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diff --git a/30740.txt b/30740.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..975edfc --- /dev/null +++ b/30740.txt @@ -0,0 +1,4427 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Men of the Bible, by Dwight Moody + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Men of the Bible + +Author: Dwight Moody + +Release Date: December 22, 2009 [EBook #30740] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEN OF THE BIBLE *** + + + + +Produced by Keith G. Richardson from pdf file kindly +provided at www.archive.org + + + + + + + + +MEN OF THE BIBLE + + +BY + + +D. L. Moody. + + +Chicago: New York: Toronto + +Fleming H. Revell Company + +Publishers of Evangelical Literature + + + +_Copyright, 1898, by The Bible Institute Colportage Association._ + + + + +CONTENTS. + + +I. ABRAHAM'S FOUR SURRENDERS + +II. THE CALL OF MOSES + +III. NAAMAN THE SYRIAN + +IV. THE PROPHET NEHEMIAH + +V. HEROD AND JOHN THE BAPTIST + +VI. THE MAN BORN BLIND AND JOSEPH OF ARIMATHEA + +VII. THE PENITENT THIEF + + + +Men of the Bible + + +ABRAHAM'S FOUR SURRENDERS + + +A great many people are afraid of the will of God, and yet I believe +that one of the sweetest lessons that we can learn in the school of +Christ is the surrender of our wills to God, letting Him plan for us +and rule our lives. If I know my own mind, if an angel should come +from the throne of God and tell me that I could have my will done +the rest of my days on earth, and that everything I wished should be +carried out, or that I might refer it back to God, and let God's +will be done in me and through me, I think in an instant I would +say: + +"Let the will of God be done." + +I cannot look into the future. I do not know what is going to happen +to-morrow; in fact, I do not know what may happen before night; so I +cannot choose for myself as well as God can choose for me, and it is +much better to surrender my will to God's will. Abraham found this +out, and I want to call your attention to four surrenders that he +was called to make. I think that they give us a pretty good key to +his life. + + +I + + +In the first place, Abraham was called to give up _his kindred and +his native country_, and to go out, not knowing whither he went. + +While men were busy building up Babylon, God called this man out of +that nation of the Chaldeans. He lived down near the mouth of the +Euphrates, perhaps three hundred miles south of Babylon, when he was +called to go into a land that he perhaps had never heard of before, +and to possess that land. + +In the twelfth chapter of Genesis, the first four verses, we read: + +"Now the Lord had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and +from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I +will shew thee." Now notice the promise: "And I will make of thee a +great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and +thou shalt be a blessing: and I will bless them that bless thee, and +curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the +earth be blessed. So Abram departed, as the Lord had spoken unto +him; and Lot went with him: and Abram was seventy five years old and +when he departed out of Haran." + +It was several years before this that God first told him to leave Ur +of the Chaldees. Then he came to Haran, which is about half-way +between the valley of the Euphrates and the valley of the Jordan. +God had called him into the land of the Canaanite, and + + +HE CAME HALF-WAY, + +and stayed there--we do not know just how long, but probably about +five years. + +Now, I believe that there are a great many Christians who are what +might be called _Haran Christians_. They go to Haran, and there they +stay. They only half obey. They are not out-and-out. How was it that +God got him out of Haran? His father died. The first call was to +leave Ur of the Chaldees and go into Canaan, but instead of going +all the way they stopped half-way, and it was affliction that drove +Abram out of Haran. A great many of us bring afflictions on +ourselves, because we are not out-and-out for the Lord. We do not +obey Him fully. God had plans He wanted to work out through Abram, +and He could not work them out as long as he was there at Haran. +Affliction came, and then we find that he left Haran, and started +for the Promised Land. + +There is just one word there about Lot--"and Lot went with Abram." +That is the key, you might say, to Lot's life. He was a weaker +character than Abram, and he followed his uncle. + +When they got into the land that God had promised to give him, Abram +found it already inhabited by great and warlike nations--not by one +nation, but by a number of nations. What could he do, a solitary +man, in that land? Not only was his faith tested by finding the land +preoccupied by other strong and hostile nations, but he had not been +there a great while before a great famine came upon him. No doubt a +great conflict was going on in his breast, and he said to himself: + +"What does this mean? Here I am, thirteen hundred miles away from my +own land, and surrounded by a warlike people. And not only that, but +a famine has come, and I must get out of this country." + +Now, I don't believe that God sent Abram down to Egypt. I think that +He was only testing him, that he might in his darkness and in his +trouble be + + +DRAWN NEARER TO GOD. + +I believe that many a time trouble and sorrow are permitted to come +to us that we may see the face of God, and be shut up to trust in +Him alone. But Abram went down into Egypt, and there he got into +trouble by denying his wife. That is the blackest spot on Abram's +character. But when we get into Egypt we will always be getting into +trouble. + + +II + + +Abram became rich; but we don't hear of any altar--in fact, we hear +of no altar at Haran, and we hear of no altar in Egypt. When he came +up with Lot out of Egypt, they had great possessions, and they +increased in wealth, and their herds had multiplied, until there was +a strife among their herdsmen. + +Now it is that Abram's character shines out again. He might have +said that he had a right to the best of everything, because he was +the older, and because Lot would probably not have been worth +anything if it had not been for Abram's help. But instead of +standing up for _his rights_, to choose the best of the land, he +surrenders them, and says to the nephew: + +"Take your choice. If you go to the right hand, I will take the +left; or if you prefer the left hand, then I will go to the right." + +Here is where Lot made his mistake. If there was a man under the sun +that needed Abram's counsel, and Abram's prayers, and Abram's +influence, and to have been surrounded by the friends of Abram, it +was Lot. He was just one of those weak characters that + + +NEEDED BOLSTERING UP. + +But his covetous eye looked upon the well-watered plains of the +valley of the Jordan that reached out towards Sodom, and he chose +them. He was influenced by what he saw, He walked by sight, instead +of by faith. I think that is where a great many Christian people +make their mistake--walking by sight, instead of by faith. If he had +stopped to think, Lot might have known that it would be disastrous +to him and his family to go anywhere near Sodom. Abram and Lot must +both have known about the wickedness of those cities on the plains, +and although they were rich, and there was chance of making money, +it was better for Lot to keep his family out of that wicked city. +But his eyes fell upon the well watered plains, and he pitched his +tent towards Sodom, and separated from Abram. + +Now, notice that after Abram had let Lot have his choice, and Lot +had gone off to the plains, for the first time God had Abram alone. +His father had died at Haran, and he had left his brother there. +Now, after his nephew had left him, he moved down to Hebron, and +there built an altar. "Hebron" means _communion_. Here it is that +God came to him and said: + +"Abram, look around as far as your eye can reach--it is all yours. +Look from the place where thou art northward, and southward, and +eastward, and westward: for all the land which thou seest, to thee +will I give it, and to thy seed for ever. And I will make thy seed +as the dust of the earth: so that if a man can number the dust of +the earth, then shall thy seed also be numbered. Arise, walk through +the land in the length of it and in the breadth of it; for I will +give it unto thee." + +"Then Abram removed his tent, and came and dwelt in the plain of +Mamre, which is in Hebron, and built there an altar unto the Lord." + +It is astonishing how far you can see in that country. God took +Moses up on Pisgah and showed him the Promised Land. In Palestine, a +few years ago, I found that on Mount Olivet I could look over and +see the Mediterranean. I could look into the valley of the Jordan, +and see the Dead Sea. And on the plains of Sharon I could look up to +Mount Lebanon, and up at Mount Hermon, away beyond Nazareth. You can +see with the naked eye almost the length and breadth of that +country. So when God said to Abram that he might look to the north, +and that as far as he could see he could have the land; and then +look to the south, with its well-watered plains that Lot coveted, +and to the east and the west, from the sea to the Euphrates--then +God gave His friend Abram a clear title, no conditions whatever, +saying: + +"I will give it all to you." + +Lot chose all he could get, but it was not much. Abram let God +choose for him, and was given all the land. Lot had no security for +his choice, and soon lost all. Abram's right was maintained +undisputed by God the giver. + +Do you know that the children of Israel never had faith enough to +take possession of all that land as far as the Euphrates? If they +had, probably Nebuchadnezzar would never have come and taken them +captives. But that was God's offer; He said to Abram, "Unto your +seed I will give it forever, clear to the valley of the Euphrates." +From that time on God enlarged Abram's tents. He enriched His +promises, and gave him much more that He had promised down there in +the valley of the Euphrates when He first called him out. It is very +interesting to see how God kept + + +ADDING TO THE PROMISE + +for the benefit of His friend Abram. + +Let us go back a moment to Lot, and see what Lot gained by making +that choice. I believe that you can find five thousand Lots to one +Abram to-day. People are constantly walking by sight, lured by the +temptations of men and of the world. Men are very anxious to get +their sons into lucrative positions, although it way be disastrous +to their character; it may ruin them morally and religiously, and in +every other way. The glitter of this world seems to attract them. +Some one has said that Abram was a far-sighted man, and Lot was a +short-sighted man; his eye fell on the land right around him. There +is the one thing that we are quite sure of--he was so short-sighted +that his possessions soon left him. And you will find that these +people who are constantly building for time are disappointed. + +I have no doubt that the men of Sodom said that Lot was + + +A MUCH SHREWDER MAN + +than his uncle Abram, and that if he lived twenty-five years he +would be the richer of the two, and that by coming into Sodom he +could sell his cattle and sheep and goats and whatever else he had +for large sums, and could get a good deal better market than Abram +could back there on the plains of Mamre. + +For awhile Lot did make money very fast, and became a very +successful man. If you had gone into Sodom a little while before +destruction came, you would have found that Lot owned some of the +best corner lots in town, and that Mrs. Lot moved in what they +called the _bon-ton_ society or upper ten; and you would have found +that she was at the theatre two or three nights in the week. If they +had progressive euchre, she could play as well as anybody; and her +daughters could dance as well as any other Sodomites. We find Lot +sitting in the gates, he was getting on amazingly well. He might +have been one of the principal men in the city; Judge Lot, or the +Honorable Lot of Sodom. If there had been a Congress in those days, +they would have run him for a seat in Congress. They might have +elected him + + +MAYOR OF SODOM. + +He was getting on amazingly well; wonderfully prosperous. + +But by and by there comes a war. If you go into Sodom, you must take +Sodom's judgment when it comes, for it is bound to come. The battle +turned against those five cities of the plain and they took Lot and +his wife and all that they had, and one man escaped and ran off to +Hebron and told Abram what had taken place. Abram took his +servants,--three hundred and eighteen of them,--went after these +victorious kings, and soon returned with all the booty and all the +prisoners. + + +III + + +On Abram's way back with the spoils one of the strangest scenes of +history occurs. Whom should he meet but Melchizedek, who brought out +bread and wine; and the priestly king blessed the Father of the +Faithful. After the old king of peace had blest him, he met the King +of Sodom, and the King of Sodom said, "You take the money, and I +will take the people"; but Abram replied: + +"Not a thing will I take, not even the shoe-latchets, lest thou +shouldst say, I have made Abram rich." + +There is another surrender. There was a temptation _to get rich at +the hands of the King of Sodom_. But the King of Salem had blessed +him, and this world did not tempt him. It tempted Lot, and no doubt +Lot thought Abram made a great mistake when he refused to take this +wealth; but Abram would not touch a thing; he spurned it and turned +from it. He had the world under his feet; he was living for another +world. He would not be enriched from such a source. + +Every one of us is met by the prince of this world and the Prince of +Peace. The one tempts us with wealth, pleasure, ambition: but our +Prince and Priest is ready to succor and strengthen us in the hour +of temptation. + +A friend of mine told me some years ago that his wife was very fond +of painting, but that for a long time he never could see any beauty +in her paintings; they all looked like a daub to him. One day his +eyes troubled him and he went to see an oculist. The man looked in +amazement at him and said: + +"You have what we call a short eye and a long eye, and that makes +everything a blur." + +He gave him some glasses that just fitted him, and then he could see +clearly. Then, he said, he understood why it was that his wife was +so carried away with art, and he built an art gallery, and filled it +full of beautiful things; because everything looked so beautiful +after he had had his eyes straightened out. + +Now there are lots of people that have + + +A LONG EYE AND A SHORT EYE, + +and they make miserable work of their Christian life. They keep one +eye on the eternal city and the other eye on the well-watered plains +of Sodom. That was the way it was with Lot: he had a short eye and a +long eye. It would be pretty hard work to believe that Lot was saved +if it were not for the New Testament. But there we read that "Lot's +righteous soul was vexed,"--so he had a righteous soul, but he had a +stormy time. He didn't have peace and joy and victory like Abram. + +After Abram had given up the wealth of Sodom that was offered him, +then God came and enlarged his borders again--enlarged the promise. +God said: + +"I will be your exceeding great reward; I will protect you." + +Abram might have thought that these kings that he had defeated might +get other kings and other armies to come, and he might have thought +of himself as a solitary man, with only three hundred and eighteen +men, so that he might have feared lest he be swept from the face of +the earth. But the Lord came and said: + +"Abram, fear not." + +That is the first time those oft-repeated words, "fear not," occur +in the Bible. + +"Fear not, for I will be your shield and your reward." + +I would rather have that promise than all the armies of earth and +all the navies of the world to protect me--to have the God of heaven +for my Protector! God was teaching Abram that He was to be his +Friend and his Shield, if he would surrender himself wholly to His +keeping, and trust in His goodness. That is what we want--to +surrender ourselves up to God, fully and wholly. + +In Colorado the superintendent of some works told me of a miner that +was promoted, who came to the superintendent, and said: + +"There is a man that has seven children, and I have only three, and +he is having a hard struggle. Don't promote me, but promote him." + +I know of nothing that speaks louder for Christ and Christianity +than to see a man or woman giving up what they call their rights for +others, and "in honor preferring one another." + +We find that Abram was constantly surrendering his own selfish +interests and trusting to God. What was the result? Of all the men +that ever lived he is the most renowned. He never did anything the +world would call great. The largest army he ever mustered was three +hundred and eighteen men. How Alexander would have sneered at such +an army as that! How Caesar would have looked down on such an army! +How Napoleon would have curled his lip as he thought of Abram with +an army of three hundred and eighteen! We are not told that he was a +great astronomer; we are not told that he was a great scientist; we +are not told that he was a great statesman, or anything the world +calls great; but there was one thing he could do--he could live an +unselfish life, and in honor could waive his rights, and in that way +he became the friend of God; in that way he has become immortal. +There is + + +NO NAME IN HISTORY + +so well known as the name of Abram. Even Christ is not more widely +known, for the Mohammedans, the Persians, and the Egyptians make a +great deal of Abram. His name has been for centuries and centuries +favorably known in Damascus. God promised him that great men, and +warriors, and kings, and emperors, should spring from his loins. Was +there ever a nation that has turned out such men? Think of Moses, +and Joseph, and Joshua, and Caleb, and Samuel, and David, and +Solomon, and Elisha. Think of Elijah, and Daniel, and Isaiah, and +all the other wonderful Bible characters that have sprung from this +man! Then think of Peter, of James, and John, and Paul, and John the +Baptist, a mighty army. No man can number the multitude of wonderful +men that have sprung from this one man called out of the land of the +Chaldeans, unknown and an idolater, probably, when God called him; +and yet how literally God has fulfiled His promise that through him +He would bless all the nations of the earth. All because he +surrendered himself fully and wholly to let God bless him. + + +IV + + +The last surrender is perhaps the most touching and the hardest of +all to understand. Perhaps he could not have borne it until the +evening of life. God had been taking him along, step by step, until +now he had reached a place where he had learned to obey fully +whatever God told him to do. I believe the world has yet to see what +God will do with the man who is perfectly surrendered. Next to God's +own Son, Abraham was perhaps the man who came nearest to this +standard. + + +FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS + +Abraham had been in the Promised Land without the promised heir. God +had promised that He would bless all the nations of the earth +through him, and yet He did not give him a son. Abraham's faith +almost staggered a number of times. Ishmael was born, but God set +aside the son of the bondwoman, for he was not to be the ancestor of +the Son of God. God was setting Abram apart simply that He might +prepare the way for His own Son, and now, at last, a messenger comes +down from heaven to Hebron, and tells Abraham in his old age that he +should have a son. + +It seemed too good to be true. He had hard work to believe it; but +at the appointed time Isaac was born into that family. I don't +believe there was ever a child born into the world that caused so +much joy in the home as in Abraham's heart and home. How Abraham and +that old mother, Sarah, must have doted on that child! How their +eyes feasted on him! + +But just when the lad was growing up into manhood Abraham received +another very strange command, and there was another surrender--_his +only son_. Perhaps he was making an idol of that boy, and thought +more of him than he did of the God that gave him. There must be no +idol in the heart if we are going to do the will of God on earth. + +I can imagine that one night the old patriarch retired worn out and +weary. The boy had gone fast to sleep, when suddenly a heavenly +messenger came and told him that he must take that boy off on to a +mountain that God was to show him, and offer him up as a sacrifice. +No more sleep that night! If you had looked into that tent the next +morning I can imagine that you would have seen the servants flying +round and making preparations for the master's taking a long +journey. He perhaps keeps the secret locked up in his heart, and he +doesn't tell even Sarah or Isaac. He doesn't tell the servants, even +the faithful servant Eliezer, what is to take place. About nine +o'clock you might have seen those four men--Abraham, Isaac and the +two young men with them--start off on the long journey. Once in a +while Abraham turns his head aside and wipes away the tear. He +doesn't want Isaac to see what a terrible struggle is going on +within. It is a hard battle to give up his will and to surrender +that boy, the idol of his life. Oh, how he loved him! + +I can imagine the first night. The boy soon falls asleep, tired and +weary with the hot day's journey, but the old man doesn't sleep. I +can see him look into the face of the innocent boy, and say: + +"Soon my boy will be gone, and I will be returning without him." + +Perhaps most of the night his voice could have been heard in prayer, +as he cries to God to help him; and as God had helped him in the +past so God was helping him that night. + +The next day they journeyed on, and again a terrible conflict goes +on. Again he brushes away the tear. Perhaps Isaac sees it, and says: + +"Father is going away to meet his God, and the angels may come down +and talk with him as at Hebron. That is what he is so agitated +about." + +The second night comes, and the old man looks into that face every +hour of the night. He sleeps a little, but not much, and the next +morning at family worship he breaks down. He cannot finish his +prayer. + +They journey on that day--it is a long day--and the old patriarch +say: "This is the last day I am to have my boy with me. To-morrow I +must offer him up; to-morrow I shall be without the son of my +bosom." + +The third night comes, and what a night it must have been! I can +imagine he didn't eat or sleep that night. Nothing is going to break +his fast, and every hour of the night he goes to look into the face +of that boy, and once in a while