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Total Commitment to Christ
By A. W. Tozer
In the first chapter of Colossians we read that Jesus Christ "is the
image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature: for by him
were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth,
visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or
principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him:
and he is before all things, and by him all things consist. And he is the
head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the
dead; that in all things he might have the pre-eminence. For it pleased
the Father that in him should all fullness dwell" (verses 15-19).
Then in Ephesians, the first chapter, Paul says that God's power "wrought
in Christ, when he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right
hand in the heavenly places, far above all principality, and power, and
might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world,
but also in that which is to come: and hath put all things under his feet,
and gave him to be the head over all things to the church, which is his
body, the fullness of him that filleth all in all" (verses 20-23).
Now before we talk about our union with Christ and our conscious and
volitional attachment to Christ in total commitment, we must look at who
Christ is and what His relation is to the redeemed company we call the
church In one of the passages I have read you will find this truth set
forth, which I may imperfectly condense into three words: centrality,
basicality, pre-eminence.
Within the church Jesus Christ the Lord is central. The old writers used
to say that Christ is to the church what the soul is to the body--it is
that which gives it life. Once the soul flees the body there is nothing
that can keep the body alive. When the soul is gone the embalmer takes
over. In the church of Christ--any church anywhere, of any
denomination--as long as Christ is there imparting life, being the life of
that redeemed company, you have a church; for Christ is central in His
church. He holds it together.
Then there is the next word, basicality. Jesus Christ is basic to the
church. He's underneath it--the whole redeemed company rests down upon the
Lord Jesus Christ. I know this sounds like a string of religious clichés,
but I'd like to say it at least in such a tone of voice that the cliché'
element will go out of it and you will hear it as though you are hearing
it for the first time: the whole Church of God rests down upon the
shoulders of His Son. I think we might be able to go around the world and
simply cry "Christ is enough!'' Jesus Christ is enough.
There is a weakness among us in evangelical circles--we put a plus sign
after Christ: Christ plus something else. It is always the pluses that
ruin our spiritual lives personally, and it is always the additions that
weaken the church. God has declared that Christ, His Son, is sufficient.
He is the way, the truth and the life. He is wisdom and righteousness and
sanctification and redemption. He is the wisdom of God and the power of
God and He gathers up in Himself all things and in Him all things consist.
So we do not want Jesus Christ plus something else.
"Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth: for the Lord hath spoken'' And
what He has said is, ''This is my beloved Son: hear him. " So the Lord
Jesus Christ is enough. We of the evangelical faith should not preach
Christ plus science, or Christ plus philosophy, or Christ plus psychology,
or Christ plus education or Christ plus civilization; but Christ alone and
Christ enough. These other things may have their place surd fit in and be
used. But we are not leaning on any of them; we are resting down on Him
who is basic to the
faith of our fathers.
Then there is the word pre-eminent. Christ is pre-eminent He is above all
things and - underneath all things and outside of all things and inside of
all things. As the old bishop said, He is above all things but not pushed
up, and He is beneath all things but not pressed down, and outside of all
things but not excluded and inside but not confined. He its above all,
presiding; and beneath all, upholding; and outside all, embracing and
inside of all, filling. Now our relation to Him is all that really
matters. A true Christian faith is an attachment to the Person of Christ.
The attachment of the individual person o Jesus Christ is intellectual and
volitional and exclusive and irrevocable.
Intellectual Attachment
To follow Christ in complete and total cornmitment means that there must
be an intellectual attachment to Christ. That is, we cannot run on our
feelings or on wisps of poetic notions about Christ. There are a great
many bogus Christs among us these days, and we must show them for what
they are and then point to the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of
the world. John Owen, the old Puritan, warned people in his day: "You have
an imaginary Christ and if you are satisfied with an imaginary Christ you
must be satisfied with imaginary salvation."
In finality there is only one Christ and the truly saved maul has an
attachment to Christ that is intellectual in that he knows who Christ is
theologically. For you know there is the romantic Christ of the female
novelist and there is the sentimental Christ of the half-converted cowboy
and there is the philosophical Christ of the academic egghead and there is
the cozy Christ of the effeminate poet and there is the muscular Christ of
the all-American halfback. But there is only one true Christ, and God has
said that; He is His Son.
