Working for God! – by Andrew Murray

     _________________________________________________________________

           Title: Working For God!
      Creator(s): Murray, Andrew
     Print Basis: New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1901
          Rights: Public Domain
   CCEL Subjects: All; Practical
      LC Call no: BV4501
   LC Subjects:

   Practical theology

   Practical religion. The Christian life
     _________________________________________________________________

   Scanning, OCR, and proofing done by Claude V. King, September, 2000.

   Note: In Scripture references Murray used Roman numerals. For the sake
   of the modern reader, these have been converted to Arabic numerals in
   the following public domain text.

   WORKING

   for

   GOD!

   A SEQUEL TO WAITING ON GOD!

   by

   Rev. ANDREW MURRAY

   AUTHOR of “THE MINISTRY OF INTERCESSION,” “ABIDE IN CHRIST,” ETC.,
   ETC.

   NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO

   Fleming H. Revell Company

   Publishers of Evangelical Literature

   1901

   COPYRIGHT 1901

   BY

   FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY

   (August)
     _________________________________________________________________

   INTRODUCTION

   The object of this little book is first of all to remind all Christian
   workers of the greatness and the glory of the work in which God gives
   a share. It is nothing less than that work of bringing men back to
   their God, at which God finds His highest glory and blessedness. As we
   see that it is God’s own work we have to work out, that He works it
   through us, that in our doing it His glory rests on us and we glorify
   Him, we shall count it our joy to give ourselves to live only and
   wholly for it.

   The aim of the book at the same time is to help those who complain,
   and perhaps do not even know to complain, that they are apparently
   labouring in vain, to find out what may be the cause of so much
   failure. God’s work must be done in God’s way, and in God’s power. It
   is spiritual work, to be done by spiritual men, in the power of the
   Spirit. The clearer our insight into, and the more complete our
   submission to, God’s laws of work, the surer and the richer will be
   our joy and our reward in it.

   Along with this I have had in view the great number of Christians who
   practically take no real part in the service of their Lord. They have
   never understood that the chief characteristic of the Divine life in
   God and Christ is love and its work of blessing men. The Divine life
   in us can show itself in no other way. I have tried to show that it is
   God’s will that every believer without exception, whatever be his
   position in life, gives himself wholly to live and work for God.

   I have also written in the hope that some, who have the training of
   others in Christian life and work, may find thoughts that will be of
   use to them in teaching the imperative duty, the urgent need, the
   Divine blessedness of a life given to God’s service, and to waken
   within the consciousness of the power that works in them, even the
   Spirit and power of Christ Himself.

   To the great host of workers in Church and Chapel, in Mission-Hall and
   Open-Air, in Day and Sunday Schools, in Endeavour Societies, in Y. M.
   and Y. W. and Students’ Associations, and all the various forms of the
   ministry of love throughout the world, I lovingly offer these
   meditations, with the fervent prayer that God, the Great Worker, may
   make us true Fellow-Workers with Himself.
                            ANDREW MURRAY.

   Wellington, February, 1901.

   CONTENTS

      CHAP. PAGE

   I. Waiting and Working.–Isa. 40:31, 64:4 11

   II. Good Works the Light of the World.–Matt. 5:14, 16 16

   III. Son, go Work.–Matt. 21:28 21

   IV. To Each one his Work.–Mark 8:34 26

   V. To Each one according to his Ability.–Matt. 25:14 31

   VI. Life and Work.–John 5:34, 9:4, 17:4 36

   VII. The Father abiding in Me doeth the Work.–John 5:17-20, 14:10 41

   VIII. Greater Works.–John 14:12-14 46

   IX. Created in Christ Jesus for Good Works.–Eph. 2:10 51

   X. Work, for it is God which worketh in you.–Phil. 2:12, 13 56

   XI. Faith working by Love.–Gal. 5:6, 13 61

   XII. Bearing Fruit in every Good Work.–Col. 1:10 66

   XIII. Always abounding in the Work of the Lord.–I Cor. 15:58 71

         XIV. Abounding Grace for abounding Work.–2 Cor. 9:8 76

   XV. The Work of Ministering.–Eph. 4:11, 12 81

   XVI. According to the Working of each several Part.–Eph. 4:15, 16 86

   XVII. Women adorned with Good Works.–1 Tim. 2:10. 5:9, 10 90

   XVIII. Rich in Good Works.–1 Tim. 6:18 95

   XIX. Prepared unto every Good Work.–2 Tim. 2:21 100

   XX. Furnished completely unto every Good Work.–2 Tim. 3:16, 17,
   2:15 104

   XXI. Zealous of Good Works.–Tit. 2:14 109

   XXII. Ready to every Good Work.–Tit. 3:1 113

   XXIII. Careful to maintain Good Works. Tit. 3:14 118

   XIV. As His Fellow-Workers.–1 Cor. 3:9; 2 Cor. 6:1 123

        XXV. According to the Working of His Power.–Col. 1:29; Eph.
   3:7 128

      XXVI. Labouring more abundantly.–1 Cor. 15:10; 2 Cor. 12:9, 11 133

   XXVII. A Doer that worketh shall be blessed in Doing.–Jas. 1:22, 25
   138

   XXVIII. The Work of Soul-Saving.–Jas. 5:19 142

   XXIX. Praying and Working.–1 John 5:16 147

   XXX. I know thy Works.–Rev. 2, 3 152

   XXXI. That God may be Glorified.–1 Pet. 4:11 157
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   I

   Waiting and Working

   `They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. Neither hath
   the eye seen, O God, beside Thee, which worketh for him that waiteth
   for Him.’–Isa. 40:31, 64:4.

   Here we have two texts in which the connection between waiting and
   working is made clear. In the first we see that waiting brings the
   needed strength for working–that it fits for joyful and unwearied
   work. `They that wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they
   shall mount up on eagles’ wings; they shall run, and not be weary;
   they shall walk, and not faint.’ Waiting on God has its value in this:
   it makes us strong in work for God. The second reveals the secret of
   this strength. `God worketh for Him that waiteth for Him.’ The waiting
   on God secures the working of God for us and in us, out of which our
   work must spring. The two passages teach the great lesson, that as
   waiting on God lies at the root of all true working for God, so
   working for God must be the fruit of all true waiting on Him. Our
   great need is to hold the two sides of the truth in perfect
   conjunction and harmony.

   There are some who say they wait upon God, but who do not work for
   Him. For this there may be various reasons. Here is one who confounds
   true waiting on God (in living direct intercourse with Him as the
   Living One), and the devotion to Him of the energy of the whole being,
   with the slothful, helpless waiting that excuses itself from all work
   until God, by some special impulse, has made work easy. Here is
   another who waits on God more truly, regarding it as one of the
   highest exercises of the Christian life, and yet has never understood
   that at the root of all true waiting there must lie the surrender and
   the readiness to be wholly fitted for God’s use in the service of men.
   And here is still another who is ready to work as well as wait, but is
   looking for some great inflow of the Spirit’s power to enable him to
   do mighty works, while he forgets that as a believer he already has
   the Spirit of Christ dwelling in Him; that more grace is only given to
   those who are faithful in the little; and that it is only in working
   that we can be taught by the Spirit how to do the greater works. All
   such, and all Christians, need to learn that waiting has working for
   its object, that it is only in working that waiting can attain its
   full perfection and blessedness. It is as we elevate working for God
   to its true place, as the highest exercise of spiritual privilege and
   power, that the absolute need and the divine blessing of waiting on
   God can be fully known.

   On the other hand, there are some, there are many, who work for God,
   but know little of what it is to wait on Him. They have been led to
   take up Christian work, under the impulse of natural or religious
   feeling, at the bidding of a pastor or a society, with but very little
   sense of what a holy thing it is to work for God. They do not know
   that God’s work can only be done in God’s strength, by God Himself
   working in us. They have never learnt that, just as the Son of God
   could do nothing of Himself, but that the Father in Him did the work,
   as He lived in continual dependence before Him, so, and much more, the
   believer can do nothing but as God works in him. They do not
   understand that it is only as in utter weakness we depend upon Him,
   His power can rest on us. And so they have no conception of a
   continual waiting on God as being one of the first and essential
   conditions of successful work. And Christ’s Church and the world are
   sufferers to-day, oh, so terribly! not only because so many of its
   members are not working for God, but because so much working for God
   is done without waiting on God.

   Among the members of the body of Christ there is a great diversity of
   gifts and operations. Some, who are confined to their homes by reason
   of sickness or other duties, may have more time for waiting on God
   than opportunity of direct working for Him. Others, who are
   overpressed by work, find it very difficult to find time and quiet for
   waiting on Him. These may mutually supply each other’s lack. Let those
   who have time for waiting on God definitely link themselves to some
   who are working. Let those who are working as definitely claim the aid
   of those to whom the special ministry of waiting on God has been
   entrusted. So will the unity and the health of the body be maintained.
   So will those who wait know that the outcome will be power for work,
   and those who work, that their only strength is the grace obtained by
   waiting. So will God work for His Church that waits on Him.

   Let us pray that as we proceed in these meditations on working for
   God, the Holy Spirit may show us how sacred and how urgent our calling
   is to work, how absolute our dependence is upon God’s strength to work
   in us, how sure it is that those who wait on Him shall renew their
   strength, and how we shall find waiting on God and working for God to
   be indeed inseparably one.

   1. It is only as God works for me, and in me, that I can work for Him.

   2. All His work for me is through His life in me.

   3. He will most surely work, if I wait on Him.

   4. All His working for me, and my waiting on Him, has but one aim, to
   fit me for His work of saving men.
     _________________________________________________________________

   II

   Good Works the Light of the World

   `Ye are the light of the world. Let your light shine before men, that
   they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in
   heaven.’–Matt. 5:14, 16.

   A light is always meant for the use of those who are in darkness, that
   by it they may see. The sun lights up the darkness of this world. A
   lamp is hung in a room to give it light. The Church of Christ is the
   light of men. The God of this world hath blinded their eyes; Christ’s
   disciples are to shine into their darkness and give them light. As the
   rays of light stream forth from the sun and scatter that light all
   about, so the good works of believers are the light that streams out
   from them to conquer the surrounding darkness, with its ignorance of
   God and estrangement from Him.

   What a high and holy place is thus given to our good works. What power
   is attributed to them. How much depends upon them. They are not only
   the light and health and joy of our own life, but in every deed the
   means of bringing lost souls out of darkness into God’s marvellous
   light. They are even more. They not only bless men, but they glorify
   God, in leading men to know Him as the Author of the grace seen in His
   children. We propose studying the teaching of Scripture in regard to
   good works, and specially all work done directly for God and His
   kingdom. Let us listen to what these words of the Master have to teach
   us.

   The aim of good works.–It is, that God may be glorified. You remember
   how our Lord said to the Father: `I have glorified Thee on the earth,
   I have finished the work which Thou gavest Me to do.’ We read more
   than once of His miracles, that the people glorified God. It was
   because what He had wrought was manifestly by a Divine power. It is
   when our good works thus too are something more than the ordinary
   virtues of refined men, and bear the impress of God upon them, that
   men will glorify God. They must be the good works of which the Sermon
   on the Mount is the embodiment–a life of God’s children, doing more
   than others, seeking to be perfect as their Father in heaven is
   perfect. This glorifying of God by men may not mean conversion, but it
   is a preparation for it when an impression favourable to God has been
   made. The works prepare the way for the words, and are an evidence to
   the reality of the Divine truth that is taught, while without them the
   world is powerless.

   The whole world was made for the glory of God. Christ came to redeem
   us from sin and bring us back to serve and glorify Him. Believers are
   placed in the world with this one object, that they may let their
   light shine in good works, so as to win men to God. As truly as the
   light of the sun is meant to lighten the world, the good works of
   God’s children are meant to be the light of those who know and love
   not God. What need that we form a right conception of what good works
   are, as bearing the mark of something heavenly and divine, and having
   a power to compel the admission that God is in them.

   The power of good works.–Of Christ it is written: `In Him was life,
   and the life was the light of men.’ The Divine life gave out a Divine
   light. Of His disciples Christ said: `If any man follow Me, be shall
   not walk in darkness, but have the light of life.’ Christ is our life
   and light. When it is said to us, Let your light shine, the deepest
   meaning is, let Christ, who dwells in you, shine. As in the power of
   His life you do your good works, your light shines out to all who see
   you. And because Christ in you is your light, your works, however
   humble and feeble they be, can carry with them a power of Divine
   conviction. The measure of the Divine power which works them in you
   will be the measure of the power working in those who see them. Give
   way, O child of God, to the Life and Light of Christ dwelling in you,
   and men will see in your good works that for which they will glorify
   your Father which is in heaven.

   The urgent need of good works in believers.–As needful as that the
   sun shines every day, yea, more so, is it that every believer lets his
   light shine before men. For this we have been created anew in Christ,
   to hold forth the Word of Life, as lights in the world. Christ needs
   you urgently, my brother, to let His light shine through you.
   Perishing men around you need your light, if they are to find their
   way to God. God needs you, to let His glory be seen through you. As
   wholly as a lamp is given up to lighting a room, every believer ought
   to give himself up to be the light of a dark world.

   Let us undertake the study of what working for God is, and what good
   works are as part of this, with the desire to follow Christ fully, and
   so to have the light of life shining into our hearts and lives, and
   from us on all around.

   1. `Ye are the light of the world!’ The words express the calling of
   the Church as a whole. The fulfilment of her duty will depend upon the
   faithfulness with which each individual member loves and lives for
   those around him.

   2. In all our efforts to waken the Church to evangelise the world, our
   first aim must be to raise the standard of life for the individual
   believer of the teaching: As truly as a candle only exists with the
   object of giving light in the darkness, the one object of your
   existence is to be a light to men.

   3. Pray God by His Holy Spirit to reveal it to you that you have
   nothing to live for but to let the light and love of the life of God
   shine upon souls.
     _________________________________________________________________

   III

   Son, go Work

   `Son, go work to-day in my vineyard.’–Matt. 21:28.

   The father had two sons. To each he gave the command to go and work in
   his vineyard. The one went, the other went not. God has given the
   command and the power to every child of His to work in His vineyard,
   with the world as the field. The majority of God’s children are not
   working for Him and the world is perishing.

   Of all the mysteries that surround us in the world, is not one of the
   strangest and most incomprehensible this–that after 1800 years the
   very name of the Son of God should be unknown to the larger half of
   the human race.

   Just consider what this means. To restore the ruin sin had wrought,
   God, the Almighty Creator, actually sent His own Son to the world to
   tell men of His love, and to bring them His life and salvation. When
   Christ made His disciples partakers of that salvation, and the
   unspeakable joy it brings, it was with the express understanding that
   they should make it known to others, and so be the lights of the
   world. He spoke of all who through them should believe, having the
   same calling. He left the world with the distinct instruction to carry
   the Gospel to every creature, and teach all nations to observe all
   that He had commanded. He at the same time gave the definite assurance
   that all power for this work was in Him, that He would always be with
   His people, and that by the power of His Holy Spirit they would be
   able to witness to Him to the ends of the earth. And what do we see
   now? After 1800 years two-thirds of the human race have scarce heard
   the name of Jesus. And of the other third, the larger half is still as
   ignorant as if they had never heard.

   Consider again what this means. All these dying millions, whether in
   Christendom or heathendom, have an interest in Christ and His
   salvation. They have a right to Him. Their salvation depends on their
   knowing Him. He could change their lives from sin and wretchedness to
   holy obedience and heavenly joy. Christ has a right to them. It would
   make His heart glad to have them come and be blessed in Him. But they
   and He are dependent on the service of His people to be the connecting
   link to brink them and Him together. And yet what His people do is as
   nothing to what needs to be done, to what could be done, to what ought
   to be done.

   Just consider yet once again what this means. What a revelation of the
   state of the Church. The great majority of those who are counted
   believers are doing nothing towards making Christ known to their
   fellow-men. Of the remainder, the majority are doing so little, and
   that little so ineffectually, by reason of the lack of wholehearted
   devotion, that they can hardly be said to be giving themselves to
   their Lord’s service. And of the remaining portion, who have given
   themselves and all they have to Christ’s service, so many are occupied
   with the hospital work of teaching the sick and the weakly in the
   Church, that the strength left free for aggressive work, and going
   forth to conquer the world, is terribly reduced. And so, with a
   finished salvation, and a loving Redeemer, and a Church set apart to
   carry life and blessing to men, the millions are still perishing.

   There can be no question to the Church of more intense and pressing
   importance than this: What can be done to waken believers to a sense
   of their holy calling, and to make them see that to work for God, that
   to offer themselves as instruments through whom God can do His work,
   ought to be the one aim of their life? The vain complaints that are
   continually heard of a lack of enthusiasm for God’s kingdom on the
   part of the great majority of Christians, the vain attempts to waken
   anything like an interest in missions proportionate to their claim, or
   Christ’s claim, make us feel that nothing less is needed than a
   revival that shall be a revolution, and shall raise even the average
   Christian to an entirely new type of devotion. No true change can come
   until the truth is preached and accepted, that the law of the kingdom
   is: Every believer to live only and wholly for God’s service and work.

   The father who called his sons to go and work in his vineyard did not
   leave it to their choice to do as much or as little as they chose.
   They lived in his home, they were his children, he counted on what
   they would give him, their time and strength. This God expects of His
   children. Until it is understood that each child of God is to give His
   whole heart to his Father’s interest and work, until it is understood
   that every child of God is to be a worker for God, the evangelisation
   of the world cannot be accomplished. Let every reader listen, and the
   Father will say to him personally: `Son, go work in My vineyard.’

   1. Why is it that stirring appeals on behalf of missions often have so
   little permanent result? Because the command with its motives is
   brought to men who have not learned that absolute devotion and
   immediate obedience to their Lord is of the essence of true salvation.

   2. If it is once seen, and confessed, that the lack of interest in
   missions is the token of a low and sickly Christian life, all who
   plead for missions will make it their first aim to proclaim the
   calling of every believer to live wholly for God. Every missionary
   meeting will be a consecration meeting to seek and surrender to the
   Holy Spirit’s power.

   3. The average standard of holiness and devotion cannot be higher
   abroad than at home, or in the Church at large than in individual
   believers.

   4. Every one cannot go abroad, or give his whole time to direct work;
   but everyone, whatever his calling or circumstances, can give his
   whole heart to live for souls and the spread of the kingdom.
     _________________________________________________________________

   IV

   To Each one his Work

   `As a man sojourning in another country, having given authority to his
   servants, to each one his work, commanded the porter also to
   watch.’–Mark 13:34.

