IN OUR STUDIES of the Scriptures, we frequently
come across such expressions as giving glory to God, or to God be the
glory. Peter, in one of his letters, uses the phrase, that in all God may be
glorified, and Paul presses his readers at Corinth to do all for the glory of
God.
Let
us consider together some of the ways by which men, in spite of their fleshly weaknesses
and sinning propensities, ought still to be glorifying God, and in particular, how we as
believers should be doing so, especially in view of our deeper appreciation of His deity.
One
method is by attributing to God all that is rightly His, and by thanking Him accordingly
for all the benefits received from Him. This has been stressed in previous studies and is
most important. It is the Creators demand of His creation.
We
are today surrounded on all sides by indifference to God. We are living in what is largely
a pagan world. Pauls great indictment of men as a whole (in Romans 1) is embodied in
the phrase that, knowing God, not as God do they glorify or thank
Him.
It
is not that they do not know Him. They cannot plead ignorance of His existence. The
evidence of God all around, in the things that grow and the things that move, leaves them
without excuse. Because of this and because they refuse to glorify God and thank Him, they
become subject to His indignation.

GIVING THANKS TO GOD
The
glorification of God lies in the creatures appreciation of Him as the Source from
Whom all blessings flow, as well as the Power through which all is sustained; the
expressions of thanks are evidences that such appreciation is there, and is genuine. That
is why Paul lays such emphasis upon our being thankful. In everything be giving
thanks, he told the Thessalonians, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus
for you (1 Thess.5:18). And everything, whatever you may be doing in word and
in act, he wrote to the Colossians, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus
Christ, giving thanks to God, the Father, through Him (Col-3:17). In Ephesians he
says, Be filled full with spirit . . . giving thanks always for all things, in the
name of our Lord, Jesus Christ, to our God and Father (Eph.5:19-21).
Superabundance
of thanksgiving is the apostles constant plea. In everything, by prayer and
petition, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God (Phil.4:6). Let
us note that our thanks should precede, or at least accompany, our requests to God. We can
always thank Him again when our requests are granted.
Thanks
are not necessary to God, but they gratify His heart. They are necessary for us, and for
several reasons. They remind us constantly of His goodness. They acknowledge Him as the
Giver. They help to convince us of our utter dependency upon Him. They inculcate in us a
true spirit of subjection, and in all this we glorify Him.
We
glorify Him because we acknowledge Him as the Deity. We know Him and add to that knowledge
by our recognition of Him as God. This is the meaning of the Greek word, epignoosis
(ON-KNOWLEDGE). In Romans 1:28, it is translated recognition. In Colossians
1:9,10 the same word is translated realization. This is a further stage of
knowledge. Mankind as a whole does not have any recognition of God as the
Deity; blessed indeed are we if we are growing into a full realization of Him. And the
greater that this realization becomes, the deeper will be our thanks to Him Who creates it
in our hearts.
There
are several cases in Scripture where people are recorded as glorifying God by giving
thanks for favors and blessings received. There is for example the case of the Samaritan
leper, recorded in Luke 17. He was one of ten who were healed by Jesus, but the only one
who perceiving he was healed returned glorifying God with a loud voice. And he
fell on his face at the feet of Jesus to thank Him. How typical is this of conditions
today! For every one who acknowledges God and thanks Him, nine (or perhaps ninety-nine)
accept gifts from His hands and take them all as a matter of course.
Another
instance, mentioned in Luke 18, concerns the blind beggar outside Jericho, who was given
sight by Jesus. In verse 43 we read that he followed Jesus, glorifying God, and that the
entire people perceiving it gave praise to God, Our actions in glorifying God, by
thankfully acknowledging Him as the Provider of all the blessings we enjoy, may influence
others to perceive their own indebtedness to Him.

