
By Andrew Murray
"But straightway Jesus spake unto them saying, Be of good cheer, it is I, be not afraid."--Matt. 14:27.
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		we have had about the work of the blessed Spirit is dependent upon what 
		we think of Jesus, for it is from Christ Jesus that the Spirit comes to 
		us; it is to Christ Jesus that the Spirit ever brings us; and the one 
		need of the Christian life day by day and hour by hour is this,--the 
		presence of the Son of God. God is our salvation. If I have Christ with 
		me and Christ in me, I have full salvation. We have spoken about the 
		life of failure and of the flesh, about the life of unbelief and 
		disobedience, about the life of ups and downs, the wilderness life of 
		sadness and of sorrow; but we have heard, and we have believed, there is 
		deliverance. Bless God, He brought us out of Egypt, that He might bring 
		us into Canaan, into the very rest of God and Jesus Christ. He is our 
		peace, He is our rest. Oh, if I may only have the presence of Jesus as 
		the victory over every sin: the presence of Jesus as the strength for 
		every duty, then my life shall be in the full sunshine of God's unbroken 
		fellowship, and the word will be fulfilled to me in most blessed 
		experience, "Son, thou art ever with me, and all I have is thine," and 
		my heart shall answer, "Father, I never knew it, but it is true,--I am 
		ever with thee and all Thou hast is mine." God has given all He has to 
		Christ, and God longs that Christ should have you and me entirely. I 
		come to every hungry heart and say, "If you want to live to the glory of 
		God, seek one thing, to claim, to believe that the presence of Jesus can 
		be with you every moment of your life.
      
        I want to speak about the presence of 
		Jesus as it is set before us in that blessed story of Christ's walking 
		on the sea. Come and look with me at some points that are suggested to 
		us.
      
        1. Think, first, of the presence of 
		Christ lost. You know the disciples loved Christ, clung to Him, and with 
		all their failings, they delighted in Him. But what happened? The Master 
		went up into the mountain to pray, and sent them across the sea all 
		alone without Him; there came a storm, and they toiled, rowed, and 
		labored, but the wind was against them, they made no progress, they were 
		in danger of perishing, and how their hearts said, "Oh, if the Master 
		only were here!" But His presence was gone. They missed Him. Once 
		before, they had been in a storm, and Christ had said, "Peace, be 
		still," and all was well; but here they are in darkness, danger, and 
		terrible trouble, and no Christ to help them. Ah, isn't that the life of 
		many a believer at times? I get into darkness, I have committed sin, the 
		cloud is on me, I miss the face of Jesus; and for days and days I work, 
		worry, and labor; but it is all in vain, for I miss the presence of 
		Christ. Oh, beloved, let us write that down,--the presence of Jesus lost 
		is the cause of all our wretchedness and failure.
      
        2. Look at the second step,--the 
		presence of Jesus dreaded. They were longing for the presence of Christ, 
		and Christ came after midnight: He came walking on the water amid the 
		waves; but they didn't recognize Him, and they cried out, for fear, "It 
		is a spirit!" Their beloved Lord was coming nigh, and they knew Him not. 
		They dreaded His approach. And, ah, how often have I seen a believer 
		dreading the approach of Christ,--crying out for Him, longing for Him, 
		and yet dreading His coming. And why? Because Christ came in a fashion 
		that they expected not.
      
        Perhaps some have been saying, "Alas, 
		alas! I fear I never can have the abiding presence of Christ." You have 
		heard what we have said about a life in the Spirit: you have heard what 
		we have said about abiding ever in the presence of God and in His 
		fellowship, and you have been afraid of it, afraid of it; and you have 
		said, "It is too high and too difficult." You have dreaded the very 
		teaching that was going to help you. Jesus came to you in the teaching, 
		and you didn't recognize His love.
      
