MASTERY OVER THE BELIEVER
"Ye call
Me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am." John 13:13
Our
Lord never insists on having authority; He never says--Thou shalt. He leaves us perfectly free--so free that we can spit in
His face, as men did; so free that we can put Him to death, as men did; and He will never say a word. But when His life has
been created in me by His Redemption, I instantly recognize His right to absolute authority over me. It is a moral domination--"Thou
art worthy" It is only the unworthy in me that refuses to bow down to the worthy.
If when I meet a man who is more holy than myself, I do not recognize his worthiness and obey what comes through him, it is
a revelation of the unworthy in me. God educates us by means of people who are a little better than we are, not intellectually
but "holier," until we get under the domination of the Lord Himself, and then the whole attitude of the life is one of obedience
to Him.
If
Our Lord insisted upon obedience He would become a taskmaster, and He would cease to have any authority. He never insists
on obedience, but when we do see Him we obey Him instantly, He is easily Lord, and we live in adoration of Him from morning
till night. The revelation of my growth in grace is the way in which I look upon obedience. We have to rescue the word "obedience"
from the mire. Obedience is only possible between equals; it is the relationship of a father and son, not between master and
servant. "I and My Father are one." 'Though He were a Son, yet learned He obedience by the things which He suffered." The
Son's obedience was a Redeemer, because he was son, not in order to be Son.