Some of my favorite Tozer:
"Satan's first attack upon the human race was
his sly effort to destroy Eve's confidence in the kindness of God.
Unfortunately for her and for us, he succeeded too well. From that day,
men have had a false conception of God, and it is exactly this that has
cut out from under them the ground of righteousness and driven them to
reckless and destructive living.
Nothing twists and deforms the soul more than a low or unworthy
conception of God. Certain sects, such as Pharisees, while they held
that God was stern and austere, managed to maintain a fairly high level
of external morality; but their righteousness was only outward. Inwardly
they were "white sepulchres," as our Lord Himself told them. Their
wrong conception of God resulted in a wrong idea of worship. To a
Pharisee, the service of God was a bondage which he did not love but
from which he could not escape without a loss too great to bear. The God
of the Pharisee was not an easy God to live with, so his religion
became grim and hard and loveless. It had to be so, for our notion of
God must always determine the quality of our religion.
Much Christianity since the days of Christ's flesh has also been grim
and severe. And the cause has been the same - an unworthy or an
inadequate view of God. Instinctively we try to be like our God, and if
He is conceived to be stern and exacting, so will we ourselves be.
From a failure to properly understand God comes a world of
unhappiness among good Christians even today. The Christian life is
thought to be a glum, unrelieved cross-carrying under the eye of a stern
Father who expects much and excuses nothing. He is austere, peevish,
highly temperamental, and extremely hard to please. The kind of life
which springs out of such libelous notions must of necessity be but a
parody on the true life in Christ.
It is most important to our spiritual welfare that we hold in our
minds always a right conception of God. If we think of Him as cold and
exacting, we shall find it impossible to love Him, and our lives will be
ridden with servile fear. If, again, we hold Him to be kind and
understanding our whole inner life will mirror that idea.
The truth is that God is the most winsome of all beings and His
service is one of unspeakable pleasure. He is all love, and those who
trust Him need never know anything but that love. He is just, indeed,
and He will not condone sin; but through the blood of the everlasting
covenant He is able to act toward us exactly as if we had never sinned.
Toward the trusting sons of men His mercy will always triumph over
justice.
Fellowship with God is delightful beyond all telling. He communes
with His redeemed ones in an easy, uninhibited fellowship that is
restful and healing to the soul. He is not sensitive nor selfish nor
temperamental. What He is today we shall find Him tomorrow and the next
day and the next year. He is not hard to please, though He may be hard
to satisfy. He expects of us only what He has Himself first supplied. He
is quick to mark every simple effort to please Him, and just as quick
to overlook imperfections when He knows we meant to do His will. He
loves us for ourselves and values our love more than galaxies of newly
created worlds.
Unfortunately, many Christians cannot get free from their perverted
notions of God, and these notions poison their hearts and destroy their
inward freedom. These friends serve God grimly, as the elder brother
did, doing what is right without enthusiasm and without joy, and seem
altogether unable to understand the buoyant, spirited celebration when
the prodigal comes home. Their idea of God rules out the possibility of
His being happy in His people, and they attribute the singing and
shouting to sheer fanaticism. Unhappy souls, these, doomed to go heavily
on their melancholy way, grimly determined to do right if the heavens
fall and to be in the winning side in the day of judgment.
How good it would be if we could learn that God is easy to live with.
He remembers our frame and knows that we are dust. He may sometimes
chasten us, it is true, but even this He does with a smile, the proud,
tender smile of a Father who is bursting with pleasure over an imperfect
but promising son who is coming every day to look more and more like
the One whose child he is.
Some of us are religiously jumpy and self-conscious because we know
that God sees our every thought and is acquainted with all our ways. We
need not be. God is the sum of all patience and the essence of kindly
good will. We please Him most, not by frantically trying to make
ourselves good, but by throwing ourselves into His arms with all our
imperfections, and believing that He understands everything and loves us
still."
Thanks Erick...it is so good to be reminded the God of the bible is not the God we often form or think Him to be in our minds.It is so needed and comforting to reflect on the fact His Word affirms over and over He is our "Abba"(Daddy!) and we are His beloved children.Christ secured that forever! He is the one and only perfect Father in every way possible ; the one who made us for Himself,and loves us more than we can imagine or think.The cross proves that beyond measure!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reminding us of what God is really like...and our need each day to see, savor and embrace the indescribably wonderful relationship He desires/ provides for us.
Thanks brother..Peter Spiers
Thanks for the kind words Peter. God is always surprisingly better than we imagine him :-)
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