   What I have said in a previous chapter of the failure of the Church to
   do her Master’s work, or even clearly to insist upon the duty of its
   being done by every member has often led me to ask the question, What
   must be done to arouse the Church to a right sense of her calling?
   This little book is an attempt to give the answer. Working for God
   must take a very different and much more definite place in our
   teaching and training of Christ’s disciples than it has done.

   In studying the question I have been very much helped by the life and
   writings of a great educationist. The opening sentence of the preface
   to his biography tells us: `Edward Thring was unquestionably the most
   original and striking figure in the schoolmaster world of his time in
   England.’ He himself attributes his own power and success to the
   prominence he gave to a few simple principles, and the faithfulness
   with which he carried them out at any sacrifice. I have found them as
   suggestive in regard to the work of preaching as of teaching, and to
   state them will help to make plain some of the chief lessons this book
   is meant to teach.

   The root-principle that distinguished his teaching from what was
   current at the time was this: Every boy in school, the dullest, must
   have the same attention as the cleverest. At Eton, where he had been
   educated, and had come out First, he had seen the evil of the opposite
   system. The school kept up its name by training a number of men for
   the highest prizes, while the majority were neglected. He maintained
   that this was dishonest: there could be no truth in a school which did
   not care for all alike. Every boy had some gift; every boy needed
   special attention; every boy could, with care and patience, be fitted
   to know and fulfil his mission in life.

   Apply this to the Church. Every believer, the feeblest as much as the
   strongest, has the calling to live and work for the kingdom of his
   Lord. Every believer has equally a claim on the grace and power of the
   Holy Spirit, according to his gifts, to fit him for his work. And
   every believer has a right to be taught and helped by the Church for
   the service our Lord expects of him. It is when this truth, every
   believer the feeblest, to be trained as a worker for God, gets its
   true place, that there can be any thought of the Church fulfilling its
   mission. Not one can be missed, because the Master gave to every one
   his work.

   Another of Thring’s principles was this: It is a law of nature that
   work is pleasure. See to make it voluntary and not compulsory. Do not
   lead the boys blindfold. Show them why they have to work, what its
   value will be, what interest can be awakened in it, what pleasure may
   be found in it. A little time stolen, as he says, for that purpose,
   from the ordinary teaching, will be more than compensated for by the
   spirit which will be thrown into the work.

   What a field is opened out here for the preacher of the gospel in the
   charge he has of Christ’s disciples. To unfold before them the
   greatness, the glory, the Divine. blessedness of the work to be done.
   To show its value in the carrying out of God’s will, and gaining His
   approval; in our becoming the benefactors and saviours of the
   perishing; in developing that spiritual vigour, that nobility of
   character, that spirit of self-sacrifice which leads to the true
   bearing of Christ’s image.

   A third truth Thring insisted on specially was the need of inspiring
   the belief in the possibility, yea, the assurance of success in
   gaining the object of pursuit. That object is not much knowledge; not
   every boy can attain to this. The drawing out and cultivation of the
   power there is in himself–this is for every boy–and this alone is
   true education. As a learner’s powers of observation grow under true
   guidance and teaching and he finds within himself a source of power
   and pleasure he never knew before, he feels a new self beginning to
   live, and the world around him gets a new meaning. `He becomes
   conscious of an infinity of unsuspected glory in the midst of which we
   go about our daily tasks, becomes lord of an endless kingdom full of
   light and pleasure and power.’

   If this be the law and blessing of a true education, what light is
   shed on the calling of all teachers and leaders in Christ’s Church!
   The know ye nots of Scripture–that ye are the temple of God–that
   Christ is in you–that the Holy Spirit dwelleth in you–acquire a new
   meaning. It tells us that the one thing that needs to be wakened in
   the hearts of Christians is the faith `in the power that worketh in
   us.’ As one comes to see the worth and the glory of the work to be
   done, as one believes in the possibility of his, too, being able to do
   that work well; as one learns to trust a Divine energy, the very power
   and spirit of God working in him; `he will, in the fullest sense
   become conscious of a new life, with an infinity of unsuspected glory
   in the midst of which we go about our daily task, and become lord of
   an endless kingdom full of light and pleasure and power.’ This is the
   royal life to which God has called all His people. The true Christian
   is one who knows God’s power working in himself, and finds it his true
   joy to have the very life of God flow into him, and through him, and
   out from him to those around.

   1. We must learn to believe in the power of littles–of the value of
   every individual believer. As men are saved one by one, they must be
   trained one by one for work.

   2. We must believe that work for Christ can become as natural, as much
   an attraction and a pleasure in the spiritual as in the natural world.

   3. We must believe and teach that every believer can become an
   effective worker in his sphere. Are you seeking to be filled with love
   to souls?
     _________________________________________________________________

   V

   To Each according to his Ability

   `The kingdom of heaven is as when a man, going into another country,
   called his own servants, and delivered them his goods. And unto one he
   gave five talents, to another two, to another one; to each according
   to his several ability.’–Matt. 25:14.

   In the parable of the talents we have a most instructive summary of
   our Lord’s teaching in regard to the work He has given to His servants
   to do. He tells us of His going to heaven and leaving His work on
   earth to the care of His Church; of His giving every one something to
   do, however different the gifts might be; of His expecting to get back
   His money with interest; of the failure of him who had received least;
   and of what it was that led to that terrible neglect.

   `He called his own servants and delivered unto them his goods, and
   went on his journey.’ is literally what our Lord did. He went to
   heaven, leaving His work with all His goods to the care of His Church.
   His goods were, the riches of His grace, the spiritual blessings in
   heavenly places, His word and Spirit, with all the power of His life
   on the throne of God,–all these He gave in trust to His servants, to
   be used by them in carrying out His work on earth. The work He had
   begun they were to prosecute. As some rich merchant leaves Cape Town
   to reside in London, while his business is carried on by trustworthy
   servants, our Lord took His people into partnership with Himself, and
   entrusted His work on earth entirely to their care. Through their
   neglect it would suffer; their diligence would be His enrichment. Here
   we have the true root-principle of Christian service; Christ has made
   Himself dependent for the extension of His kingdom on the faithfulness
   of His people.

   `Unto one he gave five talents, to another two, to another one; to
   each according to his several ability.’ Though there was a difference
   in the measure, every one received a portion of the master’s goods. It
   is in connection with the service we are to render to each other that
   we read of `the grace given to each of us according to the measure of
   the gift of Christ.’ This truth, that every believer without exception
   has been set apart to take an active part in the work of winning the
   world for Christ, has almost been lost sight of . Christ was first a
   son, then a servant. Every believer is first a child of God, then a
   servant. It is the highest honour of a son to be a servant, to have
   the father’s work entrusted to him. Neither the home nor the foreign
   missionary work of the Church will ever be done right until every
   believer feels that the one object of his being in the world is to
   work for the kingdom. The first duty of the servants in the parable
   was to spend their life in caring for their master’s interests.

   `After a long time the lord of those servants cometh and maketh a
   reckoning with them.’ Christ keeps watch over the work He has left to
   be done on earth; His kingdom and glory depend upon it. He will not
   only hold reckoning when He comes again to judge, but comes
   unceasingly to inquire of His servants as to their welfare and work.
   He comes to approve and encourage, to correct and warn. By His word
   and Spirit He asks us to say whether we are using our talents
   diligently, and, as His devoted servants, living only and entirely for
   His work. Some He finds labouring diligently, and to them He
   frequently says: `Enter into the joy of thy Lord.’ Others He sees
   discouraged, and them He inspires with new hope. Some He finds working
   in their own strength; these He reproves. Still others He finds
   sleeping or hiding their talent; to such His voice speaks in solemn
   warning: `from him that hath shall be taken away even that he hath.’
   Christ’s heart is in His work; every day He watches over it with the
   intensest interest; let us not disappoint Him nor deceive ourselves.

   `Lord, I was afraid and hid thy talent in the earth.’ That the man of
   the one talent should have been the one to fail, and to be so severely
   punished is a lesson of deep solemnity. It calls the Church to beware
   lest, by neglecting to teach the feebler ones, the one-talent men,
   that their service, too, is needed, she allow them to let their gifts
   lie unused. In teaching the great truth that every branch is to bear
   fruit, special stress must be laid on the danger of thinking that this
   can only be expected of the strong and advanced Christian. When Truth
   reigns in a school, the most backward pupil has the same attention as
   the more clever. Care must be taken that the feeblest Christians
   receive special training, so that they, too, may joyfully have their
   share in the service of their Lord and all the blessedness it brings.
   If Christ’s work is to be done, not one can be missed.

   `Lord, I knew that thou art a hard man, and I was afraid.’ Wrong
   thoughts of God, looking upon His service as that of a hard master,
   are one chief cause of failure in service. If the Church is indeed to
   care for the feeble ones, for the one-talent servants, who are apt to
   be discouraged by reason of their conscious weakness, we must teach
   them what God says of the sufficiency of grace and the certainty of
   success. They must learn to believe that the power of the Holy Spirit
   within them fits them for the work to which God has called them. They
   must learn to understand that God Himself will strengthen them with
   might by His Spirit in the inner man. They must be taught that work is
   joy and health and strength. Unbelief lies at the root of sloth. Faith
   opens the eyes to see the blessedness of God’s service, the
   sufficiency of the strength provided, and the rich reward. Let the
   Church awake to her calling to train the feeblest of her members to
   know that Christ counts upon every redeemed one to live wholly for His
   work. This alone is true Christianity, is full salvation.
     _________________________________________________________________

   VI

   Life and Work

   `My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me, and to accomplish His
   work. I must work the works of Him that sent Me. I have glorified Thee
   on the earth; I have finished the work Thou gavest Me to do. And now,
   O Father, glorify Me with Thyself.’–John 5:34, 9:4, 17:4.

   `Work is the highest form of existence.’ The highest manifestation of
   the Divine Being is in His work. Read carefully again the words of our
   Blessed Lord at the head of the chapter, and see what Divine glory
   there is in His work. In His work Christ showed forth His own glory
   and that of the Father. It was because of the work He had done, and
   because in it He had glorified the Father, that He claimed to share
   the glory of the Father in heaven. The greater works He was to do in
   answer to the prayer of the disciples was, that the Father might be
   glorified in the Son. Work is indeed the highest form of existence,
   the highest manifestation of the Divine glory in the Father and in His
   Son.

   What is true of God is true of His creature. Life is movement, is
   action, and reveals itself in what it accomplishes. The bodily life,
   the intellectual, the moral, the spiritual life–individual, social,
   national life–each of these is judged of by its work. The character
   and quality of the work depends on the life: as the life, so the work.
   And, on the other hand the life depends on the work; without this
   there can be no full development and manifestation and perfecting of
   the life: as the work, so the life.

   This is specially true of the spiritual life–the life of the Spirit
   in us. There may be a great deal of religious work with its external
   activities, the outcome of human will and effort, with but little true
   worth and power, because the Divine life is feeble. When the believer
   does not know that Christ is living in him, does not know the Spirit
   and power of God working in him, there may be much earnestness and
   diligence, with little that lasts for eternity. There may, on the
   contrary, be much external weakness and apparent failure, and yet
   results that prove that the life is indeed of God.

   The work depends upon the life. And the life depends on the work for
   its growth and perfection. All life has a destiny; it cannot
   accomplish its purpose without work; life is perfected by work. The
   highest manifestation of its hidden nature and power comes out in its
   work. And so work is the great factor by which the hidden beauty and
   the Divine possibilities of the Christian life are brought out. Not
   only for the sake of what it accomplishes through the believer as
   God’s instrument, but what it effects on himself, work must in the
   child of God take the same place it has in God Himself. As in the
   Father and the Son, so with the Holy Spirit dwelling in us, work is
   the highest manifestation of life.

   Work must be restored to its right place in God’s scheme of the
   Christian life as in very deed the highest form of existence. To be
   the intelligent willing channel of the power of God, to be capable of
   working the very work of God, to be animated by the Divine Spirit of
   love, and in that to be allowed to work life and blessing to men; it
   is this gives nobility to life, because it is for this we are created
   in the image of God. As God never for a moment ceases to work His work
   of love and blessing in us and through us, so our working out what He
   works in us is our highest proof of being created anew in His
   likeness.

   If God’s purpose with the perfection of the individual believer, with
   the appointment of His Church as the body of Christ to carry on His
   work of winning back a rebellious world to His allegiance and love is
   to be carried out, working for God must have much greater prominence
   given to it as the true glory of our Christian calling. Every believer
   must be taught that, as work is the only perfect manifestation, and
   therefore the perfection of life in God and throughout the world, so
   our work is to be our highest glory. Shall it be so in our lives?

   If this is to come, we must remember two things. The one is that it
   can only come by beginning to work. Those who have not had their
   attention specially directed to it cannot realise how great the
   temptation is to make work a matter of thought and prayer and purpose,
   without its really being done. It is easier to bear than to think,
   easier to think than to speak, easier to speak than to act. We may
   listen and accept and admire God’s will, and in our prayer profess our
   willingness to do,–and yet not actually do. Let us, with such measure
   of grace as we have, and much prayer for more, take up our calling as
   God’s working men, and do good hard work for Him. Doing is the best
   teacher. If you want to know how to do a thing, begin and do it.

   Then you will feel the need of the second thing I wish to mention, and
   be made capable of understanding it,–that there is sufficient grace
   in Christ for all the work you have to do. You will see with
   ever-increasing gladness how He the Head works all in you the member,
   and how work for God may become your closest and fullest fellowship
   with Christ, your highest participation in the power of His risen and
   glorified life.

   1. Life and work: beware of separating them, The more work you have,
   the more your work appears a failure. The more unfit you feel for
   work, take all the more time and care to have your inner life renewed
   in close fellowship with God.

   2. Christ liveth in me–is the secret of joy and hope, and also of
   power for work. Care for the life, the life will care for the work.
   `Be filled with the Spirit.’
     _________________________________________________________________

   VII

   The Father abiding in Me doeth the Work

   `Jesus answered them, My Father worketh even until now, and I
   work.’–John 5:17-20.

   `Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me? the
   words that I speak I speak not of Myself: but the Father abiding in Me
   doeth the work.’–John 14:10.

   Jesus Christ became man that He might show us what a true man is, how
   God meant to live and work in man, and how man may find his life and
   do his work in God. In words like those above, our Lord opens up the
   inner mystery of His life, and discovers to us the nature and the
   deepest secret of His working. He did not come to the world to work
   instead of the Father; the Father was ever working–`worketh even
   until now.’ Christ’s work was the fruit, the earthly reflection of the
   Heavenly Father working. And it was not as if Christ merely saw and
   copied what the Father willed or did: `the Father abiding in Me doeth
   the work.’ Christ did all His work in the power of the Father dwelling
   and working in Him. So complete and real was His dependence on the
   Father, that, in expounding it to the Jews, He used the strong
   expressions (v. 19, 30)John 5:19, 30: `The Son can do nothing of
   Himself, but what He seeth the Father doing’; `I can do nothing of
   Myself.’ As literally as what He said is true of us, `Apart from Me ye
   can do nothing,’ is it true of Him too. `The Father abiding in Me
   doeth the work.’

   Jesus Christ became man that He might show us what true man is, what
   the true relation between man and God, what the true way of serving
   God and doing His work. When we are made new creatures in Christ
   Jesus, the life we receive is the very life that was and is in Christ,
   and it is only by studying His life on earth that we know how we are
   to live. `As I live because of the Father, so he that eateth Me shall
   live because of Me.’ His dependence on the Father is the law of our
   dependence on Him and on the Father through Him.

   Christ counted it no humiliation to be ,able to do nothing of Himself,
   to be always and absolutely dependent on the Father. He counted it His
   highest glory, because so all His works were the works of the all
   glorious God in Him. When shall we understand that to wait on God, to
   bow before Him in perfect helplessness, and let Him work all in us, is
   our true nobility, and the secret of the highest activity? This alone
   is the true Son-life, the true life of every child of God. As this
   life is known and maintained, the power for work will grow, because
   the soul is in the attitude in which God can work in us, as the God
   who `worketh for him that waiteth on Him.’ It is the ignorance or
   neglect of the great truths, that there can be no true work for God
   but as God works it in us, and that God cannot work in us fully but as
   we live in absolute dependence on Him, that is the explanation of the
   universal complaint of so much Christian activity with so little real
   result. The revival which many are longing and praying for must begin
   with this: the return of Christian ministers and workers to their true
   place before God–in Christ and like Christ, one of complete
   dependence and continual waiting on God to work in them.

   Let me invite all workers, young and old, successful or disappointed,
   full of hope or full of fear, to come and learn from our Lord Jesus
   the secret of true work for God. `My Father worketh, and I work;’ `The
   Father abiding in Me doeth the works.’ Divine Fatherhood means that
   God is all, and gives all, and works all. Divine Sonship means
   continual dependence on the Father, and the reception, moment by
   moment, of all the strength needed for His Work. Try to grasp the
   great truth that because `it is God who worketh all in all,’ your one
   need is, in deep humility and weakness, to wait for and to trust in
   His working. Learn from this that God can only work in us as He dwells
   in us. `The Father abiding in Me doeth the works.’ Cultivate the holy
   sense of God’s continual nearness and presence, of your being His
   temple, and of His dwelling in you. Offer yourself for Him to work in
   you all His good pleasure. You will find that work, instead of being a
   hindrance, can become your greatest incentive to a life of fellowship
   and childlike dependence.

   At first it may appear as if the waiting for God to work will keep you
   back from your work. It may indeed–but only to bring the greater
   blessing, when you have learned the lesson of faith, that counts on
   His working even when you do not feel it. You may have to do your work
   in weakness and fear and much trembling. You will know that it is all,
   that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us. As you
   know yourself better and God better, you will be content that it
   should ever be–His strength made perfect in our weakness.

   1. `The Father abiding in Me doeth the work.’ There is the same law
   for the Head and the member, for Christ and the believer. `It is the
   same God that worketh all in all.’

   2. The Father not only worked in the Son when He was on earth, but
   now, too, that He is in heaven. It is as we believe in Christ in the
   Father’s working in Him, that we shall do the greater works. See John
   14:10-12.

   3. It is as the indwelling God, the Father abiding in us, that God
   works in us. Let the life of God in the soul be clear, the work will
   be sure.

   4. Pray much for grace to say, in the name of Jesus, `The Father
   abiding in me doeth the work.’
     _________________________________________________________________

   VIII

   Greater Works

   Verily, verily, I say unto You, He that believeth on Me, the works
   that I do shall he do also and greater works shall he do; because I
   go unto the Father. And whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will
   I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If ye shall ask
   anything in My name, that will I do.’–John 14:12-14.

