Present-Time Blessings
Read with me the first twelve verses of
Matthew 5, these verses that we generally call the “Beatitudes.”
Some tell us that Matthew 5 is a millennial chapter and that
we cannot attain to these blessings at the present time. I
believe that every one who receives the Baptism in the Spirit
has a real foretaste and earnest of millennial blessing, but
that here the Lord Jesus is setting forth present-day blessings
that we can enjoy here and now.
“Blessed are the poor in spirit: for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” This is one of the
richest places into which Jesus brings us. The poor have a
right to everything in heaven. “Theirs is.” Dare
you believe it? Yes, I dare. I believe, I know, that I was
very poor. When God's Spirit comes in as the ruling, controlling
power of the life, He gives us God's revelation of our inward
poverty, and shows us that God has come with one purpose,
to bring heaven's best to earth, and that with Jesus He will
indeed “freely give us all things.”
An old man and an old woman had lived together
for seventy years. Someone said to them, “You must have
seen many clouds during those days.” They replied, “Where
do the showers come from? You never get showers without clouds.”
It is only the Holy Ghost who can bring us to the place of
realization of our poverty; but, every time He does it, He
opens the windows of heaven and the showers of blessing fall.
But I must recognize the difference between
my own spirit and the Holy Spirit. My own spirit can do certain
things on natural lines, can even weep and pray and worship,
but it is all on a human plane, and we must not depend on
our own human thoughts and activities or on our own personality.
If the Baptism means anything to you, it should bring you
to the death of the ordinary, where you are no longer putting
faith in your own understanding; but, conscious of your own
poverty, you are ever yielded to the Spirit. Then it is that
your body becomes filled with heaven on earth.”
“Blessed are they that mourn: for they
shall be comforted.” People get a wrong idea of mourning.
Over in Switzerland they have a day set apart to take wreaths
to graves. I laughed at the people's ignorance and said, “Why
are you spending time around the graves? The people you love
are not there. All that taking of flowers to the graves is
not faith at all.” Those who died in Christ are gone
to be with Him, “which,” Paul said, “is
far better.”
My wife once said to me, “You watch
me when I'm preaching. I get so near to heaven when I'm preaching
that some day I'll be off.” One night she was preaching
and when she had finished, off she went. I was going to Glasgow
and had said goodbye to her before she went to meeting. As
I was leaving the house, the doctor and policeman met me at
the door and told me that she had fallen dead at the Mission
door. I knew she had got what she wanted. I could not weep,
but I was in tongues, praising the Lord. On natural lines
she was everything to me; but I could not mourn on natural
lines, but just laughed in the Spirit. The house was soon
filled with people. The doctor said, “She is dead, and
we can do no more for her.” I went up to her lifeless
corpse and commanded death to give her up, and she came back
to me for a moment. Then God said to me, “She is Mine;
her work is done.” I knew what He meant.
They laid her in the coffin, and I brought
my sons and my daughter into the room and said, “Is
she there?” They said, “No, father.” I said,
“We will cover her up.” If you go mourning the
loss of loved ones who have gone to be with Christ, I say
it in love to you, you have never had the revelation of what
Paul spoke of when he showed us that it is better to go than
to stay. We read this in Scripture, but the trouble is that
people will not believe it. When you believe God, you will
say, “Whatever it is, it is all right. If Thou dost
want to take the one I love, it is all right, Lord.”
Faith removes all tears of self-pity.
But there is a mourning in the Spirit. God
will bring you to a place where things must be changed, and
there is a mourning, an unutterable groaning until God comes.
And the end of all real faith always is rejoicing. Jesus mourned
over Jerusalem. He saw the conditions, He saw the unbelief,
He saw the end of those who closed their ears to the Gospel.
But God gave a promise that He should see the travail of His
soul and be satisfied, and that He should see His seed. What
happened on the day of Pentecost in Jerusalem was an earnest
of what will be the results of His travail, to be multiplied
a billionfold all down the ages in all the world. And as we
enter in the Spirit into travail over conditions that are
wrong, such mourning will ever bring results for God, and
our joy will be complete in the satisfaction that is brought
to Christ thereby.
“Blessed are the meek: for they shall
inherit the earth.” Moses was headstrong in his zeal
for his own people, and it resulted in his killing a man.
His heart was right in his desire to correct things, but he
was working on natural lines, and when we work on natural
lines we always fail. Moses had a mighty passion, and that
is one of the best things in the world when God has control
and it becomes a passion for souls to be born again; but apart
from God it is one of the worst things. Paul had it to a tremendous
extent, and, breathing out threatenings, he was hailing men
and women to prison. But God changed it, and later we find
him wishing himself accursed from Christ for the sake of his
brethren, his kinsmen according to the flesh. God took the
headstrong Moses and moulded him into the meekest of men.
