- Home
- Speakers
- A.W. Tozer
- (John Part 22): Commentary On The Nature Of The Triune God
(John - Part 22): Commentary on the Nature of the Triune God
A.W. Tozer

A.W. Tozer (1897 - 1963). American pastor, author, and spiritual mentor born in La Jose, Pennsylvania. Converted to Christianity at 17 after hearing a street preacher in Akron, Ohio, he began pastoring in 1919 with the Christian and Missionary Alliance without formal theological training. He served primarily at Southside Alliance Church in Chicago (1928-1959) and later in Toronto. Tozer wrote over 40 books, including classics like "The Pursuit of God" and "The Knowledge of the Holy," emphasizing a deeper relationship with God. Self-educated, he received two honorary doctorates. Editor of Alliance Weekly from 1950, his writings and sermons challenged superficial faith, advocating holiness and simplicity. Married to Ada, they had seven children and lived modestly, never owning a car. His work remains influential, though he prioritized ministry over family life. Tozer’s passion for God’s presence shaped modern evangelical thought. His books, translated widely, continue to inspire spiritual renewal. He died of a heart attack, leaving a legacy of uncompromising devotion.
Download
Topic
Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the preacher discusses the harmony and subordination within the Holy Trinity. He emphasizes the importance of understanding the relationship between the Father and the Son in creation and redemption. The preacher also mentions his recent sermons on the attributes of God, which were well-received by the audience. He concludes by highlighting the simplicity of salvation and the importance of believing in Jesus Christ.
Scriptures
Sermon Transcription
Tonight, I picked for myself a very difficult section of Scripture. It was Gypsy Smith, I think, or Sam Jones, maybe, Sam Jones, the eccentric American evangelist of a couple of generations ago, that said that when the average preacher took a text, it reminded him of an insect trying to carry a bale of cotton. And if ever I felt like an insect, it's tonight, and if ever I felt I was trying to lift a bale of cotton, it's tonight. But let me read the passage here, in John 5. Jesus answered them, My Father worketh hitherto, and I work. Therefore the Jews sought the more to kill him, because he not only had broken the Sabbath, but had said also that God was his Father, making himself equal with God. Then answered Jesus and said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do. For what thing soever he doeth, that is, the Father, these also doeth the Son likewise. For the Father loveth the Son, and showeth him all things that himself doeth. And he will show him greater works than these that ye may marvel. For as the Father raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, even so the Son quickeneth whom he will. For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son. That all men should honor the Son, even as they honor the Father. He that honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father which hath sent him. Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is passed from death unto life. Verily, verily, I say unto you, There always coming and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live. For as the Father hath life in himself, so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself. Now the first part of this section of scripture I preached on two weeks ago. My Father worketh hitherto, and I work. And now in the passage before us, the opening part of it, our Lord explains how he works with the Father. The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do. For what things soever he, the Father, doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise. Now I spoke of the unceasing activity of God the Father. The unwearied, restless, and yet ever restful, omnipotent, creative work of the Father. Working toward a predetermined end. A purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus before the world began. Now here, our Lord tells us that his working is in line with the Father's working and altogether dependent upon it. The Son can do nothing of himself. I want you to notice, and I think this is a bit of theology that we can well take with us into every corridor and passage of the whole word of God. That the Son can do nothing of himself, but the Son can do everything in himself. I quoted the old Middle Ages, medieval theological concept that the Son is not God of himself, but he is God in himself. Or, correctly wording it, the Son is not God of himself, but of the Father, but he is God in himself. And here we have it, that the Son works himself, but he does not work of himself, for he can do nothing of himself. Now there are four wonderful doctrines that are taught here. One of them is the harmony in the blessed Godhead. There is a harmony in the blessed Godhead. I think it would be impossible to overemphasize this doctrine, that there is a perfect