MUCH of the
feebleness, barrenness and paucity of religion results from the failure
to have a scriptural and reasonable standard in religion, by which to
shape character and measure results; and this largely results from the
omission of prayer or the failure to put prayer in the standard. We
cannot possibly mark our advances in religion if there is no point to
which we are definitely advancing.
Always there
must be something definite before the mind's eye at which we are aiming
and to which we are driving. We cannot contrast shapeliness with
unshapeliness if there be no pattern after which to model. Neither can
there be inspiration if there be no high end to stimulate us.
Many
Christians are disjointed and aimless because they have no pattern
before them after which conduct and character are to be shaped. They
just move on aimlessly, their minds in a cloudy state, no pattern in
view, no point in sight, no standard after which they are striving.
There is no standard by which to value and gauge their efforts. No
magnet is there to fill their eyes, quicken their steps, and to draw
them and keep them steady.
Who will raise the Standard?
Commentary on the Standard
Whatever attempts the enemies of God’s
people may make upon them to disturb their peace, they shall be baffled
and brought to nought: When the enemy shall come in like a flood, like a
high spring-tide, or a land-flood, which threaten to bear down all
before them without control, then the Spirit of the Lord by some secret
undiscerned power shall lift up a Standard against him, and so put him
to flight. He that has delivered will still deliver. When God’s people
are weak and helpless, and have no Standard to lift up against the
invading power, God will give a banner to those that fear Him (Ps.
60:4), will by His Spirit lift up a Standard, which will draw multitudes
together to appear on the church’s behalf.
All this
vague idea of religion grows out of loose notions about prayer. That
which helps to make the standard of religion clear and definite is
prayer. That which aids in placing that standard high is prayer. The
praying ones are those who have something definite in view. In fact
prayer itself is a very definite thing, aims at something specific, and
has a mark at which it aims.
Prayer aims
at the most definite, the highest and the sweetest religious experience.
The praying ones want all that God has in store for them. They are not
satisfied with anything like a low religious life, superficial, vague
and indefinite. The praying ones are not only after a "deeper work of
grace," but want the very deepest work of grace possible and promised.
They are not
after being saved from some sin, but saved from all sin, both inward and
outward. They are after not only deliverance from sinning, but from sin
itself, from its being, its power and its pollution. They are after
holiness of heart and life.
Prayer
believes in, and seeks for the very highest religious life set before us
in the Word of God. Prayer is the condition of that life. Prayer points
out the only pathway to such a life. The standard of a religious life is
the standard of prayer. Prayer is so vital, so essential, so
far-reaching, that it enters into all religion, and sets the standard
clear and definite before the eye.
The degree
of our estimate of prayer fixes our ideas of the standard of a religious
life. The standard of biblical religion is the standard of prayer. The
more there is of prayer in the life, the more definite and the higher
our notions of religion.
The
Scriptures alone make the standard of life and experience. When we make
our own standard, there is delusion and falsity for our desires,
convenience and pleasure form the rule, and that is always a fleshly and
a low rule. From it, all the fundamental principles of a Christlike
religion are left out. Whatever standard of religion which makes in it
provision for the flesh, is unscriptural and hurtful.
Nor will it
do to leave it to others to fix the standard of religion for us. When we
allow others to make our standard of religion, it is generally deficient
because in imitation, defects are transferred to the imitator more
readily than virtues, and a second edition of a man is marred by its
defects.
The most
serious damage in thus determining what religion is by what others say,
is in allowing current opinion, the contagion of example, the grade of
religion current among us, to shape our religious opinions and
characters. Adoniram Judson once wrote to a friend, "Let me beg you, not
to rest contented with the commonplace religion that is now so
prevalent."
Commonplace
religion is pleasing to flesh and blood. There is no self-denial in it,
no cross bearing, no self-crucifixion. It is good enough for our
neighbors. Why should we be singular and straight-laced? Others are
living on a low plane, on a compromising level, living as the world
lives.
Why should
we be peculiar, zealous of good works? Why should we fight to win heaven
while so many are sailing there on "flowery beds of ease"? Are the
easy-going, careless, sauntering crowd, living prayerless lives, going
to heaven? Is heaven a fit place for non-praying, loose living, ease
loving people? That is the supreme question.
Paul gives
the following caution about making for ourselves the jolly,
pleasure-seeking religious company all about us the standard of our
measurement:
For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare ourselves with
some that commend themselves; but they, measuring themselves by
themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are not wise. But
we will not boast of things without our measure, but according to the
measure of the rule which God hath distributed to us, a measure to reach
even unto you.
No standard
of religion is worth a moment's consideration which leaves prayer out of
the account. No standard is worth any thought which does not make prayer
the main thing in religion. So necessary is prayer, so fundamental in
God's plan, so all important to everything like a religious life, that
it enters into all biblical religion.
