God has given me a message for His people.
They must awake, spread their tents, and enlarge their borders.
My brethren and sisters, you have been bought with a price, and
all that you have and are is to be used to the glory of God and
for the good of your fellow men. Christ died on the cross to
save the world from perishing in sin. He asks your co-operation
in this work. You are to be His helping hand. With earnest, unwearying
effort you are to seek to save the lost. Remember that it was
your sins that made the cross necessary. When you accepted Christ
as your Saviour you pledged yourself to unite with Him in bearing
the cross. For life and for death you are bound up with Him,
a part of the great plan of redemption.
The transforming power of Christ's grace
molds the one who gives himself to God's service. Imbued with
the Spirit of the Redeemer, he is ready to deny self, ready to
take up the cross, ready to make any sacrifice for the Master.
No longer can he be indifferent to the souls perishing around
him. He is lifted above self-serving. He
has been created anew in Christ, and self-serving has no place
in his life. He realizes that every part of his being belongs
to Christ, who has redeemed him from the slavery of sin; that
every moment of his future has been bought with the precious
lifeblood of God's only-begotten Son.
Have you so deep an appreciation of the
sacrifice made on Calvary that you are willing to make every
other interest subordinate to the work of saving souls? The same
intensity of desire to save sinners that marked the life of the
Saviour marks the life of His true follower. The Christian has
no desire to live for self. He delights to consecrate all that
he has and is to the Master's service. He is moved by an inexpressible
desire to win souls to Christ. Those who have nothing of this
desire might better be concerned for their own salvation. Let
them pray for the spirit of service.
How can I best glorify Him whose I am by
creation and by redemption? This is to be the question that we
are to ask ourselves. With anxious solicitude the one who is
truly converted seeks to rescue those who are still in Satan's
power. He refuses to do anything that would hinder him in his
work. If he has children he realizes that his work must begin
in his own family. His children are exceedingly precious to him.
Remembering that they are the younger members of the Lord's family,
he strives with all his power to place them where they will stand
on the Lord's side. He has pledged himself to serve, honor, and
obey Christ; and he puts forth patient, untiring effort so to
train his children that they will never be hostile to the Saviour.
On fathers and mothers, God has placed
the responsibility of saving their children from the power of
the enemy. This is their work, a work that they should on
no account neglect. Those parents who have
a living connection with Christ will not rest until they see
their children safe in the fold. They will make this the burden
of their life.
Parents, do not neglect the work waiting
for you in the church in your own family. This is your first
field of missionary effort. The most important work you can do
is to place your children on the Lord's side. When they err,
deal with them tenderly, yet firmly. Let them unite with you
in opposing the evil by which Satan seeks to destroy the souls
and bodies of human beings. Share with them the secret of the
cross, the secret that to you means sanctification, redemption,
and eternal victory. As you take your children with you into
the service of the Lord, what a victory you gain.
If the families around you are opposed
to the truth, strive to lead them to yield to the claims of Christ.
Work patiently, wisely, considerately, winning your way by the
tender ministry of love. Present the truth in such a way that
it will be seen in all its beauty, exerting an influence that
cannot be resisted. Thus the walls of prejudice will be broken
down.
If this work were faithfully done, if fathers and mothers would work for the members of their own families, and then for those around them, uplifting Christ by a godly life, thousands of souls would be saved. When God's people are truly converted, when they realize the obligation resting on them to labor for those within their reach, when they leave no means untried to rescue sinners from the power of the enemy, the reproach will be removed from our churches.
We have now only a little time in which to
prepare for eternity. May the Lord open the closed eyes of His
people and quicken their dulled senses, that they may
realize that the gospel is the power of God
unto salvation to them that believe. May they see the importance
of giving so pure and righteous a representation of God that
the world shall see Him in His beauty. May they be so filled
with the Spirit that dwells in Him that the world will have no
power to divert them from the work of presenting to men the wonderful
possibilities before every soul who receives Christ.
In all lines of our work there is need
of greater earnestness. Time is passing. God's servants are to
be "not slothful in business; fervent in spirit; serving
the Lord." People need the truth, and by earnest, faithful
effort it is to be communicated to them. Souls are to be sought
for, prayed for, labored for. Earnest appeals are to be made.
Fervent prayers are to be offered. Our tame, spiritless petitions
are to be changed into petitions of intense earnestness. God's
word declares: The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man
availeth much."
The world is our field of missionary toil,
and we are to go forth to labor surrounded with the atmosphere
of Gethsemane and Calvary.