| The
School of Prayer
Being More Effective in Your Prayers
Part Three
Walter
Beuttler
Comments:
1)
All
scriptures are from the KJV except where noted.
2)
This
message has been transcribed word for word (from Walter
Beuttler’s own teachings)
as accurately as possible (due to the
quality of the recording).
3)
Walter
Beuttler had his own dictionary of favorite words he used throughout
his messages, and they have been transcribed and spelled out accordingly.
4)
Spelling
on certain proper names, airports, hotels, locations, etc. may not
be exact.
5)
Messages
were spoken late 1960’s, early 1970’s.
6)
Walter
Beuttler was a Bible teacher at NBI (a.k.a. EBI,
Eastern Bible Institute)
for 32 years traveling worldwide since early 1950’s until a year
before he went to be with the Lord in 1974.
Yesterday
I indicated to you that I wanted to be of some help or at least
try to be in helping you to be more effective in your prayers for
your personal necessities of life.
Now you might not have any necessities.
You might not need money or clothes, but you may know of
somebody else who does. Then maybe you can help them. Do you think I believe what I said? You don’t know me yet. I can’t blame you.
24)
“No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one,
and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise
the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon (money).
25)
“Therefore I say unto you; Take no thought for your life, what
ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what
ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the
body than raiment?
26)
“Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they
reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?
27)
“Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
28)
“And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of
the field, how they grow: they toil not, neither do they spin.
29)
“And yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was
not arrayed like one of these.
30)
“Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to
day is, and to morrow is cast into the over, shall he not much more
clothe you, O ye of little faith?
31)
“Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? Or, What
shall we drink? Or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
32)
“(For after all these things do the Gentiles seek;) for your
heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things.
33)
“But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness;
and all these things shall be added unto you.
34)
“Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall
take thought for the things of itself.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. Matthew 6:24-34
Yesterday
I emphasized for you what Jesus taught His disciples when He said,
“And pray to thy Father.”
Now I told you this is not a matter of format.
Simply changing the format, the phraseology from God to Father
doesn’t do a thing. Behind
this - “And pray to thy Father” - there needs to be an inner
awareness of our relationship to God as our heavenly Father.
That
comes by the Spirit where Paul says, “Whereby we cry Abba (or Pappa)
Father.” The Holy
Spirit within us gives us a conscience awareness, an assurance,
an instinctive knowledge that God is our Father.
He makes us so aware of this relationship that we can pray
to Him like a child will pray to its earthly Father.
Now
then, if we want Him to supply our needs, there are some things
to be observed.
In
this chapter, I told you yesterday, Jesus is speaking predominately
about our personal necessities of life.
You get that throughout the whole chapter.
For most of it, He talks about drink, clothing and food.
In
this chapter there is involved a threefold recognition of God. You see much of this receiving things
from God depends on our personal relationship to Him. It’s not simply of pushing a button and
say, “God, I need a $100.00.
You promised.”
Presto, chango, duno, hallelluyo.
No, no, there’s a relationship involved.
Now
in Matthew 6:24 again, “No man can serve two masters.” Here, the Lord indicates in this context
that there are “two masters.”
We are either ruled, dominated, controlled by God as our
master, or by money as our master.
You know that this world is money crazy?
The Word says, “The love of money (not money,
but the love of money)
is the root of all evil.”
You can tell that easily from the stench that comes out of
Washington in our day with respect to the Presidential campaign
- stench on both sides.
The
Lord indicates that we are either mastered by things, or we are
mastered by God. Many
people are mastered by things.
Jesus said, “Man’s life consisteth not of the things which
he possesses.” That’s what’s wrong with America. People never get enough: more money for
less work, double time for no work. That’s the American philosophy. That is what’s going to bring this country
into ruination just as sure as you sit there. We’re going the way of ancient Rome.
You might not believe it, but I think it’s so.
Much
of it (not all),
but much of it centers on the great materialism of the age. Men live for things. Now the question is: Do we live for God
or things? Are we mastered
by Him or by things? We
need to decide who is our master, and if necessary, chose God as
our master.
In
Matthew 6:26, “Your heavenly Father feedeth them.” That’s the fowls of the air. Now don’t fall into a rationalistic trap
here. We’ve had a student
in school who didn’t pay his bills, he didn’t do any work. I challenged him about his negligence
and he said, “Brother Beuttler, why should I work? The fowls of the air didn’t work, yet
the heavenly Father fed them.”
