HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 16
Revelation of God's Glory
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture XVI
December 20, 1843
.
Text.--Ex. 33: 12-23:
"And Moses said unto the Lord, see, thou sayest unto me, bring up this
people; and thou hast not let me know whom thou wilt send with me; yet thou hast
said, I know thee by name, and thou hast also found grace in my sight. Now
therefore, I pray thee, if I have found grace in thy sight, show me now thy way,
that I may know thee, that I may find grace in thy sight; and consider that this
nation is thy people. And He said my presence shall go with thee, and I will
give thee rest. And he said, if thy presence go not with me, carry us not up
hence. For wherein shall it be known here that I and thy people have found grace
in thy sight? Is it not in that thou goest with us? So shall we be separated, I
and thy people, from all the people that are upon the face of the earth. And the
Lord said unto Moses, I will do this thing also that thou hast spoken; for thou
hast found grace in my sight, and I know thee by name.
And he said, I beseech thee, show me thy glory. And He said, I will make all my
goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the name of the Lord before thee;
and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I
will show mercy. And He said, thou canst not see my face; for there shall no man
see me, and live. And the Lord said, behold there is a place by me, and thou
shalt stand upon a rock. And it shall come to pass while my glory passeth by,
that I will put thee in a cleft of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand
while I pass by. And I will take away my hand and thou shalt see my back parts,
but my face shall not be seen."
In this discourse I shall show,
I. What is intended by the glory of God.
II. What is implied in Moses' prayer.
III. What is implied in God's answer.
I. What is meant by the glory of God.
The original meaning of the term glory was, brightness, clearness, effulgence:
from that it has come to signify honor, renown; and again, that which renders
honorable, or demands honor, or renown, reverence, adoration, and worship--that
which is worthy of confidence and trust. The glory of God is essential and
declarative. By essential glory is meant that in Him which is glorious--that in
his character which demands honor, worship, and adoration. His declarative glory
is the showing forth, the revealing, the manifesting, the glory of his
character--his essential glory--to his creatures: the laying open his glory to
the apprehension of intelligences. And this is what Moses meant--that God would
reveal Himself to his mind so that he might know Him--might have a clear and
powerful apprehension of those things which constitute his glory.
II. What is implied in Moses' prayer.
III. What is implied in God's answer to Moses.
"I will make all my goodness pass before thee," said he. God's glory consists in
his moral attributes--in his goodness.
REMARKS.
1. The circumstances and the prayer of Moses, were the conditions of the
revelation which God made to him. His circumstances--he needed to know more of
God. His prayer--he made supplication to be taught. The circumstances alone were
not enough, nor the prayer alone, but both united. He had subsequent and
frequent manifestations of God's presence and power as circumstances required.
Sometimes alone, sometimes in the full presence of all the people. On awful
Sinai He moved in thunder and fire, and the congregation quaked at the terror of
the Lord. According to the exigencies of Moses and of the people God dealt with
them, and showed his glory to them.
2. A principle of the divine administration is here developed, namely--God will
furnish such grace and manifestation of his goodness, as the circumstances
demand, and their exigencies require. He is unchangeable. In the same
circumstances his dealings are the same. He who gave to his ancient servant, an
overwhelming view of his glory, such a view, as that in unspeakable awe, "he
bowed his head and worshiped," will, whenever necessary, grant the same or
greater manifestations, if it be requisite to strengthen for his own work.
3. He will be inquired of, to do the things that need to be done for you for his
glory. The Bible every where insists on this. Moses prayed, and prayed with
great earnestness and importunity--"God show me thy glory." "Lord if Thou go not
with us, take us not up hence." The universal example of Bible saints, is one
continued stream of prayer, flowing onward in a broad and deep current, with a
strong and resistless tide, to the great ocean of God's boundless mercy and
compassion.
4. We are to persevere in this asking. Was Moses to be put off? No indeed. He
cries-- "Show me thy way, that I may know Thee, that I may find grace in thy
sight." God answers, "My presence shall go up with thee, and I will give thee
rest." But a mere promise is not enough for Moses. "O Lord, surely Thou wilt go
up with us, but O Lord show me thy Glory, let me know Thee, let thy perfections
come home with such power to my soul, that they shall never depart therefrom.
