The Wellspring. No.34
“Understanding
is a Wellspring of Life to him that has it.”
(Proverbs. 16:22)
Occasional
papers by Arthur & Rosalind Eedle
The Responsibility
Factor
Hebrews
13:5 For He Himself has said,
“I will never leave you nor forsake you.” Most comforting words.
Paul was
quoting from Deuteronomy 31:6-8, where Moses was commissioning Joshua in
readiness to cross over into the Promised Land. He said, “Be strong
and of a good courage . . . for it is the Lord who goes before you; He will be
with you, He will not fail you nor forsake you. Fear not, neither be
dismayed.”
He could
equally well have been quoting from 1 Chron.28:20, where David was
commissioning his son Solomon in respect of building the
The promise
was repeated by the Lord in Isaiah’s day (54:10) “For the
mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed, but my kindness shall not
depart from you, neither shall my covenant of peace be removed,” says the
Lord who has mercy on you.
Words such
as these have been rendered into song by those who have gained comfort and
strength from God’s word.
“I will never, never leave thee,
I will hold thee by my hand,”
Though mountains move, the hills depart,
His faithfulness will stand. (597 in CSSM choruses)
I will never leave thee, tho’
clouds obscure the way,
Neither will I forsake thee, however dark the
day;
My eye shall ever guide thee,
My right hand shall uphold thee,
In triumph I will bring thee to Eternal Day. (891 in Elim
choruses)
But this is
where we have to stop for a moment and consider God’s promise within the
contexts of Scripture. To whom was God speaking these comforting words? To take
the words and sing them as though they applied at all times, under all
circumstances, regardless of how we live our lives is to promote serious error.
There is the Responsibility Factor to consider.
We must now
observe from numerous situations in Biblical history the fact that God withdrew
from His people when they caused Him grief.
Our first
example will be King Saul. In 1 Samuel
“Now
the spirit of the Lord had departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord
troubled him.” The young man David was called to
assist Saul by playing on his harp. “And
it came to pass when the evil spirit was upon Saul, that David took the harp,
and played with his hand, . . . and the evil spirit departed from
him.” Later we learn that “an
evil spirit from God came mightily upon Saul and he prophesied in the midst of
the house.” False prophecy
was therefore possible under such conditions. Furthermore, Saul’s
condition was shown to be sinister, because “the evil spirit from
the Lord was upon Saul as he sat in his house with his spear in his hand . . .
and he sought to smite David even to the wall with his spear.”
Our Lord
said, “Unto whom much is given, of him shall much be
required.” (Luke 12:48)
Saul had been given kingship. He could hardly have been given more.
Therefore when he reneged on his responsibilities, the consequences were more
drastic than on lesser mortals.
On a more
generalised level, we read in Isaiah 54:7, “For a small moment I
have forsaken you, but with great mercies I will gather you.” So the Lord does forsake His people at
times, but always with the tenderness of drawing them back to Himself when lessons
have been learned.
Take the
case of King David. He was another “to whom much was
committed.” After his sins
of murder and adultery, he repented in deep contrition, and writes in Psalm
51:11-12, “Cast me not away from your presence; take not your Holy
Spirit from me. Restore unto me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a
free spirit.”
This brings
us to the crux of this message, namely the Responsibility Factor, the possibility of God withdrawing Himself, in
the Person of the Holy Spirit, from a person’s life under certain
conditions. The Old Testament contains
many examples of this, and we do well to ponder the implications.
“Take
not the word of truth utterly out of my mouth, for I have hoped in your
judgments.” (Psalm 119: 43) The Psalmist is
aware of his responsibility, and knows that his life-style will dictate whether
or not the “words of his mouth” will be “acceptable”
in the sight of the Lord. (Psalm
Speaking of
Hosea, prophesying
to
Paul,
quoting Isaiah (65:2) said of
Some may
say, “Yes, this was all very well in Old Testament days, but as
Christians we stand more surely in the Lord. We no longer live under law, but
under God’s grace.” Such
sentiments abound in certain quarters today, but one can only say that it is by
no means a reflection of New Testament theology. One only needs to refer to
Paul’s words in Galatians 6:7. “Be not deceived. God is not
mocked. Whatsoever a man sows, that shall he also reap. He who sows to his own
flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he who sows to the spirit, shall
of the spirit reap eternal life.”
In
Ephesians
The
Psalmist said, “Forty years long was I grieved with that
generation, and said, It is a people who err in their heart, and they have not known
my ways, wherefore I sware in my wrath that they
should not enter into my rest.” (Psalm
95:10-11) All but Joshua and Caleb of that generation died in the desert, and
failed to reach the Promised Land. But lest anyone should think that this again
is just Old Testament theology, no longer applicable in today’s Christian
world, let us turn to Hebrews 3 & 4, where Paul quotes from this Psalm.
