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Friday, May 25, 2012

Profiting From the Word # 7

As it was in the Jewish world, so it is in Christendom. Multitudes who 'believe' in the Holy Trinity are completely devoid of a supernatural or spiritual knowledge of God. How are we so sure of this? In this way: the character of the fruit reveals the character of the tree that bears it; the nature of the waters makes known the nature of the fountain from which they flow. A supernatural knowledge of God produces a supernatural experience, and a supernatural experience results in supernatural fruit. That is to say, God actually dwelling in the heart revolutionizes, transforms the life. There is that brought forth which mere nature cannot produce, yea, that which is directly contrary thereto. And this is noticeable absent from the lives of perhaps ninety-five out of every hundred now professing to be God's children. There is nothing in the life of the average professing Christian except what can be accounted for on natural grounds. But in the genuine child of God it is far otherwise. He or she is, in truth, a miracle of grace; he is a 'new believer in Christ Jesus' (2 Corinthians 5:17). Their experience, their life, is supernatural.


The supernatural experience of the Christian is seen in his or her attitude toward God.  Having within him/her the life of God, having been made a 'partaker of the Divine nature' (2 Peter 1:4), he or she necessarily loves God, loves the things of God, loves what God loves; and, hates what God hates. This supernatural experience is wrought in them by the Spirit of God, and that by means of the Word of God. The Spirit never works apart from the Word. By that Word He quickens. By that Word He produces conviction of sin. By that Word He sanctifies. By that Word He gives assurance. By that Word He makes the saint to grow. Thus each one of us may ascertain the extent to which we are profiting from our reading and studying of the Scriptures by the effects which they are, through the Spirit's application of them, producing in us. Let us enter now into details. He who is truly and spiritually profiting from the Scriptures has:


1. A clearer recognition of God's claims.  The great controversy between the Creator and the believer has been whether He or they should be God, whether His wisdom or theirs should be the guiding principle of their actions, whether His will or theirs should be supreme. That which brought about the fall of Lucifer was his resentment at being in subjection to  to his Maker: "Thou has said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne about the stars of God ... I will be like the most High" (Isaiah 14:13, 14). The lie  of the serpent which lured our first parents to their destruction was, "Ye shall be as gods" (Genesis 3:5). And ever since then the heart-sentiment of the natural man has been, 'Depart from us; for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways. What is the Almighty, that we should serve him?" (Job 21:14, 15). 'Our lips are our own; who is Lord over us/ (Psalm 12:4). 'We are lords; we will come no more unto thee' (Jeremiah 2:31).


Sin has alienated man from God (Ephesians 4:18). His heart is averse to Him, his will is oppose to His, his mind is at enmity against Him. But, salvation means being restored to God;  "For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God" (1 Peter 3:18). Legally that has already been done; experimentally it is in the process of accomplishment. Salvation means being reconciled to God; and that involves and includes sin's dominion over us being broken, enmity within us being slain, the heart being won to God.  This is what true conversion is; it is a tearing down of every idol, a renouncing of the empty vanities of a cheating world, and taking God for our portion, our ruler, our all in all. Of the Corinthians we read that they 'first gave their own selves unto the Lord' (2 Corinthians 8:5). The desire and determination of those truly converted is that they 'should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them, and rose again' (2 Corinthians 5:15).


~A. W. Pink~


(continued with # 8)

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