Complete Surrender

“And thou shalt remember all the way which the LORD thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his commandments, or no” (Deuteronomy 8:2).

Israel was a stubborn, stiffnecked people who were constantly in rebellion against God. They longed for the fish, the cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions, and the garlic which they ” … did eat in Egypt freely … ” (Numbers 11 :5). Every time they faced a new difficulty, they forgot their former Egyptian slavery and remembered with avidity the smell of Egypt’s onions and garlic.

You might say, “What else can you expect? That was Israel,” but we, in the closing days of the church age, have nothing in ourselves whereof we can boast. When God permits some trial or some difficulty, what are we most apt to do – praise Him or doubt Him? Let each one answer for himself.

Could it be that we have not made a full surrender to God? True, some of the most devout Christians are sometimes led through deep water and fiery trials, but far too many are in difficulties because they have not surrendered completely to God’s will.

We remember a good friend who got into a difficult situation one time and burst out, “Why in the world do these things happen to me? Ever since I became a Christian, it has been this way.”

His remark left the impression that he had made a mistake that his troubles multiplied as soon as he gave his heart to the Lord. It was not so, of course, and he perhaps did not mean it that way, but had there been any unsaved people around, they would probably have decided that the devil was not such a bad taskmaster after all.

The children of Israel acted that way. They had come out of Egypt- but Egypt was still more or less in them. We talk easily of being ” … crucified with Christ … ” (Galatians 2:20), and that is true if we have believed on Him; for as believers, we are identified with him in His death on the cross. lt is also true that we have not always brought our stubbornness and willfulness to His cross for crucifixion. We are still creatures of choice. We choose to have our own way, and thereupon hangs a tale of difficulties in the lives of many Christians.

This matter of an all-out-surrender to the will of God is something of tremendous importance. Moody was an all-out, surrendered man, and we see what the Lord did through him.

YIELD TO HIM

It is not hard to discover our lack of surrender to the whole will of God, for our willfulness or stubbornness manifests itself in so many different ways. The difficulty is in bringing that lack of surrender, that willfulness, that stubbornness to God, saying, “Lord, I am willing to quit the whole business; Lord, I want to make an unreserved consecration; Lord, I surrender all!”

If we did this, we would not be so apt to look back on the children of Israel with contempt because of their wilderness wanderings. We would probably discover that we too are more or less wandering around in today’s wilderness because of lack of all-out surrender to the will of God.

I can look back over the years of wilderness wanderings that preceded my surrender to the Lord. Reverting to the text, ” … remember all the way which the LORD thy God led … to humble … to prove … to know … ” what was in my heart.

Was I a Christian? I wasn’t a heathen. I was like millions of other church Christians who are in the visible church, yet not in the body of Christ as surrendered believers.

Was I stubborn? I’ll say I was! Did the Lord humble me? He did! The Lord brought me to a place of humility where I was willing to chuck into a literal furnace some things that stood between me and full surrender.

Most of the children of Israel never made the all-out surrender to God. Because they did not, their carcasses were left in the wilderness. We repeat, they had come out of Egypt, but Egypt was still more or less in them. Have we, in these closing days of the church age, made the all-out surrender? If not, we should, lest our “carcasses” be left in this present wilderness when ” … the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trump of God …” (1 Thessalonians 4:16). – – by Manford Evans