I
said, “Yes, He fed them, but He didn’t put the food into their
mouths. They had to go out and get it.” The
heavenly Father lets the berry grow, but the bird doesn’t sit there
with its mouth open waiting for God to put the berry in. He has to go out to the bush.
What
we have here is the faithfulness of our heavenly Father. This involves the recognition, and I talked
about that yesterday, that God is our Father and consequently has
a responsibility, an obligation and is faithful in taking care of
His children. So we
need to recognize Him as our Father.
Then
we come to a difficult one, not to understand, but to carry out. Observe here that Jesus talked about the
Father, how He takes care of the fowls, how He has clothed the grass,
the flowers, how pretty they are.
Now
He says in verse 33, “But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and
his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” Now the Lord is pointing out some necessary
conditions that need to be met on our part. Some things take priority over our food
and over our clothing.
First
He says the Father cloths you, He’ll give you drink, He’ll give
you good, He’ll give you pretty clothing.
Why not? We
don’t have to walk in rags.
We might have to be willing to, but still.
But then, He adds something - BUT.
Here is a but. “But
seek ye first.” There
are things which must take priority in our lives over food and drink
and clothing.
I
talked to a young people’s group in New Jersey. Afterward in the evening, a girl followed
me up to the bus station and said, “Brother Beuttler, I want
to talk to you.” I didn’t like the setup, but couldn’t do anything
about it.
She
said, “What’s wrong with me?”
Well,
how would I know? So
I followed what we used to do in Germany as children.
When we didn’t feel well, Mother would take us to the Doctor
and he would say, “Son, stick your tongue out.”
So you stick your tongue out and he’ll look in there and
supposedly discover what might be wrong.
I let her stick her tongue out.
I still use that method.
I use it many times in school.
They
come to the office and say, “Brother Beuttler, I’ve got a problem. I’m so discouraged. My boyfriend ditched me. Boo hoo.”
“Well
now, first of all come, wipe your tears off.” I always have a clean handkerchief in
Bible school - for tears.
So I said to her, “Tell me your story.”
I let them stick their tongue out.
They don’t know that, but I let them stick their tongue out. Sooner or later they say something and
you catch on. I did
that with that girl.
She
mentioned something about her clothes.
We came back to that so I said, “Tell me more about your
clothes that you mentioned before.” I saw the twinkle in her
eye when she touched clothes.
She
said, “Brother Beuttler, I live for clothes. Money doesn’t mean a thing. I have everything. I’m a receptionist.” That was her trouble. She was mastered by clothes.
Now
there are “firsts.”
“Seek ye first the kingdom of God.”
Jesus is not speaking about heaven at all. He is speaking about the kingdom of God
within us. He taught
the kingdom of God is within you.
What Jesus is saying primarily is this: If you expect the
heavenly Father, the Almighty God, to supply your every need, you
must first of all establish a right relationship and seek the establishment
of the kingdom of God within you. That is to say, first of all it is necessary
to recognize the sovereignty of God in our lives. It’s one thing to call the Lord, Lord,
and it’s another thing to do what He says and to regard Him as such. We have a kingdom within us, and it means
that, first of all, our lives have to be reordered if necessary,
“Seek ye first.” Priorities
have to be considered.
The
kingdom of God within us, that is to say, our recognition of God
our Father as sovereign, and our subjection to His sovereignty by
doing His will takes priority over our request for the supply of
our material needs. Every kingdom has laws and seek ye first
the kingdom of God means, before you even pray for God to supply
your needs – first of all recognize the sovereignty of God in your
life, not merely in theory, but in practice. Subject
yourself to the laws that govern His kingdom, a subjecting through
obedience doing the will of God.
Then we are in a position to come to Him with confidence
to supply our needs. Seek ye first.
Again
I say there may need to be a re-ordering of our priorities. So often we have wrong priorities in life.
What comes first, what comes second, what comes third? The
kingdom of God has firsts and seconds when His sovereignty is recognized.
That implies we do the will of God.
Some
of you might say, “But I find it hard to do the will of God. The price seems to be great.” That’s
true. Saying “Yes”
to God has quite a price tag, but I’ll tell you something, “While
it costs us much to say yes to God, it will cost still more to say
no to God.” The price of obedience to God is less
than the price of disobedience.