        Or, perhaps, He came in a way that you 
		dreaded His presence. Perhaps God has been speaking to you about some 
		sin. There is that sin of temper, or that sin of unlovingness, or that 
		sin of unforgivingness, or that sin of worldliness, compromise, and 
		fellowship with the world, that love of man and man's honor, that fear 
		of man and man's opinion, or that pride and self confidence. God has 
		been speaking to you about it, and yet you have been frightened. That 
		was Jesus wanting to draw you nigh, but you were afraid. You don't see 
		how you can give up all that, you are not ready to say, "At any 
		sacrifice I am going to have that taken out of me, and I will give it 
		up," and while God and Christ were coming nigh to bless you, you were 
		afraid of Him.
      
        Oh, believers, at other times Christ 
		has come to you with affliction, and perhaps you have said, "If I want 
		to be entirely holy, I know I shall have to be afflicted, and I am 
		afraid of affliction," and you have dreaded the thought, "Christ may 
		come to me in affliction." The presence of Christ dreaded!--oh, beloved, 
		I want to tell you it is all misconception. The disciples had no reason 
		to dread that "spirit" coming there, for it was Christ Himself; and, 
		when God's word comes close to you and touches your heart, remember that 
		is Christ out of Whose mouth goes the two-edged sword. It is Christ in 
		His love coming to cut away the sin, that He may fill your heart with 
		the blessing of God's love. Beware of dreading the presence of Christ.
      
        3. Then comes the third thought,--the 
		presence of Christ revealed. Bless God! When Christ heard how they 
		cried, he spoke the words of the text, "Be of good cheer; it is I; be 
		not afraid." Ah, what gladness those words brought to those hearts! 
		There is Jesus, that dark object appears, that dreaded form. It is our 
		blessed Lord Himself. And, dear friends, the Master's object, whether it 
		be by affliction or otherwise, is to prepare for receiving the presence 
		of Christ, and through it all Jesus speaks, "It is I; be not afraid." 
		The presence of Christ revealed! I want to tell you that the Son of God, 
		oh believer, is longing to reveal Himself to you. Listen! Listen! 
		LISTEN! Is there any longing heart? Jesus says, "Be of good cheer; it is 
		I; be not afraid."
      
        Oh, beloved; God has given us Christ. 
		And does God want me to have Christ every moment? Without doubt. God 
		wants the presence of Christ to be the joy of every hour of my life, 
		and, if there is one thing sure, Christ can reveal Himself to me every 
		moment. Are you willing to come and claim this privilege? He can reveal 
		Himself. I cannot reveal Him to you; you cannot grasp Him; but He can 
		shine into your heart. How can I see the sunlight tomorrow morning, if I 
		am spared? The sunlight will reveal itself. How can I know Christ? 
		Christ can reveal Himself. And, ere I go further, I pray you to set your 
		heart upon this, and to offer the humble prayer, "Lord, now reveal 
		Thyself to me, so, that I may never lose the sight of Thee. Give me to 
		understand that through the thick darkness Thou comest to make Thyself 
		known." Let not one heart doubt, however dark it may be,--at 
		midnight,--whatever midnight there be in the soul,--at midnight, in the 
		dark, Christ can reveal Himself. Ah, thank God, often after a life of 
		ten and twenty years of dawn, after a life of ten and twenty years of 
		struggling, now in the light, and now in the dark, there comes a time 
		when Jesus is willing just to give Himself to us, nevermore to part. God 
		grant us that presence of Jesus!
      
