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CALLED,  CHOSEN,  FAITHFUL
Genesis 28: 10-22; 32: 24-31; 33: 17, 20; 35: 1-15, 19-21
Yarmouth, June 5, 1937
Memorials 11: 77-85
The substance of this address is excellent but it does not read well
on account of inadequate original editing,
to which only a few minor changes have been made here.     GAR.

G. R. Cowell, 1898-1963

I suppose that Abraham, Isaac and Jacob represent three sides of a believer’s history, three sides which I should link with the scripture in the Revelation where it tells of the judgment of Babylon, and we know Abraham was called out of Babylon.

I think the called is connected with Abraham, chosen with Isaac, and faithful with Jacob. These three lines run back in our histories.

There is another point of view. Although we are going to on attain it, the place is already secured for us. We were chosen to be there before the world began.

Jacob was a man who needed much education and patience on the thoughts of God, so that it is encouraging for us.

If you are really heavenly you will be faithful down here.

Jacob was a young man leaving home. I want to touch on these important points of Jacob’s history.

Esau was a very attractive man, but Jacob was a plain man.

A king is not a homely tent dweller. The genealogy of Esau is full of kings and dukes. God is not filling His house with kings and dukes.

Jacob valued the birthright. That is another thing where he was true to his instincts.

There are faithful sayings recorded in Timothy. You can lean back on them when you leave home. You cannot get worse than the

So God wanted to impress Jacob – and us – that the centre of His interest is earth and He had established something which the angels could ascend from without coming down to it.

Jacob as much as says ‘If such a place as that is here on earth, there ought to be a pillar raised’, so he sets up this pillar and pours oil upon it.

It may seem a dreadful place at first, because God could not have you there if you had not a sense of what you are.

At this point Jacob answers to the truth of Timothy’s thoughts and says, ‘If you will give me bread and garments’.

He was definite. It was his own suggestion. I would desire that we might be more definite, both as to our time and as to our money, and everything in a general way,

Jacob goes on with this scheming, and for the time being he appears to be diverted.

God goes to Jacob and tells him to go back to Bethel.

Edom says later “lest I come out against thee with a sword”, Numbers 20: 18 – and they have to go right round his land, as they must show Christ to him, typically.

Jacob said, “I will not let you go unless you bless me”.

Then comes what I regard as the most sad part of Jacob’s history. He is no longer worried about getting a living. God has come in for him. He is very successful in business.

Many so-called Christians think that the blessing of God is to be successful in business, and to have your altar in your house.

Jacob comes to Bethel, and he builds the altar. It is not a question of God at the top of the ladder now;

So God blesses Jacob here, and says,

May God help us to tread the path that is indicated in these scriptures!

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THE  MOST  EXCELLENT
THOUGHT  OF  SONSHIP
Exodus 4: 22-23; 13: 1-2
Deuteronomy 14: 1-2; Malachi 1: 6, 11, 14; 3: 16-18
Gillingham, November 4, 1939
Memorials 11: 86-98
The substance of this address is excellent but it does not read well
on account of inadequate original editing,
to which only a few minor changes have been made here.     GAR.

These scriptures bring before us in the first instance God’s thought in regard of His people of old; not that it was ever, or could be, found in people after the flesh.

But before dwelling on Malachi, I wish to say a few words as to the earlier history of the children of Israel, to indicate how God operated to secure His end, according to the word

Now to secure His great end, God sent His Son into this world. That is how John’s gospel presents it.

How wonderful it is that every Christian is a firstborn son.

Moral questions, however, have to be settled before we can enjoy our place in sonship.

What seems so clear is that God will not get His portion apart from sonship; it can only be as we know and love Him as Father.

But other moral issues have to be faced, as with the people in the wilderness.

When we come to the book of Malachi, a great deal is said about God’s Name. It says a

I want to refer to the incense and the pure oblation – v. 11.

On the other hand incense speaks of intimate priestly service Godward. I believe it refers to what is personal.

In the second vision Nebuchadnezzar saw a great tree reaching to heaven and he saw that the leaves were beautiful and the fruit was abundant and in it was food for all.

