"Fervent in
spirit" ("The spiritual glow" - Moffatt)
(Romans 12:11).
In the legend of Orpheus there
is the incident when Orpheus sailed by the Island of the Siren
and the Siren made such enchanting music that Orpheus had to
lash his crew to the ship to keep them from rushing ashore and
deserting him. Then he hit on another idea. With his lyre he made
better music than the Siren and his crew lost all desire to leave
the ship. The Siren was despised by comparison and no more
trouble arose.
That is Greek legend, but there
is an occasion in the Bible when in reality something happened of
far greater importance. It is in the life of Hezekiah, the king
of Israel (2 Chronicles, chapters 29, 30). Israel had been
enticed away from Jehovah by other gods and were deeply involved
in the worship of the idols of those false deities. So committed
were they that neither appeal, entreaty, warning, nor threat on
the part of the Prophets affected them. Things were in a bad
state in Israel, but the people would not listen to God's
messengers. Hezekiah was a man with a heart truly for the Lord.
He decided to hold a feast of the Passover in Jerusalem. He sent
an earnest invitation far and wide, and although they of Ephraim,
Manasseh and Zebulun laughed the messengers to scorn, a great
number responded and went up to the feast. It was such a time of
life, joy and Divine blessing that the people voted to keep the
feast for a further seven days. When this was concluded the
people returned to the cities, towns, villages, and provinces.
But as they went they saw the signs of their former spiritual
declension, the idols of the false gods. So real was the work of
grace in their hearts and their turning unto the Lord that they
destroyed with zeal all these relics and swept them away. What
all the warnings and entreaties had failed to do, one taste of
the real thing accomplished in a short time. All the false was
seen for its worthlessness in the light and experience of the
real and true.
Many are the efforts,
recourses, appeals, enticements, subtleties, attractions, and
expense, being used to get people - especially young people - to
come to the Lord, or to be more committed to Him than they are.
Some respond; many do not. Some who respond turn back. Many who
respond, because their response was based largely upon
entertainment and pleasant attractions, require to have these
incentives repeated and, should the glamour fade, they feel that
the world has a better time than Christians do. Is this the only,
or the best way?
In our own personal experience,
and in our history in the Lord's work, we have known such a joy
and satisfaction with the Lord and His life that all other
incentives and interests have faded right out. The writer, as a
young man, was one of a group of young people who hardly stopped
to take a meal after their daily work so that they could get to a
meeting, an opportunity for witnessing for the Lord, and Saturday
was always looked forward to, not for sports and diversions, but
because it brought a concerted action to go where sinners needed
to know of their Saviour. Not in attractive and inviting
conditions, but often in the slum houses and places of terrible
filth and evil. In the Lord's work we have seen large numbers of
young people gathered - on public holidays - for several
days of intensive and solid conference gatherings, full of joy in
the Lord. No other attractions or appeals than Christian
fellowship and the ministry of the Word in an atmosphere of
spiritual life. Coming from near and far, these hungry and
committed numbers have rejoiced together like the Tribes of
Israel going up to Jerusalem in olden times, singing the songs of
Zion as they came and went.
We are not saying that there is
little like that today; that would not be true, but we fear there
is much more natural pleasure and worldly attraction than is
necessary, or should be. If, in this day of frustrations,
dissatisfaction, unrest, and casting off of restraint, people -
especially young people - are going to be drawn to the Lord, we
feel that the best and most effective way, and the way that will
have the most solid results, will be the strategy of the
positive; that is, by means of Christians who are so satisfied
with the Lord, and to whom the Lord and His things mean so much,
that their 'bill' is filled and they spontaneously convey that
impression so that both the world and the 'Christian plus' feel
that Christ is greater than all. It is not just exuberance; it is
the deep waters of spiritual reality and Christly satisfaction.
The answer to the quest which
lies behind words often sung:
"The
dearest idol I have known,
Whate'er that idol be,
Help me to tear it from Thy
throne,
And worship only Thee",
is not, first, in the turning
down of idols, but in a taste of the true and real. The idols
will go when we see the Lord.
This principle in Hezekiah's
Feast, that all other and lesser things (in every connection)
cease to be of any concern when that which is wholly of the Lord
is seen and tasted, is the way of fullest joy, explains two
things: one, why the Lord would provide the means for such
experience. It is very important to the Lord's highest interests
that there should be that which ministers to spiritual fulness;
occasions when His injunction can be obeyed: "Gather my
saints together unto me: those that have made a covenant with me
by sacrifice" (Psalm. 50:5). Such means can be a
very great power in the Lord's testimony in this world.
The other thing is that the
curtailment, hindrance, discontinuance, or weakening of such
means will be a primary object of the enemy of God's testimony.
Have you noticed what immediately follows this great celebration,
convocation and committal in the time of Hezekiah?
"After these things,
and this faithfulness, Sennacherib, king of Assyria, came...
and encamped against..." (2 Chronicles 32).
The devil is always opposed to
anything that results in a testimony to the all-sufficiency of
the Lord to His people.
First published in "A Witness and A
Testimony" magazine, Sep-Oct 1965, Vol 43-5