| An
Eye for the Spirit
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.
“And
I will pray the Father, and He shall give you another Comforter,
that He may abide with you for ever: even the Spirit of truth: whom
the world cannot receive, because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth
Him: but ye know Him; for He dwelleth with you, and shall be in
you.” John 14:16-17
As
I told you this morning from a German translation, “The world
cannot receive the Spirit because the world has no eye for the Spirit;
no love for the Spirit; no interest.”
We lose very many things if we do not have an interest in
the Spirit of God or an eye for the Spirit.
I
remember the occasion in our school where we had a chapel service. Now the system we had was that the student
group that led the service had a faculty advisor. The auditorium was divided into two sections.
It was our custom, or our arrangement that when the service
was finished, the faculty advisor in charge would leave the platform
first, and the students on the platform having a part in the service
followed him. Then
he would lead the group down the center isle, and the rest of the
students would then follow behind and leave the chapel to the classroom.
One
morning I happened to be faculty chairman.
The students carried on with the service, and just as the
speaker began to get nearer the end of his message, I could distinctly
perceive the Lord standing in front of the platform, just a few
moments before closing. Obviously, there was a reason why the
Lord was there. I didn’t
see Him, not on that occasion; I’ve seen Him, but not on this occasion,
but I could clearly perceive the presence of the Lord.
This
boy finished his message, and then he said, “Let’s stand and
be dismissed.” Well,
I try to have an eye for the Spirit, and I knew in my spirit, the
service was not to be dismissed.
Yet he prayed and dismissed the chapel and said, “Now
shall we go to our classes?”
It
was up to me to take the lead in getting off the platform, and I
didn’t take the lead. I
just stood there. I had my hand raised, my eyes closed.
I said to the Lord in my heart, “Lord, if everyone walks
out on You, I want You to know that I will not walk out.
I will stay behind with You.”
I
stood there, and everybody expected me to start leaving the chapel
and I wouldn’t do it. I
could hear our some 200 students turn around facing the center isle
getting ready to follow behind, and I kept standing, eyes closed.
I stood and stood, kept my mind, my eyes so to speak, on
the Spirit to see what He would have me do.
I
felt I should simply keep standing.
I knew that 400 eyes were watching me wondering why on earth
Beuttler doesn’t make a move.
Now that’s an uncomfortable feeling, but it’s one of the
things you have to bear. I kept standing. I do not know how long, but it was not
very long, though to me, it seemed an eternity, all withstood.
Later
on the students said to me, “Brother Beuttler, when we saw you
stand like that, we knew something was up, but didn’t know what.” Well, I kept standing, and all of a sudden,
the power of God struck that student body and poured out His Spirit.
We were in that chapel for three solid hours until the noon
hour. God gave us a
mighty move of the Spirit of God. We almost missed it. It was a case of having an eye for the
Spirit.
We
miss many, many things along this line.
You’ll have to pardon me when I go back to school, because
I spent 32 years there and you draw from your experiences, of course. There had been many an occasion when having
an eye for the Spirit saved the class, or saved a chapel service.
One
year at school before class, I was going to stop in somebody’s house
and borrow a tool. As
I walked up the hill, I suddenly had a little presence in here (stomach area),
a little signal. I
knew what the signal meant: don’t do it.
So
I went right back to school, and during that first hour class, we
had a real outpouring of the Spirit.
I’m confident we would have missed it if I had not been sensitive
to the check of the Spirit of God.
These
things are so far reaching; it would be difficult for me to take
you in all sorts of avenues where this thing operates.
One
year I was going to Africa; then over to Australia; to Perth; etc. I had a schedule. I had meetings lined up in the Congo.
I was very glad to go to the Congo, as I had never been there.
The Congo had always fascinated me, and here I had the opportunity
to go way back into the interior for a seminar with the national
pastors.
Well,
the day approached. Everything
was set: ticket, everything fixed.
It was a very short time before leaving.
I try to be sensitive to the Spirit - I think I am. I discovered a song of the Spirit in here
(stomach area). Now as I tell you these things, you watch
because you will learn. Or
putting it differently: when you see how the Spirit of God works
in other people, very often that’s the way He works in you. Many times you didn’t recognize Him and
people say, “Now I know what that was.” This is my style; this is my method.
I
discovered a chorus in my spirit.
I do not know whether you have it here in Australia. (Is this Australia?
No, not yet; it’s on my schedule later.)
I noticed the song in here, “Not what I wish to be, nor where
I wish to go, for who am I that I should choose my way.” Do you have that song here? Now I’m not a singer, you recognize that
right away, but that was the song in here.
That went over and over.
Finally, it dawned on me and I said to myself, “Hey Beuttler,
the Spirit is speaking to you.”
Let
me tell you something here.
Very, very often the Spirit of God has something to say through
a chorus. You watch that. It’s a wonderful life in the Spirit, but
we have to be sensitive to it.
