THE TRIAL OF FAITH WROUGHT INTO
EXPERIENCE
The world owes an immeasurable debt to Christianity for its
treasures of music and song. Jesus sang (Matt. xxvi. 30). Oh, to
have heard Him! And in his Letters, especially, to the Ephesians and
Colossians, Paul exhorts the Christians to speak to themselves,
"teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and
spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord," and
making melody in your hearts to the Lord" (Col. iii. 16; Eph. v.
19). They were to sing to be heard not of men only, but of the Lord
Himself.
Every great revival of religion results in a revival of singing and
of the composition of both music and song. The Franciscan revival in
the thirteenth century was marked by exultant singing. And so it was
in the days of Luther, of the Wesleys, of William Booth, and of
Moody. And so it will always be.
The joys, the faith, the hopes and aspirations, the deepest desires,
the love and utter devotion, and the sweet trust of the Christian
find noblest and freest expression in music and song. And yet it is
probable that in no way do people more frequently and yet
unconsciously stultify, befool and deceive themselves, and actually
lie to each other and to God, than in the public singing of songs
and hymns.
Languidly, lustily, thoughtlessly in song they profess a faith they
do not possess, a love and devotion their whole life falsifies, a
joy their lack of radiance on the face and of light in the eye
contradicts. They sing, "Oh, how I love Jesus!" while their hearts
are far from Him, with no intention of doing the things that please
Him; or:
I've wondrous peace through trusting, A well of joy within; This rest is everlasting, My days fresh triumphs bring --
while they are restless and defeated; or:
Take my life, and let it be Consecrated, Lord, to Thee; Take my moments and my days, Let them flow in ceaseless praise --
while they live selfishly and spend much of their time in murmurings
and complainings, instead of in praise.
It is a solemn thing to stand before God and sing such songs.
We should think. A hush should be upon our spirits, for we are
standing upon holy ground, where mysteries are all about us,
enshrouding us, while the Angel of the Lord looks upon us through
pillar of cloud and fire, and devils leer and lurk to entrap and
overthrow us.
Nearly fifty years ago, at The Salvation Army's Training Home, at
Clapton, we Cadets were singing:
My will be swallowed up in Thee; Light in Thy light still may I see In Thine unclouded face. Called the full strength of trust to prove ...
and there my heart cried out, "Yes, Lord, let me prove the full
strength of trust!
And then I was hushed into deep questioning and prayer, for a
whisper within me, deep within, asked: "Can you, will you, endure
the tests, the trials, that alone can prove the full strength of
trust? A feather's weight may test the strength of an infant or an
invalid, but heavier and yet heavier weights alone can test the full
strength of a man. Will you bear patiently, without murmuring or
complaining or fainting, the trials I permit to come upon you, which
alone can prove the full strength of your trust and train it for
larger service and yet greater trials?"
My humbled heart dared not say, "I can," but only, "By Thy grace I
will." And then we continued to sing:
My will be swallowed up in Thee ............ Let all my quickened heart be love, My spotless life be praise.
And my whole soul consented to any trial which the Lord in His
wisdom and love might permit to come upon me. I willed to be wholly
the Lord's; to endure, to "bear up and steer right onward" in the
face of every tempest that might blow, every whelming sea that might
threaten to engulf me, every huge Goliath who might mock and vow he
would destroy me. I was not jubilant: my soul was awed into silence,
but also into strong confidence and a deep rest of quiet faith.
I felt sure from that hour that if I was to do a man's work, to be a
saint or soldier of Christ, a winner of souls, and a conqueror on
life's battlefields, then I was not to be a pampered pet of the
Lord: that I must not expect favours; that my path was not to be
strewn with roses; that acclaiming multitudes were not to cheer and
crown me; that I must walk by faith, not sight; that I must be
faithful and hold fast that which God had given me; that I must
still pray when Heaven seemed shut and God not listening; that I
must rejoice in tribulation and glorify any Lord in the fire; that I
must keep hot when others grew cold; that I must stand alone when
others ran away; that I must look to no man for my example, but that
I myself should seek always to be an example to all men; that I must
stand on instant guard against the lure of the world, the insurgence
and insistence of the flesh and the wiles of the Devil; that I must
not become sarcastic, cynical, suspicious, or supercilious, but have
the love that thinketh no evil, beareth all things, believeth all
things, hopeth all things, endureth all things, and never faileth;
that I must not be seduced by flattery, nor frightened by frowns. I
felt that, while esteeming others better than myself (Phil. il. 3),
and in honour preferring others before myself (Rom. xii. 10), and
while I was not to be wise in my own conceits (Rom. xii. 16), yet I
was in no sense to permit my own personality to be submerged in the
mass; that I must be myself, stand on my own feet, fulfill my own
task, bear my own responsibility, answer at last for my own soul,
and stand or fall, when the Judgment books are opened, by my own
record.
