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The Spirit of
Truth
1893
General Conference Sermon by A. T. Jones
As we begin our Bible study I think it would be
well to spend this hour, at any rate, in considering what we came for, and how
we are to come to get any good. I suppose that every one came expecting to hear
things we never thought of before; and not only expecting to hear things we
never thought of before, but expecting to learn things we never thought of
before. It is very easy to hear things we never thought of before, but we do not
always learn what we hear. But I suppose we have come expecting to learn things
we never thought of before. It is simply saying we have come expecting the Lord
to give us new revelations of Himself, of His word, and of His way altogether. I
have come for this.
This text is good advice for us all: "Verily I
say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child,
he shall not enter therein" (Mark 10:15). Thus we have come to learn of the
kingdom of God, to receive things of the kingdom of God, things new and old, old
things in a new way, and new things in a new way. Whosoever shall not receive it
as a little child, shall not enter therein; cannot have it. Hence, we are all to
come here and to sit down at the feet of Christ, looking to Him as our teacher,
expecting to receive what He has to tell us, coming as a little child. Because,
not only is this text here which speaks thus about those who would receive the
kingdom of God, but in Matthew it is put in such a way as to cover all the time
after we receive the kingdom of God from the first. "At the same time came
the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?
And Jesus called a little child unto him, and set him in the midst of them, and
said, Verily I say unto you, except ye be converted, and become as little
children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 18:1-3).
Now if any one should say that the other text
refers to any who are receiving the kingdom of God for the first time and admit
the truth that they can receive it only as a little child, confessing that they
know nothing of it themselves and cannot bring themselves to a knowledge of it,
this verse shows that it goes beyond that, and that the idea goes with it even
after we have received the kingdom of God; for in order to be converted we are
to be as a little child, receive the kingdom of God as a little child, allowing
that we know nothing of ourselves, no wisdom of our own. It is not our own
wisdom that can make it plain to us, can open the way by which we can understand
it all right as it is. We must leave all our wisdom out in order to gain it and
by being converted become as a little child. "Except ye be converted and
become as a little child, ye shall not enter the kingdom of God." What kind
of children are mentioned? Little children. Little children have not much pride
of opinion of their own. Grown up ones are not so ready to learn. Then this is
spoken as giving us a model and example as to how we are to come to the word of
God to learn.
There
is another verse that tells us the same thing and perhaps in a more forcible
manner. "And if any man think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing
yet as he ought to know it" (1 Corinthians 8:2). How many people does that
cover? "Any man," all of us that have come here. Any one then who has
come here, will it refer to us as personally as that? Every one. Any one of us
then who have come here, that thinks he knows anything, how much does that
cover? Thinks he knows how much? Thinks he knows what? "Anything."
Does that cover all things then? Yes sir. Then the text covers all people and
all things that may be known. Then if any one of us thinks he knows anything,
what does he know? How much does he know? He knows nothing yet as he ought to.
Well, then, we will all assent that that is true,
shall we? Just set that down for yourself. If you came here thinking you knew
something, you must decide you do not know that as you ought to know it. Then
shall we come to this study in that way? Shall we all come to this study
tomorrow, next day, each time we come here, and just settle it in our minds that
we do not know anything as we ought to know it? I do not care if it is the
oldest minister in our ranks; he must come and say, "I do not know anything
yet as I ought to know it; teach thou me." And we will learn. Every one
that comes to this house that way will learn something every lesson he hears.
And this includes that same oldest minister in the ranks. He will learn more
than any of the rest of us, if he sits down like that. But how long a time does
that text cover? How long will it remain there? Will we go beyond that time
during this institute, think you? No sir. Very good then, we have that settled,
for the whole institute, if we thought we knew anything.
There are some things we thought we knew pretty
well. If there is one thing we thought we knew, just put it down, we don't know
anything. We are always learning the most out of those texts that we already
know best. Don't forget that. We are always learning the most out of the texts
with which we are already the most familiar. Then don't you see that any one who
takes any text or thought, and studies upon it for a long time and thinks he has
got all the thought out of it that is in it, he just shuts himself off there?
