Our Great Need
      
      
        The knowledge of God that works transformation of character is
      
      
        our great need. If we fulfill His purpose, there must be in our lives a
      
      
        revelation of God that shall correspond to the teaching of His word.
      
      
        The experience of Enoch and of John the Baptist represents what
      
      
        ours should be. Far more than we do, we need to study the lives of
      
      
        these men—he who was translated to heaven without seeing death,
      
      
        and he who, before Christ’s first advent, was called to prepare the way
      
      
        of the Lord, to make His paths straight.
      
      
        The Experience of Enoch
      
      
        Of Enoch it is written that he lived sixty-five years and begat a
      
      
        son; after that he walked with God three hundred years. During those
      
      
        earlier years, Enoch had loved and feared God, and had kept His
      
      
        commandments. But after the birth of his first son he reached a higher
      
      
        experience; he was drawn into closer relationship with God. As he saw
      
      
        the child’s love for its father, its simple trust in his protection; as he
      
      
        felt the deep, yearning tenderness of his own heart for that first-born
      
      
        son, he learned a precious lesson of the wonderful love of God to man
      
      
        in the gift of His Son, and the confidence which the children of God
      
      
        may repose in their heavenly Father. The infinite, unfathomable love
      
      
        of God through Christ became the subject of his meditations day and
      
      
        night. With all the fervor of his soul he sought to reveal that love to
      
      
        the people among whom he dwelt.
      
      
        Enoch’s walk with God was not in a trance or a vision, but in all the
      
      
        duties of his daily life. He did not become a hermit, shutting himself
      
      
        entirely from the world; for he had, in the world, a work to do for God.
      
      
         [330]
      
      
        In the family and in his intercourse with men, as a husband and father,
      
      
        a friend, a citizen, he was the steadfast, unwavering servant of God.
      
      
        His faith waxed stronger, his love became more ardent, with the
      
      
        lapse of centuries. To him prayer was as the breath of the soul. He
      
      
        lived in the atmosphere of heaven.
      
      
        310