We have a message from the Lord to bear
to the world, a message that is to be borne in the rich fullness
of the Spirit's power. Let our ministers see the need of seeking
to save the lost. Direct appeals are to be made to the unconverted.
"Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners?"
the Pharisees asked Christ's disciples. And the Saviour responded:
"I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance."
Matthew 9:11, 13. This is the work He has given us. And never
was there greater need of it than at the present time.
God has not given His ministers the work of
setting the churches right. No sooner is this work done, apparently,
than it has to be done over again. Church members that are thus
looked after and labored for become religious weaklings. If nine
tenths of the effort that has been put forth for those who know
the truth had been put forth for those who have never heard the
truth, how much greater would have been the advancement made!
God has withheld His blessings because His people have not worked
in harmony with His directions.
It weakens those who know the truth for
our ministers to expend on them the time and talent that should
be given to the unconverted. In many of our churches in the cities
the minister preaches Sabbath after Sabbath, and Sabbath after
Sabbath the church members come to the house of God with no words
to tell of blessings received because of blessings imparted.
They have not worked during the week to carry out the instruction
given them on the Sabbath. So long as church members
make no effort to give to others the help
given them, great spiritual feebleness must result.
The greatest help that can be given our
people is to teach them to work for God, and to depend on Him,
not on the ministers. Let them learn to work as Christ worked.
Let them join His army of workers and do faithful service for
Him.
There are times when it is fitting for
our ministers to give on the Sabbath, in our churches, short
discourses, full of the life and love of Christ. But the church
members are not to expect a sermon every Sabbath.
Let us remember that we are pilgrims and
strangers on this earth, seeking a better country, even a heavenly.
Let us work with such earnestness, such devotion, that sinners
will be drawn to Christ. Those who have united with the Lord
in the covenant of service are under bonds to unite with Him
in the great, grand work of soul saving. Let church members,
during the week, act their part faithfully, and on the Sabbath
relate their experience. The meeting will then be as meat in
due season, bringing to all present new life and fresh vigor.
When God's people see the great need of working as Christ worked
for the conversion of sinners, the testimonies borne by them
in the Sabbath service will be filled with power. With joy they
will tell of the precious experience they have gained in working
for others.
Our ministers are not to spend their time
laboring for those who have already accepted the truth. With
Christ's love burning in their hearts, they are to go forth to
win sinners to the Saviour. Beside all waters they are
to sow the seeds of truth. Place after place
is to be visited; church after church is to be raised up. Those
who take their stand for the truth are to be organized into churches,
and then the minister is to pass on to other equally important
fields.
Just as soon as a church is organized,
let the minister set the members at work. They will need to be
taught how to labor successfully. Let the minister devote more
of his time to educating than to preaching. Let him teach the
people how to give to others the knowledge they have received.
While the new converts should be taught to ask counsel from those
more experienced in the work, they should also be taught not
to put the minister in the place of God. Ministers are but human
beings, men compassed with infirmities. Christ is the One to
whom we are to look for guidance. "The Word was made flesh,
and dwelt among us, . . . full of grace and truth." "And
of His fullness have all we received, and grace for grace."
John 1:14,16.
The power of the gospel is to come upon
the companies raised up, fitting them for service. Some of the
new converts will be so filled with the power of God that they
will at once enter the work. They will labor so diligently that
they will have neither time nor disposition to weaken the hands
of their brethren by unkind criticism. Their one desire will
be to carry the truth to the regions beyond.
The Lord has presented before me the work
that must be done in our cities. The believers in these cities
can work for God in the neighborhood of their homes. They are
to labor quietly and in humility, carrying with them wherever
they go the atmosphere of heaven. If they keep self out of sight,
pointing always to Christ, the power of their influence will
be felt.
As a worker gives himself unreservedly
to the service of the Lord, he gains an experience that enables
him to labor more and more successfully for the Master. The influence
that drew him to Christ helps him to draw others to Christ. The
work of a public speaker may never be laid upon him, but he is
nonetheless a minister for God, and his work testifies that he
is born of God.
It is not the Lord's purpose that ministers
should be left to do the greatest part of the work of sowing
the seeds of truth. Men who are not called to the ministry are
to be encouraged to labor for the Master according to their several
ability. Hundreds of men and women now idle could do acceptable
service. By carrying the truth into the homes of their friends
and neighbors, they could do a great work for the Master. God
is no respecter of persons. He will use humble, devoted Christians,
even if they have not received so thorough an education as some
others. Let such ones engage in service for Him by doing house-to-house
work. Sitting by the fireside, they can-- if humble, discreet,
and godly--do more to meet the real needs of families than could
an ordained minister.
Why do not believers feel a deeper, more
earnest concern for those who are out of Christ? Why do not two
or three meet together and plead with God for the salvation of
some special one, and then for still another? In our churches
let companies be formed for service. Let different ones unite
in labor as fishers of men. Let them seek to gather souls from
the corruption of the world into the saving purity of Christ's
love.
The formation of small companies as a basis
of Christian effort has been presented to me by One who cannot
err. If there is a large number in the church,
let the members be formed into small companies, to work not only
for the church members, but for unbelievers. If in one place
there are only two or three who know the truth, let them form
themselves into a band of workers. Let them keep their bond of
union unbroken, pressing together in love and unity, encouraging
one another to advance, each gaining courage and strength from
the assistance of the others. Let them reveal Christlike forbearance
and patience, speaking no hasty words, using the talent of speech
to build one another up in the most holy faith. Let them labor
in Christlike love for those outside the fold, forgetting self
in their endeavor to help others. As they work and pray in Christ's
name, their numbers will increase; for the Saviour says: "If
two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they
shall ask, it shall be done for them of My Father which is in
heaven." Matthew 18:19.