When Christ saw the multitudes that gathered
about Him, "He was moved with compassion on them, because
they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd."
Christ saw the sickness, the sorrow, the want and degradation
of the multitudes that thronged His steps. To Him were presented
the needs and woes of humanity throughout the world. Among the
high and the low, the most honored and the most degraded, He
beheld souls who were longing for the very blessings He had come
to bring, souls who needed only a knowledge of His grace to become
subjects of His kingdom. "Then saith He unto His disciples,
The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few; pray
ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that He will send forth
laborers into His harvest." Matthew 9:36-38.
Today the same needs exist. The world is
in need of workers who will labor as Christ did for the suffering
and the sinful. There is indeed a multitude to be reached. The
world is full of sickness, suffering, distress, and sin. It is
full of those who need to be ministered unto--the weak, the helpless,
the ignorant, the degraded.
Many of the youth of this generation, in
the midst of churches, religious institutions, and professedly
Christian homes, are choosing the path to destruction. Through
intemperate habits they bring upon themselves disease, and through
greed to obtain money for sinful indulgences they fall into dishonest
practices. Health and character are ruined. Aliens from God and
outcasts from society, these poor souls feel that they are without
hope either for this life or for the life to come. The hearts
of parents are broken. Men speak of these erring ones as
hopeless, but God looks upon them with pitying
tenderness. He understands all the circumstances that have led
them to fall under temptation. This is a class that demands labor.
Nigh and afar off are souls, not only the
youth but those of all ages, who are in poverty and distress,
sunken in sin, and weighed down with a sense of guilt. It is
the work of God's servants to seek for these souls, to pray with
them and for them, and lead them step by step to the Saviour.
But those who do not recognize the claims
of God are not the only ones who are in distress and in need
of help. In the world today, where selfishness, greed, and oppression
rule, many of the Lord's true children are in need and affliction.
In lowly, miserable places, surrounded with poverty, disease,
and guilt, many are patiently bearing their own burden of suffering,
and trying to comfort the hopeless and sin-stricken about them.
Many of them are almost unknown to the churches or to the ministers;
but they are the Lord's lights, shining amid the darkness. For
these the Lord has a special care, and He calls upon His people
to be His helping hand in relieving their wants. Wherever there
is a church, special attention should be given to searching out
this class and ministering to them.
And while working for the poor, we should
give attention also to the rich, whose souls are equally precious
in the sight of God. Christ worked for all who would hear His
word. He sought not only the publican and the outcast, but the
rich and cultured Pharisee, the Jewish nobleman, and the Roman
ruler. The wealthy man needs to be labored for in the love and
fear of God. Too often he trusts in his riches and feels not
his danger. The worldly possessions which the Lord has entrusted
to men are often a source of great
temptation. Thousands are thus led into sinful indulgences that
confirm them in habits of intemperance and vice. Among the wretched
victims of want and sin are found many who were once in possession
of wealth. Men of different vocations and different stations
in life have been overcome by the pollutions of the world, by
the use of strong drink, by indulgence in the lusts of the flesh,
and have fallen under temptation. While these fallen ones excite
our pity and demand our help, should not some attention be given
also to those who have not yet descended to these depths, but
who are setting their feet in the same path? There are thousands
occupying positions of honor and usefulness who are indulging
habits that mean ruin to soul and body. Should not the most earnest
effort be made to enlighten them?
Ministers of the gospel, statesmen, authors,
men of wealth and talent, men of vast business capacity and power
for usefulness, are in deadly peril because they do not see the
necessity of strict temperance in all things. They need to have
their attention called to the principles of temperance, not in
a narrow or arbitrary way, but in the light of God's great purpose
for humanity. Could the principles of true temperance be thus
brought before them, there are very many of the higher classes
who would recognize their value and give them a hearty acceptance.
There is another danger to which the wealthy
classes are especially exposed, and here also is a field for
the work of the medical missionary. Multitudes who are prosperous
in the world and who never stoop to the common forms of vice,
are yet brought to destruction through the love of riches. Absorbed
in their worldly treasures, they are insensible to the claims
of God and the needs of their fellow men. Instead of regarding
their wealth as a talent to be used for the glory of God and
the uplifting of humanity, they
look upon it as a means of indulging and glorifying themselves.
They add house to house and land to land, they fill their homes
with luxuries, while want stalks the streets, and all about them
are human beings in misery and crime, in disease and death. Those
who thus give their lives to self-serving are developing in themselves,
not the attributes of God, but the attributes of Satan.
These men are in need of the gospel. They
need to have their eyes turned from the vanity of material things
to behold the preciousness of the enduring riches. They need
to learn the joy of giving, the blessedness of being co-workers
with God.