Lord show me thy glory." He reminded God that He had called him to bring up the
people, and yet he was not prepared. "Thou hast said to me, bring up this
people, and yet thou hast not let me know whom thou wilt send with me." Moses
persevered, and he gained his request. God did for him what he asked. It is
exceedingly important that we continue to press upon God, so to speak, for any
grace which we need. Let us learn our duty from the Bible, and the relations we
sustain, and then, having settled the question that we are in the work to which
God has called us, let us come to God with a full assurance of faith that He has
promised to be with us always, and that what He has promised, He is able also to
perform. Press upon Him your wants. Say to Him--O Lord Thou hast placed me here,
Thou hast made me what I am, and I have not strength for the work, I have not
knowledge for the labor. O Lord, arm me for the contest, harness me for the
battle, fit me for the work. O Lord, thy name will be disgraced if I fail, for
Thou hast set me here, thy honor is at stake. What will become of thy great
name? "O God show me thy glory." Whatever we find ourselves in need of for the
success of his work, to which He has called us, we have a right to go and ask
for, with perfect confidence, and complete assurance, and we should not let go
our suit, till the request is granted. We should come with importunity I said.
See how Moses speaks to God at one time, with what confidence and holy
familiarity, he addresses his heavenly Father! When God was angry with the
rebellious Israelites, and said, "Let me alone, that my anger may wax hot
against them, that I may destroy them from the face of the earth," Moses
besought the Lord. He came, and seizing hold of his hand as it were, "O Lord,"
he cries, "why doth thy wrath wax hot against thy people, for whom Thou hast
done so much? Why should the Egyptians say, for mischief did He bring them out
to slay them? O turn from thy wrath and repent Thee of the evil." Moses was so
importunate, it seemed as though God could not deny him. And thus may we come to
God, and cry--are not all thy promises yea and amen in Christ Jesus? Hast Thou
not promised, and shall thy word fail? Brethren, is not this directly? point?
May we not come to God and ask at all times? Is He not able to save to the
uttermost? Shall not "our strength be equal to our day?" O how strongly my
experience testifies to this truth. Many a time, I should have given up all for
lost, and sat down in despair, had it not been for such a revelation of God's
glory, as to strengthen me for the work I had to accomplish. Always, yes always,
when I have gone to God, as Moses did, with the prayer, "Show me thy glory," He
has never denied me, never, never.
5. It is reasonable to understand a call of God to any station, as a virtual
pledge of every thing that we need, to stand in that place, and meet those
responsibilities. If God calls us to do a thing, it can be done. What is needed
to accomplish it may be had. God is not a Pharaoh, commanding to make brick, yet
withholding straw. The requiring a thing, always vouchsafes every thing
necessary for its fulfillment.
6. The people always need one thing. Every child of God is called to represent
God, to be a teacher of God, to show forth to the world around him the character
of God. Every saint is called of God to do this. Every Christian has a right to
insist that God will give him grace to do that--to do it fully and successfully.
He may say to God, "Lord, thou hast made me a Christian, put thy spirit within
me, called me to represent thee, and show the world who thou art, and what thy
character is; but how can I do this, except I be shown by thy grace, except all
thy goodness pass before me and melt me into contrition and love." How long
shall it be, ere Christians, feeling their weakness, will go to God and ask him
thus for what they need, and must have, or perish.
7. Many persons seem to have exceedingly narrow, partial, obscure views of God.
So shadow-like, and dim is their notion of Him, or so partial and one sided, and
distorted, that it is like any thing almost more than like God. Perhaps Moses
was somewhat in this condition. He had seen God in the burning bush, he had
heard his voice, saying, "O, lead my people Israel," he had been the rod of
Jehovah's wrath on wicked Egypt, he had stood on Sinai and seen God in fire and
smoke and lightnings, but he could not be satisfied--he must know more. And all
along Moses had to ask for new revelations continually.
Many know God only as a lawgiver and judge. They apprehend his law, and they
sink in terror and fear; that is all they know of God. Others know nothing of
him but what they call his mercy and love; nothing of justice, and holiness, and
righteous indignation against sin. They have neither of them any confidence in
his word and promises. Now Moses ever after, trusted firmly and unwaveringly in
God's truth. God had shown him his truth, and Moses forgot it not. The impress
of that hand, he felt always pressing on him; that sight was ever present to his
mind. He had confidence in his mercy after this. Only see how, when God said,
"Let me destroy this rebellious and stiff-necked people, and I will make of thee
a great nation." Moses had such trust in God's mercy. He cried, "O Lord, save
thy people, or blot out my name from thy book." "O God, what will become of thy
great name?" What a savor and relish the revelation had left on his mind--a
sweet and controlling sense of God's mercy and goodness. God's Justice, too,
rested with awful distinctness upon Moses' apprehension. He was the great and
terrible God, visiting the iniquities of them which hate him, upon their own
heads, and upon the heads of their children. It is vastly important that men
should have just and symmetrical views of God's character; for where the
revelation is partial, they do not possess a well proportioned piety; they show
a want of balance in their character. If they have not seen the justice of God,
his holiness, they have no apprehension of the guilt of sin, of its desert of
punishment, of God's infinite hatred of it. They have no proper sense of the
condition of sinners, have no compassion, no ardent zeal, no burning love for
them. So if men have not a revelation of the mercy and love and compassion of
God, they will be legal, have very little confidence to pray for sinners;
instead of laying hold of God, as they should do, even in the most desperate
cases, they slacken, and give up in despair. So of all his attributes; if men
have not sought and obtained a just view of God's character, they will be like
their views of God, ill-proportioned, and unbalanced in their own character.
