WALKING WITH GOD OR THE DEVIL -- WHICH?
By Bud Robinson
02 -- SCRIPTURES
In Genesis 3:8 we read, "And
they heard the voice of the Lord walking in the garden in the
cool of the day," and in the book of Job, first chapter and seventh
verse, "And the Lord said unto
Satan, Whence comest thou? Then Satan answered the Lord, and said, From
going to and fro in the
earth, and from walking up and down in it."
* * * *
* * *
03 -- THE MESSAGE
My friends, we have before
us two of the greatest generals that ever crossed swords on
earth. One rules heaven and the other hell, and the country that you
and I live in is in dispute, and
we find these commanders walking up and down on this earth seeking
companionship. They are
both seekers -- they are beating their drums and calling for
volunteers, and you have to walk with
one or the other of these generals. You see you are a free agent, and
this war is in the country
where you live, and you are compelled to take sides with one or the
other, and then you are so
constructed that you can't go through this country without a companion.
You see we are of a very
puny make-up. There is a place in your heart that must be full all the
time, and if you are not
walking with God and filled with Him, then you are walking with the
Devil and you are filled with
him.
You see, in some
respects God and the Devil are just alike. They are both walking up and
down the earth -- they are both seeking you. God wants you to glorify
Him, and, of course, the
Devil wants you to glorify him. They are both looking at you, and if
God doesn't get you, the Devil
will. They both take everybody they can get. We read in II Chron. 16:9,
"For the eyes of the Lord
run to and fro throughout the whole earth to show himself strong in
behalf of them whose heart is
perfect toward him." So you see, my friend, God is looking for somebody
to walk with Him, and
there is nothing that pleases God better than to find a person who will
walk with Him. In Psalm
84:11, He said, "No good thing will He withhold from them that walk
uprightly." Well, glory to
God, heaven is plunder to the man that is walking with God, and God has
nothing too good for the
man that will link arms with Him and walk through this country by His
side. With all God's
greatness and riches and glory in heaven, He seems to have left it all,
and He is down here walking
up and down in the earth looking for someone to walk with Him. It seems
like God would rather
walk with a man on earth than to sit on a throne and rule a universe;
and it matters not how poor
and sinful and wretched a fellow is, if he is tired of sin and evil and
immorality, and sick of
himself and disgusted with the Devil, there is nothing that would
please God better than to link
arms with that poor sinner and pull him out of his poverty, and put
shoes on his feet and a ring on
his hand, and clothe him with the robe of righteousness, and order the
fatted calf killed.
Well, thank God, He has been
able to find a few followers that were willing to walk with
Him, and He has left nothing undone to prove to this old world that He
was making the fellow
happy that was walking with Him. So you see, my friend, God is doing
all that a God of love and
mercy can do to make you one of the purest holiest, happiest and best
men on earth. And the Devil
is doing all a mighty devil can do to make you one of the most corrupt,
vile, degraded, sin-cursed,
devil-ridden, hell-bound men that walk on earth. The Devil is a mighty
general; his black flag is
floating over multiplied thousands of Adam's fallen race, and he is
robbing heaven and populating
hell with human souls. My friend, if he can persuade you to walk with
him he will put hell in you
while you are on earth, and then put you in hell after you die. The
only use the Devil has for you, is
for you to commit sin for him; and when you do it, you dishonor God,
degrade the human family,
glorify the Devil, and become a co-worker with him. My friend, if you
will stop for a few hours
and just walk through the Devil's camp and see the awful wreckage of
his soldiers, and hear their
groans and shrieks and wails as they die in darkness and despair, you
will be convinced that the
Devil is the greatest enemy his followers ever had.
Come, friend, and walk with
me through the camp of the Lord, and let us see if we can see
any difference between the soldiers and the camps of these two
commanders. The first one of the
Lord's soldiers I want you to look at is Enoch. We read in Genesis
5:22, that Enoch walked with
God three hundred years. So you see that God found a man going in the
same direction that He was
going, and it was so easy for them to walk together. After a stroll of
three hundred years we find
Enoch and the Lord enjoying each other's society so much, and their
companionship so delightful,
that the Lord proposed to Enoch to go home with Him and stay all night,
and of course, Enoch did
not refuse. And he went up to the country where the Lord lives, and he
met so many of the old
soldiers there, and they had such a shine on their faces, and they had
so many things to tell him
about the city that he seemed to forget all about this country -- and
then, to his surprise, the sun has
never set there, and he has been there in that city with the Lord and
the old soldiers five thousand
years, shining and shouting, and to his great satisfaction there has
never been one night there, and
of course, Enoch could not very well come back to this country until he
had stayed one night with
the Lord. You see, friend, a day in the Lord's country is as
everlasting as God Himself, for the
Lord God is the light thereof.
Now, friend, as we have been
watching the Lord and one of His soldiers for awhile, let us
turn our eyes and just look at one of the Devil's soldiers for a few
minutes. We see a young man by
the name of Cain joining the Devil's army. The first thing the Devil
puts him at is disbelieving God.
