by T. Austin-Sparks
Beloved of our Lord,
So we constantly address you. And this is no formal designation. It
is the address of the Holy Spirit.
To many this fervent hearted New Testament speech may have become a
dead language; but this is the case with all scripture when the
letter has supplanted the vital experience of the spirit. To those
who live because they hear the voice of the Son of God, this
"beloved" has the music of God's truth in it.
To love, and to be loved: this is the compass of life in God. "We
love Him, because He first loved us." This is the wondrous fruit of
Calvary's wooing. "He loved me, and gave Himself for me"
declares Paul. Faith dares to interpret and to bring that Infinite
Heart down to the personal, individual life. This is also the
supreme goal of spiritual knowledge, namely, - in those paradoxical
words of grace - "to know the knowledge-surpassing love of Christ";
for it is beyond all knowledge, yet shall we know it, as we do now
in part.
But it's this blessed inner and essential "me" we need to
know as the especial object of the Divine Love: "He loved me." For
the love of Christ is that foreknowing, elective, eternal, yet
discriminating and personal love of the Good Shepherd that has
singled me out for His Desire: "He calleth His own sheep by
name."
And when our faith can accept this mentally incredible fact, we are
perfected in love, and all fear is cast out: we have boldness for
the day of judgment. The Blood in the Throne is speaking its
Covenant Love in our hearts. Every disciple then becomes "that
disciple whom Jesus loved," for the Bosom upon which he rested has
become Infinite, and we all have place there. "Behold, what
love!" exclaims this same disciple, "the Father hath bestowed upon
us." And what provokes this further astonishment of faith? It is
that we share the Life of the Only-Begotten in the "new birth." We
are His very own whom He has purchased with His blood for a
"peculiar possession." And we are the Father's gift to the Son - the
gift of Love Universal to Love Particular. Let him that readeth
understand.
For while we may never forget that wide embracing love of God that
includes "a world of sinners lost and ruined by the Fall," there is
for those who have believed that Jesus came forth out from God, who
have through their deep repentance and sorrow of grace come unto Him
Who calls them from His Cross, yea, they who are no longer of this
world, but as He is so are they in it, - there is for them, so
witnesses the Holy Ghost, a love in God as between the Father and
the Son. "The Father Himself loveth you." And, again, "That the love
wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in them and I in them."
So "Beloved of God" is no exaggeration of religious ecstasy, but the
sober speech of believing hearts. "Herein is love." The devil would have us doubt this or pass it by as something unreal
and ecstatic, some cloud of deluded dreaming, or else something it
is not now lawful for us to gaze upon. But the truth is sealed in
ransoming blood. He loves me. Take it to your heart.
One would press the balm home to bruised and torn souls. Some maybe
who are seeking rest at this time, and finding none, because there
is no rest within. Are you in danger of forgetting or disbelieving
God's personal love for you? Have service, obligation, or even
truth, as impersonal and doctrinal truth, so crowded in upon your
mind, that you are cumbered in heart, jaded and lean as to this
vital treasure of grace, - God's love? Have you forgotten that He
loves you, and wants you to rest in that, and to give Him
love in return that shall be the unfailing spring of all service?
Will you not therefore sit in His Presence this holiday-time and
with great delight realise His Banner, His very Protection over you,
is love?
Beloved, let us think of His love once again. This is a month
of rest for many a Christian worker. The tired and the weary are
seeking quiet places. Oh, is there not a place of the deepest and
quietest rest, rest of heart, where the fury of the oppressor cannot
touch the warrior of the Cross? It is to allow Him, Who, alas, is so
often the Divine Stranger even to His own, to pour in His Oil and
His Wine, even the Love of God poured forth in our hearts by His
Spirit. We have ministered to Him throughout the year, it may have
been feebly and very imperfectly. He would also minister to us.
Yours in the Love of the Paraclete,
T. Austin-Sparks
T. Madoc-Jeffreys.
In keeping with T. Austin-Sparks' wishes that what was freely received should be freely given and not sold for profit, and that his messages be reproduced word for word, we ask if you choose to share these messages with others, to please respect his wishes and offer them freely - free of any changes, free of any charge (except necessary distribution costs) and with this statement included.