When he says, "Now I know it," he shuts himself off from learning what
is really in that text.
Brother Porter here in the lesson of the previous
hour spoke to us of God's purpose in making known to us these things. What kind
of purpose was that spoken of? An "eternal purpose." And the Scripture
is God's expression to us of His thoughts in that eternal purpose. The Scripture
is the expression of God's thoughts on that purpose, in carrying out and setting
forth and making known that purpose. Well then, what kind of purpose is it?
Eternal. How deep then are His thoughts? How far-reaching is that purpose?
Eternal. How deep then are the thoughts expressed in the scriptures? Eternal. In
how many expressions in the Scriptures and in how many scriptures is the thought
of eternal depth? In how many passages? Every one. Then it does take all the
Scriptures that are written for the Lord to express to us what he wants to tell
us, of His eternal purpose? Yes, sir. Then how deep is the thought in each
passage of Scripture and the words that are used to tell it? Eternal. Then just
as soon as any man catches one of these thoughts and thinks, I know it now and
have got it, how far short is he? How far short is he from having the thought
that is really there, from having the thought that is in that passage? (Voices:
As far as his mind is from God's mind.) When he says, I have the truth; I have
the thought, he has shut up his own mind from the wisdom of the knowledge of
God, putting himself and his own mind in the place of God and His thoughts. The
man that does that cannot learn any more. Don't you see, that at that instant he
shuts himself out forever from learning? And the man who does that, of course
can learn nothing beyond himself, and of course will never have the knowledge of
God.
The expressions of thought conveyed in the
statements of the Scriptures are as eternal depths. Then what limit can we set
to ourselves in the study of these? No limit at all. Then does not that present
the splendid picture and the grand prospect that the eternal and the whole mind
of God is wide open before us for us to study upon? Well, then, let us not
forget that that is the field of study upon which we are to enter.
We have been in it a good while, and let us be
careful that we do not think we know something. Let us be sure that we have not
been inveigled into the idea of thinking that we know something as we are to
know it. Let us just settle it now by the word of God that we do not know that
thing at all. There is knowledge in each line of thought for us to catch. And
until all the depths and eternities are past we will never get to the place
where we will have the right to think we know that thing and are done with it.
Shall we? Well then, I am glad to know that we have such a subject as that to
study upon, and such a length of time as that (eternity) in which to study it.
Well, then, let us be glad to start with. That text is going to remain with us
as long as we are in the world at least, and it won't go then; it will go in
this shape of course; the Bible, the word of God as put up in this shape, will
go. No doubt these Bibles will be burned up just as any other book of paper and
leather. But the word of God will not be burned up. That text in this shape (in
print) will last as long as the world does, but after that it will still exist
in this shape (the body). Then that text will still remain with us all the time,
even eternally. "And if any man think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth
nothing yet as he ought to know." No, no man knows it. Are not you glad,
brethren, are not you glad?
But we must not linger too long upon any one of
these texts, for there are several texts we want to bring up tonight. Taking the
thought we had a moment ago, we have come here expecting to learn many things
that are new and many new things about what we have learned formerly. We have
not come though, to learn anything but the truth. That is what we want. The only
thing there is any power in, the only thing there is any good in, the only thing
there is any sanctifying force in, is the truth, the truth as it is in Jesus of
course, because there is no truth in any other way. Then coming with that
purpose, to know only the truth, that is all we are to study, that is all we are
to ask about. It is none of your business or mine whether a thing be old or new
or who says it in this institute or whether it is for us to study or for any one
else, is it? The thing for us to ask is, Is it true? If it be true, then take
the Lord's word as He has given it to us, no difference by whom He says it, no
difference in what way it comes, no difference if it comes in exactly the
opposite way in which way we expected it to come--and the probabilities are that
it will, "for your ways are not my ways, saith the Lord." Then when we
have a way fixed up, we may expect it to come another way.
