1. POWER FOR SERVICE
"That ye may know the exceeding greatness
of His power toward us who believe." Eph. i. 19
Man is born the most impotent creature on the face of the earth. The young
brute grows into its prime while the infant is still a helpless child. And
morally, he is still more weak . His own passions are stronger than he. Every
temptation bears him away, and every surrounding influence controls and molds
him. Spiritually he is still more weak; not only impotent, but dead. Slowly
he learns this humbling truth, and only by many a futile effort and painful
fall. This is the meaning of Abraham s falsehood, and Davids
double crime, Jobs long siege of suffering and Peters sad denial.
"Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly
fail." The strongest, the most self-confident, are the most impotent of all.
And true strength and safety come when at last we learn our utter insufficiency
and accept the simple paradox: "When I am weak, then I am strong."
II. But over against mans weakness stands the revelation of Gods
power.
This is His first manifestation; and He comes in the mighty forces and forms
of Creation and Providence. So He appears to Abraham as El Shaddai, "the
Almighty God." So He comes in the redemption of Israel, crushing before a
little rod the mightiest empire on earth, dividing the Red Sea and the Jordan
and leading His people between the parted waves; marching before them in
the pillar of cloud of His awful presence; leveling the walls of Jericho
by a trumpet blast, and routing the Canaanitish hosts at Beth-horon by the
artillery of heaven while the orbs of nature stood still at His servants
word; delivering His people again and again from their outnumbering and
overpowering foes; holding nations as the drop of a bucket and the small
dust of the balance; weighing the mountains in scales and handling them as
man would handle the little ounce weights of the druggists counter;
taking up the isles as a very little thing; carrying the government of the
universe on a single shoulder, and asking as He points to the traces of His
power in earth and heaven and all the past history of man: "Is there anything
too hard for the Lord?" This is the first lesson of His teaching: "Power
belongeth unto God." And this power He puts at our service. "I am your God,"
He says, "All that is in Me belongs to obedient faith." There are two great
potencies in the universeGod and the believer. "With God all things
are possible." "All things are possible to him that believeth." It is very
wonderful that God should thus harness His omnipotence to a human life and
put the reins in the hands of humble faith. Wonderful that He should say
to a worm: "I am the Almighty God. Take me, possess me, use me. I am thy
God."
III. The Power of God is manifested in Christ.
He is called "the power and the wisdom of God." His life was a constant
embodiment of divine power; power over Satan in the wilderness and on the
cross, whom he left a conquered and disarmed foe; power over demoniacal
possession in human souls; power over disease in every form; power over nature
in storm and tempest and in the multiplied bread which fed the five thousand
on the hills of Galilee; power over death itself in the resurrection of others,
and most signally of all in His own resurrection and ascension.
This is the special exhibition of His power which the apostle here emphasises
"The exceeding greatness of His power which He wrought in Christ when He
raised Him from the dead and set Him at His own right hand in heavenly places,
far above all might and dominion and every name that is named, not only in
this world , but that which is to come." Here is a power that sets all the
laws of nature at defiance, sets aside all the ordinary operations and
extraordinary forces of the material world and puts its feet on all power,
law and dominion. Far above all the forces of the present world, far above
the mightier powers astronomy reveals, far above all heavens, indeed, and
all the beings that govern their myriad worlds, far above all the rulers
of the greater world of spirits even to the throne of sovereign power and
universal preeminence, has that wondrous Man ascended, and ascended in our
name, as "Head over all things the Church, which is His Body."
So that all this marvelous power is possessed in common with us, and may
he shared with the weakest of His members. The least of them can be no less
or lower than His feet, yet "He has put all things under His feet," and in
Him we may put our feet on the neck of every foe.
0, have we known "the power of His resurrection," and in it "the exceeding
greatness of His power toward us who believe," and have we taken this Jesus
as made unto us "the power of God?" Surely of Him shall men say: "In the
Lord have I righteousness and strength." Surely this was what the overcoming
apostle meant when he said: "I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me."
IV. The Gospel is the Power of God to everyone that believeth.
This divine power, inherent in God and manifested in Christ, is offered to
us in the Gospel. It is not only peace, but also power. It is in itself
Gods mighty instrument for saving men. It has power to break mans
pride and reveal mans sin, and win mans confidence and change
mans destiny. It has proved stronger than the philosophy of Greece,
or the strength of Rome, or the pride of Judaism. It is power. The weakness
of God, it is stronger than men. But it also brings power. It offers man
the strength of God, and it confers it. It brings in one hand pardon for
all the past, and for the future the power of a new, faithful and Almighty
Friend. He who fully receives it may live a life of victory and effectiveness.