   In the words (ver. 10) `The Father abiding in Me doeth the works,’
   Christ had revealed the secret of His and of all Divine service–man
   yielding himself for God to dwell and to work in him. When Christ now
   promises, `He that believeth on Me, the works that I do shall he do
   also,’ the law of the Divine inworking remains unchanged. In us, as
   much as in Him, one might even say a thousand times more than with
   Him, it must still ever be: The Father in me doeth the works. With
   Christ and with us, it is `the same God who worketh all in all.’

   How this is to be, is taught us in the words, `He that believeth on
   Me.’ That does not only mean, for salvation, as a Saviour from sin.
   But much more. Christ had just said (vers. 10, 11), `Believe Me that I
   am in the Father, and the Father in Me: the Father abiding in Me doeth
   the works.’ We need to believe in Christ as Him in and through whom
   the Father unceasingly works. To believe in Christ is to receive Him
   into the heart. When we see the Father’s working inseparably connected
   with Christ, we know that to believe in Christ, and receive Him into
   the heart, is to receive the Father dwelling in Him and working
   through Him. The works His disciples are to do cannot possibly be done
   in any other way than His own are done.

   This becomes still more clear from what our Lord adds: `And greater
   works shall he do; because I go unto the Father.’ What the greater
   works are, is evident. The disciples at Pentecost with three thousand
   baptized, and multitudes added to the Lord; Philip at Samaria, with
   the whole city filled with joy; the men of Cyprus and Cyrene, and,
   later on, Barnabas at Antioch, with much people added to the Lord;
   Paul in his travels, and a countless host of Christ’s servants down to
   our day, have in the ingathering of souls, done what the Master
   condescendingly calls greater works than He did in the days of His
   humiliation and weakness.

   The reason why it should be so our Lord makes plain, `Because I go to
   the Father.’ When He entered the glory of the Father, all power in
   heaven and on earth was given to Him as our Redeemer. In a way more
   glorious than ever the Father was to work through Him; and He then to
   work through His disciples. Even as His own work on earth `in the days
   of the weakness of the flesh, had been in a power received from the
   Father in heaven, so His people, in their weakness, would do works
   like His, and greater works in the same way, through a power received
   from heaven. The law of the Divine working is unchangeable: God’s work
   can only be done by God Himself. It is as we see this in Christ, and
   receive Him in this capacity, as the One in and through whom God works
   all, and so yield ourselves wholly to the Father working in Him and in
   us,’ that we shall do greater works than He did.

   The words that follow bring out still more strongly the great truths
   we have been learning, that it is our Lord Himself who will work all
   in us, even as the Father did in Him, and that our posture is to be
   exactly what His was, one of entire receptivity and dependence.
   `Greater works shall he do, because I go to the Father, and whatsoever
   ye shall ask in My name, that will I do.’ Christ connects the greater
   works the believer is to do, with the promise that He will do whatever
   the believer asks. Prayer in the name of Jesus will be the expression
   of that dependence that waits on Him for His working, to which He
   gives the promise: Whatsoever ye ask, I will do, in you and through
   you. And when He adds, `that the Father may be glorified in the Son,’
   He reminds us bow He had glorified the Father, by yielding to Him as
   Father, to work all His work in Himself as Son. In heaven Christ would
   still glorify the Father, by receiving from the Father the power, and
   working in His disciples what the Father would. The creature, as the
   Son Himself can give the Father no higher glory than yielding to Him
   to work all. The believer can glorify the Father in no other way than
   the Son, by an absolute and unceasing dependence on the Son, in whom
   the Father works, to communicate and work in us all the Father’s work.
   `If ye shall ask anything in My name, that will I do,’ and so ye shall
   do greater works.

   Let every believer strive to learn the one blessed lesson. I am to do
   the works I have seen Christ doing; I may even do greater works as I
   yield myself to Christ exalted on the throne, in a power He had not on
   earth; I may count on Him working in me according to that power. My
   one need is the spirit of dependence and waiting, and prayer and
   faith, that Christ abiding in me will do the works, even whatsoever I
   ask.

   1. How was Christ able to work the works of God? By God abiding in
   Him! How can I do the works of Christ? By Christ abiding in me!

   2. How can I do greater works than Christ? By believing, not only in
   Christ, the Incarnate and Crucified, but Christ triumphant on the
   throne.

   3. In work everything depends, O believer, on the life, the inner
   life, the Divine life. Pray to realise that work is vain except as it
   is in `the power of the Holy Spirit’ dwelling in thee.
     _________________________________________________________________

   IX

   Created in Christ Jesus for Good Works

   `By grace have ye been saved through faith; not of works, lest any man
   should glory. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for
   good works, which God afore prepared that we should walk in
   them.’–Eph. 2:8-10.

   We have been saved, not of works, but for good works. How vast the
   difference. How essential the apprehension of that difference to the
   health of the Christian life. Not of works which we have done, as the
   source whence salvation comes, have we been saved. And yet for good
   works, as the fruit and outcome of salvation, as part of God’s work in
   us, the one thing for which we have been created anew. As worthless as
   are our works in procuring salvation, so infinite is their worth as
   that for which God has created and prepared us. Let us seek to hold
   these two truths in their fulness of spiritual meaning. The deeper our
   conviction that we have been saved, not of works, but of grace, the
   stronger the proof we should give that we have indeed been saved for
   good works.

   `Not of works, for ye are God’s workmanship.’ If works could have
   saved us, there was no need for our redemption. Because our works were
   all sinful and vain, God undertook to make us anew–we are now His
   workmanship, and all the good works we do are His workmanship too.
   `His workmanship, created us anew in Christ Jesus.’ So complete had
   been the ruin of sin, that God had to do the work of creation over
   again in Christ Jesus. In Him, and specially in His resurrection from
   the dead, He created us anew, after His own image, into the likeness
   of the life which Christ had lived. In the power of that life and
   resurrection, we are able, we are perfectly fitted, for doing good
   works. As the eye, because it was created for the light, is most
   perfectly adapted for its work, as the vine-branch, because it was
   created to bear grapes, does its work so naturally, we who have been
   created in Christ Jesus for good work, may rest assured that a Divine
   capacity for good works is the very law of our being. If we but know
   and believe in this our destiny, if we but live our life in Christ
   Jesus, as we were new created in Him, we can, we will, be fruitful
   unto every good work.

   `Created for good works, which God hath afore prepared that we should
   walk in them.’ We have been prepared for the works, and the works
   prepared for us. To understand this, think of how God foreordained His
   servants of old, Moses and Joshua, Samuel and David, Peter and Paul,
   for the work He had for them, and foreordained equally the works for
   them. The feeblest member of the body is equally cared for by the Head
   as the most honoured The Father has prepared for the humblest of His
   children their works as much as for those who are counted chief. For
   every child God has a life-plan, with work apportioned just according
   to the power, and grace provided just according to the work. And so
   just as strong and clear as the teaching, salvation not of works, is
   its blessed counterpart, salvation for good works, because God created
   us for them, and even prepared them for us.

   And so the Scripture confirms the double lesson this little book
   desires to bring you. The one, that good works are God’s object in the
   new life He has given you, and ought therefore to be as distinctly
   your object. As every human being was created for work, and endowed
   with the needful powers, and can only live out a true and healthy life
   by working, so every believer exists to do good works, that in them
   his life may be perfected, his fellowmen may be blessed, his Father in
   heaven be glorified. We educate all our children with the thought that
   they must have their work in the world: when shall the Church learn
   that its great work is to train every believer to take his share in
   God’s great work, and to abound in the good works for which he was
   created? Let each of us seek to take in the deep spiritual truth of
   the message, `Created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God hath
   afore prepared’ for each one, and which are waiting for him to take up
   and fulfil.

   The other lesson–that waiting on God is the one great thing needed on
   our part if we would do the good works God has prepared for us. Let us
   take up into our hearts these words in their Divine meaning: We are
   God’s workmanship. `Not by one act in the past, but in a continuous
   operation. We are created for good works, as the great means for
   glorifying God. The good works are prepared for each of us, that we
   might walk in them. Surrender to and dependence upon God’s working is
   our one need. Let us consider how our new creation for good works is
   all in Christ Jesus, and abiding in Him, believing on Him, and looking
   for His strength alone will become the habit of our soul. Created for
   good works! will reveal to us at once the Divine command and the
   sufficient power to live a life in good works.

   Let us pray for the Holy Spirit to work the word into the very depths
   of our consciousness: Created in Christ Jesus for good works! In its
   light we shall learn what a glorious destiny, what an infinite
   obligation, what a perfect capacity is ours.

   1. Our creation in Adam was for good works. It resulted in entire
   failure. Our new creation in Christ is for good works again. But with
   this difference: perfect provision has been made for securing them.

   2. Created by God for good works; created by God in Christ Jesus; the
   good works prepared by God for us–let us pray for the Holy Spirit to
   show us and impart to us all this means.

   3. Let the life in fellowship with God be true; the power for the work
   will be sure. As the life, so the work.
     _________________________________________________________________

   X

   Work, for God works in You

   `Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God
   which worketh in you both to will and to work, for His good
   pleasure.’–Phil. 2:12, 13.

   In our last chapter we saw what salvation is. It is our being God’s
   workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works. It concludes, as
   one of its chief and essential elements, all that treasury of good
   works which God afore prepared that we should walk in them. In the
   light of this thought we get the true and full meaning of to-day’s
   text. Work out your own salvation, such as God has meant it to be, a
   walk in all the good works which God has prepared for you. Study to
   know exactly what the salvation is God has prepared for you, all that
   He has meant and made it possible for you to be, and work it out with
   fear and trembling. Let the greatness of this Divine and most holy
   life, hidden in Christ, your own absolute impotence, and the terrible
   dangers and temptations besetting you, make you work in fear and
   trembling,

   And yet, that fear need never become unbelief, nor that trembling
   discouragement, for–it is God which worketh in you. Here is the
   secret of a power that is absolutely sufficient for everything we have
   to do, of a perfect assurance that we can do all that God really means
   us to do. God works in us both to will and to work. First, to will; He
   gives the insight into what is to be done, the desire that makes the
   work pleasure, the firm purpose of the will that masters the whole
   being, and makes it ready and eager for action. And then to work. He
   does not work to will, and then leave its unaided to work it out
   ourselves. The will may have seen and accepted the work, and yet the
   power be lacking to perform. The renewed will of Romans 7 delighted in
   God’s law, and yet the man was impotent to do, until in Romans 8:2-4,
   by the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, he was set free from
   the law of sin and death; then first could the righteousness of the
   law be fulfilled in him, as one who walked not after the flesh but
   after the Spirit.

   One great cause of the failure of believers in their work is that,
   when they think that God has given them to will, they undertake to
   work in the strength of that will. They have never learnt the lesson,
   that because God has created us in Christ Jesus for good works, and
   has afore prepared the good works in which we are to walk, He must
   needs, and will most certainly, Himself work them all in us. They have
   never listened long to the voice speaking `It is God which worketh in
   you.’

   We have here to do with one of the deepest, most spiritual, and most
   precious truths of Scripture–the unceasing operation of Almighty God
   in our heart and life. In virtue of the very nature of God, as a
   Spiritual Being not confined to any place, but everywhere present,
   there can be no spiritual life but as it is upheld by His personal
   indwelling.

   Not without the deepest reason does Scripture say, He worketh all in
   all. Not only of Him are all things as their first beginning, and to
   Him as their end, but also through Him, who alone maintains them.

   In the man Christ Jesus the working of the Father in Him was the
   source of all He did. In the new man, created in Christ Jesus, the
   unceasing dependence on the Father is our highest privilege, our true
   nobility. This is indeed fellowship with God: God Himself working in
   us to will and to do.

   Let us seek to learn the true secret of working for God. It is not, as
   many think, that we do our best, and then leave God to do the rest. By
   no means. But it is this, that we know that God’s working His
   salvation in us is the secret of our working it out. That salvation
   includes every work we have to do. The faith of God’s working in us is
   the measure of our fitness to work effectively. The promises,
   `According to your faith be it unto you,’ `All things are possible to
   him that believeth,’ have their full application here. The deeper our
   faith in God’s working in us, the more freely will the power of God
   work in us, the more true and fruitful will our work be.

   Perhaps some Sunday-school worker reads this. Let me ask, Have you
   really believed that your only power to do God’s work is as one who
   has been created in Christ Jesus for good works, as one in whom God
   Himself works to will and to work? Have you yielded yourself to wait
   for that working? Do you work because you know God works in you? Say
   not that these thoughts are too high. The work of leading young souls
   to Christ is too high for us indeed, but if we live as little
   children, in believing that God will work all in us, we shall do His
   work in His strength. Pray much to learn and practise the lesson in
   all you do: Work, for God worketh in you.

   1. I think we begin to feel that the spiritual apprehension of this
   great truth, `God worketh in you,’ is what all workers greatly need.

   2. The Holy Spirit is the mighty power of God, dwelling in believers
   for life and for work. Beseech God to show it you, that in all our
   service our first care must be the daily renewing of the Holy Spirit.

   3. Obey the command to be filled with the Holy Spirit. Believe in His
   indwelling. Wait for His teaching. Yield to His leading. Pray for His
   mighty working. Live in the Spirit.

   4. What the mighty power of God works in us we are surely able to do.
   Only give way to the power working in you.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XI

   Faith working by Love

   `In Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything, nor
   uncircumcision; but faith working through love. Through love be
   servants one to another; for the whole law is fulfilled in this: Thou
   shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.’–Gal. 5:6, 13.

   In Christ Jesus no external privilege avails. The Jew might boast of
   his circumcision, the token of God’s covenant. The Gentile might boast
   of his uncircumcision, with an entrance into the Kingdom free from the
   Jewish law. Neither availed aught in the Kingdom of heaven–nothing
   but, as we have it in 6:15, a new creature, in which old things are
   passed away and all things become new. Or, as we have it in our
   text–as a description of the life of the new creature–nothing but
   faith working by love, that makes us in love serve one another.

   What a perfect description of the new life. First you have faith, as
   the root, planted and rooted in Christ Jesus. Then as its aim you have
   works, as the fruit. And then between the two, as the tree, growing
   downwards into the root and bearing the fruit upward, you have love,
   with the life-sap flowing through it by which the root brings forth
   the fruit, Of faith we need not speak here. We have seen how believing
   on Jesus does the greater works; how the faith in the new creation,
   and in God working in us, is the secret of all work. Nor need we speak
   here of works–our whole book aims at securing for them the place in
   every heart and life that they have in God’s heart and in His Word.

   We have here to study specially the great truth that all work is to be
   love, that faith cannot do its work but through love, that no works
   can have any worth but as they come of love, and that love alone is
   the sufficient strength for all the work we have to do.

   The power for work is love.–It was love that moved God to all His
   work in creation and redemption. It was love that enabled Christ as
   man to work and to suffer as He did. It is love that can inspire us
   with the power of a self-sacrifice that seeks not its own, but is
   ready to live and die for others. It is love that gives us the
   patience that refuses to give up the unthankful or the hardened. It is
   love that reaches and overcomes the most hopeless. Both in ourselves
   and those for whom we labour love is the power for work. Let us love
   as Christ loved us.

   The power for love is faith.–Faith roots its life in the life of
   Christ Jesus, which is all love. Faith knows, even when we cannot
   realise fully, the wonderful gift that has been given into our heart
   in the Holy Spirit shedding abroad God’s love there. A spring in the
   earth may often be hidden or stopped up. Until. it is opened the
   fountain cannot flow out. Faith knows that there is a fountain of love
   within that can spring up into eternal life, that can flow out as
   rivers of living waters. It assures us that we can love, that we have
   a Divine power to love within us, as an unalienable endowment of our
   new nature.

   The power to exercise and show love is work.–There is no such thing
   as power in the abstract; it only acts as it is exercised. Power in
   repose cannot be found or felt. This is specially true of the
   Christian graces, hidden as they are amid the weakness of our human
   nature. It is only by doing that you know that you have; a grace must
   be acted ere we can rejoice in its possession. This is the unspeakable
   blessedness of work, and makes it so essential to a healthy Christian
   life that it wakens up and strengthens love, and makes us partakers of
   its joy.

   Faith working by love.–In Christ Jesus nothing avails but this.
   Workers for God! believe this. Practise it. Thank God much for the
   fountain of eternal love opened within you. Pray fervently and
   frequently that God may strengthen you with might by the power of His
   Spirit in your inner man, so that, with Christ dwelling in you, you
   may be rooted and grounded in love. And live then, your daily life, in
   your own home, in all your intercourse with men, in all your work, as
   a life of Divine love. The ways of love are so gentle and heavenly,
   you may not learn them all at once. But be of good courage, only
   believe in the power that worketh in you, and yield yourself to the
   work of love: it will surely gain the victory.

   Faith working by love.–In Christ Jesus nothing avails but this. Let
   me press home this message, too, on those who have never yet or only
   just begun to think of working for God. Come and listen.

   You owe everything to God’s love. The salvation you have received is
   all love. God’s one desire is to fill you with His love. For His own
   satisfaction, for your own happiness, for the saving of men. Now, I
   ask you–Will you not accept God’s wonderful offer to be filled with
   His love? Oh! come and give up heart and life to the joy and the
   service of His love. Believe that the fountain of love is within you;
   it will begin to flow as you make a channel for it by deeds of love.
   Whatever work for God you try to do, seek to put love into it. Pray
   for the spirit of love. Give yourself to live a life of love; to think
   how you can love those around you, by praying for them, by serving
   them, by labouring for their welfare, temporal and spiritual. Faith
   working by love in Christ Jesus, this alone availeth much.

   1. `Faith, Hope, Love: the greatest of these is Love.’ There is no
   faith or hope in God. But God is love. The most Godlike thing is love.

   2. Love is the nature of God. When it is shed abroad in our hearts by
   the Holy Spirit love becomes our new nature. Believe this, give
   yourself over to it, and act it out.

   3. Love is God’s power to do His work. Love was Christ’s power. To
   work for God pray earnestly to be filled with love to souls!
     _________________________________________________________________

   XII

   Bearing Fruit in every Good Work

   `To walk worthily of the Lord unto all pleasing, bearing fruit in
   every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened
   with all power, according to the might of His glory, unto all
   patience.’–Col. 1:10.

