the wilderness there was nothing to eat; there was often no
water. God graciously supplied their wants by the manna, and the water from the
rock. But, alas! they were not content with this, and their life was one of
want and murmurings. But in Canaan God gave them vineyards that they had not
planted, and the old corn of the land was there waiting for them; a land
flowing with milk and honey; a land that lived by the rain of Heaven and had
the very care of God Himself. Oh, Christian, come and say to-day, "I
believe there is a possibility of such a change out of that life of spiritual
death, and darkness, and sadness, and complaining, that I have often lived,
into the land of supply of every want; where the grace of Jesus is proved
sufficient every day, every hour." Say to-day: "I believe in the
possibility that there is such a land of rest for me."
And then, the third difference: In the wilderness there was
no victory. When they tried, after they had sinned at Kadesh, to go up against
their enemies, they were defeated. In the land they conquered every enemy; from
Jericho onward, they went from victory to victory. And so God waits, and Christ
waits, and the Holy Spirit waits, to give victory every day; not freedom from
temptation; no, not that; but in union with Christ a power that can say,
"I can do all things through Him that strengtheneth me." "We are
more than conquerors through Him that loved us." May God help every heart
to say that.
Then comes the second step. I want you to say not only,
"I believe there is such a life," but, second, "I have not had
it yet." Say that. "I have never yet got that." Some may say,
"I have sought it;" some may say, "I have never heard about
it;" some may say, "At times I thought I had found it, but I lost it
again." Let every one be honest with God.
And now, will all who have never yet found it honestly,
begin to say, "Lord, up to this time I have never had it?" And why is
it of such consequence to speak thus? Because, dear friends, some people want
to glide into this life of rest gradually; and just quietly to steal in; and
God won't have it. Your life in the wilderness has not only been a life of
sadness to yourself, but of sin and dishonor to God. Every deeper entrance into
salvation must always be by the way of conviction and confession; therefore,
let every Christian be willing to say: "Alas! I have not lived that life,
and I am guilty; I have dishonored God; I have been like Israel; I have
provoked Him to wrath by my unbelief and disobedience. God have mercy upon
me!" Oh, let it go up before God--the secret confession: "I haven't
it; alas! I have not glorified God by a life in the land of rest."
Then comes the third word I want you to speak and that is:
"Thank God, that life is for me." Some say, "I believe there is
such a life, but not for me." There are people who continually say:
"Oh, my character is so unstable; my will is naturally very weak; my
temperament is nervous and excitable, it is impossible for me always to live
without worry, resting in God." Beloved brother, do not say that. You say
so only for one reason: You do not know what your God will do for you. Do begin
to look away from self, and to look up to God, Take that precious word:
"He brought them out that he might bring them in." The God who took them
through the Red Sea was the God who took them through Jordan into Canaan. The
God who converted you is the God who is able to give you every day this blessed
life. Oh, begin to say, with the beginnings of a feeble faith, even before you
claim it, begin even intellectually to say: "It is for me; I do believe
that. God does not disinherit any of His children. What He gives is for every
one. I believe that blessed life is waiting for me. It is meant for me. God is
waiting to bestow it, and to work it in me. Glory be to His blessed name! My
soul says it is for me, too." Oh, take that little word "me,"
and looking up in the very face of God dare to say: "This inestimable
treasure--it is for me, the weakest and the unworthiest; it is for me."
Have you said that? Say it now: "This life is possible to me, too."
And then comes the next step, and that is: "I can
never, by any effort of mine, grasp it; it is God must bestow it on me." I
want you to be very bold in saying, "It is for me." But then I want
you to fall down very low and say, "I can not seize it; I can not take it
to myself." And how can you then get it? Praise God, if once He has
brought you down in the consciousness of utter helplessness and self-despair,
then comes the time that He can draw nigh and ask you, "Will you trust
your God to work this in you?" Dearly beloved Christians, say in your
heart: "I never, by any effort, can take hold of God, or seize this for
myself; it is God must give it." Cherish this blessed impotence. It is He
who brought us out, who Himself must bring us in. It is your greatest happiness
to be impotent. Pray God by the Holy Spirit to reveal to you this true
impotence, and that will open the way for your faith to say, "Lord, Thou
must do it, or it will never be done." God will do it. People wonder, when
they hear so many sermons about faith, and such earnest pleading to believe,
and ask why it is they can not believe. There is just one answer: It is self.
Self is working; is trying; is struggling, and self must fail. But when you
come to the end of self and can only cry, "Lord, help me! Lord, help
me!"--then the deliverance is nigh; believe that. It was God brought the
people in. It is God who will bring you in.
One should be willing, for the sake of this rest, to give up
everything. The grace of God is very free. It is given without money and
without price. And yet, on the other hand, Jesus said that every man who wants
the pearl of great price must sacrifice his all, must sell all that he has to
buy that pearl. It is not enough to see the beauty, the attractiveness and the
glory, and almost to taste the gladness and the joy of this wonderful life as it
has been set before you. You must become the possessor, the owner of the field.
The man who found the field with a treasure, and the man who found the great
pearl, were both glad; but they had not yet got it. They had found it, seen it,
desired it, rejoiced in it; but they had not yet got it. Not until they went
and sold all, gave up everything, and bought the ground, and bought the pearl.