That moment when we sang those words was to me most solemn and
sacred, and not to be forgotten. There God set His seal upon my
consenting soul, for service, for suffering, for sacrifice. From
that moment life became a thrilling adventure in fellowship with
God, in friendship and companion-ship with Jesus. Everything that
has come into my life from that moment has, in some way, by God's
sanctifying touch and unfailing grace, enriched me. It may have
impoverished me on one side, but it has added to my spiritual wealth
on the other, as Jacob's withered thigh, Joseph's slavery and
imprisonment, Moses' enforced banishment from Pharaoh's court, and
Paul's thorn and shipwrecks and stonings and imprisonments, enriched
them.
Pain has come to me, but in it I have always found some secret
pleasure and compensation. Sorrow and bereavement have thrown me
back upon God and deepened and purified my joy in Him. Agony,
physical and mental, have led to some unexpected triumph of grace
and faith, some enlargement of sympathy and of power to understand
and bless others. Loss and gain, loneliness and love, light and
darkness, trials and things hard or impossible to understand --
everything has brought its own blessing as my soul has bowed to and
accepted the yoke of Jesus and refused to murmur or complain, but
has received the daily providences of life as God's training school
for faith, for patience, for steadfastness and love.
Paul was right -- and my soul utters a deep Amen -- when he wrote:
"All things work together for good to them that love God, to them
who are called according to His purpose" (Rom.
viii. 28). Listen to Paul's record of some of the "all things" which
worked together for his good. He had been ridiculed and treated with
scorn by his enemies as an Apostle and minister, and he replies:
Are they ministers of Christ? (I speak as a fool) I am more; in
labours more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more
frequent, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received I forty
stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned,
thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in the
deep; in journeyings often [long and dangerous, over bandit infested
roads], in perils of waters [on stormy seas and icy mountain
torrents and unbridged rivers], in perils of robbers [in Balkan
hills and Cilician mountain passes], in perils by mine own
countrymen [the Jews were always lying in wait for him in every
city], in perils by the heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in
the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false
brethren; in weariness and painfulness [long journeys wearied him,
and stonings, beatings, whippings and holding on grimly to a spar
after shipwreck, while the surges of the sea beat upon him to and
fro for a night and a day, must have meant excruciating pain], in
watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness.
Beside those things that are without, that which cometh upon me
daily, the care of all the churches (2 Cor. xi. 23-28).
What a list of " all things," and yet it is not complete! A study of
his Corinthian Letters reveals much more of his mental and spiritual
trials and conflicts which meant unmeasured suffering to his
sensitive soul, so chaste in its purity, so keenly alive to all the
finest and loftiest views of life, and so hungry for human as well
as Divine love and fellowship. This is the man who glories in his
tribulations, because they work in him patience, experience, hope
(Rom. v. 3, 4), and declares that in all things he is more than
conqueror (Rom. viii. 37). Indeed, he calls these things a "light
affliction, which is but for a moment" (2 Cor. iv. 17).
He looks at them in the light of Eternity and they are so swallowed
up in that vastness, that infinitude, that he says they are "but for
a moment." And then he adds that this affliction "worketh for us "
-- our slave, working out for us a far more exceeding and eternal
weight of glory; while we look not at the things which are seen, but
at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are
temporal [fleeting, soon to pass away and be forgotten] but the
things which are not seen are eternal (2 Cor. iv. 17, 18).
Paul says, "We know" -- his uncertainties, doubts, fears,
questionings, had all vanished, being swallowed up in knowledge --
"we know that all things work together for good to them that love
God."
But how did he know? How had Paul reached such happy assurance? He
knew by faith. He believed God, and light on dark problems streamed
into his soul through faith.
He knew by joyful union with the risen Christ, who had conquered
death and the grave. This union was so real that Christ's victory
was his victory also.
