To the humble, believing soul, the house
of God on earth is the gate of heaven. The song of praise, the
prayer, the words spoken by Christ's representatives, are God's
appointed agencies to prepare a people for the church above,
for that loftier worship into which there can enter nothing that
defileth.
From the sacredness which was attached
to the earthly sanctuary, Christians may learn how they should
regard the place where the Lord meets with His people. There
has been a great change, not for the better, but for the worse,
in the habits and customs of the people in reference to religious
worship. The precious, the sacred, things which connect us with
God are fast losing their hold upon our minds and hearts, and
are being brought down to the level of common things. The reverence
which the people had anciently for the sanctuary where they met
with God in sacred service has largely passed away. Nevertheless,
God Himself gave the order of His service, exalting it high above
everything of a temporal nature.
The house is the sanctuary for the family,
and the closet or the grove the most retired place for individual
worship; but the church is the sanctuary for the congregation.
There should be rules in regard to the time, the place, and the
manner of worshiping. Nothing that is sacred, nothing that pertains
to the worship of God, should be treated with carelessness or
indifference. In order that men may do their best work in showing
forth the praises of God, their associations must be such as
will keep the sacred distinct from the common, in their minds.
Those who have broad ideas, noble thoughts and aspirations, are
those who have associations that strengthen all thoughts of divine
things. Happy are those who have a sanctuary, be it high or low,
in the city or among the rugged mountain caves, in the lowly
cabin or in the wilderness. If
it is the best they can secure for the Master, He will hallow
the place with His presence, and it will be holy unto the Lord
of hosts.
When the worshipers enter the place of
meeting, they should do so with decorum, passing quietly to their
seats. If there is a stove in the room, it is not proper to crowd
about it in an indolent, careless attitude. Common talking, whispering,
and laughing should not be permitted in the house of worship,
either before or after the service. Ardent, active piety should
characterize the worshipers.
If some have to wait a few minutes before
the meeting begins, let them maintain a true spirit of devotion
by silent meditation, keeping the heart uplifted to God in prayer
that the service may be of special benefit to their own hearts
and lead to the conviction and conversion of other souls. They
should remember that heavenly messengers are in the house. We
all lose much sweet communion with God by our restlessness, by
not encouraging moments of reflection and prayer. The spiritual
condition needs to be often reviewed and the mind and heart drawn
toward the Sun of Righteousness. If when the people come into
the house of worship, they have genuine reverence for the Lord
and bear in mind that they are in His presence, there will be
a sweet eloquence in silence. The whispering and laughing and
talking which might be without sin in a common business place
should find no sanction in the house where God is worshiped.
The mind should be prepared to hear the word of God, that it
may have due weight and suitably impress the heart.
When the minister enters, it should be
with dignified, solemn mien. He should bow down in silent prayer
as soon as he steps into the pulpit, and earnestly ask help of
God. What an impression this will make! There will be solemnity
and awe upon the people. Their minister is communing with God;
he is committing himself to God before he dares to stand before
the people. Solemnity rests upon all, and angels of God are brought very near. Every one of the congregation,
also, who fears God should with bowed head unite in silent prayer
with him that God may grace the meeting with His presence and
give power to His truth proclaimed from human lips. When the
meeting is opened by prayer, every knee should bow in the presence
of the Holy One, and every heart should ascend to God in silent
devotion. The prayers of faithful worshipers will be heard, and
the ministry of the word will prove effectual. The lifeless attitude
of the worshipers in the house of God is one great reason why
the ministry is not more productive of good. The melody of song,
poured forth from many hearts in clear, distinct utterance, is
one of God's instrumentalities in the work of saving souls. All
the service should be conducted with solemnity and awe, as if
in the visible presence of the Master of assemblies.
