Theodore W.
Austin-Sparks was born in London,
England in 1888 and was educated in
both England and Scotland. At the
age of 25 he was ordained as a
pastor, however, a few years later
his "career" took a decidedly
different direction when a spiritual
crisis brought him to a place of
brokenness. He left the denomination
with which he was involved and
dropped the title of "Reverend". He
wrote:
Years ago I was
unquestionably stretched out to
the full for God's best (as I
trust I am now), and there was
no doubt whatever as to my
devotion to the Lord. I was
right in the full tide of every
kind of evangelical activity,
and especially in conventions
everywhere for the deepening of
spiritual life. I was a member
of many Missionary Boards and
Committees, and was greatly in
demand because it was believed
that I was a man with a message.
This is putting into very few
words an immense amount of truly
devoted activity and concern for
the Lord's interests. Being a
man of prayer, I was open to the
Lord for all His will, I
believed. But there was a
certain realm of things against
which I was deeply prejudiced.
It was really the very essence
of the original ''Keswick''
teaching, but I would not have
it at any price. I fought it and
those who taught it. To make a
long story short, the Lord took
me seriously in hand along
another line, and brought me
into great spiritual distress.
The very thing that proved my
emancipation was that which I
would not formerly have touched
for anything. That proved the
key to a fuller life and a
worldwide ministry. I came to
see that my judgment had been
wholly wrong, and that I was
blinded by prejudice. I believed
that I was honest and right, and
seemed to have evidence of it;
but, no, I was in my ignorance
shutting out something which was
of great value to the Lord and
to myself. Thank God for the
grace to be perfectly honest
when the fact of prejudice was
brought home to my heart.... No
man is infallible, and no one
has yet ''apprehended'' nor is
''yet perfect". Many godly men
have had to adjust in the
presence of fuller light given
when a sense of need made such
necessary.
(From an
Editor's Letter first published
in "A Witness and A Testimony"
magazine, Jul-Aug 1946, Vol
24-4).
Based in Honor Oak,
London, TAS (as he was
affectionately known) was not
lacking in opposition and
rejection to himself and his
ministry in the denominational
circles of the day, but he felt he
should neither defend himself nor
promote himself. His son-in-law
Angus Kinnear wrote:
"From his
early years he had believed in
the power and significance of
the spoken Word of God, and
that all developments of its
exposition and application
should be vitally related to
the actual and growing needs
of the spiritual life of
representative bodies of God's
people. Through His Word God
would meet His own, but His
way of giving to His servants
was not merely through
bookish, cloistered or studied
matter. Rather it was made
necessary, drawn out and given
meaning by the call and answer
of living conditions. Its
value - if it was to be
anything more than words - lay
in its being able to touch the
Lord's people at the point of
experience and need which had
been the occasion of its
original calling forth. Such
was the special calling of T.
Austin-Sparks, a man ploughing
a furrow perhaps a little
apart from his contemporaries,
but always true to Christ
Jesus his Saviour and Lord,
and committed to a vision of
spiritually fruitful harvests
throughout the whole field
that is God's world."
Something which
becomes clear when reading the
writings of T. Austin-Sparks is
that very little information is
given about himself or his
personal life; instead the focus
is consistently upon Christ as his
(and our) Life. Your attention is
continually directed away from the
messenger to the One Who is the
Message (2 Cor. 4:5).
Mr Austin-Sparks
published a bi-monthly magazine
called "A Witness and A Testimony"
from 1923 until his death in 1971.
This magazine has been the source
for most of the messages on this
website. In the July 1966 issue of
the magazine, he wrote the
following:
It is only
occasionally that we write
personally. Our desire has
always been to avoid drawing
attention to persons and
things in the ministry, and to
occupy our readers with the
Lord and the ministry of His
Word. But from time to time we
have felt it to be both wise
and important to remind our
readers of the purpose that
definitely governs this
ministry - and has always done
so...
What, then,
is this ministry? We must go
back. The name of this little
paper, which has been the
printed expression of the
ministry for the past almost
forty-four years, embodies the
meaning — “Witness and
Testimony.” “Witness”: the
instrument or vessel used.
“Testimony”: the ministry in
and through the vessel. The
Testimony has ever been - but
growing as light has increased
- to the greatness and
fullness of Jesus Christ, the
Son of God and Son of Man.
This greatness has been
centered and unfolded in:
(1) His
Person
(2) The
immensity of God's eternal
purpose as centered in and
exclusively related to Him
(3) The
greatness of His Cross as
basic and essential to the
greatness of His Person and
work both for and in believers
(4) The
greatness of The Church which
is His Body as essential to,
and chosen for, His ultimate
self-manifestation in
fullness and government in the
new heavens and the new earth
(5) The
necessity that all the people
of God should know, not only
of salvation, but of the
immense purpose of salvation
in the eternal council of God,
being brought to “full growth”
by the supply of Jesus Christ
in ample measure.
We feel that
the New Testament contains a
tremendous urgency in this
matter; such urgency is summed
up in the words of the Apostle
Paul: "Admonishing every man
and teaching every man....
that we may present every man
perfect (complete) in Christ”
(Colossians 1:28). We believe
that all the sovereign
activities of the Holy Spirit
are directed to and dictated
by this end and object.
