Chapter 13
THE HOLY OF HOLIES
The holy of holies was fifteen feet square, and separated from the holy
place by a thick curtain. There was only one article of furniture in this place.
This was the ark of the covenant, which was a little chest about three feet high,
overlaid within and without with pure gold. In this ark were three articles -- the
table of the law, known as the Ten Commandments; the golden pot of manna,
and Aaron's rod, which budded, bloomed and bore fruit. The lid of the ark
was the mercy-seat, and on each end were the cherubim; while between their
hovering wings dwelt the Shekinah glory.
This ark, we know, is a type of a sanctified heart. In it was the law. God
has been working for ages to get His laws in man's heart. In Heb. 8:10, we
read: "I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts." When
God writes His laws in our hearts, they enter into our wills, our choices and
our affections. Duty is transformed into a delight and into a spontaneous love
service.
Concerning this new covenant, we read in Ezekiel 36:26, 27: "A new
heart also will I give you, and a new spirit also will I put within you.
“And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my
statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.” Here is something
more than writing His laws in our hearts. It is Christ Himself coming to dwell
there by the Holy Spirit, causing us to be Christ-like, holy, and heavenly
minded. The best that man can do by his most strenuous efforts is but failure.
It is God that worketh in us to will and to do.
"I will cause you to walk in my statutes." There is so much religion and
service that is of self-effort that is a strain, a pull and a tug. This class live under
the lash of conscience. "I will put my Spirit within you." Just as a watch-spring
causes every wheel to move and the hand to keep time, so God proposes to
work from the inside until the whole being will respond to Him in a
spontaneous love service.
The difference between the first and the second covenant is the contrast
between Sinai and Calvary. At Sinai, the law was given in thunderous tones,
and Israel fled from God. At Calvary love was poured out, and love is stronger
than law.
Those who serve God from the standpoint of fear and duty find "Zion's
road a hard one to travel." This type of religion is irksome, burdensome and
wearisome. But the heart that has God's law written in it finds that His yoke is
easy and His burden is light, because a love service causes the chariot wheels
of the soul to run smoothly and easily.
The second article in the ark of the covenant was the golden pot of
manna. The manna of the wilderness, as we know, was a type of Christ. There
are multitudes who feast on His outward life found in the Gospels, but the
hidden manna in the golden vessel behind the second veil represents Christ's
inward life, which only the Holy Ghost can reveal. The manna that fell in the
wilderness, remaining only a day, is a type of the transitoriness of the blessing
in the lower state of grace. The manna in the golden pot in the ark kept sweet
for hundreds of years. It surely has its spiritual significance for us. Gold in the
Bible is a type of holiness and of divinity. When the Holy Ghost puts in us the
Divine nature, the manna in our hearts will keep sweet. There is nothing more
odious or obnoxious than a holiness grown sour.
In Rev. 2:17 we read, "To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
hidden manna." Now, the manna which fell on the ground in the wilderness
was not hidden, but visible for everyone to see. This undoubtedly has
reference to the manna in the ark behind the second veil. You will notice that
it is promised to the overcomer -- to the believer who dares to go behind the
second veil, entering into the death of Jesus, and dying, not only to the world,
with all of its attractions, but to his own fleshly, carnal nature. Thousands of
preachers are kept out of this rich blessing by refusing to place reputation,
ministerial standing, big salaries and ecclesiastical power on the altar.
Friends, it is worth dying a hundred deaths to eat of God's hidden manna.
The reproach connected with the blessing of holiness is nothing compared to
the glory that accompanies it.
Just as the manna behind the veil kept fresh and sweet, there is a striking
similitude in the freshness and sweetness about the second blessing. It is
difficult to describe. One must experience it in order to understand it. It is
beyond expression. To awaken in the morning with a honey-like sweetness in
the soul diffuses blessing all through the trying hours of the day. After a certain
writer received the blessing of Sanctification, he described it as "like a big lump
of honey lodged in the heart, dripping its sweetness as the days went by."
Another said that he felt as if he were buried in a bed of roses with their
fragrance filling his soul. You can generally tell those who have gone behind
the second veil and have eaten of the hidden manna. There is a sweetness in
the countenance, a tenderness in the eye, and an unmistakable expression of
sympathy on the face when the deep things of God are being preached.
Since our great High Priest has rent the veil and opened the way in the
holy of holies, let us press our way in until we are assured that we are feasting
with Him on the hidden manna The third article contained in the ark in the
holy of holies was Aaron's rod, which budded, bloomed and bore fruit, all in
one night.