he bends over and kisses him, and +he says: + +"O Isaac, how can I give thee up?" + +Morning breaks. What a morning it must have been for that father! He +doesn't eat; he tries to pray, but his voice falters. After +breakfast they start on their journey again. He has not gone a great +way before he lifts up his eyes, and yonder is Mount Moriah. His +heart begins to beat quickly. He says to the two young men: + +"You stay here, and I will go yonder with my son." + +Then, as father and son went up Mount Moriah, with the wood, and the +fire, and the knife, the boy turns suddenly to the father, and says: + +"Father, where is the lamb? We haven't any offering, father." + +It was a common thing for Isaac to see his father offer up a victim, +but there is no lamb now. + +Did you ever think + + +HOW PROPHETIC THAT ANSWER WAS + +when Abraham turned and said to the son, "God will provide Himself a +sacrifice?" I don't know that Abraham understood the full meaning of +it, but a few hundred years after God did provide a sacrifice right +there. Mount Moriah and Mount Calvary are close together, and God's +Son was provided as a sacrifice for the world. + +On Mount Moriah this father and son begin to roll up the stones, and +together they build the altar; then they lay on the wood and +everything is ready for the victim. Isaac looks around to see where +the lamb is and then the father can keep it from the son no longer, +and he says: + +"My boy, sit down here close to the altar, and let me tell you +something." + +Then perhaps that old, white-haired patriarch puts his arm around +the lad, and tells how God came to him in the land of the Chaldeans, +and the story of his whole life, and how, by one promise after +another, God had kept enlarging the promised blessings, and that He +would bless all the nations of the earth through him. Isaac was to +be the heir. But he says: + +"My son, the last night I was at home God came to me in the hours of +the night and told me to bring you here and offer you up as a +sacrifice. I don't understand what it means, but I can tell you one +thing: it is much harder for me to offer you up than it would be for +me to be sacrificed myself." + +There was a time when I used to think more of the love of Jesus +Christ than of God the Father. I used to think of God as a stern +judge on the throne, from whose wrath Jesus Christ had saved me. It +seems to me now I could not have + + +A FALSER IDEA OF GOD + +than that. Since I have become a father I have made this discovery: +that it takes more love and self-sacrifice for the father to give up +the son than it does for the son to die. Is a father on earth a true +father that would not rather suffer than to see his child suffer? Do +you think that it did not cost God something to redeem this world? +It cost God the most precious possession He ever had. When God gave +His Son, He gave all, and yet He gave Him freely for you and me. + +I can imagine that Abraham talks to Isaac and tells him how hard it +is to offer him up. "But God has commanded it," he says, "and I +surrender my will to God's will. I don't understand it, but I +believe that God will be able to raise you up, and maybe He will." + +They fell on their faces, and prayed together. After prayer I can +see that old father take his boy to his bosom, and embrace him for +the last time. He kisses and kisses him. Then he takes those hands +that are so innocent, and binds them, and he binds the feet, and he +ties him up, and lays him on the altar, and gives him a last kiss. +Then he takes the knife, and raises his hand. No sooner is the hand +lifted than a voice calls from heaven: + +"Abraham, Abraham, spare thy son!" + +You remember that Christ said, "Abraham saw my day, and was glad." I +have an idea that God then and there just + + +LIFTED THE CURTAIN OF TIME + +for Abraham. He looked down into the future, saw God's Son coming up +Calvary, bearing his sins and the sins of all posterity. God gave +him that secret, and told him how His Son was to come into the world +and take away his sins. + +Now, my friends, notice: whenever God has been calling me to higher +service, there has always been a conflict with my will. I have +fought against it, but God's will has been done instead of mine. +When I came to Jesus Christ, I had a terrible battle to surrender my +will, and to take God's will. When I gave up business, I had another +battle for three months; I fought against it. It was a terrible +battle. But oh! how many times I have thanked God that I gave up my +will and took God's will. Then there was another time when God was +calling me into higher service, to go out and preach the gospel all +over the land, instead of staying in Chicago. I fought against it +for months; but the best thing I ever did was when I surrendered my +will, and let the will of God be done in me. Because Abraham obeyed +God and held back not even his only child, God enlarged his promises +once again: + +"And the angel of the Lord called unto Abraham out of heaven the +second time, and said, By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, for +because thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, +thine only son: that in blessing I will bless thee, and in +multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars of the heaven, and +as the sand which is upon the sea shore; and thy seed shall possess +the gate of his enemies; and in thy seed shall all the nations of +the earth be blessed; because thou hast obeyed my voice." + +If you take my advice, you will have no will other than God's will. +Make a full and complete surrender, and the sweet messages of heaven +will come to you. God will whisper into your soul + + +THE SECRETS OF HEAVEN. + +After Abraham did what God told him, then it was that God told His +friend all about His Son. If we make a full surrender, God will give +us something better than we have ever known before. We will get a +new vision of Jesus Christ, and will thank God not only in this life +but in the life to come. May God help each and every one of us to +make a full and complete and unconditional surrender to God, fully +and wholly, now and forever. + + + +THE CALL OF MOSES + + +There is a great deal more room given in Scripture to the _call_ of +men to God's work than there is to their _end_. For instance, we +don't know where Isaiah died, or how he died, but we know a great +deal about the call God gave him, when he saw God on high and lifted +up on His throne. I suppose that it is true to-day that hundreds of +young men and women who are listening for a call and really want to +know what their life's mission is, perhaps find it the greatest +problem they ever had. Some don't know just what profession or work +to take up, and so I should like to take the call of Moses, and see +if we cannot draw some lessons from it. + +You remember when God met Moses at the burning bush and called him +to do as great a work as any man has ever been called to in this +world, that + + +HE THOUGHT THE LORD HAD MADE A MISTAKE, + +that he was not the man. He said, "Who am I?" He was very small in +his own estimation. Forty years before he had started out as a good +many others have started. He thought he was pretty well equipped for +service. He had been in the schools of the Egyptians, he had been in +the palaces of Egypt, he had moved in the _bon ton_ society. He had +had all the advantages any man could have when he started out, +undoubtedly, without calling on the God of Abraham for wisdom and +guidance, yet he broke down. + +How many men have started out in some profession and made a failure +of it! They haven't heard the voice of God, they haven't waited upon +God for instruction. + +I suppose Moses thought that the children of Israel would be greatly +honored to know that a prince of the realm was going to take up +their cause, but you remember how he lost his temper and killed the +Egyptian, and next day, when he interfered in a quarrel between two +Hebrews, they wanted to know who had made him judge and ruler over +them, and he had to flee into the desert, and was there for forty +years hidden away. He killed the Egyptian and lost his influence +thereby. Murder for liberty; wrong for right; it was a poor way to +reform abuses, and Moses needed training. + +It was a long time for God to keep him in His school, a long time +for a man to wait in the prime of his life, from forty to eighty. +Moses had been brought us with all the luxuries that Egypt could +give him, and now he was a shepherd, and in the sight of the +Egyptians a shepherd was an abomination. I have an idea that Moses +started out with a great deal bigger head than heart. I believe that +is the reason so many fail; they have + + +BIG HEADS AND LITTLE HEARTS. + +If a man has a shriveled-up heart and a big head he is a monster. +Perhaps Moses looked down on the Hebrews. There are many people who +start out with the idea that they are great and other people are +small, and they are going to bring them up on the high level with +themselves. God never yet used a man of that stamp. Perhaps Moses +was a slow scholar in God's school, and so He had to keep him there +for forty years. + +But now he is ready; he is just the man God wants, and God calls +him. Moses said, "Who am I?" He was very small in his own eyes--just +small enough so that God could use him. If you had asked the +Egyptians who he was, they would have said he was + + +THE BIGGEST FOOL IN THE WORLD. + +"Why," they would say, "look at the opportunity that man had! He +might have been commander of the Egyptian army, he might have been +on the throne, swaying the sceptre over the whole world, if he +hadn't identified himself with those poor, miserable Hebrews! Think +what an opportunity he has lost, and what a privilege he has thrown +away!" + +He had dropped out of the public mind for forty years, and they +didn't know what had become of him, but God had His eye upon him. He +was the very man of all others that God wanted, and when he met God +with that question, "Who am I?" it didn't matter who he was but who +his God was. When men learn the lesson that they are nothing and God +is everything, then there is not a position in which God cannot use +them. It was not Moses who accomplished that great work of +redemption, for he was only the instrument in God's hand. God could +have spoken to Pharaoh without Moses. He could have spoken in a +voice of thunder, and broken the heart of Pharaoh with one speech, +if He had wanted to, but He condescended to take up a human agent, +and to use him. He could have sent Gabriel down, but he knew that +Moses was the man wanted above all others, so He called him. God +uses men to speak to men: He works through mediators. He could have +accomplished the exodus of the children of Israel in a flash, but +instead He chose to send a lonely and despised shepherd to work out +His purpose through pain and disappointment. That was God's way in +the Old Testament, and also in the New. He sent His own Son in the +likeness of sinful flesh to be the mediator between God and man. + +Moses went on making excuses and said, "When I go down there, who +shall I say has sent me?" I suppose he remembered how he went before +he was sent that other time, and he was afraid of a failure again. A +man who has made a failure once is always afraid he will make +another. He loses confidence in himself. It is a good thing to lose +confidence in ourselves so as to gain confidence in God. + +The Lord said, "Say unto them, 'I AM hath sent me.'" + +Some one has said that God gave him + + +A BLANK CHECK, + +and all he had to do was to fill it out from that time on. When he +wanted to bring water out of the rock, all he had to do was to fill +out the check; when he wanted bread, all he had to do was to fill +out the check and the bread came; he had a rich banker. God had +taken him into partnership with Himself. God had made him His heir, +and all he had to do was to look up to Him, and he got all he +wanted. + +And yet he seemed to draw back, and began to make another excuse, +and said: + +"They will not believe me." + +He was afraid of the Israelites as well as of Pharaoh: he knew how +hard it is to get even your friends to believe in you. + +Now, if God has sent you and me with a message it is not for us to +say whether others will believe it or not. _We_ cannot make men +believe. If I have been sent by God to make men believe, He will +give me power to make them believe. Jesus Christ didn't have that +power; it is the work of the Holy Ghost; we cannot persuade men and +overcome skepticism and infidelity unless we are baptised with the +Holy Ghost and with power. + +God told Moses that they _would_ believe him, that he would succeed, +and bring the children of Israel out of bondage. But Moses seemed to +distrust even the God who had spoken to him. + +Then the Lord said, "What is that in thy hand?" + +He had a rod or staff, a sort of shepherd's crook, which he had cut +haphazard when he had wanted something that would serve him in the +desert. + +"It is only a rod." + +"With that you shall deliver the children of Israel; with that rod +you shall make Israel believe that I am with you." + +When God Almighty linked Himself to that rod, it was worth more than +all the armies the world had ever seen. Look and see how that rod +did its work. It brought up the plagues of flies, and the thunder +storm, and turned the water into blood. It was not Moses, however, +nor Moses' rod that did the work, but it was the God of the rod, the +God of Moses. As long as God was with him, he could not fail. + +Sometimes it looks as if God's servants fail. When Herod beheaded +John the Baptist, it looked as if John's mission was a failure. But +was it? The voice that rang through the valley of the Jordan rings +through the whole world to-day. You can hear its echo upon the +mountains and the valleys yet, "I must decrease, but He must +increase." He held up Jesus Christ and introduced Him to the world, +and Herod had not power to behead him until his life work had been +accomplished. Stephen never preached but one sermon that we know of, +and that was before the Sanhedrim; but how that sermon has been +preached again and again all over the world! Out of his death +probably came Paul, the greatest preacher the world has seen since +Christ left this earth. If a man is sent by Jehovah, there is no +such thing as failure. Was Christ's life a failure? See how His +parables are going through the earth to-day. It looked as if the +apostles had made a failure, but see how much has been accomplished. +If you read the book of Acts, you will see that every seeming +failure in Acts was turned into a great victory. Moses wasn't going +to fail, although Pharaoh said with contempt, "Who is God that I +should obey Him?" He found out who God was. He found out that there +was a God. + +But Moses made another excuse, and said, "I am slow of speech, slow +of tongue." He said he was + + +NOT AN ORATOR. + +My friends, we have too many orators. I am tired and sick of your +"silver-tongued orators." I used to mourn because I couldn't be an +orator. I thought, Oh, if I could only have the gift of speech like +some men! I have heard men with a smooth flow of language take the +audience captive, but they came and they went, their voice was like +the air, there wasn't any _power_ back of it; they trusted in their +eloquence and their fine speeches. That is what Paul was thinking of +when he wrote to the Corinthians:--"My speech and my preaching was +not with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the +Spirit and of power: that your faith should not stand in the wisdom +of men, but in the power of God." + +Take a witness in court and let him try his oratorical powers in the +witness-box, and see now quickly the judge will rule him out. It is +the man who tells the plain, simple truth that has the most +influence with the jury. + +Suppose that Moses had prepared a speech for Pharaoh, and had got +his hair all smoothly brushed, and had stood before the looking +-glass or had gone to an elocutionist to be taught how to make an +oratorical speech and how to make gestures. Suppose that he had +buttoned his coat, put one hand in his chest, had struck an attitude +and begun: + +"The God of our fathers, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, has +commanded me to come into the presence of the noble King of Egypt." + +I think they would have taken his head right off! They had Egyptians +who could be as eloquent as Moses. It was not eloquence they wanted. +When you see a man in the pulpit trying to show off his eloquence he +is making a fool of himself and trying to make a fool of the people. +Moses was slow of speech, but he had a message, and what God wanted +was to have him deliver the message. But he insisted upon having an +excuse. He didn't want to go; instead of being eager to act as +heaven's messenger, to be God's errand boy, he wanted to excuse +himself. The Lord humored him and gave him an interpreter, gave him +Aaron. + +Now, if there is a stupid thing in the world, it is to talk through +an interpreter. I tried it once in Paris. I got up into a little box +of a pulpit with the interpreter--there was hardly room enough for +one. I said a sentence while he leaned away over to one side, and +then I leaned over while he repeated it in French. Can you conceive +of a more stupid thing than Moses going before Pharaoh and speaking +through Aaron! + +But this slow-of-speech man became eloquent. Talk about Gladstone's +power to speak! Here is a man one hundred and twenty years old, and +he waxed eloquent, as we see in Deuteronomy xxxii:1-4: + + Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; + And hear, O earth, the words of my mouth. + My doctrine shall drop as the rain, + My speech shall distil as the dew, + As the small rain upon the tender herb, + And as the showers upon the grass: + Because I will publish the name of the Lord: + Ascribe ye greatness unto our God. + He is the Rock, His work is perfect: + For all His ways are judgment: + A God of truth and without iniquity, + Just and right is He. + +He turned out to be one of the most eloquent men the world has ever +seen. If God sends men and they deliver His message He will be with +their mouth. If God has given you a message, go and give it to the +people as God has given it to you. It is a stupid thing for a man to +try to be eloquent. Make + + +YOUR MESSAGE, AND NOT YOURSELF, + +the most prominent thing. Don't be self-conscious Set your heart on +what God has given you to do, and don't be so foolish as to let your +own difficulties or your own abilities stand in the way. It is said +that people would go to hear Cicero and would come away and say, +"Did you ever hear anything like it? wasn't it sublime? wasn't it +grand?" But they would go and hear Demosthenes, and he would fire +them so with the subject that they would want to go and fight at +once. They forgot all about Demosthenes, but were stirred by his +message; that was the difference between the two men. + +Next Moses said: "O my Lord, send, I pray thee, by the hand of him +whom thou wilt send." + +Did you ever stop to think what Moses would have lost if God had +taken him at his word, and said: + +"Very well, Moses; you may stay here in the desert, and I will send +Aaron, or Joshua, or Caleb!" + +Don't seek to be excused if God calls you to some service. What +would the twelve disciples have lost if they had declined the call +of Jesus! I have always pitied those other disciples of whom we read +that they went back, and walked no more with Jesus. Think what Orpah +missed and what Ruth gained by cleaving to Naomi's God! Her story +has been + + +TOLD THESE THREE THOUSAND YEARS. + +Father, mother, sisters, brothers, the grave of her husband--she +turned her back on them all. Ruth, come back, and tell us if you +regret your choice! No: her name shines one of the brightest among +all the women that have ever lived. The Messiah was one of her +descendants. + +Moses, you come back and tell us if you were afterwards sorry that +God had called you? I think that when he stood in glorified body on +the Mount of Transfiguration with Jesus and Elijah, he did not +regret it. + +My dear friends, God is not confined to any one messenger. We are +told that He can raise up children out of stones. Some one has said +that there are three classes of people, the "wills," the "won'ts," +and the "can'ts"; the first accomplish everything, the second oppose +everything, and the third fail in everything. If God calls you, +consider it a great honor. Consider it a great privilege to have +partnership with Him in anything. Do it cheerfully, gladly. Do it +with all your heart, and He will bless you. Don't let false modesty +or insincerity, self-interest, or any personal consideration turn +you aside from the path of duty and sacrifice. If we listen for +God's voice, we shall hear the call; and if He calls and sends us, +there will be no such thing as failure, but success all along the +line. Moses had glorious success because he went forward and did +what God called him to do. + + + +NAAMAN THE SYRIAN + + +I wish to call your attention to one who was a great man in his own +country, and very honorable; one whom the king delighted to honor. +He stood high in position; he was captain of the host of the King of +Syria; but he was a leper, and that threw a blight over his whole +life. As Bishop Hall quaintly puts it, "The meanest slave in Syria +would not have changed skins with him." + +Now you cannot have a better type of a sinner than Naaman was. I +don't care who or what he is, or what position he holds--all men +alike have sinned, and all have to bear the same burden of death. +"All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God." All men must +stand in judgment before God. What a gloom that throws over our +whole life! + +"_But he was a leper_." There was + + +NO PHYSICIAN + +who could help him in Syria. None of the eminent doctors in Damascus +could do him any good. If he was to get rid of the leprosy, the +power must come from on high. It must be some one unknown to Naaman, +for he did not know God. + +But I will tell you what they had in Syria--they had one of God's +children there, and she was a little girl, a simple captive maid, +who waited on Mrs. Naaman. Naaman knew nothing about this little +Israelite, though she was one of his household. + +I can imagine that one day, as she was waiting on the general's +wife, she noticed her weeping. Her heart was breaking because of the +dark cloud that rested over her home. So she told her mistress that +there was a prophet in her country that could cure her master of his +leprosy. "Would to God," she said, "my lord were with the prophet in +Samaria! for he would recover him of his leprosy." + +There's faith for you! + +She boasted of God that He would do more for this heathen than He +had done for any in Israel; and + + +GOD HONORED HER FAITH. + +"What do you say? A prophet in Israel that can cure leprosy?" + +"Yes." + +"Why, did