THE RAISING OF LAZARUS
The
two instances just quoted were the result of miracles performed by Jesus when He was on
earth, but there was one miracle of His in which God was particularly glorified, and the
account of this contains so many wonderful and instructive points that it is well worthy
of frequent examination. We refer to the raising of Lazarus in John 11.
Now
there was a certain infirm man, Lazarus from Bethany, of the village of Mary and her
sister Martha. Now it was Mary who rubs the Lord with attar and wipes off His feet with
her hair, whose brother Lazarus was infirm. The sisters, then, dispatch to Him (Christ),
saying, Lord, lo, he of whom Thou art fond is infirm. Yet Jesus, hearing it, said, This
infirmity is not to death, but for the glory of God....
What,
can God be glorified in infirmity? Are our infirmities also to the glory of God?
Let us read on, and see what happens in the case of Lazarus.
This
infirmity is not to death, but for the glory of God, that the Son of God should be
glorified through it. Here, a new factor is brought into the picture. It is not
infirmity, for infirmitys sake, that glorifies God, but that some facet of the
Divine character or purpose should be displayed through it. In this case it is the power
of Gods operations in Christ; on a later occasion it would be the power of
Gods operations in Paul (2 Cor. 12:9). Here Jesus was being given the opportunity of
demonstrating beyond any peradventure that He was indeed the Son of God, with power over
death and the grave. And so, as we read on, we find that Jesus remained where He was for
two days after hearing the news, although it is specially stressed that He loved Martha
and her sister and Lazarus.
In
the meantime we find from verse 19 that Martha and Mary were not lacking in visitors. Many
Jews came to comfort them concerning their brother, but the One they wanted most and Who
could help them most stayed away with seeming indifference. And when eventually Jesus did
arrivetardily as it seemed to themeach sister reproached Him in turn with
identical words, Lord, if Thou wert here, my brother would not have died. The
same theme was also taken up by some of the crowd who said, Could not this One Who
opens the eyes of the blind man, also make it that this man should not be dying?
How
often we, too, think like that! We are living in the days of expectancy of His coming, and
all around us our friends are falling asleep. If only the Lord would come, and
gather us to Himself, we need no longer remain in our infirmities! If only the Lord had
come sooner, this brother or that brother need not have died. Or again, Is
there any necessity for all the mounting sorrow that there is in the world? If God would
only hasten His purpose and cut short this evil day! Such are often the burdens of
our complaints. But Gods purpose will not be hurried. Our infirmities are for His
glory, and creations travail is also for His glory.
Which
gives the greater glory to God, the healing of the sick or the rousing of the dead? Which
is the greater manifestation of His power? Had Jesus not tarried, Martha and Mary might
truly have been spared two days of sorrow, but neither they nor we living nearly two
thousand years later would have had that demonstration of the resurrection power of God
which was provided by the calling forth of a dead Lazarus from the tomb. Neither would we
have known that Jesus could weep!
Jesus
weeps is one of the shortest, if not the shortest, statement in Scripture, but one
that reveals much. The heart of the Son of God was touched. Though Jesus knew that He had
come to conquer death, the immediate plight of humanity created in Him a tremendous bond
of sympathy. And we are not to assume that He was really indifferent during those two days
that He had delayed His coming. Doubtless His heart ached to be with the sorrowing sisters
in their distress, but He held back in deference to the greater need of a supreme
demonstration of Gods glory.
In
all this, Jesus mirrors His Father. God is not indifferent to all the suffering of
humanity, nor to the afflictions of those who are His chosen ones. He rejoices with us in
our joys, and sympathizes with us in our sorrows. Brother A. E. Knoch has a beautiful
comment on the matter, Why does God allow evil? Why does He not hasten to remove it?
All that is needed is His presence. But He delays. His delay confirms the great truth that
evil as well as good is from Him. It is the necessary foil for the display of His
glory.
It
would seem from a careful reading of the context that though Jesus indeed tarried, the
sisters of Lazarus were not left without consolation. When Jesus eventually arrived,
Martha made a remarkable declaration of faith. Yes, Lord, she said, I
have believed that Thou art the Christ, the Son of God, Who is coming into the
world.
Now,
when Peter made a similar declaration on another occasion, Jesus responded by saying,
Happy are you, Simon Bar-jonah, seeing that flesh and blood does not reveal it to
you, but my Father Who is in the heavens (Matt.16:17). Did Marthas conviction
come from any less exalted source than Peters? Surely to her, it was a Divine
revelation as well! And with her assurance came an expectation, and in holding fast to
that even in affliction and distress, she glorified God. We too, though surrounded by a
world of suffering and often suffering in ourselves, have a yet more glorious expectation
than Marthas, which enables us to rise above our environment and to glorify God in
seeing beyond present experiences. And (did it but know it) the entire creation, groaning
and travailing together until now and subjected to vanity, not voluntarily but because of
Him Who subjects it, has an expectation too-an expectation of being freed from the
slavery of corruption into the glorious freedom of the children of God. Would that
creation were aware of its wonderful future!
Comparatively
little is told us about that happy family of Bethany, and yet all that is said is both
interesting and significant. Martha, in spite of that one rebuke from the Lord about her
over-worry concerning temporal things (a rebuke which many of us could equally justly
apply to ourselves!) was a very lovable character with an exceedingly strong faith. We
have seen that both sisters used identical words in upbraiding Jesus for His delay in
coming to their succor, but whereas Mary was content to say, Lord, if Thou wert
here, my brother would not have died, Martha supplemented this by adding, But
even now I am aware that whatever Thou shouldst be requesting of God, God will be giving
it to Thee. Following this declaration by Martha came that intimate conversation
between her and the Lord which ended by Jesus asking, Are you believing this?
and Marthas reply, Yes, Lord, I have believed that Thou art the Christ, the
Son of God, Who is coming into the world. Truly, Martha glorified God in believing,
and one of the ways in which we can most truly glorify God is in believing also.

