have spoken of the crisis that comes in the life of the man who sees
that his Christian experience is low and carnal, and who desires to
enter into the full life of God. Some Christians do not understand that
there should be such a crisis. They think that they ought, from the day
of their conversion, to continue to grow and progress. I have no
objections to that, if they have grown as they ought. If their life has
been so strong under the power of the Holy Ghost that they have grown as
true believers should grow, I certainly have no objection to this. But I
want to deal with those Christians whose life since conversion has been
very much a failure, and who feel it to be such because of their not
being filled with the Spirit, as is their blessed privilege. I want to
say for their encouragement, that by taking one step, they can get out
into the life of rest, and victory, and fellowship with God to which the
promises of God invite them.
Look at the elder son in the
parable. How long would it have taken him to get out of that state of
blindness and bondage into the full condition of sonship? By believing
in his father's love, he might have gotten out that very hour. If he had
been powerfully convicted of his guilt in his unbelief, and had
confessed like his prodigal brother, "I have sinned," he would have come
that very moment into the favor of the son's happiness in his father's
home. He would not have been detained by having a great deal to learn,
and a great deal to do; but in one moment, his whole relation would have
been changed.
Remember, too, what we saw in
Peter's case. In one moment, the look of Jesus broke him down and there
came to him the terribly bitter reflection of his sin, owing to his
selfish, fleshly confidence, a contrition and reflection which laid the
foundation for his new and better life with Jesus. God's word brings out
the idea of the Christian's entrance into the new and better life by the
history of the people of Israel's entrance into the land of Canaan.
In our text, we have these
words:--"God brought us out from thence (Egypt), that He might bring us
in" into Canaan. There are two steps: one was bringing them out; and the
other was bringing them in. So in the life of the believer, there are
ordinarily two steps quite separate from each other;--the bringing him
out of sin and the world; and the bringing him into a state of complete
rest afterward. It was the intention of God that Israel should enter the
land of Canaan from Kadesh-Barnea, immediately after He had made His
covenant with them at Sinai. But they were not ready to enter at once,
on account of their sin and unbelief, and disobedience. They had to
wander after that for forty years in the wilderness. Now, look how God
led the people. In Egypt, there was a great crisis, where they had first
to pass through the Red Sea, which is a figure of conversion; and when
they went into Canaan, there was, as it were, a second conversion in
passing through the Jordan. At our conversion, we get into liberty, out
of the bondage of Egypt; but, when we fail to use our liberty through
unbelief and disobedience, we wander in the wilderness for a longer or
shorter period before we enter into the Canaan of victory, and rest, and
abundance. Thus God does for His Israel two things:--He brings them out
of Egypt; and He lead them into Canaan. My message, then, is to ask this
question of the believer:--Since you know you are converted and God has
brought you out of Egypt, have you yet come into the land of Canaan? If
not, are you willing that he should bring you into the fuller liberty
and rest provided for His people? He brought Israel out of Egypt by a
mighty hand, and the same mighty hand brought us out of our land of
bondage; with the same mighty hand, He brought his ancient people into
rest, and by that hand, too, He can bring us into our true rest. The
same God who pardoned and regenerated us--is waiting to perfect His love
in us, if we but trust Him. Are there many hearts saying:--"I believe
that God brought me out of bondage twenty, or thirty, or forty years
ago; but alas! I cannot say that I have been brought into the happy land
of rest and victory?"
How glorious was the rest of
Canaan after all the wanderings in the wilderness! And so is it with the
Christian who reaches the better promised Canaan of rest, when he comes
to leave all his charge with the Lord Jesus--his responsibilities,
anxieties, and worry; his only work being to hand the keeping of his
soul into the hand of Jesus every day and hour. and the Lord can keep,
and give the victory over every enemy. Jesus has undertaken not only to
cleans our sin, and bring us to heaven, but also to keep us in our daily
life.
I ask again:--Are you hungering
to get free from sin and its power?--Anyone longing to get complete
victory over his temper, his pride, and all his evil
inclinations?--Hearts longing for the time when no clouds will come
between them and their God?--Longing to walk in the full sunshine of
God's loving favour? The very God who brought you from the Egypt of
darkness is ready and able to bring you also into the Canaan of rest.
