Deu 8:2 And thou shalt remember all the way which the LORD thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his commandments, or no.
There is no question that Isaac was given of God to
Abraham; he was a perfect miracle, impossible unless God had given him.
And then we read, "God did prove Abraham." Abraham... gave him up and he
got him back; got him back with a whole kingdom....
He has the kingdom
by letting go...the foreshadowing of this Son of God Who let go.
You
see, it is intensely practical. Oh, how can this be? By getting yourself
out of the picture!
That is why it cannot be because self is in the
picture!
Self-will, self-interest, self-realization; that is the kingdom
of Satan, and God is not going to give you His kingdom on that
ground....
This is practical. I have to be quite sure that I am
not in this, that some secret ambition of mine, some motive of mine, is
not at work.
Oh, how subtle are our hearts! You and I perhaps are ready
to be utterly for the Lord. We mean well, and we mean it thoroughly.
We
would sing really with our hearts and with our voices at full strength,
'None of self, and all of Thee,' and we would mean it, and there would
be no uncertainty so far as we are concerned.
And yet God knows that we
are all the time defeated in our very sincerity by secret motives, and
nothing but a test position can prove whether we actually mean it.
So He
brings us to a test – to a prospect, and then a disappointment.
How do
we react? Is our sorrow, our pain, for the Lord or for ourselves?
Are we
disappointed, or is it really only the Lord for Whom we are concerned
and we are not in it at all?
You see what I mean...a test situation to
find out after all whether it is 'None of self, and all of Thee.'
We can
never discover it except in practical ways along the line of very
practical testings.
The Lord knows it all right, but it is not enough
that He knows it.
You see, in order for us to come in, we have to come
in intelligently and cooperatively. That is the point of every test.
The
Lord could do a thing with a stroke, it could happen mechanically. But
we are in a moral world, and God acts towards man on moral ground.
Man
has a will that constitutes him a morally responsible person, and so he
must exercise his will in cooperation with God.
~T. Austin Sparks ~
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