In continuing my reading of A.W. Tozer, I started this book after finishing The Knowledge of the Holy. Both books were similarly impactful in my life and opened my eyes to areas in which I need to really work on my relationship with God. I love that we have books like this readily available for us to read; they’ve been such an immense blessing in my life!
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Takeaways from this book:
•”We pursue God because, and only because, He has first put an urge within us that spurs us to the pursuit.”
•We have the capacity to know God because we are made in His image.
•”To have found God and still to pursue Him is the soul’s paradox of love.”
•We must truly desire to want and know God if we would like for Him to manifest Himself to us. “Complacency is a deadly foe of a spiritual growth.”
•Seeking God and making Him our All will not narrow our lives or restrict our expanding hearts.
•”The man who has God for his treasure has all things in One.”
•We must be as Abraham, having everything, but possessing nothing.
•We fear to give up our treasures to the Lord for fear of their safety, when in truth, “Everything is safe which we commit to Him, and nothing is really safe which is not committed.”
•We only have ourselves for our defense when we feel the need to defend ourselves, but if we come defenseless before the Lord, He will be our defender.
•”God formed us for Himself.”
•”The highest love of God is not intellectual, it is spiritual. God is Spirit and only the spirit of man can know Him really.”
•”We can never exaggerate our obligation to Jesus or the compassionate abundance of the love of Jesus to us.”
•It has become very prevalent to promote self under the guise of promoting God.
•”Self is the opaque veil that hides the face of God from us. It can be removed only in spiritual experience, never by mere instruction. There must be a work of God in destruction before we are free.”
•”We possess spiritual faculties by means of which we can know God and the spiritual world if we obey the Spirit’s urge and begin to use them.”
•”Faith enables our spiritual sense to function. Where faith is defective the result will be inward insensibility and numbness toward spiritual things.”
•”Imagination is not faith. Imagination projects unreal images out of the mind and seeks to attach reality to them. Faith creates nothing; it simply reckons upon that which is already there.”
•”At the root of the Christian life lies belief in the invisible. The object of the Christian’s faith is unseen reality.”
•The Presence and the manifestation of God are not the same thing, for we can have one without the other. God is always there even when we are completely unaware of it. “He is manifest only when and as we are aware of His presence. That manifestation will be the difference between a nominal Christian life and a life radiant with the light of His face.”
•We pray for increasing degrees of awareness and a more perfect consciousness of the divine Presence. He is never absent. “He is nearer than our own soul, closer than our most secret thoughts.”
•”We have within us the ability to know Him if we will but respond to His overtures.”
•”The voice of God is the most powerful force in nature, indeed the only force in nature, for all energy is here only because the power-filled Word is being spoken. It is the present Voice which makes the written Word all powerful. He spoke a Book and lives in His spoken words, constantly speaking His words and causing the power of them to persist across the years.”
•”God breathed on clay and it became a man; He breathes on men and they become clay.”
•”The tragedy is that our eternal welfare depends upon our hearing and we have trained our ears not to hear.”
•We so often try to explain God rather than simply adoring Him.
•It is of the utmost importance that we spend alone time with God. We are to be still and wait on Him, drawing near to Him so that He may speak to our hearts.
•”A word of God once spoken continues to be spoken.”
•”Faith is the gaze of a soul upon a saving God.”
•”Faith is not a once-done act, but a continuous gaze of the heart at the Truine God. Believing, then, is directing the heart’s attention to Jesus. It is lifting the mind to “Behold the Lamb of God”, and never ceasing that beholding for the rest of our lives.”
•”Faith is a redirecting of our sight, a getting out of the focus of our own vision and getting God into focus. Faith looks out instead of in and the whole life falls into line.”
•”You can see God from anywhere if your mind is set to love and obey Him.”
•”Essentially, salvation is the restoration of a right relation between man and Creator, a bringing back to normal of the Creator-creature relation.”
•”We must begin with God. We are right when, and only when, we stand in a right position relative to God.”
•We owe God every honor that is in our power to give to Him.
•”The pursuit of God will embrace the labor of bringing our total personality into conformity to His.”
•”Not perfection, but holy intention (makes) the difference.”
•God offered rest in meekness. We must drop our artificiality and not care what people think so long as we are right with God. We must recognize that in ourselves we are nothing, but in God, everything.
•Rest is simply release from the heavy burden borne by mankind. “It is not something we do; it is what comes to us when we cease to do.”
•The words of Jesus are the essence of truth. He never guessed; He always knew and knows.
•We try to divide our lives into two categories: secular and spiritual. This does not lead to a life of peace, but instead causes feels of unrest and misgivings. We should have God in ALL aspects of our lives. All that we do should be done to bring Him honor and glory.