        4. And now comes the fourth 
		thought,--The presence of Jesus lost, was the first; the presence of 
		Jesus dreaded, was the second; the presence of Jesus revealed, was the 
		third; the presence of Jesus desired, is the fourth. What happened? 
		Peter heard the Lord, and yonder was Jesus, some 30, 40, 50 yards 
		distant, and He made as though He would have passed them; and Peter,--in 
		a preceding chapter I spoke about Peter, shewing what terrible failure 
		and carnality there was in him,--but, bless the Lord, Peter's heart was 
		right with Christ, and he wanted to claim His presence, and he said, 
		"Lord, if it be Thou, bid me come upon the water to Thee." Yes, Peter 
		could not rest; he wanted to be as near to Christ as possible. He saw 
		Christ walking on the water; he remembered Christ had said, "Follow Me;" 
		he remembered how Christ, with the miraculous draught of fishes, had 
		proved that He was Master of the sea, and of the waters, and he 
		remembered how Christ had stilled the storm; and, without argument or 
		reflection, all at once he said, "There is my Lord manifesting Himself 
		in a new way; there is my Lord exercising a new and supernatural power, 
		and I can go to my Lord, He is able to make me walk where He walks." He 
		wanted to walk like Christ, he wanted to walk near Christ. He didn't 
		say, "Lord, let me walk around the sea here," but he said, "Lord, let me 
		come to Thee."
      
        Friends, would you not like to have the 
		presence of Christ in this way? Not that Christ should come down,--that 
		is what many Christians want; they want to continue in their sinful 
		walk, they want to continue in their worldly walk, they want to continue 
		in their old life, and they want Christ to come down to them with His 
		comfort, His presence, and His love; but that cannot be. If I am to have 
		the presence of Christ, I must walk as He walked. His walk was a 
		supernatural one. He walked in the love and in the power of God. Most 
		people walk according to the circumstances in which they are, and most 
		people say, "I am depending upon circumstances for my religion. A 
		hundred times over you hear people say, "My circumstances prevent my 
		enjoying unbroken fellowship with Jesus." What were the circumstances 
		that were found about Christ? The wind and the waves,--and Christ walked 
		triumphant over circumstances; and Peter said, "Like my Lord I can 
		triumph over all circumstances: anything around me is nothing, if I have 
		Jesus." He longed for the presence of Christ. Would God that, as we look 
		at the life of Christ upon earth, as we look how Christ walked and 
		conquered the waves, every one of us could say, "I want to walk like 
		Jesus." If that is your heart's desire, you can expect the presence of 
		Jesus; but as long as you want to walk on a lower level than Christ, as 
		long as you want to have a little of the world, and a little of 
		self-will, do not expect to have the presence of Christ. Near Christ, 
		and like Christ,--the two things go together. Have you taken that in? 
		Peter wanted to walk like Christ that he might get near Christ; and it 
		is this I want to offer every one of you. I want to say to the weakest 
		believer, "With God's presence you can have the presence and fellowship 
		of Christ all the day long, your whole life through." I want to bring 
		you that promise, but I must give God's condition,--walk like Christ, 
		and you shall always abide near Christ. The presence of Christ invites 
		you to come and have unbroken fellowship with Him.
      
        5. Then comes the next thought. We have 
		just had the presence of Christ desired, and my next thought is,--the 
		presence of Christ trusted. The Lord Jesus said, "Come," and what did 
		Peter do? He stepped out of the boat. How did he dare to do it against 
		all the laws of nature?--how did he dare to do it? He sought Christ, he 
		heard Christ's voice, he trusted Christ's presence and power, and in the 
		faith of Christ he said, "I can walk on the water," and he stepped out 
		of the boat. Here is the turning point; here is the crisis. Peter saw 
		Christ in the manifestation of a supernatural power, and Peter believed 
		that supernatural power could work in him, and he could live a 
		supernatural life. He believed this applied to walking on the sea; and 
		herein lies the whole secret of the life of faith. Christ had 
		supernatural power,--the power of heaven, the power of holiness, the 
		power of fellowship with God, and Christ can give me grace to live as He 
		lived. If I will but, like Peter, look at Christ and say to Christ, 
		"Lord, speak the word, and I will come," and if I will listen to Christ 
		saying, "Come," I, too, shall have power to walk upon the waves.
      
