The School of Obedience
by Andrew Murray
III. The Secret of True
Obedience.
'He learned obedience.'-Heb. 5:8.
The secret of true obedience-let me say at once what I believe it
to be-is the clear and close personal relationship to God. All our attempts
after full obedience will be failures until we get access to His abiding
fellowship. It is God's holy presence, consciously abiding with us, that keeps
us from disobeying Him.
Defective obedience is always the result of a defective life. To
rouse and spur on that defective life by arguments and motives has its use, but
their chief blessing must be that they make us feel the need of a different
life, a life so entirely under the power of God that obedience will be its
natural outcome. The defective life, the life of broken and irregular fellowship
with God, must be healed, and make way for a full and healthy life; then full
obedience will become possible. The secret of a true obedience is the return to
close and continual fellowship with God.
'He learned obedience' (Heb. 5:8). And why was this needful? And
what is the blessing He brings us? Listen, 'He learned obedience by the things
which He suffered, and became the author of eternal salvation to all them that
obey Him.'
Suffering is unnatural to us, and therefore calls for the
surrender of our will.
Christ needed suffering that in it He might learn to obey and
give up His will to the Father at any cost. He needed to learn obedience that as
our great High Priest He might be made perfect. He learned obedience, He became
obedient unto death, that He might become the author of our salvation. He became
the author of salvation through obedience, that He might save those 'who obey
Him.'
As obedience was with Him absolutely necessary to procure, it is
with us absolutely necessary to inherit, salvation. The very essence of
salvation is-obedience to God. Christ as the obedient One saves us as His
obedient ones. Whether in His suffering on earth, or in His glory in heaven,
whether in Himself or in us, obedience is what the heart of Christ is set upon.
On earth Christ was a learner in the school of obedience; in
heaven He teaches it to His disciples here on earth. In a world where
disobedience reigns unto death, the restoration of obedience is in Christ's
hands. As in His own life, so in us, He has undertaken to maintain it. He
teaches and works it in us.
Let us try and think what and how He teaches: it may be we shall
see how little we have given ourselves to be pupils in this school, where alone
obedience is to be learnt. When we think of an ordinary school, the principal
things we ask often are,- (1) the teacher, (2) the class-books, (3) the pupils.
Let us see what each of these is in Christ's school of obedience.
I. THE TEACHER
'He learned obedience.' And now that He teaches it, He does so
first and most by unfolding the secret of His own obedience to the Father.
I have said that the power of true obedience is to be found in
the clear personal relationship to God. It was so with our Lord Jesus. Of all
His teaching He said, 'I have not spoken of Myself, but the Father which sent Me
gave Me a commandment, what I should say and what I should speak. And I know
that His commandment is life everlasting; whatever I speak therefore, even as
the Father said unto Me, so I speak.'
This does not mean that Christ received God's commandment in
eternity as part of the Father's commission to Him on entering the world. No.
Day by day, each moment as He taught and worked, He lived, as man, in continual
communication with the Father, and received the Father's instructions just as He
needed them. Does He not say, 'The Son can do nothing of Himself but what He
seeth the Father do; for the Father showeth the Son all things that Himself
doeth; and He will show Him greater things,' 'As I hear, I judge,' 'I am not
alone, but I and the Father that sent Me,' 'The words that I speak, I speak not
of Myself, but the Father that dwelleth in Me'? It is everywhere a dependence
upon a present fellowship and operation of God, a hearing and a seeing of what
God speaks and does and shows.
Our Lord ever spoke of His relation to the Father as the type and
the promise of our relation to Him, and to the Father through Him. With us as
with Him, the life of continual obedience is impossible without continual
fellowship and continual teaching. It is only when God comes into our lives, in
a degree and a power which many never consider possible, when His presence as
the Eternal and Ever-present One is believed and received, even as the Son
believed and received it, that there can be any hope of a life in which every
thought is brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.
The imperative need of the continual receiving our orders and
instructions from God Himself is what is implied in the words:
'OBEY MY VOICE, AND I WILL BE YOUR GOD.'
The expression 'obeying the commandments' is very seldom used in
Scripture; it is almost always obeying Me, or obeying or hearkening to My voice.
With the commander of an army, the teacher of a school, the father of a family,
it is not the code of laws, however clear and good, with its rewards or threats,
that secures true obedience; it is
THE PERSONAL LIVING INFLUENCE,
wakening love and enthusiasm. It is the joy of ever hearing the
Father's voice that will give the joy and the strength of true obedience. It is
the voice gives power to obey the word; the word without the living voice does
not avail.
