A great and solemn truth has been entrusted
to us, for which we are responsible. Too often this truth is
presented in cold theory. Sermon after sermon upon doctrinal
points is delivered to people who come and go, some of whom will
never have another as favorable opportunity of being convicted
and converted to Christ. Golden opportunities are lost by delivering
elaborate discourses, which display self, but do not magnify Christ. A theory of the truth without
vital godliness cannot remove the moral darkness which envelops
the soul.
Most precious gems of truth are often rendered
powerless by the wisdom of words in which they are clothed, while
the power of the Spirit of God is lacking. Christ presented the
truth in its simplicity; and He reached not only the most elevated,
but the lowliest men of earth. The minister who is God's ambassador
and Christ's representative on the earth, who humbles himself
that God may be exalted, will possess the genuine quality of
eloquence. True piety, a close connection with God, and a daily,
living experience in the knowledge of Christ, will make eloquent
even the stammering tongue.
As I see the wants in young churches, as
I see and realize their great need of vital godliness and their
deficiency in true religious experience, my heart is sad. I know
that those who bear the message of truth to them do not properly
instruct them on all points essential to the perfection of a
symmetrical character in Christ Jesus. These things may be neglected
too long by the teachers of the truth. Speaking of the gospel,
Paul says: "Whereof I am made a minister, according to the
dispensation of God which is given to me for you, to fulfill
the word of God, even the mystery which hath been hid from ages
and from generations, but now is made manifest to His saints:
to whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory
of this mystery among the Gentiles [mark the explanation of the
mystery]; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory: whom we
preach, warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom;
that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus: whereunto
I also labor, striving according to His working, which worketh
in me mightily."
Here the ministers of Christ have their
work, their qualifications, and the power of God's grace working
in them, clearly defined. God has been pleased recently to show
me a great deficiency in many who profess to be representatives
of Christ. In short, if they are deficient in faith and in a
knowledge of vital godliness they are not
only deceiving their own souls, but are making a failure in the
work of presenting every man perfect in Christ. Many whom they
bring into the truth are destitute of true godliness. They may
have a theory of the truth, but they are not thoroughly converted.
Their hearts are carnal; they do not abide in Christ and He in
them. It is the duty of the minister to present the theory of
the truth; but he should not rest with having done this merely.
He should adopt the language of Paul: "I also labor, striving
according to His working, which worketh in me mightily."
A vital connection with the Chief Shepherd
will make the undershepherd a living representative of Christ,
a light indeed to the world. An understanding of all points of
our faith is indeed essential, but it is of greater importance
that the minister be sanctified through the truth which he presents
for the purpose of enlightening the consciences of his hearers.
In a series of meetings not one discourse should be given consisting
of theory alone, nor should one long, tedious prayer be made.
Such prayers God does not hear. I have listened to many prosy,
sermonizing prayers that were uncalled for and out of place.
A prayer with one half the number of words, offered in fervor
and faith, would have softened the hearts of the hearers; but,
instead of this, I have seen them wait impatiently, as though
wishing that every word would end the prayer. Had the minister
wrestled with God in his chamber until he felt that his faith
could grasp the eternal promise, "Ask, and ye shall receive,"
he would have come to the point at once, asking with earnestness
and faith for what he needed.
We need a converted ministry; otherwise
the churches raised up through their labors, having no root in
themselves, will not be able to stand alone. The faithful minister
of Christ will take the burden upon his soul. He will not hunger
after popularity. The Christian minister should never enter the
desk until he has first sought God in his closet and has come
into close connection with Him. He may, with humility, lift his
thirsty soul to God and be refreshed with the dew of grace before
he shall speak to the people. With an unction of the
Holy Spirit upon him, giving him a burden
for souls he will not dismiss a congregation without presenting
before them Jesus Christ, the sinner's only refuge, making earnest
appeals that will reach their hearts. He should feel that he
may never meet these hearers again until the great day of God.
