Are You A Member?  And Of What?

by George Cutting

A Word to believers as to fellowship with Christians

Introductory Remarks

As long as the solemn  question of the soul's eternal salvation is left in dark uncertainty there will  be little, if any, freedom of spirit to think of that which interests Christ  or concerns His glory, apart from the bare matter of the sinner's peace and  safety. On the other hand, when one who professes to have the knowledge of this  great salvation gives evidence in walk and ways of cold indifference to those  interests, it manifests either a very shallow work in the soul, or no real work  at all. For be sure of this, that the work of the spirit in a soul is as great  a reality as the work of Christ for that soul, and that in whomsoever He (the  Spirit) dwells, His activity will always tend to the glory of Christ. " He shall  glorify Me," said the blessed Lord; "for He shall receive of Mine, and shall  show it unto you," John 16:14. In case this should fall into the hands of a  troubled soul, it may well be to add here, for his comfort, that peace does  not depend upon our being satisfied with the work of the spirit in us, but upon  God's satisfaction in the work of Christ for us, and as this rests eternally  the same, the ground of our peace is unchanging too. "Christ also hath once  suffered for the sins, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God."  I Peter 3:18. But it is for those who have been recently been brought to the  knowledge of salvation that this little book is intended, though it is the earnest  prayer of the writer that its pages may graciously be used to the exercise and  blessing of every reader who loves our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity.

How should I like, before  we proceed further, to fill your heart (if it is not already full) with the  warm and heavenly rays which shine forth from that little sentence in John 13:1-"Having  loved His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end!" " His own!"  What a precious thought! His, not only by Creator-right and redemption- titles,  but His by gift form the Father-"Thine they were, and Thou gavest them Me,"  John 17:6. And so precious is this thought to His own heart, that seven times  over in that remarkable out-breathing of His soul to the Father (John 17) He  makes mention of it. Is this not enough to fill your heart, dear reader? 'Tis  true you are left for a little while in this cold, dark world, but you are "loved"  by Him, and loved through everything, right on "to the end." Never dream, I  pray you, of asking Him to increase His love toward you. He never could love  you more, and He never will love you less. Blessed be His name, His love is  like Himself-infinite and eternal.

"Love that  no tongue can teach,
Love that no thought can reach;
No love like His.
God is its blessed source,
Death ne'er can stop its course,
Nothing can stay its force;
Matchless it is."

Now I need not say that  you are not the only one in this poor world loved by Christ and saved by His  precious blood. There are other joint-heirs, "many sons," that have God's eternal  glory as their bright destiny; and I am desirous of saying a few simple words  to you about your path in connection with these, your fellow-Christians-" His  own" -left with you in the world. But I would first say,

Be Right With God In Secret,

And would earnestly  press upon you the deep importance of personal piety, and the wholehearted  devotedness to Christ, apart from the question of any other saint on earth.  May the Holy Spirit of God make this plain to you. Depend upon it; to be right  with God in your closet is of equal importance to being right with Him in public,  among your fellow-Christians. Take a simple illustration. Will not a good servant  see to the proper condition of the glasses, etc., before he puts them in their  places on the master's table? And will not he soldier look well that his accouterments  are in a bright and worthy state before he steps into rank with his comrades?  Mark, I am not going to say a word against right order, but rather to urge its  importance. Yet I do see the necessity of pressing upon you a prior thing. What  would any master care for the most exact order of laying a table if the knives  and forks, etc., were in a dirty and unsatisfactory sate, and the servant himself  in a disgraceful untidiness? Or what captain is satisfied with the punctuality  and regularity of his men, if their rifles were foul and their bayonets rusty?  Of course, a servant who cared for the approval of his master would neglect none of these things.

