GOD'S SIDE AND MAN'S SIDE
In
introducing this subject of the life and walk of faith, I desire, at
the very outset, to clear away one misunderstanding which very commonly
arises in reference to the teaching of it, and which effectually hinders
a clear apprehension of such teaching. This misunderstanding comes from
the fact that the two sides of the subject are rarely kept in view at
the same time. People see distinctly the way in which one side is
presented, and, dwelling exclusively upon this, without even a thought
of any other, it is no wonder that distorted views of the whole matter
are the legitimate consequence.
Now
there are two very decided and distinct sides to this subject, and,
like all other subjects, it cannot be fully understood unless both of
these sides are kept constantly in view. I refer, of course, to God's
side and man's side; or, in other words, to God's part in the work of
sanctification, and man's part. These are very distinct and even
contrastive, but are not contradictory; though, to a cursory observer,
they sometimes look so.
This
was very strikingly illustrated to me not long ago. There were two
teachers of this higher Christian life holding meetings in the same
place, at alternate hours. One spoke only of God's part in the work, and
the other dwelt exclusively upon man's part. They were both in perfect
sympathy with one another, and realized fully that they were each
teaching different sides of the same great truth; and this also was
understood by a large proportion of their hearers. But with some of the
hearers it was different, and one lady said to me, in the greatest
perplexity, "I cannot understand it at all. Here are two preachers
undertaking to teach just the same truth, and yet to me they seem flatly
to contradict one another." And I felt at the time that she expressed a
puzzle which really causes a great deal of difficulty in the minds of
many honest inquirers after this truth.
Suppose
two friends go to see some celebrated building, and return home to
describe it. One has seen only the north side, and the other only the
south. The first says, "The building was built in such a manner, and has
such and such stories and ornaments." "Oh, no!" says the other,
interrupting him, "you are altogether mistaken; I saw the building, and
it was built in quite a different manner, and its ornaments and stories
were so and so." A lively dispute would probably follow upon the truth
of the respective descriptions, until the two friends discover that they
have been describing different sides of the building, and then all is
reconciled at once.
I
would like to state as clearly as I can what I judge to be the two
distinct sides in this matter; and to show how the looking at one
without seeing the other, will be sure to create wrong impressions and
views of the truth.
To
state it in brief, I would just say that man's part is to trust and
God's part is to work; and it can be seen at a glance how contrastive
these two parts are, and yet not necessarily contradictory. I mean this.
There is a certain work to be accomplished. We are to be delivered from
the power of sin, and are to be made perfect in every good work to do
the will of God. "Beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord," we are
to be actually "changed into the same image from glory to glory, even
as by the Spirit of the Lord." We are to be transformed by the renewing
of our minds, that we may prove what is that good and acceptable and
perfect will of God. A real work is to be wrought in us and upon us.
Besetting sins are to be conquered. Evil habits are to be overcome.
Wrong dispositions and feelings are to be rooted out, and holy tempers
and emotions are to be begotten. A positive transformation is to take
place. So at least the Bible teaches. Now somebody must do this. Either
we must do it for ourselves, or another must do it for us. We have most
of us tried to do it for ourselves at first, and have grievously failed;
then we discover from the Scriptures and from our own experience that
it is a work we are utterly unable to do for ourselves, but that the
Lord Jesus Christ has come on purpose to do it, and that He will do it
for all who put themselves wholly into His hand, and trust Him to do it.
Now under these circumstances, what is the part of the believer, and
what is the part of the Lord? Plainly the believer can do nothing but
trust; while the Lord, in whom he trusts, actually does the work
intrusted to Him. Trusting and doing are certainly contrastive things,
and often contradictory; but are they contradictory in this case?
Manifestly not, because it is two different parties that are concerned.
If we should say of one party in a transaction that he trusted his case
to another, and yet attended to it himself, we should state a
contradiction and an impossibility. But when we say of two parties in a
transaction that one trusts the other to do something, and that that
other goes to work and does it, we are making a statement that is
perfectly simple and harmonious. When we say, therefore, that in this
higher life, man's part is to trust, and that God does the thing
intrusted to Him, we do not surely present any very difficult or
puzzling problem.
