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Jesus said, “...I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.” (John 10:10b)

Saturday, December 9, 2006

The Christian's Greatest Enemy


by A. W. Tozer
Article excerpted from Rut, Rot or Revival
East of the Jordan in the territory of Moab, Moses began to expound this law,
saying:

The Lord our God said to us at Horeb, "You have stayed long enough at this
mountain. Break camp and advance into the hill country of the Amorites; go to
all the neighboring peoples in the Arabah, in the mountains, in the western
foothills, in the Negev and along the coast, to the land of the Canaanites and
to Lebanon, as far as the great river, the Euphrates. See, I have given you this
land. Go in and take possession of the land that the Lord swore He would give to
your fathers - to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob - and to their descendants after them."
(Dt. 1:5- 8)

In the Old Testament, the enemy that threatened Israel the most was the
dictatorship of the customary. Israel became accustomed to walking around in
circles and was blissfully content to stay by the safety of the mountain for a
while. To put it another way, it was the psychology of the usual. God finally
broke into the rut they were in and said, "You have been here long enough. It is
time for you to move on."

To put Israel's experience into perspective for our benefit today, we must see
that the mountain represents a spiritual experience for a spiritual state of
affairs. Israel's problem was that they had given up hope of ever getting the
land God had promised them. They had become satisfied with going in circles and
camping in nice, comfortable places. They had come under the spell of the
psychology of the routine. It kept them where they were and prevented them from
getting the riches God had promised them.

If their enemy, the Edomites, would have come after them, the Israelites would
have fought down to the last man and probably would have beaten the Edomites -
Israel would have made progress. Instead they were twiddling their thumbs,
waiting for the customary to keep on being the customary.

What is the worst enemy the church faces today? This is where a lot of unreality
and unconscious hypocrisy enters. Many are ready to say, "The liberals are our
worst enemy." But the simple fact is that the average evangelical church does
not have too much trouble with liberalism. Nobody gets up in our churches and
claims that the first five books of Moses are just myths. Nobody says that the
story of creation is simply religious mythology. Nobody denies that Christ
walked on the water or that He rose from the grave. Nobody gets up in our
churches and claims that Jesus Christ is not the Son of God or that He isn't
coming back again. Nobody denies the validity of the Scriptures. We just cannot
hide behind liberalism and say that it is our worst enemy. We believe that
evangelical Christians are trying to hold on to the truth given to us, the faith
of our fathers, so the liberals are not our worst enemy.

Neither do we have a problem with the government. People in our country can do
just about whatever they please and the government pays no attention. We can
hold prayer meetings all night if we want, and the government would never bother
us or question us. There is no secret police breathing down our backs watching
our every move. We live in a free land, and we ought to thank God every day for
that privilege.

Dictatorship of the Routine

The treacherous enemy facing the church of Jesus Christ today is the
dictatorship of the routine, when the routine becomes "lord" in the life of the
church. Programs are organized and the prevailing conditions are accepted as
normal. Anyone can predict next Sunday's service and what will happen. This
seems to be the most deadly threat in the church today. When we come to the
place where everything can be predicted and nobody expects anything unusual from
God, we are in a rut. The routine dictates, and we can tell not only what will
happen next Sunday, but what will occur next month and, if things do not improve,
what will take place next year. Then we have reached the place where what has
been determines what is, and what is determines what will be.

That would be perfectly all right and proper for a cemetery. Nobody expects a
cemetery to do anything but conform. The greatest conformists in the world today
are those who sleep out in the community cemetery. They do not bother anyone.
They just lie there, and it is perfectly all right for them to do so. You can
predict what everyone will do in the cemetery from the deceased right down to
the people who attend a funeral there. Everyone and everything in a cemetery has
accepted the routine. Nobody expects anything out of those buried in the
cemetery. But the church is not a cemetery and we should expect much from it,
because what has been should not be lord to tell us what is, and what is should
not be ruler to tell us what will be. God's people are supposed to grow.

As long as there is growth, there is an air of unpredictability. Certainly we
cannot predict exactly, but in many churches you just about can. Everybody knows
just what will happen, and this has become our deadliest enemy. We blame the
devil, the "last days" and anything else we can think of, but the greatest enemy
is not outside of us. It is within - it is an attitude of accepting things as
they are. We believe that what was must always determine what will be, and as a
result we are not growing in expectation.

The Progressive Stages

As soon as someone begins talking like this, the Lord's people respond by
getting busy. What I'm talking about, however, is internal. It is a matter of
the soul and mind that ultimately determines our conduct. Let me show you the
progressive stages.

I began with what I call the rote. This is repetition without feeling. If
someday someone would read the Scripture and believe it and would believe what
is sung in the great Christian hymns, there would be a blessed spiritual
revolution underway in a short time. But too many are caught up in the rote,
repeating without feeling, without meaning, without wonder and without any happy
surprises or expectations. In our services God cannot get in because we have it
all fixed up for Him. We say, "Lord, we are going to have it this way. Now
kindly bless our plans." We repeat without feeling, we repeat without meaning,
we sing without wonder, and we listen without surprise. That is my description
of the rote.

We go one step further and come to what I will call the rut, which is bondage to
the rote. When we are unable to see and sense bondage to the rote, we are in rut.
For example, a man may be sick and not even know it. The doctors may have
confided in the man's wife instead, "We don't want to frighten your husband, but
he could drop any minute. He is critically ill, so just expect it any moment."
The man himself does not know he is seriously ill. He goes about his business as
if nothing is wrong. He may play golf or tennis, maybe even go on a hunting trip.
He is sick, and yet he does not know how sick he really is. This may in fact
hasten his end. Not knowing is risky business and full of danger. Spiritually
speaking, the rut is bondage to the rote, and the greatest danger lies in our
inability to sense or feel this bondage.

