The word of God was preached by His
ministers in early days "in demonstration of the Spirit
and of power." The hearts of men were stirred by the proclamation
of the gospel. Why is it that the preaching of the truth has
now so little power to move the people? Is God less willing to
bestow His blessing upon the laborers in His cause in this age
than in the apostles' day?
The warning which we bear to the world
must prove to them a savor of life unto life or of death unto
death. And will the Lord send forth His servants to proclaim
this fearfully solemn message and withhold from them His Holy
Spirit? Shall frail, erring men, without special grace and power
from God, dare to stand between the living and the dead to speak
the words of everlasting life? Our Lord is rich in grace, mighty
in power; He will abundantly bestow these gifts upon all who
come to Him in faith. He is more willing to give the Holy Spirit
to them that ask Him than are parents to give good gifts to their children. The reason why the precious,
important truth for this time is not powerful to save is that
we do not work in faith.
We should pray as earnestly for the descent
of the Holy Spirit as the disciples prayed on the day of Pentecost.
If they needed it at that time, we need it more today. Moral
darkness, like a funeral pall, covers the earth. All manner of
false doctrines, heresies, and satanic deceptions are misleading
the minds of men. Without the Spirit and power of God it will
be in vain that we labor to present the truth.
It is by contemplating Christ, by exercising
faith in Him, by experiencing for ourselves His saving grace,
that we are qualified to present Him to the world. If we have
learned of Him, Jesus will be our theme; His love, burning upon
the altar of our hearts, will reach the hearts of the people.
The truth will be presented, not as a cold, lifeless theory,
but in the demonstration of the Spirit.
Many of our ministers in their discourses
dwell too largely upon theory and not enough on practical godliness.
They have an intellectual knowledge of the truth, but their hearts
are untouched with the genuine fervor of the love of Christ.
Many have gained by the study of our publications a knowledge
of the arguments that sustain the truth, but they have not become
Bible students for themselves. They are not constantly seeking
for a deeper and more thorough knowledge of the plan of salvation
as revealed in the Scriptures. While preaching to others, they
are becoming dwarfs in religious growth. They do not often go
before God to plead for His Spirit and grace that they may rightly
present Christ to the world.
Human strength is weakness, human wisdom
is folly. Our success does not depend on our talents or learning,
but on our living connection with God. The truth is shorn of
its power when preached by men who are seeking to display their
own learning and ability. Such
men display also that they know very little of experimental religion,
that they are unsanctified in heart and life and are filled with
vain conceit. They do not learn of Jesus. They cannot present
to others a Saviour with whom they themselves are not acquainted.
Their own hearts are not softened and subdued by a vivid sense
of the great sacrifice which Christ has made to save perishing
man. They do not feel that it is a privilege to deny self and
to suffer for His dear sake. Some exalt self, and talk of self;
they prepare sermons and write articles to call the attention
of the people to the minister, fearing that he will not receive
due honor. Had there been more lifting up of Jesus and less extolling
the minister, more praise rendered to the Author of truth and
less to its messengers, we would occupy a more favorable position
before God than we do today.
The plan of salvation is not presented
in its simplicity for the reason that few ministers know what
simple faith is. An intellectual knowledge of the truth is not
enough; we must know its power upon our own hearts and lives.
Ministers need to come to Christ as little children. Seek Jesus,
brethren, confess your sins, plead with God day and night, until
you know that for Christ's sake you are pardoned and accepted.
Then will you love much because you have been forgiven much.
Then you can point others to Christ as a sin-pardoning Redeemer.
Then you can present the truth from the fullness of a heart that
feels its sanctifying power. I fear for you, my brethren. I counsel
you to tarry at Jerusalem, as did the early disciples, until,
like them, you receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Never
feel at liberty to go into the desk until you have by faith grasped
the arm of your strength.
If we have the spirit of Christ we shall
work as He worked; we shall catch the very ideas of the Man of
Nazareth and present them to the people. If, in the place of
formal professors and unconverted
ministers, we were indeed followers of Christ we would present
the truth with such meekness and fervor, and would so exemplify
it in our lives, that the world would not be continually questioning
whether we believe what we profess. The message borne in the
love of Christ, with the worth of souls constantly before us,
would win even from worldlings the decision: "They are like
Jesus."
