In times
of national emergency one of the most vital
considerations, and one that very largely governs the
issue, is that of the food supply. To conserve it is a
primary feature of both defence and aggression. To keep
it from falling into the enemy's hands is a tactic of
victory. If this is true in the natural and earthly
realm, it certainly is true in the spiritual and
heavenly. It is not always realized by Christians that
they are born (at new birth) into conditions which are
such as mark an emergency. That is to say, a state of war
has existed from the day that Adam sinned, and that
warfare is becoming more intense as the end of the
dispensation approaches. A feature of this warfare is the
food question, and the final issue in the case of each
believer depends to a very serious degree upon spiritual
food. As in the time of Gideon, so now. The Midianites
then sought to spoil and steal all the crops, Gideon was
marked by God as one to be taken up and used as a
deliverer because secretly he gave himself up to conserve
food for his brethren, and so defeat the enemy.
But to
consider the matter of food generally: there are some
quite simple analogies between the natural and the
spiritual.
Firstly,
then, is the matter of
APPETITE
A first
question asked of a patient by a doctor is, How is your
appetite? showing that this is closely related to
sickness or health, and may be a symptom. Now a fact to
be recognized is that in the Christian there is an
"inner man", which is altogether other and
distinct from the outer man, and has a whole set of
definite faculties and functions. This inner man is
capable of growth; of being in sickness or in health; of
being weak or strong; of being able to do spiritual
exploits, or being impotent in the fight. No matter how
full of natural vim and energy a Christian may be, he
cannot by any natural strength effect even one iota of
spiritual value. There will, sooner or later, be a
terrible breakdown both in the worker and the work, and
any emergency will quickly precipitate this, if there is
no real spiritual constitution. This depends upon
spiritual food. But inasmuch as it is so easy to go on in
natural energy and activity and fail to realize that it
is not really spiritual power, we should apply the test
of spiritual life and health. How is your appetite? What
kind of an appetite have you for spiritual food, Is it
poor? Is it easily satisfied? Is it faddy, or fussy? Do
you have to have your spiritual food prepared and served
up in such a pleasant and tasty way as to make you feel
that you are eating and yet not eating? What can you eat?
is a question for the delicate and invalid.
For the
truly healthy and sound, the demand is for 'something
that you can put your teeth into'; 'something solid';
'something to live and work on'! This is a fairly
sound test of our spiritual life, and Paul, the Apostle,
has left us in no doubt about it. "I, brethren,
could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but... as
unto babes. I fed you with milk, not with meat: for... ye
were not able to bear it" (1 Cor. 3:1,2).
A SELF-DECEIVING PRACTICE
One of
the most treacherous and disastrous features of the
feeding side of life in recent years is the confectionery
side. Pleasant to the taste, nullifying the sense of
hunger FOR THE MOMENT, anything more substantial
is destroyed. But it is quick to be taken, the sense of
need or desire for a false world, treacherous in that it
fails to make for constitution, and when the rigid test
comes; when epidemics are rife, and germs are abroad;
when for any reason endurance is called for or a crisis
has to be passed, then the fatal lack of constitution is
revealed.
This all
has a tragic counterpart or parallel in the spiritual
life. There is a distressing tendency to serve up
spiritual things in the way that will make the least
demand. Attractiveness is a primary consideration. The
solid classics of a generation or two ago have been
supplanted by that which can be read in a few minutes,
and then is done with. It is said that this is what is
demanded, and there is little demand for anything more
substantial. Is this a symptom of the spiritual state of
the majority of Christians today? We cannot but foresee a
terrible 'fainting in the day of adversity'.
The
perils of this condition are many and great. One of them
is a predisposition to error. Errors usually gain their
advantage by presenting something which offers the line
of least resistance. That is to say, they seem easily to
solve some difficult problem, or offer a quick way to a
desired end. There is something pleasant and fascinating
about every substitute which Satan produces for the pure
truth. People who are not prepared to take or accept the
way of the Cross in all its implications are carried away
as by a flood when some beautiful lie is offered as a way
to reach the same end. The Word of God makes it
unmistakably clear that the Cross demands or postulates
the setting aside of the whole race in Adam, and of man
by nature; and that there is no hope for any, except as
they are of the new creation in Christ Jesus.
DISCRIMINATION AND SERIOUSNESS OF
PURPOSE
A
predisposition in the physical realm to any malady is
often overcome by constitutional means. So it is in the
spiritual.
In the
physical body there is a wonderful system of testing
(accepting or rejecting) food properties. The bloodstream
performs the double function of bringing nourishment to
each and every part of the body, and taking from it its
waste products for elimination. Everything that is taken
into the body is carried to the little doors, so to
speak, or cells, and there it is challenged by the action
of certain secretions. Such of the food as is found to
have nutritive qualities is accepted, broken down, and
transmuted into vital tissue and nerve fuel. If there are
useless or poisonous elements, they are - in a healthy
body - rejected. A battle may ensue for their ejection,
and some consciousness of this battle may be registered
in the person concerned. The point for the moment is,
that in the matter of food there is required a basic
vitality by which values are discerned, determined, and
turned into the thought, the speech, the action, and the
nature of the individual. On the other hand, the harmful
elements, and that which is lacking in value, will be
perceived and rejected. Thus in the case of the believer,
how important it is that for building up there should be
a real vitality in relation to food.
So then,
real life means appetite and discrimination, leading to
strength and capability. But it is also necessary to take
an initial serious attitude toward the food question. We
can through carelessness fail to give the inner man what
he needs, and just allow him to be served up with mere
pleasantries in spiritual truth. Let us recognize that he
MUST HAVE wholesome and really nutritious
food, and we should give ourselves definitely to seeking
this out. The essence of nourishment is Christ Himself.
Therefore the test of everything is whether it really
ministers Christ to us. Not, How much more do we know?
or, Have a pleasant sensation, but How is it possible to
grow in the measure of Christ?
First published in "A Witness and A Testimony" magazine, Nov-Dec 1936.