THE SECRET OF BLESSEDNESS IN HEART,
BEAUTY IN CHARACTER,
FRUITFULNESS IN SERVICE,
AND PROSPERITY IN EVERYTHING
By R. A. Torrey
"Blessed
is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth
in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his
delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day
and night. And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water,
that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not
wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper." Ps. 1:1-3.
IN these verses, God speaking
through the Psalmist sets before us the secret of blessedness in heart,
beauty in character, fruitfulness in service, and prosperity in
everything. Are not these the four things that we all desire for
ourselves? These verses tell us in the plainest sort of way how we may
obtain them. They tell us that if we will not do three things and will
do two things, we shall have blessedness in our hearts, beauty in our
characters, fruitfulness in our service, and prosperity in whatsoever
we do.
I. THE THREE THINGS WE MUST NOT DO.
The three things that we must not
do are, First, Walk in the counsel of the ungodly; second, Stand in the
way of sinners; third, Sit in the seat of the scornful, i.e., we must
come out from the world and be separate in our walk, in our standing
and in our sitting. As to our walk, we must not walk in the counsel of
the ungodly; we must get our directions as to our walk from God and not
from the world. We must not ask what the world does or advises, we must
ask what God tells us to do. As to our standing, it must not be in the
way of sinners; as to our sitting, or continuous fellowship, it must
not be in the seat of the scornful. We will not dwell on these three
things that we must not do for the words are so plain as to need no
comment; what they need is not so much to be expounded as to be obeyed,
and furthermore, if we do the two things which we must do we will be
sure not to do the three things which we must not do.
II. THE TWO THINGS WHICH WE MUST DO.
The first of the two things which
we must do is "Delight in the law of the Lord." The Law of the Lord is
God's will as revealed in His Word and these words tell us that it is
not enough merely to read God's Word; indeed, that it is not enough
even to earnestly study God's Word, we must delight in God's Word. We
must have greater joy in the Word of God than in any other book, or in
all other books put together. Now doubtless many of us will have to
admit that we do not delight in the law of the Lord. Probably we read
it, quite likely we study it diligently, but we read it and study it
simply because we think it is our duty. As to delighting in it, we do
not. If many of you were to reveal the exact facts about yourself, you
would have to say, "I would rather read the newspaper than the Word of
God. I would rather read the latest novel than the Word of God." When I
was thirteen years of age, I was told that if I read three chapters in
the Bible every week-day and five every Sunday, I would read the Bible
in a year, and I started out to do it, and I have read the Bible every
day of my life from that time to this, but for years I did not delight
in it. I read it simply because I thought I ought to, or because I was
uneasy if I did not, but as for delighting in it, it was the dullest,
stupidest book in the world to me. I would rather have read last year's
almanac than the Bible. And what was true of me then, and remained true
for years, is true of many a professed Christian to-day. They may study
the Bible every day but simply do it from a sense of duty or because
their conscience is uneasy if they do not.
What shall one do if he does not delight in the law of the Lord? The answer is very simple.
(1) First of all, he must be born
again. The one who is truly born again will love the Word of God. The
Lord Jesus says in John 8:47, "He that is of God heareth God's words:
Ye therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God." The little
Greek word which is translated "of" in this passage is a very
significant word. It really means and should be translated "out of,"
i.e., in this connection "born of"; and what Jesus said was that the
one that was born of God would have an ear for God's word, and that the
reason that the Jews did not really have an ear for God's Word was
because they were not born of God. One of the clearest proofs that a
man is born of God is that he loves, delights in God's Word. I have
seen men and women pass in a moment from an utter distaste for God's
Word to an abounding delight in God's Word by simply being born again.
"But," some one will say, "how may
I be born again?" God Himself answers the question in a very simple way
in John 1:12. "But as many as RECEIVED HIM, to them gave He power to
become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name."
According to these words the way to be born again is by simply
receiving Him, receiving the Lord Jesus. The moment any man, woman, or
child really receives Jesus to be to themselves all that He offers
Himself to be to anyone, to be their Saviour from the guilt of sin by
His death upon the cross, to be their Saviour from the power of sin, by
His resurrection power (Heb. 7:25) and to be their Lord and Master, to
whom they surrender the entire control of their lives (Acts 2:36), that
moment that man, woman or child is born again and with the new life
thus obtained they will get a new love, a love for God and a delight in
His Word.