   There is a difference between fruit and work. Fruit is that which
   comes spontaneously, without thought or will, the natural and
   necessary outcome of a healthy life. Work, on the contrary, is the
   product of effort guided by intelligent thought and will. In the
   Christian life we have the two elements in combination. All true work
   must be fruit, the growth and product of our inner life, the operation
   of God’s Spirit within us. And yet all fruit must be work, the effect
   of our deliberate purpose and exertion. In the words, `bearing fruit
   in every good work,’ we have the practical summing up of the truth
   taught in some previous chapters. Because God works by His life in us,
   the work we do is fruit. Because, in the faith of His working, we have
   to will and to work, the fruit we bear is work. In the harmony between
   the perfect spontaneity that comes from God’s life and Spirit
   animating us, and our co-operation with Him as His intelligent
   fellow-labourers, lies the secret of all true work.

   In the words that precede our text, `filled with the knowledge of His
   will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding,’ we have the human
   side, our need of knowledge and wisdom; in the words that follow,
   `strengthened with all power, according to the might of His glory,’ we
   have the Divine side. God teaching and strengthening, man learning to
   understand and patiently do His will; such is the double life that
   will be fruitful in every good work.

   It has been said of the Christian life that the natural man must first
   become spiritual, and then again the spiritual man must become
   natural. As the whole natural life becomes truly spiritual, all our
   work will partake of the nature of fruit, the outgrowth of the life of
   God within us. And as the spiritual again becomes perfectly natural to
   us, a second nature in which we are wholly at home, all the fruit will
   bear the mark of true work, calling into full exercise every faculty
   of our being.

   `Bearing fruit unto every good work.’ The words, suggest again the
   great thought, that as an apple-tree or a vine is planted solely for
   its fruit, so the great purpose of our redemption is that God may have
   us for His work and service. It has been well said: `The end of man is
   an Action and not a Thought, though it were of the noblest.’ It is in
   his work that the nobility of man’s nature as ruler of the world is
   proved. It is for good works that we have been new created in Christ
   Jesus: It is when men see our good works that our Father in Heaven
   will be glorified and have the honour which is His due for His
   workmanship. In the parable of the vine our Lord insisted on this: `He
   that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same beareth much fruit.’
   `Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit.’ Nothing is
   more to the honour of a husbandman than to succeed in raising an
   abundant crop–much fruit is glory to God.

   What need that every believer, even the feeblest branch of the
   Heavenly Vine, the man who has only one talent, be encouraged and
   helped, and even trained, to aim at the much fruit. A little
   strawberry plant may, in its measure, be bearing a more abundant crop
   than a large apple-tree. The call to be fruitful in every good work is
   for every Christian without exception. The grace that fits for it, of
   which the prayer, in which our words are found, speaks, is for every
   one. Every branch fruitful in every good work–this is an essential
   part of God’s Gospel.

   `Bearing fruit in every good work.’ Let us study to get a full
   impression of the two sides of this Divine truth. God’s first creation
   of life was in the vegetable kingdom. There it was a life without
   anything of will or self-effort, all growth and fruit was simply His
   own direct work, the spontaneous outcome of His hidden working. In the
   creation of the animal kingdom there was an advance. A new element was
   introduced–thought and will and work. In man these two elements were
   united in perfect harmony. The absolute dependence of the grass and
   the lily on the God who clothes them with their beauty were to be the
   groundwork of our relationship–nature has nothing but what it
   receives from God. Our works are to be fruit, the product of a
   God-given power. But to this was added the true mark of our
   God-likeness the power of will and independent action: all fruit is to
   be our own work. As we grasp this we shall see how the most absolute
   acknowledgment of our having nothing in ourselves is consistent with
   the deepest sense of obligation and the strongest will to exert our
   powers to the very utmost. We shall learn to study the prayer of our
   text as those who must seek all their wisdom and strength from God
   alone. And we shall boldly give ourselves, as those who are
   responsible for the use of that wisdom and strength, to the diligence
   and the sacrifice and the effort needed for a life bearing fruit in
   every good work.

   1. Much depends, for quality and quantity, on the healthy life of the
   tree. The life of God, of Christ Jesus, of His Spirit, the Divine life
   in you, is strong and sure.

   2. That life is love. Believe in it. Act it out. Have it replenished
   day by day out of the fulness there is in Christ.

   3. Let all your work be fruit; let all your willing and working be
   inspired by the life of God. So will you walk worthily of the Lord
   with all pleasing.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XIII

   Always abounding in the Work of the Lord

   `Wherefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, , unmoveable, always
   abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your
   labour is not in vain in the Lord.’–1 Cor. 15:58.

   We all know the fifteenth chapter of 1st Corinthians, in its Divine
   revelation of the meaning of Christ’s resurrection, with all the
   blessings of which it is the source.

   It gives us a living Saviour, who revealed Himself to His disciples on
   earth, and to Paul from heaven. It secures to us the complete
   deliverance from all sin. It is the pledge of His final victory over
   every enemy, when He gives up the kingdom to the Father, and God is
   all in all. It assures us of the resurrection of the body, and our
   entrance on the heavenly life. Paul had closed his argument with his
   triumphant appeal to Death and Sin and the Law: `O Death, where is thy
   victory? The sting of Death is Sin, and the power of Sin is the Law.
   But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord
   Jesus Christ.’ And then follows, after fifty-seven verses of exultant
   teaching concerning the mystery and the glory of the resurrection life
   in our Lord and His people, just one verse of practical application:
   `Wherefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always
   abounding in the work of the Lord.’ The faith in a risen, living
   Christ, and in all that His resurrection is to us in time and
   eternity, is to fit us for, is to prove itself in–abounding work for
   our Lord!

   It cannot be otherwise. Christ’s resurrection was His final victory
   over sin, and death, and Satan, and His entrance upon His work of
   giving the Spirit from heaven and extending His kingdom throughout the
   earth. Those who shared the resurrection joy at once received the
   commission to make known the joyful news. It was so with Mary and the
   women. It was so with the disciples the evening of the resurrection
   day. `As the Father sent Me, I send you.’ It was so with all to whom
   the charge was given: `Go into all the world, preach the Gospel to
   every creature.’ The resurrection is the beginning and the pledge of
   Christ’s victory over all the earth. That .victory is to be carried
   out to its complete manifestation through His people. The faith and
   joy of the resurrection life are the inspiration and the power for the
   work of doing it. And so the call comes to all believers without
   exception: `Wherefore, my beloved brethren, be ye always abounding in
   the work of the Lord!’

   `In the work of the Lord.’ The connection tells us at once what that
   work is. Nothing else, nothing less than, telling others of the risen
   Lord, and proving to them what new life Christ has brought to us. As
   we indeed know and acknowledge Him as Lord over all we are, and live
   in the joy of His service, we shall see that the work of the Lord is
   but one work–that of winning men to know and bow to Him. Amid all the
   forms of lowly, living, patient service, this will be the one aim, in
   the power of the life of the risen Lord, to make Him Lord of all.

   This work of the Lord is no easy one. It cost Christ His life to
   conquer sin and Satan and gain the risen life. It will cost us our
   life, too–the sacrifice of the life of nature. It needs the surrender
   of all on earth to live in the full power of resurrection newness of
   life. The power of sin, and the world, in those around us is strong,
   and Satan does not yield his servants an easy prey to our efforts. It
   needs a heart in close touch with the risen Lord, truly living the
   resurrection life, to be stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the
   work of the Lord. But that is a life that can be lived–because Jesus
   lives.

   Paul adds: `Forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not vain in the
   Lord.’ I have spoken more than once of the mighty influence that the
   certainty of reward for work, in the shape of wages or riches, exerts
   on the millions of earth’s workers. And shall not Christ’s workers
   believe that, with such a Lord, their reward is sure and great? The
   work is often difficult and slow, and apparently fruitless. We are apt
   to lose heart, because we are working in our strength and judging by
   our expectations. Let us listen to the message: `O ye children of the
   resurrection life, be ye always abounding in the work of the Lord,
   forasmuch as ye know your labour is not in vain in the Lord.’ `Let not
   your hands be weak; your work shall be rewarded.’ `You know that your
   labour is not vain in the Lord.’

   `In the Lord.’ The expression is a significant one. Study it in Romans
   16 where it occurs ten times, where Paul uses the expressions:
   `Receive here in the Lord;’ `my fellow-worker in Christ Jesus;’ `who
   are in Christ, in the Lord;’ `beloved in the Lord;’ `approved in
   Christ;’ `who labour in the Lord;’ `chosen in the Lord.’ The whole
   life and fellowship and service of these saints had the one mark–they
   were, their labours were, in the Lord. Here is the secret of effectual
   service. Your labour is not `in vain in the Lord.’ As a sense of His
   presence and the power of His life is maintained, as all works are
   wrought in Him, His strength works in our weak ness; our labour cannot
   be in vain in the Lord. Christ said: `He that abideth in Me, and I in
   him, the same bringeth forth much fruit.’ Oh! let not the children of
   this world, with their confidence that the masters whose work they are
   doing will certainly give them their due reward, put the children of
   light to shame. Let us rejoice and labour in the confident faith of
   the word: `Your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Wherefore, beloved
   brethren, be ye always abounding in the work of the Lord.’
     _________________________________________________________________

   XIV

   Abounding Grace for Abounding Work

   `And God is able to make all grace abound unto you, that ye may abound
   unto every good work.’–2 Cor. 9:8.

   In our previous meditation we had the great motive to abounding
   work–the spirit of triumphant joy which Christ’s resurrection
   inspires as it covers the past and the future. Our text to-day assures
   us that for this abounding work we have the ability provided: God is
   able to make all grace abound, that we may abound to all good works.
   Every thought of abounding grace is to be connected with the abounding
   in good works for which it is given. And every thought of abounding
   work is to be connected with the abounding grace that fits for it.

   Abounding grace has abounding work for its aim. It is often thought
   that grace and good works are at variance with each other. This is not
   so. What Scripture calls the works of the law, our own works, the
   works of righteousness which we have done, dead works–works by which
   we seek to merit or to be made fit for God’s favour, these are indeed
   the very opposite of grace. But they are also the very opposite of the
   good works which spring from grace, and for which alone grace is
   bestowed. As irreconcilable as are the works of the law with the
   freedom of grace, so essential and indispensable are the works of
   faith, good works, to the true Christian life. God makes grace to
   abound, that good works may abound. The measure of true grace is
   tested and proved by the measure of good works. God’s grace abounds in
   us that we may abound in good works. We need to have the truth deeply
   rooted in us: Abounding grace has abounding work for its aim.

   And abounding work needs abounding grace as its source and strength.
   There often is abounding work without abounding grace. Just as any man
   may be very diligent in an earthly pursuit, or a heathen in his
   religious service of an idol, so men may be very diligent in doing
   religious work in their own strength, with but little thought of that
   grace which alone can do true, spiritual effective work. For all work
   that is to be really acceptable to God, and truly fruitful, not only
   for some visible result here on earth, but for eternity, the grace of
   God is indispensable. Paul continually speaks of his own work as owing
   everything to the grace of God working in him: `I laboured more
   abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the grace of God which was
   with me’ (1 Cor. 15:10). `According to the gift of that grace of God
   which was given me according to the working of His power’ (Eph. 3:7).
   And he as frequently calls upon Christians to exercise their gifts
   `according to the grace that was given us’ (Rom. 12:6). `The grace
   given according to the measure of the gift of Christ’ (Eph. 4:7). It
   is only by the grace of God working in us that we can do what are
   truly good works. It is only as we seek and receive abounding grace
   that we can abound in every good work.

   `God is able to make all grace abound unto you, that ye may abound in
   all good works.’ With what thanksgiving every Christian ought to
   praise God for the abounding grace that is thus provided for him. And
   with what humiliation to confess that the experience of, and the
   surrender to, that abounding grace has been so defective. And with
   what confidence to believe that a life abounding in good works is
   indeed possible, because the abounding grace for it is so sure and so
   Divinely sufficient.

   And then, with what simple childlike dependence to wait upon God day
   by day to receive the more grace which He gives to the humble.

   Child of God! do take time to study and truly apprehend God’s purpose
   with you, that you abound in every good work! He means it! He has
   provided for it! Make the measure of your consecration to Him nothing
   less than His purpose for you. And claim, then, nothing less than the
   abounding grace He is able to bestow. Make His omnipotence and His
   faithfulness your confidence. And live ever in the practice of
   continual prayer and dependence upon His power working in you. This
   will make you abound in every good work. According to your faith be it
   unto you.

   Christian worker, learn here the secret of all failure and all
   success. Work in our own strength, with little prayer and waiting on
   God for His spirit, is the cause of failure. The cultivation of the
   spirit of absolute impotence and unceasing dependence will open the
   heart for the workings of the abounding grace. We shall learn to
   ascribe all we do to God’s grace. We shall learn to measure all we
   have to do by God’s grace. And our life will increasingly be in the
   joy of God’s making His grace to abound in us, and our abounding in
   every good work.

   1. `That ye may abound to every good work.’ Pray over this now till
   you feel that this is what God has prepared for you.

   2. If your ignorance and feebleness appear to make it impossible,
   present yourself to God, and say you are willing, if He will enable
   you to abound in good works, to be a branch that brings forth much
   fruit.

   3. Take into your heart, as a living seed, the precious truth: God is
   able to make all grace abound in you. Trust His power and His
   faithfulness (Rom. 4:20, 21 ; 1 Thess. 5:24).

   4. Begin at once by doing lowly deeds of love. As the little child in
   the kindergarten. Learn by doing.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XV

   In the Work of Ministering

   `And he gave some to be apostles; and some, prophets; and some,
   evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting of the
   saints, unto the work of ministering, unto the building up of the body
   of Christ.’–Eph. 4:11, 12.

   The object with which Christ when He ascended to heaven bestowed on
   His servants the various gifts that are mentioned is threefold. Their
   first aim is–for the perfecting of the saints. Believers as saints
   are to be led on in the pursuit of holiness until they `stand perfect
   and complete in all the will of God.’ It was for this Epaphras
   laboured in prayer. It is of this Paul writes: `Whom we preach,
   teaching every man in all wisdom that we may present every man perfect
   in Christ’ (Col. 4:12; 1:28).

   This perfecting of the saints is, however, only a means to a higher
   end: unto the work of ministering, to fit all the saints to take their
   part in the service to which every believer is called. It is the same
   word as is used in texts as these: `They ministered to Him of their
   substance; Ye ministered to the saints and do minister’ (Luke 4:30,
   8:3; 1 Cor. 16:15; Heb. 6:10; 1 Pet. 4:11).

   And this, again, is also a means to a still higher end: unto the
   building up of the body of Christ. As every member of our body takes
   its part in working for the health and growth and maintenance of the
   whole, so every member of the body of Christ is to consider it his
   first great duty to take part in all that can help to build up the
   body of Christ. And this, whether by the helping and strengthening of
   those who are already members, or the ingathering of those who are to
   belong to it. And the great work of the Church is, through its pastors
   and teachers, so to labour for the perfecting of the saints in
   holiness and love and fitness for service, that every one may take his
   part in the work of ministering, that so, the body of Christ may be
   built up and perfected.

   Of the three great objects with which Christ has given His Church
   apostles and teachers, the work of ministering stands thus in the
   middle. On the one hand, it is preceded by that on which it absolutely
   depends–the perfecting of the saints. On the other, it is followed by
   that which it is meant to accomplish–the building up of the body of
   Christ. Every believer without exception, every member of Christ’s
   body, is called to take part in the work of ministering. Let every
   reader try and realise the sacredness of his holy calling.

   Let us learn what the qualification is for our work. `The perfecting
   of the saints’ prepares them for the `work of ministering.’ It is the
   lack of true sainthood, of true holiness, that causes such lack and
   feebleness of service. As Christ’s saints are taught and truly learn
   what conformity to Christ means, a life like his, given up in
   self-sacrifice for the service and salvation of men, as His humility
   and love, His separation from the world and devotion to the fallen,
   are seen to be the very essence and blessedness of the life He gives,
   the work of ministering, the ministry of love, will become the one
   thing we live for. Humility and Love–these are the two great virtues
   of the saint–they are the two great powers for the work of
   ministering. Humility makes us willing to serve; love makes us wise to
   know how to do it. Love is inventive; it seeks patiently, and suffers
   long, until it find a way to reach its object. Humility and love are
   equally turned away from self and its claims. Let us pray, let the
   Church labour for `the perfecting of the saints’ in humility and love,
   and the Holy Spirit will teach us how to minister.

   Let us look at what the great work is the members of Christ have to
   do. It is to minister to each other. Place yourself at Christ’s
   disposal for service to your fellow Christians. Count yourself their
   servant. Study their interest. Set yourself actively to promote the
   welfare of the Christians round you. Selfishness may hesitate, the
   feeling of feebleness may discourage, sloth and ease may raise
   difficulties–ask your Lord to reveal to you His will, and give
   yourself up to it. Round about you there are Christians who are cold
   and worldly and wandering from their Lord. Begin to think what you can
   do for them. Accept as the will of the Head that you as a member
   should care for them. Pray for the Spirit of love. Begin
   somewhere–only begin, and do not continue hearing and thinking while
   you do nothing. Begin `the work of ministering’ according to the
   measure of the grace you have. He will give more grace.

   Let us believe in the power that worketh in us as sufficient for all
   we have to do. As I think of the thumb and finger holding the pen with
   which I write this, I ask, How is it that during all these seventy
   years of my life they have always known just to do my will? It was
   because the life of the head passed into and worked itself out in
   them. `He that believeth on Me,’ as his Head working in him, `the
   works that I do shall he do also.’ Faith in Christ, whose strength is
   made perfect in our weakness’ will give the power for all we are
   called to do.

   Let us cry to God that all believers may waken up to the power of this
   great truth: Every member of the body is to live wholly for the
   building up of the body.

   1. To be a true worker the first thing is close, humble fellowship
   with Christ the Head, to be guided and empowered by Him.

   2. The next is humble, loving fellowship with Christ’s members serving
   one another in love.

   3. This prepares and fits for service in the world.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XVI

   According to the Working of each several Part

   `That we may grow up in all things into Him, which is the Head, even
   Christ; from whom all the body fitly framed and knit together
   through that which every joint together supplieth, according to the
   working in due measure of each several part, maketh the increase of
   the body unto the building up of itself in love.’–Eph. 4:15, 16.