And there was that chorus, over and over.
“Beuttler, the Lord’s talking to you.”
I
thought, “What could that be with that chorus going over and
over?” so I said, “Lord, I’m not going where I want to go. You asked me to go and teach all nations,
and Africa and Australia are all part of it. What’s wrong? Is there anything wrong with the itinerary?”
No
sooner had I said that, there stood in my conscientiousness one
word, “The Congo.”
I
said, “Lord, what’s wrong with the Congo. Why shouldn’t I go there?” I recognized I wasn’t supposed to go to
the Congo.
I
said, “Lord, I have a nice invitation, and a good week of ministry
with the national pastors.”
But the song kept singing, and I realized God did not want
me to go to the Congo. I had an eye for the Spirit, an interest,
an openness, a responsiveness that saved me.
So
I wrote and told them I was not coming.
They wrote back and said, “We’re very, very sorry, very
disappointed.”
I
couldn’t help that. But
now I had an open week, so I left it open.
It was too late to fill it up.
I thought, “Somewhere on route, I’ll stop and have a vacation.”
You need that too sometime, you know.
So
I stopped in Kano, Nigeria.
I had a hotel there, and it was furiously hot.
It’s just south of the Sahara, and the wind came down. It was dreadfully hot, so I thought, “I’ll
go out to the airport and go upstairs. Maybe I’ll catch a little breeze.”
I
was up there sipping a Coke Cola, and as I did, I noticed a plane
coming in: a DC 6, women and children only.
It’s the only passengers that were on; not one man. I thought, “That’s strange.”
Five
minutes later, another DC 6 plane came in: women and children only. Five minutes later, another DC 6 came
in: woman and children only.
I still remember a little girl dragging her dolly by one
arm. They all had bundles. I said to myself, “Something is wrong
somewhere.”
So
I went down to the information desk and said, “Lady, could you
tell me something. What’s
the idea of three DC 6’s coming in with woman and children only? Where are the men?”
She
said, “Haven’t you heard?”
I
said, “No, heard what?”
She
said, “There’s a revolution in the Congo.”
I
said, “Oh! Where
is the revolution?”
She
said, “Way beyond Stanleyville in the interior.” And she mentioned the very city where
we were supposed to have the seminar.
Now
God saved me from being caught in that revolution. And you doubtless know while many got
out, many never did. They
were thrown into the river; and to the crocodiles: missionaries,
whites, Frenchmen and what have you.
The Lord had saved me from being caught in the beginning
of that revolution that was so terrible.
It necessitated an eye for the Spirit, a song in here (stomach area),
and I recognized the Spirit of God was talking. Friends, if we will develop a sensitivity
to the Spirit, an eye for the Spirit, there’s no telling what God
can do for us as a result.
Just
one more instance that comes to my mind:
Mrs.
Beuttler and I were in Singapore a couple of years ago. She wanted to do a little shopping in
a Chinese department store at what they call Rattles Place. Some of you have been there, of course.
So she went shopping, and I followed behind her.
I remember saying, “You just go around the store, and
I’ll walk behind you like a little doggie.” I had nothing to
do, but to be with her.
As
we were walking along, I discovered in here (stomach area),
a little presence, a presence of the Spirit of God, and I knew what
it meant. You see,
the Lord will teach us these things.
They cannot effectively be taught to others, but I knew what
it meant. It meant to me that the Lord wanted me
to be alone. So I said
to Wife, “If you’ll go shopping alone, I’ll go over in that chair
and we’ll meet there,” and I went over there.
As
soon as I sat down, there was a strong inner presence, a combination
of worship and intercession.
In the midst of it, the Lord gave me a message for the Bible
school the next morning. That message, so to speak, brought the
house down, brought the roof down.
Did we have the move of the Spirit!
The missionary’s wife went all to pieces. It was a message fresh from the heart
of God, but it took an eye for the Spirit: that little discerning,
that little signal within, and understanding it’s meaning - “I
want you alone.”
So
here, “The world cannot receive the Spirit because it seeth Him
not, has no eye for Him, no interest, neither knoweth Him, but ye
know Him, for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you.”
This
morning I mentioned this personal knowledge of the Spirit of God. I had also mentioned to you that the Holy
Spirit is a person, and now we’re going to look into that for a
little while.
In
I Corinthians 2:9-11 we have a marvelous passage giving insight
into this area:
“But
as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared
for them that love him. But
God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth
all things, yea, the deep things of God.” I Corinthians 2:9-10
Now
what I’m doing with verse 9 is to point out to you a little secret,
and if you can catch it, you’ll be on the way for marvelous things
from the Spirit of God. Notice
what is said, “As it is written, eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,
neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God
hath prepared for them that love him.”
Notice
something, there are things which God has for us in the life of
the Spirit which do not come to us, which we do not acquire, as
it is written here, by means of the eye.
