by
Hannah Whitall Smith
(1832-1911)
One of the greatest
obstacles to living unwaveringly this life of entire surrender is the
difficulty of seeing God in everything. People say, "I can easily submit
to things which come from God; but I cannot submit to man, and most of
my trials and crosses come through human instrumentality." Or they say,
"It is all well enough to talk of trusting; but when I commit a matter
to God, man is sure to come in and disarrange it all; and while I have
no difficulty in trusting God, I do see serious difficulties in the way
of trusting men."
This is no imaginary trouble, but it is of vital importance, and if it
cannot be met, does really make the life of faith an impossible and
visionary theory. For nearly everything in life comes to us through
human instrumentalities, and most of our trials are the result of
somebody's failure, or ignorance, or carelessness, or sin. We know God
cannot be the author of these things, and yet unless He is the agent in
the matter, how can we say to Him about it, "Thy will be done"?
Besides, what good is there in trusting our affairs to God, if, after
all, man is to be allowed to come in and disarrange them; and how is it
possible to live by faith, if human agencies, in whom it would be wrong
and foolish to trust, are to have a predominant influence in moulding
our lives?
Moreover, things in which we can see God's hand always have a sweetness
in them which consoles while it wounds. But the trials inflicted by man
are full of bitterness.
What is needed, then, is to see God in everything, and to receive
everything directly from His hands, with no intervention of second
causes. And it is just to this that we must be brought, before we can
know an abiding experience of entire abandonment and perfect trust. Our
abandonment must be to God, not to man, and our trust must be in Him,
not in any arm of flesh, or we shall fail at the first trial.
The question here confronts us at once: But is God in everything, and
have we any warrant from the Scripture for receiving everything from His
hands, without regarding the second causes which may have been
instrumental in bringing it about? I answer to this, unhesitatingly,
Yes. To the children of God everything comes directly from their
Father's hand, no matter who or what may have been the apparent agents.
There are no "second causes" for them.
The whole teaching of
the Bible asserts and implies this:
"Not a sparrow falls to the ground
without our Father." The very hairs of our head are all
numbered. We are not to be careful about anything, because our Father
cares for us.
We
are not to avenge ourselves, because our Father has charged Himself with
our defense.
We are not to fear, for the Lord is on our side. No one can
be against us, because He is for us.
We shall not want, for He is our
Shepherd.
When we pass through the rivers they shall not overflow us,
and when we walk through the fire we shall not be burned, because He
will be with us.
He shuts the mouths of lions, that they cannot hurt us.
"He delivereth and rescueth."
"He changeth the times and the seasons; He
removeth kings and setteth up kings."
A man's heart is in His hand, and,
"as the river of water, He turneth it whithersoever He will."
"He ruleth
over all the kingdoms of the heathen; and in His hand there is power and
might," so that none is able to withstand" Him.
"He ruleth the raging of
the sea; when the waves thereof arise, He stilleth them."
He "bringeth
the counsel of the heathen to nought; He maketh the devices of the
people of none effect."
"Whatsoever the Lord pleaseth, that does He in
heaven, and in earth, in the seas, and all deep places."
"If thou seest the oppression of the poor, and violent perverting of
judgment and justice in a province, marvel not at the matter; for He
that is higher than the highest regardeth; and there be higher than
they."
"Lo, these are a part of His ways; but how little a portion is heard of
Him? But the thunder of His power who can understand?"
"Hast thou not
known, hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the
Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? There
is no searching of His understanding."
"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in
trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and
though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; though the
waters thereof roar and be troubled; though the mountains shake with the
swelling thereof."
"I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my
fortress, my God, in Him will I trust. Surely He shall deliver thee from
the snare of the fowler, and from the noisesome pestilence. He shall
cover thee with His feathers, and under His wings shalt thou trust. His
truth shall be thy shield and buckler. Thou shalt not be afraid for the
terror by night, nor for the arrow that flieth by day, nor for the
pestilence that walketh in darkness, nor for the destruction that
wasteth at noonday. A thousand shall fall at thy side, and ten thousand
at thy right hand; but it shall not come nigh thee."