The next work he has for him to do is to murder his brother, and as the
earth opens her mouth to
swallow the blood of his brother, we see Cain fleeing from home and
crying out, "My punishment
is greater than I can bear," and there was a mark put on him so that
everybody that saw him would
know that he was a murderer, and he was cursed from the face of the
earth, and in sorrow and
disgrace he walked up and down in the earth, a fugitive and a vagabond.
My friend, will you stop
long enough to hear Cain tell his experience that will throw a world of
light on the subject. In Gen.
4:13, 14, "And Cain said unto the Lord, My punishment is greater than I
can bear; behold, thou has
driven me out this day from the face of the earth, and from Thy face
shall I be hid, and I shall be a
fugitive and a vagabond in the earth, and it shall come to pass that
every one that findeth me shall
slay me." Now, reader, did you ever hear a testimony with more sorrow
and sadness in it than this
one? It looks like if the Devil had a heart that the testimony of Cain
would break it.
Reader, just think of the
difference between Enoch and Cain. Look at Enoch as he steps into
a chariot and goes sweeping through the gates of the New Jerusalem,
leaning on the everlasting
arms. Now turn and look out there at Cain as he looks up from his
poverty and misery and woe.
You see the black-winged demons hovering over him, and you hear his
awful wail, "My
punishment is greater than I can bear."
Let us look at another of the
Lord's soldiers for a few minutes. In Genesis 6:9, we read,
"These are the generations of Noah; Noah was a just man and perfect in
his generation, and Noah
walked with God." So you see, reader, here is another fellow that was
willing to walk with God,
and now let us see what the Lord did for him. We read in the eleventh
chapter of Hebrews and
seventh verse, "By faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as
yet, moved with fear,
prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by which he condemned the
world and became heir of
the righteousness which is by faith." So you see, reader, God gave this
man Noah the honor of
building the only ark that was ever built, and when the creek got up
higher than it had ever been
before, Noah had the blessed privilege of moving into the ark with all
his house, and he and all his
floated over a river five miles deep and more than twelve months wide.
Well, thank God for such
deliverance as God brings to them that walk with Him.
Now look at another
soldier from the Devil's camp. You remember a young man by the
name of Saul. He started out in God's army and God blessed him above
his fellows, and he had the
finest prospects before him of any man in his land. God gave him great
riches and honor, and it
seemed God just piled good things around him, and he had everything
that heart could wish, but
finally the Devil succeeded in getting him to forsake God and join him.
The Devil put him to doing
his work, and of all the dark pictures you ever looked at you find them
in the life of this young man.
His friends left him, his fortune seemed to take the wings of the
morning and flee away. He lost his
national standing -his people forsook him -- friends and fortune gone,
and broken in health and his
soul and body filled with evil spirits, we find him wandering about in
darkness and wretchedness
without a ray of hope, and finally you see him walking up and down in
the earth, and crossing the
hills and mountains on a dark, drizzly night seeking for a witch to
call up a dead man, to see if he
could get one ray of light to comfort his poor, broken, and sad heart.
But all the witch tells him
only increases his awful agony of soul, and he wanders about the rest
of the night, and daybreak
finds him in such awful sorrow and wretchedness that to end his
miserable existence he feels
would be a great relief, and you see him falling on his own sword,
plunging it into his heart. You
hear his awful wail as he dies without God.
Now, reader, just glance at this
dying soldier as he lay there with his sword stuck through
his body, and the Devil with all his imps shouting for joy, and just
think of what this man was at
one time, walking with God, fighting under the banner of righteousness,
with the smiles of God on
him and the fat of the land in his possession. Now see gloated-faced
devils spreading out their
black wings over him as he dies by his own hand. What an awful step
that man took when he
stepped down and out of God's company and linked arms with the Devil.
Now, reader, turn with me
and let us look at one more soldier. In Genesis 17:1-3, we read,
"And when Abram was ninety years old and nine, the Lord appeared to
Abram and said unto him, I
am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect." So you see
this man was to walk with
God in perfection, and for one hundred and seventy-five years we see
God and Abraham walking
hand in hand. God had so much respect for Abraham He would not do
anything in the country
without sending angels to consult him. And God made an everlasting
covenant with him and gave
him all the land of Canaan for a possession, and God allowed the angels
to come down from
heaven and rest in Abraham's tent and stay with him till after dinner.
But few men in this world
have had the honor of having dinner for the angels, but Abraham had
that honor because he was
walking with God. And we read in the Bible that Abraham was the friend
of God. Friend, did you
know that that was never said of any other man on earth? And he is
called the Father of the faithful
in the Bible, another remarkable statement not said of any other man.
Well, glory to God, the man in all
ages of the world that has walked with God has come out
ahead. Well, glory!
* * * * *
* *
THE END