        Have you ever seen a more beautiful and 
		more instructive symbol of the Christian life? I once preached on it 
		many years ago, and the thought that filled my heart then was this,--the 
		Christian life compared to Peter walking on the waves, nothing so 
		difficult and impossible without Christ, nothing so blessed and safe 
		with Christ. That is the Christian life,--impossible without Christ's 
		nearness,--most safe and blessed, however difficult, if I only have the 
		presence of Christ. Believers, we have tried in these pages to call you 
		to a better life in the Spirit, to a life in the fellowship with God. 
		There is only one thing can enable you to live it,--you must have the 
		Lord Jesus hold your hand every minute of the day. "But can that be?" 
		you ask. Yes, it can. "I have so much to think of. Sometimes for four or 
		five hours of the day I have to go into the very thick of business and 
		have some ten men standing around me, each claiming my attention. How 
		can I, how can I always have the presence of Jesus?" Beloved, because 
		Jesus is your God and loves you wonderfully, and is able to make His 
		presence more clear to you than that of ten men who are standing around 
		you. If you will in the morning take time and enter into your covenant 
		every morning with Him, "My Lord Jesus, nothing can satisfy me but Thine 
		abiding presence," He will give it to you, He will surely give it to 
		you. Oh, Peter trusted the presence of Christ, and He said, "If Christ 
		calls me I can walk on the waves to Him." Shall we trust the presence of 
		Christ? To walk through all the circumstances and temptations of life is 
		exactly like walking on the water,--you have no solid ground under your 
		feet, you do not know how strong the temptations of Satan may come; but 
		do believe God wants you to walk in a supernatural life above human 
		power. God wants you to live a life in Christ Jesus. Are you wanting to 
		live that life? Come then, and say, "Jesus, I have heard Thy promise 
		that Thy presence will go with me. Thou hast said, "My presence shall go 
		with thee,"--and, Lord, I claim it; I trust Thee."
      
        6. Now, the sixth step in this 
		wonderful history. The presence of Christ forgotten. Peter got out of 
		the boat and began to walk toward the Lord Jesus with his eyes fixed 
		upon Him. The presence of Christ was trusted by him, and he walked 
		boldly over the waves; but all at once he took his eyes off Jesus, and 
		he began at once to sink, and there was Peter, his walk of faith at an 
		end; all drenched and drowning and crying, "Lord, help me!" There are 
		some of you saying in your hearts, I know, "Ah, that's what will come of 
		your higher-life Christians." There are people who say, "You never can 
		life that life; do not talk of it; you must always be failing." Peter 
		always failed before Pentecost. It was because the Holy Spirit had not 
		yet come, and therefore his experience goes to teach us, that while 
		Peter was still in the life of the flesh he must fail somehow or other. 
		But, thank God, there was One to life him out of the failure; and our 
		last point will be to prove that out of that failure he came into closer 
		union with Jesus than ever before, and deeper dependence. But listen, 
		first, while I speak to you about this failure.
      
        Someone may say, "I have been trying, 
		to say, `Lord, I will live it;' but, tell me, suppose failure come, what 
		then?" Learn from Peter what you ought to do. What did Peter do? The 
		very opposite of what most do. What did he do when he began to sink? 
		That very moment, without one word of self-reproach of 
		self-condemnation, he cried, "Lord, help me!" I wish I could teach every 
		Christian that. I remember the time in my spiritual life when that 
		became clear to me; for up to that time, when I failed, my only thought 
		was to reproach and condemn myself, and I thought that would do me good. 
		I found it didn't do me good; and I learn from Peter that my work is, 
		the very moment I fail, to say, "Jesus, Master, help me!" and the very 
		moment I say that, Jesus does help me. Remember, failure is not an 
		impossibility. I can conceive more than one Christian who said, "Lord, I 
		claim the fulness of the Holy Ghost. I want to live every hour of every 
		day filled with the Holy Spirit;" and I can conceive that an honest soul 
		who said that with a trembling faith, yet may have fallen; I want to say 
		to that soul, Don't be discouraged. If failure comes, at once, without 
		any waiting, appeal to Jesus. He is always ready to hear, and the very 
		moment you find there is the temper, the hasty word, or some other 
		wrong, at once the living Jesus is near, so gracious, and so mighty. 
		Appeal to Him and there will be help at once. If you learn to do this, 
		Jesus will lift you up and lead you on to a walk where His strength 
		shall secure you from failure.
      
