109. The Pursuit of God

1 Samuel 20:1  Then David fled from Naioth in Ramah and came and said before Jonathan, “What have I done? What is my guilt? And what is my sin before your father, that he seeks my life?”

  Psalms 7:3-5     O LORD my God, if I have done this, if there is wrong in my hands,  if I have repaid my friend with evil or plundered my enemy without cause,  let the enemy pursue my soul and overtake it, and let him trample my life to the ground and lay my glory in the dust.

Psalms 119:112    I incline my heart to perform your statutes forever, to the end.

1 John 3:21     Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God;

Psalms 18:21-22       For I have kept the ways of the LORD, and have not wickedly departed from my God.  For all his rules were before me, and his statutes I did not put away from me.

2 Corinthians 1:12     For our boast is this, the testimony of our conscience, that we behaved in the world with simplicity and godly sincerity, not by earthly wisdom but by the grace of God, and supremely so toward you.

Trials and troubles come into our lives.  We can take note of God’s word when He was angered and past judgment on people or nations.  Their guilt was evident and the action taken by God was righteous.  Other times, people were victims of the consequences of others actions.  This is why David is speaking like this.  What have I done?  What is my guilt?  What is my sin?  These are very good questions to ask ourselves when trials and troubles come our way.  Note the heart of David;  “I incline my heart.”  “I have kept your ways.”  “Your word is before me and I kept it close to me.”  “I’m committed to the end.”

Tozer wrote this in his book “The Pursuit of God.”  We pursue God because and only because He has first put an urge within us that spurs us to the pursuit. “No man can come to Me,” said our Lord, “except the Father which hath sent me draw him,” and it is by this drawing that God takes from us every drop of credit for the act of coming. The impulse to pursue God originates with God, but the outworking of the impulse is our pursuit (following hard) after Him.  All is of God.  God is always previous.  In practice, where God’s previous working meets our present response, we must pursue God.  On our part, there must be positive reciprocation if this secret personal drawing of God is to become an identifiable experience of the presence of the Holy Spirit in our life.  David said, As the deer pants after water, so pants my soul after thee.”

It would seem we have watered down and diluted the conversion of becoming a child of God.  Has it become mechanical and spiritless?  Has faith been diluted to the point where there is no shake-up to our moral life and no embarrassment to our self-centered, non-hungering and non-thirsting pursuit of God?  Are we in danger of losing God because of our lack of hunger and thirst for His word?  Have we lost sight of what it means to be a humble servant?  Does the lack of time set aside for His word and subsequent lack of knowledge and understanding give any indication of how non-existent our pursuit of God is?

Now is the time to assess your heart.  Do you hunger and thirst for His word, or are you eating and drinking the way of the world.

Author: Daryl Pint

Saved by Grace, living by faith

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