Now pause here a moment,  and let me ask myself and you a practical question: Is there anything in your  heart which you are well aware would not have a place there for an instant if  your blessed Lord and Master had it all His own way with you? Let us honestly  face that question, and be very jealous lest there be a single selfish reserve  in our hearts from Him. A Christian who cherishes such a reserve is virtually  saying, "Lord, I can trust Thee with my safety, but cannot trust Thee with my  happiness." Oh, let us consider Him more, dear reader! "He sold all that He  had," and gave His precious lifeblood too, for the joy of making us "His own";  and having done and suffered all this for us, He now gives everything to us,  and makes a feast for His own heart in doing it. What a Giver! What a Lover!  Blessed, thrice blessed Savior! Help me praise Him, and let us exalt His name  together. Well, the more you become at home with Him, to use a familiar expression,  the more you will joyfully anticipate being with Him at home, and the greater  heavenly glow and fervor will your testimony have until you get there. No amount  of effort will bring about this state; but in keeping His company, and beholding  Him in glory, where He now is, you will be "changed into the same image from  glory to glory," and thus reflect His moral beauty here below. The more practically  we become like Him, the louder our lives speak for Him. Whenever you find that  your appetite for Him is diminishing, you may be pretty sure that one or more  of the "little foxes that spoil the vines" are finding an undisturbed lodging-place  in your heart. Therefore, search diligently, and spare them not, or else bid  farewell to your joy and spiritual prosperity. But go at once to Him, and say,  with full surrender of your own will," search me O God, and know my heart: try  me, and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked way in me (margin,  way of pain or grief), and lead me in the way everlasting." Ps. 139:23,24.

Ever may it be-"Our  only grief to give Him pain, our joy to serve and follow Him." What a luxury  it is to one that loves the Lord to have the consciousness in his soul that  he is ministering pleasure to the heart of Christ! I t is then that the brightest  offer the world can make you but crumbles into dust and ashes at your feet.

Steps Rightly Directed, A False Way Detected.

 It is well at the commencement  of your Christian career to be fully alive to the fact that it is the word of  God, which must be the touchstone for everything in your path, whether personally  or relatively. Look at Psalm 119:104, " Through Thy precepts I get understanding:  therefore I hate every false way "; and again, verse 128, " therefore I esteem  all Thy precepts concerning all things to be right; and I hate every false way."  Notice how the Holy Spirit speaks through the Psalmist. It is either a right  way because according to the word, or it is a false way to be hated. Man naturally  loves to tone things down to keep his conscience quiet. God in creation "divided  the light from the darkness," and morally He does so still. Man would blend  them together in a kind of dim twilight; but beware of these subtle compromises,  and like David, say, "The double-minded have I hated, but Thy law do I love."  v.113.

Now do not let this  apply only to the question of your salvation and personal state, but to that  also which I now desire briefly to dwell upon; viz.,

Your Ground Of  Fellowship With Other Christians; Or, In Other Words, Your Church Position.

One of the first things,  I believe, which the renewed heart craves for is fellowship with God's people.  He finds himself no longer at home in the world, and naturally seeks "his own  company." But amidst all the names and divisions of disordered Christendom,  a newborn soul may well inquire, "Where shall I turn to be right?" My answer  is, " To God, and to the word of His grace," Acts 20:32. Whoever is wrong, God  and His word are right. Get that well grounded in your soul, and "cease from  man, whose breath is in his nostrils." A few years ago two Christians, hitherto  strangers to each other, were traveling together in a railway carriage, when,  after some conversation about the Lord and His interests, one of them leaned  forward and said," May I ask what denomination you belong to?" "Well, that is  a common enough question," replied the other, "but will you first say what you  think is to guide me in my path as a Christian?"

He agreed at once that  it was the word of God alone that could with certainty direct him. "Then, if  you will allow me," said his fellow-traveler, "I will answer your question by  proposing another; viz.,WHAT  DENOMINATION DOES THE WORD OF GOD PUT ME INTO?"After  some silent deliberation he said, "Why, none at all." "Then I can't belong to  one at all," replied the other; "for if I did (upon your own showing), I should  clearly be in a position where the word of God had not placed me" "But," replied  the first speaker, "does not the word of God exhort us not to forsake the assembling  of ourselves together, 'and so much the more, as we see the day approaching'?"  Heb.10: 25. "Yes, it does. But a Christian need not belong to a denomination  to obey that word; for the Lord Jesus said, "Where two or three are gathered  in My name, there am I in the midst of them." Matt.18: 20.

