THE PILLAR EXPERIENCE
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"Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go no
more out: and I will write upon him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God,
which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God: and I will write upon
him my new name." -- Rev. 3:12
Here we have a further development in the overcoming life. Keep in mind that this was that
helpless child, who has now become a seasoned soldier who can endure hardness. Now he is a
"pillar in the temple of my God." Pillars, as a rule, are not so beautiful as pulpits, but they are
more essential! Pillars hold things up. Were it not for pillars, great buildings would, collapse.
Pillars in large warehouses may be used for various purposes -- not only to hold things together,
but they frequently have driven into them great nails and bolts upon which are hung important
things.
Oh, is it not wonderful that we can become so fixed and established that we will be
dependable? That same man or woman who was once vacillating and easily "hurt" does not pull
off and threaten to leave the church now because things do not go to suit him.
I come to your home, and upon ringing the bell a beautiful maiden opens the door and
invites me in. Her sister appears, and they both entertain me. Oh, how they can sing and make the
piano talk! After some time, a beautiful woman appears in a white apron. She bows, introducing
herself, saying: "Supper is now ready." We go out into the dining room and she says, "Father will
soon be in -- he is just washing his hands." Presently he appears and begs pardon for being in his
overalls. He sits at the head of the table while his wife sits at the other end. The children sit on the
sides, and I begin to remark that this is a beautiful and well-cooked meal. I notice the pictures on
the walls are hanging just right.
But we could not have enjoyed that music and that repast, had it not been for those two
pillars, Father and Mother. His hands may be wrinkled, his finger nails unpainted, furrows appear
on his face; but notwithstanding all this, he and his good wife are more essential to the upkeep of
that home than are those beautiful maidens.
Likewise, every church may produce those who can sing, shout and make a fair show in the
flesh; but sometimes the pastor is pained when he misses them from services. He thinks to himself,
"Did they take offense at what I said last Sabbath?" or "Are they staying away because of the way
the election of delegates to conference turned out?"
Not so, with a few old pillars! Thank God. If they are not present at the midweek prayer
meeting or Sabbath services, the pastor has no uneasiness. He knows they are all right. They are
busy serving the Lord! They have started a revival or a prayer meeting in their own neighborhood.
They are pillars that "shall go no more out."
Yes, a pillar may be rugged and unpolished, yet he is the one of whom God says, "I will
write upon him my name, and my city." This immediately lends prestige and influence. Oh, my
friends, what could be greater than to walk down the streets of this city, the new Jerusalem, with
God's own signature all over me? He wrote it Himself -- not His secretary, with a rubber stamp,
but He, Himself, wrote upon me His own name and the name of His city, even the new Jerusalem!
Oh, this is worth more than paint and polish that can easily be rubbed off! Friend, I would rather
be old-fashioned, yea, unlettered, yea, never invited to give an after-dinner speech at a great
banquet, yet be worth something when the fight is on and drudgery work needs to be done -- than to
look wise and be useless.
"To be a pillar in the temple of God indicates that the soul has penetrated from the outer
courts of religious life into the very center of that glorious spiritual structure which the Holy Ghost
has been fashioning through the centuries. It is evident that all believers who enter into that
glorious structure will not rank as pillars, for it would be out of keeping for every piece in the
temple to be a pillar. And we notice that this promise was not given in the earliest stages of the
overcoming life, but reserved for the last stage previous to sitting with Christ in His throne. There
are thousands of degrees of grace among God's children.
"When it pleases God to take one of His servants and make him a pillar in the temple,
Christ then affirms, 'He shall go no more out.' We are to take these words to mean just what they
say. We have seen in previous steps that there are points in grace from which the soul may
retrograde and be lost forever; but the Scriptures just as clearly teach that there is a point in Divine
life where the believer's glorious destiny is forever settled." -- Watson
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