Have we found its power?
V. The Holy Ghost is the Great Agent in imparting this power.
"Ye shall receive power after the Holy Ghost is come upon you." He is the
Spirit of power. Not only does He give the newborn soul power to receive
Christ and turn from sin, but He also enters the consecrated heart as a personal
guest and guide. The gift of the Holy Ghost is a distinct experience from
regeneration. It is one thing for me to build a house, and another to go
and reside in it personally. In regeneration the Holy Spirit builds the house.
In consecration He enters it as a personal guest and makes it His permanent
abode, directing and using the whole being as it is offered to Him. His coming
brings power:
1. Power for the Spirit of Sonship. "As many as received Him, to them gave
He power to become the sons of God, even to them which believe in His name,
which were born not of men nor of the will of the flesh or of man, but of
God." We are sons of God by second birth. But there is more than thiseven
power to enter intoto know and claim and enjoy our lofty sonship. There
are high born heirs who do not know their birthright. And so, "because ye
are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts crying,
Abba, Father." Then we know what is the hope our calling, and walk worthy
of God as dear children.
2. Power over Sin. "The law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made
me free from the law of sin and death. For what the law could not do in that
it was weak through the flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh; that the righteousness
of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit."
This is the power that sanctifies. Holiness is not a condition wrought in
us. It is simply the Holy One in us ruling, filling-"the Spirit of
Life in Christ Jesus" controlling with the power and uniformity of a law.
This, and this alone, can give power over sin. This battle is too great for
man. It must be the Lords.
3. Power for the Passive Virtues of Christian Character. "Strengthened according
to His glorious power, unto all patience and longsuffering with joyfulness."
This is the victory over self, and it is the secret of power over others.
The first battlefield is the heart and the home, and he who would have power
to do must first receive power to endure, yea, even "with joyfulness." Nor
is there a mightier evidence of the power of God than just such triumphs
over temper and provocation, nor a stronger testimony and service for Jesus
than the sweetness of the subdued and quiet spirit which has so learned Christ.
4. Power for Deeper Christian Experiences. "Strengthened with might by His
Spirit in the inner man; that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that
ye being rooted in love, may be able to comprehend with all saints the height
and depth, and length an breadth, and to know the love of Christ which passeth
knowledge, that ye may be filled with all the fulness of God." These words
describe the highest possibilities of Christian life, an experience exceeding
abundantly over all we are able to ask or think." But this we cannot enter
until we are first "strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man."
We could not bear such a blessing in our natural strength. We have not capacity
to receive it. Our being must be enlarged; our spirit must be raised to a
mightier manhood. Our understanding must grasp more clearly, and our faith
appropriate more firmly the things that are freely given us of God. Thus
we need power to take more power. And just as the sea wave that washes in
and fills the little basin on the beach, washes a larger, deeper basin by
its force, and leaves larger room for the next wave, so the Holy Spirit enlarges
our heart to receive still more of Himself.
5. Power to Resist Temptation. "Be strong in the Lord and in the power of
His might. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this
world, against spiritual wickedness in high places; wherefore take unto you
the whole armor of God that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day,
and having done all to stand." How large a place temptation has in every
Christian life! And the nearer we get to God the more severely it presses
us. The "principalities and powers" of evil are "in heavenly places." And
we have no power to resist them. We must have His power or fall. Nay, we
must have Himself for our power and our overcomer or we shall be overcome.
"When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall
lift up a standard against him."
Happy they who have learned the secret of strength and victory. In all these
things they are more than conquerors through Him that loved them. Hence few
know much of what temptation or victory means until they have the Life of
Power.
6. Power for Aggressive Conflict against Satan. "Behold, I give you power
to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy and
nothing shall by any means hurt you." This was Christs commission to
the seventy, and it is His message to every true worker in the great harvest
field to which He sent them forth saying, "Pray ye the Lord of the harvest
that He would send other laborers into His harvest." Therefore this prayer
is for all true servants. It is power over all the power of the enemy. This
is not for our defense against temptation merely. This is aggressive war.
This is power to cast out demons and destroy the works of the devil. Thus
the Holy Ghost came to the apostles. Filled with the Holy Ghost, Saul said
to Elymas: "O, full of all sublety and malignity, thou child of the Devil,
thou cease not to prevent the right ways of the Lord?" And Gods judgment
upon him. Thus he flung from his hand the viper, and thus he triumphed over
all the power of the enemy, and cried as he pressed on: "The Lord shall deliver
me from every evil work, and preserve me unto His heavenly kingdom." We need
this power in the conflict still and we may have it. So good Pastor Blumhardt
prayed all night long by the side of a wild demoniac, and ere the dawning
light had broken, the victim arose, shouting, "Jesus is Victor!" and went
forth to a life of blessed liberty and service.