There is a price to obey, believe you me, but disobedience
carries a higher price tag.
So
“seek first the kingdom of God.”
Let Him establish His government, His rule in your heart,
and subject yourself to His will, to the principles of His Word,
and all these things shall be added unto you.
What things? Drink,
food, clothing, the necessities of life.
I’ll borrow here from Martin Luther, the German translation. Then everything else will be thrown in.
That
reminds me when I was a boy in Germany, our grandfather sent us
two boys, cousin and myself, out to pick up the apples that had
fallen from the tree. Otherwise they rot. They take and make cider out of them.
We had a basket in our arm and walked around and picked up
apples. Every once
in awhile an apple would fall off the tree and right into the basket.
That’s exactly Luther’s translation.
First
of all, seek the kingdom of God, subject yourself to the laws of
that kingdom and the sovereignty of God in obedience to do His will,
and these things, the necessities of life, will be thrown in.
God will simply drop them in, but first comes first.
Now
then, what about these laws?
I’m trying to help you, but this is not simply a case of
pushing a button: Buzzst.
“Hey God, I need a $100.00.”
Buzzst. “No, I need $200.00.” Buzzst. “O, I need a suit of clothes too.”
Buzzst, buzzst, buzzzzzzzzst.
No, it’s not a push button thing.
There
are laws, “seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness.” Now His righteousness is expressed, is
codified shall we say, in the laws that govern His kingdom. The supply of our necessities of life
has laws which govern that supply.
Our adherence or compliance with those laws is necessary.
But
this I say, “He which soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly;
and he which soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully”
(II Corinthians
9:6).
Here
is a law. Paul is speaking
about giving and receiving.
He says, “If you give little, you get little.
If you give much, you get much.” That’s a law, and this law is as operative
as the law of the universe.
“Seek ye first the kingdom of God.” There are laws which govern the kingdom.
“Give,
and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and
shaken together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom.
(here
is the law) For with the same measure that ye mete withal it
shall be measured to you again.”
Luke 6:38
This
things works, and it’s not always easy to carry it out. Now I went to Bible school in 1927. That’s before you were around, isn’t it?
I didn’t have anything. I worked, but wages were low. I had to support myself, live by myself,
and I tried very hard to save money to attend Central Bible Institute. They wanted $125 cash upon arrival. Then, I thought they were awfully unspiritual
for wanting money. I’ve
been to school long enough, I see a different side, of course.
Well,
I saved and saved, prayed and prayed, “Lord, I need my tuition. Give me my tuition.”
Sunday
morning came, and the pastor said, “Now this morning we are taking
up a special offering.”
I
thought, “Hallelujah! Here comes the answer to my prayer.”
Then
he added, “This offering is for a poor widow in this church.” Try as I may, I just didn’t seem to qualify
for the offering. I
wasn’t a widow by any stretch of the imagination.
My heart sank.
They
took an offering. It
wasn’t for me. Anyhow,
I couldn’t give anything.
They had started, and the Lord dealt with me to put $3.00
in the offering. “$3.00! That’s an awful lot of money for me
(in those days).” I thought I was doing well to put in a
quarter when the offering came around previously. In fact, sometimes I was so unwilling
to give a quarter; I held it so tight until the eagle screamed in
my hand, so to speak. But
I finally let the thing go.
“$3.00! Lord, I can’t.” The Lord dealt with me. I knew the offering baskets were coming
up. I was in front. They started in the rear. The Lord dealt with me to give those three
dollars. I fought with
Him, argued I should say.
“How
can I give $3.00 when I don’t have enough money myself?” He just couldn’t see my point, so finally
I said, “All right, I’ll give it, but if I don’t get to Bible
school, it will be Your fault.”
I said it just like that.
The
basket came along and I dropped my $3.00 in there woefully. I remember watching them as they went
down the isle. $3.00! Finally, they were gone. I was without.
All
right, I will admit, I was not a cheerful giver. That I must admit. You know what a cheerful giver is. A cheerful giver is not one who gives
what he can give cheerfully, but who gives cheerfully what God has
a right to expect what ought to be given.
I
remember a story somebody told me when I was in Bible school in
1927, and the story stayed with me.
A brother got up in chapel and told the story.
