| The 
			Holy Spirit Sending Men Forth to Definite Lines of Work.
			We read in Acts xiii. 2-4, “As 
			they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the 
			Holy Ghost said, Separate Me Barnabas 
			and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them. And when they 
			had fasted and prayed, and laid their hands on them, they sent them 
			away. So they, being sent 
			forth by the Holy Ghost, departed into Seleucia; and 
			from thence they sailed to Cyprus.” It 
			is evident from this passage that the 
			Holy Spirit calls men into definite lines of work and sends them 
			forth into the work. He not only calls men in a general 
			way into Christian work, but selects the specific work and points it 
			out. Many a one is asking to-day, and many another ought to ask, “Shall 
			I go to China, to Africa, to India?” There 
			is only one Person who can rightly settle that question for you and 
			that Person is the Holy Spirit. You cannot settle the question for 
			yourself, much less can any other man settle it rightly for you. Not 
			every Christian man is called to go to China; not every Christian 
			man is called to go to Africa; not every Christian man is called to 
			go to the foreign field at all. God alone knows whether He wishes 
			you in any of these places, but He is willing to show you. In a day 
			such as we live in, when there is such a need of the right men and 
			the right women on 
			the foreign field, every young and healthy and intellectually 
			competent Christian man and woman should definitely offer themselves 
			to God for the foreign field and ask Him if He wants them to go. But 
			they ought not to go until He, by His Holy Spirit, makes it plain. 
			The great need in all lines of Christian work to-day is men and 
			women whom the Holy Ghost calls and sends forth. We have plenty of 
			men and women whom men have called and sent forth. We have plenty of 
			men and women who have called themselves, for there are many to-day 
			who object strenuously to being sent forth by men, by any 
			organization of any kind, but, in fact, are what is immeasurably 
			worse, sent forth by themselves and not by God. 
			
			How does the Holy Spirit call? The 
			passage before us does not tell us how the Holy Spirit spoke to the 
			group of prophets and teachers in Antioch, telling them to separate 
			Barnabas and Saul to the work to which He had called them. It is 
			presumably purposely silent on this point. Possibly it is silent on 
			this point lest we should think that the Holy Spirit must always 
			call in precisely the same way. There is nothing whatever to 
			indicate that He spoke by an audible voice, much less is there 
			anything to indicate that He made His will known in any of the 
			fantastic ways in which some in these days profess to discern His 
			leading—as for example, by twitchings of the body, by shuddering, by 
			opening of the Bible at random and putting his finger on a passage 
			that may be construed into some entirely different meaning than that 
			which the inspired author intended 
			by it. The important point is, He made His will clearly known, and 
			He is willing to make His will clearly known to us to-day. Sometimes 
			He makes it known in one way and sometimes in another, but He will 
			make it known. 
			But how 
			shall we receive the Holy Spirit's call? First of all, 
			by desiring it; second, by earnestly seeking it; third, by waiting 
			upon the Lord for it; fourth, by expecting it. The record reads, “As 
			they ministered 
			to the Lord, and fasted.” They 
			were waiting upon the Lord for His direction. For the time being 
			they had turned their back utterly upon worldly cares and 
			enjoyments, even upon those things which were perfectly proper in 
			their place. Many a man is saying to-day in justification for his 
			staying home from the foreign field, “I 
			have never had a call.” But 
			how do you know that? Have you been listening for a call? God 
			usually speaks in a still small voice and it is only the listening 
			ear that can catch it. Have you ever definitely offered yourself to 
			God to send you where He will? While no man or woman ought to go to 
			China or Africa or other foreign field unless they are clearly and 
			definitely called, they ought each to offer themselves to God for 
			this work and be ready for the call and be listening sharply that 
			they may hear the call if it comes. Let it be borne distinctly in 
			mind that a man needs no more definite call to Africa than to 
			Boston, or New York, or London, or any other desirable field at 
			home. 
			The Holy Spirit not only calls men and sends them forth into 
			definite lines of work, but He also guides 
			in the 
			details of daily life and service as to where to go and where not to 
			go, what to do and what not to do. We read in Acts viii. 
			27-29, R. V., “And 
			he (Philip) arose and went: and behold, a man of Ethiopia, a eunuch 
			of great authority under Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, who was 
			over all her treasure, who had come to Jerusalem for to worship; and 
			he was returning and sitting in his chariot, and was reading the 
			prophet Isaiah. And 
			the Spirit said unto 
			Philip, Go near, and join thyself to this chariot.” Here 
			we see the Spirit guiding Philip in the details of service into 
			which He had called him. In a similar way, we read in Acts xvi. 6, 
			7, R. V., “And 
			they went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having 
			been forbidden of the Holy Ghost to speak the word in Asia; 
			and when they were come over against Mysia, they assayed to go into 
			Bithynia; and the 
			Spirit of Jesus suffered them not.” Here 
			we see the Holy Spirit directing Paul where not to go. It is 
			possible for us to have the unerring guidance of the Holy Spirit at 
			every turn of life. Take, for example, our personal work. It is 
			manifestly not God's intention that we speak to every one we meet. 