The Lord will not allow any one to dictate to Him
or to lay out plans for Him. We may take the Lord in that text, "O God,
verily thou art a God that hidest thyself." But we can see Him. He will
hide Himself; we cannot fix the ways in which He is going to do things always,
but the best of it is we will let Him have His own way to do things, and we will
be in a position to do it all the time. Then we will be perfectly safe. Then we
will never need to have any anxieties, need never have any thing to do with the
management of it ourselves. He is all wise; everything goes straight with Him,
and we simply keep ourselves ready to see Him do it at any time. And we have
nothing to do but to enjoy ourselves in seeing Him do things. I have been
greatly blessed in the study of the Bible and in watching the Lord do things.
And when it is the darkest, the most mysterious, then it is the best study,
because it takes us clear out of ourselves to see Him do it. If we could see
just how it was coming out always it would not seem interesting. When it is the
darkest, we can watch the more intently and with more interest, to see the Lord
straighten it out.
So then we are to learn the truth only--no
difference who speaks it. The Lord will speak it, of course, no difference by
whom it is spoken or the way it comes. If we knew it before, thank God somebody
else knows it now. If we did not know it before, then thank the Lord we now know
it. The only thing to ask is, Is it true? You all know those verses in 2
Thessalonians 2:9, 10: "Even him, whose coming is after the working of
Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of
unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the
truth." Any one who loves the truth and will receive the love of the truth,
Satan will never have any chance to work in with all signs and lying wonders and
all deceivableness of unrighteousness. No sir. Because Jesus has said it (John
8:32): "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free."
Then every one who receives the love of the truth, this will make them free.
Then the one in whom Satan is to work all signs and lying wonders, is he free?
No, he is a fearful slave. As long as we have it settled in our minds that the
only thing we shall ever seek or expect is the truth, and love it because it is
the truth, and take it because it is the truth, then we need not be uneasy about
whether Satan is going to deceive us or not.
Notice the last half of the verse. The effect of
the truth is to make us free. The first half is the best promise in the Bible,
if we could measure promises. But we cannot do that because one is just as
important as another. All are the thoughts of God, and His thoughts are eternal.
But this is an excellent promise, "Ye shall know the truth." That, it
seems to me, is a most wonderful promise. "Ye shall know the truth."
Think you know it? Wonder if you know it? Wonder whether such and such a thing
is true? No sir. "Ye shall know the truth." That is the promise of
Jesus Christ to you and to me, that when we trust in Him and follow Him, we
shall know the truth. And as certain as we yield to Him and follow Him, He will
take care that we know the truth, and we trust Him for it.
"Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed
on Him, 'If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed. And ye
shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.'" How are we to
know the truth? Continue in His word, be His disciples indeed, and ye shall know
the truth. Then His word is the word of truth. "Ye shall know the
truth." We want to stick to that promise. It seems to me that if that
promise were the only one in the Bible it would be all we would need. "Ye
shall know the truth." Because Christ has promised that, this is for you
and for me, when we follow Him and when we yield to Him. And because this is so,
it seems to me that we ought to be the gladdest people on the earth, for that
promise given, "Ye shall know the truth."
There will be plenty of opportunities,
assuredly--there have been some already, no doubt, in just the first lessons
which have been given--some opportunities already for persons in the classes to
say, Well, now, is that so? Probably some opportunity has already been offered
for some to say, "Well now, I do not know about that." There will be
countless instances doubtless, before the six weeks are past, that the Lord has
given us to study His word and ways, numberless times in which we will be called
upon to say, Well now is that so? What is the promise? "Ye shall know the
truth." Now the Lord does not want us to take things because some one says
them. God does not want us to say when anyone says a thing, Well, that is so,
because he says it. That is not the thing. We are to know it is true, because
God says it. And I say that there is the promise, "Ye shall know."