In Num. 17:7, 8, we read, "And Moses laid up the rods before the Lord in
the tabernacle of witness. And it came to pass, that on the morrow Moses went
into the tabernacle of witness: and, behold, the rod of Aaron for the house of
Levi was budded, and brought forth buds, and bloomed blossoms, and
yielded almonds." There are three features mentioned concerning Aaron's rod:
buds, blossoms, almonds. These typify freshness, fragrance, fruit.
Just as the falling dew brings a freshness in nature, so there is a Divine
freshness which belongs to the sanctified life. Numbers of believers are straight
and orthodox in their life and teaching, but, oh, how lacking in freshness!
Their sermons are dry and stale and unctionless.
D. L. Moody said that after his wonderful blessing and fiery baptism, he
preached the same sermons, gave the identical illustrations, told the same
incidents, but all seemed new to the people, and not a single sermon did he
preach after that which did not bear fruit, and souls were saved. When a
believer arises to speak with the dew of freshness on him, the people give
attention and lose not a word. He may not say anything that is new, but the
people get blessed and hearts are gripped. This heavenly freshness is that
peculiar unction, that strange something that cannot be explained. Just what
the perfume is to the rose, this dew of freshness is to the soul.
The blossoms stand for fragrance. Natural dew produces a fragrance.
There is an unseen power and holy atmosphere that goes out from a
Spirit-filled life. Fletcher had it. You can detect it in his writings. It is like
walking in a garden of spices to read his life. Fragrance comes best from
crushed flowers. Oh, for a holiness that is so lamb-like when it is crushed by
the cruel hand of an enemy that it can shower them all over with a holy
fragrance. Dr. G. D. Watson very beautifully brings out this fact in his
comment on the Song of Solomon 4:16:
"Awake, O north wind; and come, thou south; blow upon my
garden, that the spices thereof may flow out.' The north wind
brings cold, and cuts the fragrance from the flowers, whereas the
south wind brings warmth, causing the flowers and spices to
blossom. Both winds are necessary to bring out all the functions of
fragrance in shrub and flower. We need the softness of the Holy
Spirit, like a south wind, to open our desires, to win us and cause
us to unfold the secret parts of our souls in perfect abandonment
to our Lord, and then we need the cold winds from the north to
chasten our souls, to cut the fragrance out of our hearts. We need
the baptism of tears, the touch of winter frost, the cold and unkind
treatment of our acquaintances, or our relatives, or our Christian
friends. We need the pressure of occasional severity or hard times.
We need the harsh words, the slights, the neglect of our
fellow-creatures. We need the buffeting of Satan to bruise the
sweet spices of our affections in order that the delightful odors
may exude from us, in order that we may be rendered mellow and
gentle and submissive and long-suffering, and thus the fragrance
of God's grace within us is brought out and scattered on the air.
Oh, the sweetness of that perfume which goes forth from the soul
of the pure saint when it is bruised and bitten by the cold north
winds of adversity and sorrow. It is then that Jesus flies to such a
soul to enjoy their lovely worship and their complainings of
crucified love, and hence she says to the Bridegroom, 'Let my
beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits. As the
south winds cause the graces to grow, so the severe north winds
cause them to ripen, and Jesus cannot enjoy the fruits of His love
in us until it is ripe and mellow.'"
The rod, we are told, bore fruit. There is no life so fruitful as the
sanctified life. All inward hindrance has been removed, and the fruit and
graces of the Spirit grow and flourish without being choked by the bitter weeds
of carnality. In Second Peter, the first chapter, we read of the Christian's
having escaped the corruption that is in the world, which means the corrupt,
fallen nature, and being made partakers of the Divine nature. Then he bids
him add all the graces of the Spirit. "It makes us that we shall neither be barren
or unfruitful." Here is a sure guarantee that we shall be fruit-bearing Christians.
Just as Aaron's rod, a dry stick, budded, blossomed and bore fruit all in
one night, a believer who goes behind the second veil and gets the experience
of holiness will grow more in a short time than he did for years in his justified
experience, fighting, as he did, the “old man” of inbred sin.
Finally, God Himself is behind the second veil. This is the crown of all
blessings, "Thou that dwellest between the cherubim, shine forth." In Exodus,
the fortieth chapter, we read that when the tabernacle was complete, every
article of furniture in its place, every curtain hung, that it was dedicated to the
Lord, anointed with oil. Immediately the pillar of cloud and fire began to
descend, and entered the holy of holies there between the wings of the
cherubim and the blood-stained mercy seat, the glowing Shekinah took up His
abode.
Friends, this is the climax of the atonement. There is nothing sweeter,
higher, nor deeper than God enthroned in a human heart. This is the Christian
perfection, sanctification, soul-rest – the fullness of the blessing, perfect love! It
is Heaven on earth.