harmony between the persons of the Godhead, and that we must never allow ourselves, ever once, to think there is any conflict, or to think any conflict into the persons of the Godhead. The Father planned it, but he planned it in his Son, and he wrought it out through his Son by the power of the Holy Spirit, so that there had never been anything but harmony in the blessed Godhead. And whatever the Father does, the Son sees him do, and works in harmony with what the Father is doing. And the Holy Ghost is the perfect bond between the Father and the Son, energizing the eternal Son with the energies of the Father, and so working harmoniously to a preordained end. This is taught in this passage, and is also taught throughout the entire Bible. But also there is taught the subordinate position of the Son of Man. This has bothered some people very much, that the Son is equal to the Father, and yet is subordinate to the Father. For our Lord Jesus Christ teaches both. He says that the Son can do nothing of himself, and he says the Father is greater than I, and so he takes a subordinate position, and prays to his Father. And naturally, an equal does not pray to an equal. An equal prays to one who is above him, and to whom he can address his prayers. And when the Son prays to the Father, it is a tacit confession of subordination. He is not equal to the Father, so he prays to one who is above him. And yet he can say, My Father and I are one, and he that has seen me has seen the Father. Now what do we mean, and how do we get this way? And is there contradiction there? No, there is no contradiction there, my brethren, because the old Athanasian creed has it that as pertaining to his Godhead, he is equal to the Father. As pertaining to his manhood, he is less than the Father. And in this ancient and holy trinity, there was nothing before and nothing after, nothing higher and nothing lower, but all three persons together, co-eternal and equal, so that Jesus Christ has the two natures, the nature of man and the nature of God, harmonized into one perfect personality. Let us not imagine Jesus as a schizophreniac, one with a split personality, having two personalities. Let us know that he has one personality, but he has two natures, harmonized into one personality. And when he speaks about himself as the Son of Mary, he says that I can do nothing of myself. I see the Father do it and I do it, and says that the Father is greater than I. When he speaks about himself as God, he says I and my Father are one. So there is no contradiction here. There is only an understanding. When I was a very young preacher, I got among the Jesus-only people. Now in case you don't know what the Jesus-only people are, now sometimes you'll see a button, somebody will be wearing it on their lapel, big around as a schoolboy's cap, and it'll say Jesus-only on it. Now that isn't what I mean. They may be just movie students, you know, or Nyack students, or somebody out trying to tell the world they belong to the Lord. I don't mean that. But there is a group that call themselves the Jesus-only group. I don't know that they ever wear lapel buttons. But they say that the name of the Godhead is Jesus. That scripture says you shall baptize him in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. But it doesn't give us the name. But that Jesus is the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, and they get all mixed up in their mathematics. They say how can three be one and how can one be three? And they get all mixed up in their mathematics. Their arithmetic gets them into confusion. So they say there is but one person of the Godhead and that he is named Jesus and that Jesus is the Father and he is the Son and he is the Holy Ghost. How one can be the father of another has never been explained to me by these friends. And I might add also that these persons believe that everyone who is truly saved and ready for the coming of the Lord has spoken in tongues and they put you in a tub of water till you do. They say there's a blessing in the tub, brother, and they will baptize you till you do come through to their satisfaction. I do not mean to reflect upon them. I think that they are well-intentioned and many times good people. But of course you can be good in your heart and be badly mixed up in your head. And they certainly are badly mixed up in their theology. For they teach that there is only one person of the Godhead and he is Father and Son and Holy Spirit. I can't see how it could possibly be. And that the name of these three or the name of this one is Jesus. But anyway, it's true of a school of modern theologians that there is one person of the Godhead but he has three masks. That is, he has three faces. The old god of the ancient Roman days named Janus or Janus had two faces looking two directions but they've gone one further and they've given the Godhead three faces. And when this one person of the Godhead wants to be the Father, he puts on the Father's face and turns that to