"Because thou hast
made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the Most High, thy habitation,
there shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy
dwelling. For He shall give His angels charge over thee, to keep thee in
all thy ways."
To my own mind, these Scriptures, and many others like them, settle
forever the question as to the power of second causes in the life of the
children of God. They are all under the control of our Father, and
nothing can touch us except with His knowledge and by His permission. It
may be the sin of man that originates the action, and therefore the
thing itself cannot be said to be the will of God but by the time it
reaches us, it has become God's will for us, and must be accepted as
directly from His hands. No man or company of men, no power in earth or
heaven, can touch that soul which is abiding in Christ, without first
passing through Him, and receiving the seal of His permission. If God be
for us, it matters not who may be against us; nothing can disturb or
harm us, except He shall see that it is best for us, and shall stand
aside to let it pass.
An earthly parent's care for his helpless child is a feeble illustration
of this. If the child is in its father's arms, nothing can touch it
without that father's consent, unless he is too weak to prevent it. And
even if this should be the case, he suffers the harm first in his own
person, before he allows it to reach his child. And if an earthly parent
would thus care for his little helpless one, how much more will our
Heavenly Father, whose love is infinitely greater, and whose strength
and wisdom can never be baffled! I am afraid there are some, even of
God's own children, who scarcely think that He is equal to themselves in
tenderness, and love, and thoughtful care; and who in their secret
thoughts, charge Him with a neglect and indifference of which they would
feel themselves incapable. The truth really is, that His care is
infinitely superior to any possibilities of human care; and that He who
counts the very hairs of our head, and suffers not a sparrow to fall
without Him, takes note of the minutest matters that can affect the
lives of His children, and regulates them all according to His own sweet
will, let their origin be what they may.
The instances of this are numberless. Take Joseph. What could have
seemed more apparently on the face of it to be the result of sin, and
utterly contrary to the will of God, than his being sold into slavery?
And yet Joseph, in speaking of it, said, "As for
you, ye thought evil against me: but God meant it unto good
. . . Now, therefore, be not grieved
nor angry with yourselves, that ye sold me hither, for God did send me
before you to preserve life." To the eye of sense it was surely Joseph's
wicked brethren who had sent him into Egypt; and yet Joseph, looking at
it with the eye of faith, could say, "God sent me."
It had been
undoubtedly a grievous sin in his brethren, but, by the time it had
reached Joseph, it had become God's will for him, and was in truth,
though at first it did not look so, the greatest blessing of his whole
life. And thus we see how the Lord can make even the wrath of man to
praise Him, and how all things, even the sins of others, shall work
together for good to them that love Him.
I learned this lesson practically and experimentally long years before I
knew the scriptural truth concerning it. I was attending a
prayer-meeting held for the promotion of scriptural holiness, when a
strange lady rose to speak, and I looked at her, wondering who she could
be, little thinking she was to bring a message to my soul which would
teach me such a grand lesson. She said she had had great difficulty in
living the life of faith, on account of the second causes that seemed to
her to control nearly everything that concerned her. Her perplexity
became so great, that at last she began to ask God to teach her the
truth about it, whether He really was in everything or not. After
praying this for a few days, she had what she described as a vision. She
thought she was in a perfectly dark place, and that there advanced
towards her from a distance a body of light, which gradually surrounded
and enveloped her and everything around her. As it approached, a voice
seemed to say, "This is the presence of God; this is the presence of
God." While surrounded with this presence, all the great and awful
things in life seemed to pass before her, -- fighting armies, wicked
men, raging beasts, storms and pestilences, sin and suffering of every
kind.