   The Apostle is here speaking of the growth, the increase, the building
   up of the body. This growth and increase has, as we have seen, a
   double reference. It includes both the spiritual uniting and
   strengthening of those who are already members, so as to secure the
   health of the whole body; and also the increase of the body by the
   addition of all who are as yet outside of it, and are to be gathered
   in. Of the former we spoke in the previous chapter–the mutual
   interdependence of all believers, and the calling to care for each
   other’s welfare. In this chapter we look at the growth from the other
   side–the calling of every member of Christ’s body to labour for its
   increase by the labour of love that seeks to bring in them who are not
   yet of it. This increase of the body and building up of itself in love
   can only be by the working in due measure of each several part.

   Think of the body of a child; how does it reach the stature of a
   full-grown man? In no other way but by the working in due measure of
   every part. As each member takes its part, by the work it does in
   seeking and taking and assimilating food, the increase is made by its
   building up itself. Not from without, but from within, comes the work
   that assures the growth. In no other way can Christ’s body attain to
   the stature of the fulness of Christ. As it is unto Christ the Head we
   grow up, and from Christ the Head that the body maketh increase of
   itself, so it is all through that which every joint supplieth,
   according to the working in due measure of each several part. Let us
   see what this implies.

   The body of Christ is to consist of all who believe in Him throughout
   the world. There is no possible way in which these members of the body
   can be gathered in, but by the body building itself tip in love. Our
   Lord has made Himself, as Head, absolutely dependent on His members to
   do this work. What nature teaches us of our own bodies, Scripture
   teaches us of Christ’s body. The head of a child may have thought and
   plans of growth–they will all be vain, except as the members all do
   their part in securing that growth. Christ Jesus has committed to His
   Church the growth and increase of His body. He asks and expects that
   as wholly as He the Head lives for the growth and welfare of the body,
   every member of His body, the very feeblest, shall do the same, to the
   building up of the body in love. Every believer is to count it his one
   duty and blessedness to live and labour for the increase of the body,
   the ingathering of all who, are to be its members.

   What is it that is needed to bring the Church to accept this calling,
   and to train and help the members of the body to know and fulfil it?
   One thing. We must see that the new birth and faith, that all insight
   into truth, with all resolve and surrender and effort to live
   according to it, is only a preparation for our true work. What is
   needed is that in every believer Jesus Christ be so formed, so dwell
   in the heart, that His life in us shall be the impulse and inspiration
   of our love to the whole body, and our life for it. It is because self
   occupies the heart that it is so easy and natural and pleasing to care
   for ourselves. When Jesus Christ lives in us, it will be as easy and
   natural and pleasing to live wholly for the body of Christ. As readily
   and naturally as the thumb and fingers respond to the will and
   movement of the head will the members of Christ’s body respond to the
   Head, as the body grows up into Him, and from Him maketh increase of
   itself.

   Let us sum up. For the great work the Head is doing in gathering in
   from throughout the world and building up His body, He is entirely
   dependent on the service of the members. Not only our Lord, but a
   perishing world is waiting and calling for the Church to awake and
   give herself wholly to this work–the perfecting of the number of
   Christ’s members. Every believer, the very feeblest, must learn to
   know his calling–to live with this as the main object of this
   existence. This great truth will be revealed to us in power, and
   obtain the mastery, as we give ourselves to the work of ministering
   according to the grace we already have. We may confidently wait for
   the full revelation of Christ in its as the power to do all He asks of
   its.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XVII

  Women adorned with Good Work

   `Let women adorn themselves; not with braided hair, and gold or pearls
   or costly raiment; but through good works. Let none be enrolled as a
   widow under threescore years old, well reported of for good works; . .
   . if she hath diligently followed every good work.– 1 Tim. 2:10, 5:9,
   10.

   In the three Pastoral Epistles, written to two young pastors to
   instruct them in regard to their duties, `good works’ are more
   frequently mentioned than in Paul’s other Epistles. [1][1] In writing
   to the Churches, as in a chapter like Romans 12 he mentions the
   individual good work by name. In writing to the pastors he had to use
   this expression as a summary of what, both in their own life and their
   teaching of others, they had to aim at. A minister was to be prepared
   to every good work, furnished completely to every good work, an
   ensample of good works. And they were to teach Christians–the women
   to adorn themselves with good works, diligently to follow every good
   work, to be well reported of for good works; the men to be rich in
   good works, zealous of good works, ready to every good work, to be
   careful and to learn to maintain good works. No portion of God’s work
   presses home more definitely the absolute necessity of good works as
   an essential, vital element in the Christian life.

   Our two texts speak of the good works of Christian women. In the first
   they are taught that their adorning is to be not with braided hair,
   and gold or pearls or costly raiment, but, as becomes women preferring
   godliness, with good works. We know what adornment is. A leafless tree
   in winter has life; when spring comes it puts on its beautiful
   garments, and rejoices in the adornment of foliage and blossom. The
   adorning of Christian women is not to be in hair or pearls or raiment,
   but in good works. Whether it be the good works that have reference to
   personal duty and conduct, or those works of beneficence that aim at
   the pleasing and helping of our neighbor or those that more definitely
   seek the salvation of souls–the adorning that pleases God, that gives
   true heavenly beauty, that will truly attract others to come and serve
   God, too, is what Christian women ought to seek after. John saw the
   holy city descend from heaven, `made ready as a bride adorned for her
   husband.’ `The fine linen is the righteous acts of the saints’ (Rev.
   21:2, 24:8). Oh! that every Christian woman might seek so to adorn
   herself as to please the Lord that loved her.

   In the second passage we read of widows who were placed upon a roll of
   honour in the early Church, and to whom a certain charge was given
   over the younger women. No one was to be enrolled who was not `well
   reported of for good works.’ Some of these are mentioned: if she has
   been known for the careful bringing up of her children, for her
   hospitality to strangers, for her washing the saints’ feet, for her
   relieving the afflicted; and then there is added, `if she hath
   diligently followed every good work.’ If in her home and out of it, in
   caring for her own children, for strangers, for saints, for the
   afflicted, her life has been devoted to good works, she may indeed be
   counted fit to be an example and guide to others. The standard is a
   high one. It shows us the place good works took in the early Church.
   It shows how woman’s blessed ministry of love was counted on and
   encouraged. It shows how, in the development of the Christian life,
   nothing so fits for rule and influence as a life given to good works.

   Good works are part and parcel of the Christian life, equally
   indispensable to the health and growth of the individual, and to the
   welfare and extension of the Church. And yet what multitudes of
   Christian women there are whose active share in the good work of
   blessing their fellow-creatures is little more than playing at good
   works. They are waiting for the preaching of a full gospel, which
   shall encourage and help and compel them to give their lives so to
   work for their Lord, that they, too, may be well reported of as
   diligently following every good work. The time and money, the thought
   and heart given to jewels or costly raiment will be redeemed to its
   true object. Religion will no longer be a selfish desire for personal
   safety, but the joy of being like Christ, the helper and saviour of
   the needy. Work for Christ will take its true place as indeed the
   highest form of existence, the true adornment of the Christian life.
   And as diligence in the pursuits of earth is honoured as one of the
   true elements of character and worth, diligently to follow good works
   in Christ’s service will be found to give access to the highest reward
   and the fullest joy of the Lord.

   1. We are beginning to awaken to the wonderful place woman can take in
   church and school and mission. This truth needs to be brought home to
   every one of the King’s daughters, that the adorning in which they are
   to attract the world, to please their Lord, and enter His presence
   is–good works.

   2. Woman, as the image of `the weakness of God,’ `the meekness and
   gentleness of Christ,’ is to teach man the beauty and the power of the
   long-suffering, self -sacrificing ministry of love.

   3. The training for the service of love begins in the home life; is
   strengthened in the inner chamber; reaches out to the needy around,
   and finds its full scope in the world for which Christ died.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XVIII

   Rich in Good Works

   `Charge them that are rich in the present world, that they do good,
   that they be rich in good works, that they be ready to distribute,
   willing to communicate, laying up for themselves a good foundation
   against the time to come, that they may lay hold on the life which is
   life indeed.’–1 Tim. 6:18.

   If women are to regard good work as their adornment, men are to count
   them their riches. As good works satisfy woman’s eye and taste for
   beauty, they meet man’s craving for possession and power. In the
   present world riches have a wonderful significance. They are often
   God’s reward on diligence, industry, and enterprise. They represent
   and embody the life-power that has been spent in procuring them. As
   such they exercise power in the honour or service they secure from
   others. Their danger consists in their being of this world, in their
   drawing off the heart from the living God and the heavenly treasures.
   They may become a man’s deadliest enemy: How hardly shall they that
   have riches enter the kingdom of heaven!

   The gospel never takes away anything from us without giving us
   something better in its stead. It meets the desire for riches by the
   command to be rich in good works. Good works are the coin that is
   current in God’s kingdom: according to these will be the reward in the
   world to come. By abounding in good works we lay up for ourselves
   treasures in heaven. Even here on earth they constitute a treasure, in
   the testimony of a good conscience, in the consciousness of being
   well-pleasing to God (1 John 3) in the power of blessing others.

   There is more. Wealth of gold is not only a symbol of the heavenly
   riches; it is actually, though so opposite in its nature, a means to
   it. `Charge the rich that they do good, that they be ready to
   distribute, willing to communicate, laying up for themselves a good
   foundation.’ `Make to yourselves friends by means of the mammon of
   unrighteousness, that, when it fails, they may receive you into the
   eternal tabernacles.’ Even as the widow’s mite, the gifts of the rich,
   when given in the same spirit, may be an offering with which God is
   well pleased (Heb. 13:16). The man who is rich in money may become
   rich in good works, if he follows out the instructions Scripture lays
   down. The money must not be given to be seen of men `but as unto the
   Lord. Nor as from an owner, but a steward who administers the Lord’s
   money, with prayer for His guidance. Nor with any confidence in its
   power or influence, but in deep dependence on Him who alone can make
   it a blessing. Nor as a substitute for, or bringing out from that
   personal work and witness, which each believer is to give. As all
   Christian work, so our money-giving has its value alone from the
   spirit in which it is done, even the spirit of Christ Jesus.

   What a field there is in the world for accumulating these riches,
   these heavenly treasures. In relieving the poor, in educating the
   neglected, in helping the lost, in bringing the gospel to Christians
   and heathen in darkness, what investment might be made if Christians
   sought to be rich in good works, rich toward God. We may well ask the
   question, `What can be done to waken among believers a desire for
   these true riches? Men have made a science of the wealth of nations,
   and carefully studied all the laws by which its increase and universal
   distribution can be promoted. How can the charge to be rich in good
   works find a response in the hearts that its pursuit shall be as much
   a pleasure and a passion as the desire for the riches of the present
   world?

   All depends upon the nature, the spirit, there is in man. To the
   earthly nature, earthly riches have a natural affinity and
   irresistible attraction. To foster the desire for the acquisition of
   what constitutes wealth in the heavenly kingdom, we must appeal to the
   spiritual nature. That spiritual nature needs to be taught and
   educated and trained into all the business habits that go to make a
   man rich. There must be the ambition to rise above the level of a bare
   existence, the deadly contentment with just being saved. There must be
   some insight into the beauty and worth of good works as the expression
   of the Divine life–God’s working in us and our working in Him; as the
   means of bringing glory to God; as the source of life and blessing to
   men; as the laying up of a treasure in heaven for eternity. There must
   be a faith that these riches are actually within our reach, because
   the grace and Spirit of God are working in us. And then the outlook
   for every opportunity of doing the work of God to those around us, in
   the footsteps of Him who said, `It is more blessed to give than
   receive.’ Study and apply these principles–they will open the sure
   road to your becoming a rich man. A man who wants to be rich often
   begins on a small scale, but never loses an opportunity. Begin at once
   with some work of love, and ask Christ, who became poor, that you
   might be rich, to help you.

   1. What is the cause that the appeal for money for missions meets with
   such insufficient response? It is because of the low spiritual state
   of the Church. Christians have no due conception of their calling to
   live wholly for God and His kingdom.

   2. How can the evil be remedied? Only when believers see and accept
   their Divine calling to make God’s kingdom their first care, and with
   humble confession of their sins yield themselves to God, will they
   truly seek the heavenly riches to be found in working for God.

   3. Let us never cease to plead and labour for a true spiritual
   awakening throughout the Church.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XIX

   Prepared unto every Good Work

   `If a man therefore cleanse himself from them, he shall be a vessel
   unto honour, sanctified, meet for the Master’s use, prepared unto
   every good work.’–2 Tim. 2:21.

   Paul had spoken of the foundation of God standing sure (2:19), of the
   Church as the great house built upon that foundation, of vessels, not
   only of gold, silver, costly and lasting, vessels to honour, but also
   of wood and of earth, common and perishable, vessels to dishonour. He
   distinguishes between them of whom he had spoken, who gave themselves
   to striving about words and to vain babblings, and such as truly
   sought to depart from all iniquity. In our text he gives us the four
   steps in the path in which a man can become a vessel unto honour in
   the great household of God. These are, the cleansing from sin; the
   being sanctified; the meetness for the Master to use as He will; and
   last, the spirit of preparedness for every good work. It is not enough
   that we desire or attempt to do good works. As we need training and
   care to prepare us for every work we are to do on earth, we need it no
   less, or rather we need it much more, to be–what constitutes the
   chief mark of the vessels unto honour–to be prepared unto every good
   work.

   `If a man cleanse himself from them’–from that which characterises
   the vessels of dishonour–the empty profession leading to ungodliness,
   against which he had warned. In every dish and cup we use, how we
   insist upon it that it shall be clean. In God’s house the vessels must
   much more be clean. And every one who would be truly prepared unto
   every good work must see to this first of all, that he cleanse himself
   from all that is sin. Christ Himself could not enter upon His saving
   work in heaven until He had accomplished the cleansing of our sins.
   How can we become partners in His work, unless there be with us the
   same cleansing first. Ere Isaiah could say, `Here am I, send me,’ the
   fire of heaven had touched his lips, and he heard the voice, `Thy sin
   is purged.’ An intense desire to be cleansed from every sin lies at
   the root of fitness for true service.

   `He shall be a vessel of honour, sanctified.’ Cleansing is the
   negative side, the emptying out and removal of all that is impure.
   Sanctified, the positive side, the refilling and being possessed of
   the spirit of holiness, through whom the soul becomes God-possessed,
   and so partakes of His holiness. `Let us cleanse ourselves from all
   defilement of flesh and spirit’–this first, then, and so `perfecting
   holiness in the fear of the Lord.’ In the temple the vessels were not
   only to be clean, but holy, devoted to God’s service alone. He that
   would truly work for God must follow after holiness; `a heart
   established in holiness’ (1 Thess. 4:14), a holy habit of mind and
   disposition, yielded up to God and marked by a sense of His presence,
   fit for God’s work. The cleansing from sin secures the filling with
   the Spirit.

   `Meet for the Master’s use.’ We are vessels for our Lord to use. In
   every work we do, it is to be Christ using us and working through us.
   The sense of being a servant, dependent on the Master’s guidance,
   working under the Master’s eye, instruments used by Him and His mighty
   power, lies at the root of effectual service. It maintains that
   unbroken dependence, that quiet faith, through which the Lord can do
   His work. It keeps up that blessed consciousness of the work being all
   His, which leads the worker to become the humbler the more be is used.
   His one desire is–meet for the Master’s use.

   `Prepared unto every good work.’ Prepared. The word not only means
   equipment, fitness, but also the disposition, the alacrity which keeps
   a man on the outlook, and makes him earnestly desire and joyfully
   avail himself of every opportunity of doing his Master’s work. As he
   lives in touch with his Lord Jesus, and holds himself as a cleansed
   and sanctified vessel, ready for Him to use, and he sees how good
   works are what he was redeemed for, and what his fellowship with his
   Lord is to be proved in, they become the one thing he is to live for.
   He is prepared unto every good work.

   1. `Meet for the Master’s use,’ that is the central thought. A
   personal relation to Christ, an entire surrender to His disposal, a
   dependent waiting to be used by Him, a joyful confidence that He will
   use us–such is the secret of true work.

   2. Let the beginning of your work be a giving yourself into the hands
   of the Master, as your living, loving Lord.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XX

   Furnished completely unto every Good Work

   `Give diligence to present thyself approved unto God, a workman that
   needeth not to be ashamed, handling aright the word of truth.’–2 Tim.
   2:15.

   `Every scripture inspired of God is also profitable for teaching, for
   reproof, for correction, for instruction which is in righteousness;
   that the man of God may be complete, furnished completely unto every
   good work.’–2 Tim. 3:16, 17.

   A workman that needeth not to be ashamed is one who is not afraid to
   have the master come and inspect his work. In hearty devotion to it,
   in thoroughness and skill, he presents himself approved to him who
   employs him. God’s workers are to give diligence to present themselves
   approved to Him; to have their work worthy of Him unto all
   well-pleasing. They are to be as a workman that needeth not to be
   ashamed. A workman is one who knows his work, who gives himself wholly
   to it, who is known as a working man, who takes delight in doing his
   work well. Such every Christian minister, every Christian worker, is
   to be–a workman that makes a study of it to invite and expect the
   Master’s approval.

   `Handling aright the word of truth.’ The word is a seed, a fire, a
   hammer, a sword, is bread, is light. Workmen in any of these spheres
   can be our example. In work for God everything depends upon handling
   the word aright. Therefore it is that, in the second text quoted
   above, the personal subjection to the word, and the experience of its
   power, is spoken of as the one means of our being completely furnished
   to every good work. God’s workers must know that the Scripture is
   inspired of God, and has the life and life-giving power of God in it.
   Inspired is Spirit-breathed–the life in a seed, God’s Holy Spirit is
   in the word. The Spirit in the word and the Spirit in our heart is
   One. As by the power of the Spirit within us we take the Spirit-filled
   word we become spiritual men. This word is given for teaching, the
   revelation of the thoughts of God; for reproof, the discovery of our
   sins and mistakes; for correction, the removal of what is defective to
   be replaced by what is right and good; for instruction which is in
   righteousness, the communication of all the knowledge needed to walk
   before God in His ways. As one yields himself wholly and heartily to
   all this, and the true Spirit-filled word gets mastery of his whole
   being, he becomes a man of God, complete and furnished completely to
   every good work. He becomes a workman approved of God, who needs not
   to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of God. And so the man of God
   has the double mark–his own life wholly moulded by the
   Spirit-breathed word–and his whole work directed by his rightly
   handling that word.