There will be the opportunity for the query to arise, Is that so? How about
that. There is the query, but there is the promise with it. Do not forget it.
Jesus has said to you every time that query arises, "Ye shall know the
truth." Then, when that query arises from some thought in the lesson, what
is the answer to you and me? What are we then to consider? What is the place for
us to occupy just then? Here is some brother who will be speaking some day, and
he will make a statement perhaps, reading a passage or two or three passages,
and catch a thought there that is new to me, make an expression here that is new
to me, and the query comes, Well now is that so? What is the answer to me?
"Ye shall know the truth." Then what am I to do just then with that
new thought, with that query? Am I now just to hold that query, that new
thought, that which is to me a new thought? Am I not to hold that right before
Christ, and ask Him the truth? Or wouldn't I better go to some of the brethren
and ask, "What do you think about that? Brother A. says so and so. What do
you think about that? That is new to me, and I kind of half doubt it."
"Well, I doubt it too," says the other brother. Well then, of course
it cannot be so; that settles it. It is not so. It is none of your business what
I think about it.
I remember once in a camp meeting a brother read
some scriptures right straight through--it was about all he did do; it was a
Bible reading--but the thoughts he brought out in the Bible reading were new to
a large number in the audience. About half a dozen came in a flock to me and
asked, "Well, now, Brother Jones, what do you think about that?" I
said, "It is none of your business what I think about it; what do you think
about it yourself?" "Well, we do not know what to think about
it," they replied. Then I said, "Find out." Suppose I had said I
do not believe it. Then they would have gone off and said, "I do not
believe that, because Brother Jones said he did not." Suppose I had said it
was so. They would have said, "That is so. Brother Jones says that is
so." So I propose to tell you nothing about what I think. It is none of
your business. You know for yourselves what is the truth. That is the position I
propose to occupy in this institute. I expect to find some things coming out
here that are new. I have never found a meeting yet where we have studied the
Bible that the Lord did not give us something that was new, beautiful, grand,
and glorious. But the place I propose to occupy is right upon that promise,
"Ye shall know the truth."
But I find people, and doubtless you have too, who
seem to get upon the idea that the only sure way to know the truth is to raise
all the objections they can and have them answered. But when I have raised and
presented all the objections I know against a point and they are all answered,
then am I sure what is truth? Am I sure of it? No, because there are objections
I never thought of. Don't you see? On that line can I ever be sure that it is
the truth until every objection that is possible is brought against it by every
mind in the universe--can I be sure of it until then? When these are all
answered would that make me sure it was so? If it would, how can I live long
enough to hear all the objections answered? Can we get at the truth in that way?
Is there any possibility of getting at the truth by raising objections and
having them answered? No sir. What is the use of starting on a road of which you
will never reach the end--a wrong road of course? Better not start on it at all.
Another word. Can there be any objections against the truth? Think of that
closely. Well, when something is presented, are you and I to say, "I see an
objection against that?" Is that the position we are to take? No. We are to
ask whether it is the truth, and if it is, there is no objection. There can be
no objection against it. Our objection is a fraud. Don't you see? The thing we
are to ask is, Is it the truth?
And then another way the people have of getting at
the truth is to hear both sides of it. You have heard that thing yourself.
"That is one side," they say, "but now I want to hear the other
side before I decide." What is one side of the truth? Well, here is one
side of the truth, and there is the other side of the truth. Then where is the
truth? You get on either side of the truth and it is error. I have heard one
side, and I want to hear another side of it! Then how can I tell what is the
truth, anyhow? But suppose I have heard actual truth (and that is the need of
it), and I am not satisfied until I hear the other side. What is the other side?
Taking this one side to be the truth, what is the other side? Error. Then we can
decide best what is truth by hearing a lot of lies, can we? "Well,"
says one, "I have heard your side of it, and it looks to me as though it
were true, but I want to hear the other side!" The truth is the word of
God. Then he proposes by waiting to hear the other side, to know whether it is
true or not by comparing it with a lot of lies and thus make a lot of lies a
test of the truth.