you. When he wants to be the Son, he turns the Son's face. When he wants to be the Spirit, he turns the Spirit's face to you. I find it much easier to believe in an ancient, incorruptible, uncreated Godhead, a fountain of ancient Godhead, and then the three persons leaping up out of that Godhead. I have thought of God, the Godhead, as a great sea. Because you know that the mystic theologians taught that the Godhead goes back of and beneath any of the three persons of the Trinity. That there is the underlying Godhead and then that the Godhead expressed himself as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost in three personalities. That is what I believe. I believe that the Father is the ancient Godhead expressing himself as the Father, and the Son is the ancient Godhead in expression as the Son, and the Holy Ghost is the ancient Godhead, all of one substance of one eternity, one without beginning and without creation. And so we have the triune God. And when Jesus says, I am less than the Father, he's speaking of his manhood. When he says, I am equal to the Father, he's speaking of his Godhood. And when he speaks of his Godhead, he does not take any low place beneath the Father. Neither does the Holy Spirit. But these three are one. It's a wonderful mystery, and I don't claim to be able to understand it. But I confess I delight to tremble before the throne and say holy three times repeated. Holy, holy, holy. So there is a harmony in the blessed Godhead, but there is a subordination of the Son to the Father for the purposes of creation and redemption. And the third thing this text teaches is the unaffected relation between the Father and the Son in the Incarnation. I'm saying so many things these days that I don't hear anybody else say that I wonder if it is that I just don't get around or is nobody saying it. I preached over in Keswick last week, over the weekend, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday in New Jersey. And a lot of Lance people were there and people who had been in this church. People had come here and they'd gone by as students and so on. But I had four sermons to preach, so I preached on four of the attributes of God. And you know that the people gave me to understand that they had never heard any sermons on the attributes of God in their life. I preached on the selfhood of God and the, well, three other attributes of God, and they said they'd never heard any sermons on the attributes of God. And it isn't that I don't get around because when I preach I have to listen to other preachers. That is, I preach in the morning, say, and you preach in the afternoon, and I preach at night and then reverse it and so as to get a right share. Each one taking his turn at bat. And, of course, I have to be courteous enough to sit back there and write editorials while the other fellow preaches. But I never hear this business. I don't hear anybody preach about the everlasting Godhead and the eternal creed. I just hear other things. And that's not to reflect on any man who's preaching the truth, but it is only to say that there certainly is truth that is being tragically neglected in the day in which we live. And there's a whole world of gold and truth that we can mine out with a pickaxe of prayer from the Bible that will be meat and drink and food and wonderful help to our Christian people. I mix my metaphors there too, brother. Mining out gold to eat it for food. You preachers just overlook that because I feel the way that the brother, what was his name, in that great Brooklyn preacher, Beecher, he said that when a metaphor gets in my way, God help it, he wasn't concerned very much with it. Anyway, there was an unaffected relationship between the Father and the Son in the Incarnation. Now, we generally say that Jesus Christ left his home far above yonder and that he came down and cut himself off from the Father and left the delights of the Father's bosom and the Father's heart and walked in exile among men. But that's only partly true. It is true as we sing. He left his Father's home above so something his love emptied himself of all but love. He did do that, but he never emptied himself of his deity. Never. When it says that he considered not an equality with God, something to be held on to, but emptied himself, remember one thing, he never emptied himself of his deity. He couldn't do it. It would be metaphysically impossible even to think such a thought as that the Eternal Son should be anything less than God. But he never emptied himself of one of the attributes of deity. But he emptied himself of the accouterments of deity. He emptied himself of the evidences of deity and covered the deity in a cloak of opaque flesh and walked among us as though he were a man. He was God in overalls. God living on the earth and wearing the common denim of mankind and covering over his deity. But as somebody has pointed out, when occasion required, he could let his deity shine through. As once when he prayed to the Heavenly Father