There are things, which God has for us, which you will not
discover through the eye, that is to say, reading will not do it.
It has to come by revelation.
“Neither
hath ear heard” - you never hear some of the things which God
has prepared for those that love Him.
“Neither hath entered into the heart of man the things
which God has prepared for them that love him” - in other words,
we would never conceive in our hearts what God has in store for
us.
In
1951, the Lord dealt with me about traveling for Him. In fact, the Lord spoke to me in a voice
that I heard. Now I
can tell you what happened.
It shows you the marvelous ways of the Spirit.
In
the School, I had charge of a revival, a tremendous move of the
Spirit. On Friday night, I made a mistake, and
by my mistake, I killed the meeting.
I killed it, a tremendous move of God. I killed it dead. I did not mean to, but made a mistake.
I knew the meeting was dead and could not be saved, so I
dismissed the students.
During
the night, at 2:30 a.m., I had a marvelous experience. I was awakened by a man singing in my
room, in our bedroom. Wife
slept over there by the wall.
I was over here. She
never knew a thing about it.
I was awakened by a man singing in the room.
As I woke up startled, I looked and there stood the Lord
by the window (inside though),
full size, dressed in white down to the foot, down to the floor,
a white garment, looking my way; and He kept singing. He sang two stanzas of a song I never
heard before nor since. The
first stanza had to do with sin and forgiveness.
The second stanza had to do with grace and glory.
When
He finished the second stanza, He suddenly was gone. That was just as real when I looked at
Him as when I look at you people.
I was thrilled, and was so conscience of His presence. It was 2:30 in the morning.
I
got up and sat before the Lord for several hours. Then I noticed something was wrong. I could give you details, but do not want
to take the time. So
I said, “Lord, is there anything wrong?”
At
once, in front of me stood words that said, “The error of Uzzah.”
You remember Uzzah in the Old Testament, the man who touched the
ark by mistake and was killed.
The Lord let me know, “You touched the ark and death in
the meeting was the result.” That is to say, the meeting died. There was no moving of the Spirit at all.
I
recognized at once what was wrong: I had killed the meeting by putting
my hand on the manifestation of the Spirit.
I didn’t mean to. Some
of the fellows went into excesses.
They were getting into the flesh, so I got into the flesh
trying to correct the flesh.
But the flesh cannot correct the flesh.
Flesh is flesh. That’s
what killed the meeting.
So
I said, “Lord, I’m awfully sorry.
I did not mean to do it.
Is there anything I can do?”
And
the Lord spoke to my heart very clearly, “On Sunday morning I
want you to stand up before the entire student body and make a full
confession of what you did on Friday night, and ask the students
for their forgiveness.”
I
squirmed like a worm and said, “Lord, that’s hard. I’m a teacher, and I’m the senior teacher
at that.” Apparently,
that made it all the more necessary.
I
said, “Lord, normally it isn’t the faculty that does the confession,
it’s the students.” Maybe
that’s what’s wrong. But
this time it was the faculty, and I squirmed and said, “Lord,
You’ll get me eventually; You’ll get me to come around, but can’t
You let me out?”
There
was no out. Sunday
morning came. We were
passing out communion. My
heart started to pound so awfully, it seemed it was going to jump
out of my suit, and out of me.
I knew that was the signal.
Say,
have you ever sat in an audience and the Spirit came on you to give
a message in prophecy or tongues or interpretation, and your heart
pounds to beat the band? Very
often that is the signal that that’s it.
It’s some reaction of the Spirit, but that for me, was the
signal.
I
stood up and said, “Students, I have a confession to make.” Whew! You could have heard a pin drop.
I
could hear them think, “Brother Beuttler!” Oh the silence! The silence was so loud it hurt my ears,
if you know what I mean.
But
I said it. I told them
straight. I told them
what happened; told them what I did; and asked for their forgiveness. It wasn’t easy, but I did it. When I did that, one of the young men,
a student, jumped to his feet and gave a powerful utterance in prophecy.
I’ll
give you part of it. Some
of it I withhold. I’m
afraid to share that. I
don’t share everything. It
was obviously addressed to me, and started out by saying, “Because
thou hast done this thing, and hast humbled thyself in the sight
of this congregation; therefore the Lord, thy God, will raise thee
up and make thee a city set on a hill; and cause thee to ride upon
the high places of the earth...” It went on with some more, but I do not
want to share that.
When
I heard that, I broke and wept.
I wept, and knelt right down on the floor between the seats
and wept like a baby. I
went to pieces, and as I did, the Lord spoke right in here (stomach area),
in words that I heard. The
Spirit spoke as clear as a bell, sharp as a razor, “Go and teach
all nations.”
If
I had not made that confession, He would never have done it.
