When I finish a book by A.W. Tozer, I always finish with a desire for more of God in my life, and Tozer never neglects to remind us that more of God in our lives is always possible.
For my own future notes:
Page 43 - “The question that desperately needs to be answered is, How does faith differ from unbelief?
The difference is simply that faith says, "If some other time, then why not now?" And that's the important thing. If God said it for some other time, why does it not apply now?
Faith says emphatically that it does apply to me right now. Faith also says, "If some other place, then why not right here? If it's good wherever, then why can't it be good here where I am standing?"
Faith says, "If someone else, then why not me? Whatever God has done for anybody else, God can do for me."
Faith takes the "I" out of the equation and brings God back to the center. If God said it, then it must be true, and if it's true, then it's true now, and if it's true for someone else, it's also true for me. Somehow, we have taken the Scripture and parsed it to mean "that one" when it means "this one."
Pages 65-66 - “My biggest enemy is not Satan. My worst enemy is myself. If I could let go of the past that God has led me out of and latch on to what God has for me now- the provisions and the access to heaven He has for me I would begin to experience the kind of Christian life that is full of joy, praise, and honor to God.”
Page 99 - “Patrick was a chef in one of the finest hotels in this country. He and his wife had a son in his twenties, Lawrence, who was born unable to walk. Patrick believed the Lord would heal him, but He did not. One day he said to God, "I am not going to eat again until my boy is healed." His wife said, "Do you think that's wise, Patrick?" He said, "Leave that to God and me." So Patrick went to work, and the first day was not so bad, but the second and third days were terrible. In this fine, high-class restaurant, he was dishing up food that was just utterly out of this world for these high-class patrons. Still, Patrick remained steadfast. He told his wife, "Until Lawrence is healed, I am fasting. I am leaning on God.”
One morning he heard his wife's scream that filled the room. He ran into the room and said, "What's the matter?" And she said, "Look! Look!" Lawrence was running around all over the room, perfectly delivered.
I would not say that everybody should do that. I would not go that far, and I could not go along with some of the healing evangelists. I will only say, God did that for a simplehearted man who no one else could help.”
Page 127 - “For example, when we think of the cloud by day and the fire by night, we are thinking of opposites. During the day, the cloud contradicts the light, and at night the fire contradicts the dark. I find it is difficult to get a handle on that. My circumstances do not define me, but rather, God's work in me always contradicts them.
My joy is not in my circumstance but in that Angel that is before me.
We are the ones opening our hearts to receive as much of God as we will. God does not determine how much we shall have; we decide how much we are going to accept from God. I have prayed and labored unselfishly, and I believe the Holy Spirit has spoken to my heart. I need to put away selfish ambitions, and I need to set before me the Canaan God has for me. When I see what God has for me, and when I begin to see not through my eyes, but through the eyes of the Lord, I will see something worth sacrificing for.”
Pages 139-140 - “What I want to emphasize is the fact that the true Christian is known. There is no question about that person being a Christian.
It is similar to the birth of a baby. We know that baby has been born because there it is right in front of us. No question about it.
The same goes for that Christian who has been born again.
The spiritual experience is real. There is the struggle, the pain, and the labor, and finally we come into the sunlight of God's redeeming power.
There are some reasonable conclusions I want to state here.
If we do not know that we have crossed a line, we have not. If we do not know when, we have not. An experience is the reality of crossing that line.
I believe it is the same with other aspects of our Christian experience.
If you do not know that you have consecrated yourself to the Lord and do not know when, you probably have not consecrated your life unto the Lord.
If you do not know when you surrendered to the Lord, you have not surrendered.
If you do not know when you were filled with the Holy Spirit, you were not filled with the Holy Spirit.
These personal experiences are landmarks in our walk with Christ. Just as the Israelites had that monument reminding them of crossing the Jordan, so we have monuments reminding us of experiences with Christ. Our conversion, our filling with the Holy Spirit, our surrender to Christ are all landmarks and monuments to our encounters with Him.
Nobody will go to heaven who does not know now that they are going to heaven. It is not guesswork; it is the reality of the personal experience that makes us completely confident in our walk with Christ.”
Page 141 - “You cannot surrender to Christ and have nobody notice it.”
Page 146 - “If my conversion is not separating me from the world around me, it is not a genuine conversion. What reason is there for conversion if it is not as drastic
as circumcision?”
Page 156 - “What are you going to do about your discouragement? Remember, the stars in heaven do not shine in the daytime; it is already light upon the earth. Why do they shine at night? Because the darkness makes them visible. So in all the periods of history the saint always stands out when darkness rises upon the earth.”