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Back to Great Works Index 
Within or The Kingdom of God is Whithin You By Andrew Murray
Note: the first three Addresses contained in this volume were delivered at the Mowbray Convention,
Cape of Good Hope, and have since been revised and corrected by the author. 1897.
Contents
I. The Kingdom of God
II. The Indwelling of God
III. Jesus Christ in You
IV. Daily Fellowship with God
II. The Indwelling of God
What agreement hath the temple of God with idols? For ye are the temple of the living
God; as God hath said, I will dwell in them and walk in them; and I will be their God,
and they shall be my people.-2 COR.vi.16.
We have here an answer to the question, How is God going to be my God? Am I to
regard Him as a great and Almighty and distant God, outside of me and separate from
me in the heaven above, from whom I am from time to time to have a little help? That
is what many Christians think, and it is owing to this thought of God that they
experience so little of His real presence and power. No, this thought of God is only
the beginning of true faith in Him. As we learn to know Scripture better, and the deep
need of our heart, and the wonderful love of God that longs to enter completely into
us, we learn that there is something better. The question, How is God going to be my
God? finds its answer in the words I have just read. "God hath said, I will dwell in
them, and I will be their God." That is God's answer to your question.
And what a wonderful answer it is. You know what a difference there is between
the things that surround us and force themselves on our notice and occupy us, but
which we never give place in our heart, and others that enter into us and take
possession of our very life. A mother has a place for the child in her heart - it lives
there.
The gold of a miser has his heart, with all its love and hope. How little we think
that our heart was actually created that God might dwell there, that He might show
forth His life and love there, and that there our love and joy might be in Him alone.
How little we know that just as naturally we have the love of parents or children
filling our heart and making us happy, we can have the living God, for whom the
heart was made, dwelling there and filling it with His own goodness and blessedness.
This is my message this evening: God wants your heart; if you give it Him, He will
dwell in it.
You heard what was said this afternoon about God, and what He was to the
Psalmist, in Ps.xlii. and xliii., as he calls Him, "the end of my life, the God of my
strength, end of my exceeding joy, and my end." But how is God to be the strength of
my life and my God? In no other way but by coming into my life with His divine life,
and so filling it with His Almighty strength- then He is the strength of my life. With
His holy life and love. He comes into my heart, the very seat and centre of my life,
and acts within me as my God, working out my life for me. He makes divinely and
blessedly true what is written here: "God hath said, I will dwell in them, and so I will
be their God."
Do you think it would make a wonderful difference in our life if we really believe
this, and in believing received the blessing it speaks of? What a holy awe there would
be in us. And what tender fear lest we should hurt or grieve this holy, loving God.
What a longing would be awakened- I want to know how to walk with this God and
have full communion with Him. And what a bright confidence: now my God has
come to dwell in me, I need fear no more that I shall not have His presence, or that He
will not do for me and in all that I need.
I want to speak to you very simply about this wonderful indwelling, and to give a
few thoughts that may help you to see how it is the very essence of true Christianitythe
very thing man as a sinner needed to have restored to him, and the very thing
Christ Jesus came to give.
And let me say in the first place, that it was for nothing less, and nothing else, than
this indwelling that man was created by God. Have you ever wondered why God
created man at all? The reason was this. God brought creatures into existence that He
might show forth and impart His own divine goodness and glory to them in a
creaturely fashion, so that they, as far as they were capable of it, might share with
Him His divine perfections and blessings.
And He specially created man in His own
image and likeness, that in him He might show how the Life of God could dwell in
the human creature, and gradually fit him and lift him up for dwelling with God and
in God through eternity. God's love said: in his measure, I want man to be as holy and
as good and as blessed as I am. I cannot give him the holiness or blessedness apart
from Myself, but I can and will dwell in him, in the inmost depths of his life, and be
to him his goodness and his strength. Yes, this was the glory of the divine creating
love -–God wanted to give man all He had Himself – God gave Himself to be his life
and joy.
In no other possible way could God do this but by dwelling in him. Just as an oil
lamp has its light inside, and through the globe gives light all around, so the God of
love created man that He might be within him the light of his life. This was to be
man's dignity and his blessedness, that in and through him all the glories of the
blessed God should ever be shining out before the universe. Our whole nature, will
and affections, and powers, were all to be the vessel to receive and hold and overflow
with the blessed fulness of the life of God in us.
And it was to be man's high
perogative and privilege just to offer and yield himself to God in the consciousness of
this holy partnership. What God was in Himself in heaven, living out His own life
there, that He was to be on earth in and through man, living out His own life and truly
in heaven. Oh! the glory and the bliss of being a man! Glory to God for our creation.
But now, look next in the light of this blessed truth, I will dwell in them, at what
sin has done. God had made man to be His home, His temple, where His presence,
His will would be all in all.
It is of this indwelling that sin has robbed both God and
us. The temptation with which Satan came to man in Paradise really meant this –
would he with his whole heart yield to God as Father and doing His will alone? Or
would he not do his own will, and let self rule as master in his own house? Alas! that
fatal choice.
God was dethroned and cast out of His temple, and self sat upon the
throne. Just as really as in later days the image of an idol was set up in the very home
that God had caused to be built for us Himself, so self was enthroned in the seat of
God. The description of the man of sin, when he is fully revealed come to full
maturity, "who opposeth and exalteth himself about all that is called God, or that is
worshipped, so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God and showeth himself that
he is God," is the true self at every stage and in every state: self sits in the temple of
God as God.
All the sin of heathendom - and how awful it is – and all the sin of
Christendom – no less terrible! - is but the outgrowth of that one root – God
dethroned, self enthroned, in the heart of man. All the sin and sorrow of the life of
each one of us has been nothing but this: you were not what you were created to be –
you had not God dwelling in your heart to fill it with His life and peace and love.
I can with confidence ask any man here, Would you be content to have all filthy
reptiles and animals occupy your houses along with yourselves? Would you allow
other people to be masters of your home you dwell in? You never would. And yet,
alas! you allow so much else to occupy the heart and have the place God alone is
meant to have. And so many are quite unconscious of it. We come to-night with the
message: let there be an end of all this desecration of God's temple. God asks your
whole heart for Himself – oh! let it be given to Him.
A third thought is, in the light of this indwelling of God, look at Christ's work of
redemption. What was the object of Christ's coming from Heaven? It was to show us
the possibility and blessedness of being a man with God living His life in Him. We
teach children by means of pictures and models. When God's Son became man, He
lived a perfect human life – "made like us in all things" – and told us it was by the
power of the Father dwelling in Him. "I do nothing of Myself – the Father in Me
doeth the work." Here is no question of abstract thought or deep theology – here is a
true man, sleeping, hungering, wearied, tempted, weeping, suffering like ourselves,
telling us that the Father dwells in Him, and that this is the secret of His perfect
blessed life. He felt it all just as we feel it, but He could do and bear all because the
Father was in Him. He showed us how a man can live, and how He would enable us
to live.
When He had done this in His life, He died that He might deliver us from the
power of sin, and open up the way for us to return to God. On the cross He proved
that a man in whom God dwells will be ready to suffer anything and to give his life
even to the death, that he may enter into the fulness of the life of God. When sin
entered, man lost the life of God dwelling in him, and became dead to it. There was
no way for man to be freed from the life of sin but by dying to it. Christ died to sin,
that He might take up into His fellowship and that we too might be dead to sin, and
live unto God and His own life. And so He won back for us the life man had been
created for, with God dwelling in him, by giving to us His life, the very life He had
lived. As He spake, "As Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they may be one
with us."
Continued 
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