He took the fiery Saul of Tarsus and made him the foremost
exponent of grace. Oh, brothers, God can transform you in
like manner, and plant in you a divine meekness and every
other thing that you lack.
In our Sunday school we had a boy with red
hair. His head was as red as fire and so was his temper. He
was such a trial. He kicked his teachers and the superintendent.
He was simply uncontrollable. The teachers had a meeting in
which they discussed the matter of expelling him. They thought
that God might undertake for that boy and so they decided
to give him another chance. One day he had to be turned out,
and he broke all the windows of the mission. He was worse
outside than in. Some time later we had a ten-days revival
meeting. There was nothing much doing in that meeting and
people thought it a waste of time, but there was one result--the
redheaded lad got saved. After he was saved, the difficulty
was to get rid of him at our house. He would be there until
midnight crying to God to make him pliable and use him for
His glory. God delivered the lad from his temper and made
him one of the meekest, most beautiful boys you ever saw.
For twenty years he has been a mighty missionary in China.
God takes us just as we are and transforms us by His power.
I can remember the time when I used to go
white with rage, and shake all over with temper. I could hardly
hold myself together. I waited on God for ten days. In those
ten days I was being emptied out and the life of the Lord
Jesus was being wrought into me. My wife testified of the
transformation that took place in my life, “I never
saw such a change. I have never been able to cook anything
since that time that has not pleased him. Nothing is too hot
or too cold, everything is just right.” God must come
and reign supreme in your life. Will you let Him do it? He
can do it, and He will if you will let Him. It is no use trying
to tame the “old man.” But God can deal with him.
The carnal mind will never be subjected to God, but God will
bring it to the cross where it belongs, and will put in its
place, the pure, the holy, the meek mind of the Master.
“Blessed are they which do hunger and
thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.”
Note that word, “shall be filled.” If you ever
see a “shall” in the Bible make it yours. Meet
the conditions and God will fulfil His word to you. The Spirit
of God is crying, “Ho, every one that thirsteth, come
ye to the waters, and he that hath no money: come ye, buy
and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without
price.” The Spirit of God will take of the things of
Christ and show them to you in order that you may have a longing
for Christ in His fullness, and when there is that longing,
God will not fail to fill you.
See that crowd of worshipers who have come
up to the feast. They are going away utterly unsatisfied,
but on the last day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stands
up and cries. “If any man thirst, let him come unto
me and drink. He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath
said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.”
Jesus knew that they were going away without the living water,
and so He directs them to the true source of supply. Are you
thirsty today? The living Christ still invites you to Himself,
and I want to testify that He still satisfies the thirsty
soul and still fills the hungry with good things.
In Switzerland, I learned of a man who met
with the assembly of the Plymouth Brethren. He attended their
various meetings, and one morning, at their breaking of bread
service, he arose and said, “Brethren, we have the Word,
and I feel that we are living very much in the letter of it,
but there is a hunger and thirst in my soul for something
deeper, something more real than we have, and I cannot rest
until I enter into it.” The next Sunday this brother
rose again and said, “We are all so poor here, there
is no life in this assembly, and my heart is hungry for reality.”
He did this for several weeks until it got on the nerves of
those people and they protested. “Sands, you are making
us all miserable. You are spoiling our meetings, and there
is only one thing for you to do, and that is to clear out.”
That man went out of the meeting in a very
sad condition. As he stood outside, one of his children asked
him what was the matter, and he said, “To think that
they should turn me out from their midst for being hungry
and thirsty for more of God!” I did not know anything
of this until afterward.
Some days later someone rushed up to Sands
and said, “There is a man over here from England, and
he is speaking about tongues and healing.” Sands said,
“I'll fix him. I'll go to the meeting and sit right
up in the front and challenge him with the Scriptures. I'll
dare him to preach these things in Switzerland. I'll publicly
denounce him.” So he came to the meetings. There he
sat. He was so hungry and thirsty that he drank in every word
that was said. His opposition soon petered out. The first
morning he said to a friend, “This is what I want.”
He drank and drank of the Spirit. After three weeks he said,
“God will have to do something now or I'll burst.”
He breathed in God and the Lord filled him to such an extent
that he spoke in other tongues as the Spirit gave utterance.
Sands is now preaching, and is in charge of a new Pentecostal
assembly.
God is making people hungry and thirsty after
His best. And everywhere He is filling the hungry and giving
them that which the disciples received at the very beginning.
Are you hungry? If you are, God promises that you shall be
filled.
|