And now comes the question
again:--What is the way by which God will bring me to this rest? What is
needed on my part if God is really to bring me into the happy land? I
give the answer first of all by asking another question:--Are you
willing to forsake your wanderings in the wilderness? If you say "We do
not want to leave our wanderings, where we have had so many wonderful
indications of God's presence with us; so many remarkable proofs of the
Divine care and goodness, like that of the ancient people of God, who
had the pillar to guide them, and the manna given them every day for
forty years; Moses and Aaron to lead and advise them. The wilderness is
to us, on account of these things, a kind of sacred place; and we are
loath to leave it." If the children of Israel had said anything of this
kind to Joshua, he would have said to them (and we all would have
said):--"Oh, you fools: It is the very God who gave you the pillar of
cloud and the other blessings in the wilderness, who tells you how to
come into the land flowing with milk and honey." And so I can speak to
you in the same way; I bring you the message that He who has brought you
thus far on your journey, and given you such blessings thus far, is the
God who will bring you into the Canaan of complete victory and rest. The
first question, then, that I would ask you is,
ARE YOU READY TO LEAVE THE
WILDERNESS?
You know the mark of Israel's
life in the wilderness--the cause of all their troubles there--was
unbelief. They did not believe that God could take them into the
promised land. And then followed many sins and failures--lusting,
idolatry, murmuring, etc. That has, perhaps, been your life, beloved;
you do not believe that God will fulfill His word. You do not believe in
the possibility of unbroken fellowship with Him, and unlimited
partnership. On account of that, you become disobedient, and did not
live like a child doing God's will, because you did not believe that God
could give you the victory over sin. Are you willing now to leave that
wilderness life? Sometimes you are, perhaps, enjoying fellowship with
God, and sometimes you are separated from Him; sometimes you have
nearness to Him, and at other times great distance from Him; sometimes
you have a willingness to walk closely with Him, but sometimes there is
even unwillingness. Are you now going to give up your whole life to Him?
Are you going to approach Him and say, "My God, I do not want to do
anything that will be displeasing to Thee; I want Thee to keep me from
all worldliness, from all self-pleasure; I want Thee, O God, to help me
to live like Peter after Pentecost, filled with the Holy Ghost, and not
like carnal Peter."
Beloved, are you willing to say
this? Are you willing to give up your sins, to walk with God
continually, to submit yourself wholly to the will of God, and have no
will of your own apart from His will? Are you going to live a perfect
life? I hop you are, for I believe in such a life;--not perhaps in the
sense in which you understand "perfection"--entire freedom from
wrong-doing and all inclination to it, for while we live in the flesh
the flesh will lust against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh;
but the perfection spoken of in the Old Testament as practiced by some
of God's saints, who are said to have "served the Lord with a perfect
heart." What is this perfection? A state in which your hearts will be
set on perfect integrity without any reserve, and your will wholly
subservient to God's will. Are you willing for such a perfection, with
your whole heart turned away from the world and given to God alone? Are
you going to say, "No, I do not expect that I will ever give up my
self-will."? It is the devil tempting you to think it will be too hard
for you. Oh! I would plead with God's children just to look at the will
of God, so full of blessing, of holiness, of love; will you not give up
your guilty will for that blessed will of God? A man can do it in one
moment when he comes to see that God can change his will for him. Then
he may say farewell to his old will, as Peter did when he went out and
wept bitterly, and when the Holy Spirit filled his soul on the day of
Pentecost. Joshua "wholly followed the Lord his God." He failed, indeed,
before the enemy at Ai, because he trusted too much to human agency, and
not sufficiently to God; and he failed in the same manner when he made a
covenant with the Gibeonites; but still, his spirit and power differed
very widely from that of the people whose unbelief drove them before
their enemies and kept them in the wilderness. Let us be willing wholly
to serve the Lord our God, and "make no provision for the flesh to
fulfill the lusts thereof." Let us believe in the love and power of God
to keep us day by day, and put "no confidence in the flesh."
Then comes the second step:--"I
must believe that such a life in the land of Canaan is a possible life."
Yes, many a one will say, "Ah! what would I give to get out of the
wilderness life! But I cannot believe that it is possible to live in
this constant communion with God. You don't know my difficulties--my
business cares and perplexities; I have all sorts of people to associate
with; have gone out in the morning braced up by communion with God in
prayer, but the pressure of business before night has driven out of my
heart all that warmth of love that I had, and the world has gotten in
and made the heart as cold as before." But we must remember again what
it was that kept Israel out of Canaan. When Caleb and Joshua said, "We
are able to overcome the enemy," the ten spies, and the six hundred
thousand answered, "We cannot do it; they are too strong for us." Take
care, dear reader, that we do not repeat their sin, and provoke God as
these unbelievers did. He says, it is possible to bring us into the land
of rest and peace; and I believe it because He has said so, and because
He will do it if I trust Him. Your temper may be terrible; your pride
may have bound you a hundred times; your temptations may "compass you
about like bees," but there is victory for you if you will but trust the
promises of God.
