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Possessing Nothing to Possess All

Mark Earley

President, Prison Fellowship


July 11, 2008

1948 was the year the "Big Bang" theory was introduced, the game "Scrabble" was first played, and state of Israel was established. It was also the year that A. W. Tozer wrote The Pursuit of God—a small book, but one that has profoundly influenced Christians for the past 60 years. It has challenged me, and I hope this summer you give it a chance to challenge you.

Ken Boa, who features The Pursuit of God this month in his tremendous "Great Books Audio CD" series, says that Tozer was "a modern mystic who had given priority to the lost art of meditation." Tozer, a self-taught pastor in the Chicago area, was not known among those in his congregation as the most gregarious man. In fact, it was rumored that Tozer rarely visited his congregants unless they were deathly ill. But his aloofness was simply the product of a man relentlessly chasing after God.

Boa explains that when Tozer prayed, he would often put on a ragged pair of pants—what became known as his "prayer pants"—and spend hours in solitude with God. In fact, it was during one solitary train ride from Chicago to Texas that Tozer penned The Pursuit of God—all of it!

Tozer's behavior might seem a bit strange to us today, but his words offer timeless significance. In The Pursuit of God, Tozer tramples on mediocrity in the Christian life. He wrote: "The way to deeper knowledge of God is through the lonely valleys of soul poverty and abnegation of all things. The blessed ones who possess the kingdom are they who have repudiated every external thing and have rooted from their hearts all sense of possessing."

Here, Tozer confronts what he called the "tyranny of things"—in other words, the subtle way that materialism can take us captive. He asks readers to consider whether they are willing to walk through sadness, suffering, and solitude in order to know God deeply. This he calls "the blessedness of possessing nothing."

He explains that man can discover this blessedness only by wholeheartedly running after God. "The man who has God for his treasure has all things in One," he wrote. "Many ordinary treasures may be denied him, or if he is allowed to have them, the enjoyment of them will be so tempered that they will never be necessary to his happiness."

Much of what Tozer had to say slaps modern man in the face. He calls into question the materialism and idolatry that continue to infect our churches and our lives. He asks us to question why we have difficulty spending time in solitude. And, he gives us the opportunity to return to a place of "meekness and rest," where Christ becomes all that we need.

I highly recommend you pick up this book this summer and read it. It is quite short, but I guarantee you will be surprised by its depth and profundity. But also prepare to be challenged by what it truly means to pursue God.

Most Recent User Comments
stevevg
8/7/2008 9:54 AM
It is very clear that when God speaks to His people, that He wants to communicate a truth that we need to hear. Far to often, we do not realize that the words of God hold an everlasting truth that can bring about much joy and peace in our lives. Needles to say, truth and Biblical wisdom is sadly lacking within the church in modern day American. How and why has this happened? The answer is quite simple. Christians today have not spent time reading God's Word and therefore they have not implemented this truth in their everyday living. The Old Testament says; "grow rich by heeding My instruction" and Psalms 119:11 instructs us that "Thy Word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against Thee".
marysunkes
7/18/2008 7:15 PM
A link to this article has been posted on the website GoodNewsNow.com.
whos_your_dolly
7/11/2008 7:47 PM
AHH yes a man after my own heart. How have we strayed so far from the reality of Who God is and who we are? We own NOTHING and HE owns everything. That is the BEGINNING of a wisdom that is totally ignored by so many. He gives us what we NEED, and expects us to learn from Him what to do with what we are entrusted with. He reveals need and guides us to meet those we can. He says if a man asks for your shirt give him your coat too. That's pretty clear isn't it? WHY do so many hold so FAST to what they think is THEIRS when it never was nor ever will be theirs... its always been and always will be GOD's. We are just the middlemen guys. STOP HOARDING and stop thinking that its enough to throw 10% at some greedy pastor so he can drive a nice car. Its not going to please God, and its so caterwalled. Do NOT be decieved, God is NOT mocked by senseless, thoughtless giving to fraudulent "men of god" He wants you to listen to HIM and HIM only.
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