She shrank back at first in terror, but she soon saw that the presence
of God so surrounded and enveloped each one of these, that not a lion
could reach out its paw, nor a bullet fly through the air, except as His
presence moved out of the way to permit it. And she saw that, let there
be ever so thin a sheet, as it were, of this glorious presence between
herself and the most terrible violence, not a hair of her head could be
ruffled, nor anything touch her, unless the presence divided to let the
evil through. Then all the small and annoying things of life passed
before her, and equally she saw that these all were so enveloped in this
presence of God that not a cross look, not a harsh word, nor petty trial
of any kind, could reach her unless His presence moved out of the way to
let them through.
Her difficulty vanished. Her question was answered forever. God was in
everything; and to her henceforth there were no second causes. She saw
that her life came to her day by day and hour by hour directly from His
hand, let the agencies which should seem to control it be what they
might. And never again had she found any difficulty in an abiding
consent to His will and an unwavering trust in His care.
If we look at the seen things, we shall not be able to understand the
secret of this. But the children of God are called to look, "not at the
things which are seen: for the things which are seen are temporal, but
the things which are not seen are eternal." Could we but see with our
bodily eyes His unseen forces surrounding us on every side, we would
walk through this world in an impregnable fortress, which nothing could
ever overthrow or penetrate, for "the angel of the Lord encampeth round
about them that fear Him, and delivereth them."
We have a striking illustration of this in the history of Elisha. The
king of Syria was warring against Israel, but his evil designs were
continually frustrated by the prophet; and at last he sent his army to
the prophet's own city for the express purpose of taking him captive. We
read, "He sent thither horses and chariots and a great host; and they
came by night and compassed the city about." This was the seen thing.
And the servant of the prophet, whose eyes had not yet been opened to
see the unseen things, was alarmed. And we read, "And when the servant
of the man of God was risen early and gone forth, behold an host
compassed the city, both with horses and chariots. And his servant said
unto him, Alas, my master, how shall we do?" But his master could see
the unseen things, and he replied, "Fear not; for they that be with us
are more than they that be with them." And then he prayed, saying,
"Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes that he may see. And the Lord opened
the eyes of the young man, and he saw; and behold, the mountain was full
of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha."
The presence of God is the fortress of His people. Nothing can withstand
it. At His presence the wicked perish; the earth trembles; the hills
melt like wax; the cities are broken down; "the heavens also dropped,
and Sinai itself was moved at the presence of God." And in the secret of
this presence He has promised to hide His people from the pride of man,
and from the strife of tongues. "My presence shall
go with thee," He says, "and I will give
thee rest."
I wish it were only possible to make every Christian see this truth as
plainly as I see it; for I am convinced it is the only clue to a
completely restful life. Nothing else will enable a soul to live only in
the present moment, as we are commanded to do, and to take no thought
for the morrow. Nothing else will take all the risks and "supposes" out
of a Christian's heart, and enable him to say, "Surely goodness and
mercy shall follow me all the days of my life." Abiding in God's
presence, we run no risks; and such a soul can triumphantly say, --
I know not what it is to doubt,
My heart is always gay;
I run no risks, for, come what will,
God always has His way.
God does not order the wrong thing, but He uses it for our blessing;
just as He used the cruelty of Joseph's wicked brethren, and the false
accusations of Pharaoh's wife. In short, this way of seeing our Father
in everything makes life one long thanksgiving, and gives a rest of
heart, and more than that, a gayety of spirit, that is unspeakable.
Someone says, "God's will on earth is always joy, always tranquillity."
And since He must have His own way concerning His children, into what
wonderful green pastures of inward rest, and beside what blessedly still
waters of inward refreshment, is the soul led that learns this secret.
If the will of God is our will, and if He always has His way, then we
always have our way also, and we reign in a perpetual kingdom. He who
sides with God cannot fail to win in every encounter; and whether the
result shall be joy or sorrow, failure or success, death or life, we
may, under all circumstances, join in the apostle's shout of victory,
"Thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ!"
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