(2) In the second place, in order
to delight in the law of the Lord we must feed upon it. Jeremiah says
in Jer. 15:16, "Thy words were found, and I did eat them ; and thy word
was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart." The reason why many
do not delight in the Word of God is because they do not eat it. They
read it ; they skim over it, they smell of it, but they do not eat it,
and yet they wonder why they do not delight in God's Word. What would
you think if some day some friend came to visit you who had never eaten
strawberries, and you should get for him a dish of our wonderful
California strawberries. You tell him how delicious they are and set
them before him you are called away but in an hour or two you come back
and you say to your friend, "How did you like those strawberries?" He
replies, "I did not care for them. I have seen many things that I have
enjoyed more." In surprise you say, "What, did not care for them?" "No,
they seemed very ordinary to me." For a moment you are puzzled, and
then you say to him, "Did you eat the berries?" "No," he answers, "I
did not eat them. I smelled of them and I have smelled many things that
smell better." Well, that is the way that many, even of professing
Christians treat the Word of God. They just smell of it, they skim over
a few verses, or many verses, or many chapters, but they do not stop to
eat a single verse. They do not chew the words, swallow them and
assimilate them. Oh, how different the Word of God becomes when we
really eat it. Take for example, the most familiar passage in the
Bible, the verse that most of us learned first of all, Ps. 23:1, "The
LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want." It sounds beautiful even when
we merely read it, but how sweet it becomes when we stop and ponder it,
weigh the meaning of the words, chew each word in it. When we ask
ourselves first of all, "Who is my shepherd?" And then stop for a while
to meditate upon the fact that it is JEHOVAH who is our Shepherd. Then
ask ourselves, "What is Jehovah?" "My Shepherd." And then stop and
think what is involved in being a shepherd and what it means to have
Jehovah as our SHEPHERD. Then ask ourselves "Whose shepherd is Jehovah?
My Shepherd." Not merely the Shepherd of men in general but my own
Shepherd. A stranger entered a Presbyterian Church one day and was
shown to a pew. The congregation rose to read the 23rd Psalm. A young
lady sitting next to him, handed him one corner of her Bible as they
read. As they read the first verse, he took a pencil out of his pocket
and drew a line under the word "My." When the service was over, the
young lady said to him, "Do you mind telling me why you drew the line
under the word My?" "Well," he replied, "The Lord is my Shepherd. I was
wondering if He were yours." Next dwell on the word, "I," then on the
word "shall" with all the certainty that there is in the word then on
the word "not" then on the word "want" and ask yourself all that is
implied in the statement, "I shall not want." Ah, the old familiar
verse becomes so much sweeter as we eat it, chew and chew it and
swallow it and digest it and assimilate it. If we thus eat different
portions of the Bible day by day we would soon find a joy in it that we
find in no other book. The only word that would express our relation to
the book would be "DELIGHT." The second of the two things that we must
do is "meditate in the law of the Lord day and night." These words tell
us how to study the Word and when to study it.
(1) First, How to study it.