and his face became shining white and his garments whiter than any fuller on earth and they shone like the sun as he knelt there, it was only his deity showing itself through the previously opaque veil of his manhood. But even while he walked on the earth, he was within unbroken fellowship with the Father. For it's impossible that the Father and the Son should ever cease in the ancient sea of the Godhead to be joined together as one. But the man Christ Jesus cried, My God, my God, why'st thou forsaken me? And as pertaining to his manhood, he was forsaken of the Father. As pertaining to his deity, forsaking would be impossible. For we cannot divide the deity or separate the persons of the Holy Trinity. So Jesus, when he walked on earth, saw the Father. And that gives us our fourth thought, the perfect clairvoyance of the Son. Now I use that word clairvoyance without apology, though it needs an explanation. What a beautiful word it is, the word clairvoyance. I like it. It means clear sea, clear sight, perfect visibility, perfect unending ceiling, no clouds between, but the spooks have taken it, and the wizards and witches and spiritualists and what have you, they've taken it, and now we have clairvoyance used by the spiritists. They have no more right to it than I have the right to the title of being called King of England. They have no right to it. For the spiritist doesn't see clearly, and no one sees clearly but the Son. And what he seeth the Father do, that he doeth. For the Father shows the Son what he seeth him do, so that the Father and the Son are working harmoniously within sight of each other. Not all the clouds that ever came over Palestine prevented the clairvoyance of the Son, the clear sight of Jesus Christ. And not all the shadows that gathered round Calvary prevented the Eternal Son from gazing full into the face of the Eternal Father. As pertaining to his manhood, he cried in agony of sacrifice and offering, My God, my God, and bled and died as God turned away from the sacrifice. But the Eternal Godhood was unaffected and undivided, and the Son looked into the clear face of the Father without a shadow between. It had to be like that, my brethren. It had to be like that. What a terrible mixed-up and imperfect redemption it would have been if Jesus Christ had had to fight his way through. If he, the Eternal Son, had been rejected from the presence of the Father, we would not have had Christianity then. We would have had Roman mythology. We were down calling, Mr. McAfee and I, in the neighborhood of the University of Chicago this last week, and we dropped into a little bookstore there at the Red Door, bookstore, mostly foreign books, it is foreign language, and classics. And I picked up the Aeneas of Virgil, translated into English, and while my friend was driving along, watching the stoplights, I was reading about the gods and goddesses of Egypt or of Rome. And we saw there, I'd read it, of course, as he had and you had before, but it was a new translation, and I enjoyed reading it as I went along. And here were the gods and the goddesses, marrying and giving in marriage, and fighting and being jealous, and pushing each other around, and trying to murder each other. One god would sneak in behind another god's back and grab a hammer or sneak something out and disappear into the bushes. Another god would chase him. And if we listen to poor, uneducated, I mean spiritually uneducated, preaching, we will imagine that there exists in the godhead some kind of such conflict. And that the Son of God, like some demigod of Rome, then slipped in and rescued mankind, like Prometheus brought down fire from heaven and was punished for her robbery. But nothing like that exists. The perfect clairvoyance, the perfect sight of the Son, the clear seeing of Jesus as he walked among men and gazed into the face of the Father. For the Father was there and is here. For he says, The Father loves the Son. And this love, of course, is not simply the love of God for a good man. It is the ancient unity of love among the Holy Three. The ancient unity of love. Oh, that's what it means in the Bible when it says, God is love, and he that loveth knoweth God, and he that loveth not knoweth not God. Time me to get out. So these blessed DC-6's and Connie's don't go overhead. Do they bother you? Just when I'm saying something I consider important, why, there's eight engines roaring up there. But we'll try to keep sweet. Someday we'll fly without wings. Three, The sun quickens them, and even so the sun quickens whom it will. Now, if this means anything at all, my listening friends, it means that the working of the sun in regeneration is as radical and miraculous as the working of the father in raising the dead. If it means anything, it means that. That the father raises the dead and quickens them, and even so the son quickens whom he will. And that's in the present tense, and he's not talking about the resurrection. He's talking about the present time. The time now