A Conference to be Avoided
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Galatians 1:15-16
But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called me by his grace,…
Being taught of God, he did not consult those who were already believers, lest he should seem to have received his religion at second-hand. He did not consult his relatives, who would have advised caution. He did not consult his own interests, which all lay in the opposite direction. These he counted loss for Christ. He did not consult his own safety, but risked life itself for Jesus. In this independent course he was justified, and should be imitated.
I. FAITH NEEDS NO WARRANT BUT THE WILL OF GOD.
1. Good men in all ages have acted upon this conviction. Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Samson, David, Elijah, Daniel, the three who were cast into the furnace, etc.
2. To ask more is virtually to renounce the Lord as our Commander and Guide, and to lift man into his place.
3. To hesitate from self-interest is openly to defy the Lord.
4. To submit the claims of duty to the judgment of the flesh is diametrically opposed to the character and claims of the Lord Jesus, who gave Himself to us, and expects us to give ourselves to Him without question or reserve.
5. To delay duty until we have held such consultation almost always ends in not doing the right thing at all. Too often it is sought after that an excuse may be found for avoiding an unpleasant duty.
II. THE PRINCIPLE HAS A WIDE RANGE OF APPLICATION.
1. To known duties. In service we are not to consult personal liking, ease, honour, prospect of advancement, or remuneration.
2. To needful sacrifices. We had better not confer with flesh and blood; for good men may be self-indulgent, and so consult their own flesh.
3. To special service. We are not to be held back from this by — Considerations of personal weakness; considerations of want of visible means; considerations of how others will interpret our actions.
4. To an open avowal of Christ. We must not be deterred from it by — The wishes of others, who think themselves involved in our act; the dread of contempt from those who deride godliness; the fear of not holding on, and of thus disgracing religion; reluctance to give up the world, and a secret clinging to its ways. This is a very perilous vice. "Remember Lot's wife."
III. THE PRINCIPLE COMMENDS ITSELF OUR BEST JUDGMENT. It is justified by —
1. The judgment which we exercise upon others. We blame them if they have no mind of their own. We applaud them if they are bravely faithful.
2. The judgment of an enlightened conscience.
3. The judgment of a dying bed.
4. The judgment of an eternal world.
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