We do not want to hear the other side. All we want
is the truth. Here is one side of the truth, and there is the other side of the
truth. He hears both sides according to his own plan; then how does he arrive at
the truth? In his own way. He has heard this and that. Where is the truth? He
must find it out some way. Does he not compare one side with the other and weigh
one against the other and strike the balance and judge where the truth is? Well,
when he has done that, can he know he has the truth? Is he sure that is the
truth? Is my mind, my judgment, my ability to weigh arguments and decide upon
the truth--is that the infallible test of truth? Is a man's judgment, his
faculties, the test of truth at all? When we want to test the truth so as to
know it is the truth, the test must be an infallible one. Is not that so? It
must be one that will never fail. To discern the truth and declare it, it must
be one that will never miss under any circumstances amid ten thousand arguments
and errors. The one by which we must test the truth must be such a one as will
strike the truth among ten million diverse opinions, and strike it without fail
in succession--every thought that may be raised among men. Is not that so? Man's
mind we know is not the test of truth. It is only his own idea and the truth
that he settles upon. "But your thoughts are not my thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways, says the Lord."
Now brethren, in the time in which we are, there
are two reasons why that thing could not be worked, even if it were correct. One
is, that the truth of God is developing so rapidly that we have not time to hunt
out all the objections and listen to the arguments on both sides, because we
would be everlastingly behind while we were listening to a lot of arguments and
objections. But we do not want to stand in that place when probation closes. The
time is too short for that, and we would be left out when we get there. But
there is the promise, "Ye shall know the truth."
Turn again to John 14:16, 17: "I will pray the
Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you
forever, even the Spirit of truth." Spirit of what? Truth. Oh! Thank the
Lord for the promise, "I will pray the Father." What is Christ doing
tonight for us, who are here in this institute? Praying the Father. He will send
us the Comforter? The Spirit of truth. What is the position to occupy before we
come to the class each day? Taking part in that prayer, that we may have the
Spirit of truth, isn't it?
So then Jesus is praying, and by the way, as Jesus
is doing it are not we in good company when we do it? Let us spend a good deal
of time at it then during this institute. Let us spend a good deal of time in
His company during this institute. What do you say? (Audience: "Amen")
I will pray the Father and He will give you--He does not say I will pray the
Father that He may do it, as though it was to be decided after He had prayed,
but I will pray the Father and He shall give you. Of course His prayer is heard,
for He makes intercession for us. He presents our prayers according to the will
of God. And so then He prayed and we pray that He may give us this Comforter,
and He does. When we ask we know we receive, for He says so. If we ask anything
according to His will, what then? He hears us. And this is the confidence we
have in Him tonight. This is the confidence we have in Him that if we ask
anything according to His will He hears us. Then if we have that confidence in
the Lord, we can have a good time throughout this institute. Ask anything
according to His will and He hears us. Then it is His will that we should have
the Holy Spirit. Then we can go to Him every day, and every hour of the day,
asking Him for that Spirit of truth and know that we shall receive it, know He
hears us, and if we know He hears us, we know we have the petitions we desired
of Him.
Now put these things together. We ask anything
according to His will, and He hears us. Every time we ask, He hears. Then when
He hears, then what? We know we may have it? Shall have it? Have it. Then what
are we to do? When we have asked according to His will we know He hears us. And
we have what we ask for, then what are we to do? Let us thank Him for it. Then
before we come to the institute each morning let us ask the Lord for the Holy
Spirit according to His will, then when we have asked, yield wholly to the Lord,
and thank Him that it is done, and come expecting Him to teach, and that He will
teach the teacher, and through Him teach us.
"That I may abide with you." How long?