   `That the man of God may be complete, thoroughly furnished unto every
   good work.’ In our previous meditation we learnt bow in the cleansing
   and sanctification of the personal life the worker becomes a vessel
   meet for the Masters use, prepared unto every good work. Here we learn
   the same lesson–it is the man of God who allows God’s word to do its
   work of reproving and correcting and instructing in his own life who
   will be complete, completely furnished unto every good work. Complete
   equipment and readiness for every good work–that is what every worker
   for God must aim at.

   If any worker, conscious of how defective his preparation is, ask how
   this complete furnishing for every good work is to be attained, the
   analogy of an earthly workman, who needs not be ashamed, suggests the
   answer. He would tell us that be owes his success, first of all, to
   devotion to his work. He gave it his close attention. He left other
   things to concentrate his efforts on mastering one thing. He made it a
   life-study to do his work perfectly. They who would do Christ’s work
   as a second thing, not as the first, and who are not willing to
   sacrifice all for it, will never be complete or completely furnished
   to every good work.

   The second thing he will speak of will be patient training and
   exercise. Proficiency only comes through painstaking effort. You may
   feel as if you know not how or what to work aright. Fear not–all
   learning begins with ignorance and mistakes. Be of good courage. He
   who has endowed human nature with the wonderful power that has filled
   the world with such skilled and cunning workmen, will He not much more
   give His children the grace they need to be His fellow-workers? Let
   the necessity that is laid upon you–the necessity that you should
   glorify God, that you should bless the world, that you should through
   work ennoble and perfect your life and blessedness, urge you to give
   immediate and continual diligence to be a workman completely furnished
   unto every good work.

   It is only in doing we learn to do aright. Begin working under
   Christ’s training; He will perfect His work in you, and so fit you for
   your work for him.

   1. The work God is doing, and seeking to have done in the world, is to
   win it back to Himself.

   2. In this work every believer is expected to take part.

   3. God wants us to be skilled workmen, who give our whole heart to His
   work, and delight in it.

   4. God does His work by working in us, inspiring and strengthening us
   to do His work.

   5. What God asks is a heart and life devoted to Him in surrender and
   faith.

   6. As God’s work is all love, love is the power that works in us,
   inspiring our efforts and conquering its object.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXI

   Zealous of Good Works

   `He gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity,
   and purify us for Himself, a people of His own, zealous of good
   works.’–Tit. 2:14.

   In these words we have two truths–what Christ has done to make us His
   own, and what He expects of us. In the former we have a rich and
   beautiful summary of Christ’s work for us: He gave Himself for us, He
   redeemed us from all iniquity, He cleansed us for Himself, He took us
   for a people, for His own possession. And all with the one object,
   that we should be a people zealous of good works. The doctrinal half
   of this wonderful passage has had much attention bestowed on it; let
   us devote our attention to its practical part–we are to be a people
   zealous of good works. Christ expects of us that we shall be zealots
   for good works–ardently, enthusiastically devoted to their
   performance.

   This cannot be said to be the feeling with which most Christians
   regard good works. What can be done to cultivate this disposition? One
   of the first things that wakens zeal in work is a great and urgent
   sense of need. A great need wakens strong desire, stirs the heart and
   the will, rouses all the energies of our being. It was this sense of
   need that roused many to be zealous of the law; they hoped their works
   would save them. The Gospel has robbed this motive of its power. Has
   it taken away entirely the need of good works? No, indeed, it has
   given that urgent need a higher place than before. Christ needs, needs
   urgently, our good works. We are His servants, the members of His
   body, without whom He cannot possibly carry on His work on earth. The
   work is so great–with the hundreds of millions of the unsaved–the
   work is so great, that not one worker can be spared. There are
   thousands of Christians to-day who feel that their own business is
   urgent, and must be attended to, and have no conception of the urgency
   of Christ’s work committed to them. The Church must waken up to teach
   each believer this.

   As urgently as Christ needs our good works the world needs them. There
   are around you men and women and children who need saving. To see men
   swept down past us in a river, stirs our every power to try and save
   them. Christ has placed His people in a perishing world, with the
   expectation that they will give themselves, heart and soul, to carry
   on His work of love. Oh! let us sound forth the blessed Gospel
   message: He gave Himself for us that He might redeem us for Himself, a
   people of His own, to serve Him and carry on His work–zealous of good
   works.

   A second great element of zeal in work is delight in it. An apprentice
   or a student mostly begins his work under a sense of duty. As he
   learns to understand and enjoy it, be does it with pleasure, and
   becomes zealous in its performance. The Church must train Christians
   to believe that when once we give our hearts to it, and seek for the
   training that makes us in some degree skilled workmen, there is no
   greater joy than that of sharing in Christ’s work of mercy and
   beneficence. As physical and mental activity give pleasure, and call
   for the devotion and zeal of thousands, the spiritual service of
   Christ can waken our highest enthusiasm.

   Then comes the highest motive, the personal one of attachment to
   Christ our Redeemer: `The love of Christ constraineth us.’ The love of
   Christ to us is the source and measure of our love to Him. Our love to
   Him becomes the power and the measure of our love to souls. This love,
   shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, this love as a Divine
   communication, renewed in us by the renewing of the Holy Ghost day by
   day, becomes a zeal for Christ that shows itself as a zeal for good
   works. It becomes the link that unites the two parts of our text, the
   doctrinal and the practical, into one. Christ’s love, that gave
   Himself for us, that redeemed us from all iniquity, that cleansed us
   for Himself, that made us a people of His own in the bonds of an
   everlasting loving kindness, that love believed in, known, received
   into the heart, makes the redeemed soul of necessity zealous in good
   works.

   `Zealous of good works!’ Let no believer, the youngest, the feeblest,
   look upon this grace as too high. It is Divine, provided for and
   assured in the love of our Lord. Let us accept it as our calling. Let
   us be sure it is the very nature of the new life within us. Let us, in
   opposition to all that nature or feeling may say, in faith claim it as
   an integral part of our redemption–Christ Himself will make it true
   in us.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXII

   Ready to every Good Work

   `Put them in mind to be ready to every good work.’–Tit. 3:1.

   `Put them in mind.’ The words suggest the need of believers to have
   the truths of their calling to good works ever again set before them.
   A healthy tree spontaneously bears its fruit. Even where the life of
   the believer is in perfect health, Scripture teaches us how its growth
   and fruitfulness only come through teaching, and the influence that
   exerts on mind and will and heart. For all who have charge of others
   the need is great of Divine wisdom and faithfulness to teach and train
   all Christians, specially young and feeble Christians, to be ready to
   every good work. Let us consider some of the chief points of such
   training.

   Teach them clearly what good works are. Lay the foundation in the will
   of God, as revealed in the law, and show them how integrity and
   righteousness and obedience are the groundwork of Christian character.
   Teach them how in all the duties and relationships of daily life true
   religion is to be carried out. Lead them on to the virtues which Jesus
   specially came to exhibit and teach–humility, meekness and gentleness
   and love. Open out to them the meaning of a life of love,
   self-sacrifice, and beneficence–entirely given to think of and care
   for others. And then carry them on to what is the highest, the true
   life of good works–the winning of men to know and love God.

   Teach them what an essential part of the Christian life good works
   are. They are not, as many think, a secondary element in the salvation
   which God gives. They are not merely to be done in token of our
   gratitude, or as a proof of the sincerity of our faith, or as a
   preparation for heaven. They are all this, but they are a great deal
   more. They are the very object for which we have been redeemed: we
   have been created anew unto good works. They alone are the evidence
   that man has been restored to his original destiny of working as God
   Works, and with God, and because God works through him. God has no
   higher glory than His works, and specially His work of saving love. In
   becoming imitators of God, and walking and working in love, even as
   Christ loved us and gave Himself for us, we have the very image and
   likeness of God restored in us. The works of a man not only reveal his
   life, they develop and exercise, they strengthen and perfect it. Good
   works are of the very essence of the Divine life in us.

   Teach them, too, what a rich reward they bring. All labour has its
   market value. From the poor man who scarce can earn a shilling a day,
   to the man who has made his millions, the thought of the reward there
   is for labour has been one of the great incentives to undertake it.
   Christ appeals to this feeling when He says, `Great shall be your
   reward.’ Let Christians understand that there is no service where the
   reward is so rich as that of God. Work is bracing, work is strength,
   and cultivates the sense of mastery and conquest. Work wakens
   enthusiasm and calls out a man’s noblest qualities. In a life of good
   works the Christian becomes conscious of his Divine ministry of
   dispensing the life and grace of God to others. They bring us into
   closer union with God. There is no higher fellowship with God than
   fellowship in His saving work of love. It brings us into sympathy with
   Him and His purposes; it fills us with His love; it secures His
   approval. And great is the reward, too, on those around us. When
   others are won to Christ, when the weary and the erring and the
   desponding are helped and made partakers of the grace and life there
   are in Christ Jesus for them, God’s servants share in the very joy in
   which our blessed Lord found His recompense.

   And now the chief thing. Teach them to believe that it is possible for
   each of us to abound in good works. Nothing is so fatal to successful
   effort as discouragement or despondency. Nothing is more a frequent
   cause of neglect of good works than the fear that we have not the
   power to perform them. Put them in mind of the power of the Holy
   Spirit dwelling in them. Show them that God’s promise and provision of
   strength is always equal to what He demands; that there is always
   grace sufficient for all the good works to which we are called. Strive
   to waken in them a faith in `the power that worketh in us,’ and in the
   fulness of that life which can flow out as rivers of living water.
   Train them to begin at once their service of love. Lead them to see
   how it is all God working in them, and to offer themselves as empty
   vessels to be filled with His love and grace. And teach them that as
   they are faithful in a little, even amid mistakes and shortcomings,
   the acting out of the life will strengthen the life itself, and work
   for God will become in full truth a second nature.

   God grant that the teachers of the Church may be faithful to its
   commission in regard to all her members–`Put them in mind to be ready
   for every good work.’ Not only teach them, but train them. Show them
   the work there is to be done by them; see that they do it; encourage
   and help them to do it hopefully. There is no part of the office of a
   pastor more important or more sacred than this, or fraught with richer
   blessing. Let the aim be nothing less than to lead every believer to
   live entirely devoted to the work of God in winning men to Him. What a
   change it would make in the Church and the world!

   1. Get a firm hold of the great root-principle. Every believer, every
   member of Christ’s body, has his place in the body solely for the
   welfare of the whole body.

   2. Pastors have been given for the perfecting of the saints with the
   work of ministering, of serving in love.

   3. In ministers and members of the churches, Christ will work mightily
   if they will wait upon Him.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXIII

   Careful to maintain Good Works

   `I will that thou affirm these things confidently, to the end that
   they which have believed God may be careful to maintain good works.
   Let our people also learn to maintain good works for necessary uses,
   that they be not unfruitful.’–Tit. 3:8, 14.

   In the former of these passages Paul charges Titus confidently to
   affirm the truths of the blessed Gospel to the end, with the express
   object that all who had believed should be careful, should make a
   study of it, to maintain good works. Faith and good works were to be
   inseparable; the diligence of every believer in good works was to be a
   main aim of a pastor’s work. In the second passage he reiterates the
   instruction, with the expression, let them learn, suggesting the
   thought that, as all work on earth has to be learned, so in the good
   works of the Christian life there is an equal need of thought and
   application and teachableness, to learn how to do them aright and
   abundantly.

   There may be more than one reader of this little book who has felt how
   little he has lived in accordance with all the teaching of God’s word,
   prepared, thoroughly furnished, ready unto, zealous of good works. It
   appears so difficult to get rid of old habits, to break through the
   conventionalities of society, to know how to begin and really enter
   upon a life that can be full of good works, to the glory of God. Let
   me try and give some suggestions that may be helpful. They may also
   aid those who have the training of Christian workers, in showing in
   what way the teaching and learning of good works may best succeed.
   Come, young workers all, and listen.

   1. A learner must begin by beginning to work at once. There is no way
   of learning an art like swimming or music, a new language or a trade,
   but by practice. Let neither the fear that you cannot do it, nor the
   hope that something will happen that will make it easier for you, keep
   you back. Learn to do good works, the works of love, by beginning to
   do them. However insignificant they appear, do them. A kind word, a
   little help to some one in trouble, an act of loving attention to a
   stranger or a poor man, the sacrifice of a seat or a place to some one
   who longs for it–practise these things. All plants we cultivate are
   small at first. Cherish the consciousness that, for Jesus’ sake, you
   are seeking to do what would please Him. It is only in doing you can
   learn to do.

   2. The learner must give his heart to the work, must take interest and
   pleasure in it. Delight in work ensures success. Let the tens of
   thousands around you in the world who throw their whole soul into
   their daily business, teach you how to serve your blessed Master.
   Think sometimes of the honour and privilege of doing good works, of
   serving others in love. It is God’s own work, to love and save and
   bless men. He works it in you and through you. It makes you share the
   spirit and likeness of Christ. It strengthens your Christian
   character. Without actions, intentions lower and condemn a man instead
   of raising him. Only as much as you act out, do you really live. Think
   of the Godlike blessedness of doing good, of communicating life, of
   making happy. Think of the exquisite joy of growing up into a life of
   beneficence, and being the blessing of all you meet. Set your heart
   upon being a vessel meet for the Master’s use, ready to every good
   work.

   3 . Be of good courage, and fear not. The learner who says I cannot,
   will surely fail. There is a Divine power working in you. Study and
   believe what God’s word says about it. Let the holy self-reliance of
   St. Paul, grounded on his reliance on Christ, be your example: I can
   do all things–in Christ which strengtheneth me. Study and take home
   to yourself the wonderful promises about the power of the Holy Spirit,
   the abundance of grace, Christ’s strength made perfect in weakness,
   and see how all this can only be made true to you in working.
   Cultivate the noble consciousness that as you have been created to
   good works by God, He Himself will fit you for them. And believe then
   that just as natural as it is to any workman to delight and succeed in
   his profession, it can be to the new nature in you to abound in every
   good work. Having this confidence, you need never faint.

   4. Above all, cling to your Lord Jesus as your Teacher and Master. He
   said: `Learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall
   find rest to your souls.’ Work as one who is a learner in His school,
   who is sure that none teaches like Him, and is therefore confident of
   success. Cling to Him, and let a sense of His presence and His power
   working in you make you meek and lowly, and yet bold and strong. He
   who came to do the Father’s work on earth, and found it the path to
   the Father’s glory, will teach you what it is to work for God.

   To sum up again, for the sake of any who want to learn how to work, or
   how to work better:

   1. Yield yourself to Christ. Lay yourself on the altar, and say you
   wish to give yourself wholly to live for God’s work.

   2. Believe quietly that Christ accepts and takes charge of you for His
   work, and will fit you for it.

   3. Pray much that God would open to you the great truth of His own
   working in you. Nothing else can give true strength.

   4. Seek to cultivate a spirit of humble, patient, trustful dependence
   upon God. Live in loving fellowship with Christ, and obedience to Him.
   You can count upon His strength being made perfect in your weakness.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXIV

   As His Fellow-Workers

   `We are God’s fellow-workers: ye are God’s building.’–1 Cor. 3:9.

   `And working together with Him we intreat that ye receive not the
   grace of God in vain.’–2 Cor. 6:1.

   We have listened to Paul’s teaching on good works (chaps. IX.-XXII.);
   let us turn now to his personal experience, and see if we can learn
   from him some of the secrets of effective service.

   He speaks here of the Church as God’s building, which, as the Great
   Architect, He is building up into a holy temple and dwelling for
   Himself. Of his own work, Paul speaks as of that of a master builder,
   to whom a part of the great building has been given in charge. He had
   laid a foundation in Corinth; to all who were working there he said:
   `Let each man take heed how he buildeth thereon.’ `We are God’s
   fellowworkers.’ The word is applicable not only to Paul, but to all
   God’s servants who take part in His work; and because every believer
   has been called to give his life to God’s service and to win others to
   His knowledge, every, even the feeblest, Christian needs to have the
   word brought to him and taken home: `We are God’s fellowworkers.’ How
   much it suggests in regard to our working for God!

   As to the work we have to do.–The eternal God is building for Himself
   a temple; Christ Jesus, God’s Son, is the foundation; believers are
   the living stones. The Holy Spirit is the mighty power of God through
   which believers are gathered out of the world made fit for their place
   in the temple, and built up into it. As living stones, believers are
   at the same time the living workmen, whom God uses to carry out His
   work. They are equally God’s workmanship and God’s fellow-workers. The
   work God is doing He does through them. The work they have to do is
   the very work God is doing. God’s own work, in which He delights, on
   which His heart is set, is saving men and building them into His
   temple. This is the one work on which the heart of every one who would
   be a fellow-worker with God must be set. It is only as we know how
   great, how wonderful, this work of God is–giving life to dead souls,
   imparting His own life to them, and living in them–that we shall
   enter somewhat into the glory of our work, receiving the very life of
   God from Him, and passing it on to men.

   As to the strength for the work.–Paul says of his work as a mere
   master builder, that it was `according to the grace of God which was
   given me.’ For Divine work nothing but Divine power suffices. The
   power by which God works must work in us. That power is His Holy,
   Spirit. Study the second chapter of this Epistle, and the third of the
   Second, and see how absolute was Paul’s acknowledgment of his own
   impotence, and his dependence on the teaching and power of the Holy
   Spirit. As this great truth begins to live in the hearts of God’s
   workers, that God’s work can only be done by God’s power in us, we
   shall feel that our first need every day is to have the presence of
   God’s Spirit renewed within us. The power of the Holy Spirit is the
   power of love. God is love. All He works for the salvation of men is
   love; it is love alone that truly conquers and wins the heart. In all
   God’s fellow-workers love is the power that reaches the hearts of men.
   Christ conquered and conquers still by the love of the cross. Let that
   mind be in you, O worker, which was in Christ Jesus, the spirit of a
   love that sacrifices itself to the death, of a humble, patient, gentle
   love, and you will be made meet to be God’s fellow-worker.

   As to the relation we are to hold to God.–In executing the plans of
   some great building the master builder has but one care–to carry out
   to the minutest detail the thoughts of the architect who designed it.
   He acts in constant consultation with him, and is guided in all by his
   will; and his instructions to those under him have all reference to
   the one thing–the embodiment, in visible shape, of what the master
   mind has conceived. The one great characteristic of fellow-workers
   with God ought to be that of absolute surrender to His will, unceasing
   dependence on His teaching, exact obedience to His wishes. God has
   revealed His plan in His Word. He has told us that His Spirit alone
   can enable us to enter into His plans, and fully master His purpose
   with the way he desires to have it carried out. The clearer our
   insight into the Divine glory of God’s work of saving souls, into the
   utter insufficiency of our natural powers to do the work, into the
   provision, that has been made by which the Divine love can animate us,
   and the Divine Spirit guide and strengthen us for its due performance,
   the more we shall feel that a childlike teachableness, a continual
   looking upward and waiting on God, is ever to be the chief mark of one
   who is His fellow-labourer. Out of the sense of humility,
   helplessness, and nothingness there will grow a holy confidence and
   courage that knows that our weakness need not hinder us, that Christ’s
   strength is made perfect in weakness, that God Himself is working out
   His purpose through us. And of all the blessings of the Christian
   life, the most wonderful will be that we are allowed to be–God’s
   fellow-workers!