Folkses,
it may well be as we go through the way, and you see what there
is in store for us; it may well be that the Spirit of God will create
a hunger, a thirst, a desire in your heart for some of these things
I expect to share with you. And in doing so, in your response, it
may well be, that He will put His finger on something to straighten
out first of all. You
understand what I mean? The
Spirit works that way. So
the Lord spoke right in here (stomach area)
precisely as I told you.
Now
then:
“Eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart
of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him.”
I
had no idea; it would have never occurred to my mind that when the
Lord said, “Go and teach all nations,” that that would reap
such immense proportions.
I have traveled for 22 years, crisscrossed the world over
and over again. My feet have stood in more than 100 countries.
In some of them so often, I couldn’t even tell you how often.
When I think of all the mileage, of all the ministry for
over 22 years, over a half a million miles of air travel.
That thing would have never dawned on my mind.
“Eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart
of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him.”
As
we respond to the Lord, we have no inkling what God will do, what
He has in store for you and for me.
“But
God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth
all things, yea, the deep things of God.
For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit
of man which is in him? Even so the things of God knoweth no man,
but the Spirit of God.” I Corinthians 2:10-11
Basically,
what we see here is that the Spirit of God knows. Obviously, the Spirit of God has an intellect.
May I suggest to you that many Christians do not know that
the Spirit of God knows. They say they know, “Oh yes, the Spirit
of God knows,” but they do not know. You see the Spirit of God knows the need.
He knows what needs are present in a given congregation at
a given time.
Have
you ever heard people say, “That preacher? He was talking about me. Why doesn’t he have the courage and talk
to me directly if he has something to say?” I have been accused countless times of
having been informed. “Who
told Beuttler about me? Oh
I know: He’s staying in Sister ‘So and So’s house, and she told
him all about the church.
No wonder he knows so much about us.”
The
fact is, I do not like to stay in anybody’s house at any time. When I’m in meetings, I don’t even like
social visits. I like
to stay where I belong. That
way, I hear nothing; I learn nothing.
Nobody can fill my ear except the Lord.
Then when you touch things that are present, people can’t
say, “Well, he has been informed.”
The Spirit of God knows.
I
remember speaking in the States.
I’d never been to this church before; I didn’t know the pastor;
I came right from the train to the platform.
The service had already begun.
After
the service a lady walked up.
How shall I describe her?
Well, she was very rotundant, very heavy.
Oh, she had muscle!
She had big fists, and she had her fists on her hips, and
came right up the center isle swinging her torso belligerently.
She
says, “Preacher, I have a question.”
I
could tell her belligerence, but I didn’t belligerate her belligerence. I said, “Well, what’s the problem?”
She
said, “You’re the problem.
Listen preacher, weren’t you talking about me now for a whole
hour and a quarter?”
I
said, “I wasn’t talking about you, not to my knowledge.”
She
said, “Are preachers telling lies too?
Listen young feller, you weren’t only talking about me for
a whole hour and a quarter, but when you said such and such a thing,
you were even pointing your finger at me.
And you say that nobody told you.
Somebody told you all about me.”
And off she went taking her torso with her.
I
didn’t know one thing. To
this day, I don’t know what she had in mind.
The Holy Ghost knows.
Instead of throwing bricks or stones at the preachers who
talk right to our need, to our condition, we ought to thank God
that the Spirit of God knows the place we’re in; and knows how to
direct words toward us. The Spirit of God knows.
He
knows everything about every one of us.
And so we ought to treat this Spirit of God with due respect,
not only have an eye for Him, but respect the Spirit of God as a
person.
At
this point, I want to point out to you that the Spirit of God has
emotions; the Spirit of God feels.
We need to respect and reverence the Spirit of God.
He has feeling; He’s sensitive.
I’m
taking you for a moment to Isaiah 63:7-10.
We’re now getting into some specific aspects of the Spirit
of God.
“I
will mention the lovingkindnesses of the Lord, and the praises of
the Lord, according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us, and
the great goodness toward the house of Israel, which he hath bestowed
on them according to his mercies, and according to the multitude
of his lovingkindnesses. For he said, Surely they are my people,
children that will not lie; so he was their Saviour. In all their
affliction he was afflicted, and the angel of his presence saved
them: in his love and in his pity he redeemed them; and he bare
them, and carried them all the days of old.” Isaiah 63:7-10
Will
you just notice this in passing: “In all their affliction, he
was afflicted.” This
is God now, the Father in His lovingkindness.
Those of us who are afflicted have the comfort of the fact
that the Lord is afflicted with our affliction.
When
a child is sick, parents that love the child are afflicted in their
hearts by the affliction of their child.
They say, “Oh honey, I feel so badly.
I feel so sorry for you.
It hurts me to see that you are sick.”
Well, God is afflicted when we are afflicted. That’s only in passing.
“But
they rebelled, and vexed his Holy Spirit.”