you ever know any one that was cured?" + +"No." + +"Well, then, what makes you think there is a prophet that can cure +leprosy?" + +"Oh, that isn't anything to what Elisha can do. There was a little +child that lived near us that died, and he raised him to life. He +has done many wonderful things." + +She must have had a reputation for truthfulness. If she hadn't, her +testimony would not have been taken. + +Some one told the general of it, and he made it known to the king. +Now, Naaman stood high in the king's favor, for he had recently won +a great victory. He stood near the throne. So the king said: + +"You had better go down to Samaria, and see if there is anything in +it. I will give you letters of introduction to the King of Israel." + +Yes, he would give Naaman letters of introduction to the king. +That's just man's idea. The notion was, that if anybody could help +him it was the king, and that the king had power both with God and +man. Oh, my friends, it is a good deal better to know a man that +knows God! A man acquainted with God has more power than any earthly +potentate. Gold can't do everything. + +Away goes Naaman down to Samaria with his kingly introduction. What +a stir it must have made when the commander of the Syrian army drove +up! He has brought with him a lot of gold and silver. That is man's +idea again; he is going to pay for a great doctor, and he took about +five hundred thousand dollars to pay for the doctor's bill. There +are a good many men who would willingly pay that sum if with it they +could buy the favor of God, and get rid of the curse of sin. Yes, if +money could do it, + + +HOW MANY WOULD BUY SALVATION! + +But, thank God, it is not in the market for sale. You must buy it at +God's price, and that is "without money and without price." Naaman +found that out. + +My dear friends, did you ever ask yourselves which is the worse--the +leprosy of sin, or the leprosy of the body? For my own part, I would +a thousand times sooner have the leprosy of the body eating into my +eyes, and feet, and arms! I would rather be loathsome in the sight +of my fellow-men than die with the leprosy of sin in my soul, and be +banished from God forever! The leprosy of the body is bad, but the +leprosy of sin is a thousand times worse. It has cast angels out of +heaven. It has ruined the best and strongest men that ever lived in +the world. Oh, how it has pulled men down! The leprosy of the body +could not do that. + +There is one thing about Naaman that I like specially, and that is +his earnestness of purpose. He was + + +THOROUGHLY IN EARNEST. + +He was quite willing to go one hundred and fifty miles, and to take +the advice of this little maid. A good many people say: + +"Oh, I don't like such and such a minister; I should like to know +where he comes from, and what he has done, and whether any bishop +has laid his hands on his head." + +My dear friends, never mind the minister; it is the message you +want. If some one were to send me a telegraph message, and the news +were important, I shouldn't stop to ask about the messenger who +brought it. I should want to read the news. I should look at the +message, and not at the boy who brought it. + +And so it is with God's message. The good news is everything, the +minister nothing. The Syrians looked down with contempt on the +Israelites, and yet this great man was willing to take the good news +at the hands of this little maiden, and listened to the words that +fell from her lips. If I got lost in New York, I should be willing +to ask anybody which way to go, even if it were only a shoeblack; +and, in point of fact, a boy's word in such a case is often better +than a man's. It is the way I want, not the person who directs me. + +But there was one drawback in Naaman's case. Though he was willing +to take the advice of the little girl, he was not willing to take +the remedy. The stumbling-block of pride stood in his way. The +remedy the prophet offered him was a terrible blow to his pride. I +have no doubt he expected a grand reception from the King of Israel, +to whom he brought letters of introduction. He had been victorious +on many a field of battle, and held high rank in the army; perhaps +we may call him Major-General Naaman of Syria, or he might have been +higher in rank even than that; and bearing with him kingly +credentials, he expected no doubt a distinguished reception. But +instead of the king rushing out to meet him, he, when he heard of +Naaman's arrival and his object, simply rent his mantle, and said: + +"Am I God, to kill and to make alive, that this man doth send unto +me to recover a man of his leprosy? Wherefore consider, I pray you, +and see how he seeketh a quarrel against me." + +Elisha heard of the king's trouble, and sent him a message, saying: + +"Wherefore hast thou rent thy clothes? Let him come now to me, and +he shall know that there is a prophet in Israel." + +I can imagine Naaman's pride reasoning thus: "Surely, the prophet +will feel very much exalted and flattered that I, the great Syrian +general, should come and call upon him." + +And so, probably, full of those proud thoughts, he drives up to the +prophet's humble dwelling with his chariot and his splendid retinue. +Yes, Naaman drove up in grand style to the prophet's abode, and as +nobody seemed to be coming out to greet him, he sent in his message: + +"Tell the prophet that Major-General Naaman of Syria has arrived, +and wishes to see him." + +Elisha takes it very coolly. He does not come out to see him, but as +soon as he learns his errand he sends his servant to tell him to dip +seven times in the river Jordan, and he shall be clean. + +That was a terrible blow to his pride. I can imagine him saying to +his servant: + +"What did you say? Did I understand you aright? Dip seven times in +the Jordan! Why, we call the river Jordan a _ditch_ in our country." + +But the only answer he got was, "The prophet says, Go and dip seven +times in the Jordan, and thy flesh shall become like the flesh of a +little child." + +I can fancy Naaman's indignation as he asks, "Are not Abana and +Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? +May I not wash in them and be clean? Haven't I bathed myself +hundreds of times, and has it helped me? Can water wash away +leprosy?" + +So he turned and went away in a rage. + +It isn't a bad sign when a man gets mad if you tell him the truth. +Some people are afraid of getting other people mad. I have known +wives afraid to talk to their husbands, afraid of getting them mad. +I have known mothers who were afraid to talk to their sons because +they were + + +AFRAID THEY WOULD GET MAD. + +Don't be afraid of getting them mad, if it is the truth that makes +them mad. If it is our foolishness that makes them mad, then we have +got reason to mourn over it. If it is the truth, God sent it, and it +is a good deal better to have a man get mad than it is to have him +go to sleep. I think the trouble with a great many nowadays is that +they are sound asleep, and it is a good deal better to rouse them +even if they do wake up mad. + +The fact was, the Jordan never had any great reputation as a river. +It flowed into the Dead Sea, and that sea never had a harbor to it, +and its banks were not half so beautiful as those of the rivers of +Damascus. Damascus was one of the most beautiful cities in the +world. It is said that when Mahomet beheld it he turned his head +aside for fear it should divert his thoughts from heaven. + +Naaman turned away in a rage. "Ah," he said, "here am I, a great +conqueror, a successful general on the battlefield, holding the very +highest rank in the army, and yet this prophet does not even come +out to meet me; he simply sends a message. Why, I thought he would +surely come out to me, and stand and call on the name of the Lord +his God, and strike his hand over the place and recover the leper." + +There it is. I hardly ever knew a man yet who, when talked to about +his sins, didn't say: + +"Yes, but I _thought_ so and so." + +"Mr. Moody," they say, "I will tell you what _I think;_ I will tell +you _my opinion_." + +In the 55th chapter of Isaiah it says that God's thoughts are not +our thoughts, nor His ways our ways. And so it was with Naaman. In +the first place, he thought a good big doctor's fee would do it all, +and settle everything up. And besides that there was another thing +he thought; he thought going to the king with his letters of +introduction would do it. Yes, those were Naaman's first thoughts. +_I thought_. Exactly so. He turned away in rage and disappointment. +He thought the prophet would have come out to him very humble and +very subservient, and + + +BID HIM DO SOME GREAT THINGS. + +Instead of that, Elisha, who was perhaps busy writing, did not even +come to the door or the window. He merely sent out the message: + +"Tell him to dip seven times in the Jordan." + +And away went Naaman, saying, _I thought, I thought, I thought_. + +I have heard that tale so often that I am tired of it. Give it up, +and take God's words, God's thoughts, God's ways. I never yet knew a +man converted just in the time and manner he expected to be. I have +heard people say, "Well, if ever I am converted, it won't be in a +Methodist church; you won't catch me there." I never knew a man say +that but, at last, if converted at all, it was in a Methodist +church. + +In Scotland a man was converted at one of our meetings--an employer. +He was very anxious that all his employees should be reached, and he +used to send them one by one to the meetings. But there was one man +that wouldn't come. We are all more or less troubled with +stubbornness; and the moment this man found that his employer wanted +him to go to the meetings he made up his mind he wouldn't go. If he +was going to be converted, he said, he was going to be converted by +some ordained minister; he was not going to any meeting that was +conducted by Americans that were not ordained. He believed in +conversion, but he was going to be + + +CONVERTED THE REGULAR WAY. + +He believed in the regular Presbyterian Church of Scotland, and that +was the place for him to be converted. + +The employer tried every way he could to get him to attend the +meetings, but he wouldn't come. + +After we left that town and went away up to Inverness, the employer +had some business up there, and he sent this employee to attend to +it in the hope that he would attend some of our meetings. + +One night as I was preaching on the banks of a river I happened to +take this for my text: "I thought; I thought." I was trying to take +men's thoughts up and to show the difference between their thoughts +and God's thoughts. This man happened to be walking along the banks +of the river. He saw a great crowd, and heard some one talking, and +he wondered to himself what that man was talking about. He didn't +know who was there, so he drew up to the crowd, and listened. He +heard the sermon, and became convicted and converted right there. +Then he inquired who was the preacher, and he found out it was the +very man that he said he would not hear--the man he disliked. The +very man he had been talking against was the very man God used to +convert him. + +Whilst Naaman was thus wavering in his mind, and thinking on what +was best to be done, one of his servants drew near and made a very +sensible remark: + +"My lord, if the prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldest +thou not have done it? How much rather then, when he saith to thee, +Wash, and be clean?" + +There is a great deal of truth in that. + +If Elisha had told him to go back to Syria on his hands and knees, +one hundred and fifty miles, he would have done it and thought it +was all right. If he had told him to go into some cave and stay +there a year or two, he would have done it and thought it was all +right. If he had told him that it was necessary to have some +surgical operation performed, and that he had to go through all the +torture incident to it, that would have suited him. Men like to have +something to do about their salvation; they don't like to give up +the idea that they can't do anything; that God must do it all. If +you tell them to take bitter herbs every morning and every night for +the next five years, they think that's all right, and if he had told +Naaman to do that he would have done it. But to tell him merely to +dip in the river Jordan seven times, why, it seemed absurd on the +face of it! But this servant suggested to him that he had better go +down to the Jordan and try the remedy, as it was + + +A VERY SIMPLE ONE. + +Now, don't you see yourselves there? How many men there are who are +waiting for some great thing; waiting for some sudden feeling to +come stealing over them; waiting for some shock to come upon them. +That is not what the Lord wants. There is a man that I have talked +to about his soul for a number of years, and the last time I had a +talk with him, he said: + +"Well, the thing hasn't struck me yet." + +I said: "What?" + +"Well," says he, "the thing hasn't struck me yet." + +"Struck you; what do you mean?" + +"Well," said he, "I go to church, and I hear you preach, and I hear +other men preach, but the thing hasn't struck me yet; it strikes +some people, but it hasn't struck me yet." + +That was all that I could get out of him. There are a good many men +who reason in that way. They have heard some young converts tell how +light dawned upon them like the flash of a meteor; how they +experienced a new sensation; and so they are waiting for something +of the kind. But you can't find any place in Scripture where you are +told to wait for anything of the kind. You are just to obey what God +tells you to do, and let your feelings take care of themselves. I +can't control my feelings. I can't make myself feel good and bad +when I want to, but I can obey God. God gives me the power. He +doesn't command me to do something and not give me the power to do +it. With the command comes the power. + +Now, Naaman could do what the prophet told him; he could go down to +the Jordan, and he could dip seven times; and that is what the Lord +had for him to do; and if we are going to get into the kingdom of +God, right at the threshold of that kingdom we have to learn this +doctrine of obedience, to do whatsoever He tells us. + +I can fancy Naaman still reluctant to believe in it, saying, "Why, +if there is such cleansing power in the waters of Jordan, would not +every leper in Israel go down and dip in them, and be healed?" + +"Well, but you know," urges the servant, "now that you have come a +hundred and fifty miles, don't you think you had better do what he +tells you? After all, you can but try it. He sends word distinctly, +my lord, that your flesh shall come again as that of a little +child." + +Naaman accepts this word in season. His anger is cooling down. He +has got over the first flush of his indignation. He says: + +"Well, I think I might as well try it." + +That was + + +THE STARTING-POINT OF HIS FAITH, + +although still he thought it a foolish thing, and could not bring +himself to believe that the result would be what the prophet had +said. + +At last Naaman's will was conquered, and he surrendered. When +General Grant was besieging a town which was a stronghold of the +Southern Confederacy, some of the officers sent word that they would +leave the city if he would let them go with their men. But General +Grant sent word: + +"No, nothing but an unconditional surrender!" + +Then they sent word that they would go if he would let them take +their flag with them. But the answer was: "No, an unconditional +surrender." + +At last the beleagured walls were broken down, and the city entered, +and then the enemy made a complete and unconditional surrender. +Well, it was so with Naaman; he got to that point when he was +willing to obey, and the Scripture tell us, "To obey is better than +to sacrifice." + +God wants obedience. Naaman had to learn this lesson. There was no +virtue, probably, in going down to the Jordan, any more than in +obeying the voice of God. He had to obey the word, and + + +IN THE VERY ACT OF OBEDIENCE + +he was blessed. + +Look at those ten New Testament lepers who came to Christ. He said +to them: "Go show yourselves to the priests." + +"Well," they might have said, "what good is that going to do us? +Here we are all full of leprosy, and if we go and show ourselves to +the priests they will order us back again into exile. That is not +going to help us." + +But those ten men started off, and did just what the Lord Jesus +Christ told them to do, and in the very act of doing it they were +blessed; their leprosy left them. + +He said to that man that had the palsy, whom they brought to Him +upon a bed: "Take up thy bed and walk." + +The man might have said: "Lord, I have been trying for years to take +that bed up, but I can't. I haven't got the power. I have been +shaking with the palsy for the last ten years. Do you think that if +I could have rolled up that bed that I would have been brought here +and let down through the roof? I haven't the power." + +But when the Lord commanded him He gave the power. Power came with +the command, and that man stood up, rolled up his bed, and started +off home. He was blessed in the very act of obedience. + +My friends, if you want God to bless you, obey Him. Do whatsoever He +calls upon you to do, and then see if He will not bless you. + +Christ went to a Pharisee's house one day while He was down here +upon earth, to be entertained. They wanted to get Him to do +something to break the law of Moses, that they might condemn Him to +death, and so they put a man right opposite to Him at the table with +a withered hand, to see if He would heal upon the Sabbath day. He +said to the man: + +"Stretch out thy hand." + +Now, the man might have said, "Lord, that is a very strange command. +I haven't got the power. That hand has been withered for the last +twenty years. I haven't stretched it out for the last twenty years; +and you say, 'Stretch it out.'" + +But when He told him to do it He gave him the power, and out went +that old withered hand, and before it came out straight, right in +the very act, it was made whole. He was blessed in the very act of +obedience. + +Now, Naaman had to be taught the lesson that he had to obey; and so, +finally, he went down to the Jordan just as he was told to do. And +if you will do just what the Lord tells you the Lord will bless you +as He did Naaman. + +You may ask, "What does He tell me?" + +"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." + +The word of God to Naaman was to go and wash; and the word of God to +every soul out of Christ is to believe on His Son. "Verily, verily, +I say unto you, he that heareth My word and believeth on Him that +sent Me _hath_ everlasting life, and shall not come into +condemnation, but is passed from death unto life." If a man believes +with all his heart on the Lord Jesus Christ, God will never bring +him to judgment for sin; that is all passed--that is all gone. Take +Him at His word; believe Him; believe what He says, and you shall +enter into life eternal. "He came unto His own, and His own received +Him not." HIM--mark you--not a dogma, not a creed, + + +NOT A MYTH, BUT A PERSON. + +"He came to His own, and His own received Him not. But as many as +received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons and daughters +of God." That is the way you get the power. + +Naaman goes down to the river and takes the first dip. As he comes +up I can imagine him looking at himself, and saying to his servant: + +"There! there I am, no better than I was when I went in! If one +-seventh of the leprosy was gone, I should be content." + +The servant says: "The man of God told you to dip seven times. Do +just as he told you. There is no discount on God's word." + +Well, down he goes a second time, and he comes up puffing and +blowing, as much a leper as ever; and so he goes down again and +again, the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth time, with the same +result, as much a leper as ever. Some of the people standing on the +banks of the river probably said, as they certainly would in our +day: + +"Why, that man has gone clean out of his mind!" + +When he comes up the sixth time, he looks at himself, and says: + +"Ah, no better! What a fool I have made of myself! How they will all +laugh at me! I wouldn't have the generals and aristocracy of +Damascus know that I have been dipping in this way in Jordan for all +the world. However, as I have gone so far, I'll make the seventh +plunge." + +He has not altogether lost faith, and down he goes the seventh time, +and comes up again. He looks at himself, and shouts aloud for joy. + +"Lo, I am well! My leprosy is all gone, all gone! My flesh has come +again as that of a little child." + +If one speck of leprosy had remained, it would have been a +reflection on God. + +Ask him now how he feels. + +"Feel? I feel that this is the happiest day of my life. I thought +when I won a great victory upon the battlefield that that was the +most joyful day of my life; I thought I should never be so happy +again; but that wasn't anything; it didn't compare with this hour; +my leprosy is all gone, I am whole, I am cleansed." + +First he lost his temper; then he lost his pride; then his leprosy. +That is generally the order in which proud, rebellious sinners are +converted. + +So he comes up out of Jordan and puts on his clothes, and goes back +to the prophet. He was very mad with Elisha in the beginning, but +when he was cleansed his anger was all gone too. He wants to pay +him. That's just the old story; Naaman + + +WANTS TO GIVE MONEY + +for his cure. How many people want to do the same nowadays. Why it +would have spoiled the story of grace if the prophet had taken +anything! You may give a thank-offering to God's cause, not to +purchase salvation, but because you are saved. The Lord doesn't +charge anything to save you. It is "without money and without +price." The prophet Elisha refused to take anything, and I can +imagine no one felt more rejoiced than he did. + +Naaman starts back to Damascus a very different man than he was when +he left it. The dark cloud has gone from his mind; he is no longer a +leper, in fear of dying from a loathsome disease. He lost the +leprosy in Jordan when he did what the man of God told him; and if +you obey the voice of God, even while I am speaking to you, the +burden of your sins will fall from off you, and you shall be +cleansed. It is all done through faith and obedience. + +Let us see what Naaman's faith led him to believe. "And he returned +to the man of God, he and all his company, and came, and stood +before him: and he said, Behold, now I know that there is no God in +all the earth, but in Israel: now therefore, I pray thee, take a +blessing of thy servant." + +What I want particularly to call your attention to is the words + + +I KNOW. + +There is no hesitation about it, no qualifying the expression. +Naaman doesn't now say, "I