Persons of this class are often the most
difficult of access, but Christ will open ways whereby they may
be reached. Let the wisest, the most trustful, the most hopeful,
laborers seek for these souls. With the wisdom and tact born
of divine love, with the refinement and courtesy that result
alone from the presence of Christ in the soul, let them work
for those who, dazzled by the glitter of earthly riches, see
not the glory of the heavenly treasure. Let the workers study
the Bible with them, pressing sacred truth home to their hearts.
Read to them the words of God: "But of Him are ye in Christ
Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption." "Thus saith the
Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the
mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in
his riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he
understandeth and knoweth Me, that I am the Lord which exercise
loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the earth: for
in these things I delight, saith the Lord." "In whom
we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins,
according to the riches of His grace." But my God shall
supply all your need according
to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus." 1 Corinthians 1:30;
Jeremiah 9:23, 24; Ephesians 1:7; Philippians 4:19.
Such an appeal, made in the spirit of Christ,
will not be thought impertinent. It will impress the minds of
many in the higher classes.
By efforts put forth in wisdom and love,
many a rich man may be awakened to a sense of his responsibility
and his accountability to God. When it is made plain that the
Lord expects them as His representatives to relieve suffering
humanity, many will respond and will give of their means and
their sympathy for the benefit of the poor. When their minds
are thus drawn away from their own selfish interests, many will
be led to surrender themselves to Christ. With their talents
of influence and means they will gladly unite in the work of
beneficence with the humble missionary who was God's agent in
their conversion. By a right use of their earthly treasure they
will lay up "a treasure in the heavens that faileth not,
where no thief approacheth, neither moth corrupteth." They
will secure for themselves the treasure that wisdom offers, even
"durable riches and righteousness."
Through observing our lives, the people
of the world form their opinion of God and of the religion of
Christ. All who do not know Christ need to have the high, noble
principles of His character kept constantly before them in the
lives of those who do know Him. To meet this need, to carry the
light of Christ's love into the homes of the great and the lowly,
the rich and the poor, is the high duty and precious privilege
of the medical missionary.
"Ye are the salt of the earth,"
Christ said to His disciples; and in these words He was speaking
to His workers of today. If you
are salt, saving properties are in you, and the virtue of your
character will have a saving influence.
Although a man may have sunk to the very
depths of sin, there is a possibility of saving him. Many have
lost the sense of eternal realities, lost the similitude of God,
and they hardly know whether they have souls to be saved or not.
They have neither faith in God nor confidence in man. But they
can understand and appreciate acts of practical sympathy and
helpfulness. As they see one with no inducement of earthly praise
or compensation come into their wretched homes, ministering to
the sick, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and tenderly
pointing all to Him of whose love and pity the human worker is
but the messenger--as they see this, their hearts are touched.
Gratitude springs up. Faith is kindled. They see that God cares
for them, and they are prepared to listen as His word is opened.
In this work of restoration much painstaking
effort will be required. No startling communications of strange
doctrines should be made to these souls; but as they are helped
physically, the truth for this time should be presented. Men
and women and youth need to see the law of God with its far-reaching
requirements. It is not hardship, toil, or poverty that degrades
humanity; it is sin, the transgression of God's law. The efforts
put forth to rescue the outcast and degraded will be of no avail
unless the claims of the law of God and the need of loyalty to
Him are impressed on mind and heart. God has enjoined nothing
that is not necessary to bind up humanity with Him. "The
law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul. . . . The commandment
of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes." "By the
word of Thy lips," says the
psalmist, I have kept me from the paths of the destroyer."
Psalms 19:7, 8; 17:4.
Angels are helping in this work to restore
the fallen and bring them back to the One who has given His life
to redeem them, and the Holy Spirit is co-operating with the
ministry of human agencies to arouse the moral powers by working
on the heart, reproving of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment.
As God's children devote themselves to
this work, many will lay hold of the hand stretched out to save
them. They are constrained to turn from their evil ways. Some
of the rescued ones may, through faith in Christ, rise to high
places of service and be entrusted with responsibilities in the
work of saving souls. They know by experience the necessities
of those for whom they labor, and they know how to help them;
they know what means can best be used to recover the perishing.
They are filled with gratitude to God for the blessings they
have received; their hearts are quickened by love, and their
energies are strengthened to lift up others who can never rise
without help. Taking the Bible as their guide and the Holy Spirit
as their helper and comforter, they find a new career opening
before them. Every one of these souls that is added to the force
of workers, provided with facilities and instruction as to how
to save souls for Christ, becomes a colaborer with those who
brought him the light of truth. Thus God is honored and His truth
advanced.
The world will be convinced not so much
by what the pulpit teaches as by what the church lives. The preacher
announces the theory of the gospel, but the practical piety of
the church demonstrates its power.