When the word is spoken, you should
remember, brethren, that you are listening to the voice of God
through His delegated servant. Listen attentively. Sleep not
for one instant, because by this slumber you may lose the very
words that you need most--the very words which, if heeded, would
save your feet from straying into wrong paths. Satan and his
angels are busy creating a paralyzed condition of the senses
so that cautions, warnings, and reproofs shall not be heard;
or if heard, that they shall not take effect upon the heart and
reform the life. Sometimes a little child may so attract the
attention of the hearers that the precious seed does not fall
into good ground and bring forth fruit. Sometimes young men and
women have so little reverence for the house and worship of God
that they keep up a continual communication with each other during
the sermon. Could these see the angels of God looking upon them
and marking their doings, they would be filled with shame, with
abhorrence of themselves. God wants attentive hearers. It was
while men slept that Satan sowed his tares.
When the benediction is pronounced, all
should still be quiet, as if fearful
of losing the peace of Christ. Let all pass out without jostling
or loud talking, feeling that they are in the presence of God,
that His eye is resting upon them, and that they must act as
in His visible presence. Let there be no stopping in the aisles
to visit or gossip, thus blocking them up so that others cannot
pass out. The precincts of the church should be invested with
a sacred reverence. It should not be made a place to meet old
friends and visit and introduce common thoughts and worldly business
transactions. These should be left outside the church. God and
angels have been dishonored by the careless, noisy laughing and
shuffling of feet heard in some places.
Parents, elevate the standard of Christianity
in the minds of your children; help them to weave Jesus into
their experience; teach them to have the highest reverence for
the house of God and to understand that when they enter the Lord's
house it should be with hearts that are softened and subdued
by such thoughts as these: "God is here; this is His house.
I must have pure thoughts and the holiest motives. I must have
no pride, envy, jealousy, evil surmising, hatred, or deception
in my heart, for I am coming into the presence of the holy God.
This is the place where God meets with and blesses His people.
The high and holy One who inhabiteth eternity looks upon me,
searches my heart, and reads the most secret thoughts and acts
of my life."
Brethren, will you not devote a little
thought to this subject and notice how you conduct yourselves
in the house of God and what efforts you are making by precept
and example to cultivate reverence in your children? You roll
vast responsibilities upon the preacher and hold him accountable
for the souls of your children; but you do not sense your own
responsibility as parents and as instructors and, like Abraham,
command your household after you, that they may keep the statutes
of the Lord. Your sons and daughters are corrupted by your own
example and lax precepts; and, notwithstanding this lack of domestic training, you expect the minister
to counteract your daily work and accomplish the wonderful achievement
of training their hearts and lives to virtue and piety. After
the minister has done all he can do for the church by faithful,
affectionate admonition, patient discipline, and fervent prayer
to reclaim and save the soul, yet is not successful, the fathers
and mothers often blame him because their children are not converted,
when it may be because of their own neglect. The burden rests
with the parents; and will they take up the work that God has
entrusted to them, and with fidelity perform it? Will they move
onward and upward, working in a humble, patient, persevering
way to reach the exalted standard themselves and to bring their
children up with them? No wonder our churches are feeble and
do not have that deep, earnest piety in their borders that they
should have. Our present habits and customs, which dishonor God
and bring the sacred and heavenly down to the level of the common,
are against us. We have a sacred, testing, sanctifying truth;
and if our habits and practices are not in accordance with the
truth, we are sinners against great light, and are proportionately
guilty. It will be far more tolerable for the heathen in the
day of God's retributive justice than for us.
A much greater work might be done than
we are now doing in reflecting the light of truth. God expects
us to bear much fruit. He expects greater zeal and faithfulness,
more affectionate and earnest efforts, by the individual members
of the church for their neighbors and for those who are out of
Christ. Parents must begin their work on a high plane of action.
All who name the name of Christ must put on the whole armor and
entreat, warn, and seek to win souls from sin. Lead all you can
to listen to the truth in the house of God. We must do much more
than we are doing to snatch souls from the burning.
