By
A. W. Tozer
The Church at this moment needs men, the right kind of men, bold
men. The talk is that we need revival, that we need a new [movement]
of the Spirit—and God knows we must have both; but God will not
revive mice. He will not fill rabbits with the Holy Ghost.
We languish for men who feel themselves expendable in the warfare of
the soul, who cannot be frightened by threats of death because they
have already died to the allurements of this world. Such men will be
free from the compulsions that control weaker men. They will not be
forced to do things by the squeeze of circumstances; their only
compulsion will come from within—or from above.
This kind of freedom is necessary if we are to have . . . [powerful
preachers] again instead of mascots. These free men will serve God
and mankind from motives too high to be understood by the rank and
file of religious retainers who today shuttle in and out of the
sanctuary. They will make no decisions out of fear, take no course
out of a desire to please, accept no service for financial
considerations, perform no religious act out of mere custom; nor
will they allow themselves to be influenced by the love of publicity
or the desire for reputation.
Much that the church—even the evangelical church—is doing these days
she is doing because she is afraid not to. Ministerial associations
take up projects for no higher reason than that they are being
scared into it. Whatever their ear-to-the-ground, fear-inspired
reconnoitering leads them to believe the world expects them to do
they will be doing come next Monday morning with all kinds of
trumped-up zeal and show of godliness. The pressure of public
opinion calls these prophets, not the voice of Jehovah.
The true church has never sounded out public expectations before
launching her crusades. Her leaders heard from God and went ahead
wholly independent of popular support or the lack of it. They knew
their Lord’s will and did it, and their people followed
them—sometimes to triumph, oftener to insults and public
persecution—and their sufficient reward was the satisfaction of
being right in a wrong world.
Another characteristic of the true [man of God] has been love. The
free man who has learned to hear God’s voice and dared to obey it
has felt the moral burden that broke the hearts of the Old Testament
prophets, crushed the soul of our Lord Jesus Christ and wrung
streams of tears from the eyes of the apostles.
The free man has never been a religious tyrant, nor has he sought to
lord it over God’s heritage. It is fear and lack of self-assurance
that has led men to try to crush others under their feet. These have
had some interest to protect, some position to secure, so they have
demanded subjection from their followers as a guarantee of their own
safety. But the free man—never; he has nothing to protect, no
ambition to pursue and no enemy to fear. For that reason he is
completely careless of his standing among men. If they follow him,
well and good; if not, he loses nothing that he holds dear; but
whether he is accepted or rejected he will go on loving his people
with sincere devotion. And only death can silence his tender
intercession for them.
Yes, if evangelical Christianity is to stay alive she must have men
again, the right kind of men. She must repudiate the weaklings who
dare not speak out, and she must seek in prayer and much humility
the coming again of men of the stuff prophets and martyrs are made
of. God will hear the cries of His people as He heard the cries of
Israel in Egypt. And He will send deliverance by sending deliverers.
It is His way among men.
And when the deliverers come . . . they will be men of God and men
of courage. They will have God on their side because they will be
careful to stay on God’s side. They will be co-workers with Christ
and instruments in the hand of the Holy Ghost. . . .