The
preacher who is speaking on man's part in this matter cannot speak of
anything but surrender and trust, because this is positively all the man
can do. We all agree about this. And yet such preachers are constantly
criticised as though, in saying this, they had meant to imply there was
no other part, and that therefore nothing but trusting is done. And the
cry goes out that this doctrine of faith does away with all realities,
that souls are just told to trust, and that is the end of it, and they
sit down thenceforward in a sort of religious easy-chair, dreaming away a
life fruitless of any actual results. All this misapprehension arises,
of course, from the fact that either the preacher has neglected to
state, or the hearer has failed to hear, the other side of the matter;
which is, that when we trust, the Lord works, and that a great deal is
done, not by us, but by Him. Actual results are reached by our trusting,
because our Lord undertakes the thing trusted to Him, and accomplishes
it. We do not do anything, but He does it; and it is all the more
effectually done because of this. The puzzle as to the preaching of
faith disappears entirely as soon as this is clearly seen.
On
the other hand, the preacher who dwells on God's side of the question
is criticised on a totally different ground. He does not speak of trust,
for the Lord's part is not to trust, but to work. The Lord does the
thing intrusted to Him. He disciplines and trains the soul by inward
exercises and outward providences. He brings to bear all the resources
of His wisdom and love upon the refining and purifying of that soul. He
makes everything in the life and circumstances of such a one subservient
to the one great purpose of making him grow in grace, and of conforming
him, day by day and hour by hour, to the image of Christ. He carries
him through a process of transformation, longer or shorter, as his
peculiar case may require, making actual and experimental the results
for which the soul has trusted. We have dared, for instance, according
to the command in Rom. 6:11, by faith to reckon ourselves "dead unto
sin." The Lord makes this a reality, and leads us to victory over self,
by the daily and hourly discipline of His providences. Our reckoning is
available only because God thus makes it real. And yet the preacher who
dwells upon this practical side of the matter, and tells of God's
processes for making faith's reckonings experimental realities, is
accused of contradicting the preaching of faith altogether, and of
declaring only a process of gradual sanctification by works, and of
setting before the soul an impossible and hopeless task.
Now,
sanctification is both a sudden step of faith, and also a gradual
process of works. It is a step as far as we are concerned; it is a
process as to God's part. By a step of faith we get into Christ; by a
process we are made to grow up unto Him in all things. By a step of
faith we put ourselves into the hands of the Divine Potter; by a gradual
process He makes us into a vessel unto His own honor, meet for His use,
and prepared to every good work.
To
illustrate all this: suppose I were to be describing to a person, who
was entirely ignorant of the subject, the way in which a lump of clay is
made into a beautiful vessel. I tell him first the part of the clay in
the matter, and all I can say about this is, that the clay is put into
the potter's hands, and then lies passive there, submitting itself to
all the turnings and overturnings of the potter's hands upon it. There
is really nothing else to be said about the clay's part. But could my
hearer argue from this that nothing else is done, because I say that
this is all the clay can do? If he is an intelligent hearer, he will not
dream of doing so, but will say, "I understand. This is what the clay
must do; but what must the potter do?" "Ah," I answer, "now we come to
the important part. The potter takes the clay thus abandoned to his
working, and begins to mould and fashion it according to his own will.
He kneads and works it, he tears it apart and presses it together again,
he wets it and then suffers it to dry. Sometimes he works at it for
hours together, sometimes he lays it aside for days and does not touch
it. And then, when by all these processes he has made it perfectly
pliable in his hands, he proceeds to make it up into the vessel he has
purposed. He turns it upon the wheel, planes it and smooths it, and
dries it in the sun, bakes it in the oven, and finally turns it out of
his workshop, a vessel to his honor and fit for his use."
Will
my hearer be likely now to say that I am contradicting myself; that a
little while ago I had said the clay had nothing to do but lie passive
in the potter's hands, and that now I am putting upon it a great work
which it is not able to perform; and that to make itself into such a
vessel is an impossible and hopeless undertaking? Surely not. For he
will see that, while before I was speaking of the clay's part in the
matter, I am now speaking of the potter's part, and that these two are
necessarily contrastive, but not in the least contradictory, and that
the clay is not expected to do the potter's work, but only to yield
itself up to his working.
Nothing,
it seems to me, could be clearer than the perfect harmony between these
two apparently contradictory sorts of teaching on this subject. What
can be said about man's part in this great work, but that he must
continually surrender himself and continually trust?
But
when we come to God's side of the question, what is there that may not
be said as to the manifold and wonderful ways in which He accomplishes
the work intrusted to Him? It is here that the growing comes in. The
lump of clay would never grow into a beautiful vessel if it stayed in
the clay-pit for thousands of years. But once put into the hands of a
skilful potter, and, under his fashioning, it grows rapidly into a
vessel to his honor. And so the soul, abandoned to the working of the
Heavenly Potter, is changed rapidly from glory to glory into the image
of the Lord by His Spirit.