7. Power for Service and Testimony. "Ye shall receive power after the Holy
Ghost is come upon you and ye shall be witnesses unto Me." "Ye are witnesses
of these things, and behold I send the promise of My Father upon you; but
tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on
high." "Our Gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and
in the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance." "My speech and my preaching was
not with enticing words of mans wisdom, but in demonstration of the
Spirit and of power: that your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men,
but in the power of God." "If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles
of God; if any minister, let him do it as of the ability which God giveth:
that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom be
forever and ever. Amen."
The Apostle Paul devotes a whole chapter, I. Cor. Xii, especially to explain
and illustrate the gifts of the Holy Spirit for service. He begins by declaring
our absolute dependence upon the Holy Ghost even for power to bear the simplest
testimony to Jesus Christ. He then shows the diversity of the Spirits
gifts, but declares that to every one some manifestation of this divine power
is given for improvement and service. He specifies the various gifts of
knowledge, wisdom, faith, miracles, healing, prophecy, tongues, discerning
of spirits, and clearly intimates that they may all be expected in the Church
of Christ through the whole Christian age. These charismata, or spiritual
gifts, were clearly recognised in the early Church and designed to be zealously
sought, cherished and cultivated. Service for Christ was understood not as
the exercise of our natural powers and talents, but the use of the special
gifts of the Great Paraclete. The wisdom of nature was regarded as foolishness
with God, and Christ was received as wisdom and utterance. The talents and
the pounds were not natural endowments, but spiritual endowments. Our good
works were declared to be "prepared for us that we should walk in them,"
so that the weakest and humblest saint could minister "according to the
proportion of faith," and as of the ability which God gave." Indolence, timidity
and unfruitfulness were left without excuse. In themselves all were equally
insufficient even to think anything as of themselves and all had equal claims
to His all-sufficiency, and equal right to say: "I can do all things through
Christ who strengtheneth me."
This power reached out alike in every direction of Christian life and service.
It was as necessary for a deacon in administering the finances of a church,
of a private member in giving his means to God, as to an apostle to his ministry,
or a saint on his knees. Every service for the Lord must be in the Holy Spirit
and in the strength of Jesus, or it could not be acceptable to God. He only
is acceptable to the Father, and only His life and work in as can be accepted
above. All our service, therefore, is simply partnership with Christ. It
is Christ working in us His work. This was His promise when He went away.
"He that believeth in Me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater
works than these shall he do because I go unto the Father."
That does not mean that we shall do the works that He used to do, but that
we shall do the works He is still to do, the works that He is now carrying
on in His resurrection life as our Living Head, through us, the members of
His body. He is the power; we are the executioners of that power. Our works
are but the complement of "all which Jesus began both to do and to teach."
This power, therefore, can never exalt the possessor into self-importance.
It is not his power at all, but simply Christ in him. It differs entirely
from mere human power. It is not oratorical power or personal magnetism,
that subtle influence which some possess in a marked degree. It is not
intellectual power or logical force, the power of persuading other minds.
It is not sympathetic power, the exquisite capacity to move human sympathy,
kindle feeling, excite emotion and sway human hearts at will. It is not even
moral power, the power to rouse the conscience, to alarm the guilty soul,
to persuade men to reformation of life and conduct. All this may be merely
natural. Spiritual power is far deeper and higher. It is the power of God.
It brings men to feel the presence and the fear of God. It leads men to know
God, to love God, to obey God, to be like God, to receive God. It is God
in man leading man to God.
Some elements in this gift of power are:
1. Knowledge of the Word of God, especially the plan of salvation through
the Lord Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit carries the truth with great vividness
and power to the mind and enables us so to see and reveal Jesus that the
sinner cannot but accept Him.
2. Wisdom and tact that is holy and divinely taught discrimination and fitness
of appeal, counsel and exhortation. This is "the word in season to him that
is weary," with "which He openeth our ear to hear as the learned." This is
"the word of wisdom," and "the word spoken in season," so good and wholesome.
This is the power to know and speak the Lords own message, one sentence
of which is worth a volume of our well-meaning opinions and ideas.
