"But How... "
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Old Paths Classics

[a]

"But How... "

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[b]

"But How. . ."

"for to will is present with me; but how to
perform that which is good I find not."

Rom. 7:18.

   This is the cry from the heart of many a disappointed,
defeated, disheartened, troubled Christian.   The beginning
of the Christian pathway was so bright.   He looks back to the
time when he received the Lord Jesus Christ as Saviour.   He
rejoiced in the joy of knowing that his sins were forgiven; a
great burden was lifted from his heart; he was filled with
love for his newly found Saviour.   It seemed then that he
would never want to sin again, that nothing could be sim-
pler than to live always in the power of this new joy.   But this
did not last.   Gradually the first exuberant joy died down;
the old temptations came back as strong, even stronger than
before; the desire to pray and read the Bible grew less; there
came bad falls and failures such as he had thought had been
left behind forever.   And now, after months, or it may be
years, of Christian experience, there has come to him a settled
sense of failure, a state of continual self reproach; a deep
impression that his Lord looks on him as a failure, too.   There
have been bright patches in his pathway, times of blessing at
conference meetings and the like, when he seemed to get a
new grip on things, and felt that he had entered a new phase
in his Christian life.   But the influence of such times has not
lasted; there has been the coming down from the mountain
of temporary joy and victory into the valley of further defeat
and failure, and the valleys have been longer of late, and he
is beginning to distrust the mountain top experiences be-
cause they make the valleys so much darker by contrast.   And
whether it is concerning his private Christian life which seems
so full of defeat and failure, or whether it is concerning his

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attempts at Christian work, which have been so feeble and
fruitless, the cry of his heart is expressed in exactly these
words, "how to perform that which is good I find not."

   Does that describe your experience of the Christian
life?   Then it is especially for you that this booklet is written
in an effort to show clearly God's way of deliverance for
those who are troubled as you are.   For God has a way of
deliverance, do not doubt that for a moment.   You may
enter into that way today and walk joyfully in it all the days
to come.

   Get it clear, first, that deliverance comes by laying hold
of and acting upon certain great truths revealed in God's
Word.   But before we set down these great truths as simply
as possible, and see how we may lay hold of and act upon
them, will you seek to realize these two facts?

  • Only God, by His Holy Spirit, is able to lead you
    into His way of deliverance.

  • He desires far, far more than you do, that you
    should find that way.

   So take a moment now, in His presence, to tell Him (in
the light of the first of these facts) that you are entirely de-
pending on His Spirit to lead you into His truth.   Then tell
Him (in the light of the second of these facts) that you are
confident that He has brought you to this time and place to
bless you, and that you are expecting Him to teach you as
you read.

   Now, the first great truth is this:

  1. You, with your sinful nature, are incapable of producing
    any good thing.

   The sinful nature with which you were born remained
unchanged when you were born again.   It is just as incapable
of doing good now as it was when you became a Christian.

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You "cannot please God" (Rom. 8:8) by any effort you make,
any more than an unsaved man can.   You are as unable to
produce one good thing, thought, word, or deed, as you
were unable to blot out the record of your past sins.   "[I]n
me,"
said Paul, "...dwelleth no good thing" (Rom. 7:18).   That
is what God says about you with your sinful nature: in you
dwells no good thing.   No good thing.   Take a moment and
let that sink in.   Ask the Holy Spirit to drive it home and
enable you to accept God's estimate of you.   Don't shrink
from believing it utterly; accept the truth of it without reser-
vation, even though at the moment you cannot begin to see
all that it implies.   It seems to be a truth that should lead you
to despair.   No, the acceptance of it is the beginning of the
pathway that leads to deliverance.

   For has not all your experience been teaching you the
truth of it?   You have tried to do good; tried to love, and
please, and serve God; tried to produce in your life and
service the goodness and the fruitfulness that you know should
be there.   And you have failed.   Of course you have.   Do you
see what you have been doing?

   You have been trying to prove in your life the very oppo-
site of what God says is the truth.   God says: in you dwells no
good thing; you have been trying to produce some "good
thing."
  And now you are downcast and disheartened because
you are beginning to find that there is "no good thing" there
to produce.   You have been struggling against the admission of
that truth, because you felt that in admitting it, you must
admit once and for all the downfall of your Christian life.   In
reality the admission and acceptance of that truth will be the
place where deliverance will begin for you.   There will be no
deliverance until, in utter despair of yourself, you admit that
you cannot do the first thing toward pleasing and serving God.