is, he says, the dead shall hear the voice of the son of God and those who hearken will live. So he's not talking about future resurrection. He's talking about the present time. And he says here that as the father has ability to raise the dead and give them life, so he has given to the son also power to raise the dead and give them life. Only the father raises the dead in the future resurrection. The son raises the dead right now. They hear the voice of the son of God and those who hearken will, shall live. Now, the work of the Holy Ghost, then the work of Christ in making a Christian is as radical a thing as raising Lazarus from the dead. When Lazarus came out of the tomb, a live man where a dead man had been, he stood everlastingly as a figure of a Christian who stands up a live man where a dead man has been. Who stands up a clean man where a filthy man has been. Over in Keswick they have what they call the Colony of Mercy. It's a whole colony, as the name implies, a lot of buildings given over entirely to men who have gone down through drink or dope or both or other vices that have dragged them down. And all of my two trips there and I've talked to these men, last year when I was there, there was a very brilliant man running around there who had been a professor in the university using, I knew he was because he used long words, and he could talk books for the hour and he was nice enough to run around carrying the little pursuit of God. Told me how much he thought of it. And I went back and I said, what's happened to so-and-so? They said, you mean the fellow that was always talking books and running around here? I said, that's the man I mean. Well, you know, he had been a university professor and had gotten into either dope or drink or both and had gone clear down to the gutter and had gone over to Keswick to be rehabilitated. And over there, they believe in rehabilitation plus regeneration. So they not only rehabilitated him by getting him off of the stuff, but they taught him the word of God day and night wherever they could get to him. Finally, he got converted. Do you know where he is now? He's in a Bible school and he's going to preach the rest of his days. He's a middle-aged man already in the happy underside of middle age, but approaching it. And won't have a long ministry, but he has quit the university now and he's in a Bible school in the east and he's going to preach. Now that is a deliberate quickening by the Holy Ghost that is as radical and as miraculous as the raising of Lazarus from the dead. For here was a learned man whose learning broke down in the crisis and he went down to the gutter and bounced back again by the grace of God and is now a thoroughly converted and blessed man. Now it says here that all men should honor the Son as they honor the Father because there is a harmony in the blessed Godhead. Because there is an unaffected relation between the Father and the Son. Because of the perfect clairvoyance of the Son wherein he sees as he has from eternity the Father at work. Because the Father loves the Son and because the Father has given into the hands of the Son power to raise the dead even as he raises the dead. All men should honor the Son even as they honor the Father. And he says that if we withhold honor from the Son we withhold honor from the Father also. That's here. That's the plain teaching of the scriptures. Now there are those who do not honor the Son. They honor him only as a good teacher. Perhaps the best but only a good preacher or teacher and preacher of that word. And the scripture says that all men should honor the Son as they honor the Father. So you need have no hesitation in attributing all of the worship and glory to the Son that you attribute to the Father. You need have no fear because the Father lives for the glory of the Son and the Son lives for the glory of the Father. And the Spirit of God lives for the glory of the Father and the Son. So we honor the Son of God. We have no hesitation whatsoever in praying to the Son as we pray also to the Father. And while it is not usually done we also have no hesitation in addressing the Holy Ghost. Somebody was asking me today what I thought about praying to the Spirit. Is it ever the right thing to do? Should we ever pray to the Spirit? And my answer is that normally we pray to the Father in the name of the Son and in the Spirit. But also Jesus Christ had no hesitation in receiving prayers and granting them when he walked among men. So obviously there is no formula. If there had been an unbroken and unbreakable formula that the only way to pray would be to pray to the Father in the name of the Son then why should Jesus have broken that order and allowed prayer to be made to himself? Plainly then, the persons of the Godhead are equally God. And the persons of the Godhead are equally present before our minds when we pray. And when we sing, Holy Spirit, faithful guide ever near the Christian side we're praying to the Spirit. And when we pray, Holy Ghost