I like what they say of Him in the creeds-- that He is God of the
substance of His Father, begotten before all ages; Man of the substance of
His mother, born in the world; perfect God and perfect Man of a reasonable
soul and human flesh subsisting; equal to His Father as touching His
Godhead, less than His Father as touching His manhood; who although He be
God and Man yet He is not two, but one Christ; for as the reasonable soul
and flesh is one man, so God and Man is one Christ. This is the Christ we
adore and we must have this knowledge of Him. That is, we must have the
Christ of Chri~ tian theology and we must have an intellectual attachment
to Christ. We must believe in the Christ of God, that We is what God says
He is.
Volitional Attachment
There is also the volitional attachment to Christ. If I am going to follow
Christ in complete and total commitment I must do it by a continuous act
of my will. A Christian who tries to live on impulse and inspiration, wine
hopes to sail to heaven over the undulating sea of religious feeling, is
making a bad mistake. A man who lives on his feelings is not living very
well and is not going to last very long. The old writers used to tell us
of the dark night of the soul There's a place where a Christian goes
through darkness, where there is heaviness. God isn't going to take us off
to heaven all wrapped in cellophane looking as if we ought to be hanging
on a Christmas tree. God is going to take us there after He has purged us
and disciplined us and dragged us through the fire and has made us strong
and has taught us that faith and feeling are not the same--although faith,
thank God, brings feeling sometimes.
We used to sing, "High heaven that heard my solemn vow, that vow renewed
shall daily hear. " People are afraid of that kind of thing now, but I
believe just as Daniel determined that be would riot eat of the king's
meat and as Jesus set His face like a flint, and just as Paul said "This
one thing I do, " the true follower of Christ must be a man whose will has
been sanctified. He dare not be a will-less man. I never believed that
when we teach the deeper life we should teach that God destroys our will.
But God unites our will with His will and our will becomes strong in His
will, and sometimes as we go on in God we hardly know whether it is our
will
or God' s that is working at a given moment.
Exclusive Attachment
Now I go onto an exclusive attachment. Our attachment to the Per son of
Christ must exclude all that is contrary to Christ. These are the days
when we are trying to be 100 per cent positive. But the Scripture says of
Jesus, "Thou lovest righteousness, and hatest wickedness.'' That was said
of the very Holy Christ Himself, who is higher than the highest heavens
and separate from sinners, If He had to hate in order to love , so do you
and I. To be 100 per cent positive would be as fatal as to inhale steadily
all your life without exhaling. You can't do that.
The human body requires that you inhale to get oxygen and exhale to get
rid of the poison. And so the church of Christ has to inhale and exhale.
When she inhale s she must exhale When the church inhales the Holy Ghost
she must exhale everything that is contrary to Him. I don't believe any
man can love until he's able to hate.
I don't think that any man can love God unless he hates the devil. I don't
think be can love righteousness unless he hates sin; for the Scripture
leaves us with the belief that in order to accept there are some things
you must reject. In order to affirm there are things you have to deny; in
order to say yes you have to be able to say no.
For my part I have long ago come to the conclusion that I can't get along
with everybody. In an effort to please everybody you will succeed in
pleasing nobody. I don't want a watered-down Christianity. I want to be
able to say no. I say no to the devil and no to Khrushchev and no to the
Pope and no to everybody who has anything to say that's contrary to the
Lord whom I adore and to whom I am attached with an intellectual
attachment that is theological and with a volitional attachment that is
final and with an exclusive attachment that would exclude every thing
that's contrary to Christ.
Inclusive Attachment
Then there is the inclusive attachment what do I mean by that? Well,
that's the inhaling, you see. That is all Christ is and does and says and
promises and commands, and all the glories that circle around His head and
all the offices He holds and all the shining beauties and varied facets of
His infinite nature. All that He is and all that He has said and all that
He has promised --I take all that, I include all that. In addition, since
I'm identified with Him, I accept His friends as my friends. I love all
the people of God, and preach to them all--and some of them listen!
You know, the Lord has some odd friends, really. That fellow that goes
down the street with a "Jesus Only" button or a "Jesus Saves" button as
big as a dinner plate, and his hair not combed too well, staring aheacd--if
he belongs to Jesus I'm going to own him. The old bishop said the Lord has
His treasure in earthen vessels and some of the vessels are a bit cracked.
You've got to be willing to own the friends of the Lord wherever they are.
His friends are my friends and His enemies are my enemies. This
''togetherness'' that everybody is talking about-I don't like it. I want
to know what you stand for whom do you love and what do you hate?
A good definition of a Christian is somebody who is back from the dead. T
think that Paul was one of the oddest and strangest and one of the most
glorious of all the Christians that have ever lived, and he gave us a
little text that no contemporary editor would ever accept in a manuscript
without recasting it, "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live . .