It is too true that reverence for the house
of God has become almost extinct.
Sacred things and places are not discerned; the holy and exalted
are not appreciated. Is there not a cause for the want of fervent
piety in our families? Is it not because the high standard of
religion is left to trail in the dust? God gave rules of order,
perfect and exact, to His ancient people. Has His character changed?
Is He not the great and mighty God who rules in the heaven of
heavens? Would it not be well for us often to read the directions
given by God Himself to the Hebrews, that we who have the light
of the glorious truth shining upon us may imitate their reverence
for the house of God? We have abundant reason to maintain a fervent,
devoted spirit in the worship of God. We have reason even to
be more thoughtful and reverential in our worship than had the
Jews. But an enemy has been at work to destroy our faith in the
sacredness of Christian worship.
The place dedicated to God should not be
a room where worldly business is transacted. If the children
assemble to worship God in a room that is used during the week
for a school or a storeroom, they will be more than human if,
mingled with their devotional thoughts, they do not also have
thoughts of their studies or of things that have happened during
the week. The education and training of the youth should be of
a character that would exalt sacred things and encourage pure
devotion for God in His house. Many who profess to be children
of the heavenly King have no true appreciation of the sacredness
of eternal things. Nearly all need to be taught how to conduct
themselves in the house of God. Parents should not only teach,
but command, their children to enter the sanctuary with sobriety
and reverence.
The moral taste of the worshipers in God's
holy sanctuary must be elevated, refined, sanctified. This matter
has been sadly neglected. Its importance has been overlooked,
and as the result, disorder and irreverence have become prevalent,
and God has been dishonored. When the leaders
in the church, ministers and people, father and mothers, have
not had elevated views of this matter, what could be expected
of the inexperienced children? They are too often found in groups,
away from the parents, who should have charge of them. Notwithstanding
they are in the presence of God, and His eye is looking upon
them, they are light and trifling, they whisper and laugh, are
careless, irreverent, and inattentive. They are seldom instructed
that the minister is God's ambassador, that the message he brings
is one of God's appointed agencies in the salvation of souls,
and that to all who have the privilege brought within their reach
it will be a savor of life unto life or of death unto death.
The delicate and susceptible minds of the
youth obtain their estimate of the labors of God's servants by
the way their parents treat the matter. Many heads of families
make the service a subject of criticism at home, approving a
few things and condemning others. Thus the message of God to
men is criticized and questioned, and made a subject of levity.
What impressions are thus made upon the young by these careless,
irreverent remarks the books of heaven alone will reveal. The
children see and understand these things very much quicker than
parents are apt to think. Their moral senses receive a wrong
bias that time will never fully change. The parents mourn over
the hardness of heart in their children and the difficulty in
arousing their moral sensibility to answer to the claims of God.
But the books of heavenly record trace with unerring pen the
true cause. The parents were unconverted. They were not in harmony
with heaven or with heaven's work. Their low, common ideas of
the sacredness of the ministry and of the sanctuary of God were
woven into the education of their children. It is a question
whether anyone who has for years been under this blighting influence
of home instruction will ever have a sensitive reverence and
high regard for God's ministry and the agencies
He has appointed for the salvation of souls. These things should
be spoken of with reverence, with propriety of language, and
with fine susceptibility, that you may reveal to all you associate
with that you regard the message from God's servants as a message
to you from God Himself.
Parents, be careful what example and what
ideas you give your children. Their minds are plastic, and impressions
are easily made. In regard to the service of the sanctuary, if
the speaker has a blemish, be afraid to mention it. Talk only
of the good work he is doing, of the good ideas he presented,
which you should heed as coming through God's agent. It may be
readily seen why children are so little impressed with the ministry
of the word and why they have so little reverence for the house
of God. Their education has been defective in this respect. Their
parents need daily communion with God. Their own ideas need to
be refined and ennobled; their lips need to be touched with a
live coal from off the altar; then their habits, their practices
at home, will make a good impression on the minds and characters
of their children. The standard of religion will be greatly elevated.