A father sent his son to Sunday school and gave him two coins,
a dime and a quarter. He
said, “Now son, when they take up the offering, you put in either
the dime or the quarter and bring the other coin back.”
The
son returned and the father said, “Son, which coin did you put
in?”
The
son said, “Well Father, it was like this. When they first took up the offering the
scripture came to my mind, God loveth a cheerful giver. I was going to give the quarter, but when
that scripture came, I thought I could give ten cents more cheerfully
than the quarter. So
I put the dime in.”
Well,
that’s not exactly a cheerful giver.
I wasn’t giving cheerfully, but God respected my obedience
nevertheless. “Seek
ye first the kingdom of God.”
First recognize His sovereignty, subject yourself to the
laws of His kingdom and the will of His sovereignty, and all these
things shall be added unto you.
I
worked in New York City. About
three days later I crossed the Hudson in the evening by ferryboat
reading the evening paper.
The paper reached down to my chest.
A brother sat next to me.
He did some writing.
I paid no attention. It was none of my business. But he reached over and dropped a check
on the top of the paper. The
check slid down and stopped at my chest and I read: To Walter H. Beuttler, $25.00, and the scripture came
with quickening, “Give, and it shall be given unto you: good
measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and running over, shall
men give into your bosom.”
What more do you want?
$25.00 against $3.00. There you are. “Seek ye first the kingdom of God and
all these things shall be added.”
Romans
13:8 gives us another law regarding the affairs of His kingdom in
the realm of supplying our material needs.
Here I’m speaking somewhat from a Bible school background. After all, I spent most of my life there.
Owe no man anything.
If
we want God to supply what we need, we need to observe also this
law of His kingdom, namely, to practice financial responsibility. Owe no man anything. Many Bible school students are so
very indifferent in their financial responsibility to the school
in which they are getting their training.
And as I said, “I speak from experience.”
The carelessness, the indifference of some students is almost
unbelievable. That’s
true.
Bookstore
bills? “Who cares? I’m trusting the Lord. The Lord hasn’t sent it in. When He sends it in, I’ll pay.” When He does send it in they get a hoagie,
a dinner with their girlfriend, $5.00 for each meal. Well, the bookstore can wait. Now I know nothing about your bookstore,
but human nature happens to be the same all over.
Financial
responsibility - I’ll tell you frankly, and God knows I’m telling
the truth, “If I were owing you money, I would rather skip my
meals to pay you back what I owe than sit down at the feast.”
And I mean that. Wife
and I have made that a principle of life for many years. We simply do not owe. We do without first of all.
We
had a student in Bible school who for three years paid not one cent
on his tuition. On
graduation he never paid the $2.00 for his diploma.
Now that couldn’t happen today, but in those days the school
didn’t have tough enough policies.
Today they do. If
a student doesn’t pay up at the end of the semester, he’s not coming
back the next semester. That thing has worked wonders. It has worked wonders. It’s surprising how they can get it when
they’re up against it.
That
boy graduated. After
graduation he bought himself a new car, got credentials in the ministry
and is in the ministry today, is a pastor.
That man has never paid one cent on three years of Bible
school tuition. He has had letters. He never answers one letter. Finally the school gave up. How can we be in the ministry and teach
our people the laws of the kingdom of God when we ourselves ignore
them?
Take
any Christian bookstore anywhere.
They can tell you how much money preachers are owing. They come, “Well, I’m hard up. I’ll pay you next week sister dear, brother
dear. Hallelujah! Can I just take that with me and I’ll
be sending you a check.”
They never hear from them.
It is a pity when the ministry cannot be trusted in the matter
of financial responsibility.
A good time to begin is right in school to pay our bills,
and when we don’t have it to seek God persistently and definitely
that He might help us to meet our obligations.
I
used to be on the Board of Administration down there for many years,
and I remember one year when we added up what students owed, and
past students owed the school.
It was over $30,000.
Most of it to this day has never been paid.
The school had to borrow money and pay interest because the
students refused to pay. They failed to pay, paid no attention.
It’s terrible isn’t it?
“Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and all these things
shall be added unto you.”
Again,
this is the kingdom of God within us where we recognize His sovereignty
and the laws that govern His kingdom.
We should do our utmost to be free from financial debt. It maybe necessary sometimes temporarily,
but I’m speaking about the lack of responsibility in this area and
the great neglect. I
remember students who had their girlfriends, owed money in the school. They had money to take them out over to
Trainers, paid $5-6 for a dinner, took them here, took them there,
bought a ring and what have you.