The
Spirit of God is a person, and because He is a person, He has characteristics
of personality; one of them is that He has sensibility or emotion,
feeling. The Holy Spirit feels. That’s why it is written:
“And
grieve not the Holy Spirit whereby ye are sealed unto the day of
redemption.”
When
I was a young preacher, I was quite legalistic. That’s the German, you know. It took God a long time to get the German
out of the German. Now
I have some characteristics, but I’m speaking about this legalism.
One
night, I gave the assembly I pastored a terrible whipping. Ooh! Did I let them have it! I laid down the law and you better believe
it.
After
I got done, they were all still.
Nobody, as we say in German, “nouxed.” They were all still, and I felt so hurt
in my spirit. I congratulated
myself by saying, “You know Beuttler, you’re all right. You can whip God’s people and feel bad
about it. That’s a
good sign.” So, I even complimented myself on top of it all.
I
was talking to a preacher’s wife, who was no fool. I told her the whole thing. She said, “Brother Beuttler, are you
sure what you felt was not the grieving of the Spirit?”
When
she said that, I knew she was right.
The Spirit felt hurt because I hurt His people.
We
can vex the Holy Spirit.
“Grieve
not the Holy Spirit, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and clamour,
and evil speaking with all malice be put away from among you.”
Now
I know there is no evil speaking in Auckland, and no malice and
no bitterness; they’re all saints, but in New York, San Francisco
and Chicago, you have those conditions in the Assemblies of God,
believe it or not. Those things hurt the Spirit of God.
Here
the prophet speaks about the Spirit’s vexation. We can vex the Spirit, that is to say,
irritate Him, trouble Him, disturb Him, agitate Him, anger Him. He can be angry. God can be angry and still be holy. Incidentally, we can vex the Spirit of
God by some things. Now
if we really know the Spirit, surely we do not want to vex the Spirit.
Here
I want to take a little while and give you tonight four things that
vex the Spirit of God. Remember
He’s a person. He’s
omnipresent; He’s among us.
We can vex Him, trouble Him, disturb Him, irritate Him, agitate
Him. Oh yes! Look how the Spirit of God was
agitated in the case of Ananias and Sapphira.
I’m
taking you here to I Thessalonians 5:19.
You probably know the scripture.
“Quench not the Spirit.”
We can vex the Spirit, trouble Him, disturb Him, anger Him
in a holy sense by quenching Him.
He can be quenched; He can be suppressed.
This has largely to do with the exercise of the gifts of
the Spirit. We’re told here to “Quench not the
Spirit.” We can
suppress the Spirit when He wants to use us.
We
had a teacher in the school, a good woman, a good teacher, but she
did not like what she called, “the interruptions of the Spirit.” She would not permit any manifestations
of the Spirit such as prophesying, tongues, interpretations and
other things in her classes.
She simply would not tolerate it, and she would suppress
any attempt of the Spirit of God to use a student.
That was very unfortunate because she was a good woman and
a top quality teacher, but this was an area for which she did not
have any particular use.
“Quench
not the Spirit.”
I’m
going to read to you from my notes where I have the reading of six
different translations. They’re
all quite synonymous, but still there is a shade of difference,
and it helps you to grasp better the idea of quenching the Spirit.
Before
I forget it - there is a difference between the Holy Spirit and
the human spirit. Some
human spirits do need suppression.
I’m not speaking about the human spirit, but about the genuine
manifestation of the Spirit, as Paul does.
Now we have here in different translations:
1)
“Do
not extinguish the Spirit’s fire” (Berkeley). In other words, if the Spirit of God moves,
do not extinguish it.
2)
“Do
not put out the fire of the Spirit of God”
(New World Translation).
3)
“Never
quench the fire of the Spirit”
(Moffat).
I
have seen the Spirit of God quenched on many, many occasions over
the years, and that, deliberately, because other things take priority. Remember now, it does not speak about
the human spirit when people carry on in their own spirit. That’s another subject. But as far as the Spirit is concerned:
never quench the fire of the Spirit.
4)
“Stop
stifling the Spirit” (Williams). We can stifle it in public; we can do
it individually.
I
had a pianist once while I was a pastor.
I was speaking, and in speaking, felt that someone had an
utterance from the Spirit.
So I stopped, looked over the congregation, waited for something,
but nothing came. I happened to look over to the pianist
and there she was: (demonstrated
how she held an utterance in by stuffing a handkerchief in her mouth),
and I knew that was it. She
was stifling, suppressing the Spirit of God.
So
I went over to her and said, “Look here, take your handkerchief
out and let the Spirit have His way,” and she gave a beautiful
utterance in tongues.
We
can stifle the Spirit.
We
had another case in school.
There was a girl, and she was a little problem in this area. A good kid, but ignorant. She would scream. She went: Oooooooooooh! Louder than that! Oh, it chilled your ears, went down your
spine. She screamed. Well, she sat over there, and I didn’t
want to be harsh with her.
