THE RENEWING OF POWER
Though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day
by day. Paul.
To do God's work we must have God's power. Therefore Jesus said:
"Tarry ye in Jerusalem until ye be endued with power from on high."
(Luke 24:49.) And again He said: "Ye shall receive power when the
Holy Ghost is come upon you." (Acts 1:8.)
The soul-winner receives this power when he is sanctified wholly and
filled with the Spirit, and he need never lose it. But while the
Holy Spirit abides with the believer, there yet seems to be need for
frequent renewals of the power He bestows. And, thank God, He he
made ample provision to meet this need. "They that wait upon the
Lord shall renew their strength," said Isaiah. "Wait on the Lord; be
of good courage, and He shall strengthen thine heart; wait, I say,
on the Lord," cries David.
Years ago President Asa Mahan wrote as follows of his old friend:
"The extraordinary power which attended the preaching of President
Finney during the early years of his ministry was chiefly owing to a
special baptism of the Spirit which he received not long after his
conversion; hence it was that when through him the 'violated law
spake out its thunders,' it did seem as if we had in truth 'come
unto the mount that might be touched, and that burned with fire, and
unto blackness and darkness and tempest and the sound of a trumpet
and the voice of words.' But when he spoke of Christ, then indeed
did his 'doctrine drop as the rain, and his speech distil as the
dew, as the small rain upon the tender herb and as the showers upon
the mown grass.' The reason also why he is bringing forth such
wondrous fruit in his old age is that while his whole ministry has
been under the power of the Spirit, his former baptisms have been
renewed with increasing power and frequency during a few years
past."
The need for these frequent renewings and anointings does not
necessarily arise from backsliding. Sometimes the soul feels the
need of a renewal of its power when confronted by great opposition,
danger and powerful foes. The apostles were filled with the Holy
Ghost, and had not only won their great Pentecostal victory, but
many others as well, when suddenly a stubborn wall of opposition
arose before them. They were arrested by the rulers, thrust into
prison, brought before the high priest, sharply questioned by what
power and name they were working their miracles, and then when no
ground for punishment could be found, they were threatened and
commanded to preach no more in the name of Jesus.
When they were let go they went to their own people, told them what
had happened, and began a sweet, childlike, heaven storming prayer
meeting, told the Lord the story, too, and cried to Him to show
forth His power, and then a wonderful thing happened; Pentecost was
repeated; "the place was shaken where they were assembled together,
and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the
word of God with boldness, and with great power gave the apostles
witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great peace was
upon them all."
They waited before the Lord and their strength was renewed, their
power reinforced from heaven. their past victories put into the
shade and "a great company of the priests were obedient to the
faith."
Sometimes the need for this renewal of strength arises after great
victories. For victory is usually secured as the result of great
spiritual and mental activity, and often physical activity as well,
and it is but natural that there should be a reaction; the pendulum,
if left alone, swings to the other extreme. Depression may follow,
the powers of soul and mind relax, joyful emotions subside, and the
inexperienced soul-winner may at this point get into great
perplexity, and suffer from fierce temptation; and strain himself to
keep up his accustomed spiritual activity, crying out with David,
"Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and why art thou disquieted
within me?" And again. "My flesh and my heart faileth," and imagine
himself to be backsliding. But what is needed now is not so much
anxious wrestling with God as quiet waiting upon God for a renewal
of power, saying to his soul, "Hope thou in God, for I shall yet
praise Him who is the health of my countenance, and my God," and
though heart and flesh do fail, "yet God is the strength of my
heart, and my portion forever." At such times the strength of the
soul is to sit still in quietness and confidence. (Is. 30:7, 15.)
I once heard a wise old evangelist, one of the mightiest this
country has produced, say that while at home after a season of rest,
the Spirit of God would come upon him, leading him to earnest prayer
and travail for the salvation of men. This was God's way of
preparing him for a campaign, and for victory, and away he would go
for battle and siege, to rescue the souls of men, and never did he
fail to win. But after a while there seemed to be an abatement of
power, when he would return home for another season of rest and
quiet, waiting upon God for the renewal of his strength. And thus he
continued till he was past eighty, still bringing forth fruit in old
age.
Again, there is sometimes need of a renewal of power owing to
weakness and infirmity of the flesh. Paul must have received a great
addition of power when, instead of removing his "thorn," Jesus said
to him, "My grace is sufficient for thee, for My strength is made
perfect in weakness." And such was the uplift that Paul got at that
time that ever afterward he took "pleasure in infirmities, in
reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses, for
Christ's sake," glorying in them, since through them the power of
Christ rested upon him, and in weakness he was made strong.
Spiritual power is not necessarily dependent upon physical energy,
and however much he may be afflicted with infirmities there are
mighty enduements of power for the soul-winner if he intelligently
and with quiet and persistent faith seeks them from on high.
There will be times of loneliness and spiritual agony such as Jesus
suffered in the Garden, or Elijah when he felt that all the prophets
were slain, and there was none true to God in Israel but himself. Or
again, when there is widespread barrenness and desolation, when
revivals have ceased, and worldliness sweeps in like a flood, and
there is apparently no vision, and God seems silent, and the devil
mocks and taunts, then the soul-winner will need to have his
spiritual strength renewed. And he may fully expect such a renewal.
The angels are all round about him, and the heavens are bending over
him, and Jesus has lost none of His tender interest and sympathy for
him. An angel came and strengthened Jesus in His agony (Luke 22:43),
and an angel strengthened Elijah for his long and lonely journey,
and an angel came to Daniel and said, "O man, greatly beloved, fear
not; peace be unto thee; be strong, yea, be strong." And not only an
angel, but the Lord Himself will surely empower His trusting
workers. It was Jesus that cheered Paul in the chief captain's
castle (Acts 23:11), and John on the lonely Isle of Patmos (Rev.
1:17), and so He still cheers and strengthens His servants and
warriors. Bless His name!
These renewals of power are not always necessarily of an
extraordinary character. There are sometimes great uplifts of
physical strength without any apparent cause, but ordinarily a man's
physical strength is renewed by rest and the timely eating of proper
food. And so there may be times when the Spirit of God falls upon
the soul-winner, giving him great uplifts and visions and courage.
But ordinarily power comes by the use of the simple means of much
regular prayer and patient, diligent searching of God's Word and a
daily listening to God's voice It is renewed like fire, not by the
fall of lightning from Heaven, but by the addition of new fuel; like
physical strength, not by some hypodermic injection of fresh blood,
but by proper food. David calls upon his soul to bless God "who
satisfieth thy mouth with good things so that thy youth is renewed
like the eagle's." (Ps. 103:5.)
This will require time and attention on our part, but it will be
time well spent. It is by appropriate food, then, that the soul is
strengthened. Jesus told us what that food was when He said, "Man
shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out
of the mouth of God." (Matt 4:4.) And does not this correspond to
Paul's statement that though the outward man was perishing, yet "the
inward man is renewed day by day"? and with that passage that says,
"The Lord revealed Himself unto Samuel in Shiloh by the word of the
Lord"? It is the Lord that renews our strength, but He does it not
in some mysterious way, but by means of His Word, which we read and
meditate upon and appropriate by faith. Through it we see Jesus and
come to know our Lord. Bless His name!
My own strength is usually renewed by the opening up of some new
truth, or the powerful application of some promises, or portion of
the Word of God to my soul, which I am enabled to make my own by a
definite and bold, affectionate and daredevil act of faith in secret
prayer.
|