They had money for everything but the school.
There is something not right.
As
I said before, this matter of getting God to supply our need may
very well involve a re-ordering of our priorities.
Wife and I have a fixed rule: What we cannot pay for in cash,
we cannot afford to buy. We
never buy on the installment plan, not even an automobile.
I
was trained to save when I was a boy in Germany. They’re great workers, they’re great savers.
Children are taught to save from a child on, have a bank
account to save your few pennies. When we buy a car, we first save up for
it. When we buy a car,
we put aside five cents for every mile we drive.
At the end of the month we put that in a bank account at
4½ % interest (now it’s 5%). At the end of the next month we add up
the miles. We drive
so far, five cents per mile goes in the bank.
When it comes time to buy a new car, the money is there. Instead of paying out interest, we gain
interest. It’s a marvelous
system, and it works if you have the will to follow through. Now in the beginning, it may be different.
They are good principles and that way we’re greatly helped
in keeping out from this debt that strangles so many people.
I
want to clarify something on the matter of debts. I do not want someone getting an impression
I do not mean to convey. I
do not mean to imply that installment buying is what Paul is talking
about with owe no man anything.
That doesn’t refer to buying things on installments. I mentioned installments because they
are so expensive and there is another way of avoiding that in many
cases.
But
if a person buys a car or a house on installments, that isn’t what
Paul is talking about owe no man anything.
When payments are due and they are neglected to be paid,
that’s where Paul’s admonition comes in.
I have an American Express credit card that I use all over
the world in charging hotels and airline tickets, but that’s not
in a sense a debt. That’s a contract, an orderly arrangement.
Now when the bill comes in and I refuse to pay it, don’t
pay for one reason or another when they’re due, that’s another story,
so please do not feel convicted when you buy a car on the installment
plan, or a house or mansion.
I
mentioned re-ordering our priorities, complying with the laws that
govern His kingdom in this area of financial responsibility, and
now another one namely, honoring God with our substance.
“Honour
the Lord with thy substance, and with the first-fruits of all thine
increase. So shall
thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out
with new wine.” Proverbs 3:9-10
“Honoring
the Lord with our substance and with the increase of our first-fruits”
means that, first of all, what we already have should be used for
the honor and glory of God and not wasted.
Some people that are in need are great wasters.
We’re not exactly poor, nor are we exactly rich by any means,
but we are very careful with wasting food.
We just don’t waste food.
It’s part of the substance the Lord has given to us, and
we try to take care of it. And God takes care of us.
To
honor the Lord with the first-fruit of our increase brings us into
tithing. We ourselves are tithers systematically.
Not everybody tithes.
But if we’re going to honor God, we’re going to pay our tithes.
Last
year in school a question came up by some students, “Where are
we to pay our tithe?”
Some go out to work and wanted to know, “Should we send
it to our home church and support the pastor, or what should we
do with our tithe?” Far
be it from me to tell anybody what to do with their tithe. That’s between the individual and God,
but the student had asked us for our opinion.
My
opinion was, in fact, I said, “Where do you get your spiritual
nourishment? Where
do you get your food? Where
do you get your spiritual values?”
They
answered, “Here at school.”
Well
I said, “Does it not seem appropriate that your tithe would go
where you’re getting your spiritual food?”
Anyhow,
we ought to honor God with the first-fruits of our substance. That takes us to Malachi 1. You understand I’m hurrying because I
do not want to come back to this tomorrow.
There are other things I would like to share with you.
“A
son honoureth his father, and a servant his master: if then I be
a father, where is mine honour?
And if I be a master, where is my fear?
Saith the Lord of hosts unto you, O priests, that despise
my name. And ye say, Wherein have we despised thy
name? Ye offer polluted
bread upon mine altar; and ye say, Wherein have we polluted thee? In that ye say, The table of the Lord
is contemptible. And
if ye offer the blind for sacrifice, is it not evil? and if ye offer
the lame and sick, is it not evil?
Offer it now unto thy governor; will he be pleased with thee,
or accept thy person? saith the Lord of host.” Malachi 1:6-9
Now
I am reminded here of an incident.
I was speaking one place.
The pastor showed me something and said, “Brother Beuttler,
look. This is what was in the offering basket.”