think"; no, he says, "_I know_ there is a +God who has power to cleanse the leprosy." + +Then there is another thought. Naaman left only one thing in +Samaria, and that was his leprosy; and the only thing God wishes you +to leave with Him is your sin. And yet it is the only thing you seem +not to care about giving up. + +"Oh," you say, "I love leprosy, it is so delightful, I can't give it +up; I know God wants it, that He may make me clean. But I can't give +it up." + +Why, what downright madness it is for you to love leprosy; and yet +that is your condition. + +"Ah," says someone, "I don't believe in sudden conversions." + +Don't you? How long did it take Naaman to be cured? The seventh time +he went down, away went the leprosy. Read the great conversions +recorded in the Bible. Saul of Tarsus, Zacchaeus, and a host of +others; how long did it take the Lord to bring them about? They were +effected in a minute. We are born in iniquity, shapen in it, dead in +trespasses and sins; but when spiritual life comes it comes in a +moment, and we are free both from sin and death. + +You may be sure when he got home there was no small stir in Naaman's +house. I can see his wife, Mrs. Naaman, when he gets back. She has +been watching and looking out of the window for him with a great +burden on her heart. And when she asks him, "Well, husband, how is +it?" I can see the tears running down his cheeks as he says: + +"Thank God, I am well." + +They embrace each other, and pour out mutual expressions of +rejoicing and gladness. The servants are just as glad as their +master and mistress, as they have been waiting eagerly for the news. +There never was a happier household than Naaman's, now that he has +got rid of the leprosy. And so, my friends, it will be with your own +households if you will only get rid of the leprosy of sin to-day. +Not only will there be joy in your own hearts and at home, but there +will also be + + +JOY AMONG THE SAINTS IN HEAVEN. + +Once, as I was walking down the street, I heard some people laughing +and talking aloud. One of them said: + +"Well, there will be no difference, it will be all the same a +hundred years hence." + +The thought flashed across my mind, "Will there be no difference? +Where will you be a hundred years hence?" + +Young man, just ask yourself the question, "Where shall I be?" Some +of you who are getting on in years may be in eternity ten years +hence. Where will you be, on the left or the right hand of God? I +cannot tell your feelings, but I can my own. I ask you, "Where will +you spend eternity? Where will you be a hundred years hence?" + +I heard once of a man who went to England from the Continent, and +brought letters with him to eminent physicians from the Emperor. The +letters said: + +"This man is a personal friend of mine, and we are afraid he is +going to lose his reason. Do all you can for him." + +The doctor asked him if he had lost any dear friend in his own +country, or any position of importance, or what it was that was +weighing on his mind. + +The young man said, "No; but my father and grandfather and myself +were brought up infidels, and for the last two or three years this +thought has been haunting me, Where shall I spend eternity? And the +thought of it follows me day and night." + +The doctor said, "You have come to + + +THE WRONG PHYSICIAN, + +but I will tell you of one who can cure you"; and he told him of +Christ, and read to him the 53d chapter of Isaiah, "With His stripes +we are healed." + +The young man said, "Doctor, do you believe that?" + +The doctor told him he did, and prayed and wrestled with him, and at +last the clear light of Calvary shone on his soul. He had settled +the question in his own mind at last, where he would spend eternity. +I ask you, sinner, to settle it now. It is for you to decide. Shall +it be with the saints, and martyrs, and prophets, or in the dark +caverns of hell, amidst blackness and darkness forever? Make haste +to be wise; for "how shall we escape if we neglect so great +salvation?" + +At our church in Chicago I was closing the meeting one day, when a +young soldier got up and entreated the people to decide for Christ +at once. He said he had just come from a dark scene. A comrade of +his, who had enlisted with him, had a father who was always +entreating him to become a Christian, and in reply he always said he +would when the war was over. At last he was wounded, and was put +into the hospital, but got worse and was gradually sinking. One day, +a few hours before he died, a letter came from his sister, but he +was too far gone to read it. Oh, it was such an earnest letter! The +comrade read it to him, but he did not seem to understand it, he was +so weak, till it came to the last sentence, which said: + +"Oh, my dear brother, when you get this letter, will you not accept +your sister's Savior?" + +The dying man sprang up from his cot, and said, "What do you say? +what do you say?" and then, falling back on his pillow, feebly +exclaimed, "_It is too late! It is too late!_" + +My dear friends, thank God it is not _too late_ for you to-day. The +Master is still calling you. Let every one of us, young and old, +rich and poor, come to Christ at once, and He will put all our sins +away. Don't wait any longer for feeling, but obey at once. You can +believe, you can trust, you can lay hold on eternal life, if you +will. Will you not do it now? + + + +THE PROPHET NEHEMIAH + + +I should like to call your attention to the prophet Nehemiah. We may +gain some help from that distinguished man who accomplished a great +work. He was one of the last of the prophets, was supposed to be +contemporary with Malachi, and perhaps his book was one of the last +of the Old Testament books that was written. He might have known +Daniel, for he was a young man in the declining years of that very +eminent and godly statesman. We are sure of one thing at least--he +was a man of sterling worth. Although he was brought up in the +Persian court among idolaters, yet he had a character that has stood +all these centuries. + +Notice his prayer in which he made confession of Israel's apostasy +from God. There may be some confessions we need to make to be +brought into close fellowship with God. I have no doubt that numbers +of Christians are hungering and thirsting for a personal blessing, +and have a great desire to get closer to God. If that is the desire +of _your_ heart, keep in mind that if there is some obstacle in the +way which you can remove, you will not get a blessing until you +remove it. We must cooperate with God. If there is any sin in my +heart that I am not willing to give up then I need not pray. You may +take a bottle and cork it up tight, and put it under Niagara, and +not a drop of that mighty volume of water will get into the bottle. +If there is any sin in my heart that I am not willing to give up, I +need not expect a blessing. The men who have had power with God in +prayer have always begun by confessing their sins. Take the prayers +of Jeremiah and Daniel. You find Daniel confessing his sin, when +there isn't a single sin recorded against him; but he confesses his +sin and the sins of the people. Notice how David confessed his sins +and what power he had with God. So it is a good thing for us to +begin as Nehemiah did. + +It seems that some men had come down from his country to the Persian +court, perhaps to see the king on business. This man, who was in +high favor with the king, met them, and finding that they had come +from Jerusalem he began to inquire about his country. He not only +loved his God, but he + + +LOVED HIS COUNTRY. + +I like to see a patriotic man. He began to inquire about his people +and about the city that was very near to his heart, Jerusalem. He +had never seen the city. He had no relations back there in Jerusalem +that he knew of. Nehemiah was not a Jewish prince, although it is +supposed he had royal blood in his veins. He was born in captivity. +It was about one hundred years after Jerusalem was taken that he +appeared upon the horizon. He was in the court of Artaxerxes, a +cupbearer to the king, and held a high position. Yet he longed to +hear from his native land. When these men told him the condition of +the city, that the people were in great want and distress and +degradation, and that the walls of the city were still down, that +the gates had been burned and never restored, his patriotic heart +began to burn. We are told he fasted and prayed and wept, and not +only did he pray for one week, or one month, but he kept on praying. +He prayed "day and night." Having many duties to perform, of course +he was not always on his knees, but in heart he was ever before the +throne of grace. It was not hard for him to understand and obey the +precept, "Pray without ceasing." He began the work in prayer, +continued in prayer, and the last recorded words of Nehemiah are a +prayer. + +It was in November or December when those men arrived at that court, +and this man prayed on until March or April before he spoke to the +king. If a blessing doesn't come to-night, pray harder to-morrow, +and if it doesn't come to-morrow, pray harder, and then, if it +doesn't come keep right on, and you will not be disappointed. God in +heaven will hear your prayers, and will answer them. He has _never +failed_, if a man has been honest in his petitions and honest in his +confessions. Let your faith beget patience. God is never in a hurry, +said St. Augustine, because He has all eternity to work. + +In the first chapter of Nehemiah is + + +THE PRAYER + +of this wonderful man, his cry which has been on record all these +years, and a great help to many people: + +"I beseech thee, O Lord God of heaven, the great and terrible God, +that keepeth covenant and mercy for them that love him and observe +his commandments: let thine ear now be attentive, and thine eyes +open, that thou mayest hear the prayer of thy servant, which I pray +before thee now, day and night, for the children of Israel thy +servants, and confess the sins of the children of Israel, which we +have sinned against thee: both I and my father's house have sinned. +We have dealt very corruptly against thee, and have not kept the +commandments, nor the statutes, nor the judgments, which thou +commandedst thy servant Moses. Remember, I beseech thee, the word +that thou commandedst thy servant Moses, saying, If ye transgress, I +will scatter you abroad among the nations: but if ye turn unto me, +and keep my commandments, and do them; though there were of you cast +out unto the uttermost part of the heaven, yet will I gather them +from thence, and will bring them unto the place that I have chosen +to set my name there. Now these are thy servants and thy people, +whom thou hast redeemed by thy great power, and by thy strong hand. +O Lord, I beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer +of thy servant, and to the prayer of thy servants, who desire to +fear thy name: and prosper, I pray thee, thy servant this day, and +grant him mercy in the sight of this man." + +When he began to pray I have no idea that he thought he was to be +the instrument in God's hand of building the walls of Jerusalem. But +when a man gets into sympathy and harmony with God, then God +prepares him for the work He has for him. No doubt he thought the +Persian king might send one of his great warriors and accomplish the +work with a great army of men, but after he had been praying for +months, it may be the thought flashed into his mind: + +"Why should not I go to Jerusalem myself and build those walls?" + +Prayer for the work will soon arouse your own sympathy and effort. + +Now mark, it meant a good deal for Nehemiah to give up the palace of +Shushan and his high office, and identify himself with the despised +and captive Jews. He was among the highest in the whole realm. Not +only that, but he was a man of wealth, lived in ease and luxury, and +had great influence at court. For him to go to Jerusalem and lose +caste was like Moses turning his back on the palace of Pharaoh and +identifying himself with the Hebrew slaves. Yet we might + + +NEVER HAVE HEARD OF + +either of them if they had not done this. They stooped to conquer; +and when you get ready to stoop God will bless you. Plato, Socrates, +and other Greek philosophers lived in the same century as Nehemiah. +How few have heard of them and read their words compared with the +hundreds of thousands who have heard and read of Nehemiah during the +last two thousand years! + +If you and I are to be blessed in this world, we must be willing to +take any position into which God puts us. So, after Nehemiah had +prayed a while, he began to pray God to send him, and that he might +be the man to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. + +After he had been praying some time, he was one day in the +banqueting hall, and the king noticed that his countenance was sad. +We might not have called the face sad; but much prayer and fasting + + +CHANGE THE VERY COUNTENANCE + +of a man. I know some godly men and women, and they seem to have the +stamp of heaven on them. The king noticed a strange look about this +cupbearer, and he began to question him. Then the thought came to +Nehemiah that he would tell the king what caused his sorrow,--how +his own nation was degraded, and how his heart was going out for his +own country. After he had told the king, the king said: + +"What is your request?" + +Now, some men tell us they don't have time to pray, but I tell you +if any man has God's work lying deep in his heart he _will_ have +time to pray. Nehemiah + + +SHOT UP A PRAYER + +to heaven right there in the king's dining hall that the Lord would +help him to make his request in the right way. He first looked +beyond Artaxerxes to the King of Kings. You need not make a long +prayer. A man who prays much in private will make short prayers in +public. The Lord told Nehemiah what to ask for, that he might be +sent to his own country, that some men might go with him, and that +the king would give him letters to the governors through whose +provinces he would pass so that he might have a profitable journey +and be able to rebuild the walls of his city. God had been preparing +the king, for the king at once granted the request, and before long +this young prince was on his way to Jerusalem. + +When he reached the city he didn't have a lot of men go before him +blowing trumpets and saying that the cupbearer of the great Persian +king, + + +THE CONVERTED CUPBEARER, + +had arrived from the Persian court, and was going to build the walls +of Jerusalem. There are some men who are always telling what they +are going to do. Man, let the work speak for itself. You needn't +blow any horns; go and do the work, and it will advertise itself. +Nehemiah didn't have any newspapers writing about him, or any +placards. However, there was no small stir. No doubt every one in +town was talking about it, saying that a very important personage +had arrived from the Persian court; but he was there three days and +three nights without telling anyone why he had come. + +One night he went out to survey the city. He couldn't ride around; +even now you cannot ride a beast around the walls of Jerusalem. He +tried to ride around, but he couldn't, so he walked. It was a +difficult task which he had before him, but he was not discouraged. +That is what makes character. Men who can go into a hard field and +succeed, they are the men we want. Any quantity of men are looking +for easy places, but the world will never hear of them. We want men +who are looking for hard places, who are willing to go into the +darkest corners of the earth, and make those dark places bloom like +gardens. They can do it if the Lord is with them. + +Everything looked dark before Nehemiah. The walls were broken down. +There was not a man of influence among the people, not a man of +culture or a man of wealth. The nations all around were looking down +upon these weak, feeble Jews. So it is in many churches today, the +walls are down, and people say it is no use, and their hands drop +down by their side. Everything seemed against Nehemiah, but he was a +man who had the _fire of God_ in his soul; he had come to build the +walls of Jerusalem. If you could have bored a hole into his head, +you would have found "Jerusalem" stamped on his brain. If you could +have looked into his heart you would have found "Jerusalem" there. +He was a fanatic; he was terribly in earnest; he was an enthusiast. +I like to see a man take up some one thing and say, "I will do it; I +live for this thing; this one thing I am bound to do." We spread out +so much, and try to do so many things, that + + +WE SPREAD SO THIN + +the world never hears of us. + +After he had been in the city three days and nights, he called the +elders of Israel together, and told them for what he had come. God +had been preparing them, for the moment he told them they said: + +"Let us rise up and build." + +But there has not been a work undertaken for God since Adam fell +which has not met with opposition. If Satan allows us to work +unhindered, it is because our work is of no consequence. The first +thing we read, after the decision had been made to rebuild the +walls, is: + +"When Sanballat the Horonite, and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, +and Geshem the Arabian, heard it, they laughed us to scorn, and +despised us, and said, What is this thing that ye do? will ye rebel +against the king?" + +These men were very indignant. They didn't care for the welfare of +Jerusalem. Who were they? A mixed multitude who had no portion nor +right nor memorial in Jerusalem. They didn't like to see the +restoration of the ruins, just as people nowadays do not like to see +the cause of Christ prospering. The offence of the cross has not +ceased. + +It doesn't take long to build the walls of a city if you can only +get the whole of the people at it. If the Christians of this country +would only rise up, we could evangelize America in twelve months. +All the Jews had a hand in repairing the walls of Jerusalem. Each +built over against his own house, priest and merchant, goldsmith and +apothecary, and even the women. The men of Jericho and other cities +came to help. The walls began to rise. + +This stirred up Nehemiah's enemies, and they began to ridicule. + + +RIDICULE + +is a mighty weapon. + +"What do these feeble Jews?" said Sanballat. "Will they fortify +themselves? Will they sacrifice? Will they make an end in a day? +Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which +are burned?" + +"Even that which they build, if a fox go up, he shall even break +down their stone wall," said Tobiah the Ammonite. + +But Nehemiah was wise. He paid no attention to them. He just looked +to God for grace and comfort: + +"Hear, O our God; for we are despised: and turn their reproach upon +their own head, and give them for a prey in the land of captivity: +and cover not their iniquity, and let not their sin be blotted out +from before: for they have provoked thee to anger before the +builders." + +Young man, if you wish to be successful in this world, don't mind +Sanballat or Tobiah. Don't be kept out of the kingdom of God or out +of active Christian work by the scorn and laughter and ridicule of +your godless neighbors and companions. + +Next, these enemies conspired to come and fight against Jerusalem. + +Nehemiah was warned, and took steps to guard against them. Half of +the people were on the watch, and the other half held a sword in one +hand and a trowel in the other. There was + + +NO EIGHT-HOUR WORKING DAY + +then; they were on duty from the rising of the morning till the +stars appeared. They did not take off their clothes except to wash +them. Fancy, this man who came from the Persian court with all its +luxury, living and sleeping in his clothes for those fifty-two days! +But he was in earnest. Ah, that is what we want! men who will set +themselves to do one thing, and keep at it day and night. + +All the people were bidden to lodge within the city, so that they +should always be on hand to work and fight. Would to God that we +could get all who belong inside the church to come in and do their +share. "Happy is the church," says one, "whose workers are well +skilled in the use of the Scripture, so that while strenuously +building the Gospel Wall, they can fight too, if occasion require +it." We ought all be ready to use the Sword of the Spirit. + +By and by the men wrote a friendly letter, and wanted Nehemiah to go +down on the plain of Ono and have a friendly discussion. It is + + +A MASTERPIECE OF THE DEVIL + +to get men into friendly discussions. I don't know whether Nehemiah +had a typewriter in those days or not; I don't know whether he had a +printed form of letters, but he always sent back the same reply: + +"I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down." + +How many a church has turned aside for years to discuss "questions +of the day," and has neglected the salvation of the world because +they must go down to the "plain of Ono" and have a friendly +discussion! Nehemiah struck a good keynote--"I am doing a great +work, so that I cannot come down." If God has sent you to build the +walls of Jerusalem, _you go and do it_. + +They sent him another letter, and again he sent word back, "I am +doing a great work, so that I cannot come down." He did not believe +in "coming down." They sent him another, and he sent back the same +word. They sent him a fourth letter, with the same result. They +could not get him down; they wanted to slay him on the way. + +I have seen many Christian men on the plain of Ono, men who were +doing a splendid work but had been switched off. Think how much work +has been neglected by temperance advocates in this country because +they have gone into politics and into discussing woman's rights and +woman's suffrage. How many times the Young Men's Christian +Association has been switched off by discussing some other subject +instead of holding up Christ before a lost world! If the church +would only keep right on and build the walls of Jerusalem they would +soon be built. Oh, it is a wily devil that we have to contend with! +Do you know it? If he can only get the church to stop to discuss +these questions, he has accomplished his desire. + +His enemies wrote him one more letter, + + +AN OPEN LETTER, + +in which they said that they had heard he was going to set up a +kingdom in opposition to the Persians, and that they were going to +report him to the king. Treason has an ugly sound, but Nehemiah +committed himself to the Lord, and went on building. + +Then his enemies hired a prophet, one of his friends. A hundred +enemies outside are not half so hard to deal with as one inside--a +false friend. When the devil gets possession of a child of God he +will do the work better than the devil himself. Temptations are +never so dangerous as when they come to us in a religious garb. So +Tobiah and Sanballat bought up one of the prophets, and hired him to +try to induce Nehemiah to go