Forever. Good. The Spirit of truth is able to take the truth and make known the
truth at any moment amid ten thousand times ten thousand phases of error. How
long? Forever. Isn't that good? Is not that a good promise that He shall give to
us the Spirit of truth, and He will stay there forever? "Even the Spirit of
truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not neither knoweth
him; but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you."
"Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is
come, he will guide you." What will He do? Guide you. He will do it; that
is positive. When He comes, He will do that. Well, brethren, can't we trust Him,
then? Let us put the three things together, "Ye shall know the truth;"
"I will pray the Father," and He shall guide you." Then can't we
trust Him? Can't we surrender everything to Him right off without a single
hesitation about anything? "Ye shall know the truth." "The Father
shall give you the Spirit of truth, and He will guide you." Then shall we
not yield everything to Him and trust Him and expect Him to guide us in every
study we have here?
"Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is
come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but
whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak; and he will shew you things to
come." Will He? He will show us things to come. Good. Doesn't the Lord want
us to see things that are coming before they overtake us? Hasn't He told us that
the people who will now see what is coming upon us by what is being transacted
before us, will trust no longer to human inventions, but will feel that the Holy
Spirit must be recognized and received? How will we see what is coming upon us?
By what is being transacted before us. Jesus will show us things to come. He
does not want us to be taken by surprise in any of these things. He wants us to
know what is coming beforehand, to be fully armed, and not to be surprised and
overtaken.
"He shall glorify me: for he shall receive of
mine, and shall show it unto you." And what is He? "I am the truth,
and the Spirit of truth." He takes what is His and shows it to us. Then
when the Spirit of truth takes only that which is the Lord's (and that is all He
will ever show to us) He does not stand out independently and do great things of
Himself, just as Jesus did not do that, but yielded everything that the Father
might move and work in Him. So the Holy Spirit in His place does the same things
as Jesus did exactly. He does not show of Himself, but finds what God told to
Jesus and tells that to you and me. So He gives us the truth of God as it is in
Jesus. He is the God of truth? "All things that the Father hath are mine.
Therefore, said I, that he shall take of mine and shall show it unto you."
Then we have the scripture, "But as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor
ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath
prepared for them that love him." There is the eternal purpose, and the
depths of it. That is where we are to stand, asking, taking part in that prayer
of Jesus every day, that we may have the spirit of truth here in our studies and
all our work, guiding us into truth.
Note the following from Steps to Christ, pp. 105,
129, 130.
Never should the Bible be studied without prayer.
Before opening its pages we should ask for the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit,
and it will be given. When Nathaniel came to Jesus, the Saviour exclaimed,
'Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile.' Nathaniel said, "Whence
knowest thou me?" Jesus answered, "Before that Philip called thee,
when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee." And Jesus will see us also
in the secret places of prayer, if we will seek him for light, that we may know
what is truth. Angels from the world of light will be with those who in humility
of heart seek for divine guidance.
The Holy Spirit exalts and glorifies the Saviour.
It is his office to present Christ, the purity of his righteousness, and the
great salvation that we have through him. Jesus says, 'He shall receive of mine,
and shall show it unto you.' The Spirit of truth is the only effectual teacher
of divine truth. How must God esteem the human race, since he gave his Son to
die for them and appoints his Spirit to be man's teacher and continual guide.
God intends that even in this life the truths of
his word shall be ever unfolding to his people. There is only one way in which
this knowledge can be obtained. We call attention to an understanding of God's
word only through the illumination of that Spirit by which the word was given.
'The things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God'; 'for the Spirit
searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.' And the Saviour's promise to
his followers was, 'When he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you
into all truth. . . . for he shall receive of mine, and shall show it unto you.'
God desires man to exercise his reasoning powers;
and the study of the Bible will strengthen and elevate the mind as no other
study can. Yet we are to beware of deifying reason, which is subject to the
weakness and infirmity of humanity. If we would not have the Scriptures clouded
to our understanding, so that the plainest truths shall not be comprehended, we
must have the simplicity and faith of a little child, ready to learn and
beseeching the aid of the Holy Spirit. A sense of the power and wisdom of God,
and of our inability to comprehend his greatness, should inspire us with
humility, and we would enter his presence, with holy awe. When we come to the
Bible, reason must acknowledge an authority superior to itself, and heart and
intellect must bow to the great I AM.