8. It is of the last importance, that men should realize that all God's
character is made up of his benevolence, his goodness. See how He says, "All my
goodness;" not my mercy, my love, but all, my mercy, my justice, my holiness, my
hatred of sin, and my settled purpose to punish it, my tender compassion and
pity, and my righteous vindictive justice. A minister, especially, should thus
know all his goodness, and be duly affected by every attribute. If they do not
have such a revelation, they will induce and foster an unnatural and ill
proportioned piety in their congregation, and among the people of their
intercourse--either an antinomian or a legal, just as the bent and cast of the
minister's own mind is.
9. Nothing can make us stable Christians, but to behold his glory, a revelation
of Him to us. No excitement, no intellectual acumen, no strength of logic,
nothing can secure us but a revelation of God to our souls. We should therefore
persevere and insist that this be done for us, that we see God's glory, and be
fixed on Him. The church should pray for ministers and for candidates for the
ministry, that God would reveal to them the deep secrets of his love and mercy;
that He would open to them the ever flowing fountains of exquisite and perennial
blessedness to let them drink therefrom and never thirst more. O do the churches
think and feel how much they can do for their ministers, by praying the heavens
open, and letting down on their hearts such rays of glory as shall forever
enrapture and hold them in awful apprehension of God's presence and character,
as that the spirit of the Highest shall come upon them, and the power of God
overshadow them, and transform them from men of clay, to angels of mercy and
power to a fallen world? Why do they not pray? Brethren, why do you not
pray--pray that God would show you, would show the students here, the community,
the whole church in the land, and in the world, his glory? Pray, and give God no
rest, till He glorify his people before the nations?
10. It is easy to see what made Moses' face shine so, when he came down from the
mount. The manifestation of God's glory has the same effect always and every
where. There was such a clearness, a glory , a brightness, in his countenance,
that the people could not look upon him. Christ in the mount, when the glory of
God appeared to Him, was transfigured, his raiment was white as the light, and
his face was like the sun.
11. Many cannot bear much of the revelation of divine glory to them. They are
babes, and must be fed with milk and not with meat; for they cannot take meat.
How it affected Isaiah, to behold the glory of the Lord. Isaiah, that man of
God. Who could behold, if he could not? One would think his views of God were
high and exalted. But see his vision. "I saw the Lord, sitting upon a throne,
high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. Above it stood the
seraphim, and one cried to another, and covered his face with his wings, saying,
Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God of Hosts. The whole earth is full of his
glory!" Think of it! It overcame Isaiah. He cried in despair, "Wo is me, for I
am undone, because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a
people of unclean lips, for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of Hosts!" He
saw the holiness of God as he never saw it before. He was completely overcome,
he seemed unable to recover from it, till one of the seraphim came with a live
coal from the altar, and laid it on his lips, saying, "Thine iniquity is taken
away, and thy sin purged." O, how much do we need such revelations--new
revelations--great and mighty things which we have not known. And then we shall
be humbled, subdued under his mighty hand. Mark how Isaiah was subdued to the
will of God. When he heard the voice crying, "Who will go for us?" with meek
boldness he answered, "Here am I, send me." And so shall we be humbled, and say,
"Lord, glorify thy name in us."
But often God has to hold back. He must cover Moses in the rock--cleft, and hide
his face from him. Often must Christians say, "Hold thy hand, O Lord, it is
enough; draw the curtain, and veil the glory from my fainting, reeling sense."
12. Sometimes young converts get proud, and think that they know a great deal of
God, and imagine that all which they never experienced, is fancy, and cannot be
true. If just what they know of God is not presented, they think it is not the
gospel, when, poor blind men, they know just one part, and a very small part.
They must not think they know the whole of God that may be known of Him. Many
cannot bear to hear of God's justice, of his sovereignty, of his holiness. Now,
we should desire to have all the character, all the goodness of God pass before
us; to have him let in upon the mind as bright and glorious a vision as it can
bear.
Brethren, is it not true, that we need new manifestations of God? One revelation
brings need of new and more glorious revelations. Do we not need it? My soul
from its depths, my heart from its very bottom, cries out, "O God, I beseech
thee, show me thy glory. Let me see and know more of God." Will you pray for me?
Will you pray for yourselves? Do we not need it, I say again? Have we not high
responsibilities? Who has higher? Now pray in view of your circumstances;
besiege the throne; give God no rest; let him have no peace, till He come and
revive his work, and make his name glorious.
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