September 30, 2012
We take our own spiritual consecration and try to make it into a
call of God, but when we get right with Him He brushes all this aside.
Then He gives us a tremendous, riveting pain to fasten our attention on
something that we never even dreamed could be His call for us. And for
one radiant, flashing moment we see His purpose, and we say, “Here am I!
Send me” (Isaiah 6:8).
This call has nothing to do with personal sanctification, but with
being made broken bread and poured-out wine. Yet God can never make us
into wine if we object to the fingers He chooses to use to crush us. We
say, “If God would only use His own fingers, and make me broken bread
and poured-out wine in a special way, then I wouldn’t object!” But when
He uses someone we dislike, or some set of circumstances to which we
said we would never submit, to crush us, then we object. Yet we must
never try to choose the place of our own martyrdom. If we are ever going
to be made into wine, we will have to be crushed—you cannot drink
grapes. Grapes become wine only when they have been squeezed.
I wonder what finger and thumb God has been using to squeeze you?
Have you been as hard as a marble and escaped? If you are not ripe yet,
and if God had squeezed you anyway, the wine produced would have been
remarkably bitter. To be a holy person means that the elements of our
natural life experience the very presence of God as they are
providentially broken in His service. We have to be placed into God and
brought into agreement with Him before we can be broken bread in His
hands. Stay right with God and let Him do as He likes, and you will find
that He is producing the kind of bread and wine that will benefit His
other children.
No comments:
Post a Comment