20 Quotes From “The Highest Good”

The Highest GoodSome of my most highlighted books are Oswald Chambers’ books, so The Highest Good was no exception. It was difficult to narrow down, but here are 20 of my favorite quotes from this book. (If you would like to read my book review of The Highest Good, click here).

“If I am a child of God, distress will lead me to Him for direction. The distress comes not because I have done wrong, it is part of the inevitable results of not being at home in the world, of being in contact with those who reason and live from a different standpoint.” 

“Spiritual insight is not for the purpose of making us realize we are better than other people, but in order that our responsibility might be added to.”

“God expects us to be intercessors, not dogmatic fault-finders, but vicarious intercessors, until other lives come up to the same standard.” 

“In times of prosperity we are apt to forget God, we imagine it does not matter whether we recognize Him or not. As long as we are comfortably clothed and fed and looked after, our civilization becomes an elaborate means of ignoring God. … But remember God’s blessing may mean God’s blasting. If God is going to bless me, He must condemn and blast out of my being what He cannot bless. ‘Our God is a consuming fire.’ When we ask God to bless, we sometimes pray terrible havoc upon the things that are not of God. God will shake all that can be shaken, and He is doing it just now.”

“God intends our attention to be arrested, He does not arrest it for us. … We are apt to pay more attention to our newspaper than to God’s Book, and spiritual leakage begins because we do not make the effort to lift up our eyes to God.” 

“The majority of us do not enthrone God, we enthrone common-sense. We make our decisions and then ask the real God to bless our god’s decision.”

“When I wish I was somewhere else I am not doing my duty to God where I am.” 

“Let us not be so careful as to how we offend or please human ears, but let us never offend God’s ears.”

“We have not only lost Jesus Christ’s idea of righteousness, but we laugh at the Bible idea of righteousness; our god is the conventional righteousness of the society to which we belong.” 

“It is so absurd to put our Lord as Teacher first, He is not first a Teacher, He is a Savior first. He did not come to give us a new code of morals: He came to enable us to keep a moral code we had not been able to fulfill. … If He is a Teacher only, then He is a most cruel Teacher, for He puts ideals before us that blanch us white to the lips and lead us to a hell of despair. But if He came to do something else as well as teach—if He came to re-make us on the inside and put within us His own disposition of unsullied holiness, then we can understand why He taught like He did.”

“The only way to get out of our smiling complacency about salvation and sanctification is to look at Jesus Christ for two minutes and then read Matthew 5:43-48 and see Who He tells us we are to be like, God Almighty, and every piece of smiling spiritual conceit will be knocked out of us for ever, and the one dominant note of the life will be Jesus Christ first, Jesus Christ second, and Jesus Christ third, and our own whiteness nowhere. Never look to your own whiteness; look to Jesus and get power to live as He wants; look away for one second and all goes wrong.”

“For the past three hundred years men have been pointing out how similar Jesus Christ’s teachings are to other good teachings. We have to remember that Christianity, if it is not a  supernatural miracle, is a sham.”

“The point is that Jesus saw life from God’s standpoint, and we don’t. We won’t accept the responsibility of life as God gives it to us, we only accept responsibility as we wish to take it, and the responsibility we wish to take is to save our own skins, make comfortable positions for ourselves and those we are related to, exert ourselves a little to keep ourselves clean and vigorous and upright; but when it comes to following out what Jesus says, His sayings are nothing but jargon. We name the Name of Christ but we are not based on His one issue of life, and Jesus says, ‘What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world’—and he can easily do it—‘and lose his own soul.’” 

“It is remarkable how little Jesus directed His speech against carnal and public sins, though He showed plenty of prophetic indignation against the sins of a wholly different class, He preached His grandest sermon to a bad, ignorant woman (John 4:10-14), and one of His most prominent disciples was a publican named Matthew. The one man He ever said He wanted to stay with was another publican called Zaccheus, and some of the most fathomless things He said were in connection with a notoriously bad woman (Luke 7:36-50). … Jesus aroused the conscience of the very worst of them by presenting the highest good.”