There were four pieces of a dollar.
The four pieces were completely separated hooked together
with a safety pin. They were taped, they were dirty, they
were torn. Somebody
put in the offering basket four separate pieces of an old dollar
bill, pasted, torn, dirty, hooked together by a safety pin.
I wish I had given the man $5 to buy that $1, just to show
it around. You might think, “What’s the difference?”
I
would say that that was an insult to Almighty God. To think that God is so little appreciated
that the person would dare to put a dollar bill like that into the
offering basket! It’s
the same spirit as you have here, “Anything is good enough for
God.” I would have rather thrown that dollar
bill in the garbage can than offering it to God. Do you see what I mean?
The
table of the Lord is contemptible.
Anything is good enough for God.
People have a Canadian dime or a quarter and don’t know what
to do with it. Nobody
wants it. Well, give it to the Lord. Put it in the offering basket. Let the treasurer worry how he’ll get
rid of it. I myself
would rather throw it away.
I would rather throw it away than demonstrate such a callous
disrespect for our heavenly Father.
Here
God is saying, “A son honoureth his father, and a servant his
master, but you are not honouring me.”
“Wherein
did we not honor you?”
By putting a Canadian quarter in the offering basket. If you had any respect for Me, you’d rather
suffer the loss than bring me that for an offering.
It’s
not merely a case of a financial transaction. It’s worship. When we give gifts to somebody, a person
that we respect, a ten-dollar bill for a birthday gift. What do you do? Many a time, we’ve gone to the bank for
the brand new ten-dollar bill, put it in an envelope and presented
it in a nice way. How
about bringing the Lord His gifts in a nice way?
In
the island of Bali in Indonesia, I watched the temple worshippers,
these Bali dancers dancing to their deity, bringing their offerings. O brother! I want to see that again. They brought their fruits and flowers
beautifully arranged on a tray.
You wondered how they did it, beautiful patterns. They bring it on their hand and there
they dance before their deity and finally they put it down. Literally, tears came to my eyes when
I saw how those girls was so devoted to their stone deity in front
of them, with what honor and grace and respect they presented their
offering. And here we just pack up a Canadian quarter
or something, throw it in the basket, good riddance, Hallelujah. The Lord will fix it up somehow.
No,
no, no, no. If you
want to come to the heavenly Father in confidence, there needs to
be a respect on our part, honoring God with our substance and the
first-fruits of all our increase.
“Will
a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed me.
But ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings.” Malachi 3:8
How
can we come to God and ask Him in confidence to supply our needs
when, according to His standards, we are a thief stealing from the
Lord by withholding wrongfully.
You see, we can’t have faith without obeying His laws.
I’ve come to that just in time.
We’re
still on the laws of His kingdom, putting our priorities in a Biblical
order as the Lord said, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God.” First comply with the rules, the laws
that govern His kingdom. First
subject yourself to the sovereignty of the will of God.
“For
even when we were with you, this we commanded you, that if any would
not work, neither should he eat.” II Thessalonians 3:10
I
wish all America believed this.
Of all the drones and lazy people that we have on welfare
today, people with whom welfare subsistence is a way of life from
generation to generation. That is correct now. But God has a law, If any man would not
work, neither should he eat.
We’ve
had a student in school with a family, and that family was down
and out. The children were ill clothed, poorly
fed. They come around
to our houses, faculty houses, sometimes to play with your children. They come at mealtime and their eyes fairly
popped. “Honey,
would you like to eat with us?”
“I
sure would. I sure
would. We don’t have that at home.”
“Well,
what do you have at home?”
“We
have bread and jelly.”
“And?”
“And
nothing,” they replied.
“What’s
your Daddy doing?”
“He’s
praying.”
“Oh,
What’s he praying?”
“He’s
praying for God to supply our food.
He prays a lot.”
When
you see that Daddy, “How you doing, brother?”
“Praying
to the Lord.”
“Have
you ever thought of getting a job?”
“No,
not me. I’m living
by faith.”
“Living
by faith? Don’t you
want to get to work?”
“Oh
no. I have a trade. I could work at it, but the Lord wants
me to live by faith.”
“Well,
what about the family?”
“That’s
the Lord’s responsibility.”
“Oh,
is it?” My Bible
says that “if any man provide not for his own, he is worse than
an infidel and has denied the faith.”