If we desire to reform others we must ourselves
practice the principles which we would enforce upon them. Words,
however good, will be powerless if contradicted by the daily
life. Ministers of Christ, I admonish you: "Take heed unto
thyself, and unto the doctrine." Do not excuse sins in yourselves
which you reprove in others. If you preach on meekness and love,
let these graces be exemplified in your own life. If you urge
others to be kind, courteous, and attentive at home, let your
own example give force to your admonitions. As you have received
greater light than others, so is your responsibility increased.
You will be beaten with many stripes if you neglect to do your
Master's will.
Satan's snares are laid for us as verily
as they were laid for the children of Israel just prior to their
entrance into the land of Canaan. We are repeating the history
of that people. Lightness, vanity, love of ease and pleasure,
selfishness, and impurity are increasing among us. There is need
now of men who are firm and fearless in declaring the whole counsel
of God; men who will not sleep as do others, but watch and be
sober. Knowing as I do the great lack of holiness and power with
our ministers, I am deeply pained to see the efforts for self-exaltation.
If they could but see Jesus as He is, and themselves as they
are, so weak, so inefficient, so unlike their Master, they would
say: If my name may be written in the obscurest part of the book
of life, it is enough for me, so unworthy am I of His notice.
It is your work to study and to imitate
the Pattern. Was Christ self-denying?
so must you be. Was He meek and lowly? so must you be. Was He
zealous in the work of saving souls? so must you be. Did He labor
to promote the glory of His Father? so must you. Did He often
seek help from God? so must you. Was Christ patient? so will
you be patient. As Christ forgave His enemies, so will you forgive.
It is not so much the religion of the pulpit
as the religion of the family that reveals our real character.
The minister's wife, his children, and those who are employed
as helpers in his family are best qualified to judge of his piety.
A good man will be a blessing to his household. Wife, children,
and helpers will all be the better for his religion.
Brethren, carry Christ into the family,
carry Him into the pulpit, carry Him with you wherever you go.
Then you need not urge upon others the necessity of appreciating
the ministry, for you will bear the heavenly credentials which
will prove to all that you are servants of Christ. Carry Jesus
with you in your hours of solitude. Remember that He was often
in prayer, and His life was constantly sustained by fresh inspirations
of the Holy Spirit. Let your thoughts, your inner life, be such
that you will not be ashamed to meet its record in the day of
God.
Heaven is not closed against the fervent
prayers of the righteous. Elijah was a man subject to like passions
as we are, yet the Lord heard and in a most striking manner answered
his petitions. The only reason for our lack of power with God
is to be found in ourselves. If the inner life of many who profess
the truth were presented before them, they would not claim to
be Christians. They are not growing in grace. A hurried prayer
is offered now and then, but there is no real communion with
God.
We must be much in prayer if we would make
progress in the divine life. When the message of truth was first
proclaimed, how much we prayed. How often was the voice of
intercession heard in the chamber, in the
barn, in the orchard, or the grove. Frequently we spent hours
in earnest prayer, two or three together claiming the promise;
often the sound of weeping was heard and then the voice of thanksgiving
and the song of praise. Now the day of God is nearer than when
we first believed, and we should be more earnest, more zealous,
and fervent than in those early days. Our perils are greater
now than then. Souls are more hardened. We need now to be imbued
with the spirit of Christ, and we should not rest until we receive
it.
Brethren and sisters, have you forgotten
that your prayers should go out, like sharp sickles, with the
laborers in the great harvest field? As young men go forth to
preach the truth, you should have seasons of prayer for them.
Pray that God will connect them with Himself and give them wisdom,
grace, and knowledge. Pray that they may be guarded from the
snares of Satan and kept pure in thought and holy in heart. I
entreat you who fear the Lord to waste no time in unprofitable
talk or in needless labor to gratify pride or to indulge the
appetite. Let the time thus gained be spent in wrestling with
God for your ministers. Hold up their hands as did Aaron and
Hur the hands of Moses.