        7.And then comes my last thought. The 
		presence of Jesus was forgotten while Peter looked at the waves; but 
		now, lastly, we have the presence of Jesus restored. Yes, Christ 
		stretched out His hand to save him. Possibly--for Peter was a very 
		proud, self-confident man--possibly he had to sink there to teach him 
		that his faith could not save him, but it was the power of Christ. God 
		wants us to learn the lesson that when we fall then we can cry out to 
		Jesus, and at once He reaches out His hand. Remember, Peter walked back 
		to the boat without sinking again. Why? Because Christ was very near 
		him. Remember it is quite possible, if you use your failure rightly, to 
		be far nearer Christ after it than before. Use it rightly, I say. That 
		is, come and acknowledge, "In me there is nothing, but I am going to 
		trust my Lord unboundedly." Let every failure teach you to cling afresh 
		to Christ, and He will prove Himself a mighty and a loving Helper. The 
		presence of Jesus restored! Yes, Christ took him by the hand and helped 
		him, and I don't know whether they walked hand in hand those forty or 
		fifty yards back to the boat, or whether Christ allowed Peter to walk 
		beside Him; but this I know, they were very near to each other, and it 
		was the nearness of his Lord that strengthened him.
      
        Remember what has taken place since 
		that happened with Peter. The cross has been erected, the blood has been 
		shed, the grave has been opened, the resurrection has been accomplished, 
		heaven has been opened, and the Spirit of the Exalted One has come down. 
		Do believe that it is possible for the presence of Jesus to be with us 
		every day and all the way. Your God has given you Christ, and He wants 
		to give you Christ into your heart in such a way that His presence shall 
		be with you every moment of your life.
      
        Who is willing to lift up his eyes and 
		his heart and to exclaim, "I want to live according to God's standard?" 
		Who is willing? Who is willing to cast himself into the arms of Jesus 
		and to live a life of faith victorious over the winds and the waves, 
		over the circumstances and difficulties? Who is willing to say 
		this,--"Lord, bid me come to Thee upon the water?" Are you willing? 
		Listen! Jesus says, "Come." Will you step out at this moment? Yonder is 
		the boat, the old life that Peter had been leading; he had been familiar 
		with the sea from his boyhood, and that boat was a very sacred place; 
		Christ had sat beside him there; Christ had preached from that boat, 
		from that boat of Peter's, Christ had given the wonderful draught of 
		fishes; it was a very sacred boat; but Peter left it to come to a place 
		more sacred still,--walking with Jesus on the water,--a new and a Divine 
		experience. Your Christian life may be a very sacred thing; you may say, 
		"Christ saved me by His blood, He has given me many an experience of 
		grace; God has proved His grace in my heart," but you confess "I haven't 
		got the real life of abiding fellowship; the winds and the waves often 
		terrify me, and I sink." Oh, come out of the boat of past experiences at 
		once; come out of the boat of external circumstances; come out of the 
		boat, and step out on the word of Christ, and believe, "With Jesus I can 
		walk upon the water." When Peter was in the boat, what had he between 
		him and the bottom of the sea? A couple of planks; but when he stepped 
		out upon the water what had he between him and the sea? Not a plank, but 
		the word of the Almighty Jesus. Will you come, and without any 
		experience, will you rest upon the word of Jesus, "Lo I am with you 
		alway"? Will you rest upon His word, "Be of good cheer; fear not; it is 
		I"? Every moment Jesus lives in heaven; every moment by His Spirit Jesus 
		whispers that word; and every moment He lives to make it true. Accept it 
		now, accept it now! My Lord Jesus is equal to every emergency. My Lord 
		Jesus can meet the wants of every soul. My whole heart says, "He can, He 
		can do it; He will, He will do it!" Oh come, believers, and let us claim 
		most deliberately, most quietly, most restfully,--let us claim, claim 
		it, claim it, CLAIM it. 
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