How clearly this is illustrated by the contrast of what we see in
Israel. The people had heard the voice of God on Sinai, and were afraid. They
asked Moses that God might no more speak to them. Let Moses receive the word of
God and bring it to them. They only thought of the commands; they knew not that
the only power to obey is in the presence of God and His voice speaking to us.
And so with only Moses to speak to them, and the tables of stone, their whole
history is one of disobedience, because they were afraid of direct contact with
God.
It is even so still. Many, many Christians find it so much easier
to take their teaching from godly men than to wait upon God to receive it from
Himself. Their faith stands in the wisdom of men, and not in the power of God.
Do let us learn the great lesson our Lord, 'who learned
obedience' by every moment waiting to see and hear the Father, has to teach us.
It is only when, like Him, with Him, in and through Him, we ever walk with God,
and hear His voice, that we can possibly attempt to offer God the obedience He
asks and promises to work.
Out of the depths of His own life and experience, Christ can give
and teach us this. Pray earnestly that God may show you the folly of attempting
to obey without the same strength Christ needed, may make you willing to give up
everything for the Christlike joy of the Father's presence all the day.
II. THE TEXT-BOOK.
Christ's direct communication with the Father did not render Him
independent of Holy Scripture.
In the divine school of obedience there is but one text-book,
whether for the Elder Brother or the younger children. In His learning obedience
He used the same text-book as we have. Not only when He had to teach or to
convince others did He appeal to the Word-He needed it and He used it for His
own spiritual life and guidance.
From the commencement of His public life to its close He lived by
the Word of God. 'It is written' was the sword of the Spirit with which He
conquered Satan. 'The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me': this word of Scripture
was the consciousness with which He opened His preaching of the gospel. 'That
the Scripture might be fulfilled' was the light in which He accepted all
suffering, and even gave Himself to the death. After the resurrection He
expounded to the disciples 'in all the Scriptures the things concerning
Himself.'
In Scripture He had found God's plan and path for Him marked out.
He gave Himself to fulfill it. It was in and with the use of God's Word that He
received the Father's continual direct teaching.
In God's school of obedience the Bible is the only text-book.
That shows us the disposition in which we are to come to the Bible-with the
simple desire in it to find what is written concerning us as to God's will, and
to do it.
Scripture was not written to increase our knowledge but to guide
our conduct; 'that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all
good works.' 'If any man will do, he shall know.' Learn from Christ to consider
all there is in Scripture of the revelation of God, and His love, and His
counsel, as simply auxiliary to God's great end: that the man of God may be
fitted to do His will, as it is done in heaven; that man may be restored to that
perfect obedience on which God's heart is set, and which alone is blessedness.
In God's school of obedience God's Word is the only text-book. To
apply that Word in His own life and conduct, to know when each different portion
was to be taken up and carried out, Christ needed and received a divine
teaching. It is He who speaks in Isaiah, 'The Lord God wakeneth morning by
morning, He wakeneth Mine ear to hear as the learned; the Lord God hath opened
My ear.'
Even so does He who thus learned obedience teach it us, by giving
us the Holy Spirit in our heart as the divine Interpreter of the Word. This is
the great work of the indwelling Holy Spirit-to draw the Word we read and think
upon into our heart, and make it quick and powerful there, so that God's living
Word may work effectually in our will, our love, our whole being. It is because
this is not understood that the Word has no power to work obedience.
Let me try and speak very plainly about this. We rejoice in
increased attention given to Bible study, and in testimonies as to the interest
awakened and benefit received. But let us not deceive ourselves. We may delight
in studying the Bible; we may admire and be charmed with the views we get of
God's truth; the thoughts suggested may make a deep impression and waken the
most pleasing religious emotions; and yet the practical influence in making us
holy or humble, loving, patient, ready either for service or suffering, be very
small. The one reason for this is that we do not receive the Word, as it is in
very deed, as the Word of a living God, who must Himself speak to us, and into
us, if it is to exert its divine power.
The letter of the Word, however we study and delight in it, has
no saving or sanctifying power. Human wisdom and human will, however strenuous
their effort, cannot give, cannot command that power. The Holy Spirit is the
mighty power of God: it is only as the Holy Spirit teaches you, only as the
gospel is preached to you by man or by book, 'with the Holy Ghost sent down from
heaven,' that it will really give you, with every command, the strength to obey,
and work in you the very thing commanded.
With man, knowing and willing, knowing and doing, even willing
and performing, are, for lack of power, often separate, and even at variance.
Never in the Holy Spirit. He is at once the light and the might of God. All He
is and does and gives has in it equally the truth and the power of God. When He
shows you God's command, He always shows it you as a possible and a certain
thing, a divine life and gift prepared for you, which He who shows is able to
impart.
