The Pursuit of God
by A.W. Tozer
Chapter 5 : The
Universal Presence
Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither
shall I flee from thy presence? Psa_139:7
In all Christian teaching certain basic truths are found, hidden at
times, and rather assumed than asserted, but necessary to all truth as the primary
colors are found inane necessary to the finished painting. Such a truth is the
divine immanence.
God dwells in His creation and is everywhere indivisibly present in
all His works. This is boldly taught by prophet and apostle and is accepted by
Christian theology generally. That is, it appears in the books, but for some
reason it has not sunk into the average Christian's heart so as to become a
part of his believing self. Christian teachers shy away from its full
implications, and, if they mention it at all, mute it down till it has little
meaning. I would guess the reason for this to be the fear of being charged with
pantheism; but the doctrine of the divine Presence is definitely not pantheism.
Pantheism's error is too palpable to deceive anyone. It is that God is the sum
of all created things. Nature and God are one, so that whoever touches a leaf
or a stone touches God. That is of course to degrade the glory of the
incorruptible Deity and, in an effort to make all things divine, banish all
divinity from the world entirely. The truth is that while God dwells in His
world He is separated from it by a gulf forever impassable. However closely He
may be identified with the work of His hands they are and must eternally
be other than He, and He is and must be antecedent to and independent of
them. He is transcendent above all His works even while He is immanent within
them.
What now does the divine immanence mean in direct Christian
experience? It means simply that God is here. Wherever we are, God is
here. There is no place, there can be no place, where He is not. Ten million
intelligences standing at as many points in space and separated by
incomprehensible distances can each one say with equal truth, God is here. No
point is nearer to God than any other point. It is exactly as near to God from
any place as it is from any other place. No one is in mere distance any further
from or any nearer to God than any other person is.
These are truths believed by every instructed Christian. It remains
for us to think on them and pray over them until they begin to glow within us.
'In the beginning God.' (Gen_1:1)
Not matter, for matter is not self-causing. It requires an antecedent
cause, and God is that Cause. Not law, for law is but a name for the
course which all creation follows. That course had to be planned, and the
Planner is God. Not mind, for mind also is a created thing and must have
a Creator back of it. In the beginning God: the uncaused Cause of matter, mind
and law. There we must begin.
Adam sinned and, in his panic, frantically tried to do the impossible:
he tried to hide from the Presence of God. David also must have had wild
thoughts of trying to escape from the Presence, for he wrote, 'Whither shall
I go from thy Spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?' (Psa. 139:7) Then he proceeded through one of his
most beautiful psalms to celebrate the glory of the divine immanence. 'If I
ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou
art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts
of the sea; even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold
me.' (Psa. 139:8-10)
And he knew that God's being and God's seeing are the same, that
the seeing Presence had been with him even before he was born, watching the
mystery of unfolding life. Solomon exclaimed, 'But will God indeed dwell on
the earth? behold the heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain thee: how
much less this house which I have built.' (1Kings 8:27)
Paul assured the Athenians that 'God is not far from any one of us: for in
him we live, and move, and have our being.' (Acts 17:27-28)
If God is present at every point in space, if we cannot go where He is
not, cannot even conceive of a place where He is not, why then has not that
Presence become the one universally celebrated fact of the world? The patriarch
Jacob, 'in the waste howling wilderness,' gave the answer to that
question. He saw a vision of God and cried out in wonder, 'Surely the Lord
is in this place; and I knew it not.' (Gen. 28:16)
Jacob had never been for one small division [fraction] of a moment outside the
circle of that all-pervading Presence. But he knew it not. That was his
trouble, and it is ours. Men do not know that God is here. What a difference it
would make if they knew.
The Presence and the manifestation of the Presence are not the same.
There can be the one without the other. God is here when we are wholly unaware
of it. He is manifest only when and as we are aware of His
Presence. On our part there must be
surrender to the Spirit of God, for His work it is to show us the Father and
the Son. If we co-operate with Him in loving obedience God will manifest
Himself to us, and that manifestation will be the difference between a nominal
Christian life and a life radiant with the light of His face.
