Apostasy

 •  6 min. read  •  grade level: 8
J. N. Darby
The day of the apostasy is hastening on with rapid strides, and also the day in which the Lord shall come to snatch His own away. The present moment is of so solemn a character that I feel constrained to address you with this word of exhortation.
Godly men everywhere, who watch the signs of the times, see the moment approaching which shall terminate the present acting of grace. The time has evidently arrived when one must speak plainly and decisively to ask you where you are and what you are about.
You have by grace, which has shined brighter and brighter as it has approached its termination, been gathered out of the seething mass of idolatry and wickedness which now threatens Christendom and the world with an overthrow more awful than that of Sodom and Gomorrah of old. The question is whether you are adequately impressed with the responsibility, as well as the blessedness, of the ground you are on, and walking like men and women whose eyes have been opened.
Believe me, there has never been in the history of the world such a time as the present, and Satan is occupied with none as he is with you. His occupation with you is the more to be feared because of the subtlety of his operations. His object is to withdraw your attention from Christ, while you suppose you are on safe ground and have nothing to fear. He would destroy you with the very truth itself. For mark the subtlety: you are on safe ground, but only while Christ is your all in all. Here is where Satan is drawing some away. Interpose anything between your soul and Christ, and your Philadelphia becomes Laodicea. Your safe ground is as unsafe as the rest of Christendom; your strength is gone from you, and you become weak like any ordinary mortal.
Some of you are young and recently converted, or brought to the right ways of the Lord, and you do not know the depths of Satan. But you are hereby solemnly warned of your peril, and if mischief overtake you, you cannot plead ignorance. Again I say, Satan has his eye especially upon you for the purpose of interposing the world in some form between your soul and Christ. He cares not how little, or in what form. If you knew but how little will answer his purpose, you would be alarmed. It is not by that which is gross or shameful; such is the development, not the beginning of evil. It is not by anything glaring that he seeks to ruin you, but in small and seemingly harmless trifles—those that would not shock nor offend anyone as things go, and yet these constitute the deadly and insidious poison, destined to ruin your testimony and withdraw you from Christ.
Do you ask what are these alarming symptoms and where are they seen? The question only shows what is the character of the opiate at work. You are being infected with the spirit of the world. Your dress, your manner, your talk, your lack of spirituality betray it. There is a dead weight, a restraint, a want of power that reveals itself as plainly as if your heart were visibly displayed and its thoughts publicly read. A form of godliness without power is to be seen among you as plainly as in Christendom generally.
It must be Christ or the world. It cannot be—ought not to be—Christ and the world. God's grace in drawing you out of the world in your ignorance is one thing, but God will never permit you to demean His grace, and play fast and loose when you have been separated from the world. Remember, you take the place and claim the privilege of one whose eyes have been opened, and if on the one hand this is unspeakably blessed, and it is; on the other hand [if you are not real] it is the most dreadful position in which a human being can be found. It is to be at the wedding feast without the wedding garment. It is to say, "Lord, Lord," while we do not the things that He bids. It is to say, "I go, sir," as he said who went not.
Beloved, I am persuaded better things of you, though I thus speak, and I have confidence in you, in the Lord, that you will bless Him for these few faithful words. Nothing can be more glorious than the position you are called to occupy in these closing days. Saints have stood in the breach, have watched through weary days and nights these nineteen hundred years, and you only wait for the trumpet of victory to go in and take possession of the glorious inheritance. Other men labored, and you are entered into their labors, and yet, you are lowering your dignity to the level of the poor potsherds of the earth, who only wait for the rod of the Victor, to be dashed into pieces.
Oh, awake, then, from your lethargy: slumber no longer. Put away your idols and false gods, wash your garments and get you to Bethel, where you will find God to be better than ever you knew Him, even in your best days. Lay aside your last bit of worldly dress, guard your speech that it be of Christ and His affairs, and not, as you know it now often is, of anything but Him. Let your prayers mingle with those of other saints at the prayer meetings; they never were more needed. Neglect no opportunity of gathering up instruction from that Word which alone can keep us from the paths of the destroyer, and let your life be the evidence of the treasures you gather up at the lecture, or the reading meeting, or in secret with the Lord. If you want an occupation with a glorious reward from a beloved Master, ask that Master to set you to work for Him. You will never regret it, either in this world or in that which is to come.
Beloved, bear with me; I am jealous over you with godly jealousy. You belong to Christ, and Christ to you. Break not this holy union. Let not the betrothed one be unfaithful to her Bridegroom! Why should you be robbed and spoiled? And for what? Empty husks and bitter fruits, while you waste this little span of blessing! All the distinctions acquired here in the energy of the Spirit will but serve to enhance your beauty and render you more lovely in the eyes of Him who has espoused you to Himself.
Can you refuse Him His delights in you? Can you refuse Him the fruit of the travail of His soul who once hung, a dying man, between two thieves on Calvary, a spectacle to men and angels and for you— you who have forgotten this devotedness for you? He could have taken the world without the cross and left you out, but He would not. Now will you, having been enriched by those agonies and that blood, take the world into your tolerance and leave Him out? Impossible! Your pure mind only needed to be stirred up by way of remembrance.
"Wherefore also we pray always
for you... that the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ may be
glorified in you, and ye in Him.”
2 Thess. 1:11,12