into the temple, that they might put +him to death there. + +"Now, Nehemiah, there is a plan to kill you, come into the temple. +Let's go in and stay for the night." + +He came near being deceived, but he said, "Shall I, such a man as I, +be afraid of my life, and do that to save my life?" + +After he had refused their invitation he saw that this man was a +false prophet; and so by his standing his ground he succeeded in +fifty-two days in building the walls of Jerusalem. Then the gates +were set up and the work was finished. + +Now during all these centuries that story has been told. If Nehemiah +had remained at court, he might have died a millionaire, but he +never would have been heard of twenty years after his death. Do you +know the names of any of Nineveh's millionaires? This man stepped +out of that high position and took a low position, one that the +world looked down upon and frowned upon, and his name has been +associated with the walls of Jerusalem all these centuries. Young +man, if you want to be immortal, become identified with God's work, +and pay no attention to what men outside say. Nehemiah and his +associates began at sunrise and worked until it grew so dark they +could not see. A man who will take up God's work, and work summer +and winter right through the year, will have a harvest before the +year is over, and the record of it will shine after he enters the +other world. + +The next thing we learn of Nehemiah is that he got up a great + + +OPEN-AIR MEETING + +for the reading of the law of Moses in the hearing of the people. A +pulpit of wood, large enough to hold Ezra the Scribe and thirteen +others, was built. The people wept when they heard the words of the +law, but Nehemiah said: + +"Mourn not, nor weep. Go your way, eat the fat, and drink the sweet, +and send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared: for this +day is holy unto our Lord: neither be ye sorry; for the joy of the +Lord is your strength." + +He did not forget the poor. Reading the Bible and remembering the +poor--a combination of faith and works--will always bring joy. + +Nehemiah then began to govern the city, and correct the abuses he +found existing. He gathered about fifty priests and scribes together +and made them sign and seal a written covenant. There were five +things in that covenant I want to call attention to. + +First, _they were not to give their daughters to the heathen_. + +They had been violating the law of God, and had been marrying their +daughters to the ungodly. God had forbidden them to intermarry with +the heathen nations in the land of Canaan; "for they will turn away +thy son from following me, that they may serve other gods: so will +the anger of the Lord be kindled against you and _destroy thee +suddenly_." I have known many a man who has lost his power by being +identified with the ungodly. If you want to have the blessing of God +rest upon you, you must be very careful about your alliances. The +Jews always got into trouble when they married with the nations +round about. The houses of Ahab and of Solomon lost their kingdom by +that sin. That was the cause of the overthrow of David's kingdom. +Families who marry for wealth, and marry the godly to the ungodly, +always bring distress into the family. + +Then he made them sign a covenant that they would _keep the +Sabbath_, that they would not buy upon the Sabbath. + +Think of a man going from a heathen court where they had no Sabbath, +a man brought up in that atmosphere, coming up to Jerusalem and +enforcing the law of Moses! It is recorded that they brought up +fish, and he would not let them into the city on the Sabbath, and +the fish spoiled. After they had tried that a few times, they gave +it up. If you will take your stand for God, even if you stand alone, +it will not be very long before you will get other men to stand with +you. God stood with this man, and he carried everything before him. + +I don't believe we shall have the right atmosphere in this country +until we can get men who have backbone enough to stand up against +the thing they believe is wrong. If it is a custom rooted and +grounded for a hundred years, never mind; you take your stand +against it if you believe it is wrong. If you have gatherings, and +it is fashionable to have wine and champagne, and you are a +teetotaler; if they ask you anywhere and you know that they are to +have drink, tell them you are not going. A man said to me some years +ago: + +"Mr. Moody, now that I am converted, must I give up the world?" + +I said: "No, you haven't got to give up the world. If you give a +good ringing testimony for the Son of God, the world will give you +up pretty quick; they won't want you around." + +They were going to have a great celebration at the opening of a +saloon and billiard hall in Chicago, in the northern part of the +city, where I lived. It was to be a gateway to death and to hell, +one of the worst places in Chicago. As a joke they sent me an +invitation to go to the opening. I took the invitation and went down +and saw the two men who had the saloon, and I said: + +"Is that a genuine invitation?" + +They said it was. + +"Thank you," I said, "I will be around; if there is anything here I +don't like I may have something to say about it." + +They said: "You are not going to _preach_?" + +"I may." + +"We don't want you. We won't let you in." + +"How are you going to keep me out?" I asked; "there is the +invitation." + +"We will put a policeman at the door." + +"What is the policeman going to do with that invitation?" + +"We won't let you in." + +"Well," I said, "I will be there." + +I gave them a good scare, and then I said, "I will compromise the +matter; if you two men will get down here and let me pray with you, +I will let you off." + +I got those two rumsellers down on their knees, one on one side of +me, and the other on the other side, and I prayed God to save their +souls and smite their business. One of them had a Christian mother, +and he seemed to have some conscience left. After I had prayed, I +said: + +"How can you do this business? How can you throw this place open to +ruin young men of Chicago?" + +Within three months the whole thing smashed up, and one of them was +converted some time after. I have never been invited to a saloon +since. + +You won't have to give up the world, not by a good deal. If you go +to reunions, and there is drinking, get up and go away. Don't you be +party to it. That is the kind of men we want. When you find anything +that is ruining your fellow men, fight it to its bitter end. + +Nehemiah said, "We will not have desecration of the Sabbath." Not +sell the Sunday paper? Not buy a Sunday paper? How many read the +Sunday newspapers? + +I suppose that if you had Nehemiah as mayor of New York, he would +stop that sort of thing. Here we have boys who are kept away from +the Sunday school to sell papers on the streets--trains running in +order that the papers can be distributed. I don't believe a man is +in a fit state to hear a sermon whose mind is full of such trash as +the Sunday newspaper is filled with. Men break the Sabbath and +wonder why it is they have not spiritual power. The trouble nowadays +is that it doesn't mean anything to some people to be a Christian. +What we must have is a higher type of Christianity in this country. +We must have a Christianity that has in it the principle of self +-denial. We must deny ourselves. If we want power, we must be +separate. + +The next thing they were to do--(and bear in mind this was a thing +they had to sign)--was to _give their land rest_. + +For four hundred and ninety years they had not let their land rest, +so God took them away to Babylon for seventy years, and let the land +rest. A man that works seven days in the week right along is cut off +about five or ten years earlier. You cannot rob God. Why is it that +so many railroad superintendents and physicians die early? It is +because they work seven days in the week. So Nehemiah made them +covenant to keep the law of Moses. If the nations of the earth had +kept that law, the truth would have gone to the four corners of the +earth before this time. + +Then he made them sign a covenant that _they would not charge +usury_. + +They were just grinding the poor down. I believe that the reason we +are in such a wretched state in this country to-day is on account of +crowding the poor, and getting such a large amount of money for +usury. People evade the law, and pay the interest, and then they +give a few hundred dollars to negotiate the loan. There is a great +amount of usury, and see where we are to-day! See what a wretched +state of things we are having, not only in this country, but all +over the world! + +The fifth thing he made them do was to _bring their first fruits to +the sons of Levi_. + +They were to give God a tenth, the first and best. As long as Israel +did that they prospered, and when they turned away from that law +they did not prosper. You can look through history and look around +you and see the same thing to-day. As long as men keep God's law and +respect God's testimony, they are going to prosper, but when they +turn aside, like Samson, they lose their strength; they have no +power. + +If you take these five things and carry them out, you will have +prosperity. Let us all do it personally. If it was good for those +men it is good for us. The moment we begin to rob God of time or +talents then darkness and misery and wretchedness will come. + + + +HEROD AND JOHN THE BAPTIST + + +If some one had told me a few years ago that he thought Herod at one +time came near the kingdom of God, I should have been inclined to +doubt it. I would have said, "I do not believe that the bloodthirsty +wretch who took the life of John the Baptist ever had a serious +thought in his life about his soul's welfare." I held that opinion +because there is one scene recorded in Herod's life that I had +overlooked. But some years ago, when I was going through the gospel +of Mark, making a careful study of the book, I found this verse: + +"Herod feared John, knowing that he was a just man and an holy, and +observed him; and when he heard him, he did many things, and heard +him gladly." (Mark vi, 20). + +This caused me to change my views about Herod. I saw that he was not +only brought within the sound of John's voice, but under the power +of the Spirit of God; his heart was touched and his conscience +awakened. We are not told under what circumstances he heard John; +but the narrative plainly states that he was brought under the +influence of the Baptist's wonderful ministry. + +Let me first say a word or two about + + +THE PREACHER. + +I contend that John the Baptist must have been one of the grandest +preachers this world has ever had. Almost any man can get a hearing +nowadays in a town or a city, where the people live close together; +especially if he speaks in a fine building where there is a splendid +choir, and if the meetings have been advertised and worked up for +weeks or months beforehand. In such circumstances any man who has a +gift for speaking will get a good audience. But it was very +different with John. He drew the people out of the towns and cities +away into the wilderness. There were no ministers to back him; no +business men interested in Christ's cause to work with him; no +newspaper reporters to take his sermons down and send them out. He +was an unknown man, without any title to his name. He was not the +Right-Rev. John the Baptist, D. D., or anything of the kind, but +plain John the Baptist. When the people went to inquire of him if he +were Elias or Jeremiah come back to life, he said he was not. + +"Who are you then?" + +"I am the Voice of one crying in the wilderness." + +He was nothing but a voice--to be heard and not seen; he was Mr. +Nobody. He regarded himself as a messenger who had received his +commission from the eternal world. + +How he began his ministry, and how he gathered the crowds together +we are not informed. I can imagine that one day this strange man +makes his appearance in the valley of the Jordan, where he finds a +few shepherds tending their flocks. They bring together their +scattered sheep, and the man begins to preach to these shepherds. +The kingdom of heaven, he says, is about to be set up on the earth; +and he urges them to set their houses in order--to repent and turn +away from their sins. Having delivered his message, he tells them +that he will come back the next day and speak again. + +When he had disappeared in the desert, I can suppose one of the +shepherds saying to another: + +"Was he not a strange man? Did you ever hear a man speak like that? +He did not talk as the rabbis or the Pharisees or the Sadducees do. +I really think he must be one of the old prophets. Did you notice +that his coat was made of camel's hair, and that he had a leathern +girdle round his loins? Don't the Scriptures say that Elijah was +clothed like that?" + +Says another: "You remember how Malachi says that before the great +and dreadful day of the Lord, Elijah should come? I really believe +this man is the old prophet of Carmel." + +What could stir the heart of the Jewish people more than the name of +Elijah? + +The tidings of John's appearance spread up and down the valley of +the Jordan, and when he returned the next day, there was great +excitement and expectation as the people listened to the strange +preacher. Perhaps till Christ came he had only that + + +ONE TEXT: + +"Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." Day after day you +could hear his voice ringing through the valley of the Jordan: + +"Repent! repent! repent! The King is at the door. I do not know the +day or the hour, but He will be here very soon." + +By and by some of the people who flocked to hear him wanted to be +baptized, and he took them to the Jordan and baptized them. + +The news spread to the surrounding villages and towns, and it was +not long before it reached Jerusalem. Then the people of the city +began to flock into the desert to hear this prince among preachers. +His fame soon reached Galilee, and the people in the mountains began +to flock down to hear him. Men left their fishing-smacks on the +lake, that they might listen to this wonderful preacher. When he was +in the zenith of his popularity, as many as twenty or thirty +thousand people perhaps flocked to his ministry day after day. + +No doubt there were some old croakers who said it was + + +ALL SENSATION. + +"Catch me there! No, sir; I never did like sensational preaching." + +Just as some people speak nowadays when any special effort is made +to reach the people! + +"Great harm will be done," they say. + +I wish all these croakers had died out with that generation in +Judea; but we have plenty of their descendants still. I venture to +say you have met with them. Why, my dear friends, there is more +excitement in your whisky shops and beer saloons in one night than +in all the churches put together in twelve months. What a stir there +must have been in Palestine under the preaching of John the Baptist, +and of Christ! The whole country reeled and rocked with intense +excitement. Don't be afraid of a little excitement in religious +matters; it won't hurt. + +One might hear those old Pharisees and Scribes grumbling about John +being such a sensational preacher. "It won't last." And when Herod +had John the Baptist beheaded, they would say, "Didn't I tell you +so?" + +Do not let us be in a hurry in passing judgment. John the Baptist +lives to-day more than ever he did; his voice goes ringing through +the world yet. He only preached a few months, but for more than +eighteen hundred years his sermons have been repeated and +multiplied, and the power of his words will never die as long as the +world lasts. + +I can imagine that just when John was at the height of his +popularity, as Herod sat in his palace in Jerusalem looking out +towards the valley of the Jordan, he could see great crowds of +people passing day by day. He began to make inquiries as to what it +meant, and the news came to him about this strange and powerful +preacher. Some one, perhaps, reported that John was preaching +treason. He was telling of a king who was at hand, and who was going +to set up his kingdom. + +"A king at hand! If Caesar were coming, I should have heard of it. +There is no king but Caesar. I must look into the matter. I will go +down to the Jordan, and hear this man for myself." + +So one day, as John stood preaching, with the eyes of the whole +audience upon him, the people being swayed by his eloquence like +tree-tops when the wind passes over them, all at once he lost their +attention. All eyes were suddenly turned in the direction of the +city. One cries: + +"Look, look! Herod is coming!" + +Soon the whole congregation knows it, and there is great excitement. + +"I believe he will stop this preaching," says one. + +And if they had in those days some of the compromising weak-kneed +Christians we sometimes meet, they would have said to John: + +"Don't talk about a coming King; Herod won't stand it. Talk about +repentance, but any talk about a coming King will be high treason in +the ears of Herod." + +I think if any one had dared to give John such counsel, he would +have replied: "I have received my message from heaven; what do I +care for Herod or any one else?" + +As he stood thundering away and calling on the people to repent, I +can see Herod, with his guard of soldiers around him, listening +attentively to find anything in the preacher's words that he can lay +hold of. At last John says: + +"The King is just at the door. He will set up His kingdom, and will +separate the wheat from the chaff." + +I can imagine Herod then saying to himself: "I will have that man's +head off inside of twenty-four hours. I would arrest him here and +now if I dared. I will catch him to-morrow before the crowd +gathers." + +By and by, as Herod listens, some of the people begin to press close +up to the preacher, and to question him. Some soldiers are among +them, and they ask John: + +"What shall we do?" + +John answers: "Do violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely; +and be content with your wages." + +"That is pretty good advice," Herod thinks; "I have had a good deal +of trouble with these men, but if they follow the preacher's advice, +it will make them better soldiers." + +Then he hears the publicans ask John, as they come to be baptized: + +"What shall we do?" + +The answer is: "Exact no more than that which is appointed you." + +"Well," says Herod, "that is excellent advice. These publicans are +all the time overtaxing the people. If they would do as the preacher +tells them, the people would be more contented." + +Then the preacher addresses himself to the Pharisees and the +Sadducees in the crowd, and cries: + +"O generation of vipers! Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath +to come? Bring forth fruits worthy of repentance." + +Says Herod within himself: "I like that. I am glad he is giving it +pretty strong to these men. I do not think I will have him arrested +just yet." + +So he goes back to his palace. I can imagine he was + + +NOT ABLE TO SLEEP MUCH + +that night; he kept thinking of what he had heard. When the Holy +Ghost is dealing with a man's conscience, very often sleep departs +from him. Herod cannot get this wilderness preacher and his message +out of his mind. The truth had reached his soul; it echoed and re +-echoed within him: "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." +He says: + +"I went out to-day to hear for the Roman Government; I think I will +go to-morrow and hear for myself." + +So he goes back again and again. My text says that he heard him +gladly, that he observed him, and feared him, knowing that he was a +just man and a holy. He must have known down in his heart that John +was + + +A HEAVEN-SENT MESSENGER. + +Had you gone into the palace in those days, you would have heard +Herod talking of nobody but John the Baptist. He would say to his +associates: + +"Have you been out into the desert to hear this strange preacher?" + +"No; have you?" + +"Yes." + +"What! you, the Roman Governor, going to hear this unordained +preacher?" + +"Yes, I have been quite often. I would rather hear him than any man +I ever knew. He does not talk like the regular preachers. I never +heard any one who had such influence over me." + +You would have thought that Herod was a very hopeful subject. "He +did many things." Perhaps he stopped swearing. He may have stopped +gambling and getting drunk. A wonderful change seemed to have passed +over him. Perhaps he ceased from taking bribes for a time; we catch +him at it afterwards, but just then he refrained from it. He became +quite virtuous in certain directions. It really looked as if he were +near the kingdom of heaven. + +I can imagine that one day, as John stands preaching, the truth is +going home to the hearts and consciences of the people, and the +powers of another world are falling upon them, one of John's +disciples stands near Herod's chariot, and sees the tears in the +eyes of the Roman Governor. At the close of the service he goes to +John and says: + +"I stood close to Herod today, and no one seemed more impressed. I +could see the tears coming, and he had to brush them away to keep +them from falling." + +Have you ever seen a man in a religious meeting trying to keep the +tears back? You noticed that his forehead seemed to itch, and he put +up his hand; you may know what it means--he wants to conceal the +fact that the tears are there. He thinks it is a weakness. It is no +weakness to get drunk and abuse your family, but it is weakness to +shed tears. So this disciple of John may have noticed that Herod put +his hand to his brow a number of times; he did not wish his +soldiers, or those standing near, to observe that he was weeping. +The disciple says to John: + +"It looks as if he were coming near the kingdom. I believe you will +have him as an inquirer very soon." + +When a man enjoys hearing such a preacher, it certainly seems a +hopeful sign. + +Herod might have been present that day when Christ was baptized. Was +there ever a man lifted so near to heaven as Herod must have been if +he were present on that occasion? I see John standing surrounded by +a great throng of people who are hanging on his words. The eyes of +the preacher, that never had quailed before, suddenly began to look +strange. He turned pale and seemed to draw back as though something +wonderful had happened, and right in the middle of a sentence he +ceased to speak. If I were suddenly to grow pale, and stop speaking, +you would ask: + +"Has death crept onto the platform? Is the tongue of the speaker +palsied?" + +There must have been quite a commotion among the audience when John +stopped. The eyes of the Baptist were fixed upon a Stranger who +pushed His way through the crowd, and coming up to the preacher, +requested to be baptized. That was a common occurrence; it had +happened day after day for weeks past. John listened to