   And notice this, and try to grasp the significance of it
in relation to your past unhappy experience.   God's dealings
with you are all directed to this end, to bring you to that place

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of utter despair of and distrust in yourself.   He will let you fail,
He will allow defeat and disappointment in your life, He will
spare you no necessary suffering, in order to bring you to that
place.   For you must learn by experience, and bitter experi-
ence it often is, that in you dwells "no good thing[.]"

   You did not realize that, did you?   You thought that
your failure was proving that God could not make use of
you.   In reality He is bringing you to the place where He can
begin to use you.   You thought He was looking on you re-
proachfully, because you cannot do the things that please
Him.   In reality, He knew all along that you cannot, and He
is watching over you in unchanging love, waiting until you
learn the lesson which He sees is necessary for you to learn.

   It has been well said that the secret of the Christian life
can be summed up in the words, "Let go, and let God."   The
first thing is to "let go[.]"   You have been clinging desperately to
your hope of "making good" as a Christian; you have been
clutching, like a drowning man at a straw at the last remnants
of good which you imagine you possess; you have felt that, if
you let them go, your whole Christian life must go.   Now you
are beginning to see your mistake.   God is telling you to "let
go,"
to do the very thing that you have felt would be your
downfall.   Will you do it?   Let go your last remaining hopes of
being able to live the Christian life by any effort you can make,
and admit once and for all the truth of God's verdict that in
you dwells "no good thing[.]"   Let go just as you did when you
first came to Him for forgiveness; you brought with you then
no lingering remnant of the "filthy rags" of your own righ-
teousness; you could find no reason in your own heart why He
should accept and bless.   It was:

Just as I am, without one plea,
But that Thy blood was shed for me.
Nothing in my hand I bring,
Simply to Thy Cross I cling.

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   Come as you came then.   Cling to nothing else.   Let go
every other hope of ever being what God wants you to be.
"Let go," and then "let God."

   This brings us to the second great truth of His Word
which you must lay hold of and act upon, and a glorious
truth it is, truly "good news" to a troubled Christian such as
you.

  1. God has given His Holy Spirit to dwell within you,
    for the purpose of working in you both to will and
    to do all that He requires of you.

   If it is true that in yourself you have no power to pro-
duce any one thing that God requires of you, it is equally true
that in the Holy Spirit you have power to produce all that
God requires of you.   And the Holy Spirit dwells within you.
He is there for the purpose of working "in you both to will
and to do of his good pleasure"
(Phil. 2:13).   But though He is
there for that purpose, He cannot do His work while you are
trying to do it for Him.   He has entered (so to speak) the door
of your life, but up to now you have kept Him on the thresh-
old, looking on while you try to straighten up the house your-
self.   Your very efforts to please God and do His work are
hindering His working.   He cannot do His work while you are
in the way.   But when you "cease from your works," when you
recognize at last that all your best efforts must end in failure,
that in you dwells "no good thing[,]" when you "let go," then
the way is prepared for Him to come and do His work in you.

   Lay hold of these great facts:

   Just as God gave the Lord Jesus Christ to die for you
that there might be pardon enough for all your sins; so He
gave the Holy Ghost to dwell in you that there might be
power enough to meet all your needs.

   Just as the blood of Christ covers all your sins, and you
do not go looking anywhere else to get rid of any one of

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them, so the power of the Holy Ghost covers all your needs,
and you must not look anywhere else in order that any one
of them may be met.

   Just as, in your salvation, God did all, and you took no
part in it, but to accept what He had done, so in your sancti-
fication and service God must do all, and you will take no
part in it but to accept what He will do for you.

   When God gave you the Holy Ghost at your conver-
sion, He gave you all you need for your Christian life and
service.   God requires nothing of you which the Holy Spirit
cannot work in you nothing which He will not work in you,
if you will let Him.   Not one good thing can you produce
yourself.   It is useless for you to try.   The attempt will drive
you more and more to despair.   When He gets to work He
will produce all good things.

   What is your need?

   Is it holiness?   You will not find even the beginnings of it
in yourself.   He is the Holy Spirit.   Where He is allowed to
work, increasing holiness must be the result.

   Is it love to God and to others?   You can never work it up.
He is the Spirit of love, and where He is allowed to work in
a human heart (however cold before) He sheds abroad the
love of God in that heart (Rom. 5:5).

   Is it assurance? It will never come by reasoning or argu-
ment.   He is the Spirit of adoption (Rom. 8:15), and His
work is to witness with your spirit that you are indeed a child
of God, enabling you to call God "Father" with a full assur-
ance.

