| THIRTIETH LESSON. |
| `An holy priesthood;' Or, The Ministry of Intercession. |
`An holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ.'-I PETER ii. 5.
`Ye shall be named the Priests of the Lord.'-ISAIAH lxi. 6.
THE Spirit of the Lord God
is upon me: because the Lord hath anointed me.' These are the words of Jesus
in Isaiah. As the fruit of His work all redeemed ones are priests,
fellow-partakers with Him of His anointing with the Spirit as High Priest.
`Like the precious ointment upon the beard of Aaron, that went down to the
skirts of his garments.' As every son of Aaron, so every member of Jesus' body
has a right to the priesthood. But not every one exercises it: many are still
entirely ignorant of it. And yet it is the highest privilege of a child of God,
the mark of greatest nearness and likeness to Him, `who ever liveth to pray.'
Do you doubt if this really be so? Think of what constitutes priesthood.
There is, first, the work of the priesthood. This has two sides, one
Godward, the other manward. `Every priest is ordained for men in things
pertaining to God' (Heb. v. 1); or, as it is said by Moses (Deut. x. 8,
see also xxi. 5, xxxiii. 10; Mal. ii. 6): `The Lord separated the tribe of
Levi, to stand before the Lord to minister unto Him, and to bless His
Name.' On the one hand, the priest had the power to draw nigh to God, to
dwell with Him in His house, and to present before Him the blood of the
sacrifice or the burning incense. This work he did not do, however, on his own
behalf, but for the sake of the people whose representative he was. This is the
other side of his work. He received from the people their sacrifices, presented
them before God, and then came out to bless in His Name, to give the assurance
of His favour and to teach them His law.
A priest is thus a man who does not at all live for himself. He lives with
God and for God. His work is as God's servant to care for His house, His
honour, and His worship, to make known to men His love and His will. He
lives with men and for men (Heb. v. 2). His work is to find out their sin
and need, and to bring it before God, to offer sacrifice and incense in their
name, to obtain forgiveness and blessing for them, and then to come out and
bless them in His Name. This is the high calling of every believer. `Such
honour have all His saints.' They have been redeemed with the one purpose to be
in the midst of the perishing millions around them, God's priests, who in
conformity to Jesus, the Great High Priest, are to be the ministers and stewards
of the grace of God to all around them.
And then there is the walk of the priesthood, in harmony with its work.
As God is holy, so the priest was to be especially holy. This means not only
separated from everything unclean, but holy unto God, being set apart and
given up to God for His disposal. The separation from the world and setting
apart unto God was indicated in many ways.
It was seen in the clothing: the holy garments, made after God's own order,
marked them as His (Ex. xxviii.). It was seen in the command as to their
special purity and freedom from all contact from death and defilement (Lev. xi.
22). Much that was allowed to an ordinary Israelite was forbidden to them. It
was seen in the injunction that the priest must have no bodily defect or
blemish; bodily perfection was to be the type of wholeness and holiness in God's
service. And it was seen in the arrangement by which the priestly tribes were
to have no inheritance with the other tribes; God was to be their inheritance.
Their life was to be one of faith: set apart unto God, they were to live on
Him as well as for Him.
All this is the emblem of what the character of the New Testament priest is to
be. Our priestly power with God depends on our personal life and walk. We must
be of them of whose walk on earth Jesus says, `They have not defiled their
garments.'
In the surrender of what may appear lawful to others in our separation from the
world, we must prove that our consecration to be holy to the Lord is
whole-hearted and entire. The bodily perfection of the priest must have its
counterpart in our too being `without spot or blemish;' `the man of God perfect,
throughly furnished unto all good works,' `perfect and entire, wanting nothing'
(Lev. xxi. 17-21; Eph. v. 27; 2 Tim. ii. 7; Jas. i. 4). And above all, we
consent to give up all inheritance on earth; to forsake all, and like Christ to
have only God as our portion: to possess as not possessing, and hold all for
God alone: it is this marks the true priest, the man who only lives for God and
his fellow-men.
And now the way to the priesthood. In Aaron God had chosen all his sons
to be priests: each of them was a priest by birth. And yet he could not enter
upon his work without a special act of ordinance-his consecration. Every child
of God is priest in light of his birth, his blood relationship to the Great High
Priest; but this is not enough: he will exercise his power only as he accepts
and realizes his consecration.
With Aaron and his sons it took place thus (Ex. xxix.): After being washed and
clothed, they were anointed with the holy oil. Sacrifices were then offered,
and with the blood the right ear, the right hand, and the right foot were
touched. And then they and their garments were once again sprinkled with the
blood and the oil together. And so it is as the child of God enters more fully
into what THE BLOOD and THE SPIRIT of which he already is partaker, are to him,
that the power of the Holy Priesthood will work in him. The blood will take
away all sense of unworthiness; the Spirit, all sense of unfitness.