   1. God’s fellow-worker! How easy to use the word, and even to
   apprehend some of the great truths it contains! How little we live in
   the power and the glory of what it actually involves!

   2. Fellow-workers with God! Everything depends upon knowing, in His
   holiness and love, the God with whom we are associated as partners.

   3. He who has chosen us, that in and through us He might do His great
   work, will fit us for His use.

   4. Let our posture be adoring worship, deep dependence, great waiting,
   full obedience.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXV

   According to the Working of His Power

   `Whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man, that we
   may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus; whereunto I also
   labour, striving according to His working, which worketh in me
   mightily.’–Col. 1:29.

   `The mystery of Christ, whereof I was made a minister, according to
   the gift of that grace of God which was given me according to the
   working of His power.’–Eph. 3:7.

   In the words of Paul to the Philippians, which we have already
   considered (Chap. IX.), in which he called upon them and encouraged
   them to work, because it was God who worked in them, we found one of
   the most pregnant and comprehensive statements of the great truth that
   it is only by God’s working in us that we can do true work. In our
   texts for this chapter we have Paul’s testimony as to his own
   experience. His whole ministry was to be according to the grace which
   was given him according to the working of God’s power. And of his
   labour he says that it was a striving according to the power of Him
   who worked mightily in him.

   We find here the same principle we found in our Lord–the Father doing
   the works in Him. Let every worker who reads this pause, and say–If
   the ever-blessed Son, if the Apostle Paul, could only do their work
   according to the working of His power who worked in them mightily, how
   much more do I need this working of God in me, to fit me for doing His
   work aright. This is one of the deepest spiritual truths of God’s
   word; let us look to the Holy Spirit within us to give it such a hold
   of our inmost life, that it may become the deepest inspiration of all
   our work. I can only do true work as I yield myself to God to work in
   me.

   We know the ground on which this truth rests, `There is none good but
   God’; `There is none holy but the Lord’; `Power belongeth unto God.’
   All goodness and holiness and power are only to be found in God, and
   where He gives them. And He can only give them in the creature, not as
   something He parts with, but by His own actual presence and dwelling
   and working. And so God can only work in His people in as far as He is
   allowed to have complete possession of the heart and life. As our will
   and life and love are yielded up in dependence and faith, and God is
   waited on to keep possession and to abide, even as Christ waited on
   Him, God can work in us.

   This is true of all our spiritual life, but specially of our work for
   God. The work of saving souls is God’s own work: none but He can do
   it. The gift of His Son is the proof of how great and precious He
   counts the work, and how His heart is set upon it. His love never for
   one moment ceases working for the salvation of men. And when He calls
   His children to be partners in His work, He shares with them the joy
   and the glory of the work of saving and blessing men. He promises to
   work His work through them, inspiring and energising them by His power
   working in them. To him who can say with Paul: `I labour, striving
   according to His power who worketh in me mightily,’ his whole relation
   to God becomes the counterpart and the continuation of Christ’s, a
   blessed, unceasing, momentary, and most absolute dependence on the
   Father for every word He spoke and every work He did.

   Christ is our pattern. Christ’s life is our law and works in us.
   Christ lived in Paul his life of dependence on God. Why should any of
   us hesitate to believe that the grace given to Paul of labouring and
   striving `according to the working of the power’ will be given to us
   too. Let every worker learn to say–As the power that worked in Christ
   worked in Paul too, that power works no less in me. There is no
   possible way of working God’s work aright, but by God working it in
   us.

   How I wish that I could take every worker who reads this by the hand,
   and say–Come, my brother! let us quiet our minds, and hush every
   thought in God’s presence, as I whisper in your ears the wonderful
   secret: God is working in you. All the work you have to do for Him,
   God will work in you. Take time and think it over. It is a deep
   spiritual truth which the mind cannot grasp nor the heart realise.
   Accept it as a Divine truth from heaven; believe that this word is a
   seed out of which can grow the very spiritual blessing of which it
   speaks. And in the faith of the Holy Spirit’s making it live within
   you, say ever again: God worketh in me. All the work I have to work
   for Him, God will work in me.

   The faith of this truth, and the desire to have it made true in you,
   will constrain you to live very humbly and closely with God. You will
   see how work for God must be the most spiritual thing in a spiritual
   life. And you will ever anew bow in holy stillness: God is working;
   God will work in me; I will work for Him according to the power which
   worketh in me mightily.

   1. The gift of the grace of God (Eph. 2:7, 3:7), the power that
   worketh in us (Eph. 3:20), the strengthening with might by the Spirit
   (Eph. 3:16)–the three expressions all contain the same thought of
   God’s working all in us.

   2. The Holy Spirit is the power of God. Seek to be filled with the
   Spirit, to have your whole life led by Him, and you will become fit
   for God’s working mightily in you.

   3. `Ye shall receive the power of the Holy Spirit coming on you.’
   Through the Spirit dwelling in us God can work in us mightily.

   4. What holy fear, what humble watchfulness and dependence, what
   entire surrender and obedience become us if we believe in God’s
   working in us.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXVI

   Labouring more Abundantly

   `By the grace of God I am what I am: and His grace which was bestowed
   on me was not in vain; but I laboured more abundantly than they all:
   yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me.’–1 Cor. 15:10.

   `And He hath said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for My
   power is made perfect in weakness. . . . In nothing was I behind the
   chiefest of the apostles, though I am nothing.’–2 Cor. 12:9, 11 .

   In both of these passages Paul speaks of how he had abounded in the
   work of the Lord. `In nothing was I behind the chiefest of the
   Apostles.’ `I laboured more abundantly, than they all.’ In both he
   tells how entirely it was all of God, who worked in Him, and not of
   himself. In the first he says: `Not I, but the grace of God which was
   with me.’ And then in the second, showing how this grace is Christ’s
   strength working in us, while we are nothing, he tells us: `He said
   unto me: My grace is sufficient for thee: My power is made perfect in
   weakness.’ May God give us `the Spirit of revelation, enlightened eyes
   of the heart,’ to see this wonderful vision, a man who knows himself
   to be nothing, glorying in his weakness, that the power of Christ may
   rest on him, and work through him, and who so labours more abundantly
   than all. What does this teach us as workers for God[?]

   God’s work can only be done in God’s strength.–It is only by God’s
   power, that is, by God Himself working in us, that we can do effective
   work. Throughout this little book this truth has been frequently
   repeated. It is easy to accept of it; it is far from easy to see its
   full meaning, to give it the mastery over our whole being, to live it
   out. This will need stillness of soul, and meditation, strong faith
   and fervent prayer. As it is God alone who can work in us, it is
   equally God who alone can reveal Himself as the God who works in us.
   Wait on Him, and the truth that ever appears to be beyond thy reach
   will be opened up to thee, through the knowledge of who and what God
   is. When God reveals Himself as `God who worketh all in all,’ thou
   wilt learn to believe and work `according to the power of Him who
   worketh in thee mightily.’

   God’s strength can only work in weakness.–It is only when we truly
   say, Not I! that we can fully say, but the grace of God with me. The
   man who said, In nothing behind the chiefest of the Apostles! had
   first learnt to say, though I am nothing. He could say: `I take
   pleasure in weaknesses, for when I am weak then am I strong.’ This is
   the true relation between the Creator and the creature, between the
   Divine Father and His child, between God and His servant. Christian
   worker! learn the lesson of thine own weakness, as the indispensable
   condition of God’s Power working in thee. Do believe that to take time
   and in God’s presence to realise thy weakness and nothingness is the
   sure way to be clothed with God’s strength. Accept every experience by
   which God teaches thee thy weakness as His grace preparing thee to
   receive His strength. Take pleasure in weaknesses!

   God’s strength comes in our fellowship with Christ and His
   service.–Paul says: I will glory in my weakness, that the strength of
   Christ may rest upon me.’ `I take pleasure in weaknesses for Christ’s
   sake.’ Andhe tells how it was when be had besought the Lord that the
   messenger of Satan might depart from him, that He answered: `My grace
   is sufficient for thee.’ `Christ is the wisdom and the power of God.’
   We do not receive the wisdom to know, or the power to do God’s will as
   something that we can possess and use at discretion. It is in the
   personal attachment to Christ, in a life of continual communication
   with Him, that His power rests on us. It is in taking pleasure in
   weaknesses for Christ’s sake that Christ’s strength is known.

   God’s strength is given to faith, and the work that is done in
   faith.–It needs a living faith to take pleasure in weaknesses, and in
   weakness to do our work, knowing that God is working in us. Without
   seeing or feeling anything, to go on in the confidence of a hidden
   power working in us–this is the highest exercise of a life of faith.
   To do God’s own work in saving souls, in per severing prayer and
   labour; amid outwardly unfavourable circumstances and appearances
   still to labour more abundantly–this faith alone can do. Let us be
   strong in faith, giving glory to God. God will show Himself strong
   towards him whose heart is perfect with Him.

   My brother! be willing to yield yourself to the very utmost to God,
   that His power may rest upon you, may work in you. Do let God work
   through you. Offer yourself to Him for His work as the one object of
   your life. Count upon His working all in you, to fit you for His
   service, to strengthen and bless you in it. Let the faith and love of
   your Lord Jesus, whose strength is going to be made perfect in your
   weakness, lead you to live even as He did, to do the Father’s will and
   finish His work.

   1. Let every minister seek the full personal experience of Christ’s
   strength made perfect in His weakness: this alone will fit him to
   teach believers the secret of their strength.

   2. Our Lord says: `My grace, My strength.’ It is as, in close personal
   fellowship and love, we abide in Christ, and have Christ abiding in
   us, that His grace and strength can work.

   3. It is a heart wholly given up to God, to His will and love, that
   will know his power working in our weakness.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXVII

   A Doer that worketh shall be blessed in Doing

   `Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deluding your own
   selves. He that looketh into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and
   so continueth, being not a hearer that forgetteth, but a doer that
   worketh, this man shall be blessed in doing.’–Jas. 1:22, 25.

   `God created us not to contemplate but to act. He created us in His
   own image, and in Him there is no Thought without simultaneous
   Action.’ True action is born of contemplation. True contemplation, as
   a means to an end, always begets action. If sin had not entered there
   had never been a separation between knowing and doing. In nothing is
   the power of sin more clearly seen than this, that even in the
   believer there is such a gap between intellect and conduct. It is
   possible to delight in hearing, to be diligent in increasing our
   knowledge of God’s word, to admire and approve the truth, even to be
   willing to do it, and yet to fail entirely in the actual performance.
   Hence the warning of James, not to delude ourselves with being hearers
   and not doers. Hence his pronouncing the doer who worketh blessed in
   his doing.

   Blessed in doing.–The words are a summary of the teaching of our Lord
   Jesus at the close of the Sermon on the Mount: `He that doeth the will
   of My Father shall enter the kingdom of heaven.’ `Every one that
   heareth My words, and doeth them, shall be likened unto a wise man.’
   To the woman who spoke of the blessedness of her who was his mother:
   `Yea rather, blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it.’
   To the disciples in the last night: `If ye know these things, happy
   are ye if ye do them.’ It is one of the greatest dangers in religion
   that we rest content with the pleasure and approval which a beautiful
   representation of a truth calls forth, without the immediate
   performance of what it demands. It is only when conviction has been
   translated into conduct that we have proof that the truth is mastering
   us.

   A doer that worketh shall be blessed in doing.–The doer is blessed.
   The doing is the victory that overcomes every obstacle it brings out
   and confirms the very image of God, the Great Worker; it removes every
   barrier to the enjoyment of all the blessing God has prepared. We are
   ever inclined to seek our blessedness in what God gives, in privilege
   and enjoyment. Christ placed it in what we do, because it is only in
   doing that we really prove and know and possess the life God has
   bestowed. When one said, `Blessed is be that shall eat bread in the
   kingdom of God,’ our Lord answered with the parable of the supper,
   `Blessed is he that forsakes all to come to the supper.’ The doer is
   blessed. As surely as it is only in doing that the painter or
   musician, the man of science or commerce, the discoverer or the
   conqueror find their blessedness, so, and much more, is it only in
   keeping the commandments and in doing the will of God that the
   believer enters fully into the truth and blessedness of deliverance
   from sin and fellowship with God. Doing is the very essence of
   blessedness, the highest manifestation, and therefore the fullest
   enjoyment of the life of God.

   A doer that worketh shall be blessed in doing.–This was the
   blessedness of Abraham, of whom we read (Jas. 2:22): `Thou seest that
   faith wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect.’ He
   had no works without faith ; there was faith working with them and in
   them all. And he had no faith without works: through them his faith
   was exercised and strengthened and perfected. As his faith, so his
   blessedness was perfected in doing. It is in doing that the doer that
   worketh is blessed. The true insight into this, as a Divine revelation
   of the true nature of good works, in perfect harmony with all our
   experience in the world, will make us take every command, and every
   truth, and every opportunity to abound in good works as an integral
   part of the blessedness of the salvation Christ has brought us. Joy
   and work, work and joy, will become synonymous: we shall no longer be
   hearers but doers.

   Let us put this truth into immediate practice. Let us live for others,
   to love and serve them. Let not the fact of our being unused to
   labours of love, or the sense of ignorance and unfitness, keep us
   back. Only begin. If you think you are not able to labour for souls,
   begin with the bodies. Only begin, and go on, and abound. Believe the
   word, It is more blessed to give than to receive. Pray for and depend
   on the promised grace. Give yourself to a ministry of love; in the
   very nature of things, in the example of Christ, in the promise of God
   you have the assurance: If you know these things, happy are ye if ye
   do them. Blessed is the doer!
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXVIII

   The Work of Soul-Saving

   `My brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert
   him, let him know that he which converteth a sinner from the error of
   his ways shall save a soul from death, and shall cover a multitude of
   sins.’–Jas. 5:19[-20] .

   We sometimes hesitate to speak of men being converted and saved by
   men. Scripture here twice uses the expression of one man converting
   another, and once of his saving him. Let us not hesitate to accept it
   as part of our work, of our high prerogative as the sons of God, to
   convert and to save men. `For it is God who worketh in us.’

   `Shall save a soul from death.’ Every workman studies the material in
   which he works: the carpenter the wood, the goldsmith the gold. `Our
   works are wrought in God.’ In our good works we deal with souls. Even
   when we can at first do no more than reach and help their bodies, our
   aim is the soul. For these Christ came to die. For these God has
   appointed us to watch and labour. Let us study these. What care a
   huntsman or a fisherman takes to know the habits of the spoil he
   seeks. Let us remember that it needs Divine wisdom and training and
   skill to become winners of souls. The only way to get that training
   and skill is to begin to work: Christ Himself will teach each one who
   waits on Him

   In that training the Church with its ministers has a part to take..
   The daily experience of ordinary life and teaching prove how often
   there exist in a man unsuspected powers, which must be called out by
   training before they are known to be there. When a man thus becomes
   conscious and master of the power there is in himself he is, as it
   were, a new creature; the power and enjoyment of life is doubled.
   Every believer has bidden within himself the power of saving souls.
   The Kingdom of Heaven is within us as a seed, and every one of the
   gifts and graces of the spirit are each also a hidden seed. The
   highest aim of the ministry is to waken the consciousness of this
   hidden seed of power to save souls. A depressing sense of ignorance or
   impotence keeps many back. James writes: `Let him who converts another
   know that he has saved a soul from death.’ Every believer needs to be
   taught to know and use the wondrous blessed power with which he has
   been endowed. When God said to Abraham: `I will bless thee, then shall
   all the nations of the earth be blessed,’ He called him to a faith not
   only in the blessing that would come to him from above, but in the
   power of blessing he would be in the world. It is a wonderful moment
   in the life of a child of God when he sees that the second blessing is
   as sure as the first.

   `He shall save a soul.’ Our Lord bears the name of Jesus, Saviour. He
   is the embodiment of God’s saving love. Saving souls is His own great
   work, is His work alone. As our faith in Him grows to know and receive
   all there is in Him, as He lives in us, and dwells in our heart and
   disposition, saving souls will become the great work to which our life
   will be given. We shall be the willing and intelligent instruments
   through whom He will do His mighty work.

   `If any err, and one convert him he which converteth a sinner shall
   save a soul.’ The words suggest personal work. We chiefly think of
   large gatherings to whom the Gospel is preached; the thought here is
   of one who has erred and is sought after. We increasingly do our work
   through associations and organisations. `If one convert him, he saveth
   a soul;’ it is the love and labour of some individual believer that
   has won the erring one back. It is this we need in the Church of
   Christ,–every believer who truly follows Jesus Christ looking out for
   those who are erring from the way, loving them, and labouring to help
   them back. Not one of us may say, `Am I my brother’s keeper?’ We are
   in the world only and solely that as the members of Christ’s body we
   may continue and carry out His saving work. As saving souls was and is
   His work, His joy, His glory, let it be ours, let it be mine, too. Let
   me give myself personally to watch over individuals, and seek to save
   them one by one.

   `Know that he which converteth a sinner shall save a soul.’ `If ye
   know these things, happy are ye if you do them.’ Let me translate
   these Scripture truths into action; let me give these thoughts shape
   and substance in daily life; let me prove their power over me, and my
   faith in them, by work. Is there not more than one Christian around me
   wandering from the way, needing loving help and not unwilling to
   receive it? Are there not some whom I could take by the hand, and
   encourage to begin again? Are there not many who have never been in
   the right way, for some of whom Christ Jesus would use me, if I were
   truly at His disposal?

   If I feel afraid–oh! let me believe that the love of God as a seed
   dwells within me, not only calling but enabling me actually to do the
   work. Let me yield myself to the Holy Spirit to fill my heart with
   that love, and fit me for its service. Jesus the Saviour lives to
   save; He dwells in me; He will do His saving work through me. `Know
   that he which converteth a sinner shall save a soul from death, and
   cover a multitude of sins.’