Always, everywhere God is present, and always He seeks to discover
[uncover] Himself. To each one he would reveal not only that He is, but what
He is as well. He did not have to be persuaded to discover Himself to Moses. 'And
the Lord descended in the cloud, and stood with him there, and proclaimed the
name of the Lord.' He not only made a verbal proclamation of His nature but
He revealed His very Self to Moses so that the skin of Moses' face shone with
the supernatural light. It will be a great moment for some of us when we begin
to believe that God's promise of self-revelation is literally true: that He
promised much, but promised no more than He intends to fulfill.
Our pursuit of God is successful just because He is forever seeking to
manifest Himself to us. The revelation
of God to any man is not God coming from a distance upon a time to pay a brief
and momentous visit to the man's soul. Thus to think of it is to misunderstand
it all. The approach of God to the soul or of the soul to God is not to be
thought of in spatial terms at all. There is no idea of physical distance
involved in the concept. It is not a
matter of miles but of experience.
To speak of being near to or far from God is to use language in a
sense always understood when applied to our ordinary human relationships. A man
may say, 'I feel that my son is coming nearer to me as he gets older,' and yet
that son has lived by his father's side since he was born and has never been
away from home more than a day or so in his entire life. What then can the
father mean? Obviously he is speaking of
experience. He means that the boy is coming to know him more intimately
and with deeper understanding, that the barriers of thought and feeling between
the two are disappearing, that father and son are becoming more closely united
in mind and heart.
So when we sing, 'Draw me nearer, nearer, blessed Lord,' we are not
thinking of the nearness of place, but of the nearness of relationship. It is
for increasing degrees of awareness that we pray, for a more perfect
consciousness of the divine Presence. We need never shout across the spaces to
an absent God. He is nearer than our own soul, closer than our most secret
thoughts.
Why do some persons 'find' God in a way that others do not? Why does
God manifest His Presence to some and let multitudes of others struggle along
in the half-light of imperfect Christian experience? Of course the will of God is the same for
all. He has no favorites within His
household. All He has ever done for any
of His children He will do for all of His children. The difference lies not
with God but with us.
Pick at random a score of great saints whose lives and testimonies are
widely known. Let them be Bible characters or well known Christians of
post-Biblical times. You will be struck instantly with the fact that the saints
were not alike. Sometimes the dissimilarities were so great as to be positively
glaring. How different for example was Moses from Isaiah; how different was
Elijah from David; how unlike each other were John and Paul, St. Francis and
Luther, Finney and Thomas à Kempis. The differences are as wide as human life
itself: differences of race, nationality, education, temperament, habit and
personal qualities. Yet they all walked, each in his day, upon a high road of
spiritual living far above the common way. Their differences must have been
incidental and in the eyes of God of no significance. In some vital quality
they must have been alike. What was it?
I venture to suggest that the one vital quality which they had in
common was spiritual receptivity. Something in them was open to heaven,
something which urged them Godward. Without attempting anything like a profound
analysis I shall say simply that they had spiritual awareness and that they
went on to cultivate it until it became the biggest thing in their lives. They
differed from the average person in that when they felt the inward longing they
did something about it. They acquired the lifelong habit of spiritual
response. They were not disobedient to the heavenly vision. As David put it
neatly, 'When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said unto thee, Thy
face, Lord, will I seek.' (Psa. 27:8)
As with everything good in human life, back of this receptivity is
God. The sovereignty of God is here, and is felt even by those who have not
placed particular stress upon it theologically. The pious Michael Angelo
confessed this in a sonnet:
My unassisted heart is barren clay,
That of its native self can nothing feed:
Of good and pious works Thou art the seed,
That quickens only where Thou sayest it may:
Unless Thou show to us Thine own true way
No man can find it: Father! Thou must lead.
