The Greatest Thing In the World and Other Addresses eBook

Henry Drummond
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about The Greatest Thing In the World and Other Addresses.

The Greatest Thing In the World and Other Addresses eBook

Henry Drummond
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about The Greatest Thing In the World and Other Addresses.

The way to trust Christ is to know Christ.  You cannot help trusting Him then.  You are changed.  By knowing Him faith is begotten in you, as cause and effect.  To trust Him without knowing Him as thousands do, is not faith, but credulity.  I believe a great deal of prayer for faith is thrown away.  What we should pray for is that we may be able to fulfill the condition, and when we have fulfilled the condition, the faith necessarily follows.  The way, therefore, to increase our faith is to increase our intimacy with Christ.  We trust Him more and more the better we know Him.

And then another immediate effect of this way of sanctifying the character is the tranquillity that it brings over the Christian life.  How disturbed and distressed and anxious Christian people are about their growth in grace!  Now, the moment you give that over into Christ’s care—­the moment you see that you are being changed—­that anxiety passes away.  You see that it must follow by an inevitable process and by a natural law if you fulfill the simple condition; so that peace is the reward of that life and fellowship with Christ.

Many other things follow.  A man’s usefulness depends to a large extent upon his fellowship with Christ.  That is obvious.  Only Christ can influence the world; but all that the world sees of Christ is what it sees of you and me.  Christ said:  “The world seeth Me no more, but ye see Me.”  You see Him, and standing in front of Him reflect Him, and the world sees the reflection.  It cannot see Him.  So that a Christian’s usefulness depends solely upon that relationship.

Now, I have only pointed out a few of the things that follow from the standing before Christ—­from the abiding in Christ.  You will find, if you run over the texts about abiding in Christ, many other things will suggest themselves in the same relations.  Almost everything in Christian experience and character follows, and follows necessarily, from standing before Christ and reflecting his character.  But the supreme consummation is that we are changed into the same image, “even as by the Lord the Spirit.”  That is to say, that in some way, unknown to us, but possibly not more mysterious than the doctrine of personal influence, we are changed into the image of Christ.

This method cannot fail.  I am not setting before you an opinion or a theory, but this is

          A CERTAINLY SUCCESSFUL MEANS

of sanctification.  “We all, with unveiled face, reflecting in a mirror the glory of Christ (the character of Christ) assuredly—­without any miscarriage—­without any possibility of miscarriage—­are changed into the same image.”  It is an immense thing to be anchored in some great principle like that.  Emerson says:  “The hero is the man who is immovably centered.”  Get immovably centered in that doctrine of sanctification.  Do not be carried away by the hundred and one theories of sanctification that are floating about in religious literature of the country at the present time; but go to the bottom of the thing for yourself, and see the rationale of it for yourself, and you will come to see that it is a matter of cause and effect, and that if you will fulfill the condition laid down by Christ, the effect must follow by a natural law.

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Project Gutenberg
The Greatest Thing In the World and Other Addresses from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.