In So Send I You, Oswald Chambers looks at the Christian’s call to missionary service and explores the nature of God’s call and how to hear Him clearly.
Christian Workers at home or abroad will find here the secret of the burning heart.
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A Series Of Missionary Studies
Ed. Marshall, Morgan & Scott
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In So Send I You, Oswald Chambers looks at the Christian’s call to missionary service and explores the nature of God’s call and how to hear Him clearly.
Christian Workers at home or abroad will find here the secret of the burning heart.
Poids | 0,125 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 11 × 17,5 cm |
Auteur |
Oswald CHAMBERS |
Nombre de pages |
172 |
Format |
110*175 |
ISBN |
0551051582 |
Date de 1ère parution |
1972 |
The power of vision which the new birth gives refers to perception by the personal spirit, and the characteristic of being born from above (RV mg) is that you begin to discern the rule of God. God's rule was there all the time, but true to His nature; now you have received His nature, you can perceive His rule. It is a good thing to mark the times when you feel your personal spirit trembling on the verge of a new vision. It may be during a lecture or in prayer, you nearly see something, then it goes, don't be distressed; it is the evidence of the new life from God.
The life given by God is capable of immediately hearing the voice of God's own nature. Unless the nature of God comes into you, said Jesus to Nicodemus, you cannot understand Him; but if His nature comes into you, of course you will hear Him (John 3:3-8). Intuition is the power to sense things without reasoning, and is a better guide than what is stated explicitly; but there is something infinitely more satisfactory—the entrance of the Holy Spirit into a man at new birth enabling him to see the Kingdom of God and to enter into it.
3. The Vocation of the Natural Life for God
Galatians 1:15-16 "But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called me by His grace, to reveal His Son in me, that I might preach Him among the heathen [Gentiles, RV]...."
The call of God is the call according to the nature of God; where we go in obedience to that call depends entirely on the providential circumstances which God engineers. The call of God is not a call to any particular service, although my interpretation of the call may be; the call to service is the echo of my identification with God. My contact with the nature of God has made me realise what I can do for God.
Service is the outcome of what is fitted to my nature; God's call is fitted to His nature, and I never hear His call until I have received His nature. When I have received His nature, then His nature and mine work together; the Son of God reveals Himself in me, and I, the natural man, serve the Son of God in ordinary ways
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