THE PRUNING KNIFE
Already Ye Are Clean Because of the Word I Have Spoken Unto
You—John 15:3
WHAT is
the pruning knife of this heavenly Husbandman? It is often said to be
affliction. By no means in the first place. How would it then fare with many
who have long seasons free from adversity; or with some on whom God appears to
shower down kindness all their life long? No; it is the Word of God that is the
knife, shaper than any two-edged sword, that pierces even to the dividing
asunder of the soul and spirit, and is quick to discern the thoughts and intents
of the heart. It is only when affliction leads to this discipline of the Word
that it becomes a blessing; the lack of this heart-cleansing through the Word
is the reason why affliction is so often unsanctified. Not even Paul's thorn in
the flesh could become a blessing until Christ's Word—"My strength is made
perfect in weakness"—had made him see the danger of self-exaltation, and
made him willing to rejoice in infirmities.
The Word of God's pruning knife.
Jesus says: "Ye are already clean, because of the word I have spoken unto
you." How searchingly that word had been spoken by Him, out of whose mouth
there went a sharp two-edged sword, as he had taught them! "Except a man
deny himself, lose his life, forsake all, hate father and mother, he cannot be
My disciple, he is not worthy of Me,"as He humbled their pride, or
reproved their lack of love, or foretold their all forsaking Him. From the
opening of His ministry in the Sermon on the Mount to His words of warning in
the last night, His Word had tried and cleansed them. He had discovered and
condemned all there was of self; they were now emptied and cleansed, ready for
the incoming of the Holy Spirit.
It is as the soul gives up its own
thoughts, and men's thoughts of what is religion, and yields itself heartily,
humbly, patiently, to the teaching of the Word by the Spirit, that the Father
will do His blessed work of pruning and cleansing away all of nature and self
that mixes with our work and hinders His Spirit. Let those who would know all
the Husbandman can do for them, all the Vine can bring forth through them, seek
earnestly to yield themselves heartily to the blessed cleansing through the
Word. Let them, in their study of the Word, receive it as a hammer that breaks
and opens up, as a fire that melts and refines, as a sword that lays bare and
slays all that is of the flesh. The word of conviction will prepare for the
word of comfort and of hope, and the Father will cleanse them through the Word.
All ye who are branches of the true
Vine, each time you read or hear the Word, wait first of all on Him to use it
for His cleansing of the branch. Set your heart upon His desire for more fruit.
Trust Him as Husbandman to work it. Yield yourselves in simple childlike
surrender to the cleansing work of His Word and Spirit, and you may count upon
it that His purpose will be fulfilled in you.
Father, I pray Thee, cleanse me
through Thy Word. Let it search out and bring to light all that is of self and
the flesh in my religion. Let it cut away every root of self-confidence, that
the Vine may find me wholly free to receive His life and Spirit. O my holy
Husbandman, I trust Thee to care for the branch as much as for the Vine. Thou
only art my hope.
Andrew Murray
Andrew Murray
Dear Annie,
ReplyDelete"My strength is made perfect in weakness"—is always comforting for me to read, since I feel so unworthy, because I am very weak. It's not major things that get me as much as the subtle things that work a wedge in my relationship with God. It's things like praying and getting side-tracked, day-dreaming, and other things that take away from my close relationship with my Lord and Savior. You would think that I wouldn't keep doing this, but it still keeps happening, I'm ashamed to say. Debbie Seiling http://bible-passages.blogspot.com and http://christian-overeaters.blogspot.com