Search This Blog

Saturday, June 02, 2007

A. W. Tozer

I've often referred to A. W. Tozer in my blogging, and it occurred to me recently that not everyone is familiar with who he is. So today I'm devoting this space to simply introducing one of my spiritual heroes --- A. W. Tozer. I grew up without a father, and spent much of my life in the church seeking a spiritual father. I wanted a pastor who could lead me. I never found one. But I did find, through the Bible and through other Christian reading, great spiritual leaders who could lead me.

It's kind of funny how God answers prayer. You see, for years I prayed and asked God to give me a spiritual father. I asked God to put a man in my life whom would lead me. Because I never actually met that man, I have to confess I was a little ticked off with God about what I perceived to be not answering my prayer. Little did I realize that God actually did answer my prayer! He sent me great heroes of the Bible to teach me who God is and how to be a man. He sent authors like A. W. Tozer to write books that would teach me those same things too. So today, let me introduce you to my spiritual father, A. W. Tozer.

A. W. Tozer actually died in 1963, just months after the death of my own birth father. I was four years old then. But his life and spiritual legacy continue to draw many (like me) into a deeper knowledge of God even today. Tozer walked a path in his spiritual life that few attempt, characterized by a relentless and loving pursuit of God. He longed to know more about the Savior—how to serve and worship Him with every part of his being.

Throughout his life and ministry, Tozer called believers to return to an authentic, biblical position that characterized the early church—a position of deep faith and holiness. " He belonged to the whole church," says James Snyder in the book, In Pursuit of God: The Life Of A. W. Tozer. "He embraced true Christianity wherever he found it."

During his lifetime, Tozer pastored several Christian and Missionary Alliance churches, authored more than forty books, and served as editor of Alliance Life, the monthly denominational publication for the C&MA. At least two of Tozer's books are considered spiritual classics, The Pursuit of God and The Knowledge of the Holy—a tremendous accomplishment for a man who never received a formal theological education. The presence of God was his classroom. His notebooks and tools consisted of prayer and the writings of early Christians and theologians—the Puritans and great men of faith.

Tozer's conversion to Christianity came when he was seventeen. As a result he gained an insatiable hunger and thirst for the things of God. A cleaned-out area in the family's basement became his refuge where he could pray and meditate on the goodness of God.

Tozer once wrote, "I have found God to be cordial and generous and in every way easy to live with." To him the love and grace of Jesus Christ were a recurring astonishment," writes Snydner.

Although he had not attended Bible college or seminary, Tozer received two honorary doctorates. He accepted an offer to pastor his first church in West Virginia in 1916. By December 1921, Tozer and his wife, Ada, moved to Morgantown where they had the first of seven children, six boys and a girl.

Money was extremely tight in the early days of his ministry. The Tozers made a pact to trust God for all their needs regardless of the circumstances. "We are convinced that God can send money to His believing children—but it becomes a pretty cheap thing to get excited about the money and fail to give the glory to Him who is the Giver!"

Tozer never swayed from this principle. Material things were never an issue. Many have said if Tozer had food, clothing, and his books, he was content. The family never owned a car. Tozer, instead, opted for the bus and train for travel. Even after becoming a well-known Christian author, Tozer signed away much of his royalties to those who were in need.

His message was as fresh as it was uncompromising. His single purpose in life was to know God personally, and he encouraged others to do the same. He quickly discovered a deep, abiding relationship with God was something that had to be cultivated.

While pastoring a church in Indianapolis, Tozer noticed his ministry changing. While he did not depart from the theme of evangelism, God began to lead him into a new phase of ministry. For the first time he began to record his thoughts on paper. This change eventually carved out a place for him as a prolific writer.

In 1928, Tozer accepted a call to pastor the Southside Gospel Tabernacle in Chicago, where he remained for thirty years. The church grew from a small parachurch to a full-fledged church. Missions and the deeper life in Jesus Christ were its two primary focuses.

"Tozer's sermons were never shallow," writes Snyder. "There was hard thinking behind them, and [he] forced his hearers to think with him. He had the ability to make his listeners face themselves in the light of what God was saying to them. The flippant did not like Tozer; the serious who wanted to know what God was saying to them loved him."

Everything Tozer taught and preached came out of the time he spent in prayer with God. It was there that he shut out the world and its confusion, focusing instead only on God. "Our religious activities should be ordered in such a way as to leave plenty of time for the cultivation of the fruits of solitude and silence," wrote Tozer.

He realized early in his ministry that Christ was calling him to a different type of devotion—one that required an emptying of self and a hunger to be filled to overflowing with God's Spirit. It was also a devotion that consumed him throughout his life.

Leonard Ravenhill once said of Tozer, "I fear that we shall never see another Tozer. Men like him are not college bred but Spirit taught."

"God discovers Himself to 'babes,'" wrote Tozer, "and hides Himself in thick darkness from the wise and the prudent. We must simplify our approach to Him. We must strip down to essentials and they will be found to be blessedly few.

A. W. Tozer died on Monday, May 12, 1963, almost a week after preaching his last sermon. The pursuit was over, the destination reached. A simple epitaph marks his grave in Akron, Ohio: A. W. Tozer—A Man of God. The wondrous pursuit of God is more than a legacy. It is a way of life passed on to us that we too might experience what A. W. Tozer lived.

You know, I spent years praying for a spiritual father. Admittedly, I also spent years being mad at God for having taken away my own birth father on December 13, 1962. It is more than ironic to me that the spiritual father God provided for me --- died just five months after him. But then I've been saying for some time now that the better I turn my life and will over to God, the more ironic life seems to get.

Who are your spiritual parents? If you don't think you have any, or don't know, ask God to lead you to them. There are plenty of spiritual parents to be had in the Bible. Perhaps A. W. Tozer, Oswald Chambers, Corrie Ten Boom or others will be God's provision in your life to inspire you, help you to know God and teach you how to be a man or woman of God. And then the challenge will be to live a life that makes you a spiritual parent one day!

No comments:

Post a Comment