FAITH IN THE DEITY OF GOD
Believe
God. Believe Him in times of blessing. Believe Him in times of adversity. Believe Him and
trust Him.
By
putting our trust in God, we affirm our faith in His deity. We acknowledge Him to be the
Supreme, Who is operating all according to the counsel of His will, and Who is working all
together for the good of those who are loving Him.
We
acknowledge His right to bring afflictions upon us, and to give us the strength and
courage. to rise above them when they cannot be pushed on one side. None of them are
allowed to separate us from His love in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Rather in them we are more
than conquering through Him Who loves us.
In
the Hebrew Scriptures, Job is the name that stands out as an example of endurance in
affliction. It is noteworthy that the term the One Who suffices (in the King
James Version: The Almighty) first used in connection with Abram in Genesis 17:1, occurs
no less than thirty-one times in the book of Job, nearly twice as often as in the rest of
the books put together. Through his afflictions, Job grew in the realization of the deity
of God, so much so that, when they were over, he was able to say of God, I have
heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear, but now mine eye seeth Thee (Job 42:5).
Afflictions are beneficial from an educational aspect, and we may glory in them as such,
realizing that they produce endurance, and endurance testedness, and testedness
expectation (Rom.5:3,4). Let us not grieve because of them, but rejoice.

TEMPLES OF GOD
When
Jesus was walking with His disciples, He said, In this is My Father glorified, that
ye may be bringing forth much fruit (John 15:8); and the same principle is true of
us. Paul desired the Corinthians by all means to glorify God in their bodies
(1 Cor.6:20), putting away all evil practices and remembering that their bodies had become
sacred temples by reason of the Spirit of God which dwelt in them. The promise that God
would be a Father to them and that they should be sons and daughters to Him, should be an
incentive to them to cleanse themselves from every pollution of flesh and spirit and to
complete holiness in the fear of God (2 Cor.6:14-7:1).
But
pollution of Gods temples is not confined to the continuance of evil practices of
the flesh; it is also to be found in the harboring of false prejudices, the cherishing of
ideas which are unsupported by Scripture, the building up of theories and doctrines that
are dishonoring to God. Each of us has a responsibility in this matter to make sure that
he or she believes and proclaims the truth according to the Scriptures.
Having
a true foundation is not always enough; even upon this we may build of wood, grass and
straw, and in such cases our work will be destroyed, as by fire. How much better to build
of gold, silver and precious stones, that our work may abide in the day of testing!
It
is in 1 Corinthians 3 that Paul describes this testing process, and following verse 15
where he says, if anyones work shall be burned up, he will forfeit it, yet he
shall be saved, yet thus, as through fire, he immediately adds, Are you not
aware that you are a temple of God and the Spirit of God is making its home in you? If
anyone is corrupting the temple of God, God will be corrupting him, for the temple of God
is holy, which you are. Let no one be deluding himself. If anyone among you is presuming
to be wise in this eon, let him become stupid, that he may be becoming wise, for the
wisdom of this world is stupidity with God.