There may be
different aspects, but the end
is single and one. The
great evangelizing and
missionary efforts, in so far
as they are governed by the
Holy Spirit, have this end in
view…
The cry which comes
through his messages again and
again is for believers to grow up
into the full knowledge
of Christ, to know
Him as the One Thing, the All
in all, the Head of all. As
believers heard and responded to
his cry, TAS was requested to
speak at conferences in Europe,
Asia and the USA, many of which
were tape-recorded. The audio
messages from these conferences
are still available today, as are
many of his books and articles
which have been republished. He was
insistent that his messages should
be reproduced word for word as
originally spoken or written by
him.
Some of the
messages on this website have been
transcribed from audio messages,
others are reproductions of his
written messages. Some of his
messages he published as books and
these were available at cost from
the Witness and Testimony
Publishers in Honor Oak. However,
most of these books were first
published chapter by chapter in
his bi-monthly magazine, "A
Witness and A Testimony". TAS
frequently called it: "This little
paper". There was no subscription
charge for this magazine which was
sent freely to all who requested
it. It was stated in the magazine
that, "This ministry is maintained
by the Lord through the
stewardship of those who value
it."
On the first page
of the magazine was this
statement:
"The object
of the ministry of this little
paper, issued bi-monthly, is
to contribute to the Divine
end which is presented in the
words of Ephesians 4:13 -
"...till we all attain unto
the unity of the faith, and of
the knowledge (literally -
full knowledge) of the Son of
God, unto a fullgrown man,
unto the measure of the
stature of the fulness of
Christ: that we be no longer
children..."
"It is not
connected with any 'Movement',
'Organization', 'Mission' or
separate body of Christians,
but is just a ministry to "all
saints". Its going forth
is with the prayer and hope
that it will so result in a
fuller measure of Christ, a
richer and higher level of
spiritual life, that, while
bringing the Church of God
into a growing approximation
to His revealed will as to its
'attainment', the Church may
be better qualified to be used
of Him in testimony in the
nations, and to the completing
of its own number by the
salvation of those yet to be
added by the Lord."
TAS was the editor
of this magazine until his death
in 1971. A similar style of
magazine named "Toward the Mark"
was then published by a colleague,
Harry Foster, from 1972 until
1989. After T. Austin-Sparks'
death in 1971 Harry Foster
wrote:
"Perhaps one
of the earliest of his books
can best give us a real clue
to his whole life and
ministry. It is called
"The
Centrality and Supremacy of
the Lord Jesus Christ". This
was where he began, and this
was where he ended, for it
became noticeable in his
closing years that he lost
interest in subjects and
concentrated his attention on
the person of Christ. Christ
is central! None of us will
claim always to have been "on
centre", and he certainly made
no such claim, but it was his
life's objective and the aim
of all his preaching and
teaching to recognize that
centrality and bow to that
supremacy. At his funeral
service there were hundreds
who responded wholeheartedly
to the suggestion that brother
Sparks had helped them to get
to know Christ in fuller and
more satisfying ways. If
anyone can make men realize
something more of the worth
and wonder of Christ, so that
they love Him more and serve
Him better, then such a one
has not lived in vain. Many
worldwide can truthfully say
that through the spoken or
written words of 'T. A-S.'
this is what happened to them
and, especially with those who
first trusted Christ as
Saviour through his ministry,
they will be his rejoicing in
the day of Jesus Christ.
Moreover, some of the truths,
which were by no means
accepted when he proclaimed
them years ago, have now
become widely accepted among
evangelical Christians, so it
is possible that in the long
run his ministry may prove to
have been more fruitful than
at the time appeared to
himself or to others. It is
the steward's business to be
faithful, and that he sought
to be: only the Master is
competent to judge of his
success."
TAS deliberately
made no provision for the
continuing of his magazine or
ministry following his death on 13
April, 1971. Harry Foster wrote:
"Mr. Austin-Sparks had left word
that there should be no automatic
continuation of the magazine
ministry". Mr Austin-Sparks
believed that what was from God
and of God would be taken care of
by Him, he wrote: "God only
takes responsibility to
supply and to carry on that
which is essentially
heavenly, and in the measure
in which a thing is
heavenly, and only in that
measure (but surely
in that measure), God takes
responsibility for it". Time has
proven that his trust was not
misplaced as God has indeed
preserved what is His own.
The advice we have
consistently received from those
that personally knew Mr
Austin-Sparks is that he wanted
his messages to be made widely
available to all, but that they
should not be changed (edited). He
wrote, "It has always been our
desire to make the ministry
through this little medium
available to
ALL
of the Lord's people; not
regarding it as our personal
property. 'Freely ye have
received, freely give' has been
our principle."
We have tried to express
this in the statement that we
have put on every page of this
website: In keeping with T.
Austin-Sparks' wishes that
what was freely received
should be freely given and not
sold for profit, and that his
messages be reproduced word
for word, we ask if you choose
to share these messages with
others, to please respect his
wishes and offer them freely -
free of any changes, free of
any charge and with this
statement included.
Mr Austin-Sparks
left behind a treasury of
messages filled with the Wisdom,
Life and Revelation of Christ.
This website does not yet
contain all of his messages and
has new ones added to it each
week. To receive these messages
by email please go to the Subscribe page.
Having greatly
appreciated his messages
ourselves, we offer them here on
the internet for the further
establishing and strengthening
of the Body, that in all things
CHRIST might have the
preeminence!