You can take something and hit people over the head, but
then to get them started again is something else.
I let it go and waited until she got done.
She held the class up 5 minutes or so with her screaming. Well, finally she ran out of steam and
that took care of it.
A
few classes later, she went screaming.
Oh did she scream!
I could tell the students wondered why I didn’t do anything. Well, the girl was new. I was sure she was sincere. She needed help, so I let it go again.
When she did it a third time, I thought, “Now this can’t
go on.”
So
I talked to her, “Would you mind coming to my office sometime? I’d like to have a little chat with you.”
She
said, “Oh yes Brother Beuttler.
When would you like to see me?”
So we made a date.
She
came in and sat in the corner.
I pulled up a chair.
I like to look people in the eye, then you can look right
down on the inside. I knew I had to treat her carefully because
she was sensitive, a certain nationality, and I knew she would be
very sensitive to any criticism.
So I said, “My, the Lord has been blessing you of late,
hasn’t He?”
She
answered, “Oh hallelujah! Brother, yes, so wonderful!”
I
thought she was ready to go off again.
I let her talk a little bit and then I said, “Do you know
that the Lord wants to bless you even more?”
“Oh,
He wants to bless me more!
If He wants to bless me more, I don’t see how I can stand
it.”
I
said, “Suppose I help you stand it.
I want to tell you a story.”
Once
upon a time, I was a boy.
(I really was,
believe it or not. I’m
an old boy now.)
(Wife said the
other day, “You know, there’s still a boy in you.” I like to have a little fun sometime.
And I said to her, “When there’s no longer a little boy
in me, then it’s time for you to worry.”)
Anyway,
when I was a little boy in Germany, I liked mechanics. My Father bought me a little steam engine
with a water pump and some other machinery for Christmas. You put water in it, put fire under it
and the engine would drive the machinery from the hot water. It had a whistle, and you know how boys
are: they love noise.
When
you see somebody with a car with a muffler that makes a lot of noise,
you know there’s still a boy driving that car even though the boy
is 60 years old. They like noise - the adolescence in them,
you understand that.
I
was a boy and liked the noise.
I liked the whistle the best.
I turned it up this loud: Whee ee ee ee ee ee ee!...until
it used up all the steam, and the machinery would stop working. There was no more steam left. It blew it all off.
One
day my Father said to me, “Son, if you would leave that whistle
alone, you’d have enough power to drive the machinery.”
I
want to tell you something, “You’ve been blowing the whistle,
and you lost all the power with the whistle.”
(Whee ee ee
ee ee! Louder than that.) At first she was a little...didn’t respond
quite right, but came around.
I
said, “Look here, if you would leave your whistle alone and not
make all that noise, and lose all the power of the Spirit, the Lord
would use you. The next time the Spirit of God comes
on you, try not to let it go with Whee ee ee ee. Nobody gets anything out of that. You’re wasting our time, and it’s hard
on our nerves. Just
hold it in, and ask the Lord to help you know what to do with it.”
She
said, “Well Brother Beuttler, thank you, I’ll try, but I don’t
know how I can keep still.”
I
said, “You try.”
We
had a few classes, and I noticed something to my side and looked
her way. There she was hanging onto the whistle
(stuffing a
handkerchief in her mouth). All of a sudden, she burst out and gave
her first message in tongues.
There was no whistle after that.
She was cured. A
little later, the Lord also used her in interpretation.
Now
she was quenching the Spirit.
First, she was disbursing the Spirit; later she was quenching
it, but trying to learn. The
Lord used her in interpretations.
She graduated, and I received a letter from California, which
said,
“Brother
Beuttler, I want to thank you for the story of the whistle. The Lord isn’t only using me in messages
in tongues, interpretations, but also in prophecy, and it has enriched
my ministry.”
Now
she had to learn. Many
people quench the Spirit out of ignorance.
Nevertheless, “Quench not the Spirit” is still one
of the rules of the Word of God.
By suppressing the Spirit willfully, we are vexing the Spirit
of God; we are hurting the Spirit; we trouble Him.
As
we read here, we are not to stifle the Spirit.
5)
“Do
not stifle the utterance of the Spirit.” (Knox).
6)
“Do
not dampen the Spirit of God” (Muhlheimer).
The
Spirit of God is a person, and we should avoid suppressing, quenching,
depriving the Spirit of God of His free manifestation and movement.
Now
the human spirit, that is something else, as I already said.
Perhaps
I’ll stay with this context.
In verse 20 it says:
“Despise
not prophesying.”
To
“despise” simply means to “treat with contempt.” Prophesying is speaking in the Spirit
of God in the language understood by the hearers. I noticed we had two prophetic utterances
this morning. It is
speaking in the Spirit of God in the language of the speaker and
the hearer without the use of speaking in tongues and interpretation.
In
fact, the two are equal. Tongues
and interpretation has the same effect as prophecy, but there is
a difference. I might
go into that some other time.
