Thu. Nov 21st, 2024

Many people admit that it is a sacred duty and a blessed
privilege to abide in Christ but shrink back continually before the
question: Is a life of unbroken fellowship with the Savior truly
possible?

Eminent Christians, to whom special opportunities of
cultivating this grace have been granted, may attain to it; but for the
large majority of disciples, whose lives, by divine appointment, are so
fully occupied with the affairs of this life, it can scarce be expected.

The more such disciples hear of this life, the deeper
their sense of its glory and blessedness, and there is nothing they
would not sacrifice to be made partakers of it. But they are too weak,
too unfaithful—they never can attain to it.

Dear souls! If they only knew that abiding in Christ is
meant for the weak and beautifully suited to their feebleness! It is not
the doing of some great thing and does not demand that we first lead a
very holy and devoted life.

No, it is simply weakness entrusting itself to a Mighty
One to be kept—the unfaithful one casting self on One who is altogether
trustworthy and true. Abiding in Him is not a work that we have to do as
the condition for enjoying His salvation but a consenting to let Him do
all—for us and in us and through us.

It is a work He does for us, the fruit and the power of
His redeeming love. Our part is simply to yield, to trust and to wait
for what He has engaged to perform.

It is this quiet expectation and confidence, resting on
the word of Christ that in Him there is an abiding place prepared, which
is so sadly wanting among Christians. They scarcely take the time or
the trouble to realize that when He says “Abide in Me,” He offers
Himself, the Keeper of Israel that slumbers not nor sleeps—with all His
power and love—as the living home of the soul, where the mighty
influences of His grace will be stronger to keep than all their
feebleness to lead astray.

The idea they have of grace is this—that their conversion
and pardon are God’s work, but that now, in gratitude to God, it is
their work to live as Christians and follow Jesus. There is always the
thought of a work that has to be done, and even though they pray for
help, still the work is theirs.

They fail continually and become hopeless; and the
despondency only increases the helplessness. No, wandering one; as it
was Jesus who drew you when He said, “Come,” so it is Jesus who keeps
you when He says, “Abide.” The grace to come and the grace to abide are
both from Him alone.

Believe the One Who Loves You

Abide in Me”: These words are no law of Moses, demanding
from the sinful what they cannot perform. They are the command of love,
which is ever only a promise in a different shape. Think of this until
all feeling of burden and fear and despair pass away, and the first
thought that comes as you hear of abiding in Jesus is one of bright and
joyous hope: It is for me; I know I shall enjoy it.

You are not under the law, but under grace. Therefore,
believe what Christ will do for you. And if the question is asked, “But
surely there is something for us to do?” the answer is, “Our doing and
working are simply the fruit of Christ’s work in us.”

It is when the soul becomes utterly passive, looking and
resting on what Christ is to do, that its energies are stirred to their
highest activity and that we work most effectually—because we know that
He works in us. It is as we see in that word “in Me” the mighty energies
of love reaching out after us to have us and hold us that all the
strength of our will is roused to abide in Him.

This connection between Christ’s work and our work is
beautifully expressed in the words of Paul: “I follow after, if that I
may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus”
(Phil. 3:12, KJV). It was because he knew that the mighty and the
faithful One had grasped him with the glorious purpose of making him one
with Himself that he did his utmost to grasp the glorious prize.

Paul’s expression and its application to the Christian
life can be best understood if we think of a father helping his child to
mount the side of some steep precipice. The father stands above and
takes the son by the hand to help him on. He points him to the spot on
which he will help him to plant his feet.

The leap would be too high and dangerous for the child
alone; but the father’s hand is his trust, and he leaps to get hold of
the point for which his father has taken hold of him. It is the father’s
strength that secures him and lifts him up, and so urges him to use his
utmost strength.

Such is the relation between Christ and you, oh weak and
trembling believer! Fix first your eyes on the purpose for which He has
apprehended you. It is nothing less than a life of abiding, unbroken
fellowship with Himself to which He is seeking to lift you up.

All that you have already received—pardon and peace, the
Spirit and His grace—are but preliminary to this. And all that you see
promised to you in the future—holiness and fruitfulness and glory
everlasting—are but its natural outcome.

Intimate Fellowship

Union with Himself, and so with the Father, is Christ’s
highest object. Fix your eye on this, and gaze until it stands out
before you clear and unmistakable: Christ’s aim is to have me abide in
Him.

And then let the second thought enter your heart: For this
I am apprehended of Christ. His almighty power has laid hold on me and
offers now to lift me up to where He would have me.

And as you think of the spot to which He points—the
blessed purpose for which He apprehended you—and keep your gaze fixed on
Him, holding you and waiting to lift you up, take the upward step, and
rise to enter upon this blessed life of abiding in Christ. Begin at
once, and say, “Oh my Jesus, if You bid me, and if You undertake to lift
and keep me there, I will venture. Trembling, but trusting, I will say:
‘Jesus, I do abide in You.’”

Go and take time alone with Jesus, and say this to Him. I
dare not speak to you about abiding in Him for the mere sake of calling
forth a pleasing religious sentiment. God’s truth must at once be acted
on.

Yield yourself this very day to the blessed Savior in the
surrender of the one thing He asks of you: Give up yourself to abide in
Him. He will work it in you. You can trust Him to keep you trusting and
abiding.

And if ever doubts again arise, or the bitter experience
of failure tempts you to despair, just remember where Paul found His
strength: “I am apprehended of Christ Jesus” (Phil. 3:12, KJV). In that
assurance you have a fountain of strength.

From that you can look up to that on which He has set His
heart, and set yours there, too. From that you gather confidence that
the good work He has begun He will also perform. And in that confidence
you will gather courage afresh, day by day, to say, “I follow on, that I
may also apprehend that for which Christ Jesus apprehended me. It is
because Jesus has taken hold of me, and because Jesus keeps me, that I
dare to say: ‘Savior, I abide in Thee.’”

Andrew Murray (1828-1917) was raised in what was then
considered one of the most remote corners of the world—Graaff-Reinet
(near the Cape), South Africa.
In 1860 he accepted a
call to Cape Colony, where he began the writing of his many devotional
books. In his 88 years he wrote more than 240 books and tracts,
including classics such as
Humility, The Secret of
Intercession and Abide in Christ, which have been read by
millions and continue to transform lives today.

Adapted from Abide in Christ by Andrew Murray,
copyright 1997. Published by Christian Literature Crusade. Used by
permission.

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