“Ask yourself, then, what is it that awakens indignation in your heart? Is it the same kind of thing that awakened indignation in Jesus Christ? The thing that awakens indignation in us is the thing that upsets our present state of comfort and society. The thing that made Jesus Christ blaze was pride that defied God and prevented Him from having His right with human hearts.” 

“If we know that we have received the unmerited favor of God and we do not give unmerited favor to other people, we are damned in that degree.”

“‘If ye then, being evil…’ (Luke 11:13). Jesus Christ is made to teach the opposite of this by modern teachers; they make out that He taught the goodness of human nature. Jesus Christ revealed that men were evil, and that He came that He might plant in them the very nature that was in Himself. He cannot, however, begin to do this until a man recognizes himself as Jesus sees him.” 

“The holiest person is not the one who is not conscious of sin, but the one is more conscious of what sin is. … The purer we are through God’s sovereign grace, the more terribly poignant is our sense of sin. … Sin destroys the capacity of knowing what sin is. … We shall find over and over again that God will send us shuddering to our knees every time we realize what sin is, and instead of increasing hardness in us towards the men and women who are living in sin, the Spirit of God will use it as a means of bringing us to the dust before Him in vicarious intercession that God will save them as He has saved us.”

“‘God is able to make all grace abound toward you.’ Have you been saying, ‘I cannot expect God to do that for me’? Why cannot you? Is God Almighty impoverished by your circumstances? Is His hand shortened that it cannot save? Are your particular circumstances so peculiar, so remote from the circumstances of every son and daughter of Adam, that the Atonement and the grace of God are not sufficient for you? Immediately we ask ourselves these things, we get shaken out of our sulks into a simple trust in God. When we have the simple, childlike trust in God that Jesus exhibited, the overflowing grace of God will have no limits, and we must set no limits to is.” 

“The love of God rakes the very bottom of hell, and from the depths of sin and suffering brings sons and daughters to God.”

The Ragamuffin Gospel (book review)

Ragamuffin GospelThe Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning was originally published 15 years ago, but its message to us is just as needed—maybe even more needed—today! The subtitle nails the essence of this book: Good news for the bedraggled, beat-up and burnt-out. Indeed it is.

Without realizing it, Manning’s ragamuffin message has impacted much of my thinking for the past decade. Ever since I started working in a church, I have been more acutely aware of how many people feel like their beat-up, burnt-out status somehow disqualifies them for God’s grace. The message they’ve heard is, “Get your act together, and then get yourself to God for help.” As a result our societies are filled with the de-churched, and our churches are only left with those who think they have their acts together.

Manning’s message is such a refreshing wake-up call! He speaks to those bedraggled de-churched people to assure them Jesus wants them just as they are. He came to meet with the messed-up and burnt-out, to show them Abba God’s love. Manning also confronts the pharisaical view of far too many Christians who truly think God only helps those who help themselves, and who want people to make themselves worthy of God’s grace.

This book was like a breath of fresh air. It clarified my frustrations with churchy people, and it renewed my passion for all the bedraggled, beat-up, and burnt-out to know the amazing, unconditional, unmerited, awe-inspiring grace of a All-Loving God!

I am a Random House book reviewer.

Small Beginnings

Small beginnings“Hey, Pete,” I asked, “How’s the new workout routine going?”

“Well,” said Pete a little sheepishly, “It’s not.”

“What do you mean?”

“I wanted to be able to run that 5k charity run next spring, but I can hardly make it around the block. How in the world am I ever going to run 5 kilometers?! So I just threw in the towel.”

If Pete has never run before, it’s a bit unrealistic for him to complete a 5k on his first day lacing up his running shoes, don’t you think? But far too often we throw in the towel before we even get started! 

How about someone’s pursuit of God? God is so vast, so majestic, so awesome. And then we hear words from Jesus telling us, “Be perfect just as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). Just like Pete we think, “How am I ever going to do that?!” and we throw in the towel before we even start.

