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Chapter 4
Passivity the chief basis of
possession
That believers--true, fully surrendered children of God--can be
deceived, and then up to the degree of deception, "possessed" by
deceiving spirits, we have seen in the preceding chapters. The primary
cause must now be made clear, and the conditions for deception and
possession resulting therefrom; apart from the possession which is the
outcome of yielding to sins of the flesh, or any sin which gives evil
spirits a hold in the fallen nature.
It is first important to define the meaning of the word "possession":
for it is generally thought to cover only cases of possession in the
acute, and fully developed degree of the cases given in the gospel
records. But even then it is overlooked that many degrees of possession
are referred to in the gospels, such as the woman with the "spirit of
infirmity"; the man who was apparently only deaf and dumb; the little
girl with the demon which terribly vexed her; the boy who gnashed with
his teeth, and was sometimes thrown on the fire, and the man with the
legion, so wholly mastered by the powers of evil that he dwelt outside
the abodes of men.
THE MEANING OF "POSSESSION" DEFINED
Such cases as these are known to-day, amongst even true believers in
Europe, as well as in heathen China, but "possession" is much more
wide-spread than is supposed, if the word "possession" is taken to mean
just what it is, i.e., a hold of evil spirits on a man in any
shade of degree; for an evil spirit "possesses" whatever spot he
holds, even though it be in an infinitesimal degree, and
from that one
spot, as a spider finds his base ere he weaves his web, the intruder
works to obtain further hold of the whole being.
Christians are as open to possession by evil spirits as other
men, and become possessed because they have, in most cases,
unwittingly fulfilled the conditions upon which evil spirits work,
and, apart from the cause of willful sin, given ground to deceiving
spirits, through (1) accepting their counterfeits of the Divine
workings, and (2) cultivating passivity, and non-use of the faculties;
and this through misconception of the spiritual laws which govern
Christian life.
It is this matter of ground given which is the crucial point of all.
All believers acknowledge known sin to be ground given to the enemy, and
even unknown sin in the life, but they do not realize that every thought
suggested to the mind by wicked spirits, and accepted, is ground
given to them; and every faculty unused invites their attempted use
of it.
The primary cause of deception and possession in surrendered
believers may be condensed into one word, passivity; that is, a
cessation of the active exercise of the will in control over spirit,
soul and body, or either, as may be the case. It is, practically, a
counterfeit of "surrender to God." The believer who "surrenders" his
"members"--or faculties--to God, and ceases to use them himself,
thereby falls into "passivity" which enables evil spirits to deceive,
and possess any part of his being which has become passive.
The deception over passive surrender may be exampled thus: a believer
surrenders his "arm" to God. He permits it to hang passive, waiting for
"God to use it." He is asked, "why do you not use your arm?" and he
replies "I have surrendered it to God. I must not use it now; God must
use it." But will God lift the arm for the man? Nay, the man himself
must lift it, note 1
and use it, seeking to understand intelligently God's mind in doing so.
THE WORD "PASSIVITY" DESCRIBES OPPOSITE
CONDITION TO ACTIVITY
The word "passivity" simply describes the opposite condition to
activity; and in the experience of the believer it means, briefly, (1)
loss of self-control--in the sense of the person himself controlling
each, or all of the departments of his personal being; and (2) loss of
freewill--in the sense of the person himself exercising his will as the
guiding principle of personal control, in harmony with the will of God.
All the danger of "passivity" in the surrendered believer, lies in
the advantage taken of the passive condition by the powers of darkness.
Apart from these evil forces, and their workings through the passive
person, "passivity" is merely inactivity, or idleness. In normal
inactivity, that is, when the evil spirits have not taken hold, the
inactive person is always holding himself ready for activity; whereas in
"passivity" which has given place to the powers of darkness, the passive
person is unable to act by his own volition.
The chief condition, therefore, for the working of evil spirits in a
human being, apart from sin, is passivity, in exact opposition to the
condition which God requires from His children for His working in them.
Granted the surrender of the will to God, with active choice to do His
will as it may be revealed to him, God requires co-operation with His
Spirit, and the full use of every faculty of the whole man. In brief,
the powers of darkness aim at obtaining a passive slave, or captive to
their will; whilst God desires a regenerated man, intelligently and
actively willing, and choosing, and doing His will in liberation of
spirit, soul and body from slavery.
The powers of darkness would make a man a machine, a tool, an
automaton; the God of holiness and love desires to make him a free,
intelligent sovereign in his own sphere--a thinking, rational, renewed
creation created after His own image (Eph. 4: 24). Therefore God never
says to any faculty of man, "Be thou idle."
God does not need, nor demand non-activity in
the believer, for His working in, and through him; but evil
spirits demand the utmost non-activity and passivity.
God asks for intelligent action (Rom. 12: 1-2, "Your
reasonable service,") in co-operation with Him.