Ah, friends, there is a great deal that has to be given up: the world, its
pleasures, its favor, its good opinion. You are to stand to the world in the
same relation as Jesus did. The world rejected Him, and cast Him out, and you
are to take up the position of your Lord, to whom you belong, and to follow
with the rejected Christ. You have to give up everything. You have to give up
all that is good in yourself and to be humbled in the dust of death. And that
is not all. Your past religious life and experience and successes--you have to
give all up and become nothing, that God alone may have the glory. God has
brought you out in conversion; it was God's own life given you: but you defiled
it with disobedience and with unbelief. Give it all up. Give up all your own
wisdom, and your own thoughts about God's work. How hard it is for the minister
of the Gospel to give up all his wisdom, and to lay it at the feet of Jesus, to
become a fool and to say: "Lord, I know nothing as I should know it. I
have been preaching the Gospel, and how little I have seen of the glory of the
blessed land, and the blessed life!"
Why is it that the blessed Spirit can not teach us more
effectually? No reason but this: the wisdom of man prevents it; the wisdom of
man prevents the light of God from shining in. And so we could say of other
things; give up all. Some may have an individual sin to give up. There may be a
Christian man who is angry with his brother. There may be a Christian woman who
has quarreled with her neighbor. There may be friends who are not living as
they should. There may be Christians holding fast some little doubtful thing,
not willing to surrender and leave behind the whole of the wilderness life and
lust. Oh, do take this step and say: "I am ready to give up everything to
have this pearl of great price; my time, my attention, my business, I count all subordinate to this rest of God as
the first thing in my life; I yield all to walk in perfect fellowship with
God." You can not get that and live every day in perfect fellowship with
God, without giving up time to it. You take time for everything. How many hours
a day has a young lady spent for years and years that she may become proficient
on the piano? How many years does a young man study to fit himself for the
profession of the law or medicine? Hours, and days, and weeks, and months, and
years, gladly given up to perfect himself for his profession. And do you expect
that religion is so cheap that without giving time you can find close
fellowship with God? You can not. But, oh, my brothers and sisters, the pearl
of great price is worth everything. God is worth everything. Christ is worth everything.
Oh, come to-day, and say, "Lord, at any cost help me; I do want to live
this life." And if you find it difficult to say this, and if there is a
struggle within the heart, never mind; say to God, "Lord, I thought I was
willing, but I see how much unwillingness there is; come and discover what the
evil is still in the heart." By His grace, if you will lie at His feet and
trust Him you may depend upon it deliverance will come Then comes the next
step, and that is to say: "I do now give up myself to the holy and
everlasting God, for Him to lead me into this perfect rest." Ah, friends,
we must learn to meet God face to face. My sin has been against God. David felt
that when he said, "Against Thee, Thee only, have I sinned." It is
God on the judgment seat whose face you will have to meet personally. It is God
Himself, personally, who met you to pardon your sins. Come to-day and put
yourself into the hands of the living God. God is love. God is near. God is
waiting to give you His blessing. The heart of God is yearning over you.
"My child," God says, "you think you are longing for rest; it is
I that am longing for you, because I desire to rest in your heart as My home,
as My temple." You need your God. Yes, but your God needs you, to find the
full satisfaction of His Father heart in Christ in you. Come to-day and say:
"I do now give up myself to Christ. I have made the choice. I deliberately
say, 'Lord God, I am the purchaser of the pearl of great price. I give up
everything for it. In the name of Jesus I accept that life of perfect
rest.'"
And then comes my last thought. When you have said that,
then add: "And now, I trust God to make it all real to me in my
experience. Whether I am to live one year, or thirty years, I have heard it
to-day again: 'God is Jehovah, the great I AM of the everlasting future, the
eternal One; and thirty years hence is to Him just the same as now;' and that
God gives Himself to me, not according to my power to hold Him, but according
to His almighty power of love to hold me." Will you trust God to-day for
the future? Oh, will you look up to God in Christ Jesus once again? A thousand
times you have heard, and thought, and thanked--"God has given us His
Son;" but will you not to-day say, "How shall He not with Him give me
all things, every moment and every day of my life?" Say that in faith.
"How shall God not be willing to keep me in the light of His countenance,
in the full experience of Christ's saving power? Did God make the sun to shine
so brightly, and is the light so willing to pour itself into every nook and
corner where it can find entrance? And will not my God, who is love, be willing
all the day to shine into this heart of mine, from morning to night, from
year's end to year's end?" God is love, and longs to give Himself to us.
Oh, come, Christians, you have hitherto lived a life in your
own strength. Will you not begin to-day? Will you not choose a life in which
God shall be all, and in which you rest in Him for all? Will you not choose a
life in which you shall say: "Oh, God, I ask, I expect, I trust Thee for
it. I enter this day into the rest of God to let God keep me; to let God keep
me every hour. I enter into the rest of God." Are you ready to say that?
Be of good courage; fear not, you can trust God. He brings into rest. Listen to
God's word in the Prophets once again: "Take heed, and be quiet. Fear not,
neither be faint-hearted." Joshua brought Israel into the land. God did it
through Joshua; and Joshua is Jesus, your Jesus, who washed you in His blood;
your Jesus, whom you have learned to know as a precious Saviour. Trust Him
to-day afresh: "O my Joshua, take me, bring me in and I will trust Thee,
and in Thee the Father." You may count upon it. He will take you and the
work will be done.
-- Andrew Murray, The Master's Indwelling, Chapter 4
2 comments:
Excellent post, Mush!
If we spend as much time with God as we do with wordly pursuits, and really it should be more so, we would learn to trust Him as we ought.
I used to inwardly laugh at how stupid the Israelites could be, but I have done the same stupid things, essentially.
I know it's not God's will for me to spend so long in the wilderness, so i know my lack of trust is the problem. I think Murray is right, it helps to be honest with ourselves and with God.
If God really is worth it, and He is worth more than everything, there's no reason not to give up everything for a relationship with Him.
Yes, I've done more than my share of stupid things, too.
The only person I ever really deceived was me.
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