In the meantime, “do not treat prophesying with contempt.”
I
was in a church in the States where all week long we had no manifestation
of the Spirit of any kind.
At the end of the week, I said to the pastor, “Brother,
don’t you have the gifts of the Spirit in operation in this church?”
He
said to me, “Oh, we don’t bother with that stuff.” And that’s
a Pentecostal man. “We
don’t bother with that stuff.”
But
the Book says, “Covet earnestly the best gifts, especially that
ye may prophesy.” It
says, “Covet to prophesy.”
Paul said, “Ye may all prophesy one by one.”
This word “covet” in the Greek is a very strong word. It means “to be in hot pursuit,”
and prophesying is one of the gifts which is open to all Spirit-baptized
believers.
“Despise
not prophesying.” What
Paul had in mind was the spurious.
In his day, there were also false prophets and false prophesying
as we have in our day. I
have heard them.
We
had a fellow in school. He
gave what was meant to be, or purported to be a prophecy. “Behold, thus saith the Lord...”
and then he gave a terrific rebuke to somebody. After chapel was out, he happened to walk
past me.
He
said to me, “Brother Beuttler, what did you think of my prophecy?”
I
wanted to keep his guessing, so I simply said, “Nothing.” That didn’t really answer him.
He
said, “What do you mean by ‘nothing?’”
I
said, “I mean nothing, nothing.”
Then
he said, “You mean, you didn’t accept my prophecy as authentic?”
I
said, “Of course not.”
He
rebutted, “I want to tell you, that was the Lord. I spoke in the Name of the Lord. Oh well, never mind now. I had it in for a fellow, and I wanted
to give him a good piece of my mind in the Name of the Lord, so
I put it in the form of a prophecy.”
Well,
you get those things. They
had them in Paul’s day, but that does not mean that we should despise
prophesyings. We should not reject the good because
of the false.
I
do not know if you, in New Zealand, have counterfeiters of New Zealand
dollars. I suppose
you do. I guess they’re everywhere. We have them in the States. Time and again you read in the paper,
“Million dollars worth of counterfeit $20 bills are in circulation.”
I
have yet to hear a person say, “I don’t believe in any $20 bills. I don’t want any.” They take them all right. You don’t throw away the good because
of the bad. So we are
not to vex the Spirit by holding prophesyings in contempt when the
Word indeed says, “Covet to prophesy.”
We
had a student in our school, a nice chap.
He was engaged to a nice girl.
He graduated a year ahead of her and took a pastorate. She wanted to finish school. I was up to give him some meetings, and
he wanted some counseling.
He said:
“Brother
Beuttler, I don’t know what to do. I have prophetesses in my congregation,
and I don’t know what to do with them.
They get up and prophesy something like this: ‘Behold, thus
saith the Lord, thou shalt not marry that girl in school. The Lord has provided for thee a wife
from thine own congregation; therefore obey thou the voice of the
Lord, or the Lord will cause thy ministry to disappear’ (what have you).’”
Invariably,
the prophetess was a mother with a girl she would like to have married
to the pastor. There
were several of them. There
were a number of girls there, and he was a nice chap.
Any girl would fall for him, and the mother’s did.
Another
had a revelation, “Brother, I must tell you of a revelation I
had from the Lord. I
saw terribly black clouds, and the black clouds settled over you.
And I said, ‘Lord what meaneth this?’ And the Lord showed me that this means
that the projected marriage with that girl is like a cloud that’s
going to come over your life, and the only way for you to get out
of this cloud of judgment is to break the engagement and look around
in your own congregation for a girl.
Behold, thus saith the Lord.”
She
had a daughter that she would have liked to get married to the pastor. He got married anyhow. The girl became his wife. They lasted about one or two years. Those prophetess’s kept up this prophesying
pronouncing brimstone and fire on this union, all because they had
daughters they would have liked the pastor to marry. Those things could easily get you prejudiced
and say, “Oh, that prophesying, we’re fed up with it.”
Well,
I’m fed up with some, but on the other hand, I’ve heard choice prophetic
utterances that were the pure gold.
Despise not prophesyings just because some people go way
off into the flesh and come along with all kinds of, shall we call
it, nonsense.
I
was teaching in a camp meeting also in the States. One day, I was told, “Brother Beuttler,
did you know that we have a prophetess here?” I’m always interested in prophetesses.
I like to meet them.
The
camp didn’t have a dishwasher, and one day they announced, “Is
there anyone here who would be willing to wash dishes today? We do not have a dishwasher.”
Nobody’s
hand went up, so I put my hand up and volunteered to wash dishes. I was washing dishes that afternoon, and
somebody said, “Brother Beuttler, the prophetess is coming,”
in a whisper.
“Good,”
I whispered back.
She
had prophesied in the camp.
The camp had a very good cook.