"MEDITATE" therein. We live in a day in which meditation is largely a
lost art. It is largely a lost art in all our study. We send our
children to school, they are not allowed to think; they are simply
crammed and crammed we cram them with physiology, biology, psychology
and all the rest of the ologies ; until they themselves become mere
ape-ologies for real thinkers. We try to see how many branches we can
cover in a few years and how much of each branch we can cram in. A
child in the Grammar School grade has twelve studies; a child of
thirteen will be set to writing a criticism on Tennyson's "In
Memoriam." This is a good way to develop conceited fools, but it is no
way to develop thinkers. Set a child of thirteen to criticizing
Tennyson's "In Memoriam" and by the time she is eighteen she will be
criticizing the Word of God itself. But cram, cram, cram, is the word
of the hour in modern education. If our children studied fewer subjects
and really studied and mastered those they did study, they would know
more and be of more use in the world. But it is in Bible study
especially that meditation is a lost art. We try to see how many
chapters we can study in a single day. We get up a chart that covers
the whole plan of the ages and all of God's dealing with men, angels
and devils, from the eternity back of us to the eternity before us and
expect to master it in thirty minutes or an hour. This is an excellent
plan for making ourselves think that we are very wise; it is a
miserable plan for getting the real nourishment out of the Word and the
real honey out of the rock. We should not so much say, "I will read so
many chapters in a day," as "I will spend so much time each day in
really studying and feeding upon the Book." Sometimes we will give to a
single verse, or a single word, that will arrest our attention, all the
time we put into Bible study that day. There is no greater enemy to
successful study than hurry, and this is especially true of Bible
study. One night I was teaching a Bible class in Minneapolis. A
travelling man from New York, a very active member of St. George's
Episcopal Church, dropped into my class. He had to take the train for
the Far West soon after the class and I walked down to the station with
him. As we walked he said to me, "Tell me in a word how to study my
Bible." That is a pretty large contract to put into a single word, How
to study the Bible, and I replied, "If I must put it into one word,
that one word would be Thoughtfully. Think on what you study; look
right at it, weigh it, weigh every word, turn it over and over and over
meditate upon it."
But the words of the Psalmist tell
us not merely how to study the Word but when to study it, "DAY AND
NIGHT." Many people are asking, "Must I study the Bible fifteen minutes
every day, or a half hour a day or two hours a day?" "Day and night,"
replies the Psalmist. This, of course, does not mean that we should be
sitting with an open Bible before us every moment of the day and night.
But it does mean that having had some regular time for Bible study,
that after that time for Bible study is over we should carry away in
our mind and heart what we have studied and meditate upon it as we go
about our business, our household duties, or whatsoever we have to do.
Oh, how much lighter and pleasanter the drudgery of life becomes if we
go about it with the Word of God in mind and heart, meditating thereon
in the midst of our wearing toil. I know of nothing else that will keep
one in such perfect peace and abounding joy in these days of war and
gloom and agony as meditating on the Word of God day and night.
III. THE RESULT.
And now what will be the result of
our separating from the world in our walk, in our standing, in our
sitting and of our delighting in the law of the Lord and meditating thereon day and night?
1. First of all, we will have
blessedness in heart. "Blessed is the man," says our text that "walketh
not/etc. The Hebrew word translated "blessed" is a very peculiar word
in the Hebrew. It is not a participle at all, but a noun and a noun in
the plural. Literally translated it would be "blessednesses of the
man," i. e., how manifold and varied is the blessedness and happiness
of the man that does not do these three things and does do these two
things. This world knows no joy so varied, so full, so manifold, so
wonderful as the joy that comes to the one who is separated from the
world and who meditates on the Word. I know all about the joy that
comes from reading good literature; I have been a passionate devourer
of books from early childhood. When I was a boy. I would get a book and
hide away in some corner and devour it until my mother would come and
say, "Oh, Archie, why don't you take your gun and go out hunting?"
But all the joy that I have found
in the study of the best literature, in the study of science, in the
study of philosophy, can never for a moment compare to the joy that I
have found in meditating on the Word of God. So sweet has that joy
become that oftentimes I am tempted to say that I will read no book but
the Bible. I remember one night the first winter I was in Chicago. I
had been very busy that day, answering my correspondence, and teaching
in the Bible Institute in the morning, studying in the afternoon, and
preaching that night. I got to my house late, after 11 o'clock, pretty
thoroughly tired. I sat down for a little while to find rest in Bible
study before I went to bed. I was reading the Bible through in course
and had reached the last book in the Bible. In those days I did not
care as much for that book as for other books sometimes I had even been
tempted to wish that the book was not in the Bible, but as that was
where I was in my reading the Bible in course, I began reading the 11th
chapter of the book. When I reached the 15th verse, The kingdoms of
this world shall become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and
he shall reign for ever and ever, such joy swept into my soul as I took
in the meaning of the words that I do you know what I did? Of course
you do. I shouted aloud. I was not brought up to shout in meeting. I
was brought up in the Presbyterian and Episcopal churches. I never
heard anyone say "Amen" except where it came in the regular place in
the service until after I was in the ministry, and the first time a man
said "Amen" when I was preaching it so upset me that I nearly lost the
thread of my discourse. I cannot shout to this day in public, but, oh,
when alone with God and His Book sometimes such a joy sweeps into the
soul that nothing but a shout will give relief.