Beloved Bible students! do learn to believe that it is only when
Christ, through the Holy Spirit, teaches you to understand and take the Word
into your heart, that He can really teach you to obey as He did. Do believe,
every time you open your Bible, that just as sure as you listen to the divine,
Spirit-breathed Word, so surely will our Father, in answer to the prayer of
faith and docile waiting, give the Holy Spirit's living operation in your heart.
Let all your Bible study be a thing of faith. Do not only try and believe the
truths or promises you read. This may be in your own power. Before that, believe
in the Holy Spirit, in His being in you, in God's working in you through Him.
Take the Word into your heart, in the quiet faith that He will enable you to
love it, and yield to it, and keep it; and our blessed Lord Jesus will make the
book to you what it was to Him when He spoke of 'the things which are written
concerning Me.' All Scripture will become the simple revelation of what God is
going to do for you, and in you, and through you.
III. THE PUPIL.
We have seen how our Lord teaches us obedience by unfolding the
secret of His learning it, in unceasing dependence on the Father. We have seen
how He teaches us to use the Sacred Book as He used it, as a divine revelation
of what God has ordained for us, with the Holy Spirit to expound and enforce. If
we now consider the place the believer takes in the school of obedience as a
pupil, we shall better understand what Christ the Son requires to do His work in
us effectually.
In a faithful student there are several things that go to make up
his feelings towards a trusted teacher. He submits himself entirely to his
leading. He reposes perfect trust in him. He gives him just as much time and
attention as he asks.
When we see and consent that Jesus Christ has a right to all
this, we may hope to experience how wonderfully He can teach us an obedience
like His own.
1. The true pupil, say of some great musician or painter, yields
his master a whole-hearted and unhesitating submission.
In practicing his scales or mixing the colors, in the slow and
patient study of the elements of his art, he knows that it is wisdom simply and
fully to obey.
It is this whole-hearted surrender to His guidance, this implicit
submission to His authority, Christ asks. We come to Him asking Him to teach us
the lost art of obeying God as He did. He asks us if we are ready to pay the
price. It is entirely and utterly to deny self! It is to give up our will and
our life to the death! It is to be ready to do whatever He saith!
The only way of learning to do a thing is to do it. The only way
of learning obedience from Christ is to give up your will to Him, and to make
the doing of His will the one desire and delight of your heart.
Unless you take the vow of absolute obedience as you enter this
class of Christ's school, it will be impossible for you to make any progress.
2. The true scholar of a great master finds it easy to render him
this implicit obedience, simply because he trusts him.
He gladly sacrifices his own wisdom and will to be guided by a
higher.
We need this confidence in our Lord Jesus. He came from heaven to
learn obedience, that He might be able to teach it well. His obedience is the
treasury out of which, not only the debt of our past disobedience is paid, but
out of which the grace for our present obedience is supplied. In His divine love
and perfect human sympathy, in His divine power over our hearts and lives, He
invites, He deserves, He wins our trust. It is by the power of a personal
admiration and attachment to Himself, it is by the power of His divine love, in
every deed shed into our heart by the Holy Spirit and wakening within us a
responsive love, that He wakens our confidence, and communicates to us the true
secret of success in His school. As absolutely as we have trusted Him as a
Savior to atone for our disobedience, so let us trust him as a Teacher to lead
us out of it. Christ is our Prophet or Teacher. A heart that enthusiastically
believes in His power and success as a Teacher, will, in the joy of that faith,
find it possible and easy to obey. It is the presence of Christ with us all the
day that will be the secret of true obedience.
3. A scholar gives his master just as much of his attendance and
attention as he asks. The master fixes how much time must be devoted to personal
intercourse and instruction.
Obedience to God is such a heavenly art, our nature is so utterly
strange to it, the path in which the Son Himself learned it was so slow and
long, that we must not wonder if it does not come at once. Nor must we wonder if
it needs more time at the Master's feet in meditation, and prayer, and waiting,
in dependence and self-sacrifice, than the most are ready to give. But let us
give it.
In Christ Jesus heavenly obedience has become human again,
obedience has become our birth-right and our life-breath: let us cling to Him,
let us believe and claim His abiding presence. With Jesus Christ who learned
obedience as our Savior, with Jesus Christ who teaches obedience as our Master,
we can live lives of obedience. His obedience-we cannot study the lesson too
earnestly-His obedience is our salvation; in Him, the living Christ, we find it
and partake of it moment by moment.
Let us beseech God to show us how Christ and His obedience are
actually to be our life every moment: that will then make us pupils who give Him
all our heart and all our time. And He will teach us to keep His commandments
and abide in His love, even as He kept His Father's commandments and abides in
His love.
-
Now
to Him who is able to keep you from falling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

Webservant
for TwoListeners.org
a
non-profit project for the edification of Christians worldwide
|