In the third vision Daniel saw the four empires under the figure of four wild beasts, referring to their propensities for evil if Satan gains control of them. They are only weak men, with the lusts of men and

In the fourth vision – chapter 8 – two only of the powers are brought in under the figure of domestic animals, the ram and the he-goat.

One feels these visions are intended to enable us to approach God intelligently in prayer for kings and those in authority.

  1. Firstly the powers are ordained of God to maintain ordered government,

  2. secondly they I are intended to be beneficial,

  3. thirdly they always tend to come under Satanic influence and to act accordingly to their natural propensities,

  4. and, finally, God can use them in a direct way for the liberation or chastisement of His people.

Then we have the response to the divine appeal for it says,

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GOD  –  A  FAITHFUL  CREATOR
Genesis 8: 20-22; 9: 6-15
Daniel 4: 17, 34-35, 37; Hebrews 1: 1-3; 13: 15-16
Highgate, London, October 18, 1941
Memorials 11: 99-106

I wish, dear brethren, to speak of God,

  1. first as a faithful Creator,

  2. secondly in His present over-ruling government in this world,

  3. and finally as expressed in the Person of the Son;

The present dispensation has always been in the mind of God in a special way and His activities in creation and in government have, from the outset, had it in view.

In being occupied with the spiritual things now revealed, however, we are in danger of failing to give God His due as Creator.

But apart from God’s creatorial power and goodness what is spiritual could not be developed.

It is interesting that the heart of God, which is rarely referred to in Scripture, is twice mentioned with reference to His feelings about the creation.

We are living in days when, in spite of God’s bountiful provision, millions are in want through the wickedness of man.

The knowledge of God as Creator brings peculiar comfort to the soul in times of persecution.

To pass on to the question of government, in covenanting to maintain stable creatorial conditions,

Later, in order to limit man’s pride and check the working of organised sin, God divided the race into nations;

The book of Daniel helps us much as to our attitude to these authorities and would help us also to pray intelligently in regard to them.

How wonderful it is to know that in all these matters the Most High is ruling. He never gives up His control. The creation is His and He never surrenders His rights.

To turn now to the passages in Hebrews, God’s activities in creation and government are all to make way for the full expression of Himself in the Son.

The expression of His substance also involves the revelation of His name as Father; for His purposes of love and grace centre in the Son.

As we enter into these things we shall desire to render to God His due, in praise and worship, as Creator, as the Blessed and Only Ruler, and as revealed in the fulness of His love; and we shall desire to do this continually.

How worthy God is of our praise in every character in which He is known! Truly we can say

May our considerations at this time stimulate our prayers and praise and help us in our testimony!

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THE  ACCEPTABLE  YEAR
OF  THE  LORD
Leviticus 23: 4-6, 9-11, 15-17, 23-27, 33-36, 39-41
Highgate, London, October 25, 1941
Memorials 11: 107-117

I have in mind, dear brethren, to speak of the acceptable year of the Lord, a term which applies in a special way to this dispensation.

What we had before us last week bears on this acceptable year.

In speaking of this chapter I trust we shall be able to see how God’s acceptable year developed in the early days of Christianity, and also how it enters into our soul experience, and in a certain measure into the Lord’s supper.

“On the morrow after the sabbath the priest shall wave it”, verse 11.

There is a measured time between the wave sheaf and Pentecost, but after that a long period elapses without a feast, until the first day of the seventh month.

The feast of the blowing of trumpets, one judges, refers to Paul announcing the whole counsel of God.

The final feast, the feast of tabernacles, speaks of the whole harvest gathered in, when they were to rejoice before God.

I have spoken of the early days of Christianity, but Paul’s ministry has in view all the saints arriving at this in their spirits even now.

I desire to refer briefly to the fact that has already been suggested in ministry, that in spirit we cover this ground in our measure at the Lord’s Supper.

At the supper Christ also comes before us as the Living One, the sheaf of the first-fruits. We contemplate His preciousness as the first-born from the dead.

It may be that this pause, this gap, between the feast of Pentecost and the feast of the blowing of trumpets has a bearing at the supper.

We are thus able to pass on to finality. We pass on in spirit into a sense of the blessedness of

May God help us in this matter, that we may not fail to reach the full harvest, the crown of the year, both in our personal experience and collective enjoyment at the supper

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