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The Snare of Service
By A. W. Pink
The main business and the principal concern of the
Christian should be that of thanking, praising and adoring that
blessed One who has saved him with an everlasting salvation, and
who, to secure that salvation, left Heaven’s glory and came
down to this sin-cursed earth, here to suffer and die the awful
death of the cross, that His people might be “delivered from
this present evil world” (Gal.1:4). “Praise is comely
for the upright” (Psa.33:1). But to see the upright praising
God is something which Satan cannot endure, and he will employ every
art and device to turn aside the happy Christian from such blissful
occupation.
Our great enemy is very, very subtil in the methods
and means he uses. He cares not what the object may be as long as
it serves to engross the believer and hinder his giving to Christ
that consideration (Heb.3:l) and adoration (Rev. 5:12) which are
His due. Satan’s aim is gained if he can occupy the believer
with perishing sinners rather than the Lord of glory. The tactics
which the devil uses with the saints are the same he uses so successfully
with the unsaved. What is the chief thing he employs to shut out
Christ from the vision of the lost (2 Cor.4:4)? Is it not getting
them occupied with their own deeds and doings? Assuredly it is.
In like manner he deals with God’s people: he seeks to get
them engaged in “service” as a substitute for communing
with Christ. It is the dragon posing as an angel of light, stirring
up the feverish nature and restless energy of the flesh, to find
some outlet that appears to be pleasing to God.
Above we have said that the great aim and chief exercise
of the Christian should be that of worshiping and adoring his blessed
and wondrous Savior, which is, really, heaven begun on earth. Yet,
let it be pointed out, this ought not to terminate at the lips,
our very lives ought to show forth His praise (1 Pet. 2:9), our
daily walk ought to be pleasing and honoring unto Him (1 Cor. 10:31),
our every act needs to be brought into conformity to His holy will
(Prov.3:6). To these statements many, perhaps all, Christians will
assent. But do they perceive what is necessarily involved? We fear
not. It involves a life’s task. And what is that? This: a
constant searching of the Scriptures with a prayerful and earnest
desire to find out what is pleasing to Him, a holy determination
to discover the details of His revealed mind. This is the service
to which God has called each of His people: to serve Him, to take
His yoke upon them, to submit to His rule over them, to be in all
things in subjection to His holy will. But, we say again, the learning
of what His will really is, in all its fullness, is a life’s
task which requires and calls for the utmost attention in the cultivation
of our own soul’s garden. “Exercise thyself unto godliness”
(1 Tim. 4:7). “Take heed unto thyself” (1 Tim. 4:16).
“Keep thyself pure” (1 Tim.5:22). “Study to show
thyself approved unto God” (2 Tim. 2:15). These are some of
the exhortations of Holy Writ which much need to be taken to heart
by God’s dear people in these hustling, bustling days. But,
alas, they are unheeded by many.
And what is one of the chief causes of hindrance?
What is it that in these times so often prevents the child of God
from “taking heed” unto himself? This: he is far to
much engrossed in attempting to “take heed” for others.
The woman who has spent much of the day in attending to domestic
duties, the man who has been toiling for his daily bread, instead
of spending the evening quietly in spiritual devotions, prayerfully
studying God’s Word, giving “attendance to reading”
(1 Tim. 4:13), and thus feeding his soul, removing the world’s
stains acquired through the day, and conversing with his family
upon the things of God, has a round of religious meetings which
he must attend, numerous church duties which he must perform. So
it is with many on the holy Sabbath. Instead of that being, as God
has designed, chiefly a day of rest, only too often it becomes the
busiest of the whole week. No wonder that so many are little better
than nervous wrecks! And all because of departing from God’s
arrangements.
It is greatly to be feared that when the saints shall
stand before the judgment-seat of Christ that everyone may receive
the things done in the body” (2 Cor. 5:10) that many of the
redeemed will have to make the sad lament, “they made me keeper
of the vineyards; mine own vineyard have I not kept” (Song
of Sol. 1:6). Note carefully the first word, it is not, “He
made me keeper of the vineyards.” No, His yoke is “easy”
and His burden is “light” (Matt. 11:30); but “they.”
Ah, it is the Egyptian taskmasters who spur on the people of God
to engage in works in which the Lord has never called them to do.
Martha is not alone in being “cumbered” (weighted down)
with “much serving” (Luke 10:40).
The witness of our lives is far more weighty than
that of our lips. If we spent more time in secret communion with
Christ, people would take knowledge of us that we had “been
with Jesus” (Acts 4:13). If we were more diligent and painstaking
to find out and to put into practice the precepts and commands which
God has recorded in His Word for the regulation of our lives; if,
in consequence, we were really walking with Him, filled with that
peace which passeth all understanding, rejoicing in the Lord; then
instead of our going to the people and pressing upon all and sundry
the precious things of Christ—thus disobeying Him who has
bidden His disciples, “Give not that which is holy unto the
dogs” (Matthew 7:6) —some, at least, would come to us
and ask “a reason of the hope” that is “in us”
(1 Pet. 3:15).
But, as we have said above, the restless energy of
the flesh longs to find some outlet, and our hearts are only too
eagerly inclined to substitute service toward others for personal
dealing with God for ourselves. It calls for less exercise of soul
to memorize a few texts for the purpose of quoting them to someone
else than it does to measure myself by the Scriptures, confess my
sad failures and beg God to write His Word upon my heart. Ah, it
is a comforting sop for our conscience to persuade ourselves that,
though our walk is so far from being what it should be, yet we can
“do our duty” in warning the wicked, or engage in some
form of “Christian service.” Yes, and Satan will whisper
in our ears, ‘You have been faithful there,’ and instead
of being humbled and chastened before God for our miserable failures
to live to Christ, our evil hearts are puffed up by the devil’s
flatteries that we have, at least, faithfully preached Christ.
Let not the reader conclude from what has been said
that the writer is opposed to either public worship or the Christian’s
being engaged in any good works for the benefit of others. Not so,
though we would earnestly warn against any attempt to worship with
those who are not walking with God, or engaging in works which are
not really glorifying to Him. Our main design has simply been to
show the need of putting first things first.
Our first great need is not seeking to minister to
others, but ourselves being ministered unto by the Lord. Our highest
privilege is not that of being engaged in service for Christ, but
of enjoying daily communion with Him. Our first obligation is not
that of being concerned over the welfare of our neighbors, but making
our own calling and election sure. Our first great task is not to
serve our fellowmen, but to serve our God by studying His Word,
learning His will, and then doing it. Our first circle of responsibility
is not towards strangers and distant acquaintances, but our own
home. Our chief ambition should not be the proclamation of Christ
with our lips, but the preaching of Him by our lives.
If we have not learned to worship God in the secret
place, we cannot do so in public assembly. If we are not ourselves
really following Christ, walking and communing with Him, it is but
mockery to speak of Him to others. If we preach Him in words but
deny Him in our works, then we are only a stumblingblock to those
who hear us. If our “service” for Christ is robbing
us of the time so urgently needed for the cultivation of our personal
“vineyard,” then it is a snare and a curse to us. Then
“take heed unto thyself,” “lay aside” every
weight (Heb. 12:1) which hinders you from running the race which
God “has set before” us. As a well known hymn says,
“Take time to be holy,” or, better still, as a Scripture
says, “The kingdom of God is... righteousness, and peace,
and joy in the Holy Spirit. For he that in these things serveth
Christ is acceptable to God, and approved of men” (Rom. 14:17,18).
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