Now, dear reader, if  you look at 2 John 6, you will find that he exhorts the elect lady, and those  with her, thus: "And this is love, that we walk after His commandments. This  is the commandment. That, as ye have heard from the beginning, ye should walk  in it."

Now John had seen the  Lord in His wondrous life; had seen Him die upon the cross; and was a witness  of His resurrection; beheld Him taken up into Heaven; and was present when on  the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit came down from an ascended Christ to baptize  believers into one body, and thus form the Church. He had lived long enough  to see evil come into the circle of the professing Church; but what is the remedy?  Is it, "Begin afresh with a new and purer sect of a more improved constitution?"  Listen to his reply by the Holy Spirit: "This is the commandment, that, as ye  have heard from the beginning ye should walk in it." so that the Spirit of God  makes it plain that He suffers no innovation of man's to trespass upon the sacred  principles of God's word for the guidance of His people, whatever their exercises  may be, or whatever the date of their history. Now apply this principle today,  and you must find yourself in one of two positions-either on God's ground of  gathering the disciples at the beginning, or on some ground that man, in his  fancied wisdom or mistaken zeal, has set up since the beginning.

The One Body And  Its Members.

In Acts 2:42, it is  said of the early disciples "they continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine  and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers." After the conversion  of Saul of Tarsus an entirely new revelation was made to the Church through  this once champion persecutor of the saints; namely, that every believer on  earth was united to Christ by the Holy Spirit (see Acts 9:4; I Cor. 6:17; I  Cor. 12:12-27); that "as the body is one, and hath many members and all the  members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is (the) Christ.  For by one spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles,  whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit,"  I Cor. 12:12,13. Then in fact plainly stated-"There is one body," but we are  exhorted to "endeavor to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace";  that is, we are to maintain practically what the Holy Spirit has formed spiritually.

There are two classes  of Christians in the world. One practically says, "Man has formed many bodies,  and I being a member of one of these (the best according to my opinion), desire  to serve its interests in every possible way I can." The other says, "God has  formed one body and made me a member of it, and now I desire by His grace to  serve the interests of the Head of that body, according to the principles laid  down in His Word who formed it."

Now, dear reader, to  which of these classes do you belong? Alas! How many a precious saint of God  is represented by the first! Do you not often hear a Christian talk about "joining"  this or that body? Surely such as one forgets (if he ever knew) that the only  body which God in His word recognizes is the "one body" of which Christ Himself  is the Head, and of which every true believer is a living member. If saved,  therefore (to use a common expression), you are already a "joined member." "He  that is joined unto the Lord is one Spirit," I Cor. 6:17. And in I Cor. 12:18,  using the figure of the human body, the apostle says, "GOD HATH SET the members  every one of them in the body AS IT HATH PLEASED HIM." What sad confusion then  to talk of joining some other body. Why not be content with the place God has  given you in the "body of Christ," and seek through grace to fulfill the responsibilities  of such a place?

Now the Holy Spirit  certainly never baptized believers into a 'sect' or denomination. Look at I  Cor. 1:12,13, and chapter 3:3, and you will see that He meets in the very threshold,  so to speak, the incoming of sectarian spirit in Corinth with a most withering  stroke of condemnation. "Are ye not carnal, and walk as men? For while one saith,  I am of Paul; and another, I of Apollos; are ye not carnal?" But you may inquire,  "If it is wrong to stand upon or uphold a sectarian position, is there any definite  way laid down in God's word of expressing the truth of the one body?" To answer  this we must look at what Scripture says of

The Lord's Table

 If you turn to I Cor.  10:16, you will find that just as twelve loaves on the table of showbread expressed  what Israel was; viz., twelve tribes (Lev. 24:5,6), so the one loaf of the Lord's  supper is the symbol to express the truth of what the Church on earth is: viz.,  one body. We being many are one bread (or loaf) and one body: for we are all  partakers of that bread (or loaf)," v.17. So that in partaking of the one loaf,  the divinely taught Christian owns his union with all true believers on the  face of the whole earth, whatever their ignorance, weakness, or Christ-dishonoring  divisions may be. But while he does this, he can only have fellowship with those  who are seeking to walk in obedience to the word, and in separation from manifested  evil. The Holy Spirit of God would certainly never seek to maintain outward  unity at the expense of inward holiness.* (Read I Cor. 5:6,7,8,13.)

