PRESENT-DAY
WITNESSES TO THE RESURRECTION
Several
years ago, I knelt in prayer with a young woman who wanted to be
holy. I asked her if she would give up everything for Jesus. She
answered that she would. I then thought I would put a hard test to
her, and asked her if she would be willing to go to Africa as a
missionary for Jesus. She said, "Yes." Then we prayed, and
while we were praying, she burst into tears and cried out, "O
Jesus!"
She
had never seen Jesus. She had never heard His voice, and before this
hour she had no more idea of such a revelation of Jesus to her soul
than a man born blind has of a rainbow. But she knew Him! She had no
more need that some one should tell her this was Jesus than you have
need of the light of a tallow candle to see the sun come up. The sun
brings its own light, and so did Jesus.
She
knew Him, she loved Him, she rejoiced in Him with "joy
unspeakable and full of glory"; and from that hour she testified
of Him and followed Him - followed Him to Africa, to help Him win the
heathen to Himself; till one day He said to her, "Well done,
good and faithful servant ... enter thou into the joy of your Lord"
(Matt. 25:23), and then she went up to Heaven, to behold with open
vision His unveiled glory.
This
young woman was a witness for Jesus - a witness that He is not dead
but living, and as such was a witness to His resurrection. Such
witnesses are needed in every age. They are needed today as much as
in the days of the Apostles. Men's hearts are just as wicked, their
pride just as stubborn, their selfishness is just as universal, and
their unbelief is just as obstinate as at any time in the world's
history, and it takes just as powerful evidence to subdue their
hearts and beget in them living faith as it ever did. There are two
kinds of evidence, each of which seems to be necessary to get men to
accept the truth and be saved. They are: the evidence we get from
history, and the evidence we get from living men who tell about that
of which they are conscious.
In
the Bible and in the writings of early Christians, we have the
historical evidences of God's plans for men and His dealings with
them; of the life and death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and
of the coming of the Holy Spirit. But these records alone do not seem
sufficient to destroy the unbelief of men and bring them into
humble, glad submission to God, and into childlike faith in His dear
love. They may produce an historical faith. That is, men may believe
what they say about God, about men, about sin, life, death,
judgement, Heaven and Hell, just as they believe what history says
about Julius Caesar, Bonaparte or Washington; and this faith may lead
men to be very religious, to build temples, to deny themselves, and
go through many forms of worship; to forsake gross outward sin and to
live lives of decorum and morality, and yet leave them dead to God.
It does not lead them into that living union with the Lord Jesus
which slays inward and outward sin, and takes away the fear of death,
and fills the heart with joyful hope of immortality. The faith that
saves, is the faith that brings the life and power of God into the
soul - a faith that makes the proud man humble, the impatient man
patient, the haughty man lowly in heart, the stingy man open-handed
and liberal, the lustful man clean and chaste, the fighting,
quarrelsome man meek and gentle, the liar truthful, the thief honest,
the light and foolish sober and grave, a faith that purifies the
heart, that sets the Lord always before the eyes, and fills the soul
with humble, holy, patient love toward God and man.
To
beget this faith, is needed not only the Bible, with its historical
evidences, but also a living witness; one who has "tasted the
good word of God, and the powers of the world to come" (Heb.
6:5); one who knows that Jesus is not dead, but alive; one who can
witness to the resurrection, because he is acquainted with the Lord
who was resurrected, and knows the Lord, who is "the
Resurrection and the Life" (John 11:25).
I
remember a little girl in Boston, whose quiet, earnest testimony for
Jesus drew people to our meetings just to hear her speak. One day, as
we were walking along the street, she said to me: "The other
evening, as I was in my room getting ready for the meeting, Jesus was
with me. I felt He was there, and I knew Him."
I
replied, "We may be more conscious of His presence than of any
earthly friend."
Then,
to my surprise and joy, she said, "Yes, for He is in our
hearts." Paul had to be such a witness, in order to bring
salvation to the Gentiles. He was not a witness of the resurrection,
in the lower sense, that he saw Jesus in the body with his natural
eyes; but in the higher, spiritual sense, in that he had the Son of
God "revealed" in him - (Gal. 1:16) - and his testimony was
just as mighty in convincing men of the truth and slaying their
unbelief; as was that of Peter or John.
And
this power to so witness was not confined to the Apostles, who had
been with Jesus, and to Paul, who was specially chosen to be an
Apostle, but is the common heritage of believers. Many years after
Pentecost, Paul wrote to the Corinthians, away off in Europe, "Know
you not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except you
be reprobates?" (2 Cor. 13:5). And, in writing to the Colossians
about the mystery of the Gospel, he said it is "Christ in you,
the hope of glory (Col. 1:27). In fact, this is the very highest
purpose for which Jesus promised to send the Holy Ghost. He said,
"When He, the Spirit of truth, is come ... He shall not speak of
Himself ... He shall testify of Me. He shall glorify Me, for He shall
receive of Mine, and shall shew it to you" (John 16:14).