It’s a man’s responsibility to take care of his family, not
God’s.
I’ve
heard him get up in a testimony meeting, “Well, I thank God for
a real good prayer time. My
family hasn’t had a decent meal for weeks, but I tell you folks,
I still believe the Lord. Hallelujah! God will not let me down.
He will find somebody to help us.”
He was making an appeal.
Of course the baskets began to show up and then he felt that
he had confirmation that he shouldn’t work.
All the people did was have pity on him and his stupidity.
Finally it got so bad he had to get a job. It’s no disgrace to get a job. I worked while I was a student.
I
know something about faith, but also the laws that govern this. I met a lady whose husband was a graduate
of our school. She
said, “Brother Beuttler, I wish you could do something for my
husband. All he does is pray. He doesn’t go to work. He gets no job. We have nothing to eat. We don’t know what to do next. He’s up in the attic praying all the time.”
“Hallelu,
hallelu, hallelujah, glory, glory, glory, hallelu, hallelu, hallelu,
hallelu. O Lord, You’re
the one who feeds the birds.” I told you He doesn’t carry it
to their mouths.
I
gave him a talking to. I
took him over the coals and I said, “Brother, you’re worse than
an infidel with no sense of responsibility for family.
Quit your praying and go out and look for a job.” He did. He got a job and his family was taken
care of. Prayer is
no substitute for work when work is an obligation.
Amen’t
I terrible this morning? It’s
easier for me to say these things than for these men because they’ll
have to stay with you. They
have to live with you. I’ll
be going. That’s one advantage of having an outsider.
All right now, but what about faith?
Let’s come back to Matthew.
I hope you could follow me because I spoke a little hastily
because of time.
“Wherefore,
if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow
is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of
little faith.” Matthew 6:30
Among
the laws of the kingdom that govern the supply of our material necessities
of life we’ve had arranging our priorities in accordance with God’s
laws, observing God’s laws, financial responsibility-exercising
it by paying our bills, and having a real concern for it when we
can’t. We do our best. Honoring God, diligence. God has not promised to supply the needs
of loafers. God does
not like loafers. God
wants people who will work.
He doesn’t like drones. They’re no good to Him, not in the ministry,
not in Bible school.
“Faith. O ye of little faith. Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God.” And
this hearing doesn’t simply mean hearing.
It involves a compliance with the Word. If we want faith for God’s supply of our
needs, we need compliance with the Word of God that has to do with
the supply of our needs.
I’ll
take you lastly to I John 3:21, and see what we get there:
“Beloved,
if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God.” I John 3:21
If
our heart condemn us not.
You see faith is not a matter of intellectual calisthenics,
“Hallelu, hallelu, I believe, I believe, hallelu, hallelu, I
believe, I’ll just believe.” You cannot just believe. Faith is a fruit. It comes through the Word quickened by
the Spirit, but it cannot grow if there is condemnation in the heart. “If our heart condemn us not, then
have we confidence toward God.”
We
cannot have real faith if our lives are not in harmony with the
Divine priority. We
cannot have faith for finances if we do not comply with the laws
of His Word that govern finances.
You can’t have faith because that disobedience will inhibit
the development of real faith in our hearts.
Our faith cannot be what it should be if we have no financial
responsibility, if we let debts ride, if we don’t care whether the
school sinks or swims, if we don’t hurry to the bookstore and pay
our bill to the best of our ability, or the business office and
put there what belongs there to the very best of our ability in
the earliest possible time.
Faith cannot be what it is, honestly students.
We
cannot have a real faith without a real sense of responsibility. We cannot have real faith, adequate faith,
without honoring God with our substance and paying our tithe conscientiously
and putting them where they belong. We cannot have real faith if we are lazy,
we’re not diligent, we’re slothful.
We don’t want to work.
We’d rather say, “I’m trusting the Lord.
I don’t have to get a job.
You poor fellows, the way you got to sweat in the factory. That’s not me. I’m spiritual. I believe the Lord. I’m trusting the Lord. I, I, I. I live by faith. You live by sweat, poor thing. Hallelu, hallelu, hallelu.”
God
has more respect for those who live by sweat than those who sit
up in an ivory tower with, Hallelu, hallelu, hallelu, and shirk
their responsibilities and obligations.
“BUT
seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all
these things shall be added unto you.”
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