." Now how did he gee that way? "I am crucified with Christ." He's dead.
"Nevertheless I live.'' He' s alive. Is he alive or is he dead? "And the
life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God,
who loved me, and gave himself for me. " See Paul contradicting himself
there. And yet within all this contradiction there is the synthesis of a
marvelous and glorious truth: that a Christian is one who was crucified
and is alive, being joined to Jesus Christ as He joined humanity to the
deity in the hypostatic union forever--the eternal God joined to the
nature of man never to be reversed.
So all the members of the Body of Christ joined to His body share in some
measure in that hypostatic union; so that we are united with Him, and when
He died on the cross we died on the cross, and when He rose from the dead
we rose from the dead, and when He went to the right hand of God we went
to the right hand of God with Him. "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek
those things which are above. " And it is written that we "sit . . . in
the heavenly places," which means we are with Him where He is, members of
His great mystic body. How wonderful !
Irrevocable Attachment
Then there is the irrevocable attachment What do I mean by that? I mean
that the Lord doesn't want any experimenters about. Some movie actor wrote
a book one time called Try Jesus. I never read the book. I wouldn't be
caught dead reading it. "Try Jesus." All this experimentation--I don't
believe in it. I believe we ought to be suicide bombers. We ought to tie
our selves in the cockpit and dive on the deck and if we go out;, we go
out. Sink or swim, 'Live or die, irrevocably attached in love and faith
and devotion to Jesus Christ the Lord.
Christians ought to be those who are so totally committed that i tis
final. This weak looking back over your shoulder to see if there isn't
something better-I can't stand it. One time a young man came to an old
saint who taught the deeper life, the crucified life, and said to him,
"Father, what does it mean to be crucified?" The old man thought for a
moment and said, "'Well, to be crucified means three things. First, the
man who is crucified is facing only one direction.'' I like that--facing
only one direction. If he hears anything behind him he can't turn a round
to see what's going on. He has stopped looking back. The crucified man on
the cross is looking in only one direction and that is the direction of
God and Christ and the Holy Ghost and the direction of Biblical revelation
and the direction of world evangelization and the direction of the
edifying of the church, the direction of sanctification and the direction
of the Spirit filled life.
And the old man scratched his scraggly gray hair and said, "One thing
more, son, about a man on a cross--he's not going back. " The fellow going
out to die on the cross doesn't say to his wife, "Good-by, honey, I'11 be
back shortly after five. " When you go out to die on the cross you bid
good-by-you're not going back! If we would preach more of this and stop
trying to make the Christian life so easy it' s contemptible we would have
more converts that would last, Get a man converted who knows that if he
joins Jesus Christ he's finished, and that while he's going to come up and
live anew, as far as this world is concerned he's not going back--then you
have a real Christian indeed.
The old man went on, "Another thing about the man on the cross, son; he
has no further plans of his own.'' I like that. Somebody else made his
plans for him, and when they nailed him up there all his plans
disappeared. On the way up to the hill he didn't see a friend and say,
"Well, Henry, next Saturday about three I'11 come by and we'll go fishing
up on the lake.'' He was going out to die and he had no plans at all.
Oh, what busy-beaver Christians we are with all of our plans, and some of
them, even though they are done in the name of the Lord and evangelical
Christianity, are as carnal as goats!
It is beautiful to say "I am crucified with Christ, " and know that Christ
is making your plans. I tell you, ladies and gentlemen, twenty minutes on
your knees in silence before God will sometimes teach you more than you
can learn out of books and teach you more than you can even learn in
churches. And the Lord will give you your plans, and lay them before you.
If the boards of the churches would only learn to spend more time with God
and less time debating they could save all those midnight meetings where
everybody leans back weary from discussing things. I tell you, you can cut
down your time in debating and discussing if you spend more time waiting
on God. He'll give you the Holy Ghost and He'll give you and teach you His
plans.
Now I think that's all I want to say: We are to be joined to Jesus Christ,
intelligently joined by knowing who He is; we are to be volitionally
joined and not to try to live on our feelings, though thank God there'll
be a lot of feeling going on with it ! And we are to be exclusively
attached, excluding everything that' s contrary to Him; and inclusively
attached, taking in everything that He surrounds Himself with; and
irrevocably attached so we are expendable and are not going back.
Reprinted from Christian Publications, Inc. Booklet. No date. HTML © 1996
Revival Theology Resources. All Rights Reserved. This page may be copied
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