Italians are good cooks, you know, and she was a good cook. She knew my weakness, blueberry pie.
She’d
say, “Brother Beuttler, there’s a piece of blueberry pie for you
in the kitchen. Come
and get it.” I could get almost anything I wanted.
This
prophetess had prophesied to this cook, “Behold thus saith the
Lord, Thou shalt not cook for another year.
This is the last year in which thou dost cook. Buy thee a white dress and white shoes,
for thou shalt die and not live.
Behold thus saith the Lord.
He has spoken.”
One
day, this cook was so sad and downhearted.
I said, “Sister, what’s the trouble?”
She
said, “I’m going to die.”
I
said, “Of what?”
“I
don’t know, but I’m going to die,” she tearfully answered.
I
said, “Well, where did you get the idea?”
She
answered, “The prophetess has spoken in the Name of the Lord.”
I
said, “And you believed her?”
“Oh
yes, Brother Beuttler, she’s a prophetess.
This is the last time I cook for this camp.” Boo Hoo, Boo Hoo.
Oh,
I got angry. I said,
“Don’t believe stuff like that.
It doesn’t sound right.”
“Yes,
but she’s the prophetess,” she tearfully replied.
Isn’t
it something how gullible people are?
They swallow almost anything.
I don’t know what it is, so I prayed. I said, “Lord, don’t let the cook die.
In the first place, she’s a good cook.
In the second place, expose the false prophetess so everybody
will know.” Because when the prophetess was around,
people tiptoed, “Oh, the prophetess,” in a whisper. The prophetess all right!
So
I said, “Lord, don’t let her die.”
Well, next year, she cooked again.
I’m not saying the Lord answered my prayer, but that’s the
way I prayed it anyhow.
I
said to the cook, “Look here, do you remember the prophecy last
year?”
“Oh
yea,” she answered.
I
said, “Now you’re still cooking.”
“Oh
yea.”
“Don’t
you see now that’s she’s false?”
She
answered, “Brother Beuttler, I don’t know. Perhaps she only made a mistake.”
Oh
Brother!
“Despise
not prophesying.”
I
have never turned away from genuine utterances just because of these
foolish people that come along with such foolish harangue in the
Name of the Lord. Let’s not vex the Spirit by holding prophetic
utterances in contempt.
Now
then, in I Corinthians 14:39, there is a third one: “Forbid not
to speak with tongues.”
What you have here is that forbidding is the wrong method
of correction for abuse. I know that people make mistakes, but
forbidding genuine utterances of the Spirit is not Pauline.
I
was in a large Assembly, but not the speaker, and a young girl stood
up and gave an utterance in tongues. The
pastor said to her, “Sit down, you.
I don’t believe God gives gifts to high school kids.”
That
was an awful mistake. That
girl had a genuine utterance of the Spirit, and just because the
pastor didn’t believe that the Lord would use girls of high school
age, he set her down to her great embarrassment.
I would not be surprised if that girl never opened her mouth
again. Forbid not to speak with tongues. I did not write this: it was Paul that
wrote it.
Apparently
what had happened was that they had excesses of the manifestation
of speaking in tongues. We
know that of course. Apparently
some leaders tried to correct that by forbidding all speaking with
tongues, but we can vex the Spirit by forbidding utterances in tongues. I would never do it, though I have suppressed
speaking in tongues that disturbed the meetings, but I don’t think
Paul is talking about that.
I think he is talking about genuine utterances in the Spirit,
presumably utterances that are to be interpreted.
Here
I also give you a note, six different translations:
1)
“Speak
not against the gift of tongues” (Centenary).
2)
“Do
not hinder the speaking with tongues” (Berkeley.)
Many
times in class over the years, students spoke in tongues and I knew
they were making a mistake.
I had never reproved in public, but kept still.
Later on, I would take them to the side to talk to them and
help them in the exercise of their gifts.
3)
“Do
not check speaking with tongues” (Weymouth).
4)
“Do
not interfere with tongues” (Knox).
5)
“Do
not prohibit speaking in unknown tongues” (Aramaic).
6)
“Stop
preventing others from speaking in ecstasy” (Williams)
Now
there are people, I do not know about New Zealand, but in other
countries, that have nothing to do of any kind with speaking with
tongues. If anyone tries to give a message in tongues,
they would suppress it immediately. Williams’ translation says, “Stop preventing
others from speaking in tongues.” So there again is one way in which we
can vex the Spirit of God, trouble Him, disturb Him by clamping
down on the free flowing of the Spirit of God.
In
I Timothy 4:14, “Neglect not the gift that is in thee.” We can have a gift, and the gift become
dormant in our hearts, and the gift gradually fall into disuse. In fact, we can go so far as to deliberately
stifle the gift in our own lives.
I
remember a girl in Bible school when I was a student in 1927. She had been used in the gift of tongues
and interpretation. S |