the +Stranger's words, but instead of going at once to the Jordan and +baptizing Him, he said: + +"I need to be baptized of Thee!" + +What a thrill of excitement must have shot through the audience! I +can hear one whispering to another: + +"I believe that is the Messiah!" + +Yes, it was the long-looked-for One, for whose appearing the nation +had been waiting these thousands of years. From the time God had +made the promise to Adam, away back in Eden, every true Israelite +had been looking for the Messiah; and there He was in their midst! + +He insisted that John should baptize Him, and the forerunner +recognized His authority as Master, took Him to the Jordan, and +baptized Him. As He came up from the water, lo! the heavens opened, +and the Spirit of God in the form of a dove descended and rested on +Him. When Noah sent forth the dove from the Ark, it could find no +resting-place; but now the Son of God had come to do the will of +God, and the dove found its resting-place upon Him. The Holy Ghost +had found a home. Now God broke the silence of four thousand years. +There came a voice from heaven, and Herod may have heard it if he +was there that day: + +"This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." + +Even if he had not witnessed this scene and heard the voice, he must +have heard about it; for the thing was not done in a corner. There +were thousands to witness it, and the news must have been taken to +every corner of the land. + +Yet Herod, living in such times, and hearing such a preacher, missed +the kingdom of heaven at last. He did many things because he feared +John. Had he feared God he would have done everything. "He did many +things"; but there was one thing he would not do-- + + +HE WOULD NOT GIVE UP ONE DARLING SIN. + +The longer I preach, the more I am convinced that that is what keeps +men out of the kingdom of God. John knew about Herod's private life, +and warned him plainly. + +If those compromising Christians of whom I have spoken had been near +John, one of them would have said: + +"Look here, John, it is reported that Herod is very anxious about +his soul, and is asking what he must do to be saved. Let me give you +some advice; don't touch on Herod's secret sin. He is living with +his brother's wife, but don't you say anything about it, for he +won't stand it. He has the whole Roman Government behind him, and if +you allude to that matter it will be more than your life is worth. +You have a good chance with Herod; he is afraid of you. Only be +careful, and don't go too far, or he will have your head off." + +There are those who are willing enough that you should preach about +the sins of other people, so long as you do not come home to them. +My wife was once teaching my little boy a Sabbath-school lesson; she +was telling him to notice how sin grows till it becomes habit. The +little fellow thought it was coming too close to him, so he colored +up, and finally said: + +"Mamma, I think you are getting a good way from the subject." + +John was a preacher of this uncompromising kind, for he drove the +message right home. I do not know when or how the two were brought +together at that time, but John kept nothing back; he boldly said: + +"Herod, it is not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife." + +The man was breaking the law of God, and living in the cursed sin of +adultery. Thank God, John did not spare him! It cost the preacher +his head, but the Lord had got his heart, and he did not care what +became of his head. We read that Herod feared John, but John did not +fear Herod. + +I want to say that I do not know of a quicker way to hell than by +the way of adultery. Let no one flatter himself that he is going +into the kingdom of God who does not repent of this sin in sackcloth +and ashes. My friend, do you think God will never bring you into +judgment? Does not the Bible say that no adulterer shall inherit the +kingdom of God? + +Do you think John the Baptist would have been a true friend of Herod +if he had spared him, and had covered up his sin? Was it not a true +sign that John loved him when he warned him, and told him he must +quit his sin? Herod had before done many things, and heard John +gladly; but he did not like him then. It is one thing to hear a man +preach down other people's sins. Men will say, "That is splendid," +and will want all their friends to go and hear the preacher. But let +him touch on their individual sin as John did, and declare (as +Nathan did to David), "Thou art the man," and they say, "I do not +like that." The preacher has touched a sore place. + +When a man has broken his arm, the surgeon must find out the exact +spot where the fracture is. He feels along and presses gently with +his fingers. + +"Is it there?" + +"No" + +"Is it there?" + +"No." + +Presently, when the surgeon touches another spot, "Ouch!" says the +man. + +He has found the broken part, and it hurts. John placed his finger +on the diseased spot, and Herod winced under it. He put his hand +right on it: + +"Herod, it is not lawful for thee to have thy brother Philip's +wife!" + +Herod did not want to give up his sin. + +Many a man would be willing to enter into the kingdom of God, if he +could do it without giving up sin. People sometimes wonder why Jesus +Christ, who lived six hundred years before Mohammed, has got fewer +disciples than Mohammed to-day. There is no difficulty in explaining +that. A man may become a disciple of Mohammed, and continue to live +in the foulest, blackest, deepest sin; but a man cannot be a +disciple of Christ without giving up sin. If you are trying to make +yourself believe that you can get into the kingdom of God without +renouncing your sin, may God tear the mask from you! Can Satan +persuade you that Herod will be found in the kingdom of God along +with John the Baptist, with the sin of adultery and of murder on his +soul? + +And now, let me say this to you. If your minister comes to you +frankly, tells you of your sin, and warns you faithfully, thank God +for him. He is your best friend; he is a heaven-sent man. But if a +minister speaks smooth, oily words to you; tells you it is all +right, when you know, and he knows, that it is all wrong, and that +you are living in sin, you may be sure that he is a devil-sent man. +I want to say I have a contempt for a preacher that will tone his +message down to suit some one in his audience; some Senator, or big +man whom he sees present. If the devil can get possession of such a +minister and speak through him, he will do the work better than the +devil himself. You might be horrified if you knew it was Satan +deceiving you, but if a professed minister of Jesus Christ preaches +this doctrine and says that God will make it all right in the end, +that though you go on living in sin, it is just the same. Don't be +deluded into believing such doctrine--it is as false as any lie that +ever came from the pit of hell. All the priests and ministers of all +the churches cannot save one soul that will not part with sin. + +There is an old saying that, "Every man has his price." Esau sold +his birthright for a mess of pottage; pretty cheap, was it not? Ahab +sold out for a garden of herbs. Judas sold out for thirty pieces of +silver--less than $17 of our money. Pretty cheap, was it not? Herod +sold out for adultery. + + +WHAT IS THE PRICE + +that you put upon your soul? You say you do not know. I will tell +you. _It is the sin that keeps you from God_. It may be whisky; +there is many a man who will give up the hope of heaven and sell his +soul for whisky. It may be adultery; you say: + +"Give me the harlot, and I will relinquish heaven with all its +glories. I would rather be damned with my sin than saved without +it." + +What are you selling out for, my friend? You know what it is. + +Do you not think it would have been a thousand times better for +Herod to-day if he had taken the advice of John the Baptist instead +of that vile, adulterous woman? There was Herodias pulling one way, +John the other, and Herod was in the balance. It's the same old +battle between right and wrong; heaven pulling one way, hell the +other. Are you going to make the same mistake yourself? We have ten +thousand-fold more light than Herod had. He lived on the other side +of the cross. The glorious gospel had not shone out as it has done +since. Think of the sermons you have heard, of the entreaties +addressed to you to become a Christian. Some of you have had godly +mothers who have prayed for you. Many of you have godly wives who +have pleaded with you, and with God, on your behalf. You have been +surrounded with holy influences from year to year, and how often you +have been near the kingdom of God! Yet here you are to-day, further +off than ever! + +It may be true of you, as it was of Herod, that you hear your +preacher gladly. You attend church, you contribute liberally, you do +many things. Remember that none of these avail to cleanse your soul +from sin. They will not be accepted in the place of what God +demands--repentance and the forsaking of every sin. + +A child was once playing with a vase, and put his hand in and could +not draw it out again. His father tried to help him, but in vain. At +last he said: + +"Now, make one more try. Open your fingers out straight, and let me +pull your arm." + +"Oh, no, papa," said the son, "I'd drop the penny if I opened my +fingers like that!" + +Of course he couldn't get his hand out when his fist was doubled. He +didn't want to give up the penny. Just so with the sinner. He won't +cut loose from his sins. + +Your path and mine will perhaps never cross again. But if I have any +influence with you, I beseech and beg of you to break with sin now, +let it cost you what it will. Herod might have been associated with +Joseph of Arimathea, and with the twelve apostles of the Lamb, if he +had taken the advice of John. There might have been a fragrance +around his name all these centuries. But alas! when we speak of +Herod, we see a sneer on the faces of those who hear us. If one had +said to Herod in those days, "Do you know that you are going to +silence that great preacher, and have him beheaded?" he would have +replied, "Is thy servant a dog that he should do such a thing? I +never would take the life of such a man." He would probably have +thought he could never do it. Yet it was only a little while after +that he had the servant of God beheaded. + +Do you know that the Gospel of Jesus Christ proves either a savor of +life unto life, or of death unto death? You sometimes hear people +say: "We will go and hear this man preach. If it does us no good, it +will do us no harm." Don't you believe it, my friend! Every time you +hear the Gospel and reject it, the hardening process goes on. The +same sun that melts the ice hardens the clay. The sermon that would +have moved you a few years ago would make no impression now. Do you +not recall some night when you heard some sermon that shook the +foundations of your skepticism and unbelief? But you are indifferent +now. + +I believe Herod was seven times more a child of hell after his +conviction had passed away than he was before. There is not a true +minister of the Gospel who will not say that the hardest people to +reach are those who have been impressed, and whose impressions have +worn away. It is a good deal easier to commit a sin the second time +than it was to commit it the first time, but it is a good deal +harder to repent the second time than the first. + +If you are near the kingdom of God now, take the advice of a friend +and step into it. Don't be satisfied with just getting near to it. +Christ said to the young ruler, "Thou art not far from the kingdom," +but he failed to get there. Don't run any risks. Death may overtake +you before you have time to carry out your best intentions, if you +put off a decision. + +It is sad to think that men heard Jesus and Paul, and were moved +under their preaching, but were not saved. Judas must many times +have come near the kingdom, but he never entered in. I saw it in the +army--men who had + + +ALMOST DECIDED + +to become Christians cut down in battle without having taken the +step that would have made them sure of eternal life. I confess there +is something very sad about it. + +In one of the tenement houses in New York city, a doctor was sent +for. He came, and found a young man very sick. When he got to the +bedside the young man said: + +"Doctor, I don't want you to deceive me; I want to know the worst. +Is this illness to prove serious?" + +After the doctor had made an examination, he said: "I am sorry to +tell you you cannot live out the night." + +The young man looked up and said: "Well, then, I have missed it at +last!" + +"Missed what?" + +"I have missed eternal life. I always intended to become a Christian +some day, but I thought I had plenty of time, and put it off." + +The doctor, who was himself a Christian man, said: "It is not too +late. Call on God for mercy." + +"No; I have always had a great contempt for a man who repents when +he is dying; he is a miserable coward. If I were not sick I would +not have a thought about my soul, and I am not going to insult God +now." + +The doctor spent the day with him, read to him out of the Bible, and +tried to get him to lay hold of the promises. The young man said he +would not call on God, and in that state of mind he passed away. +Just as he was dying the doctor saw his lips moving. He reached +down, and all he could hear was the faint whisper: + +"_I have missed it at last!_" + +Dear friend, make sure that you do not miss eternal life at last. +Will you go with Herod or with John? Bow your head now and say: + +"Son of God, come into this heart of mine. I yield myself to Thee, +fully, wholly, unreservedly." + +He will come to you, and will not only save you, but will keep you +to the end. + + + +THE MAN BORN BLIND AND JOSEPH OF ARIMATHEA + + +There were two extraordinary men living in the city of Jerusalem +when Christ was on earth. One of them has come down through history +nameless--we do not know who he was; the name of the other is given. +One was not only a beggar, but blind from his birth; the other was +one of the rich men of Jerusalem. Yet in the Gospel of John, there +is more space given to this blind beggar than to any other +character. The reason why so much has been recorded of this man is +because he took his stand for Jesus Christ. + +Look at the account given in John ix., beginning at the fifth verse. +In the previous chapter Christ had been telling them that He was the +Light of the world, and that if any man would follow Him he should +not walk in darkness, but should have the light of life. After +making a statement of that kind, Christ often gave + + +AN EVIDENCE OF THE TRUTH + +of what He said by performing some miracle. If He had said He was +the Light of the world, He would show them in what way He was the +Light of the world. If He had said He was the Life of the world, He +would prove Himself to be such by quickening and raising the dead; +just as He did, after telling them that He was the Resurrection and +the Life, by going to the graveyard of Bethany and calling Lazarus +forth. When Lazarus heard the voice of his friend saying, "Lazarus, +come forth!" he came forth immediately. + +The Son of God does not ask men to believe Him without a reason for +so doing. We need to keep this in mind. You might as well ask a man +to see without light or eyes, as to believe without testimony. + +He gave them good reason for believing in Him, and proved His +Messiahship and authority. He not only told them that He had the +power, but He showed them that He had. + +These two men, then, were both at Jerusalem. One held as high a +position, and the other as low a position, as any in the city. One +was at the top of the social ladder, and the other at the bottom. +And yet they both made a good confession; and one was as acceptable +to Jesus as the other. + + +I + + +The man mentioned in this chapter was born blind. We find the Lord's +disciples asking Him: + +"Master, who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born +blind?" + +Jesus answered, "Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents; but +that the works of God should be manifest in him." + +When He had thus spoken, He spat on the ground, and made clay of the +spittle; and He anointed the eyes of the blind man with the clay, +and said unto him: + +"Go wash in the pool of Siloam." + +The blind man went his way and washed, and his eyesight was +restored. + +Observe what that man did. He did _just what Christ told him to do_. +The Savior's command to him was to go to the pool of Siloam and +wash; and "he went his way therefore, and came seeing." He was +blessed in the very act of obedience. + +Another thought: God does not generally repeat Himself. Of all the +blind men who were healed while Christ was on earth, no two were +healed in exactly the same way. Jesus met blind Bartimeus near the +gates of Jericho, and called him to Him and said: + +"What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?" + +The answer was: "Lord, that I might receive my sight." + +Now, see what He did. He did not send Bartimeus off to Jerusalem +twenty miles away to the pool of Siloam to wash. He did not spit on +the ground, and make clay, and anoint his eyes; but with a word He +wrought the cure, saying: + +"Go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole." + +Suppose Bartimeus had gone from Jericho and had met the other blind +beggar at the gate of the city of Jerusalem, and asked him how it +was he got his sight; suppose they began to compare notes--one +telling his experience, and the other telling his. Imagine the first +saying: + +"I do not believe that you have got your sight, because you did not +get it in the same way that I got mine." + +Would the different ways the Lord Jesus had in healing them make +their cases the less true? Yet there are some people who talk just +that way now. Because God does not deal with some exactly as He does +with others, people think that God is not dealing with them at all. +God seldom repeats Himself. No two persons were ever converted +exactly alike, so far as my experience goes. Each one must have an +experience of his own. Let the Lord give sight in His own way. + +There are thousands of people who + + +KEEP AWAY FROM CHRIST + +because they are looking for the experience of some dear friend or +relative. They should not judge of their conversion by the +experiences of others. They have heard some one tell how he was +converted twenty years ago, and they expect to be converted in the +same way. Persons should never count upon having an experience +precisely similar to that of some one else of whom they have heard +or read. They must go right to the Lord Himself, and do what He +tells them to do. If He says, "Go to the pool of Siloam and wash," +then they must go. If He says, "Come just as you are," and promises +to give sight, then they must come, and let Him do His own work in +His own way, just as this blind man did. It was a peculiar way by +which to give a man sight; but it was the Lord's way; and the man's +sight was given him. We might think it was enough to make a man +blind to fill his eyes with clay. True, he was now doubly blind; for +if he had been able to see before, the clay would have deprived him +of his sight. But the Lord wanted to show the people that they were +not only spiritually blind by nature, but that they had also allowed +themselves to be blinded by the clay of this world, which had been +spread over their eyes. But God's ways are not our ways. If He is +going to work, we must let Him act as He pleases. + +Shall we dictate to the Almighty? Shall the clay say to the potter, +"Why hast thou made me thus?" Who art thou, O man, that repliest +against God? Let God work in His own way; and when the Holy Ghost +comes, let Him mark out a way for Himself. We must be willing to +submit, and to do what the Lord tells us, without any questioning +whatever. + +"He went his way, therefore, and washed, and came seeing. The +neighbors, therefore, and they which before had seen him that he was +blind, said, 'Is not this he that sat and begged?'" + +"Some said, 'This is he'; others said, 'He is like him.'" + +Now, if he had been like a good many at the present time, I am +afraid he would have remained silent. He would have said: + +"Well, now I have got my sight, and I will just keep quiet about it. +It is not necessary for me to confess it. Why should I say anything? +There is a good deal of opposition to this man Jesus Christ. There +are a great many bitter things said in Jerusalem against Him. He has +a great many enemies. I think there will be trouble if I talk about +Him; so I will say nothing." + +Some said, "This is he"; others said, "He is like him." But he said, +"I am he." He not only got his eyes opened, but, thank God, he got +his mouth open too! + +Surely, the next thing after we get our eyes opened is for us to +open our lips and begin to testify for Him. + +The people asked him, "How were thine eyes opened?" + +He answered: "A man that is called Jesus made clay and anointed mine +eyes, and said unto me, Go to the pool of Siloam and wash: and I +went and washed, and I received sight." + +He told a straightforward story, just what the Lord had done for +him. That is all. That is what a witness ought to do--tell what he +knows, not what he does not know. He did not try to make a long +speech. It is not the most flippant and fluent witness who has the +most influence with a jury. + +This man's testimony is what I call "experience." One of the +greatest hindrances to the progress of the Gospel to-day is that the +narration of the experience of the Church is not encouraged. There +are a great many men and women who come into the Church, and we +never hear anything of their experiences, or of the Lord's dealings +with them. If we could, it would be a great help to others. It would +stimulate faith and encourage the more feeble of the flock. + + +THE APOSTLE PAUL'S EXPERIENCE + +has been recorded three times. I have no doubt that he told it +everywhere he went: how God had met him; how God had opened his eyes +and his heart; and how God had blessed him. Depend upon it, +experience has its place; the great mistake that is made now is in +the other extreme. In some places and at some periods there has been +too much of it--it has been all experience; and now we have let the +pendulum swing too far the other way. + +I think it is not only right, but exceedingly useful, that we should +give our experience. This man bore testimony to what the Lord had +done for him. + +"And it was the Sabbath day when Jesus made the clay, and opened his +eyes; Then again the Pharisees also asked him how he had received +his sight. He said unto them, 'He put clay upon mine eyes; and I +washed, and do see.' Therefore said some of the Pharisees, 'This man +is not of God, because he keepeth not the Sabbath day.' Others said, +'How can a man that is a sinner do such