This phrase was coined by my lovely friend Elaine today as we chatted about my recent discovery of Tozer. Scrappy Christians: those who
are discontent with their current experience of God, plagued by holy
dissatisfaction, always wanting more and digging their heels in until they get
it; those with hearts set on God who will not be swayed from a lifelong pursuit
of Him, who will lay hold of Him until they receive the blessing of knowing Him more than they currently do. Jacob was a scrappy Christian: he determined to know God. He wrestled
with him in the long hours of the night. His searching left him bruised and
battered, but convicted of the truth of God’s power and presence.
I want to be a scrappy Christian.
In the opening chapter of Tozer’s ‘The Pursuit of God’,
which I whole-heartedly recommend with the precursor that it will leave you
somewhat wrecked, Tozer mourns the current state of the church, the plight of
the “too easily satisfied religionist” who does not know what he or she is
missing. In contrast, he points back to those saints of the past who knew what
it was to pursue God:
“Come near to the holy men and women of the past and you
will soon feel the heat of their desire for God. They mourned for Him, they
prayed and wrestled and sought for Him day and night, in season and out, and
when they found him the finding was all the sweeter for the long seeking.” (p.10)
Tozer’s critique of the church is a double edged sword: on
the one hand, he mourns for those who do not believe that an intimate
relationship with God is possible – who insist that walking with Jesus is a matter
of cold-hearted duty and obligation removed from joy and feeling; but on the
other, he despairs of the frenetic charismatic who leaps from one meeting to
the next, seeking only an experience of God without being prepared to go at it
for the long haul.
This is not a scrappy attitude. The scrappy Christian knows
that to seek God is to fight daily to meet with Him. There are no quick fixes.
“The idea of cultivation, so dear to the saints of old, has
now no common place in our total religious picture. It is too slow, too common.
We demand glamour and dramatic action. A generation of Christians reared among
push buttons and automatic machines is impatient of slower and less direct
methods of reaching their goals. We have been trying to apply machine-age
methods to our relations with God. We read our chapter, have our short
devotions and rush away, hoping to make up for our deep inward bankruptcy by
attending another gospel meeting or listening to another thrilling story told
by a religious adventurer returned from afar.” (p.52)
Ouch.
Tozer is not pleasant reading. This is hard stuff. Hard
because I recognise the truth of it in my own life: the box ticking which I
hope will somehow feed my soul, a deep inward bankruptcy which cannot be
satisfied by the perfunctory daily quiet time. I – theoretically, at least –
long for closeness with God. I crave intimacy with Him and am haunted by the
half-notion that there must be more than this; that it is in fact possible to
have a deeper awareness of His presence and to live in closer communion with Him. But that half-notion is easily silenced. Quickly pushed to one side by the
pressures of life and by the well-meaning advice of others. Such a pursuit is
too time-consuming, too labour-some. There are too many things that need to be
done and who do you think you are anyway? What are you trying to prove? Be
satisfied with your salvation and get on with it.
But I am not satisfied. I am hungry. I am scrappy. Or at
least trying to be.
“We have been too blind to see, or too timid to speak out,
or too self-satisfied to desire anything better than the poor average diet with
which others are satisfied. To put it differently, we have accepted one another’s
notions, copied one another’s lives and made one another’s experiences the
model for our own. And for a generation the trend has been downward. Now we
have reached a low place of sand and burnt wire and grass and, worse of all, we
have made the Word of Truth conform to our experience and accepted this low
plane as the very pasture of the blessed. It will require a determined heart and
more than a little courage to wrench ourselves loose from the grip of our times
and return to Biblical ways.” (p.53)
It will require scrappy Christians.
It will require making the Word of God the standard to which we conform.
It will require looking to the Saints of old, to Jacob, to
Moses, to David, to Paul and to the way in which they pursued their God
with their whole heart.
It will require setting our hearts on a vision of what could
be, of what might be in ten years’ time if we put the ground work in, if we
cultivate an awareness of God’s presence, if we refuse to be satisfied by
anything less, if we set the Lord daily before us, if we do not take our eyes
off Him.
O God, I have tasted
Thy goodness, and it has both satisfied me and made me thirsty for more. I am
painfully conscious of my need of further grace. I am ashamed of my lack of
desire, O God, the Triune God, I want to want Thee. I long to be filled with
longing. I thirst to be made more thirsty still. Show me Thy glory, I pray Thee,
so that I may know Thee indeed. Begin in mercy a new work of love within me.
Say to my soul, “Rise up, my fair one, and come away.” Then give me grace to
rise and follow Thee up from the misty lowland where I have wandered so long.
In Jesus’ Name, Amen. (p.14)
All quotes taken from, Tozer, A.W. The Pursuit of God. (http://www.ntslibrary.com/PDF%20Books/Tozer_Pursuit_of_God.pdf)