I would just add here,  that while the tenth chapter of this epistle speaks of the Lord's Table, the  eleventh speaks more particularly of

The Lord's Supper

Here our divine affections  are called forth in remembrance of the blessed worthy One Himself, and whilst  doing this together we "show His death until He come." Then we shall no longer  need such symbols, but see Him face to face. But is it not sad to think of the  cold-hearted neglect of this blessed privilege by many of those whose redemption  cost Him His precious blood? Think you, is it nothing to His heart that those  whom He loves so tenderly should manifest such disregard for what may be called  His farewell wish, expressed, as it was, on the night of His betrayal, and re-expressed  from His place of exaltation in glory? "As often as ye eat this bread, and drink  this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come," I Cor. 11:26. And we find,  in Acts 20:7, that the disciples, in loving response to this their Lord and  Master's wish came together "on the first day of the week, to break bread."  Yet in our day some consider the first Sunday in a month sufficiently frequent,  others once a quarter, and many even allow a still longer time to elapse without  granting Him this special desire of His heart. Now which of us would not freely  acknowledge that it was deplorable ingratitude on the part of Pharaoh's butler,  when, after Joseph had turned his sadness into joy, it was said, "Yet did not  the chief butler remember Joseph, but forgot him," Gen. 40:23. And this too,  after Joseph's touching appeal, in which he said, "When it shall be well with  thee, think on me."

*The fellowship  in the Church of England is much broader than Scripture owns, because every  moral-living baptized and confirmed parishioner is admitted to the Lord's supper,  whether he be converted or not; while, on the other hand, that owned in all  the dissenting bodies is much too narrow, because in them only those are recognized  as "members" who hold the views of this or that particular sect or denomination.  If Scripture therefore is to be your guide, you must be on a ground wide enough  to include every member of the body of Christ, whose walk and ways are according  to holiness and truth, and narrow enough to exclude all that scriptural discipline  would shut out.

But still Joseph only  ministered joy to his fellow-prisoner for three days, and even this cost him  no more than the mere utterance of a few short sentences. While for us the spotless  Son of God has purchased eternal blessings, and joys that know no end, at such  cost as only He who can fathom the depths of Calvary's bitterness and woe can  rightly estimate. Now what shall be said of him (with whom it is well indeed),  who, without a single merit or the slightest cost, receives these infinite and  blood-bought blessings at His hand, and the words of eternal; life from His  lips, and yet can hear Him say, "This do in remembrance of Me," without the  least apparent response of heart to it? What must the angels who look on (I  Cor. 11:10) think of such unexampled ingratitude? Nay, let us ask ourselves,  what must the blessed One Himself think of it?

Not long ago we were  told that a few Christians in a country village were often kept, for more than  a year together, from eating the Lord's Supper, just because a certain preacher  could not go over to "administer it to them." This was truly a grievous mistake;  for there is no such thing even hinted at in Scripture as any man (not even  an apostle) being set apart for such a thing. "The disciples came together to  break bread." It might be well to say here that, according to God's words, all  true believers are now priests (Rev. 1:6; I Pet. 2:5,9), and as such they have  the privilege of entering the holiest with boldness, bringing their praises  to the Father and to the Son with glad and worshipping hearts.

How sadly has human  interference set aside the simplicity of divine order, robbing the Lord of His  glory, His people of their blessing, and dragging the highest heavenly privileges  of Christianity down to the earthly level of Judaism? May the Lord deliver His  own from such a state of things so contrary to His mind.

