Chapter 41—Divine Guidance


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  1. Chapter 41—Divine Guidance
  2. There are three ways in which the Lord reveals His will to us, to
  3. guide us....
  4. God reveals His will to us in His word, the Holy Scriptures.
  5. His voice is also revealed in His providential workings; and it
  6. will be recognized if we do not separate our souls from Him by
  7. walking in our own ways, doing according to our own wills, and
  8. following the promptings of an unsanctified heart, until the senses
  9. have become so confused that eternal things are not discerned, and
  10. the voice of Satan is so disguised that it is accepted as the voice of
  11. God.
  12. Another way in which God’s voice is heard, is through the appeals
  13. of His Holy Spirit, making impressions upon the heart, which
  14. will be wrought out in the character.
  15. If you are in doubt upon any subject, you must first consult the
  16. Scriptures. If you have truly begun the life of faith, you have given
  17. yourself to the Lord, to be wholly His, and He has taken you to
  18. mold and fashion according to His purpose, that you may be a vessel
  19. unto honor. You should have an earnest desire to be pliable in His
  20. hands, and to follow whithersoever He may lead you. You are then
  21. trusting Him to work out His designs, while at the same time you
  22. are co-operating with Him by working out your own salvation with
  23. fear and trembling.—Testimonies for the Church 5:512. [157]
  24. 141
  25. Chapter 42—Silent Working of the Holy Spirit
  26. The Christian’s life is not a modification or improvement of the
  27. old, but a transformation of nature. There is a death to self and sin,
  28. and a new life altogether. This change can be brought about only by
  29. the effectual working of the Holy Spirit.
  30. Nicodemus was still perplexed, and Jesus used the wind to illustrate
  31. His meaning: “The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou
  32. hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and
  33. whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit.”
  34. The wind is heard among the branches of the trees, rustling the
  35. leaves and flowers; yet it is invisible, and no man knows whence it
  36. comes or whither it goes. So with the work of the Holy Spirit upon
  37. the heart. It can no more be explained than can the movements of
  38. the wind. A person may not be able to tell the exact time or place,
  39. or to trace all the circumstances in the process of conversion; but
  40. this does not prove him to be unconverted. By an agency as unseen
  41. as the wind, Christ is constantly working upon the heart. Little by
  42. little, perhaps unconsciously to the receiver, impressions are made
  43. that tend to draw the soul to Christ. These may be received through
  44. meditating upon Him, through reading the Scriptures, or through
  45. hearing the word from the living preacher. Suddenly, as the Spirit
  46. comes with more direct appeal, the soul gladly surrenders itself to
  47. [158] Jesus. By many this is called sudden conversion; but it is the result
  48. of long wooing by the Spirit of God,—a patient, protracted process.
  49. While the wind is itself invisible, it produces effects that are seen
  50. and felt. So the work of the Spirit upon the soul will reveal itself
  51. in every act of him who has felt its saving power. When the Spirit
  52. of God takes possession of the heart, it transforms the life. Sinful
  53. thoughts are put away, evil deeds are renounced; love, humility, and
  54. peace take the place of anger, envy, and strife. Joy takes the place
  55. of sadness, and the countenance reflects the light of heaven. No
  56. one sees the hand that lifts the burden, or beholds the light descend
  57. 142
  58. Silent Working of the Holy Spirit 143
  59. from the courts above. The blessing comes when, by faith, the soul
  60. surrenders itself to God....
  61. It is impossible for finite minds to comprehend the work of
  62. redemption. Its mystery exceeds human knowledge; yet he who
  63. passes from death to life realizes that it is a divine reality. The
  64. beginning of redemption we may know here through a personal
  65. experience. Its results reach through the eternal ages.—The Desire
  66. of Ages, 172, 173.
