The Necessity of Waiting on the Spirit
by A. B. Simpson
"Tarry in the city of Jerusalem, until you
are endued with power from on high." Luke 24:49 "He commanded them not to depart
from Jerusalem, but to wait for the Promise of the Father." Acts 1:4
These waiting days were necessary to enable the disciples to realize their need, their
nothingness, their failure and their dependence upon the Master. They had to get emptied
first, before they could get filled. Oh, how often they must have thought, as those days
went by, of the positions they were now to occupy, the responsibility that was resting
upon them, the charge that the Master had committed to them, and their utter inability for
it all! How they must have recalled their folly, their unbelief, their strife, their
selfishness, their fears, their defeats, and shrunk back into nothingness, and even stood
aghast at the prospect before them, until in the very dust they cried to Him for help and
strength needed. And so God wants us to go apart and quietly wait upon Him, until He
searches into the depths of our being, and shows us our folly, our failures, our need. There
is no wiser nor better thing to do on the eve of a season of blessing than to make an
inventory, not of our riches, but of our poverty; to count up all the voids and
vacuums and places of insufficiency; to make the valley full of ditches, and then to bring
to God the depths of our need for Him to fill. And it takes time to make this work
thorough. It takes time to burn it into our consciousness. It takes time to make us feel
it. It is one thing to know in a general way our need and failure; it is quite another
thing to realize it, to mourn over it, to be distressed about it, and to be filled with
sorrow and shame and that holy zeal and revenge upon ourselves which the apostle tells us
is part of true repentance.
In the golden stairway of the Beatitudes, the first promise is to those that are poor in
spirit; but there is another step still deeper down on the way to God, and that is
"Blessed are they that mourn." It is needful that we shall mourn over our
poverty, that we shall realize our need, that we shall be deeply troubled over our
spiritual wretchedness, and that we shall come with such hunger that nothing less than all
the fullness of Christ can ever satisfy us again. There are some spiritual conditions that
cannot be accomplished in a moment. The breaking up of the fallow ground takes time; the
frosts of winter are as necessary as the rains of spring to prepare the soil for
fertility. God has to break our hearts to pieces by the slow process of His discipline,
and grind every particle to powder, and then to mellow us and saturate us with His blessed
Spirit, until we are open for the blessing He has to give us. Oh, let us wait upon the
Lord with brokenness of heart, with openness of soul, with willingness of spirit, to hear
what God the Lord will say! These days of waiting are important also that we may listen to
God's voice. We are so busy that we cannot hear. We talk so much that we give Him no
chance to talk to us. He wants us to hearken to what He has to say to us. He wants us on
our faces before Him, that He may give us His thought, His prayer, His longing, and then
lead us into His better will.
Reference Used: The Holy Spirit or Power from on High by A. B. Simpson
From A Revival Source
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