Monday, August 30, 2010

Prepositions

It is interesting to note the various prepositions that are found in Scripture connected with the Christian walk. “Walk before me” (Gen. xvii. 1). Abraham is called to sincerity, to live his life in the presence of God. “Ye shall walk after the Lord your God” (Deut. xiii. 4). The believer is also required to follow God in close, careful obedience. “As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in Him” (Col. ii. 6). The believer is commanded to walk in union with his Lord. But highest of all we read of walking “humbly with God” (Mic. vi. 8). This is our highest and truest companionship, keeping step with God day by day.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Walking Together in Love

Dead people do not walk, and it is impossible to think of a Christian “walking” until we realise that he possesses spiritual life in order to enable him to do so. “He that hath the Son that life,” and when we receive into our hearts by faith the life of God in Christ we have the certain guarantee of our Christian walk.

The Christian walk means activity in Christ and for Him. The life is not to be quiescent, but energetic. The proof of our possession of life lies in our Christian walk.

The Christian walk is not a solitary one, for, there is companionship in it; the Christian does not go it alone. This is true with reference to our fellow-Christians, and the New Testament is very clear in its emphasis on Christian love and fellowship. A purely individualistic Christian is no Christian at all. A solitary Christian is an utter misnomer. No one can be a New Testament Christian apart from fellowship with other Christians. In this companionship there is joy and strength and inspiration, and truly to be a saint in the Bible meaning of that word requires an experience of “the Communion of Saints.”

Monday, August 16, 2010

The Walk

The Christian life is described and illustrated in Holy Scripture by means of several faculties and actions of the human body. Sometimes the eye is used: “Look unto Me, and be ye saved” (Isa. xlv. 22). At others times the ear is mentioned: “Hear, and your soul shall live” (Isa. lv. 3). Yet again we have the hand: “Let him take hold of my strength” (Isa. xxvii. 5). And not infrequently the mouth is employed: “O taste and see that the Lord is good” (Ps. xxxiv. 8). But perhaps the commonest, and in some respects the most suggestive, is the illustration of the “walk” which is found very frequently both in the Old and the New Testaments. In the Epistle to the Ephesians the metaphor of “walking” is found no less than seven times. There is a remarkable appropriateness in this use of the metaphor to express the Christian life. Walking is one of the few perfect forms of exercise, those in which all parts of the body are brought into play; and its suggestiveness and appropriateness for Christianity are evident when we remember that religion is intended to affect with vital, practical reality every part of our being, and that every faculty of our nature is to be exercised to the fullness possible extent, “ever, only, all” for God.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Lift Up Your Heads

Prophecy is history written beforehand. With God promise is reality, truth is fact. In the coming of the Lord is the hope of the world. It is not the “larger hope” but the “blessed hope” that is the true and substantial hope of God’s people and all humanity; and this revelation of eternal Kingship makes its claim upon us, and is intended to elicit a response of joyful confidence. We are to live and work in the light of this glorious day. It will give tone and power to our service, it will save us from despair, it will give fibre and force to all our endeavors, it will make us radiantly optimistic and never gloomily pessimistic. Not for an instance must we ever be discouraged, even by the gravest problems in the present condition of the world. “He must reign, He shall reign.” There must be no looking backward, even to what are called the “good old days.” Doubtless they were good old days; but as God is true, as Christ is real, as the Spirit is powerful, the present days are better, and the best is yet to come. Never must we tremble for the ark of God, though may well tremble for everything else. “Cease ye from man,” and live and work only in the light of “glorious day that is coming by-and-by.”

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

All Power

Most modern Lives of Christ begin in Bethlehem and end at Olivet, but the New Testament begins earlier and continues later. There is nothing more definite, clear, and unmistakable in the New Testament than the truth of our Lord’s present life and service in heaven. His work on earth is finished, but not so His work in heaven. He intercedes, He bestows the Spirit, He guides the Church, He is interested in individuals, He uses people, He controls affairs. We hear a great deal of going “Back to Christ.” The truer expression is “Up to Christ”; to the Christ on the throne – the living, exalted, and ever-present Lord. The Book of the Acts of the Apostles is really the Book of the Acts of the Ascended Christ; and this revelation of our Lord’s perpetual presence makes its claim upon us. How can we talk of retrenchment when “all things are ours” and “all power” is given to Christ for us?