miracles?' And there was a +division among them. + +They say unto the blind man again, 'What sayest thou of Him, that He +hath opened thine eyes?'" + +What an opportunity he had for evading the questions! He might have +said: "Why, I have never seen Him. When He met me I was blind; I +could not see Him. When I came back I could not find Him; and I have +not formed any opinion yet." He might have put them off in that way, +but he said: + +"He is a prophet." + +He gave them his opinion. He was a man of backbone. He had moral +courage. He stood right up among the enemies of Jesus Christ, the +Pharisees, and told them what he thought of Him-- + +"He is a prophet." + +If you can get young Christians to talk, not about themselves, but +about Christ, their testimony will have power. Many converts talk +altogether about their own experience--"I," "I," "I," "I." But this +blind man got away to the Master, and said, "He is a prophet." He +believed, and he told them what he believed. + +"But the Jews did not believe concerning him, that he had been +blind, and received his sight, until they called the parents of him +that had received his sight. And they asked them, saying, 'Is this +your son, who ye say was born blind? How then doth he now see?' His +parents answered them, and said, 'We know that this is our son, and +that he was born blind: but by what means he now seeth, we know not: +or who hath opened his eyes, we know not: he is of age; ask him: he +shall speak for himself.' These words spake his parents, because +they feared the Jews; for the Jews had agreed already that if any +man did confess that He was Christ, he should be put out of the +synagogue. Therefore said his parents, 'He is of age; ask him.'" + +I have always had great contempt for those parents. They had a noble +son, and their lack of moral courage then and there to confess what +the Lord Jesus Christ had done for their son, makes them unworthy of +him. They say, "We do not know how he got it," which looks as if +they did not believe their own son. "He is of age; ask him." + +It is sorrowfully true to-day that we have hundreds and thousands of +people who are professed disciples of Jesus Christ, but when the +time comes that they ought to take their stand, and give a clear +testimony for Him, they testify against Him. You can always tell +those who are really converted to God. The new man always takes his +stand for God; and the old man takes his stand against Him. These +parents had an opportunity to confess the Lord Jesus Christ, and to +do great things for Him; but they neglected their golden +opportunity. + +If they had but stood up with their noble son, and said, "This is +our son. We have tried all the physicians, and used all the means in +our power, and were unable to do anything for him; but now, out of +gratitude, we confess that he received his sight from the prophet of +Galilee, Jesus of Nazareth," they might have led many to believe on +Him. But, instead of that, they said, "We know that this is our son, +and that he was born blind: but by what means he now seeth, we know +not." + +Do you know why they did not want to tell how he got his sight? +Simply because it would + + +COST THEM TOO MUCH. + +They represent those Christians who do not want to serve Christ if +it is going to cost them anything; if they have to give up society, +position, or worldly pleasures. They do not want to come out. This +is what keeps hundreds and thousands from becoming Christians. + +It was a serious thing to be put out of the synagogue in those days. +It does not amount to much now. If a man is put out of one church, +another may receive him; but when he went out of the synagogue there +was no other to take him in. It was the State church: it was the +only one they had. If he were cast out of that, he was cast out of +society, position, and everything else; and his business suffered +also. + +Then again the Jews called the man that was blind, "and said unto +him, 'Give God the praise; we know that this man is a sinner.'" + +It looks now as if they were trying to prejudice him against Christ: +but he "answered and said, 'Whether He be a sinner or no, I know +not; one thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see.'" + +There were no infidels or philosophers there who could persuade him +out of that. There were not men enough in Jerusalem to make him +believe that his eyes were not opened. Did he not _know_ that for +over twenty years he had been feeling his way around Jerusalem; that +he had been led by children and friends; and that during all those +years he had not seen the sun in its glory, or any of the beauties +of nature? Did he not know that he had been feeling his way through +life up to that very day? + +And do we not know that we have been born of God, and that we have +got the eyes of our souls opened? Do we not know that old things +have passed away and all things have become new, and that the +eternal light has dawned upon our souls? Do we not know that the +chains that once bound us have snapped asunder, that the darkness is +gone, and that the light has come? Have we not liberty where we once +had bondage? Do we not know it? If so, then let us not hold our +peace. Let us testify for the Son of God, and say, as the blind man +did in Jerusalem, "ONE THING I KNOW, that whereas I was blind, now I +see. I have a new power. I have a new light. I have a new love. I +have a new nature. I have something that reaches out toward God. By +the eye of faith I can see yonder heaven. I can see Christ standing +at the right hand of God. By and by, when my journey is over, I am +going to hear that voice saying, 'Come hither,' when I shall sit +down in the kingdom of God." + +"Then said they to him again, 'What did He do to thee? how opened He +thine eyes?' But he answered them, 'I have told you already, and ye +did not hear; wherefore would ye hear it again? Will ye also be His +disciples?'" + +This was a most extraordinary man. Here was a young convert in +Jerusalem, not a day old, + + +TRYING TO MAKE CONVERTS + +of these Pharisees--men who had been fighting Christ for nearly +three years! He asked them if they would also become His disciples. +He was ready to tell his experience to all who were willing to hear +it. If he had covered it up at the first, and had not come out at +once, he would not have had the privilege of testifying in that way, +neither would he have been a winner of souls. This man was going to +be a soul-winner. + +I venture to say he became one of the best workers in Jerusalem. I +have no doubt he stood well to the front on the day of Pentecost, +when Peter preached, and when the wounded were around him; he went +to work and told how the Lord had blessed him, and how He would +bless them. He was a _worker_, not an _idler_, and he kept his lips +open. + +It is a very sad thing that so many of God's children are dumb; yet +it is true. Parents would think it a great calamity to have their +children born dumb; they would mourn over it, and weep; and well +they might; but did you ever think of the many dumb children God +has? The churches are full of them; they never speak for Christ. +They can talk about politics, art, and science; they can speak well +enough and fast enough about the fashions of the day; but they have + + +NO VOICE FOR THE SON OF GOD. + +Dear friend, if He is your Savior, confess Him. Every follower of +Jesus should bear testimony for Him. How many opportunities each one +has in society and in business to speak a word for Jesus Christ! How +many opportunities occur daily wherein every Christian might be +"instant in season and out of season" in pleading for Jesus! In so +doing we receive blessing for ourselves, and also become a means of +blessing to others. + +This man wanted to make converts of those Pharisees, who only a +little while before had their hands full of stones, ready to put the +Son of God to death, and even now had murder in their hearts. They +reviled him, saying, "Thou art His disciple, but we are Moses' +disciples. We know that God spake unto Moses. As for this fellow, we +know not from whence He is." + +Well, now the once blind man might have said, "There is a good deal +of opposition, and I will say no more; I will keep quiet, and walk +off and leave them." But, thank God, he stood right up with the +courage of a Paul! He answered and said unto them: + +"Why, herein is a marvellous thing, that ye know not from whence He +is, and yet He hath opened mine eyes! Now we know that God heareth +not sinners; but if any man be a worshiper of God, and doeth His +will, him He heareth." + +Now, I call that logic. If he had been through a theological +seminary he could not have given a better answer. It is sound +doctrine, and was a good sermon for those who were opposed to the +work of Christ. "If this man were not of God He could do nothing." +This is very strong proof of the man's conviction as to who the Lord +Jesus was. It is as though he said: "I, a man born blind, and He can +give me sight. He a _sinner!_" Why, it is unreasonable! If Jesus +Christ were a man only, how could He give that man sight? + +Let philosophers, skeptics, and infidels answer the question, + +Neither had he to wear glasses. He received good sight, not short +sight, or weak sight, but as good sight as any man in Jerusalem, and +perhaps a little better. They could all look at him and see for +themselves. His testimony was beyond dispute. + +After his splendid confession of the divinity and power of Christ, +"they answered and said unto him, 'Thou wast altogether born in sin, +and dost thou teach us?' And they cast him out." They could not meet +his argument, and so they cast him out. So it is now. If we give a +clear testimony for Christ, the world will cast us out. It is a good +thing to give our testimony so clearly for Christ that the world +dislikes it; it is a good thing when such testimony for Christ +causes the world to cast us out. + +Let us see what happened when they cast him out. "Jesus heard," that +is the next thing. No sooner did they cast him out than Jesus heard +of it. No man was ever cast out by the world for the sake of Jesus +Christ but He heard of it; indeed, He will be the first one to hear +of it. "Jesus heard that they had cast him out; and when He found +him He said unto him, 'Dost thou believe in the Son of God?' He +answered and said, 'Who is He, Lord, that I might believe on Him?' +And Jesus said unto him, 'Thou hast both seen Him, and it is He that +talketh with thee.' And he said, 'Lord, I believe!' And he worshiped +Him." + +That was + + +A GOOD PLACE TO LEAVE HIM + +--at the feet of Jesus. We shall meet him by and by in the kingdom +of God. + +His testimony has been ringing down through the ages these last +nineteen hundred years. It has been talked about wherever the Word +of God has been known. It was a wonderful day's work that man did +for the Son of God; doubtless there will be many in eternity who +will thank God for his confession of Christ. + +By thus showing his gratitude in coming out and confessing Christ, +he has left a record that has stirred the Church of God ever since. +He is one of the characters that always stirs one up, imparting new +life and fire, new boldness and courage when one reads about him. +This is what we need to-day as much as ever--to stand up for the Son +of God. Let the Pharisees rage against us; let the world go on +mocking, and sneering, and scoffing; we will stand up courageously +for the Son of God. If they cast us out, they will cast us right +into His own bosom. He will take us to His own loving arms. It is a +blessed thing to live so godly in Christ Jesus that the world will +not want you--that they will cast you out. + + +II + + +Now we come to Joseph of Arimathea. + +I do not think he came out quite so nobly as this blind beggar did; +but he did come out, and we will thank God for that. We read in John +that for fear of the Jews he was kept back from confessing openly. + +"And after this, Joseph of Arimathea, being a disciple of Jesus, but +secretly, _for fear of the Jews_, besought Pilate that he might take +away the body of Jesus; and Pilate gave him leave. He came, +therefore, and took the body of Jesus." + +Read the four accounts given in the four Gospels of Joseph of +Arimathea. There is very seldom anything mentioned by all four of +the Evangelists. If Matthew and Mark refer to an event it is often +omitted by Luke and John; and, if it occur in the latter, it may not +be contained in the former. John's Gospel is made up of that which +is absent from the others in most instances--as in the case of the +blind man alluded to. But all four record what Joseph did for +Christ. All His disciples had forsaken Him. One had sold Him, and +another had denied Him. He was left in gloom and darkness, when +Joseph of Arimathea came out and confessed Him. + +It was the death of Jesus Christ that brought out Joseph of +Arimathea. Probably he was one of the number that stood at the cross +when the centurion smote his breast, and cried out, "Truly, this was +the Son of God," and he was doubtless convinced at the same time. He +was a disciple before, because we read that on the night of the +trial he did not give his consent to the death of Christ. There must +have been some surprise in the Council-chamber on that occasion, +when Joseph of Arimathea, a rich man, stood up and said: + +"I will never give my consent to His death." + +There were seventy of those men, but we have very good reason to +believe that there were two of them that, like Caleb and Joshua of +old, had the courage to stand up for Jesus Christ--these were Joseph +of Arimathea and Nicodemus: neither of them gave their consent to +the death of Christ. But I am afraid Joseph did not come out and say +that he was a disciple--for we do not find a word said about his +being one until after the crucifixion. + +I am afraid there are + + +MANY JOSEPHS TODAY, + +men of position, of whom it could be said they are secret disciples. +Such would probably say to-day, "I do not need to take my stand on +Christ's side. What more do _I_ need? I have everything." We read +that he was a rich and honorable councillor, a just and a good man, +and holding a high position in the government of the nation. He was +also a benevolent man, and a devout man too. What more could he +need? God wants something more than Joseph's good life and high +position. A man may be all Joseph was and yet be without Christ. + +But a crisis came in his history. If he was to take his stand, now +was the time for him to do it, I consider that this is one of the +grandest, the noblest acts that any man ever did, to take his stand +for Christ when there seemed nothing, humanly speaking, that Christ +could give him. Joseph had no hope concerning the resurrection. It +seems that none of our Lord's disciples understood that He was going +to rise again even Peter, James, and John, as well as the rest, +scarcely believed that He had risen when He appeared to them. They +had anticipated that He would set up His kingdom, but He had no +sceptre in His hand; and, so far as they could see, no kingdom in +view. In fact, He was dead on the cross, with nails through His +hands and feet. There He hung until His spirit took its flight; that +which had made Him so grand, so glorious, and so noble, had now left +the body. + +Joseph might have said, "It will be no use my taking a stand for Him +now. If I come out and confess Him I shall probably lose my position +in society and in the council, and my influence. I had better remain +where I am." + +There was no earthly reward for him; there was nothing, humanly +speaking, that could have induced him to come out; and yet we are +told by Mark that he went boldly into Pilate's judgment-hall and +begged the body of Jesus. I consider this was + + +ONE OF THE SUBLIMEST, GRANDEST ACTS + +that any man ever did. In that darkness and gloom, His disciples +having all forsaken Him; Judas having sold Him for thirty pieces of +silver; the chief apostle Peter having denied Him with a curse, +swearing that he never knew Him; the chief priests having found Him +guilty of blasphemy; the Council having condemned him to death; and +when there was a hiss going up to heaven over all Jerusalem, Joseph +went right against the current, right against the influence of all +his friends, and begged the body of Jesus. + +Blessed act! Doubtless he upbraided himself for not having been more +bold in his defence of Christ when He was tried, and before He was +condemned to be crucified. The Scripture says he was an honorable +man, an honorable councillor, a rich man, and yet we have only the +record of that one thing--the one act of begging the body of Jesus. +But I tell you, that what he did for the Son of God, out of pure +love for Him, will live for ever; that one act rises up above +everything else that Joseph of Arimathea ever did. He might have +given large sums of money to different institutions, he might have +been very good to the poor, he might have been very kind to the +needy in various ways; but that one act for Jesus Christ, on that +memorable, that dark afternoon, was one of the noblest acts that a +man ever did. He must have been a man of great influence, or Pilate +would not have given him the body. + +And now you see another secret disciple, Nicodemus. Nicodemus and +Joseph go to the cross. Joseph is there first, and while he is +waiting for Nicodemus to come, he looks down the hill; and I can +imagine his delight as he sees his friend coming with a hundred +pounds of ointment. Although Jesus Christ had led such a lowly life, +He was to have a kingly anointing and burial. God has touched the +hearts of these two noble men and they drew out the nails, and took +the body down, washed the blood away from the wounds that had been +made on His back by the scourge, and on His head by the crown of +thorns; then they took the lifeless form, washed it clean, and +wrapped it in fine linen, and Joseph laid Him in his own sepulchre. + +When all was dark and gloomy, when His cause seemed to be lost, and +the hope of the Church buried in that new tomb, Joseph took his +stand for the One "despised and rejected of men." It was the +greatest act of his life; and, my reader, if you want to stand with +the Lord Jesus Christ in glory; if you want the power of God to be +bestowed upon you for service down here, you must not hesitate to +take your stand boldly and manfully for the most despised of all +men--the Man Christ Jesus. His cause is unpopular. The ungodly sneer +at His name. But if you want the blessings of heaven on your soul, +and to hear the "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou +into the joy of thy Lord," take your stand at once for Him; whatever +your position may be, or however much your friends may be against +you. Decide for Jesus Christ, the crucified but risen Savior. Go +outside the camp and bear His reproach. Take up your cross and +follow Him, and by and by you will lay it down and take the crown to +wear it for ever. + +I remember some meetings being held in a locality where the tide did +not rise very quickly, and bitter and reproachful things were being +said about the work. But one day, one of the most prominent men in +the place rose and said: + +"I want it to be known that I am a disciple of Jesus Christ, and if +there is any odium to be cast on His cause, I am prepared to take my +share of it." + +It went through the meeting like an electric current, and a blessing +came at once to his own soul and to the souls of others. + +Depend upon it, there is + + +NO CROWN WITHOUT A CROSS. + +We must take our proper position here, as Joseph did. It cost him +something to take up his cross. I have no doubt they put him out of +the council and out of the synagogue. He lost his standing, and +perhaps his wealth: like other faithful followers of Christ, he +became, henceforth, a despised and unpopular man. + +The blind man could not have done what Joseph did. Some men can do +what others cannot. God will hold us responsible for our own +influence. Let each of us do what we can. Even though the conduct of +our Lord's professed followers was anything but helpful to those +who, like Joseph, had but little courage to come out on the Lord's +side, he was not deterred from taking his stand. + +Whatever it costs us, let us be true Christians, and take a firm +stand. It is like the dust in the balance in comparison to what God +has in store for us. We can afford to suffer with Him a little while +if we are going to reign with Him for ever. We can afford to take up +the cross and follow Him, to be despised and rejected by the world, +with such a bright prospect in view. If the glories of heaven are +real, it will be to His praise and to our advantage to share in His +rejection now. + +May the Lord keep us from halting; and may we, when weighed in the +balance, not be found wanting! May God help every reader to do all +that the poor blind beggar did, and all that Joseph did! + +Let us confess Him at all times and in all places. Let us show our +friends that we are out and out on His side. Every one has a circle +that he can influence, and God will hold us responsible for the +influence we possess. Joseph of Arimathea and the blind man had +circles in which their influence was powerful. I can influence +people that others cannot reach; and they, in their turn, can reach +a class that I could not touch. It is only for a little while that +we can confess Him and work for Him. It is only for a few months or +years; and then the eternal ages will roll on, and great will be our +reward in the crowning day that is coming. We shall then hear the +Master say to us: + +"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of +thy Lord." + +God grant it may be so! + + + +THE PENITENT THIEF + + +It should give us all a great deal of hope and comfort that Jesus +saved such a man as the penitent thief just before He went back to +heaven. Every one who is not a Christian ought to be interested in +this case, to know how he was converted. Any one who does not +believe in sudden conversions ought to look into it. If conversions +are gradual, if it takes six months, or six weeks, or six days to +convert a man, there was no chance for this thief. If a man who has +lived a good, consistent life cannot be converted suddenly, how much +less chance for him! Turn to the 23d chapter of Luke, and see how +the Lord dealt with him. He was a thief, and the worst kind of a +thief, or else they would not have punished him by crucifixion. Yet +Christ not only saved him, but took him up with Himself into glory. + +Let us look at Christ hanging on the cross between the two thieves. +The Scribes and Pharisees wagged their heads, and jeered at Him. His +disciples had fled. Only His mother and one or two other women +remained in sight to cheer Him with their presence among all the +crowd of enemies. Hear those spiteful Pharisees mocking among +themselves: "He saved others; Himself He cannot save." The account +also says that