He knew in part by experience. Paul had suffered much, and by
experience he had found all things in the past working for his good,
enriching his spiritual life through the abounding grace of his
Lord; and this gave him assurance for " all things" and for all the
future. Nothing could really harm him while he was in the Divine
will, in the eternal order; while he was a branch in the living
Vine, a member of Christ's body (Rom. xii. 5; i Cor. xii. 20-27).
Listen to him:
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or
distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or
sword? Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through
Him that loved us (Rom. viii. 35,37).
Hear him again:
We glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh
patience and patience, experience; and experience, hope: and hope
maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our
hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us (Rom. v. 3-5).
Hear him yet once more:
I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come,
nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to
separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord
(Rom. viii. 38, 39).
Any and everything, present and future, which wrought in him
patience, experience of God's love, and hope, he was sure was
working for his good, and he welcomed it with rejoicing, for it came
bearing gifts of spiritual riches. That is how he knew. We may
believe what is revealed in the Bible about this, and enter into
peace, great peace; but we come to know, as did Paul, by putting God
and life to the test -- by experience.
I happened to be present when a young wife and mother was weeping
bitter tears of anguish. An older wife and mother, with a face like
the morning, full of Heaven's own peace, who had herself wept bitter
tears of anguish, put her arms around the younger woman and in
tender and wise words of perfect assurance comforted her. And as I
noted the gentleness, the wisdom, the calmness, the moral strength
of the elder woman, I thought to myself, "Ah, her trials that were
so painful, her tears that were so bitter, worked for her good; left
her enlarged in heart, enriched in experience and knowledge,
sweetened in character, wise in sympathy, calm in storm, perfect in
peace, with a spirit at home and at rest in God while yet in the
body."
And I looked forward with joy in the hope that the younger woman,
believing on Jesus, patiently submitting to chastenings and trials
as opportunities for the exercise and the discipline of faith, would
enter into an experience of God's love and faithfulness that would
leave her spirit for ever strengthened, sweetened, enriched, and
fitted to comfort and strengthen others. And so, after years, it
proved to be.
Our true good in this and all worlds is spiritual; and trials,
afflictions, losses, sorrows, chastenings, borne with patience and
courage and in faith, will surely develop in us spiritual graces and
"the peaceable fruit of righteousness" (Heb. xii. 11) which are
never found in those who know no trial or sorrow, whose sky is never
overcast, whose voyage over life's sea is never troubled by storm
and hurricane, whose soldiering is only on dress parade and never in
deadly battle, or who, facing storm or battle, flee away and so
escape it.
Holiness of heart does not insure us against those untoward and
painful things which try our faith, but it does prepare us for the
trial; while the patient endurance of trial reveals to ourselves, to
angels, to devils, to men, the reality of our faith and the purity
and integrity of our hearts and the grace and faithfulness of our
Lord.
When Abraham was tried in the offering up of Isaac, "the angel of
the Lord" said, "Now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou hast
not withheld thy son, thine only son from me" (Gen.
xxii. 12). And again and again the most obstinate opponents of
Christianity have been conquered by the patient endurance and the
radiant joy of suffering Christians. It was not only so in the days
of far-off persecutions -- in Rome, when Christians were thrown to
the wild beasts, roasted over slow fires, tortured in every
conceivable way; but in our own day, and in the history of the
Salvation Army, the blood of the martyrs, the patience and
triumphant joy of our soldiers, have won the hardest sinners to
Jesus.
Paul looked upon his sufferings as a part of the sufferings of
Christ, as though Christ's sufferings did not end upon the cross,
but were completed in the sufferings of His disciples. Paul writes:
I now "rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that which is
behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for His body's sake,
which is the church" (Col. i. 24).
Happy are we if we can receive all suffering in that spirit, whether
it be suffering of body, mind or soul. It will then work for our
good and through us for the good of others, whether or not we can
understand how it is to do so.
It will purge us of vanity; it will deepen us in humility, enlarge
us in sympathy, and make us more fruitful in the graces of the
Spirit.
How bitter that cup no tongue can conceive, Which He drank quite up that sinners might live. His way was much rougher and darker than mine: Did Christ, my Lord, suffer, and shall I repine?
Since all that I meet shall work for my good, The bitter is sweet, the medicine is food; Though painful at present, 'twill cease before long, And then, oh, how pleasant the conqueror's song!
|