Let us notice what there was new in the application of the blood to the priest.
If ever he had as a penitent brought a sacrifice for his sin, seeking
forgiveness, the blood was sprinkled on the altar, but not on his person. But
now, for priestly consecration, there was to be closer contact with the blood;
ear and hand and foot were by a special act brought under its power, and the
whole being taken possession of and sanctified for God. And so, when the
believer, who had been content to think chiefly of the blood sprinkled on the
mercy-seat as what he needs for pardon, is led to seek full priestly access to
God, he feels the need of a fuller and more abiding experience of the power of
the blood, as really sprinkling and cleansing the heart from an evil conscience,
so that he has `no more conscience of sin' (Heb. x. 2) as cleansing from all
sin. And it is as he gets to enjoy this, that the consciousness is awakened of
his wonderful right of most intimate access to God, and of the full assurance
that his intercessions are acceptable.
And as the blood gives the right, the Spirit gives the power, and fits for
believing intercession. He breathes into us the priestly spirit-burning love
for God's honour and the saving of souls. He makes us so one with Jesus that
prayer in His Name is a reality. He strengthens us to believing, importunate
prayer. The more the Christian is truly filled with the Spirit of Christ, the
more spontaneous will be his giving himself up to the life of priestly
intercession. Beloved fellow-Christians! God needs, greatly needs, priests who
can draw near to Him, who live in His presence, and by their intercession draw
down the blessings of His grace on others. And the world needs, greatly needs,
priests who will bear the burden of the perishing ones, and intercede on their
behalf.
Are you willing to offer yourself for this holy work? You know the surrender it
demands-nothing less than the Christ-like giving up of all, that the saving
purposes of God's love may be accomplished among men. Oh, be no longer of those
who are content if they have salvation, and just do work enough to keep
themselves warm and lively. O let nothing keep you back from giving yourselves
to be wholly and only priests-nothing else, nothing less than the priests of the
Most High God. The thought of unworthiness, of unfitness, need not keep you
back. In the Blood, the objective power of the perfect redemption works
in you: in the Spirit its full subjective personal experience as a
divine life is secured. The Blood provides an infinite worthiness to
make your prayers most acceptable: The Spirit provides a Divine fitness,
teaching you to pray just according to the will of God. Every priest knew
that when he presented a sacrifice according to the law of the sanctuary, it was
accepted: under the covering of the Blood and Spirit you have the assurance
that all the wonderful promises to prayer in the Name of Jesus will be fulfilled
in you. Abiding in union with the Great High Priest, `you shall ask what you
will, and it shall be done unto you.' You will have power to pray the effectual
prayer of the righteous man that availeth much. You will not only join in the
general prayer of the Church for the world, but be able in your own sphere to
take up your special work in prayer-as priests, to transact it with God, to
receive and know the answer, and so to bless in His Name. Come, brother, come,
and be a priest, only priest, all priest. Seek now to walk before
the Lord in the full consciousness that you have been set apart for the holy
Ministry of Intercession. This is the true blessedness of conformity to the
image of God's Son.
O Thou my blessed High Priest, accept the consecration in which my soul now
would respond to Thy message.
I believe in the HOLY PRIESTHOOD OF THY SAINTS, and that I too am a priest, with
power to appear before the Father, and in the prayer that avails much bring down
blessing on the perishing around me.
I believe in the POWER OF THY PRECIOUS BLOOD to cleanse from all sin, to give me
perfect confidence toward God, and bring me near in the full assurance of faith
that my intercession will be heard.
I believe in the ANOINTING OF THE SPIRIT, coming down daily from Thee, my Great
High Priest, to sanctify me, to fill me with the consciousness of my priestly
calling, and with love to souls, to teach me what is according to God's will,
and how to pray the prayer of faith.
I believe that, as Thou my Lord Jesus art Thyself in all things my life, so
Thou, too, art THE SURETY FOR MY PRAYER-LIFE, and wilt Thyself draw me up into
the fellowship of Thy wondrous work of intercession.
In this faith I yield myself this day to my God, as one of His anointed priests,
to stand before His face to intercede in behalf of sinners, and to come out and
bless in His Name.
Holy Lord Jesus! accept and seal my consecration. Yea, Lord, do Thou lay Thy
hands on me, and Thyself consecrate me to this Thy holy work. And let me walk
among men with the consciousness and the character of a priest of the Most High
God.
Unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins IN HIS OWN BLOOD, AND HATH
MADE US kings and priests unto God and His Father; TO HIM be glory and dominion
forever and ever. Amen
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With Christ in the School of Prayer by Andrew Murray - Public Domain
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