   1. More love to souls, born out of fervent love to the Lord Jesus–is
   not this our great need?

   2. Let us pray for love, and begin to love, in the faith that as we
   exercise the little we have more will be given.

   3. Lord! open our eyes to see Thee doing Thy great work of saving men,
   and waiting to give Thy love and strength into the heart of every
   willing one. Make each one of Thy redeemed a soul-winner.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXIX

   Praying and Working

   `If any man see his brother sinning a sin not unto death, he shall
   ask, and God will give him life for them that sin not unto death.’–1
   John 5:16.

   `Let us consider one another to provoke unto love and good works’
   these words in Hebrews express what lies at the very root of a life of
   good works–the thoughtful loving care we have for each other, that
   not one may fall away. As it is in Galatians: `Even if a man be
   overtaken in a trespass, ye which are spiritual, restore such a one in
   the spirit of meekness.’ Or as Jude writes, apparently of Christians
   who were in danger of falling away, `Some save, snatching them out of
   the fire; and on some have mercy with fear.’ As Christ’s doing good to
   men’s bodies ever aimed at winning their souls, all our ministry of
   love must be subordinated to that which is God’s great purpose and
   longing–the salvation unto life eternal.

   In this labour of love praying and working must ever go together. At
   times prayer may reach those whom the words cannot reach. At times
   prayer may chiefly be needed for ourselves, to obtain the wisdom and
   courage for the words. At times it may be specially called forth for
   the soul by the very lack of fruit from our words. As a rule, praying
   and working must be inseparable–the praying to obtain from God what
   we need for the soul; the working to bring to it what God has given
   us. The words of John here are most suggestive as to the power of
   prayer in our labour of love. It leads us to think of prayer as a
   personal work; with a very definite object; and a certainty of answer.

   Let prayer be a personal effort. If any man see his brother he shall
   ask. We are so accustomed to act through societies and associations
   that we are in danger of losing sight of the duty resting upon each of
   us to watch over those around him. Every member of my body is ready to
   serve any other member. Every believer is to care for the
   fellow-believers who are within his reach, in his church, his house,
   or social circle. The sin of each is a loss and a hurt to the body of
   Christ. Let your eyes be open to the sins of your brethren around you;
   not to speak evil or judge or helplessly complain, but to love and
   help and care and pray. Ask God to see your brother’s sin, in its
   sinfulness, its danger to himself, its grief to Christ, its loss to
   the body; but also as within reach of God’s compassion and
   deliverance. Shutting our eyes to the sin of our brethren around us is
   not true love. See it, and take it to God, and make it part of your
   work for God to pray for your brother and seek new life for him.

   Let prayer be definite. If any man see his brother sinning let him
   ask. We need prayer from a person for a person. Scripture and God’s
   spirit teach us to pray for all society, for the Church with which we
   are associated, for nations, and for special spheres of work. Most
   needful and blessed. But somehow more is needed–to take of those with
   whom we come into contact, one by one, and make them the subjects of
   our intercession. The larger supplications must have their place, but
   it is difficult with regard to them to know when our prayers are
   answered. But there is nothing will bring God so near, will test and
   strengthen our faith, and make us know we are fellowworkers with God,
   as when we receive an answer to our prayers for individuals. It will
   quicken in us the new and blessed consciousness that we indeed have
   power with God. Let every worker seek to exercise this grace of taking
   up and praying for individual souls. [1]

   Count upon an answer. He shall ask, and God will give him (the one who
   prays) life for them that sin. The words follow on those in which John
   had spoken about the confidence we have of being heard, if we ask
   anything according to His will. There is often complaint made of not
   knowing God’s will. But here there is no difficulty. `He willeth that
   all men should be saved.’ If we rest our faith on this will of God, we
   shall grow strong and grasp the promise. `He shall ask, and God will
   give him life for them that sin.’ The Holy Spirit will lead us, if we
   yield ourselves to be led by Him, to the souls God would have us take
   as our special care, and for which the grace of faith and persevering
   prayer will be given us. Let the wonderful promise: God will give to
   him who asks life for them who sin, stir us and encourage us to our
   priestly ministry of personal and definite intercession, as one of the
   most blessed among the good works in which we can serve God and man.

   Praying and working are inseparable. Let all who work learn to pray
   well. Let all who pray learn to work well.

   1. To pray Thee confidently, and, if need be, perseveringly, for an
   individual, needs a close walk with God, and the faith that we can
   prevail with Him.

   2. In all our work for God, prayer must take a much larger place. If
   God is to work all; if our posture is to be that of entire dependence,
   waiting for Him to work in us; if it takes time to persevere and to
   receive in ourselves what God gives us for others; there needs to be a
   work and a labouring in prayer.

   3. Oh that God would open our eyes to the glory of this work of saving
   souls, as the one thing God lives for, as the one thing He wants to
   work in us.

   4. Let us pray for the love and power of God to come on us, for the
   blessed work of soul-winning.
     _________________________________________________________________

   [1] This thought is very strikingly put in a penny tract, One by One,
   to be obtained from the author, Mr. Thomas Hogben, Welcome Mission,
   Portsmouth.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXX

   I Know thy Works

   `To the angel of the church in Ephesus–in Thyatira–in Sardis–in
   Philadelphia–in Laodicea write: I know thy works.’ [2] –Rev. 2-3.

   `I know thy works.’ These are the words of Him who walketh in the
   midst of the seven golden candlesticks, and whose eyes are like a
   flame of fire. As He looks upon the churches, the first thing He sees
   and judges of is–the works. The works are the revelation of the life
   and character. If we are willing to bring our works into His holy
   presence, His words can teach us what our work ought to be.

   To Ephesus He says: `I know thy works, and thy toil and patience, and
   that thou canst not bear evil men, and thou hast patience and didst
   bear for My name’s sake, and hast not grown weary. But I have this
   against thee, that thou hast left thy first love. Repent, and do the
   first works.’ There was here much to praise–toil, and patience, and
   zeal that had never grown weary. But there was one thing lacking–the
   tenderness of the first love.

   In His work for us Christ gave us before and above everything His
   love, the personal tender affection of His heart. In our work for Him
   He asks us nothing less. There is such a danger of work being carried
   on, and our even bearing much for Christ’s sake, while the freshness
   of our love has passed away. And that is what Christ seeks. And that
   is what gives power. And that is what nothing can compensate for.
   Christ looks for the warm loving heart, the personal affection which
   ever keeps Him the centre of our love and joy.

   Christian workers, see that all your work be the work of love, of
   tender personal devotion to Christ Jesus.

   To Thyatira: `I know thy works, and thy love and faith and ministry
   and patience, and that the last works are more than the first. But I
   have this against thee, that thou sufferest the woman Jezebel, and she
   teacheth and seduceth My servants.’ Here again the works are
   enumerated and praised: the last had even been more than the first.
   But then there is one failure: a false toleration of what led to
   impurity and idolatry. And then He adds of His judgments: `the
   churches shall know that I am He which searches the reins and hearts;
   and I will give to each one of you according to your works.’

   Along with much of good works there may be some one form of error or
   evil tolerated which endangers the whole church. In Ephesus there was
   zeal for orthodoxy, but a lack of love; here love and faith, but a
   lack of faithfulness against error. If good works are to please our
   Lord, if our whole life must be in harmony with them, in entire
   separation from the world and its allurements, we must seek to be what
   He promised to make us, stablished in every good word and work. Our
   work will decide our estimate in His judgment.

   To Sardis: `I know thy works, that thou hast a name to live, and thou
   art dead. Be watchful and stablish the things that are ready to die:
   for I have found no works of thine fulfilled before My God.’

   There may be all the forms of godliness without the power; all the
   activities of religious organisation without the life. There may be
   many works, and yet He may say: I have found no work of thine
   fulfilled before My God, none that can stand the test and be really
   acceptable to God as a spiritual sacrifice. In Ephesus it was works
   lacking in love, in Thyatira works lacking in purity, in Sardis works
   lacking in life.

   To Philadelphia: `I know thy works, that thou hast a little power, and
   didst keep My word and didst not deny My name. Because thou didst keep
   My word, I also will keep thee.’

   On earth Jesus had said: He that hath My commandments and keepeth
   them, he it is that loveth Me. If a man love Me, he will keep My word.
   and My Father will love him. Philadelphia, the church for which there
   is no reproof, had this mark: its chief work, and the law of all its
   work, was, it kept Christ’s word, not in an orthodox creed only, but
   in practical obedience. Let nothing less, let this truly, be the mark
   and spirit of all our work: a keeping of the word of Christ. Full,
   loving conformity to His will will be rewarded.

   To Laodicea: `I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot.
   Thou sayest, I am rich and have gotten riches, and have need of
   nothing.’ There is not a church without its works, its religious
   activities.

   And yet the two great marks of Laodicean religion, lukewarmness, and
   its natural accompaniment, self-complacence, may rob them of their
   worth. It not only, like Ephesus, teaches us the need of a fresh and
   fervent love, but also the need of that poverty of spirit, that
   conscious weakness out of which the absolute dependence on Christ’s
   strength for all our work will grow, and which will no longer leave
   Christ standing at the door, but enthrone Him in the Heart.

   `I know thy works.’ He who tested the works of the seven churches
   still lives and watches over us. He is ready in His love to discover
   what is lacking, to give timely warning and help, and to teach us the
   path in which our works can be fulfilled before His God. Let us learn
   from Ephesus the lesson of fervent love to Christ, from Thyatira that
   of purity and separation from all evil, from Sardis that of the need
   of true life to give worth to work, from Philadelphia that of keeping
   His word, and from Laodicea that of the poverty of spirit which
   possesses the kingdom of heaven, and gives Christ the throne of all!
   Workers! Let us live and work in Christ’s presence. He will teach and
   correct and help us, and one day give the full reward of all our works
   because they were His own works in us.
     _________________________________________________________________

   [2] In the A. V. we find the words in all the seven epistles;
   according to R. V. they occur only five times.
     _________________________________________________________________

   XXXI

   That God may be Glorified

   `If any man serveth, let him serve as of the strength which God
   supplieth: that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus
   Christ, whose is the glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.’–1
   Pet. 4:11.

   Work is not done for its own sake. Its value consists in the object it
   attains. The purpose of him who commands or performs the work gives it
   its real worth. And the clearer a man’s insight into the purpose, the
   better fitted will he be to take charge of the higher parts of the
   work. In the erection of some splendid building, the purpose of the
   day-labourer may simply be as a hireling to earn his wages. The
   trained stone-cutter has a higher object: be thinks of the beauty and
   perfection of the work he does. The master mason has a wider range of
   thought: his aim is that all the masonry shall be true and good. The
   contractor for the whole building has a higher aim–that the whole
   building shall perfectly correspond to the plan he has to carry out.
   The architect has had a still higher purpose–that the great
   principles of art and beauty might find their full expression in
   material shape. With the owner we find the final end–the use to which
   the grand structure is to be put when he, say, presents the building
   as a gift for the benefit of his townsmen. All who have worked upon
   the building honestly have done so with some true purpose. The deeper
   the insight and the keener the interest in the ultimate design, the
   more important the share in the work, and the greater the joy in
   carrying it out.

   Peter tells us what our aim ought to be in all Christian
   service–`that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus
   Christ.’ In the work of God, a work not to be done for wages but for
   love, the humblest labourer is admitted to a share in God’s plans, and
   to an insight into the great purpose which God is working out. That
   purpose is nothing less than this: that God may be glorified. This is
   the one purpose of God, the great worker in heaven, the source and
   master of all work, that the glory of His love and power and blessing
   may be shown. This is the one purpose of Christ, the great worker on
   earth in human nature, the example and leader of all our work. This is
   the great purpose of the Holy Spirit, the power that worketh in us,
   or, as Peter says here, `the strength that God supplieth.’ As this
   becomes our deliberate, intelligent purpose, our work will rise to its
   true level, and lift us into living fellowship with God.

   `That in all things God may be glorified.’ What does this mean? The
   glory of God is this, that He alone is the Living One, who has life in
   Himself. Yet not for Himself alone, but, because His life is love, for
   the creatures as much as for Himself. This is the glory of God, that
   He is the alone and ever-flowing fountain of all life and goodness and
   happiness, and that His creatures can have all this only as He gives
   it and works it in them. His working all in all, this is His glory.
   And the only glory His creature, His child, can give Him is
   this–receiving all He is willing to give, yielding to Him to let Him
   work, and then acknowledging that He has done it. Thus God Himself
   shows forth His glory in us; in our willing surrender to Him, and our
   joyful acknowledgment that He does all, we glorify Him. And so our
   life and work is glorified, as it has one purpose with all God’s own
   work, `that in all things God may be glorified, whose is the glory for
   ever and ever.’

   See here now the spirit that ennobles and consecrates Christian
   service according to Peter: `He that serveth (in ministering to the
   saints or the needy), let him serve as of the strength which God
   supplieth.’ Let me cultivate a deep conviction that God’s work, down
   into the details of daily life, can only be done in God’s strength,
   `by the power of the Spirit working in us.’ Let me believe firmly and
   unceasingly that the Holy Spirit does dwell in me, as the power from
   on high, for all work to be done for on high. Let me in my Christian
   work fear nothing so much, as working in my own human will and
   strength, and so losing the one thing needful in my work, God working
   in me. Let me rejoice in the weakness that renders me so absolutely
   dependent upon such a God, and wait in prayer for His power to take
   full possession.

   `Let him serve as of the strength which God supplieth, that in all
   things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.’ The more you depend
   on God alone for your strength, the more will He be glorified. The
   more you seek to make God’s purpose your purpose, the more will you be
   led to give way to His working and His strength and love. Oh! that
   every, the feeblest, worker might see what a nobility it gives to
   work, what a new glory to life, what a new urgency and joy in
   labouring for souls, when the one purpose has mastered us: that in all
   things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.

   1. The glory of God as Creator was seen in His making man in His own
   image. The glory of God as Redeemer is seen in the work He carries on
   for saving men, and bringing them to Himself.

   2. This glory is the glory of His holy love, casting sin out of the
   heart, and dwelling there.

   3. The only glory we can bring to God is to yield ourselves to His
   redeeming love to take possession of us, to fill us with love to
   others, and so through us to show forth His glory.

   4. Let this be the one end of our lives–to glorify God; in living to
   work for Him, `as of the strength which God supplieth’; and winning
   souls to know and live for His glory.

   5. Lord! teach us to serve in the strength which God supplieth, that
   God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, whose is the
   glory for ever and ever. Amen.
     _________________________________________________________________

                                    Indexes
     _________________________________________________________________

Index of Scripture References

   Isaiah

   [2]40:31 [3]40:64

   Matthew

   [4]5:14 [5]5:16 [6]21:28 [7]25:14

   Mark

   [8]13:34

   Luke

   [9]4:8 [10]4:30

   John

   [11]5:9 [12]5:16 [13]5:17-20 [14]5:19 [15]5:30 [16]5:34
   [17]14:10 [18]14:10-12 [19]14:12-14

   Romans

   [20]4:20 [21]4:21 [22]7 [23]8:2-4 [24]12 [25]12:6 [26]16

   1 Corinthians

   [27]3:9 [28]15:10 [29]15:10 [30]15:58 [31]16:15

   2 Corinthians

   [32]6:1 [33]6:1 [34]9:8 [35]12:9 [36]12:9 [37]12:11
   [38]12:11

   Galatians

   [39]5:6 [40]5:13

   Ephesians

   [41]2:3 [42]2:7 [43]2:8-10 [44]3:7 [45]3:7 [46]3:7
   [47]3:16 [48]3:20 [49]4:7 [50]4:11 [51]4:12 [52]4:15
   [53]4:16

   Philippians

   [54]2:12 [55]2:13

   Colossians

   [56]1:10 [57]1:29 [58]4:12

   1 Thessalonians

   [59]4:14 [60]5:24

   1 Timothy

   [61]2:5 [62]2:10 [63]6:18

   2 Timothy

   [64]2:15 [65]2:21 [66]3:16 [67]3:17

   Titus

   [68]2:14 [69]3:1 [70]3:8 [71]3:14 [72]3:14

   Hebrews

   [73]6:10 [74]13:16

   James

   [75]1:22 [76]1:25 [77]2:22 [78]5:19

   1 Peter

   [79]4:11 [80]4:11

   1 John

   [81]3 [82]5:16

   Revelation

   [83]2 [84]21:2 [85]21:24
     _________________________________________________________________

Index of Pages of the Print Edition

   [86]3 [87]4 [88]5 [89]6 [90]7 [91]8 [92]9 [93]11 [94]12
   [95]13 [96]14 [97]15 [98]16 [99]17 [100]18 [101]19 [102]20
   [103]21 [104]22 [105]23 [106]24 [107]25 [108]26 [109]27
   [110]28 [111]29 [112]30 [113]31 [114]32 [115]33 [116]34
   [117]35 [118]36 [119]37 [120]38 [121]39 [122]40 [123]41
   [124]42 [125]43 [126]44 [127]45 [128]46 [129]47 [130]48
   [131]49 [132]50 [133]51 [134]52 [135]53 [136]54 [137]55
   [138]56 [139]57 [140]58 [141]59 [142]60 [143]61 [144]62
   [145]63 [146]64 [147]65 [148]66 [149]67 [150]68 [151]69
   [152]70 [153]71 [154]72 [155]73 [156]74 [157]75 [158]76
   [159]77 [160]78 [161]79 [162]80 [163]81 [164]82 [165]83
   [166]84 [167]85 [168]86 [169]87 [170]88 [171]89 [172]90
   [173]91 [174]92 [175]93 [176]94 [177]95 [178]96 [179]97
   [180]98 [181]99 [182]100 [183]101 [184]102 [185]103 [186]104
   [187]105 [188]106 [189]107 [190]108 [191]109 [192]110 [193]111
   [194]112 [195]113 [196]114 [197]115 [198]116 [199]117 [200]118
   [201]119 [202]120 [203]121 [204]122 [205]123 [206]124 [207]125
   [208]126 [209]127 [210]128 [211]129 [212]130 [213]131 [214]132
   [215]133 [216]134 [217]135 [218]136 [219]137 [220]138 [221]139
   [222]140 [223]141 [224]142 [225]143 [226]144 [227]145 [228]146
   [229]147 [230]148 [231]149 [232]150 [233]151 [234]152 [235]153
   [236]154 [237]155 [238]156 [239]157 [240]158 [241]159 [242]160
   [243]161
     _________________________________________________________________

           This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal
              Library at Calvin College, http://www.ccel.org,
                   generated on demand from ThML source.

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