THE
SECRET OF POWER
"Those
who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength" (Isaiah 40:31).
If I were dying, and had the privilege of delivering a last
exhortation to all the Christians of the world, and that message had
to be condensed into three words, I would say, "Wait on God!"
Wherever I go I find backsliders - Methodist backsliders, Baptist
backsliders, Salvationist backsliders - all kinds of backsliders by
the thousand, until my heart aches as I think of the great army of
discouraged souls, of the way in which the Holy Spirit has been
grieved, and of the way in which Jesus has been treated.
If
these backsliders were asked the cause of their present condition,
ten thousand different reasons would be given; but, after all, there
is but one, and that is this: they did not wait on God. If they had
waited on Him when the fierce assault was made that overthrew their
faith and robbed them of their courage and bankrupted their love,
they would have renewed their strength and mounted over all obstacles
as though on eagles' wings. They would have run through their enemies
and not been weary. They would have walked in the midst of trouble
and not fainted. Waiting on God means more than a prayer of thirty
seconds on getting up in the morning and going to bed at night. It
may
mean
one prayer that gets hold of God and comes away with the blessing, or
it may mean a dozen prayers that knock and persist and will not be
put off, until God arises, and makes bare His arm on behalf of the
pleading soul.
There
is a drawing nigh to God, a knocking at Heaven's doors, a pleading of
the promises, a reasoning with Jesus, a forgetting of self a turning
from all earthly concerns, a holding on with determination to never
let go, that puts all the wealth of Heaven's wisdom and power and
love at the disposal of a little man, so that he shouts and triumphs
when all others tremble and fail and fly, and becomes more than
conqueror in the very face of death and Hell.
It
is in the heat of just such seasons of waiting on God that every
great soul gets the wisdom and strength that make it an astonishment
to other men. They, too, might be "great in the sight of the
Lord," if they would wait on God and be true, instead of getting
excited and running to this man and that for help when the testing
times come.
The
Psalmist had been in great trouble, and this is what he says of his
deliverance: "I waited patiently for the Lord; and He inclined
to me, and heard my cry. He brought me up also out of an horrible
pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet on a rock, and established
my goings. And He has put a new song in my mouth, even praise to our
God: many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in the Lord"
(Ps. 40:1-3).
The
other day I went to a poor little corps where nearly everything had
been going wrong. Many were cold and discouraged; but I found one
sister with a wondrous glory in her face, and glad, sweet praises in
her mouth. She told me how she had looked at others falling around
her, had seen the carelessness of many, and noted the decline of
vital piety in the corps, until her heart ached and she felt
disheartened and her feet almost slipped. But she went to God, and
got down low before Him, and prayed and waited, until He drew near
her, and showed her the awful precipice on which she herself was
standing - showed her that her one business was to follow Jesus, to
walk before Him with a perfect heart, and to cleave to Him, though
the whole corps backslid. Then she confessed all that God showed her;
confessed how near she had come to joining the great army of
backsliders herself through looking at others; humbled herself before
Him, and renewed her covenant, until an unutterable joy came to her
heart, and God put His fear in her soul, and filled her with the
glory of His presence. She told me, further, that the next day she
fairly trembled to think of the awful danger she had been in, and
declared that that time of waiting on God in the silence of the night
saved her, and now her heart was filled with the full assurance of
hope for herself, and not only for herself, but also for the corps.
Oh, for ten thousand such soldiers!
David
said, "My soul, wait thou only on God; for my expectation is
from Him (Ps. 62:5); and again he declares: "I wait for the
Lord, my soul doth wait, and in His name do I hope. My soul waits for
the Lord more than they that watch for the morning" (Ps. 130:5);
and he sends out this ringing exhortation and note of encouragement
to you and me: "Wait on the Lord: be of good courage, and He
shall strengthen your heart: wait, I say, on the Lord" (Ps.
27:14).
The
secret of all failures, and of all true success, is hidden in the
attitude of the soul in its private walk with God. The man who
courageously waits on God is bound to succeed. He cannot fail. To
other men he may appear for the present to fail, but in the end they
will see what he knew all the time: that God was with him, making
him, in spite of all appearances, "a prosperous man." Jesus
puts the secret into these words: "But thou, when thou pray,
enter into your closet, and when thou hast shut your door, pray to
your Father which is in secret; and your Father which sees in secret
shall reward you openly" (Matt. 6:6).
Know,
then, that all failure has its beginning in the closet, in neglecting
to wait on God until filled with wisdom, clothed with power, and all
on fire with love.
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