Such parents will do a great work for God. They will have less
earthliness, less sensuality, and more refinement and fidelity
at home. Life will be invested with a solemnity of which they
have scarcely conceived. Nothing will be made common that pertains
to the service and worship of God.
I am often pained as I enter the house
where God is worshiped, to see the untidy dress of both men and
women. If the heart and character were indicated by the outward
apparel, then certainly nothing could be heavenly about them.
They have no true idea of the order, the neatness, and the refined
deportment that God requires of all who come into His presence
to worship Him. What impressions do these things give to unbelievers
and to the youth, who are keen to discern and to draw their conclusions?
In the minds of many there are no more
sacred thoughts connected with
the house of God than with the most common place. Some will enter
the place of worship with their hats on, in soiled, dirty clothes.
Such do not realize that they are to meet with God and holy angels.
There should be a radical change in this matter all through our
churches. Ministers themselves need to elevate their ideas, to
have finer susceptibilities in regard to it. It is a feature
of the work that has been sadly neglected. Because of the irreverence
in attitude, dress, and deportment, and lack of a worshipful
frame of mind, God has often turned His face away from those
assembled for His worship.
All should be taught to be neat, clean,
and orderly in their dress, but not to indulge in that external
adorning which is wholly inappropriate for the sanctuary. There
should be no display of the apparel; for this encourages irreverence.
The attention of the people is often called to this or that fine
article of dress, and thus thoughts are intruded that should
have no place in the hearts of the worshipers. God is to be the
subject of thought, the object of worship; and anything that
attracts the mind from the solemn, sacred service is an offense
to Him. The parading of bows and ribbons, ruffles and feathers,
and gold and silver ornaments is a species of idolatry and is
wholly inappropriate for the sacred service of God, where the
eye of every worshiper should be single to His glory. All matters
of dress should be strictly guarded, following closely the Bible
rule. Fashion has been the goddess who has ruled the outside
world, and she often insinuates herself into the church. The
church should make the word of God her standard, and parents
should think intelligently upon this subject. When they see their
children inclined to follow worldly fashions, they should, like
Abraham, resolutely command their households after them. Instead
of uniting them with the world, connect them with God. Let none
dishonor God's sanctuary by their showy apparel. God and angels
are there. The Holy One of Israel has spoken through His apostle:
"Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold,
or of putting on of apparel; but let it be the hidden man of
the heart, in that which is not corruptible, even the ornament
of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of God of great
price."
When a church has been raised up and left
uninstructed on these points, the minister has neglected his
duty and will have to give an account to God for the impressions
he allowed to prevail. Unless correct ideas of true worship and
true reverence are impressed upon the people, there will be a
growing tendency to place the sacred and eternal on a level with
common things, and those professing the truth will be an offense
to God and a disgrace to religion. They can never, with their
uncultivated ideas, appreciate a pure and holy heaven, and be
prepared to join with the worshipers in the heavenly courts above,
where all is purity and perfection, where every being has perfect
reverence for God and His holiness.
Paul describes the work of God's ambassadors
as that by which every man shall be presented perfect in Christ
Jesus. Those who embrace the truth of heavenly origin should
be refined, ennobled, sanctified through it. It will require
much painstaking effort to reach God's standard of true manhood.
The irregular stones hewed from the quarry must be chiseled,
their rough sides must be polished. This is an age famous for
surface work, for easy methods, for boasted holiness aside from
the standard of character that God has erected. All short routes,
all cutoff tracks, all teaching which fails to exalt the law
of God as the standard of religious character, is spurious. Perfection
of character is a lifelong work, unattainable by those who are
not willing to strive for it in God's appointed way, by slow
and toilsome steps. We cannot afford to make any mistake in this
matter, but we want day by day to be growing up into Christ,
our living Head.