Having,
therefore, taken the step of faith by which you have put yourself
wholly and absolutely into His hands, you must now expect Him to begin
to work. His way of accomplishing that which you have intrusted to Him
may be different from your way. But He knows, and you must be satisfied.
I
knew a lady who had entered into this life of faith with a great
outpouring of the Spirit, and a wonderful flood of light and joy. She
supposed, of course, this was a preparation for some great service, and
expected to be put forth immediately into the Lord's harvest field.
Instead of this, almost at once her husband lost all his money, and she
was shut up in her own house, to attend to all sorts of domestic duties,
with no time or strength left for any Gospel work at all. She accepted
the discipline, and yielded herself up as heartily to sweep, and dust,
and bake, and sew, as she would have done to preach, or pray or write
for the Lord. And the result was that through this very training He made
her into a vessel "meet for the Master's use, and prepared unto every
good work."
Another
lady, who had entered this life of faith under similar circumstances of
wondrous blessing, and who also expected to be sent out to do some
great work, was shut up with two peevish invalid nieces, to nurse, and
humor, and amuse them all day long. Unlike the first lady, this one did
not accept the training, but chafed and fretted, and finally rebelled,
lost all her blessing, and went back into a state of sad coldness and
misery. She had understood her part of trusting to begin with, but not
understanding the divine process of accomplishing that for which she had
trusted, she took herself out of the hands of the Heavenly Potter, and
the vessel was marred on the wheel.
I
believe many a vessel has been similarly marred by a want of
understanding these things. The maturity of Christian experience cannot
be reached in a moment, but is the result of the work of God's Holy
Spirit, who, by His energizing and transforming power, causes us to grow
up into Christ in all things. And we cannot hope to reach this maturity
in any other way than by yielding ourselves up utterly and willingly to
His mighty working. But the sanctification the Scriptures urge as a
present experience upon all believers does not consist in maturity of
growth, but in purity of heart, and this may be as complete in the babe
in Christ as in the veteran believer.
The
lump of clay, from the moment it comes under the transforming hand of
the potter, is, during each day and each hour of the process, just what
the potter wants it to be at that hour or on that day, and therefore
pleases him. But it is very far from being matured into the vessel he
intends in the future to make it.
The
little babe may be all that a babe could be, or ought to be, and may
therefore perfectly please its mother, and yet it is very far from being
what that mother would wish it to be when the years of maturity shall
come.
The
apple in June is a perfect apple for June. It is the best apple that
June can produce. But it is very different from the apple in October,
which is a perfected apple.
God's works are perfect in every stage of their growth. Man's works are never perfect until they are in every respect complete.
All
that we claim then in this life of sanctification is, that by a step of
faith we put ourselves into the hands of the Lord, for Him to work in
us all the good pleasure of His will; and that by a continuous exercise
of faith we keep ourselves there. This is our part in the matter. And
when we do it, and while we do it, we are, in the Scripture sense, truly
pleasing to God, although it may require years of training and
discipline to mature us into a vessel that shall be in all respects to
His honor, and fitted to every good work.
Our
part is the trusting, it is His to accomplish the results. And when we
do our part, He never fails to do His, for no one ever trusted in the
Lord and was confounded. Do not be afraid, then, that if you trust, or
tell others to trust, the matter will end there. Trust is only the
beginning and the continual foundation; when we trust, the Lord works,
and His work is the important part of the whole matter. And this
explains that apparent paradox which puzzles so many. They say, "In one
breath you tell us to do nothing but trust, and in the next you tell us
to do impossible things. How can you reconcile such contradictory
statements?" They are to be reconciled just as we reconcile the
statements concerning a saw in a carpenter's shop, when we say at one
moment that the saw has sawn asunder a log, and the next moment declare
that the carpenter has done it. The saw is the instrument used, the
power that uses it is the carpenter's. And so we, yielding ourselves
unto God, and our members as instruments of righteousness unto Him, find
that He works in us to will and to do of His good pleasure; and we can
say with Paul, "I labored; yet not I, but the grace of God which was
with me." For we are to be His workmanship, not our own. (Eph. 2:10.)
And in fact, when we come to look at it, only God, who created us at
first, can re-create us, for He alone understands the "work of His own
hands." All efforts after self-creating, result in the marring of the
vessel, and no soul can ever reach its highest fulfillment except
through the working of Him who "worketh all things after the counsel of
His own will."
In
this book I shall of course dwell mostly upon man's side in the matter,
as I am writing for man, and in the hope of teaching believers how to
fulfil their part of the great work. But I wish it to be distinctly
understood all through, that unless I believed with all my heart in
God's effectual working on His side, not one word of this book would
ever have been written.
—Christian's Secret of a Happy Life.