with light divine fall upon this heart of mine we're praying to the Spirit. And I think if you'll read your Bible you will find instances where a man apostrifies the Holy Ghost. Come thou north wind and blow thou south wind and blow upon this garden that the sweet spices may flow out. Apostrophe to the Holy Ghost. And prayers are to be made to the persons of the Trinity. Normally to the Father in the name of the Son. But also without harm and without any transgression of the Scriptures to the Son when you want to pray to the Son. And if in prayer or song to the Holy Ghost then also to the Holy Ghost. Always remember friends that God is never jealous for a formula. Religious people are. They're jealous for a formula. They put it 1, 2, 3, 4. And if you say 1, 2, 4, 3 they leap all over you. And white-faced with anger they prove they love the truth because they're so mad. And they love the order of the beautiful order of the truth. And if you say 4 before you've said 3 they hate you for your heresy. They love the truth so much. Always remember friends one time more let me say it. God is easy to get along with. And if your heart is right he is not so concerned about the formula. No, no. God is kind and good and gracious. God has to be. He has to be because there are some of us that are just too hard to get along with. And if God was as hard to get along with as we are there would be one perpetual quarrel between our souls and God. So God has to be easy to live with and he is. And if he knows you mean right he'll let you make all sorts of mistakes and he won't care. But just as soon as self gets in and you mean wrong the holiest thing you do is unholy. As soon as you curse your conduct with self or sin everything you do becomes wrong. But as long as you love God and people he'll let you tumble around a lot and won't mind it a bit. He'll sit and watch you as a mother fox will lie in the sunshine with her chin on her paws with a smile on her face and watch her little what are little foxes called? Well I don't know what a little fox is called let's call them puppies. But anyway everybody that's ever hunted foxes knows how sometimes they'll come upon that beautiful idyllic picture picture of the old mother watching her little foxes. And I have seen mother cats watching their kittens and I have seen mother mothers watching their babies the same way. And God knows that the most mature of us we still toddle sometimes. And so he's quick to overlook our ignorance but he's never quick to overlook our sin. If sin is in it that's injury that's disease that's threatening death and so God's quick to leap on the sin and deal with it. But he never rides us because of formulas that we've broken. So I don't care what anybody says if I want to pray to the Spirit I'm going to pray to the Spirit. Normally we don't but if we want to let's do it and smile and say if I'm making a mistake God understands. He knows I mean the whole Godhead. When I say our Father who art in heaven hallowed be thy name I mean all the persons of the Trinity. Now verse 24 we close with that and how important it is how important in the pale light of sin and of death and of judgment how important it is that we hear these simple words. Have you noticed friends that when our Lord Jesus is talking to the believer and attempting to teach and instruct the believer's heart he gets so profound sometimes that you have to keep your chin up to keep from drowning under the glory of it. But when he tells us how to get saved he makes it so simple so very simple and here it is. He that heareth my words and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into judgment but is passed from death into life. Now that is so simple so simple. He that heareth my word now does that describe you? Have you heard the words of Jesus? I believe you have. I believe every one of you has heard the word of Jesus. There isn't one that hasn't heard the words of Jesus. If you haven't heard them all you've heard some of them. And the words of Jesus usually or any words of Jesus are like samples of seawater. They all say about the same thing. And if you've heard the words of Jesus then the next thing is believeth on him that sent me now does that describe you? He hath everlasting life. If you can say it does describe you then he has everlasting life and he shall not come into condemnation but has already passed from death to life. Now that's so simple that nobody will believe it. It's as though somebody would find an elixir of life or a universal panacea for the cure of all diseases. You know nobody would believe it at first. Everybody would say it can't be so. Jesus Christ our Lord has laid down here a universal panacea. He has given us the true elixir. He has told us where the fountain of youth is. And he has said simply it consists of hearing the words of Jesus and through those words believing on the Father who sent Jesus and if we do that then we have everlasting life and we shall not come into condemnation but has passed