But, returning to our  subject, let us never forget that the Lord's Supper must be received in the  spirit of self-judgment. (See I Cor. 11:28-31.) Having judged ourselves, and  spared nothing about us that is unworthy of Him, we come together, with grateful  and undistracted hearts, to think of all the worthiness that is in Him who went  down into death for us. What a soul-absorbing privilege it would ever be if  our practical state were no hindrance to the Holy Spirit leading us into the  true enjoyment of such a heavenly feast! May the frequency of it never rob us  of the freshness of it.

But there is another  feature of

The Holy Spirit's Presence On Earth

 Which is important  to be clear about. The Lord Jesus promised that the Comforter, even the Spirit  of Truth, when He came, should not only be in them (individually) but with them  (corporately), John 14:16,17. And without going into the matter now, it is evident  from such scriptures I Cor. 14 that in the beginning of the Church's history  His presence was owned and His guidance & operation looked for, both in public  meetings and with individuals. Alas, how human arrangements have set aside the  word of God in this matter, robbing His people, and quenching His Spirit! And  so widespread in Christendom has this evil become, that, look where you will,  from St. Peter's in Rome down to the smallest dissenting chapel, you can see  it. Instead of believers, when assembled together for worship or edification,  depending on the Lord alone for the guidance of His Spirit, why, even a prayer  meeting can scarcely be held without the appointment of someone to "conduct"  it. This one or that, whether led of the Spirit or not, is called upon to "engage  in prayer," while the "prayer leader" is supposed to "open" the meeting and  "close" it, whatever his state of soul may be. What is all this but man usurping  the place of the Holy Spirit, the sad fruit of unbelief as to His personal presence?  Some believers even go so far as to pray for Him to be sent, or to Him to come,  and this notwithstanding the plain word of the Lord-"He shall give you another  Comforter, that He may abide with you FOR EVER," John 14:16. It should, however,  be borne in mind that there is a wide difference between a meeting for preaching  the gospel to the unsaved (when the individual servant, according to his measure  of gift, is solely responsible to deliver His Master's message), and a company  of God's redeemed people, coming together for worship or edification.

Your Position Tested

 Now, with these simple  facts before us, suppose the Peter, James, and John, with a few others of the  early disciples, should have lives until the present day, say in one of our  English towns, and that they were still meeting in the simplicity of divine  order as at the beginning; i.e. gathered together in the name of the Lord Jesus  (compare Matt. 18:20 with John 20:19), remembering Him in the breaking of bread  in the first day of the week, and waiting for His coming again (examine Acts  20:7; I Cor .11:23-26); maintaining scriptural discipline (see I Cor. 5:9-13;  I Tim. 5:20; 2 Thess. 3:6,14, 15; I Thess. 5:14; 2 Tim. 4:2;Titus 2:15; Gal.  6:1); endeavoring to maintain the truth in practice that "there is one body"  (Eph. 4:3,4); and recognizing the presence and authority of the Lord Jesus Christ  in the midst to guide by the Holy Spirit, whom He will, whether in worship or  ministry, thereby ignoring, of course, all human rules and every vestige of  what is merely man's usurped authority. Now calmly pause for a moment and ask  yourself the question just referred to: "To what denomination would THEY belong?"  It will surely not take much spiritual discernment to answer that question with  a very decided negative; and, "Of course," you will say, "none at all."

But, to bring the question  somewhat nearer home, if you were living in that very town yourself, would not  you like to have the apostles' fellowship? I am sure you would. Well, then,  in order to get it, you must first leave every kind of sectarian ground set  up by man since the beginning of the Church's history upon earth and accept,  with its consequences, the "apostles' doctrine." Then, having got upon their  ground of "fellowship", you would have the privilege of expressing it with them  in the "breaking of bread." "The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the  fellowship of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the fellowship  of the body of Christ?" I Cor. 10:16. But you may say, perhaps, that the apostles  are not living on earth now. Well, but, thank God, their doctrine is-"the word  which liveth and abideth forever"; and that puts me in this day on the same  ground of fellowship that they were upon in that day; i.e., if I submit to be  guided and governed by it.