But God already started something when He created you. What God creates, He completes; and what He completes, He completes perfectly.

The prophet Zechariah said, “Do not despise small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin” (Zechariah 4:10).

The psalmist wrote, “Your hands formed me and made me; give me understanding to learn Your commands” (Psalm 119:73). There is just one Hebrew word for “Your hands” and it also happens to be the name of that section in Psalm 119: Yodh.

Yodh has a corresponding Greek word: Iota. This word shows up in Matthew 5:18 when Jesus says, “Not one iota of God’s Word will ever be wasted.”

God created you perfectly and on purpose. What He created, He wants to see completed perfectly too. He will do this through His Word working in you. The question is: Will you get started? The Hebrew letter yodh is the smallest of the Hebrew letters, but don’t despise its small beginning. Don’t despise the work God started in you either. So what if you can’t run a spiritual 5k yet … you can grow into that maturity by letting God’s Word work on you right now, right where you are.

Will you let God get started today?

If you have missed any of the messages in our P119 series, you can access them all by clicking here.

The Preacher’s Power

Andrew Murray“There are many who think they must only preach the Word, and that the Spirit will make the Word fruitful. They do not understand that it is the Spirit, in and through the preacher, who will bring the Word to the heart of the listeners. I must not be satisfied with praying to God to bless through the operation of His Spirit the Word that I preach. The Lord wants me to be filled with the Spirit; then I will speak as I should and my preaching will be in the manifestation of the Spirit and power.

—Andrew Murray

Thursdays With Oswald—The Will Of God

This is a weekly series with things I’m reading and pondering from Oswald Chambers. You can read the original seed thought here, or type “Thursdays With Oswald” in the search box to read more entries.

Oswald Chambers

The Will Of God 

     Supernatural voices, dreams, ecstasies, visions and manifestations, may or may not be an indication of the will of God. The words of Scripture, the advice of the saints, strong impressions during prayer, may or may not be an indication of the will of God.

     The one test given in the Bible is discernment of a personal God and a personal relationship to Him, witnessed to ever after in walk and conversation. 

From Christian Disciplines

The will of God may or may not come to you in a thundering voice or even in a still, small impression in your heart. But the way you walk and talk will absolutely attest to what you believe the will of God is. The way you walk and talk witnesses to what you believe.

So when you look at you, do you see God’s will on display?

Porn Is Hunting Your Kids

I’m a techy guy: I love every time I can integrate a new gadget into my daily routine. I’m also a learner: I love the almost immediate access I can get to dictionaries, encyclopedias, histories, biographies, books and other study materials online.

But there is a huge danger lurking in all of this technology—PORNOGRAPHY.

Check out this infographic that Best Counseling Degrees put together…

Teens Online Infographic

Click for a larger view

Here’s the important thing to remember for anyone on the web, but especially for those of us who are parents: Pornographers are hunting for your kids. Porn is not passively waiting for someone to find it. The pornographers are finding more and more aggressive ways to get your kids hooked on their intoxicating drug.

One of the most heart-wrenching statistics I’ve heard recently comes from Josh McDowell, who reports how many people who are now addicted to porn, saw it accidentally for the first time. In other words, they weren’t looking for porn, but porn was looking for them!

Parents, we must confront this atrocity head-on:

  • Talk to your kids. Now! If they know how to get on the internet, they’re old enough to hear about what porn is and why they must avoid it.
  • Check out the helpful resources that Josh McDowell offers at Just One Click Away, or the resources at uknowkids.com.
  • Install a monitoring application on all your web-enabled devices. I like to use X3 Watch.
  • Set limits on how much online time is acceptable, and establish a time each night when all electronic are turned off (this goes for you too, Mom and Dad!).

The Bible says that the devil prowls around like a lion. One of the places he stalks freely is the online digital world. Parents, watch out and keep your kids safe!