3. Faith. This is indispensable to all power. "We believe and therefore speak,"
must be true of every man who would speak with the power of God. We must
have the same faith for our message and our work as for our own souls. The
men of power in apostolic times were the men of faith. "Full of faith and
power," "full of faith and the Holy Ghost," are their brief biographies.
This is no common faith. The faith of effectual service is the very faith
of God, and Gods own omnipotence.
4. Love, including all its accompaniments, fervor of spirit, compassion,
tenderness, sympathy, concern for souls, affectionateness of manner, intense
longing for the salvation of men, travail of spirit for the unsaved and that
deep heart power which is the greatest of all spiritual forces. Many persons
lack this essential element of power. Great courage, wisdom, earnestness
and force are neutralised by hardness or lack of love. Arctic explorers kindle
fires from the sun by ice lenses, but he who would kindle hearts from above
must be himself on fire. "Thy heart must overflow if thou anothers
heart would reach." The Holy Spirit brings to us this element of power, even
Christs own love to men.
5. Earnestness, or the intense concentration of all ones power to the
work of saving men. A soul fully alive to its great business, to mens
interests and perils, and using all its powers and energies to do them good.
There is no power without earnestness so deep and strong as to raise even
enthusiasm. The very word means God in a man, and the power of God in us
will kindle all our powers to a flame.
6. Unction. This is finer and diviner still. It is that inexpressible yet
unmistakable influence which so melts and mellows the whole being, and baptises
both thought, feeling, word, expression, and even our very tones, looks and
gestures with the Spirit of God and with His life, love and power, that men
are irresistibly impressed, subdued, attracted and convicted. We may be so
pervaded by God Himself that God can constantly show forth in us the "sweet
savor of Christ, and make manifest His knowledge by us in every place."
7. Conviction. There is yet another element of power. The power to lead men
to conviction and decision, the power to reach their conscience with the
sense of God, to awaken their fear of God and consciousness of sin, and to
lead them to act, to decide, to choose, to be definite, immediate, and thoroughly
committed to the one urgent, all-important step of receiving the Saviour.
This power we see in Peters sermon on the day of Pentecost, Pauls
message to the Philippian jailer, and all the specially useful evangelists
of later times. It is indispensable for all true Christian workers. He who
neglects to receive and use it will have often cause to say of the fruits
of his work "While Thy servant was busy here and there, he was gone."
THE SECRET OF POWER
But how shall we obtain the gift of power?
1. Conscious weakness. "To them that have no might he increaseth strength."
Utterly to know and realise our insufficiency, we must come to the end of
all our resources , power, love, thought, even faith itself, then He comes
and lives in us, our all in all.
2. Consecration. Give your weakness to Christ to use for Himself. Dedicate
to Him your power to be filled and used. Lay on His altar the gift He is
about to bestow. Take it as a sacred and unselfish trust to be employed for
His work and glory. And He will give abundantly. He will take the offered
vessel and use it. He will feel the consecrated hand, and of His own you
will serve and glorify Him.
3. Appropriating and acting faith. Take hold of His strength. Attach your
little wheel to His great engine, and it will run with heavenly power. Sometimes
we see such advertisements as this.
"TO LET WITH POWER"
That means that a store is for rent, with connections for steam power. All
the manufacturer has to do is to move in his machinery, and attach to the
great revolving rod or wheel that passes through the premises, and use the
power that is there at his command. God gives to each of us a house "with
power." He puts within our reach the great engine of His omnipotence and
bids us attach our wheel of need for strength or service, and take the power
that is running to waste and freely at our disposal.
During the Philadelphia exposition one of the most extraordinary objects
in the great hall was the Corliss engine, a steam engine with sufficient
power to drive all the machinery which the building could hold. All over
the immense building were scattered almost all possible apparatus of industrial
machinery. Not one of them had any self-moving power, but all that was necessary
to put every wheel in swift and powerful motion was to attach it to the great
engine. Then the little knitting machine went as freely as the great printing
press, each taking from the same source of power all it could contain and
use. Even so in Gods great work of life, some of us are little knitting
and sewing machines and some great presses but none of us have any power
of our own. But in our midst is that Great Enginethe Holy Ghostand
we have only to attach the connecting band of faith; then the power passes
into each life according to our need and in proportion to our use of it,
and the humble seamstress at her sewing machine receives it as abundantly
as she can take it in, as well as the author who sends his great thoughts
to the world through the printing press or the voice that speaks to listening
thousands the messages of truth and life. The power meets us, helps us, carries
us wherever we are and whatever our service if it be but His will. And all
we need is to make the connection and then to use the power for Him. So may
He enable us to take hold of His strength and give it back to Him.