Objections Answered

 This may perhaps fall  into the hands of some older Christian, who says, "Well, I see that the ground  I have been upon has no warrant in Scripture; but I am not capable of putting  the thing right." Probably not; but your responsibility is to put yourself right.  "If a man therefore purge himself from these (vessels to dishonor), he shall  be a vessel unto honor, sanctified, and meet for the Master's use, and prepared  unto every good work. Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness, faith,  love, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart." 2 Tim. 2:19-22  To Jeremiah of old, who stood valiantly for God amidst a sinful and rebellious  people, it was said, "If thou take forth the precious from the vile, thou shalt  be as My mouth: let them return unto thee; but return not thou unto them." Jer.  15:19

"But" reasons another,  "ought I not to stay in the place and among the people where my soul was converted?"  Well, I think you will see at once that such a principle could not possibly  apply to every Christian. Some are converted amid the gross darkness of Romanism:  would you have them stay there? -Saul of Tarsus on the roadside amongst the  haters of Christ?

One is saved on the  battlefield; and only tonight I heard of a young man brought to God while tempest-tossed  and well-nigh driven to despair in the Bay of Biscay. In all such cases God  is sovereign ("The wind bloweth where it listeth."); He can convert a soul anywhere,  and by any means. But from the moment he is converted he is no longer his own,  nor has he any right to choose his own path, or do his own will; he must henceforth  consult the wishes of another-even his own precious Lord and Master, and seek  His all-sufficient grace and power to carry those wishes out.

A man may enlist for  a soldier in the common dram-shop, in the public market, or wherever the recruiting  sergeant can prevail upon him to join the colors, but as you are aware, from  that day he is no longer his own master: he must prepare himself to obey the  wishes of His Majesty. Now what would you think of a recruit who insisted upon  staying where he was enlisted, or even with the recruiting staff? Such a course  might possibly suit him, but he must now yield to other and higher authority.

There may be another  who says, "Nearly all my Christian friends are in such a sect; and,  besides, is it not right to go where you can get the most good?"

 Well, I have no doubt  that Jonathan might have reasoned thus when, in David's days, he chose rather  to think of his own good with his own relations in Saul's court than of following  one who so dearly loved him in a pathway of suffering, loneliness and rejection.  But had poor, lamented Jonathan consulted David's interests instead of his own,  had he devotedly cleaved to him, hated and hunted though David was, he would  probably never have fallen, as he did, on the mountains of Gilboa. Ah, dear  fellow-believer, depend upon it, neither the opinion of your friends, nor your  own judgment of what is most for your good, can guide you in these matters!  The truth of God alone can direct you in a Christ-honoring path, and the God  of truth alone can sustain you in it.

The Scripture which  makes you wise unto salvation furnishes you unto all good works; i.e., with  all needful instruction for your path (2 Tim. 3:15-17). And since this is so,  you ought to be as sure of one as the other. There can surely be no shadow of  uncertainty to faith when God has spoken His mind; but how sad that so many,  even of His professed people, should glibly speak of "essentials" and "nonessentials"  in the things of God, which usually means that whatever concerns their own safety  and blessing is essential, and all the rest, no matter how closely connected  with the glory of the blessed Son of God, is to be treated with comparative  indifference as nonessential! Oh, what miserable selfishness does this manifest!  What a different state of things characterized the dear apostle! The earnest  desire of his heart was, that Christ should be "magnified in my body, whether  by life or by death;" his one motto was-"To me to live is Christ, and to die  is gain." Phil. 1:20, 21

But there is yet another  objection which is sometimes raised against leaving a human for a divine ground  of association and fellowship; viz., the failures and inconsistencies of those  who professedly occupy this ground. Most sorrowfully, though frankly, do I own  that those who, through grace, have clearly seen the place to be of God, and  sought to occupy it, have very painfully and disgracefully failed; while some,  no doubt, who professedly took the ground, never saw what they were doing, nor  had any depth of godly exercise about it; so that when their faithfulness to  the principles which professedly separated them were put to the test, they either  in practice denied those very principles or else forsook them altogether.