Prayer
itself is a standard, definite, emphatic, scriptural. A life of prayer
is the divine rule. This is the pattern, just as our Lord, being a man
of prayer, is the one pattern for us after whom to copy. Prayer fashions
the pattern of a religious life. Prayer is the measure. Prayer molds the
life.
The vague,
indefinite, popular view of religion has no prayer on it. In its
program, prayer is entirely left out or put so low down and made so
insignificant, that it hardly is worth mentioning. Man's standard of
religion has no prayer about it.
It is God's
standard at which we are to aim, not man's. It is not the opinions of
men, not what they say, but what the Scriptures say. Loose notions of
religion grow out of low notions of prayer. Prayerlessness begets loose,
cloudy and indefinite views of what religion is. Aimless living and
prayerlessness go hand in hand. Prayer sets something definite on the
mind. Prayer seeks after something specific.
The more
definite our views as to the nature and need of prayer, the more
definite will be our views of Christian experience and right living, and
the less vague our views of religion. A low standard of religion loves
hard by a low standard of praying.
Everything on a religious life depends upon being definite. The
definiteness of our religious experiences and of our living will depend
upon the definiteness of our views of what religion is and of the thongs
of which it consists.
The
Scriptures ever set before us the one standard of full consecration to
God. This is the divine rule. This is the human side of this standard.
The sacrifice acceptable to God must be a complete one, entire, a whole
burnt offering. This is the measure laid down on God's Word. Nothing
less than this can be pleasing to God. Nothing half-hearted can please
Him.
"A
living sacrifice," holy, and perfect on all its parts, is the
measurement of our service to God. A full renunciation of self, a free
recognition of God's right to us, and a sincere offering of all to Him
this is the divine requirement. Nothing indefinite on that. Nothing is
on that which is governed by the opinions of others or affected by how
men live about us.
And while a
life of prayer is embraced on such a full consecration, at the same time
prayer leads up to the point where a complete consecration is made to
God. Consecration is but the silent expression of prayer. And the
highest religious standard is the measure of prayer and self-dedication
to God The prayer life and the consecrated life are partners on
religion.
They are so
closely allied they are never separated. The prayer life is the direct
fruit of entire consecration to God. Prayer is the natural outflow of a
really consecrated life. The measure of consecration is the measure of
real prayer. No consecration is pleasing to God which is not perfect on
all its parts, just as no burnt offering of a Jew was ever acceptable to
God unless it was a "whole burnt offering."
And a
consecration of this sort, after this divine measurement, has in it as a
basic principle, the business of praying. Consecration is made to God.
Prayer has to do with God. Consecration is putting one's self entirely
at the disposal of God. And God wants and commands all His consecrated
ones; to be praying ones. This is the one definite standard at which we
must aim. Lower than this we cannot afford to seek.
A scriptural
standard of religion includes a clear religious experience. Religion is
nothing if not experiential. Religion appeals to the inner
consciousness. It is an experience if anything at all, and an experience
in addition to a religious life.
There is the
internal part of religion as well as the external. Not only are we to
"work out our salvation with fear and trembling," but "it is God that
worketh in us to will and do of His good pleasure." There is a "good
work in you," as well as a life outside to be lived. The new birth is a
definite Christian experience, proved by infallible marks, appealing to
the inner consciousness.
The witness
of the Spirit is not an indefinite, vague something, but is a definite,
clear inward assurance given by the Holy Spirit that we are the children
of God. In fact everything belonging to religious experience is clear
and definite, bringing conscious joy, peace and love. And this is the
divine standard of religion, a standard attained by earnest, constant
prayer, and a religious experience kept alive and enlarged by the same
means of prayer.
An end to be
gained, to which effort is to be directed, is important in every pursuit
in order to give unity, energy and steadiness to it. In the Christian
life, such an end is all important. Without a high standard before us to
be gained, for which we are earnestly seeking, lassitude will unnerve
effort, and past experience will taint or exhale into mere sentiment, or
be hardened into cold, loveless principle.
We must go
on. "Therefore, leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us
go on unto perfection." The present ground we occupy must be held by
making advances, and all the future must be covered and brightened by
it. In religion, we must not only go on. We must know where we are
going. This is all important. It is essential that in going on in
religious experience, we have something definite in view, and strike out
for that one point.
To ever go
on and not to know to which place we are going, is altogether too vague
and indefinite, and is like a man who starts out on a journey and does
not have any destination in view. It is important that we not lose sight
of the starting point in a religious life, and that we measure the steps
already trod. But it is likewise necessary that the end be kept in view
and that the steps necessary to reach the standard be always in sight. |