QUALIFIED TO GOD
How
it behooves us to stand by the Word of God in its truth and purity and accuracy-by doing
so, we glorify Him Who has given it to us. Let us not be engaging in controversy for
nothing useful, to the upsetting of those who are hearing and reading, but rather let us
be continually endeavoring to present ourselves qualified to God, unashamed workers,
correctly cutting the word of truth. We should stand aloof from profane prattlings, for
they will only lead on to more irreverence, especially in an era like the present, when
men will not tolerate sound teaching, but their hearing being tickled, will heap up for
themselves teachers in accord with their own desires, and indeed will turn away their
hearing from the truth and will be turned aside to myths. (See 2 Tim.2:14-16; 4:2-4).
To
Paul was committed an evangel based on the word of the cross. It was Gods power for
salvation, and Paul was in no way ashamed of it. As his ministry approached its end, he
committed it to Timothy with an injunction to guard it through the holy spirit which is
making its home in us (2 Tim.1:13,14). Timothy, in turn, was to commit it to faithful men
who would be competent to teach others also. It was an evangel in which works of flesh
have no part whateverin which, on the contrary, All is of God. Let us
not adulterate the Word of God, but, by manifestation of the truth concerning the evangel,
commend ourselves to every mans conscience in Gods sight (2 Cor.4:2).

THE TIE OF MATURITY
Finally,
another way in which we can give glory to God is in the manner of our treatment of each
other. A hasty criticism, an unkind word, a thoughtless action, may give pain to someone
with whom we associate. In his Colossian letter, Paul tells us to put on, then, as
Gods chosen ones, holy and beloved, pitiful compassions, kindness, humility,
meekness, patience, bearing with one another and dealing graciously among yourselves, if
anyone should be having a complaint against any. The pattern for this gracious
dealing is to be the Lord Himself. According as the Lord also deals graciously with
you, thus also you. Now over all these put on love, which is the tie of maturity
(Col.3:12-14).
In
short, we are to be mutually disposed towards one another. Paul uses this
expression several times. In 2 Corinthians 13:11 he says, Furthermore, brethren,
rejoice, adjust, be entreated, be mutually disposed, be at peace, and the God of love and
of peace will be with you. Greet one another with a holy kiss. A holy kiss is not
just putting your lips against someone else. This is common practice in the world. A holy
kiss is when you can greet another, knowing full well that what emanates from your mouth
is truth and always in love and in the interests of the one you are greeting. A mouth that
will never speak evil of a brother can give that brother a holy kiss. In Philippians
2, Paul says again, If, then, there is any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of
love, if any communion of spirit, if any compassion and pity, fill my joy full, that you
may be mutually disposed, having mutual love, joined in soul, being disposed to one
thingnothing according with faction, nor yet according with vainglorybut with
humility, deeming one another superior to ones self, not each noting that which is
his own, but each that of the others also. And once more the pattern is to be our
Lord Himself, for, continues Paul, let this disposition be in you which
is in Christ Jesus also, Who being inherently in the form of God . . . nevertheless
empties Himself, taking the form of a slave (Phil.2:5-7).
Christ
pleased not Himself, Paul told the Romans before continuing, Now may the God of
endurance and consolation grant you to be mutually disposed to one another, according to
Christ Jesus, that, with one accord, with one mouth, you may be glorifying the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Wherefore be taking one another to yourselves according
as Christ also took you to Himself, for the glory of God (Rom.15:3,5-7).
Yes,
we may truly glorify God by walking in love, one with another, by striving earnestly to
observe the terms of that hymn we delight to sing:
Blest be the tie that binds
Our hearts in Christian love.
The fellowship of kindred minds
Is like to that above. |
Blest are the sons of peace
Whose hearts and hopes are one,
Whose kind designs to serve and please
Through all their actions run. |
Truly,
the standard is a high one, but then, we are claiming to be sons of God!

To
sum up, we have tried to show various ways in which we may exercise our privilege of
glorifying God. This can be done by our subjecting ourselves to Him, by acknowledging Him
in all things and thanking Him, by accepting evil (when it comes) as necessary in the
outworking of His designs, by believing Him and trusting Him in all circumstances, by
accepting infirmities and afflictions and living above them through holding fast to our
glorious expectation, by developing the fruit of the spirit within ourselves, by standing
by the unadulterated Word of God, and by walking in love with one another, dealing
graciously with each other at all times.
And
this we are praying, that your love may be superabounding still more and more in
realization and all sensibility, for you to be testing what things are of consequence,
that you may be sincere and no stumbling block for the day of Christ, filled with the
fruit of righteousness that is through Jesus Christ for the glory and laud of God
(Phil.1:9-11).
And
to Him be glory in the ecclesia, and in Christ Jesus, for all the generations of the eon
of the eons! Amen! (Eph.3: 21).
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