   Is it power over sin and for service? He is the Spirit of
power (2 Tim. 1:7).   He is "the Spirit of him that raised up
Jesus from the dead"
(Rom. 8:11).   If He is allowed to work
in you, all the power of His resurrection will be put forth in
you to conquer sin and to perform God's will through you.

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   Is it an understanding of God's Word?   Alone, you cannot
understand it.   You may fill your head with its teachings, but
a heart knowledge of its truths, and the assimilation of them
into your life, are beyond your reach.   He is the Spirit of
truth; His work is to lead you into all truth (John 16:13).   If
He is allowed to do His work, God's Word will begin to live
to you as never before, and to exercise a power in your life
which you had not thought possible, till you say with one of
old, "O how love I thy law!"

   Is it that you want Christ to become real to you?   It is the
Holy Spirit's work to make Him real.   He alone can take of
the things of Christ and reveal them to you (John 16:14),
until the Saviour becomes to you not One far off whom
you know by the hearing of the ear alone but "a living, bright
reality, more dear, more intimately nigh, than even the sweet-
est earthly tie."

   So we could go on.   But there is no need.   The great and
glorious fact is this, that, in giving the Holy Ghost, God gave
you all you need for all your Christian life and service.   It
matters not what you are, or what you are not; it matters not
what you can do or what you cannot do, you have all in having
Him.   He has not been given to help you when you do your
best; He has been given to do all, because over the very best
that you can produce God has written, "no good thing[.]"

   The one condition that must be fulfilled on your part,
before He will do the work which He has come to do, is
faith.   You receive His power and working, and continue to
receive them every day, in exactly the same way that you re-
ceived God's pardon for your sins through faith (Gal. 3:14).

   Just as there was always pardon for your sins because
Christ died, but it did not become yours in experience until
your faith made it yours; so there is power for you in the
Holy Ghost.   But it will not be yours in experience until your
faith makes it yours.

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   Faith is getting out of the way and letting Him work.
Faith is "letting go and letting God."   Faith does not per-
suade Him to do anything; it makes way for Him to do what
He longs to do.   He longs to get to work in your life, doing
for you, in His own wonderful way, what you have so sadly
failed to do for yourself.   Faith says, "Lord, I am not going to
try any more.   Come Thou, and do Thy work."
  He does not
ask you for any gift before He will come and bring you bless-
ing.   You have "no good thing" to offer Him if He did.   The
only "surrender" that He asks of you is the surrender that
consents to stop working and lets Him do all.   Do not try to
any reason in yourself why He should work His blessings in
you.   The only reason is in His great heart of love, which
found its full expression on Calvary, when every barrier that
could keep your soul from blessing was broken down.   That
is why He is going to bless you.   Not because of anything in
you.

   And the turning point in your life of failure will come
when, refusing to listen to any reasons that Satan or your
own heart can give why He should not bless you, you ask
the Holy Spirit to fill you, and to do in and through you
from henceforth what you have been vainly struggling to
do up till now.   And having asked Him to fill you, believe
that He has done it, and reckon on His power, expecting
evidence of His working.   If you do not get the evidences at
once, if you do not get them for some considerable time,
do not let that trouble you.   Hold on to your attitude of
faith toward God; tell Him that, as He has promised the
Holy Spirit to them that ask (Luke 11:13), and as He has
commanded you to be filled with the Spirit (Eph. 5:18),
you believe that He has filled you in response to your re-
quest and, whether He pleases to show you the evidences
of that filling sooner or later, that you are counting on it
even now as a fact, and expecting His working in and
through you.   Remember that once you have asked for and

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claimed the filling of His Holy Spirit, taking Him at His
word concerning His willingness to give you this blessing--
once you have done that (let me say it reverently) the re-
sponsibility is on Him, and "[H]e abideth faithful[.]"   "I take,
He undertakes."

   I take the promised Holy Ghost, I take the power of
Pentecost To fill me to the uttermost, I take He undertakes.

   And in His own time and way He will make it abun-
dantly clear to you that He has indeed granted your request.

   When the result of His working begins to become
apparent to you, it is likely that the first thing to become
very clear to you will be what is spoken of by the Apostle
Paul in I Cor. 2:12, "Now we have received, not the spirit
of the world, but the spirit which is of God; that we might
know the things that are freely given to us of God."
  You
will begin to see, as you have never seen before, that God's
way is always to give freely, and that our part is not to try to
win His blessings by our feeble, futile efforts but only to
receive His gifts.   It will become clear to you, in a way that
only the Holy Spirit can make it clear, what it means to be
"under grace" that all God's dealings with you, at the be-
ginning of your Christian life, and all the way along, are on
the principle of free and utterly unmerited grace.   And
when you look for the ground of this free giving of God,
you will find it always and only in the fact that Jesus has
died, that He has "offered one sacrifice for sins forever,"
that "by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that
are sanctified."
  On the ground of that perfect work upon
the Cross, God can give freely and forever every blessing
that you need.