After recalling the events of history, he says, (4:11) “Let us
therefore give diligence to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the
same example of disobedience.” There is a spiritual “rest”, into
which we have the promise of entering. But the Responsibility Factor demands
obedience, a wholehearted life of love, trustworthiness, and faithfulness
towards the One who suffered such pain that we might have life in His name. It
is therefore not a foregone conclusion that this “rest” will
be the end result of one’s life. A lesson may be learned from
Ezekiel’s words. “Because you have not remembered the days of
your youth but have grieved me in this respect, [of that already mentioned,]
therefore behold I will bring your way upon your own head, says the Lord God,
that you cease committing these abominations.” (Ezek.16:43) In other words, God’s judgments are
seen to be restorative rather than just punitive in a
believer’s life. God’s prodigals often need the privations
of the far country to bring them to their senses. As Isaiah received of the Lord, “For
a small moment have I forsaken you; but with great mercies I will gather
you.” (Isa.54:7)
Jesus
looked around Him in the synagogue at the Pharisees who were on tenterhooks,
waiting for Him to “transgress the law” (as they interpreted it)
and thereby accuse Him. “When He had looked round about on them
with anger, being grieved at the hardening of their heart, He said to the man,
‘Stretch forth your hand.’ And he stretched it forth and his hand
was restored. The Pharisees went out seeking how they might destroy Him.”
(Mark 3:1-6) Jesus’ grief
was because of the hardening of their heart. Making reference to this, Paul
spoke about Israel in Romans 11:25, when he said, “A hardening in
part has befallen Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in.”
The Greek word for
‘hardening’ is POROSIS, a medical word from the old world, which
now finds itself in that condition doctors call OSTEOPOROSIS, a hardening of
the bones in old age, a tendency towards brittleness, and easy fracturing. It
explains quite graphically what happens spiritually to a person’s heart
when the mind is no longer responsive to God’s love, mercy, and grace.
The hardening is a process. It
doesn’t occur all at once, but is a progressive experience, happening so
slowly that it may be almost unnoticeable.
We are
reminded of Charles Darwin’s words about himself.
“I had gradually
come by this time, that is 1836 to 1839, to see that the Old Testament was no
more to be trusted than the sacred books of the Hindus.”
“The Gospels
cannot be proved to have been written simultaneously with the events. They
differ in many important details, far too important, as it seemed to me, to be
admitted as the usual inaccuracies of eye-witnesses, and by such reflections as
these - - I gradually came to disbelieve in
Christianity as a divine revelation.”
“I was very
unwilling to give up my belief; I feel sure of this. -
- Unbelief crept on me at a very
slow rate, but was at last complete. The rate was so slow that I felt no
distress.”
At the end
of his life he rued the day he left behind “the faith of his
fathers.”
To conclude
this study, we need to ask ourselves a few sobering questions. Have we been
given “little” or “much”? Few if any of us can boast of
“kingship” like Saul and David, but on reflection, many of us,
after “counting our blessings” will be surprised to see what bounty
we have received from the Lord. Is our return in like measure to the
gracious gift? Our readings from the
Scriptures should bring us to the point where we ask ourselves whether we truly
“rest” in the Lord, or whether we might be said to
“wallow” in the dangerous waters of self-satisfaction, not fully
realising that the Lord is looking for a reasonable “return on His
investment”, to use a modern expression based on the Parable of the
Talents.
Remember
David’s experience of life after his sins of murder and adultery.
Although his own repentance was true, and the Lord’s forgiveness sure,
yet his family suffered in many ways, culminating in the treason and death of
his son Absalom. We could well be reminded of a similar train of events in the
British royal family. In the case of our Queen, she made a solemn oath at her
coronation in 1953, to be “protector of the faith”, which meant
complete separation from Rome, whilst giving support and protection to the
English Church. But in the following years, she visited the Pope, wearing
black, and then the Pope was given a royal welcome in this land, the first such
visit by a Pope since the Reformation. Later still, she was to visit a
syncretistic service of many “faiths”, seeming to endorse a New Age
approach. Prince Charles has spoken of his desire to be “Protector of
Faiths” if he accedes to the throne. One only needs to recall the way in
which the royal family has fallen apart to see that the Divine Hand has been
withdrawn.
And this
brings us to our last quotation, from a prophecy given by Alex Buchanan on 9th
July 1975.
“Sombre
indeed are the faces of my holy ones as they look upon your land. They are
aghast at the sin that has become so rampant within this nation, a nation once
great, a nation once given by me the opportunity to demonstrate righteousness
to a great part of the world. You began, but speedily failed; so has your
empire disappeared. There is grief in my heart as I look upon your land, where
once my name was honoured, but has now become a prey to any foul spirit. The
spirit of harlotry is deep within your land. As I look in my own church for a
bride fair and chaste, even there is harlotry and sin and every form of
indiscipline. These things bring grief to my heart and cause the holy ones to
stand amazed that I do not immediately and fully judge those who perpetrate
such things. They also see the position of my hands, for whereas once my hands
were around your country in protection, now are my hands changed, and they are
above and pointing to judgment, for I am opening the way for the workers of
iniquity to come, and I give them liberty to damage and harass your land
because you have rejected my protection.”
From
the Throne of England, down through the Church, to the individual level, there
has been a terrible downslide during the last half of the 20th
century. None of us can attempt to remedy this malaise nationally, even though
we are enjoined to pray for the Government and Royal Family. But when it comes
to the personal level, each one of us is confronted by The
Responsibility Factor. How then
shall we respond to the Divine call? Can we truthfully say, “He will never leave me or forsake
me,” or are we in need of some spiritual spring-cleaning?