Satan demands passivity as a condition for his compulsory action,
and in order to compulsorily subject men to his will and purpose.
God requires the cessation of the evil actions of believers,
primarily because they are sinful, and secondly because they hinder
co-operation with His Spirit.
Passivity must not be confused with quietness, or the meek and quiet
spirit," which, in the sight of God, is of great price. Quietness of
spirit, of heart, of mind, of manner, voice and expression, may be
co-existent with the most effective activity in the will of God (1 Thess.
4: 11, Gr. "Ambitious to be quiet.").
THE CLASS OF BELIEVERS WHO ARE OPEN TO PASSIVITY
The persons open to "passivity," of whom the evil spirits take
advantage as ground for their activity, are those who become fully
surrendered to God, and are brought into direct contact with the
supernatural world by receiving the Baptism of the Holy Ghost. There are
some who use the word "surrender," and think they are surrendered
fully to carry out the will of God, but are only so in sentiment and
purpose, for actually they walk by the reason and judgment of the
natural man; although they submit all their plans to God, and because of
this submittal sincerely believe they are carrying out His will. But
those who are really "surrendered," give themselves up to implicitly
obey, and carry out at all costs, what is revealed to them
supernaturally as from God, and not what they themselves plan and
reason out to be the will of God.
Believers who surrender their wills, and all they have and
are to God, yet who WALK BY THE USE OF THEIR NATURAL MINDS, are not the
ones who are open to the "passivity" which gives ground to evil spirits,
although they may, and do, give ground to them in other ways. These we
may call Class No. 1, as shown in the following table.
THREE CLASSES AMONG BELIEVERS
I.
Unsurrendered. |
II.
Surrendered, Deceived, Possessed. |
III.
Surrendered but Undeceived, Dispossessed and Victorious. |
| These use the word "surrender,"
but do not really know it, and act it out in practice. |
These seem more "foolish" than
those in Class 1, but in reality are more advanced. |
The mind is liberated, and all the faculties are
operating. |
|
|
|
| Believers in this stage are more
reasonable than those in No. 2, because their faculties have not
been yielded into passivity. |
In order to understand the actions
of No. 2, it is needful to read them from their inner standpoint,
for to them all that they do seems right. |
These are open to light and all that is Divine, but
they seek watchfully to close themselves to all that is Satanic. |
|
|
|
| These believers call those in the
next class "cranks," "faddists," ..extremists," etc. |
These are open to both Divine and
Satanic power. |
No. 3 can read Nos. 1 and 2 intelligently. |
 |
|
 |
| |
Are liable to be "puffed up." |
|
Class No. 1 are "surrendered" in will, but not surrendered in fact,
in the sense of being ready to carry out "obedience to the Holy Ghost"
at all costs. They consequently know little of conflict, and nothing of
the devil, excepting as a tempter or accuser. They do not understand
those who speak of the "onslaughts of Satan," for, they say, they are
not "attacked" in this way. But the devil does not always attack when he
can. He reserves his attack until it suits him. If the devil does not
attack a man, it does not prove that he could not. Another class
among believers--Class No. 2--are those who are surrendered in such a
measure of abandonment that they are ready to obey the Spirit of God at
all costs, with the result that they become open to a passivity which
gives ground for the deception and possession of evil spirits.
These surrendered believers (Class No. 2) fall into passivity after
the Baptism of the Holy Ghost, (1) because of their determination to
carry out their "surrender" at all costs; (2) their relationship with
the spiritual world, which opens to them supernatural communications,
which they believe to be all of God; (3) their "surrender" leading them
to submit, subdue and make all things subservient to this supernatural
plane.
The origin of the evil passivity which gives the evil spirits
opportunity to deceive, and then possess, is generally a wrong
interpretation of Scripture, or wrong thoughts or beliefs about Divine
things. Some of these interpretations of Scripture, or wrong
conceptions, which cause the believer to give way to the passive
condition, we have already referred to in a previous chapter.
The passivity may affect the whole man, in spirit, soul and body,
when it has become very deep, and is of many years' standing. The
progress is generally very gradual, and insidious in growth, and
consequently the release from it is gradual and slow.
