THE MAN GOD USES
A while ago I was talking with a Christian merchant who expressed
a great and important truth. He said:
"People are crying to God to use them, but He cannot. They are not
given up to Him; they are not humble and teachable and holy. There
are plenty of people who come to me and want work in my store, but I
cannot use them; they are not fit for my work. When I must have
someone, I have to go and advertise, and sometimes spend days in
trying to find a man who will fit into the place I want him for, and
then I have to try him and prove him to know whether he will suit me
or not."
The fact is, God is using everybody that He can, and using them to
the full extent of their fitness for His service. So, instead of
praying so much to be used, people should search themselves to know
whether they are usable.
God cannot use anybody and everybody who comes along any more than
the merchant could. It is only those who are "sanctified, and meet
for the Master's use, and prepared unto every good work" (2 Tim. ii.
21) that He can bless with great usefulness.
God wants men and women, and He is hunting for them everywhere; but,
like the merchant, He has to pass by hundreds before He finds the
right individuals. The Bible says: "The eyes of the Lord run to and
fro throughout the whole earth, to shew Himself strong in the behalf
of them whose heart is perfect toward Him" (2 Chron. xvi. 9).
Oh, how God wants to use you! But before you ask Him again to do so,
see to it that your heart is "perfect toward Him." Then you may
depend upon it that God will show Himself strong in your behalf.
Glory to His dear, dear name!
When God searches for a man to work in His vineyard He does not ask,
"Has he great natural abilities? Is he thoroughly educated? Is he a
fine singer? Is he eloquent in prayer? Can he talk much?"
But, rather, He asks, "Is his heart perfect toward Me? Is he holy?
Does he love much? Is he willing to walk by faith, and not by sight?
Does he love Me so much and has he such childlike confidence in My
love for him that he can trust Me to use him when he doesn't see any
sign that I am using him? Will he be weary and faint when I correct
him and try to fit him for greater usefulness? Or will he, like Job,
cry out, 'Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him'? (Job xiii.
15). Does he search My word, and 'meditate therein day and night,'
in order to 'do according to all that is written therein'? (Joshua i.
8). Does he wait on Me for My counsel and seek in everything to be
led by My Spirit? Or is he stubborn and self-willed, like the horse
and the mule, which have to be held in with bit and bridle (Ps.
xxxii. 9), so that I cannot 'guide him with Mine eye'? (Ps. xxxii.
8). Is he a man-pleaser and a time-server, or is he willing to wait
for his reward, and does he seek solely for 'the honour that cometh
from God only'? Does he 'preach the word' and is he 'instant in
season, out of season'? (2 Tim. iv. 2). Is he meek and lowly in
heart and humble?"
When God finds such a man, He will use him. God and that man will
have such a friendly understanding with each other, and such mutual
sympathy and love and confidence that they will at once become
"workers together "(2 Cor. vi. 1).
Paul was such a man, and the more they whipped him and stoned him
and tried to rid the earth of him, the more God used him. At last
they shut him up in prison, but Paul declared with unshaken faith,
"I suffer trouble as an evil doer, even unto bonds; but the word of
God is not bound" (2 Tim. ii. 9); and so he spoke God's word, and
neither devils nor men could put shackles on it, but it pierced
right through the prison walls, and flew across oceans and
continents and down through the long centuries, bearing the glorious
tidings of the blessed Gospel; overthrowing thrones and kingdoms and
powers of evil, and everywhere bringing light and comfort and
salvation to dark, troubled, sinful hearts. Though more than
eighteen hundred years have passed since they cut off Paul's head
and thought they had done with him for ever, yet his usefulness
increases and his mighty words and works are today bearing such
fruit to the good of men and the glory of God as passes the
comprehension of an archangel.
Oh, how surprised Paul will be when he receives his final reward at
the general judgment day, and enters into possession of all the
treasures he has laid up in Heaven and the everlasting inheritance
prepared for him!
Poor, troubled soul, cheer up! Be of good courage! You think you are
useless, but you do not know. Trust God!
Paul saw dark days. He wrote to Timothy one day and said, "This thou
knowest, that all they which are in Asia be turned away from me" (2
Tim. i. 15). Study his life in the Acts and the Epistles, and see
what conflicts and discouragements he had, and take courage!
Jesus said, "He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said,
out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. (But this spake
He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive ..."
(John vii. 38, 39).
See to it that you are a believer. See to it that you are "filled
with the Spirit," and Jesus will see to it that out of your life
shall flow rivers of holy influence and power to bless the world;
and you, too, will be surprised, at the reckoning day, to behold the
vastness of your reward as compared with the littleness of your
sacrifices and your work.
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