There is a third word, and I do not particularly like to use it, but the history
of the church is filled with it. The word is rot. The church is afflicted by
drive rot. This is best explained when the psychology of non-expectation takes
over and spiritual rigidity sets in, which is an inability to visualize anything
better, a lack of desire for improvement.

There are many who respond by arguing, "I know lots of evangelical churches that
would like to grow, and they do their best to get the crowds in. They want to
grow and have contest to make their Sunday school larger." That is true, but
they are trying to get people to come and share their rut. They want people to
help them celebrate the rote and finally join in the rot. Because the Holy
Spirit is not given the chance to work in our services, nobody is repenting,
nobody is seeking God, nobody is spending a day in quiet waiting on God with
open Bible seeking to mend his or her ways. Nobody is doing it - we just want
more people. But more people for what? More people to come and repeat our dead
services without feeling, without meaning, without wonder, without surprise?
More people to join us in the bondage to the rote? For the most part, spiritual
rigidity that cannot bend is too weak notice how weak it is.

What Is the Church?

For clarification, what is the church? When I say that a church gets into the
rote and then onto the rut and finely to the rot, what am I talking about?

For one thing, the church is not the building. A church is an assembly of
individuals. There is a lot of meaningless dialogue these days about the church.
It is meaningless because those engaged in the dialogue forget that a church has
no separate existence. The church is not an entity in itself, but rather is
composed of individual persons. It is the same error made about the state.
Politicians sometimes talk about the state as though it were an entity in itself.
Social workers talk about society, but society is people. So is the church. The
church is made up of real people, and when they come together we have the church.
Whatever the people are who make up the church, that is the kind of church it is
- no worse and no better, no wiser, no holier, no more ardent and no more
worshipful. To improve or change the church you must begin with individuals.

When people in the church only point to others for improvement and not to
themselves, it is sure evidence that the church has come to dry rot. It is proof
of three sins: the sin of self-righteousness, the sin of judgment and the sin of
complacency.

When our Lord said, "One of you will betray Me," thank God those disciples had
enough spirituality that nobody said, "Lord, is it he?" Every one of those
disciples said, "Lord, is it I?" If they would not have so responded there could
not have been a Pentecost. But because they were humble enough to point the
finger in their own direction the Holy Spirit fell upon them.

Self-righteousness is terrible among God's people. If we feel that we are what
we ought to be, then we will remain what we are. We will not look for any change
or improvement in our lives. This will quite naturally lead us to judge everyone
by what we are. This is the judgment of which we must be careful. To judge
others by ourselves is to create havoc in the local assembly.

Self-righteousness also leads to complacency. Complacency is a great sin and
covers just about everything I have said about the rote and the rut. Some have
the attitude, "Lord, I'm satisfied with my spiritual condition. I hope one of
these days You'll come, I will be taken up to meet You in the air and I will
rule over five cities." These people cannot rule over their own houses and
families, but they expect to rule over five cities. They pray spottily and
sparsely, rarely attending prayer meeting, but they read their Bibles and expect
to go zooming off into the blue yonder and join the Lord in the triumph of the
victorious saints.

Is Simply Self-Deception

I wonder if we are not fooling ourselves. I wonder if a lot of it is simply self-deception.
I hear the voice of Jesus saying to us, "You have stayed long enough where you
are. Break camp and advance into the hill country." This would be a new
spiritual experience that God has for us. Everything Jesus Christ did for us we
can have in this age. Victorious living, joyous living, holy living, fruitful
living, wondrous, ravishing knowledge of the Triune God - all of this is ours.
Power we never knew before, undreamed of answers to prayer - this is ours. "See,
I have given you this land. Go in and take possession of [it]." The Lord gave it
to you in a covenant. Go take it - it's yours. It was given to Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob and all their seed after. Jesus prayed, "My prayer is not for them alone.
I pray also for those who will believe in Me through their message" (Jn. 17: 20).
That embraces all those who belong to the church of Jesus Christ.

If we call Him Lord, how dare we sit any longer in the rut! The Lord has called
us to move on. But when people are in a rut, not even the angel Gabriel can help
them if they will not come out of it. This is not an accusation but a suggestion.
If you are not in a rut, don't get mad - somebody else is. But if you are in a
rut you ought to get out of it.

The difference between a wooden leg and a good leg is that if you prick a wooden
leg the person would never notice. The difference between a church that has dry
rot and a church that is alive is that if you prick the live church it will
respond. If you prick the other kind, it is already dead. The tree that stands
alive has lush, green leaves. Take a knife, scar the bark deeply and the tree
will bleed. It is alive. The old dead tree just stands there, a watchtower for
old sentinel crows. Take your knife and dig in as far as you want to, and
nothing will happen because the tree is dead.

So it is with my message. If you'll get neither mad nor glad nor sad under my
preaching, I know nothing can be done. But there are some who are alive, and I
believe it is the majority.
- A. W. Tozer
The above article was copied exactly as printed from the book, "Rut, Rot or
Revival: The Condition of the Church," by James L. Snyder and A. W. Tozer. The
book is available for purchase at online bookstores.

TruthForFree.com
As with all things, the reader is encouraged to search the
Scriptures and make his/her own conclusion based on prayer, conscience and study
of the Word of God.

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