   And this brings us to the third and last great truth that
we are going to mention.   We have deliberately left it until
the last, though some may think that it should have come
earlier.   But it is a truth which only begins to dawn on one

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who is filled with the Spirit, and on which further light is
shed by his experience only as he continues to live in the
power of that same Spirit.   The truth is this:

  1. When Christ was crucified, He took with Him to
    the cross, not only your sins, but your sinful nature
    too.

   In some wonderful way, deeply mysterious, but never-
theless true, your sinful nature was put to death on the
Cross with Christ.   So, not merely has God pronounced
that your sinful nature can produce no good thing, but He
has shown His estimate of that nature, shown how He re-
gards it as an utterly corrupt, useless thing, by passing sen-
tence of death upon it, as being unfit to live, and nailing it
to the Cross with Christ.   (Let me say again, with emphasis,
this is a truth so deep that it is not only unappreciated by,
but utter foolishness to the one who is not taught it by the
Holy Spirit.)   And as with the fact of the power of the Holy
Ghost, so with this fact, its power can only be known in
your experience as you lay hold of the fact by faith.   God
has finished with your old nature, "the old man," as it is
sometimes called in Scripture.   It has been judged, con-
demned, and executed in Christ.   "[O]ur old man[,]" writes
Paul (Rom. 6:6), "is crucified with him[.]"   And he goes on,
"[R]eckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin"
(Rom. 6:11).   As you reckon on this amazing fact, the power
of it begins to be experienced in your life (how, you cannot
tell), and there is worked out in some degree in your life
what God tells you is indeed a fact; your old nature is kept
in the place of death, and its former power to make you sin
has gone.

   The mystery of this truth is beyond the grasp of the
human mind; the power of it in the life can be unmistak-
able.   But do not make the mistake of trying to lay hold of
this great negative truth that your old nature was nailed to

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the Cross with Christ, without laying hold, first of all, of
the even greater positive truth that the Holy Ghost is within
you to produce all the power and goodness that you need.
That is why we stated the truth about the Holy Spirit's
work before this other truth that you are "crucified with
Christ[.]"
  Because it is as you reckon on the Holy Ghost
dwelling within you to work in you all that God requires,
that you will be able to understand more clearly and reckon
more confidently and effectively on the great fact that you
are crucified with Christ.   So it is that the Apostle wrote,
"[I]f ye live after the flesh [that is, obeying the desires of your
old sinful nature], ye shall die: but if ye through the Spirit do
mortify
[put to death] the deeds of the body, ye shall live"
(Rom. 8:13).   Those three words, "through the Spirit," are
very important.   This great truth of crucifixion with Christ
will be understood and experienced only as the Holy Spirit
is allowed to do His work in your life.   It is His work to
make real in your experience all the benefits of your union
with Christ in His death.   It is the ceasing from self effort,
the receiving of His fullness, and the reckoning on His work-
ing, you need to learn first of all.   And as you do that
continually, making it the habit of your life to refuse to
expect any good thing from yourself, and confidently to
expect every good thing as the result of His working, the
understanding of this second truth, that your "old man was
crucified with him,"
will help you when that old nature
comes clamoring for recognition and seems likely to entice
you to sin, or drive you to despair.   Refuse to recognize its
existence or its claims; recognize only one thing the Holy
Spirit's perfect working in your life.   When the old nature
rises up (as it will), with its promptings to sin, and you are
tempted to doubt whether the Holy Spirit is really at work
in you, and to worry because of the existence of that "old
man"
within, take your stand upon God's unshakable fact,
"My old nature was done with forever at the Cross."   Be-
cause of that do not let any of its manifestations of life

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move you from depending utterly and only on the Holy
Spirit's work, and believing that He is active within you even
when you are not conscious of it.

In Thy strong hand I lay me down,
So shall the work be done,
For Who can work so wondrously
As the Almighty One?

   As you live thus you will enter experimentally into the
meaning of those great words of Paul in Gal. 2:20, "I am
crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ
liveth in me
[by His Holy Spirit]: and the life which I now live
in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved
me, and gave himself for me."

   So we have seen that the entrance into and continua-
tion in the life for which you have been longing will be by
faith: the faith which listens only to God's voice, turning a
deaf ear to the many other voices which clamor for a hear-
ing; the faith which does not look for feelings, but reckons
on God's facts, resolutely counting on them, in the face of
everything that may seem to contradict them.

