Solid
food belongs to those who are of full age, that is, those who by reason of use
have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil. (Hebrews 5:14)
In
our natural, physical man we have five senses. We have our sight, hearing,
smell, taste and touch. Those are the five senses of our physical natural life.
But there is also an inner man called the "hidden man of the heart,"
and that inward man has what corresponds to the outer man's five senses. There
is a faculty of spiritual sight, of spiritual hearing, of spiritual smelling or
sensing, of spiritual taste and spiritual touch, and these senses are very
important to the life of the inward man – yes, more important even than the
senses of the physical man.
We
know how we feel the tragedy of people who have lost any of those outward
senses. It is a great loss; it is an imperfect life, a life of limitation. But
it is equally true of the inward man. To be without spiritual sight is a tragic
loss and a terrible limitation; or without spiritual hearing, that capacity for
answering to the Spirit – "he that hath an ear, let him hear what the
Spirit saith": if there is no capacity for hearing, that is a desperate
situation. What loss there is if there is no sensing – sensing as in the matter
of smell, so that you at once scent things. I know how wrongly that has been
used, in an everlasting attempt to scent heresy and fault and wrong, but there
is a right faculty of spiritual scent which is very important. I believe it was
to that that reference was made concerning our Lord – "His scent shall be
in the fear of the Lord" (Isa. 11:3, A.R.M.) – quick of scent, right on
the mark in scenting what the Lord wanted. And how true it was of His heavenly
life: what it saved Him to scent the enemy and what the enemy was up to, to
scent what the Father wanted and when He did not want things. It is important
to be quick of scent. And so with our taste and with our touch – our contact,
and what we register by contact. This is a very real inward man, and these are
the senses which form the basis of spiritual capacity: these are the things to
be exercised, to be "put through it" for increase and development.
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