PASSIVITY OF THE WILL
There is a passivity of the will; the "will" being the helm,
so to speak, of the ship. This originates from a wrong conception of
what full surrender to God means. Thinking that a "surrendered will" to
God means no use of the will at all, the believer ceases to (1) choose,
(2) determine, and (3) act of his own volition. The serious effect of
this, he is not allowed by the powers of darkness to discover, for at
first the consequences are trivial, and scarcely noticeable. In fact, at
first it appears to be most glorifying to God. The "strong-willed"
person suddenly becomes passively yielding. He thinks that God is
"will"-ing for him in circumstances, and through people, and so he
becomes passively helpless in action. After a time no "choice" can be
got from him in matters of daily life; no "decision," or initiative in
matters demanding action; he is afraid to express a wish, much less a
decision. Others must choose, act, lead, decide, while this one drifts
as a cork upon the waters. Later on the powers of darkness begin to make
capital out of this "surrendered" believer, and to work around him evil
of various kinds, which entangle him through his passivity of will. He
has now no power of will to protest, or resist. Obvious wrong in his
environment, which this believer alone has a right to deal with,
flourishes, and grows strong and blatant. The powers of darkness have
slowly gained, both personally and in circumstances, upon the ground of
passivity of the will, which at first was merely passive submission to
environment, under the idea that God was "will"-ing for him in
all things around him.
The text that such believers misinterpret is Phil. 2: 13, "It is God
which worketh in you, both to will, and to work, for His good pleasure."
The "passive" person reads it, ". . . God which worketh in me the
willing, and the doing," i.e., "willeth instead of me."
note 2
The first means God working in the soul up to the point of the action of
the will, and the second assumes His actually "will"-ing instead
of, and "working" instead of the believer. This wrong
interpretation gives ground for not using the will, because of
the conclusion "God wills instead of me"; thus bringing about passivity
of will.
GOD DOES NOT WILL INSTEAD OF MAN
The truth to be emphasized is that God never "wills" instead
of man, and whatever a man does, he is himself responsible for his
actions.
The believer whose "will" has become passive, finds, after a
time, the greatest difficulty in making decisions of any kind, and he
looks outside, and all around him for something to help him to decide
the smallest matters. When he has become conscious of his passive
condition, he has a painful sense of being unable to meet some of the
situations of ordinary life. If spoken to, he knows he cannot will to
listen till a sentence is completed; if asked to judge a matter, he
knows he cannot do it; if he is required to "remember" or use his
imagination, he knows he is unable to, and becomes terrified at any
proposed course of action where these demands may come upon him. The
tactics of the enemy now may be to drive him into situations where these
demands may be made, and thus torture or embarrass him before others.
Little does the believer know that in this condition be may,
unknowingly, rely upon the assistance of evil spirits, who have
brought about the passivity for this very object. The faculty unused
lies dormant and dead in their grip, but if used it is an occasion for
them to manifest themselves through it. They are too ready to "will"
instead of the man, and they will put within his reach many
"supernatural" props to help him in "decision," especially in the way of
"texts" used apart from their context, and supernaturally given, which
the believer, seeking so longingly to do the will of God, seizes upon,
and firmly grasps as a drowning man a rope, blinded, by the apparently
given Divine help, to the principle that God
note 3
only works through the active volition of a man, and not for him
in matters requiring his action.
PASSIVITY OF THE MIND
Passivity of the mind is engendered by a wrong conception of
the place of the mind in the life of surrender to God, and obedience to
Him in the Holy Spirit. Christ's call of fishermen is used as an excuse
for passivity of brain, for some believers say, God has no need for the
use of the brain, and can do without it! But the choice of Paul who had
the greatest intellect of his age, shows that when God sought for a man
through whom He could lay the foundations of the Church, He chose one
with a mind capable of vast and intelligent thinking. The greater the
brain power, the greater the use God can make of it, provided it is
submissive to truth. The cause of passivity of mind, sometimes lies in
the thought that the working of the brain is a hindrance to the
development of the Divine life in the believer. But the truth is, that
(1) the non-working of the brain hinders, (2) the evil working of the
brain hinders, (3) but the normal and pure working of the brain is
essential, and helpful for co-operation with God. This is dealt with
fully in Chapter 6,
where the various tactics of the powers of darkness are shown in their
efforts to get the mind into a condition of passivity, and hence
incapable of action to discern their wiles. The effects of passivity of
the mind may be seen in inactivity, when there should be action; or else
over activity beyond control, as if a suddenly released instrument broke
forth into ungovernable action; hesitation, or rashness; indecision (as
also from a passive will); unwatchfulness; lack of concentration; lack
of judgment; bad memory.
Passivity does not change the nature of a faculty, but it hinders its
normal operation. In the case of passivity hindering the memory, the
person will be found looking outside himself for every possible "aid to
memory," until he becomes a veritable slave to note book, and helps,
which fail at a critical moment. With this is also passivity of the
imagination, which places the imagination outside personal control, and
at the mercy of evil spirits who flash to it what they please. One
danger is to take these visions, and call them "imaginations."
The passive state can be produced without crystal gazing,
note 4
i.e., if a person gazes at any object for a prolonged period the
natural vision is dulled, and the deceiving spirits can then present
anything to the mind.
In pure inactivity of the mind, the mind can be used at the will of
the person, but in evil passivity of the mind, the person is helpless,
and he "can't think!" He feels as if his mind were bound, and held by an
iron band, or by a weight or pressure on his head.
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