The New Testament Church is founded on
the Word of God and the principle of Grace. While it is a fundamental truth
that salvation is obtained by grace through faith alone, we often forget that
obedience is expected – is demanded of His children. Andrew
Murray in his book, In the School of Obedience, reminds us of our obligation to
obey. Follow @pastorbarr
"We begin
with Paradise. In Gen. 2:16, we read: ‘And the Lord God commanded the man,
saying.’ And later (3:11), ‘Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded
thee that thou shouldest not eat?’
Note how
obedience to the command is the one virtue of Paradise, the one condition of
man’s abiding there, the one thing his Creator asks of him. Nothing is said of
faith, or humility, or love: obedience includes all. As supreme as is the claim
and authority of God is the demand for obedience as the one thing that is to DECIDE HIS DESTINY.
In the
life of man, to obey is the one thing needful.
Turn now
from the beginning to the close of the Bible. In its last chapter you read (Rev.
22:14), ‘Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have a
right to the tree of life.’ Or, if we accept the Revised Version, which gives
another reading, we have the same thought in chapters 12 and 14, where we read
of the seed of the woman (12:17), ‘which keep the commandments of God, and
hold the testimony of Jesus’; and of the patience of the saints (14:12), ‘Here
are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.’ From
beginning to end, from Paradise lost to Paradise regained, the law is
unchangeable—it is only obedience that gives access to the tree of life and the
favor of God.
And if you
ask how the change was effected out of the disobedience at the beginning that
closed the way to the tree of life, to the obedience at the end that again
gained entrance to it, turn to THAT
WHICH STANDS MIDWAY between the beginning and the end—the cross of
Christ. Read a passage like Rom. 5:19, ‘Through the obedience of the One shall
the many be made righteous’; or Phil. 2:8, ‘He became obedient unto death,
therefore God hath highly exalted Him’; or Heb. 5:8, 9, ‘He learned obedience
and became the Author of salvation to them that obey Him,’ and you
see how the whole redemption of Christ consists in restoring obedience to its
place. The beauty of His salvation consists in this, that He brings us back to
the life of obedience, through which alone the creature can give the Creator
the glory due to Him, or receive the glory of which his Creator desires to make
him partaker.
Paradise,
Calvary, Heaven, all proclaim with one voice:
‘Child of
God! the first and the last thing thy God asks of thee is simple, universal, unchanging
obedience.’"
If you enjoyed today's devotional thought, may we suggest Pastor Jim's book For His Glory: A Kaleidoscope of Wisdom.