The Highest Good (book review)

The Highest GoodThe Highest Good is a collection of three books by Oswald Chambers: The Highest Good, The Pilgrim’s Song Book, and Thy Great Redemption

The Pilgrim’s Song Book is made up of Chambers’ commentary and insight on the ascension psalms (Psalms 120-128). This is an encouraging study that leads the reader higher and higher into God’s presence, just as the pilgrims climbed the roads to the heights of Jerusalem for the annual worship feasts. 

In The Highest Good portion of this collection, I felt like having arrived in “Jerusalem,” I was now receiving a series of thoughtful teachings on Christian ethics which were preparing me for my descent back into my every-day life. 

Finally in Thy Great Redemption I am getting ongoing refresher courses on the reality that the redemption of Jesus Christ should make in my life. As Chambers said, “Everything that has been touched by sin and the devil has been redeemed; we are to live in the world immovably banked on that faith.” 

As always, the insight of Oswald Chambers is like a graduate level class in theology, philosophy, and ethics. Very few authors expand my biblical paradigm and challenge me to go deeper into God’s Word, so I always highly recommend any Chambers book on which you can get your hands. 

Oxymoron

John of the CrossNo, an oxymoron is not the big oaf sitting next to you! An oxymoron is a literary term where two seemingly contradictory things are put together to make a new item. For instance, jumbo shrimp isn’t something that is big smallness, but a tasty seafood dish. A girl who is awfully pretty isn’t a beautiful jerk, but someone remarkably cute.

I love the oxymoron that appears in the section of Psalm 119 called Tethgood pain. In just eight verses the word good appears six times, right alongside the word afflicted, which appears twice.

How in the world can pain be good?!?

To be sure there is bad pain, but where does good pain come in? Bad pain is the pain that sends you to the doctor, perhaps the pain that means you need to have surgery. There is still pain after the surgery, but that’s a good pain because it reminds you that what was wrong has been fixed. But if what was wrong has now been fixed, wouldn’t we say that the initial pain was really good pain all along?

That’s what the writer of the 119th Psalm thought. He said, “It was good for me to be afflicted so that I might learn Your decrees” (v. 71). Do you see the good pain there? How about in verse 67: “Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I obey Your Word.”

A 16th-century monk named John of the Cross described good pain this way—

“Thou hast wounded me, oh, hand Divine, in order to heal me, and Thou hast slain in me that which would have slain me but for the life of God wherein now I see that I live.” (emphasis added)

We’re really good at dulling physical pain with aspirin, Motrin and Tylenol. We try to chase away emotional pain with anti-depressants. And, to our own harm, we try to excuse or mask our spiritual pain too. But that spiritual pain is GOOD pain … if we will listen to it.

The psalmist knew good pain that came from the Holy Spirit’s illumination of God’s Word was something to pay attention to and obey quickly. The writer of Hebrews knew it too—

For the Word that God speaks is alive and full of power, making it active, operative, energizing, and effective; it is sharper than any two-edged sword, penetrating to the dividing line of the breath of life (soul) and the immortal spirit, and of joints and marrow of the deepest parts of our nature, exposing and sifting and analyzing and judging the very thoughts and purposes of the heart. (Hebrews 4:12, Amplified Bible)

Don’t ignore that spiritual pain. It’s good pain for those who will listen.

If you have missed any of the messages in our P119 series, you can access them all by clicking here.

Give An Account

Bob Klingenberg

Bob Klingenberg

Pastor, let this sink in…

“Someday I will stand before The Word to give an account for every word I’ve preached.” —Rev. Bob Klingenberg

How does that make you feel?

It makes me realize how much more I need the Holy Spirit’s help in my study time! And I pray this prayer from Oswald Chambers almost weekly before I deliver the message God has laid on my heart—

In my preaching, cause Thy glorious voice to be heard, Thy lovely face to be seen, Thy pervasive Spirit felt. 

 

Happy Birthday, America

Happy Birthday America“We cannot there do a more faithful or important service for our country than to pray fervently and perseveringly to the Father of mercies, that He would by the energy of the Holy Ghost, form the hearts of this people to an holy life, and thus ‘Purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.’”

—Samuel Wales