July
4
To me, to live is Christ (Philippians 1:21).
I wonder
very often if the fact that our tremendous knowledge about Christ, our
tremendous doctrinal apprehension, failing to lead us into triumphant joy,
failing to result in something of this contagious spirit of triumph that was
about Paul, does not imply that it is something which is not Christ personally
with which we are occupied and taken up. We are getting to know Christ purely
by a book knowledge, and a Conference knowledge, an address knowledge, an
historic knowledge; that really, apart from our Conferences, our books, our
studies, our addresses, and all these things; in the secret place, in the
secret history back of it all, we are not living on Christ Himself, and out
from Christ, and knowing Christ. So much of our Christian life is a matter of
teaching, of things about Him.
We
recognize the simplicity of that word, but we are quite sure that you
understand what we mean, because you have known a very great deal about Christ
in doctrine, and then you have discovered something of the Lord Himself, and
you have discovered the tremendous difference. There is nothing more uplifting
than to come into a personal experience of the Lord, a knowledge of the Lord,
in a living way, to have Christ ministered to your heart by the Holy Spirit.
Then you discover that there is something there which is more than all your
suffering, and which makes suffering worthwhile, and which robs suffering of
its deadly sting. It is Christ. Paul lived on Christ: “For me to live is
Christ.” Now, what might have been put afterward? For me to live is to be able
to go to meetings! For me to live is to be able to have fellowship with other
believers! If I am cut off from them I cannot live! If I cannot go to the
meetings I cannot live! You can put in anything else: For me to live is to have
encouragement in the work, to see results for my labous! You can cover a great
deal of ground, if you are going to cover the ground of our demands in order to
be triumphant. But Paul looked out, and he saw his work being injured, damaged,
outwardly destroyed, his old friends being alienated and led to doubt and
suspect him. Oh, he saw enough to take the heart out of any man at the end of
such a life, but he did not say: “For me to live is to see my life work
standing as a monument, intact; to have all my old friends faithful and around
me; to know that my message has had universal acceptance and appreciation!” No!
“For me to live is (when all these things, and many others, have gone) Christ!”
By T. Austin-Sparks from: The Excellency
of the Knowledge of Jesus Christ - Chapter 2
This photograph is from a Facebook page called 3dfirstaid visual architecture
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