This
is His chief work - to reveal Jesus to the spiritual consciousness of
each individual believer, and by so doing to purify his heart, to
destroy all evil dispositions, and to implant in the soul of the
believer the very tempers and dispositions of Jesus Himself.
Indeed,
the inward revelation of the mind and heart of Jesus, through the
baptism of the Holy Ghost, was necessary in order to make fit
witnesses out of the very men who had been with Him for three years
and who were eye-witnesses of His death and resurrection.
He
did not rise from the dead and send them out at once to tell the fact
to every one they met. He remained with them a few days, teaching
them certain things, and then, just before He ascended to Heaven,
instead of saying to them, "You have been with Me for three
years, you know My life, you have heard My teachings, you saw Me die,
you witnessed My resurrection - now go into all the world, and tell
them about these things," we read that He "commanded them
that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise
of the Father, which, says He, you have heard of Me. For John truly
baptised with water; but you will be baptised with the Holy Ghost not
many days hence ... you will receive power when the Holy Ghost is
come on you: and you will be witnesses to Me" (Acts 1:4, 5, 8).
They
had been with Him for three years, but they did not understand Him.
He had been revealed to them in flesh and blood, but now He was to be
revealed in them by the Spirit; and in that hour they knew His
divinity, and understood His character, His mission, His holiness,
His everlasting love and His saving power as they otherwise could not
had He lived with them in the flesh to all eternity. This it was that
led Jesus to say to them, just before His death, "It is better
for you that I go away; for if I do not go away the Comforter will
not come to you" (John 16:7); and if the Comforter had not come,
they could not possibly have known Jesus except in the flesh.
Oh,
how tenderly Jesus loved them, and with what unutterable longings did
He wish to make Himself fully known to them! Just so, today, does He
want to make Himself fully known to His people, and to reveal Himself
in their hearts.
It
is this knowledge of Jesus that sinners demand Christians shall have
before they believe. Now, if it is true that the children of God can
so know Christ, that the Holy Ghost does so reveal Him, that Jesus
does so earnestly wish to be known by His people, and that sinners
demand that Christians shall have such knowledge before they will
believe, is it not the duty of every follower of Jesus to seek Him
with the whole heart, till he is filled with this knowledge and this
power to so witness? Further, this knowledge should be sought, not
simply for usefulness, but for personal comfort and safety, because
it is salvation - it is eternal life. Jesus said, "This is life
eternal, that they might know You the only true God, and Jesus
Christ, whom You have sent" (John 17:3).
One
may know ten thousand things about the Lord, may be very eloquent in
speaking about His character and His works, and yet be utterly
destitute of any heart-acquaintance with Him. A peasant may know many
things about an earthly ruler - may believe in his justice, and be
ready to trust his clemency, though he has never seen him; but it is
his son and daughter and the members of his household who really know
him. This universal revelation of the Lord Jesus is more than
conversion - it is the positive side of that experience which we call
a "clean heart" or "holiness."
Do
you want to know Him in this way? If your whole soul desires it, you
may.
First,
be sure your sins are forgiven. If you have wronged anybody, undo the
wrong so far as you can. Zacchaeus said to Jesus, "The half of
my goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken anything from any
man by false accusation, I restore him fourfold" (Luke 19:8),
and Jesus saved him right on the spot. Submit to God, confess your
sins, then trust Jesus, and as sure as you live all your sins shall
be forgiven, and He will blot out all your transgressions as a thick
cloud, "and remember them no more."
Second,
now that you are forgiven, come to Him with your will, your
affection, your very self, and ask Him to cleanse you from every evil
temper, from every selfish wish, from every secret doubt, and to come
and dwell in your heart and keep you pure, and use you for His own
glory. Then struggle no more, but walk in the light He gives you, and
patiently, expectantly trust Him to answer your prayer, and as sure
as you live you shall soon "be filled with all the fullness of
God" (Eph. 3:19). Just at this point, do not become impatient
and yield to secret doubts and fears, but "hold fast the
profession of your faith" (Heb. 10:23); for, as Paul says, "You
have need of patience that, after you have done the will of God, you
might receive the promise; for yet a little while, and He that shall
come will come, and will not tarry" (Heb. 10:36, 37). God will
come to you! He will! And when He comes, He will satisfy the
uttermost longings of your heart.
By Samuel Logan Brengle
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