The Master who has chosen him, who knows
the hearts of all men, will give him tongue and utterance, that
he may speak the words he ought to speak at the right time and
with power. And those who become truly convicted of sin, and
charmed with the Way, the Truth, and the Life, will find sufficient
to do without praising and extolling the ability of the minister.
Christ and His love will be exalted above any human instrument.
The man will be lost sight of because Christ is magnified and
is the theme of thought. Many are converted to the minister who
are not really converted to Christ. We marvel at the stupor that
benumbs the spiritual senses. There is a lack of vital power.
Lifeless prayers are offered, and testimonies are borne which
fail to edify or strengthen the hearers. It becomes every minister
of Christ to inquire the cause of this.
Paul writes to his Colossian brethren:
"As ye also learned of Epaphras our dear fellow servant,
who is for you a faithful minister of Christ; who also declared
unto us your love in the Spirit. [Not an unsanctified love of
the smartness, ability, or oratory of the preacher, but a love
born of the Spirit of God, which His servant represented in his
words and character.] For this cause we also, since the day we
heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to desire that ye
might be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom
and spiritual understanding; that ye might walk worthy of the
Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and
increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might,
according to His glorious power, unto all patience and long-suffering
with joyfulness; giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made
us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light."
Ministers who labor in towns and cities
to present the truth should not feel content, nor that their
work is ended, until those who have accepted the theory of the
truth realize indeed the effect of its sanctifying power and
are truly converted to God. God would be better pleased to have
six truly converted to the truth as the result of their labors
than to have sixty make a nominal profession and yet not be thoroughly
converted. These ministers should devote less time to preaching
sermons and reserve a portion of their strength to visit and
pray with those who are interested, giving them godly instruction,
to the end that they may "present every man perfect in Christ
Jesus."
The love of God must be living in the heart
of the teacher of the truth. His own heart must be imbued with
that deep and fervent love which Christ possessed; then it will
flow out to others. Ministers should teach that all who accept
the truth should bring forth fruit to the glory of God. They
should teach that self-sacrifice must be practiced every day;
that many things which have been cherished must be yielded; and
that many duties, disagreeable though they may appear, must be
performed. Business interests, social endearments, ease, honor,
reputation, -- in short, everything, must be held in subjection
to the superior and ever-paramount claims of Christ. Ministers
who are not men of vital piety, who stir up an interest among
the people, but leave the work in the rough, leave an exceedingly
difficult field for others to enter and finish the work they
failed to complete. These men will be proved; and if they do
not do their work more faithfully, they will, after a still further
test, be laid aside as cumberers of the ground, unfaithful watchmen.
God would not have men go forth as teachers
who have not studiously learned their lessons and who will not
continue to study that they may present every point of present
truth in an intelligent, acceptable manner. With a knowledge
of the theory they should continually be obtaining a more thorough
knowledge of Jesus Christ. Rules and studies are necessary;
but with them the minister should combine
earnest prayer that he may be faithful, not building upon the
foundation wood, hay, or stubble, which will be consumed by the
fires of the last day. Prayer and study should go hand in hand.
The fact that a minister is applauded and praised is no evidence
that he has spoken under the influence of the Spirit.
It is too frequently the case that young
converts, unless guarded, will set their affections more upon
their minister than upon their Redeemer. They consider that they
have been greatly benefited by their minister's labors. They
conceive that he possesses the most exalted gifts and graces,
and that no other can do equally as well as he; therefore they
attach undue importance to the man and his labors. This is a
confidence that disposes them to idolize the man and look to
him more than to God, and in doing this they do not please God
nor grow in grace. They do great harm to the minister, especially
if he is young and developing into a promising gospel laborer.