			To attempt to do so would be to attempt the impossible, and we would 
			waste much time in trying to speak to people where we could do no 
			good that might be used in speaking to people where we could 
			accomplish something. There are some to whom it would be wise for us 
			to speak. There are others to whom it would be unwise for us to 
			speak. Time spent on them would be taken from work that would be 
			more to God's glory. Doubtless as Philip journeyed towards Gaza, he 
			met many before he met the one of whom the Spirit said, “Go 
			near, and join thyself to this chariot.” The Spirit is as 
			ready to guide us as He was to guide Philip. Some years ago, a 
			Christian worker in Toronto had the impression that he should go to 
			the hospital and speak to some one there. He thought to himself, “Whom 
			do I know at the hospital at this time?” There 
			came to his mind one whom he knew was at the hospital, and he 
			hurried to the hospital, but as he sat down by his side to talk with 
			him, he realized it was not for this man that he was sent. He got up 
			to lift a window. What did it all mean? There was another man lying 
			across the passage from the man he knew and the thought came to him 
			that this might be the man to whom he should speak. And he turned 
			and spoke to this man and had the privilege of leading him to 
			Christ. There was apparently nothing serious in the man's case. He 
			had suffered some injury to his knee and there was no thought of a 
			serious issue, but that man passed into eternity that night. Many 
			instances of a similar character could be recorded and prove from 
			experience that the Holy Spirit is as ready to guide those who seek 
			His guidance to-day as He was to guide the early disciples. But He 
			is ready to guide us, not only in our more definite forms of 
			Christian work but in all the affairs of life, business, study, 
			everything we have to do. There is no promise in the Bible more 
			plainly explicit than James i. 5-7, R. V., “But 
			if any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all 
			liberally and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. But let him 
			ask in faith, nothing doubting: for he that doubteth is like 
			the surge of the sea driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that 
			man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord.” This 
			passage not only promises God's wisdom but tells us specifically 
			just what to do to obtain it. There are really five steps stated or 
			implied in the passage: 
			1. That we “lack 
			wisdom.” We must 
			be conscious of and fully admit our own inability to decide wisely. 
			Here is where oftentimes we fail to receive God's wisdom. We think 
			we are able to decide for ourselves or at least we are not ready to 
			admit our own utter inability to decide. There must be an entire 
			renunciation of the wisdom of the flesh. 
			2. We 
			must really desire to know God's way and be willing at any cost to 
			do God's will. This 
			is implied in the word “ask.” The 
			asking must be sincere, and if we are not willing to do God's will, 
			whatever it may be, at any cost, the asking is not sincere. This is 
			a point of fundamental importance. There is nothing that goes so far 
			to make our minds clear in the discernment of the will of God as 
			revealed by His Spirit as an absolutely surrendered will. Here we 
			find the reason why men oftentimes do not know God's will and have 
			the Spirit's guidance. They are not willing to do whatever the 
			Spirit leads at any cost. It is he that “willeth 
			to do His 
			will” who shall 
			know, not only of the doctrine, but he shall know his daily duty. 
			Men oftentimes come to me and say, “I 
			cannot find out the will of God,” but 
			when I put to them the question, “Are 
			you willing to do the will of God at any cost?” they 
			admit that they are not. The way that is very obscure when we hold 
			back from an 
			absolute surrender to God becomes as clear as day when we make that 
			surrender. 
			3. We 
			must definitely “ask” guidance. It 
			is not enough to desire; it is not enough to be willing to obey; we 
			must ask, 
			definitely ask, God to show us the way. 
			4. We 
			must confidently expect guidance. “Let 
			him ask in faith nothing doubting,” There 
			are many and many who cannot find the way, though they ask God to 
			show it to them, simply because they have not the absolutely 
			undoubting expectation that God will show them the way. God promises 
			to show it if we expect it confidently. When you come to God in 
			prayer to show you what to do, know for a certainty that He will 
			show you. In what way He will show you, He does not tell, but He 
			promises that He will show you and that is enough. 
			5. We 
			must follow step by step as the guidance comes. As 
			said before, just how it will come, no one can tell, but it will 
			come. Oftentimes only a step will be made clear at a time; that is 
			all we need to know—the next step. Many are in darkness because they 
			do not know and cannot find what God would have them do next week, 
			or next month or next year. A college man once came to me and told 
			me that he was in great darkness about God's guidance, that he had 
			been seeking, to find the will of God and learn what his life's work 
			should be, but he could not find it. I asked him how far along he 
			was in his college course. He said his sophomore year. I asked, 
			“What is it you desire to know?” “What 
			I shall do when I finish college.” “Do 
			you know that you ought to go through college?” “Yes.”
