Surprised by Tozer #1 of 5:
Let your speech be seasoned with salt.
(Colossians 4:6)
This morning, by the fire pit, I read Life in the Spirit by A.W. Tozer. Last week, a friend gave it to me
and ask if I would read it so that we could discuss it together. The book is a
compilation of Sunday evening messages by Tozer delivered in 1952 while
pastoring Southside Alliance Church in Chicago (1929-59). In the preface, Tozer
apologizes: “The fact that these [chapters] were originally spoken messages
accounts for their racy style…” “Racy”? Tozer? That’s a surprise.
Tozer doesn’t bother to clarify what he means by “racy
style”. He just lets it be. I’m guessing, it’s more like “speech seasoned with
salt” as the Apostle encourages (Col
4:6). Maybe “racy,” compared to a formal Sunday morning service. You
wouldn’t know about Sunday evening services. That’s how I grew up. After Sunday
school and Morning Worship came halftime; and then back to church for the
second half with Youth Group and Evening service. But, in the evening, things
were different—less formal, even fun. The congregation loosened up. Apparently
even Tozer loosened up.
In 1962, after graduating from High School, my father
allowed Tony, Gary and I to drive his Volkswagen bug across country, before the
Interstate, to Chicago where we attended a National Youth Conference. There was
a caveat however, we had to promise dad that we would attend the 7:00AM morning
devotionals led by A.W. Tozer. We kept our promise and every morning woke early
to hear Tozer. Two things stick in my memory: 1) the sound of Tozer’s voice—unpretentious
and real; and 2) that he talked to us about God—as if he knew God and found God
immensely interesting.
That’s the voice I heard during my morning fire pit read.
Here’s how he begins: “I don’t hope to tell you very much that is new; I only
hope to set the table for you, arranging the dishes a little better and a
little more attractively so that you will be tempted to partake. …What I want
to do is to tell you the old things, but while I am doing it, to encourage your
heart to make them yours” (p.
7). I wouldn’t call that “racy”, but it certainly is “seasoned with salt”.
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