2. Second, we shall have beauty of
character, "He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water."
What is more beautiful than a well-watered tree in full leaf, the
maples and the oaks and the beeches in the East, our palms and pepper
trees and umbrella trees here in the West? Well, the one who refrains
from doing the three things mentioned above and does the two things
mentioned will be just like that tree in full leaf. His character will
be full of beauty. If we had time, I could show you from the Word of
God how every grace of character is the result of Bible study. The
Psalmist says in Ps. 119:9, "Where withal shall a young man cleanse his
way? by taking heed thereto according to thy word." In the 11th verse
he says, "Thy word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against
thee." Nothing else has the power to keep a man from sinning and
nothing else has the power to adorn a man with all possible graces of
character that the study of the Word of God has.
3. Third, we shall have
fruitfulness in service. "Bringeth forth his fruit in his season." Do
we not all long to be fruitful Christians? So many of us are fruitless.
The great secret of being fruitful is intelligent study of the Word of
God. The Apostle Paul in writing to Timothy in 2 Tim. 3:16 says, "All
Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness. That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished
unto all good works." The Revised Version says, "complete, furnished
completely unto every good work." How? Through what
the Apostle has just said, through the study of the inspired Word of
God. A man may study everything else in the world, psychology,
philosophy, pedagogy, and even theology, but if he does not study the
Word of God he is not fitted for real work for God. He will have no
measure of success in winning souls. But a man may be quite ignorant of
other branches of knowledge but if he really studies and understands
his Bible, he will have all the knowledge one needs to be a fruitful
Christian and an efficient winner of souls.
4. Fourth. There will be one other
result of not doing the three things and doing the two things, and that
is prosperity in everything: "whatsoever he doeth shall prosper." Are
we not all seeking for prosperity ? There is no other way to get it
than the way laid down in our text, but this road to prosperity is safe
and sure. No one ever walked it without becoming prosperous in
whatsoever he did. This, of course, does not mean necessarily that he
will have what the world calls prosperity. He may not become a rich
man, but he will have real prosperity in everything he undertakes. Some
years ago I preached in Chicago a sermon on "The Power of the Word of
God," or "The Advantages of Bible Study." I had in my congregation that
morning a young man who was leading a rather defeated life. He was a
Christian, but not a very effective Christian. He was a married man
with a small family of children and was getting $12.50 a week. His work
required him to get up at two or three o clock in the morning to go on
the market to buy for the house for which he worked. As he listened to
the sermon that morning he made up his mind that instead of getting up
at two o clock or three o clock in the morning, he would get up at one
or two o clock in the morning in order that he might have a solid hour
for Bible study before going to his work. He came on in his Christian
experience by leaps and bounds and he came on in his business relations
too. "Within a year he went into business for himself. The first year
he made $5,000 in his business, the next year I have been told that he
made $10,000, and some one has told me that the next year he made
$15,000, and he has gone on advancing from that day until this; but
that is not the best of it, he came on in his Christian character and
in his efficiency in Christian service. He is to-day one of the most
used laymen in Chicago, identified with and a leader in every
aggressive movement that is taken up by the Christians of the city, a
tower of strength in his own church, a generous giver to the work of
Christ at home and abroad, with three sons and one daughter following
in his steps. "Whatsoever he doeth prospers."
Now I am not saying that if anyone
will begin to study the Bible an hour a day he will spring from $12.50
a week to $5,000 a year, but I am saying, and what is better, God's
Word says it, he will have real prosperity in everything he undertakes.
Do you want blessedness in your heart, beauty in your character,
fruitfulness in your service, and prosperity in everything you do, then
stop walking in the counsel of the ungodly, stop standing in the way of
sinners, stop sitting in the seat of the scornful and begin to delight
in the law of the Lord and meditate therein day and night.
R. A. Torrey Archive
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