			This man not only knew what he ought to do next year but the 
			year after but still he was in great perplexity because he did not 
			know what he ought to do when these two years were ended. God 
			delights to lead His children a step at a time. He leads us as He 
			led the children of Israel. “And 
			when the cloud was taken up from the tabernacle, then after that the 
			children of Israel journeyed: and in the place where the cloud 
			abode, there the children of Israel pitched their tents. At the 
			commandment of the Lord the 
			children of Israel journeyed, and at the commandment of the Lord they 
			pitched: as long as the cloud abode upon the tabernacle they rested 
			in their tents. And when the cloud tarried long upon the tabernacle 
			many days, then the children of Israel kept the charge of the Lord, 
			and journeyed not. And so it was, when the cloud was a few days upon 
			the tabernacle; according to the commandment of the Lord they 
			journeyed. And so it was, when the cloud abode from even unto the 
			morning, and that the cloud was taken up in the morning then they 
			journeyed: whether it was by day or by night that the cloud was 
			taken up, they journeyed. Or whether it were two days, or a month, 
			or a year, that the cloud tarried upon the tabernacle, remaining 
			thereon, the children of Israel abode in their tents, and journeyed 
			not: but when it was taken up, they journeyed. At the commandment of 
			the Lord they 
			rested in the tents, and at the commandment of the 
			Lord they 
			journeyed: they kept the charge of the Lord, 
			at the commandment of the Lord by 
			the hand of Moses” (Num. 
			ix. 17-23). 
			Many who have given themselves up to the leading of 
			the Holy Spirit get into a place of great bondage and are tortured 
			because they have leadings which they fear may be from God but of 
			which they are not sure. If they do not obey these leadings, they 
			are fearful they have disobeyed God and sometimes fancy that they 
			have grieved away the Holy Spirit, because they did not follow His 
			leading. This is all unnecessary. Let us settle it in our minds that 
			God's guidance is clear guidance. “God 
			is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1 
			John i. 5). And any leading that is not perfectly clear is not from 
			Him. That is, if our wills are absolutely surrendered to Him. Of 
			course, the obscurity may arise from an unsurrendered will. But if 
			our wills are absolutely surrendered to God, we have the right as 
			God's children to be sure that any guidance is from Him before we 
			obey it. We have a right to go to our Father and say, “Heavenly 
			Father, here I am. I desire above all things to do Thy will. Now 
			make it clear to me, Thy child. If this thing that I have a leading 
			to do is Thy will, I will do it, but make it clear as day if it be 
			Thy will.” If it 
			is His will, the heavenly Father will make it as clear as day. And 
			you need not, and ought not to do that thing until He does make it 
			clear, and you need not and ought not to condemn yourself because 
			you did not do it. God does not want His children to be in a state 
			of condemnation before Him. He wishes us to be free from all care, 
			worry, anxiety and self-condemnation. Any earthly parent would make 
			the way clear to his child that asked to know it and much more will 
			our heavenly Father make it clear to us, and until He does make it 
			clear, we 
			need have no fears that in not doing it, we are disobeying God. We 
			have no right to dictate to God how He 
			shall give His guidance—as, for example, by asking Him to shut up 
			every way, or by asking Him to give a sign, or by guiding us in 
			putting our finger on a text, or in any other way. It is ours to 
			seek and to expect wisdom but it is not ours to dictate how it shall 
			be given. The Holy Spirit divides to “each 
			man severally as 
			He will” (1 
			Cor. xii. 11). 
			Two things are evident from what has been said about the work of the 
			Holy Spirit. First, how utterly dependent we are upon the work of 
			the Holy Spirit at every turn of Christian life and service. Second, 
			how perfect is the provision for life and service that God has made. 
			How wonderful is the fullness of privilege that is open to the 
			humblest believer through the Holy Spirit's work. It is not so much 
			what we are by nature, either intellectually, morally, physically, 
			or even spiritually, that is important. The important matter is, 
			what the Holy Spirit can do for us and what we will let Him do. Not 
			infrequently, the Holy Spirit takes the one who seems to give the 
			least natural promise and uses him far beyond those who give the 
			greatest natural promise. Christian life is not to be lived in the 
			realm of natural temperament, and Christian work is not to be done 
			in the power of natural endowment, but Christian life is to be lived 
			in the realm of the Spirit, and Christian work is to be done on the 
			power of the Spirit. The Holy Spirit is willing and eagerly desirous 
			of doing for each one of us His whole work, and He will do in each 
			one of us all that we will let Him do.   |