This, however, no more  proves the position wrong than the failure of His Majesty's Ministers in the  House of Commons proves that it is not the true House of Parliament, or Uzziah's  failure in the temple, or, still worse, that of king Ahaz, prove that it was  not God's center of gathering for all the thousands of Israel (2 Chron. 26:  16-20; 2 Kings 16:10-17); while, on the other hand, the most spotless morality  in those assembled by Jereboam at Dan or Bethel, the most ardent zeal, the most  unexampled self-denial, coupled with the greatest popularity and the voice of  the majority (ten tribes against two), could not possibly make those altars  the right centers, justify Jereboam in setting them up.

Concluding Remarks

God has ever claimed  the right to fix a gathering center for His people, and to settle the order  of priestly service & worship; and surely this not less true of the Church than  of Israel. But let it be well remembered that He never regarded mere correct  outward order as sufficient to satisfy Him. (See Isaiah 1:11-17.) In the future  history of His ancient people there will be, according to prophecy, a great  re-gathering to God's center-Jerusalem. But what a sifting will they have to  pass through ere their state is suited to the holiness of Jehovah! And they  will be sifted, too, by what is false among themselves.

What a solemn thought  for us, since a similar state of things in Church history has been foretold  by the apostle Paul in Acts 20:30, "Also of your own selves shall men arise,  speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them." But, as already  noticed, the apostle at once carries them to the resting-place of the faith  of the faith of His chosen in all ages; viz., "God, and the word of His grace."  Whatever sifting may come, blessed be His name, we shall ever find in Him and  in His word all that we need until the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven,  and with His "shout" bring about, "in the twinkling of an eye," that great gathering  around Himself spoken of in 2 Thess. 2:1.

"Then all  that grieves shall pass away,
And saints shall see a glorious day."

 Not a division among  them, nor a stain upon them! Till then "every one that hath this hope in Him  purifieth himself, even as he is pure." 1 John 3:3

"Watching  and ready may we be,
As those that wait their Lord to see." Amen

Earnestly do I entreat  you, dear reader, in view of that day when His eyes shall surely meet yours  in glory, to test your church position as well as the ground of your peace and  safety by the Lord's own question to some in the days of His flesh; viz., "Is  it from heaven, or of men?" Luke 20:4. Does it bear the unmistakable stamp of  divine and scriptural authority? Or is it merely endorsed by the hand of human  expediency or mere religious opinion? Never, never rest until you can say, without  a doubt, "I am, through grace, in a position where my gracious Lord would have  me, because I am where the word of God has placed me"; and then with purpose  of heart and fervor of spirit seek to adorn it by a holy, separate, and devoted  walk, and so when He comes you will not only be ready to "go in to the marriage"  through faith in Him, but get His approving "well done" for faithfulness to  Him.

Difficulties you may  have, will have, but if in the path that pleases Him, you may with all confidence  count upon His sympathy and succor; and even though the misunderstandings of  your fellow-Christians add bitterness to your cup, yet the sense of His smile  will more than recompense you. "Them that honor Me I will honor ,  and they that despise Me shall be lightly esteemed," 1 Sam. 2:30 "If any man  serve Me, him will My  Father honor." John 12:26

May such "honor" be  yours, dear reader, now and "till He come."

Expand All | Collapse All

God
Bible
Christianity
Christian Living
Marriage & Family
Church
Rapture
Prophecy
Topics by author
Commentaries
Overview
Old Testament
New Testament
Index by Author
Lectures
E-Books
Magazine
Audio Teaching
Meet Christians
Study Meetings
In the Hall
In the Home
Study Meetings in UK
Conferences
Plumstead Conference
Children's Corner
Links
Site Updates

Copyright © Biblecentre.org :: Free for personal use
Publication only with prior permision from Biblecentre