From this time forth as long as we live, when we
read His word just as it is, let us never set up an "if" against it.
Is there any "if" about it? Can there be any "if"? There is
no "if" in it at all. It is just what it says. Thank God it is so, and
let Him tell us what it means, and how it is to.
I read again from Gospel Workers, p. 126: God
desires us to receive the truth upon its own merits--because it is truth. The
Bible must not be interpreted to suit the ideas of men, however long they may
have held these ideas to be true.
That means that I must not interpret the Bible to
suit this man (speaker pointing to himself). It means you, too. "The spirit
in which we come to the investigation of the Scriptures, will determine the
character of the assistant at your side" (Idem, p. 127).
There is an important thing. We are coming in here
every day for the investigation of the Scriptures. Now the word is, The spirit
in which you come will determine the character of the assistant at your side.
"Angels from the world of light will be with
those who in humility of heart seek for divine guidance. But if the Bible is
opened with irreverence, with a feeling of self-sufficiency, if the heart is
filled with prejudice, Satan is beside you, and he will set the plain statements
of God's word in a perverted light" (Idem).
Let us not have Satan for an assistant. Then let us
be certain we join with Jesus in that prayer before we come--and remain in it
while we stay. "We should study the Bible for ourselves. No man should be
relied upon to think for us." That does not say we are not to be led by a
man, if God is leading the man, or by a woman either, if God is leading the
woman. You know too, that a certain man once would have done well to have
consented to be led by an ass. But he proposed to be led by the Lord alone. He
didn't propose to have anybody lead him, but he got into mischief. Let us not
choose who shall lead us, except that God shall lead us.
A man was once talking against the Spirit of
prophecy and telling how easy Seventh-day Adventists were deceived how deluded
they were, that their teachers got up and told them certain things, and they
just swallowed them down whole. I said to myself, that I wished he would try it,
try to get things down there in that way. It is a fact that Seventh-day
Adventists are hard to lead. I am glad of it in one way. I want every Seventh-
day Adventist to be so hard to lead that nobody in the universe can lead him but
Jesus Christ. Yes, sir. But oh, brethren, let us get where it will not be nearly
so hard for Him to lead us. But I am glad they are so hard to lead that nobody
can do it but Him. Let us get into that place as soon as possible, and then let
us just be led as easy as a lamb by Him, by the Lamb of God that He is.
We must not become set in our ideas and think that
no one should interfere with our opinions. When a point of doctrine that you do
not understand comes to your attention, go to God on your knees, that you may
understand what is true, and not be found as were the Jews, fighting against
God. . . .It is impossible for any mind to comprehend all the richness and
greatness of even one promise of God. One catches the glory of one point of
view, and another the beauty and grace from another point, and the soul is
filled with the heavenly light. If we saw all the glory, the spirit would faint.
But we can bear far greater revelations from God's abundant promises than we now
enjoy. It makes my heart sad to think how we lose sight of the fullness of
blessing designed for us. We content ourselves with momentary flashes of
spiritual illumination, when we might walk day after day in the light of his
presence. . . . He whose office it is to bring all things to the remembrance of
God's people and to guide them into all truth, may be with us in the
investigation of his holy word (Idem, pp. 129-131).
Oh, what a promise that is, that we shall know the
truth! Then He gives us the Spirit of truth to guide into the truth. And that
Spirit is such a perfect guide, such an infallible one that it will silence
every other voice than that which comes from Him who is truth and life. Well,
then, brethren, let us enter upon the study in this spirit and remain in this
spirit, and God will teach us. And as it was said in the days of Job, and in the
book, "Who teaches like him?"
Conclusion
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