These words will repay study as the deep and serious testimony of a
great Christian. Important as it is that we recognize God working in us, I
would yet warn against a too-great preoccupation with the thought. It is a sure
road to sterile passivity. God will not hold us responsible to understand the
mysteries of election, predestination and the divine sovereignty. The best and
safest way to deal with these truths is to raise our eyes to God and in deepest
reverence say, 'O Lord, Thou knowest.' Those things belong to the deep and
mysterious Profound of God's omniscience. Prying into them may make
theologians, but it will never make saints.
Receptivity is not a single thing; it is a compound rather, a blending
of several elements within the soul. It is an affinity for, a bent toward, a
sympathetic response to, a desire to have. From this it may be gathered that it
can be present in degrees, that we may have little or more or less, depending
upon the individual. It may be increased by exercise or destroyed by neglect.
It is not a sovereign and irresistible force which comes upon us as a seizure
from above. It is a gift of God, indeed, but one which must be recognized and
cultivated as any other gift if it is to realize the purpose for which it was
given. Failure to see this is the cause of a very serious breakdown in modern
evangelicalism. The idea of cultivation and exercise, so dear to the saints of
old, has now no place in our total religious picture. It is too slow, too
common. We now demand glamour and fast flowing dramatic action.
A generation of Christians reared among push buttons and automatic
machines is impatient of slower and less direct methods of reaching their
goals. We have been trying to apply machine-age methods to our relations with
God. We read our chapter, have our short devotions and rush away, hoping to
make up for our deep inward bankruptcy by attending another gospel meeting or
listening to another thrilling story told by a religious adventurer lately
returned from afar.
The tragic results of this spirit are all about us. Shallow lives,
hollow religious philosophies, the preponderance of the element of fun in
gospel meetings, the glorification of men, trust in religious externalities,
quasi-religious fellowships, salesmanship methods, the mistaking of dynamic
personality for the power of the Spirit: these and such as these are the
symptoms of an evil disease, a deep and serious malady of the soul.
For this great sickness that is upon us no one person is responsible,
and no Christian is wholly free from blame.
We have all contributed, directly or indirectly, to this sad state of
affairs. We have been too blind to see, or too timid to speak out, or too
self-satisfied to desire anything better than the poor average diet with which
others appear satisfied. To put it differently, we have accepted one another's
notions, copied one another's lives and made one another's experiences the
model for our own. And for a generation the trend has been downward. Now we
have reached a low place of sand and burnt wire grass and, worst of all, we
have made the Word of Truth conform to our experience and accepted this low
plane as the very pasture of the blessed.
It will require a determined heart and more than a little courage to
wrench ourselves loose from the grip of our times and return to Biblical ways.
But it can be done. Every now and then in the past Christians have had to do
it. History has recorded several large- scale returns led by such men as St.
Francis, Martin Luther and George Fox. Unfortunately there seems to be no
Luther or Fox on the horizon at present. Whether or not another such return
maybe expected before the coming of Christ is a question upon which Christians
are not fully agreed, but that is not of too great importance to us now.
What God in His sovereignty may yet do on a world-scale I do not claim
to know: but what He will do for the plain man or woman who seeks His face I
believe I do know and can tell others. Let any man turn to God in earnest, let
him begin to exercise himself unto godliness, let him seek to develop his
powers of spiritual receptivity by trust and obedience and humility, and the
results will exceed anything he may have hoped in his leaner and weaker days.
Any man who by repentance and a sincere return to God will break himself out of
the mold in which he has been held, and will go to the Bible itself for his
spiritual standards, will be delighted with what he finds there.
Let us say it again: The Universal Presence is a fact. God is here.
The whole universe is alive with His life. And He is no strange or foreign God,
but the familiar Father of our Lord Jesus Christ whose love has for these
thousands of years enfolded the sinful race of men. And always He is trying to
get our attention, to reveal Himself to us, to communicate with us. We have
within us the ability to know Him if we will but respond to His overtures. (And
this we call pursuing God!) We will know Him in increasing degree as our
receptivity becomes more perfect by faith and love and practice.
O God and Father, I repent of my sinful preoccupation with visible
things. The world has been too much with me. Thou hast been here and I knew it
not. I have been blind to Thy Presence. Open my eyes that I may behold Thee in
and around me. For Christ's sake. Amen.