from death has passed from death unto life. Somebody says in that case then what happens to the Christian who breaks down who has a lapse who sins? The answer is there is a difference between coming into discipline and coming into condemnation. The believer who fails his God and sins comes into discipline but not into condemnation. But the sinner is already under condemnation. The Christian who has believed on the Son could I give you an example? There were two men Peter and Judas his carrier. Peter had believed had heard Jesus Christ and believed on the Father and had passed out of death into life and was out of condemnation and he got in a tight spot and failed God. Another one of the apostles also got in a tight spot and failed God. One was Peter the other was Judas. Christ looked on Peter and brought him under discipline and Peter repented and wept copiously as it says in the original. Tears and floods of tears he wept copiously and in his repentance was restored to favor and blessing. He did not come into condemnation but he did come under discipline. But Judas his carrier went out and it was night and he went to his own place and he was the son of perdition. Judas his carrier who never believed on the Father nor the Son and who never was regenerate went out to night in condemnation. Peter who believed but failed went out to discipline and forgiveness. There is the difference my brethren. You come to Jesus Christ as you are weary and worn and sad. Come to Jesus Christ as you are sinful and tired and without self-confidence knowing you can't live it, knowing it. Come anyway. Hear the words of Jesus and believe on the Father and the Son. Trust the words of Jesus that believing on him and God will give you eternal life. God will promise you that you will never come into judgment for that is condemnation. God has given me a passage of Scripture to which I am clinging and holding tight. I don't understand it. That is why it's like this. I don't understand why it's like this. Telling God about this every once in a while. For this is as the waters of Noah unto me. For as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth so have I sworn that I would not be wroth with thee nor regroup thee. For the mountains shall depart and the hills be removed but my kindness shall not depart from me. Neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord, that hath mercy on thee. And I tell God about this every once in a while and I put my name in here so he'll be sure that I know who he's talking about. He says, I'll never be angry again and I'll never rebuke you again. Discipline? Yes, I expect discipline but I don't expect ever to see an angry face in God Almighty's heaven again. And that's not because I'm good but that's because he has sent a Redeemer. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord, thy Redeemer. And because the Lord is our Redeemer we never need to worry after we have trust if we do trust and walk on with him. Now that's in the book. Well, there's a little running commentary on what our Lord said. It certainly isn't all but it's something. And I pray that God may give every one of you courage to go on believing and then I trust that you who may not believe might this very night pass over. The narrow little line separates between believing and not believing. Having life and not having life. You have heard his words. Do you believe on him? Do you believe on the Father who sent him? Do you believe? Then will you believe? Will you believe now? Right now will you believe in the name of the Son of God? As the Father quickeneth the dead from the graves so the Son quickeneth whom he will. And whoever hears his voice and hearkens he shall be quickened to eternal life by the Son who takes this honor from the Father and receives this authority. Will you now believe?
(John - Part 22): Commentary on the Nature of the Triune God
- Bio
- Summary
- Transcript
- Download

A.W. Tozer (1897 - 1963). American pastor, author, and spiritual mentor born in La Jose, Pennsylvania. Converted to Christianity at 17 after hearing a street preacher in Akron, Ohio, he began pastoring in 1919 with the Christian and Missionary Alliance without formal theological training. He served primarily at Southside Alliance Church in Chicago (1928-1959) and later in Toronto. Tozer wrote over 40 books, including classics like "The Pursuit of God" and "The Knowledge of the Holy," emphasizing a deeper relationship with God. Self-educated, he received two honorary doctorates. Editor of Alliance Weekly from 1950, his writings and sermons challenged superficial faith, advocating holiness and simplicity. Married to Ada, they had seven children and lived modestly, never owning a car. His work remains influential, though he prioritized ministry over family life. Tozer’s passion for God’s presence shaped modern evangelical thought. His books, translated widely, continue to inspire spiritual renewal. He died of a heart attack, leaving a legacy of uncompromising devotion.