Looking again at Peter. He had
failed again and again, and went from bad to worse until he came to
denying Christ with oaths. But what a change came over him! Just study
the first epistle of Peter, and you will see that the very life of
Christ had entered into him. He shows the spirit of true humility, so
different from his former self-confidence; and glorying in God's will
instead of in his own. He had made a full surrender to Christ, and was
trusting entirely in Him. Come therefore to-day and say to God, "Thou
didst so change selfish, proud Peter, and Thou canst change me
likewise." Yes, God is able to bring you into Canaan, the land of rest.
You know the first half of the 8th of Romans. Have you noticed the
expressions that are to be found there--"The law of the spirit of life
in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death". To
walk after the spirit; To be after the spirit; To be in the Spirit; To
have the Spirit dwelling in us. Through the Spirit to mortify the deeds
of the body; To be led by the Spirit; To be spiritually minded. These
are all blessings which come when we bind ourselves wholly to live in
the Spirit. If we live after the Spirit we have the very nature of the
Spirit in us. If we live in the Spirit, we shall be led by Him every day
and every moment. What if you were to open your heart to-day to be
filled with the Holy Spirit? Would He not be able to keep you every
moment in the sweet rest of God? and would not His mighty arm give you a
complete victory over sin and temptation of every kind, and make you
able to live in perpetual fellowship with the Father and with His Son,
Jesus Christ? Most certainly! This, then, is the second step; this is
the blessed life God has provided for us. First, God brought us out of
Egypt; secondly, He brings us into Canaan. Then comes-- Thirdly, the
question,
HOW DOES GOD BRING US IN?
By leading us in a very
definite act, viz., that of committing ourselves wholly to
Him;--entrusting ourselves to Him, that He may bring us into the land of
rest, and keep us in.
You remember that the Jordan at
the time of harvest overflowed its banks. The hundreds of thousands of
Israel were on the side of the river from Canaan. They were told that
tomorrow, God would do wonderful things for them. The trumpet would
sound, and the priests would take up the ark--the symbol of God's
presence--and pass over before the people. But there lay the swollen
river still. If there still unbelieving children among the the people,
they would say, "What fools, to attempt to cross now! This is not the
time to attempt fording the river, for it is now twenty feet deep." But
the believing people gathered together behind the priests with the ark.
They obeyed the command of Joshua to advance; but they knew not what God
was going to do? The priests walked right into the water, and the hearts
of some began to tremble. They would perhaps ask, "Where is the rod of
Moses?" But, as the priests walked straight on and stepped into the
water, the waters rose up on the upper side in to a high wall, and
flowed away on the other side, and a clear passage was made for the
whole camp. Now, it was God that did this for the people; and it was
because Joshua and the people believed and obeyed God. The same God will
do it to-day, if we believe and trust Him.
Am I addressing a soul who is
saying:--I remember how God first brought me out of the land of bondage.
I was in complete darkness of soul and was deeply troubled. I did not at
first believe that God could take me out, and that I could become a
child of God. But, at last, God took me and brought me to trust in
Jesus, and He led me out safely." Friend, you have the same God now who
brought you out of bondage with a high hand; and can lead you into the
place of rest. Look to Him and say, "O God, make an end of my wilderness
life--my sinful and unbelieving life,--a life of grieving Thee. Oh,
bring me to-day into the land of victory and rest and blessing!" Is this
the prayer of your hearts, dear friends? Are you going to give up
yourselves to Him to do this for you? Can you trust Him that He is able
and willing to do it for you. He can take you through the swollen river
this very moment;--yes, this very moment.
And He can do more: After
Israel had crossed the river, the Captain of the Lord's host had to come
and encourage Joshua, promising to take charge of the army and remain
with them. You need the power of God's Spirit to enable you to overcome
sin and temptation. You need to live in His fellowship--in His unbroken
fellowship, without which you cannot stand or conquer. If you are to
venture to-day, say by faith "My God, I know that Jesus Christ is
willing to be the Captain of my salvation, and to conquer every enemy
for me, He will keep me by faith and by His Holy Spirit; and though it
be dark to me, and as if the waters would pass over my soul, and though
my condition seem hopeless, I will walk forward, for God is going to
bring me in to-day, and I am going to follow Him. My God, I follow Thee
now into the promised land."
Perhaps some have already
entered in, and the angels have seen them, while they have been reading
these solemn words. Is there anyone still hesitating because the waters
of Jordan look threatening and impassable? Oh! come, beloved soul; come
at once, and doubt not.
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