   Everything then depends upon such faith.   Leave the
other truths for a moment, and focus your thoughts on this
central one.   You have the Holy Ghost dwelling within you, and
He desires to fill you, and to be to you all you need in your Chris-
tian life
.   There is nothing for you to do but just to take what
He wants to give.   Will you do that now, deliberately and
definitely? Bow in His presence; tell Him you have failed;
tell Him that if any good thing is to come in your Christian
life, He must do it all; tell Him you give yourself to Him,
just as you are, not trying to make yourself better, or prepare
for His blessing, just "letting go"; ask Him to fill you now.

   "Then" (in the words of a great Christian leader) "rise up
and go forth from your chamber, not trying to feel filled, but

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reckoning that God has kept His Word with you, and daring to
believe it, though you may not be conscious of any emotional
outburst."
  Take a few moments in silence to do that now.

   One word in conclusion.   This life which you have en-
tered is all the way along a life of faith.   Feelings there will be at
times, feelings of joy unutterable and full of glory but not
always.   When the feelings come, they will be as the result of
faith, but they are not a necessary part of faith, and the lack of
them is by no means a proof that faith is in vain.   Faith rests,
without emotion, on immovable facts, not on feelings which
are ever changing.   And so for the maintenance of this life, as
for its start, for the continual "[b]eing filled" with the Spirit as
with the first "filling," everything depends on your faith.

   It is well to get that firmly fixed in your mind.   In the
days to come there will be seasons of desperate attack from
the enemy of your soul.   All his power will be put forth in
the endeavor to shake your confidence in your Lord.   The
words of the Lord to Peter before his fall are well worth
bearing in mind, "Satan hath desired to have you, that he
may sift you as wheat: But I have prayed for thee, that thy
faith fail not
"
(Luke 22:31, 32).   It is on your faith that the
strain will come.   Get that clear.   That is the point of the
enemy's attack.   That is the one point that you must guard at
all costs, whatever may come.

   Satan will not waste time attacking God's facts.   They
are unassailable.

  • God has finished with your old nature on Cal-
    vary.

  • In the Holy Ghost, who dwells in you, you have
    all the resources you need.

   These two facts Satan knows: They cannot be attacked.
They are tremendous, unalterable, unassailable facts.   But
only your faith will make the facts real in your experience.

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And your faith can be attacked.   Your faith may fail.   Those
glorious facts may become almost useless so far as your expe-
rience is concerned, because you fail to reckon on them and
live in the power of them.   So it is your faith that the enemy
will single out as the chief point of his attack.   Whether by
fierce temptation, whether by the circumstances into which
you are brought, whether through your feelings, whatever
means he may use, his one aim will be to discredit God's facts to
you, and so shake your faith in them and Him
.   "[Y]our adversary
the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he
may devour: Whom resist steadfast in the faith"
(1 Peter 5:8, 9).
When circumstances seem impossible, when all signs of grace
in you seem at their lowest ebb, when temptation is fiercest,
when love and joy and hope seem nearly extinguished in
your heart, then cling, without feeling and without emotion,
to God's faithfulness; hold on to the fact that He loves you
infinitely, and even now is working in you mightily; and honor
God, and put the enemy to flight by taking to yourself the
words of Job, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him[.]"   "I
have prayed for thee,"
says the One who ever lives to make
intercession for us, "that thy faith fail not[.]"

   This faith of yours can only be maintained and strength-
ened by regular, prayerful study of God's Word, depending
on His Holy Spirit to lead you into all truth, and in prayer
and waiting upon God receiving each day afresh the needed
strength to lay hold of the things that are freely given to
you of God.   So set apart each day a definite time for being
alone with Him, if possible in the early morning, and let
nothing take that time from you.   Then, before the rush of
the day begins, seek a fresh and firmer grasp of the great
facts of His Word, each day anew reckoning yourself dead
unto sin, and alive only unto God; each day anew claiming
and reckoning on the filling of His Holy Spirit, in whose
power alone can you live to please Him each moment, each
hour, each day.

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   Thus you will have found God's way of deliverance.
The cry of your heart, "[H]ow to perform that which is good I
find not[,]"
will be silenced forever, for you will have learned
the secret that is only learned by those who have passed from
Romans 7 into Romans 8, and who can make the words of
the second verse of that great chapter their own, saying with
the Apostle, "For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
hath made me free from the law of sin and death."

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The Old Paths
                           Publishing
                                    House

PO Box [30159-sp?] Amarillo, TX [79120-sp?]

2002

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