These teachers, if they are really men
of God, receive their words from God. Their manner of address
may be faulty and need much improvement, yet if God breathes
through them words of inspiration, the power is not of man, but
of God. The Giver should have the glory and the heart's affections,
while the minister should be esteemed, loved, and respected for
his work's sake, because he is God's servant to bear the message
of mercy to sinners. The Son of God is often eclipsed by the
man standing between Him and the people. The man is praised,
petted, and exalted, and the people scarcely get a glimpse of
Jesus, who, by the precious beams of light reflected from Him,
should eclipse everything besides.
The minister of Christ who is imbued with
the Spirit and love of his Master will so labor that the character
of God and of His dear Son may be made manifest in the fullest
and clearest manner. He will strive to have his hearers become
intelligent in their conceptions of the character of God, that
His glory may be acknowledged on the earth. A man is no sooner
converted than in his heart is born a desire to make
known to others what a precious friend he
has found in Jesus; the saving and sanctifying truth cannot be
shut up in his heart. The Spirit of Christ illuminating the soul
is represented by the light, which dispels all darkness; it is
compared to salt, because of its preserving qualities; and to
leaven, which secretly exerts its transforming power.
Those whom Christ has connected with Himself
will, as far as in them lies, labor diligently and perseveringly,
as He labored, to save souls who are perishing around them. They
will reach the people by prayer, earnest, fervent prayer, and
personal effort. It is impossible for those who are thoroughly
converted to God, enjoying communion with Him, to be negligent
of the vital interests of those who are perishing outside of
Christ.
The minister should not do all the work
himself, but he should unite with him those who have taken hold
of the truth. He will thus teach others to work after he shall
leave. A working church will ever be a growing church. They will
ever find a stimulus and a tonic in trying to help others, and
in doing it they will be strengthened and encouraged.
I have read of a man who, journeying on
a winter's day through the deep, drifted snow, became benumbed
by the cold, which was almost imperceptibly stealing away his
vital powers. And as he was nearly chilled to death by the embrace
of the frost king, and about to give up the struggle for life,
he heard the moans of a brother traveler, who was perishing with
cold as he was about to perish. His humanity was aroused to rescue
him. He chafed the ice-clad limbs of the unfortunate man, and,
after considerable effort, raised him to his feet; and as he
could not stand, he bore him in sympathizing arms through the
very drifts he had thought he could never succeed in getting
through alone. And when he had borne his fellow traveler to a
place of safety, the truth flashed home to him that in saving
his neighbor he had saved himself also. His earnest efforts to
save another quickened the blood which was freezing in his own
veins, and created a healthful warmth in the extremities of the
body.
These lessons must be forced upon young
believers continually, not only by precept, but by example, that
in their Christian experience they may realize similar results.
Let the desponding ones, those disposed to think the way to life
is very trying and difficult, go to work and seek to help others.
In such efforts, mingled with prayer for divine light, their
own hearts will throb with the quickening influence of the grace
of God; their own affections will glow with more divine fervor,
and their whole Christian life will be more of a reality, more
earnest, more prayerful.
The minister of Christ should be a man
of prayer, a man of piety; cheerful, but never coarse and rough,
jesting or frivolous. A spirit of frivolity may be in keeping
with the profession of clowns and theatrical actors, but it is
altogether beneath the dignity of a man who is chosen to stand
between the living and the dead, and to be mouthpiece for God.
Every day's labor is faithfully chronicled
in the books of God. As men claiming spiritual illumination,
you will give moral tone to the character of all with whom you
are connected. As faithful ministers of the gospel, you should
bend all the energies of the mind and all the opportunities of
your life to make your work wholly successful, and present every
man perfect in Christ Jesus. In order to do this, you must pray
earnestly. Ministers of the gospel must be in possession of that
power which wrought such wonders for the humble fishermen of
Galilee.
Moral and intellectual powers are needed
in order to discharge with fidelity the important duties devolving
upon you; but these may be possessed, and yet there may be a
great lack of godliness. The endowment of the Holy Spirit is
indispensably essential to success in your great work. Said Christ:
"Without Me ye can do nothing." But through Christ
strengthening you, you can do all things.