  67. Evidence of Divine Aid
  68. If you have a sense of need in your soul, if you hunger and thirst
  69. after righteousness, this is an evidence that Christ has wrought upon
  70. your heart in order that He may be sought unto to do for you, through
  71. the endowment of the Holy Spirit, those things which it is impossible
  72. for you to do for yourself.—Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing,
  73. 19. [159]
  74. Chapter 43—The Indwelling Christ
  75. If we are rooted and grounded in love, we shall be “able to
  76. comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and
  77. depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ, which passeth
  78. knowledge.” O precious possibilities and encouragement! In the
  79. human heart cleansed from all moral impurity dwells the precious
  80. Saviour, ennobling, sanctifying the whole nature, and making the
  81. man a temple for the Holy Spirit....
  82. His Response to Our Faith
  83. We are abiding in Christ by a living faith. He is abiding in our
  84. hearts by our individual appropriating of faith. We have the companionship
  85. of the divine presence, and as we realize this presence
  86. our thoughts are brought into captivity to Jesus Christ. Our spiritual
  87. exercises are in accordance with the vividness of our sense of this
  88. companionship. Enoch walked with God in this way; and Christ
  89. is dwelling in our hearts by faith when we will consider what He
  90. is to us, and what a work He has wrought out for us in the plan of
  91. redemption. We shall be most happy in cultivating a sense of this
  92. great gift of God to our world and to us personally.
  93. These thoughts have a controlling power upon the whole character.
  94. I want to impress upon your mind that you may have a divine
  95. companion with you, if you will, always. “And what agreement hath
  96. [160] the temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the living
  97. God; as God hath said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I
  98. will be their God, and they shall be My people.”
  99. Molded by His Love
  100. As the mind dwells upon Christ, the character is molded after
  101. the divine similitude. The thoughts are pervaded with a sense of His
  102. goodness, His love. We contemplate His character, and thus He is in
  103. all our thoughts. His love encloses us. If we gaze even a moment
  104. 144
  105. Indwelling Christ 145
  106. upon the sun in its meridian glory, when we turn away our eyes the
  107. image of the sun will appear in everything upon which we look.
  108. Thus it is when we behold Jesus; everything we look upon reflects
  109. His image, the Sun of Righteousness. We cannot see anything
  110. else, or talk of anything else. His image is imprinted upon the eye
  111. of the soul, and affects every portion of our daily life, softening
  112. and subduing our whole nature. By beholding, we are conformed
  113. to the divine similitude, even the likeness of Christ. To all with
  114. whom we associate we reflect the bright and cheerful beams of His
  115. righteousness. We have become transformed in character; for heart,
  116. soul, mind, are irradiated by the reflection of Him who loved us and
  117. gave Himself for us. Here again there is the realization of a personal,
  118. living influence dwelling in our hearts by faith.
  119. When His words of instruction have been received, and have
  120. taken possession of us, Jesus is to us an abiding presence, controlling
  121. our thoughts and ideas and actions. We are imbued with the
  122. instruction of the greatest teacher the world ever knew. A sense of [161]
  123. human accountability and of human influence, gives character to our
  124. views of life and of daily duties.
  125. Jesus Christ is everything to us,—the first, the last, the best in
  126. everything. Jesus Christ, His Spirit, His character, colors everything;
  127. it is the warp and woof, the very texture of our entire being. The
  128. words of Christ are spirit and life. We cannot, then, center our
  129. thoughts upon self; it is no more we that live, but Christ that liveth
  130. in us, and He is the hope of glory. Self is dead, but Christ is a
  131. living Saviour. Continuing to look unto Jesus, we reflect His image
  132. to all around us. We cannot stop to consider our disappointments,
  133. or even to talk of them; for a more pleasant picture attracts our
  134. sight,—the precious love of Jesus. He dwells in us by the word of
  135. truth.—Testimonies to Ministers, 387-390.
  136. The Pearl of Great Price
  137. We are to give ourselves to Christ, to live a life of willing obedience
  138. to all His requirements. All that we are, all the talents and
  139. capabilities we possess, are the Lord’s to be consecrated to His service.
  140. When we thus give ourselves wholly to Him, Christ, with all
  141. 146 Messages to Young People
  142. the treasures of heaven, gives Himself to us. We obtain the pearl of
  143. [162] great price.—Christ’s Object Lessons, 116.

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