the two thieves "cast the same in his teeth." + + +REVILING. + +The first thing we read, then, of this man is that he was a reviler +of Christ. + +You would think that he would be doing something else at such a time +as that; but hanging there in the midst of torture, and certain to +be dead in a few hours, instead of confessing his sins and preparing +to meet that God whose law he had broken all his life, he is abusing +God's only Son. Surely, he cannot sink any lower, until he sinks +into hell! + + +UNDER CONVICTION. + +The next time we hear of him, he appears to be under conviction: + +"And one of the malefactors which were hanged railed on Him, saying, +If thou be Christ, save Thyself and us. But the other answering +rebuked him, saying, Dost not thou fear God, seeing thou art in the +same condemnation? And we indeed justly; for we receive the due +reward of our deeds: but this Man hath done nothing amiss." + +What do you suppose made so great a change in this man in these few +hours? Christ had not preached a sermon, had given him no +exhortation. The darkness had not yet come on. The earth had not +opened her mouth. The business of death was going on undisturbed. +The crowd was still there, mocking and hissing and wagging the head. +Yet this man, who in the morning was railing at Christ, is now +confessing his sins and rebuking the other thief. "We indeed +justly!" No miracle had been wrought before his eyes. No angel from +heaven had come to place a glittering crown upon His head in place +of the bloody crown of thorns. + +What was it wrought such a change in him? + +I will tell you what I think it was. I think it was the Savior's +prayer: + +"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." + +I seem to hear the thief + + +TALKING TO HIMSELF + +in this way: + +"What a strange kind of man this must be! He claims to be king of +the Jews, and the superscription over His cross says the same. But +what sort of a throne is this! He says He is the Son of God. Why +does not God send down His angels and destroy all these people who +are torturing His Son to death? If He has all power now, as He used +to have when He worked those miracles they talked about, why does He +not bring out His vengeance, and sweep all these wretches into +destruction? I would do it in a minute if I had the power. I +wouldn't spare any of them. I would open the earth and swallow them +up! But this man prays to God to forgive them! Strange, strange! He +_must_ be different from us. I am sorry I said one word against Him +when they first hung us up here. + +What a difference there is between Him and me! Here we are, hanging +on two crosses, side by side; but all the rest of our lives we have +been far enough apart. I have been robbing and murdering, and He has +been feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and raising the dead. Now +these people are railing at us both! I begin to believe He must be +the Son of God; for surely no man could forgive his enemies like +that." + +Yes, that prayer of Christ's did what the scourge could not do. This +man had gone through his trial, he had been beaten, he had been +nailed to the cross; but his heart had not been subdued, he had +raised no cry to God, he was not sorry for his sins. Yet, when he +heard the Savior praying for His murderers, that + + +BROKE HIS HEART. + +It flashed into this thief's soul that Jesus was the Son of God, and +that moment he rebuked his companion, saying: + +"Dost thou not fear God?" + +The fear of God fell upon him. There is not much hope of a man's +being saved until the fear of God comes upon him. Solomon says, "The +fear of God is the beginning of wisdom." + +We read in Acts that great fear fell upon the people; that was the +fear of the Lord. That was the first sign that conviction had +entered the soul of the thief. "Dost thou not fear God?" That was +the first sign we have of life springing up. + + +CONFESSING. + +Next, he confessed his sins: "We indeed justly." He took his place +among sinners, not trying to justify himself. + +A man may be very sorry for his sins, but if he doesn't confess +them, he has no promise of being forgiven. Cain felt badly enough +over his sins, but he did not confess. Saul was greatly tormented in +mind, but he went to the witch of Endor instead of to the Lord. +Judas felt so bad over the betrayal of his Master that he went out +and hanged himself; but he did not confess to God. True, he went and +confessed to the priests, saying, "I have sinned in that I have +betrayed innocent blood"; but it was of no use to confess to them +--they could not forgive him. + +How different is the case of this penitent thief! He confessed his +sins, and Christ had mercy on him there and then. + +The great trouble is, people are always trying to make out that they +are not sinners, that they have nothing to confess. Therefore, there +is no chance of reaching them with the Gospel. There is no hope for +a man who folds his arms and says: "I don't think God will punish +sin; I am going to take the risk." There is no hope for a man until +he sees that he is under just condemnation for his sins and +shortcomings. God never forgives a sinner until he confesses. + + +JUSTIFYING CHRIST. + +The next thing, he justifies Christ: "This Man hath done nothing +amiss." + +When men are talking against Christ, they are a great way from +becoming Christians. Now he says, "He hath done nothing amiss." +There was the world mocking him; but in the midst of it all, you can +hear that thief crying out: + +"This Man hath done nothing amiss." + + +FAITH. + +The next step is faith. + +Talk about faith! I think this is about the most extraordinary case +of faith in the Bible. Abraham was the father of the faithful; but +God had him in training for twenty-five years. Moses was a man of +faith; but he saw the burning bush, and had other evidences of God. +Elijah had faith; but see what good reason he had for it. God took +care of him, and fed him in time of famine. But here was a man who +perhaps had never seen a miracle; who had spent his life among +criminals; whose friends were thieves and outlaws; who was now in +his dying agonies in the presence of a crowd who were rejecting and +reviling the Son of God. His disciples, who had heard His wonderful +words, and witnessed His mighty works, had forsaken Him; and perhaps +the thief knew this. Peter had denied Him with oaths and cursing; +and perhaps this had been told the thief. Judas had betrayed Him. He +saw no glittering crown upon His brow; only the crown of thorns. He +could see no sign of His kingdom. Where were His subjects? And yet, +nailed to the cross, racked with pain in every nerve, overwhelmed +with horror, his wicked soul in a tempest of passion, this poor +wretch managed to lay hold on Christ and trust Him for a swift +salvation. The faith of this thief, how it flashes out amid the +darkness of Calvary! It is one of the most astounding instances of +faith in the Bible! + +When I was a boy I was a poor speller. One day there came a word to +the boy at the head of the class which he couldn't spell, and none +of the class could spell it. I spelled it; by good luck; and I went +from the foot of the class to the head. So the thief on the cross +passed by Abraham, Moses and Elijah, and went to the head of the +class. He said unto Jesus: + +"Lord, remember me when thou comest into Thy kingdom." + +Thank God for such a faith! How refreshing it must have been to +Christ to have one own Him as Lord, and believe in His kingdom, at +that dark hour! How this thief's heart goes out to the Son of God! +How glad he would be to fall on his knees at the foot of the cross, +and pour out his prayer! But this he cannot do. His hands and feet +are nailed fast to the wood, but they have not nailed his eyes and +his tongue and his heart. He can at least turn his head and look +upon the Son of God, and his breaking heart can go out in love to +that One who was dying for him and dying for you and me, and he can +say: + +"Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy kingdom." + + +WHAT A CONFESSION + +of Christ that was! He called Him "Lord." A queer Lord! Nails +through His hands and feet, fastened to the cross. A strange throne! +Blood trickling down His face from the scars made by the crown of +thorns. But He was all the more "Lord" because of this. + +Sinner, call Him "Lord" now. Take your place as a poor condemned +rebel, and cry out: + +"Lord, remember me!" + +That isn't a very long prayer, but it will prevail. You don't have +to add--"when Thou comest into Thy kingdom," because Christ is now +at His Father's right hand. Three words; a chain of three golden +links that will bind the sinner to his Lord. + +Some people think they must have a form of prayer, a prayer-book, +perhaps, if they are going to address the Throne of Grace properly; +but what could that poor fellow do with a prayer-book up there, +hanging on the cross, with both hands nailed fast? Suppose it had +been necessary for some priest or minister to pray for him, what +could he do? Nobody is there to pray for him, and yet he is going to +die in a few hours. He is out of reach of help from man, but God has +laid help upon One who is mighty, and that One is close at hand. He +prayed out of the heart. His prayer was short, but it brought the +blessing. It came to the point: "Lord, remember me when Thou comest +into Thy kingdom." He asked the Lord to give him, right there and +then, what he wanted. + + +THE ANSWERED PRAYER. + +Now consider the answer to his prayer. He got more than he asked, +just as every one does who asks in faith. He only asked Christ to +"remember" him; but Christ answered: + +"To-day shalt thou be with me in Paradise!" + +Immediate blessing--promise of fellowship--eternal rest; this is the +way Christ answered his prayer. + + +DARKNESS. + +And now darkness falls upon the earth. The sun hides itself. Worse +than all, the Father hides His face from His Son. What else is the +meaning of that bitter cry: + +"My God! my God! Why hast Thou forsaken me?" + +Ah! It had been written, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a +tree." Jesus was made a curse for us. God cannot look upon sin: and +so when even His own Son was bearing our sins in His body, God could +not look upon Him. + +I think this is what bore heaviest upon the Savior's heart in the +garden when He prayed: + +"If it be possible, let this cup pass from me." + +He could bear the unfaithfulness of His friends, the spite of His +enemies, the pain of His crucifixion, and the shadow of death; He +could bear all these; but when it came to the hiding of His Father's +face, that seemed almost too much for even the Son of God to bear. +But even this He endured for our sins; and now the face of God is +turned back to us, whose sins had turned it away, and looking upon +Jesus, the sinless One, He sees us in Him. + +In the midst of all His agony, how sweet it must have been to Christ +to hear that poor thief confessing Him! + +He likes to have men confess Him. Don't you remember His asking +Peter, "Whom do men say that I am?" and when Peter answered, "Some +people say you are Moses, some people say you are Elias, and some +people say you are one of the old Prophets," He asked again, "But, +Peter, whom do _you_ say I am?" When Peter said, "Thou art the Son +of God," Jesus blessed him for that confession. And now this thief +confesses Him--confesses Him in the darkness. Perhaps it is so dark +he cannot see Him any longer; but he feels that He is there beside +him. Christ wants us to confess Him in the dark as well as in the +light; when it is hard as well as when it is easy. For He was not +ashamed of us, but bore our sins and carried our sorrows, even unto +death. + +When a prominent man dies, we are anxious, to get his last words and +acts. + + +THE LAST ACT OF THE SON OF GOD + +was to save a sinner. That was a part of the glory of His death. He +commenced His ministry by saving sinners, and ended it by saving +this poor thief. "Shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the +lawful captive delivered? But thus saith the Lord: Even the captives +of the mighty shall be taken away, and the prey of the terrible +shall be delivered." He took this captive from the jaws of death. He +was on the borders of hell, and Christ snatched him away. + +No doubt Satan was saying to himself: "I shall have the soul of that +thief pretty soon. He belongs to me. He has been mine all these +years." + +But in his last hours the poor wretch cried out to the Lord, and He +snapped the fetters that bound his soul, and set him at liberty. He +threw him a passport into heaven. I can imagine, as the soldier +drove his spear into our Savior's side, there came flashing into the +mind of the thief the words of the prophet Zechariah: + +"In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David, +and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and for uncleanness." + +You see, in the conversion of this thief, that + + +SALVATION IS DISTINCT AND SEPARATE FROM WORKS. + +Some people tell us we have to work to be saved. What has the man +who believes that to say about the salvation of this thief? How +could he work, when he was nailed to the cross? + +He took the Lord at His word, and believed. It is with the heart men +believe, not with their hands or feet. All that is necessary for a +man to be saved is to believe with his heart. This thief made a good +confession. If he had been a Christian fifty years, he could not +have done Christ more service there than he did. He confessed Him +before the world; and for nineteen hundred years that confession has +been told. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John all recorded it. They felt +it so important that they thought we should have it. + +See how + + +SALVATION IS SEPARATE AND DISTINCT FROM ALL ORDINANCES + +--not but that ordinances are right in their place. + +Many people think it is impossible for any one to get into the +kingdom of God if he is not baptized into it. I know people who were +greatly exercised because little children died unbaptized. I have +seen them carry the children through the streets because the pastor +could not come. I don't want you to think I am talking against +ordinances. Baptism is right in its place; but when you put it in +the place of salvation, you put a snare in the way. You cannot +baptize men into the kingdom of God. The last conversion before +Christ perished on the cross ought to forever settle that question. +If you tell me a man cannot get into Paradise without being +baptized, I answer, This thief was not baptized. If he had wanted to +be baptized, I don't believe he could have found a man to baptize +him. + +I have known people who had sick relatives, and because they could +not get a minister to come to their house and administer the +sacrament, they were distressed and troubled. Now, I am not saying +anything against the ordinance by which we commemorate the death of +our Lord, and remember His return. God forbid! But let me say that +it is not necessary for salvation. I might die and be lost before I +could get to the Lord's table; but if I get to the Lord I am saved. +Thank God, salvation is within my reach always, and I have to wait +for no minister. This poor thief certainly never partook of the +sacrament. Was there a man on that hill that would have had faith to +believe he was saved? Would any church to-day have received him into +membership? He had not to wait for this. The moment he asked life, +our Savior gave it. + +Baptism is one thing; the sacrament of the Lord's Supper is another +thing; and salvation through Christ is quite another thing. If we +have been saved through Christ, let us confess Him by baptism, let +us go to His table, and do whatever else He bids. But let us not +make stumbling-blocks out of these things. + +That is what I call sudden conversion--men calling on God for +salvation and getting it. You certainly won't get it unless you call +for it, and unless you take it when He offers it to you. If you want +Christ to remember you--to save you--call upon Him. + + +TWO SIDES. + +The cross of Christ divides all mankind. There are only two sides, +those for Christ, and those against Him. Think of the two thieves; +from the side of Christ one went down to death cursing God, and the +other went to glory. + +What a contrast! In the morning he is led out, a condemned criminal; +in the evening he is saved from his sins. In the morning he is +cursing; in the evening he is singing hallelujahs with a choir of +angels. In the morning he is condemned by men as not fit to live on +earth; in the evening he is reckoned good enough for heaven. In the +morning nailed to the cross; in the evening in the Paradise of God, +crowned with a crown he should wear through all the ages. In the +morning not an eye to pity; in the evening washed and made clean in +the blood of the Lamb. In the morning in the society of thieves and +outcasts; in the evening Christ is not ashamed to walk arm-in-arm +with him down the golden pavements of the eternal city. + +The thief was + + +THE FIRST MAN TO ENTER PARADISE + +after the veil of the Temple was rent. If we could look up yonder, +and catch a glimpse of the throne, we would see the Father there, +and Jesus Christ at His right hand; and hard by we would see that +thief. He is there to-day. Nineteen hundred years he has been there, +just because he cried in faith: + +"Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy kingdom." + +You know Christ died a little while before the thief. I can imagine +that He wanted to hurry home to get a place ready for His new +friend, the first soul brought from the world He was dying to +redeem. The Lord loved him because he confessed Him in that dark +hour. It was a dark hour for many who reviled the Savior. You have +heard of the child who did not want to die and go to heaven because +he didn't know anybody there. But the thief would have one +acquaintance. I can imagine how his soul leaped within him when he +saw the spear thrust into our Savior's side, and heard the cry: + +"It is finished!" + +He wanted to follow Christ. He was in a hurry to be gone, when they +came to break his legs. I can hear the Lord calling: + +"Gabriel, prepare a chariot. Make haste. There is a friend of mine +hanging on that cross. They are breaking his legs. He will soon be +ready to come. Make haste, and bring him to me?" + +The angel in the chariot swept down from heaven, took the soul of +that penitent thief, and hastened back to glory. The gates of the +city swung wide open, and the angels shouted welcome to this poor +sinner who had been washed white in the blood of the Lamb. + +And that, my friends, is just what Christ wants to do for you. That +is the business on which He came down from heaven. That is why He +died. And if He gave such a swift salvation to this poor thief on +the cross, surely He will give you the same if, like the penitent +thief, you repent, and confess, and trust in the Savior. + +Somebody says that this man "was saved at the eleventh hour." I +don't know about that. It might have been the first hour with him. +Perhaps he never knew of Christ until he was led out to die beside +Him. This may have been the very first time he ever had a chance to +know the Son of God. + +How many of you gave your hearts to Christ the very first time He +asked them of you? Are you not farther along in the day than even +that poor thief? + +Some years ago, in one of the mining districts of England, a young +man attended one of our meetings and refused to go from the place +till he had found peace in the Savior. The next day he went down +into the pit, and the coal fell in upon him. When they took him out +he was broken and mangled, and had only two or three minutes of life +left in him. His friends gathered about him, saw his lips moving, +and, bending down to catch his words, heard him say: + +"It was a good thing I settled it last night." + +Settle it now, my friends, once for all. Begin now to confess your +sins, and pray the Lord to remember you. He will make you an heir of +His kingdom, if you will accept the gift of salvation. He is just +the same Savior the thief had. Will you not cry to Him for mercy? + + . . . . . . . . . . + + A cross,--and one who hangs thereon, in sight + Of heaven and earth. + + The cruel nails are fast + In trembling hands and feet, the face is white + And changed with agony, the failing head + Is drooping heavily; but still again, + And yet again, the weary eyes are raised + To seek the face of One who hangeth pale + Upon another cross. He hears no shrill + And taunting voices of the crowd beneath, + He marks no cruel looks of all that gaze + Upon the woeful sight. He sees alone + That face upon the cross. Oh, long, long look, + That searcheth there the deep and awful things + Which are of God! + + In his first agony + And horror he had joined with them that spake + Against the Lord, the Lamb, who gave Himself + That day for us. But when he met the look + Of those calm eyes,--he paused that instant; pale + And trembling, stricken to the heart, and faint + At sight of Him. + . . . . . . . . + + At length + The pale, glad lips have breathed the trembling prayer, + "_O Lord, remember me!_" The hosts of God + With wistful angel-faces, bending low + Above their dying King, were surely stirred + To wonder at the cry. Not one of all + The shining host had dared to speak to Him + In that dread hour of woe, when Heaven and Earth + Stood trembling and amazed. Yet, lo! the voice + Of one who speaks to Him, who dares to pray, + "_O Lord, remember me!_" A sinful man + May make his pitiful appeal to Christ, + The sinner's Friend, when angels dare not speak. + And sweetly from the dying lips that day + The answer came. + + Oh, strange and solemn joy + Which broke upon the fading face of him + Who there received the promise: "_Thou shalt be_ + _In Paradise this night, this night, with Me_." + + . . . . . . . . + + O Christ, the King! + We also wander on the desert-hills, + Though haunted by Thy call, returning sweet + At morn and eve. We will not come to Thee + Till Thou hast nailed us to some bitter cross, + And _made_ us look on Thine, and driven at last + To call on Thee with trembling and with tears.-- + Thou lookest down in love, upbraiding not, + And promising the kingdom! + + . . . . . . . . + + A throne,--and one + Who kneels before it, bending low in new + And speechless joy. + + It is the night on earth. + The shadows fall like dew upon the hills + Around the Holy City, but above, + Beyond the dark vale of the sky, beyond + The smiling of the stars, they meet once more + In peace and glory. Heaven is comforted,-- + For that strange warfare is accomplished now, + Her King returned with joy: and one who watches + The far-off morning in a prison dim, + And hung at noonday on the bitter cross, + Is kneeling at His feet, and tasteth now + The sweet, sweet opening of an endless joy. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Men of the Bible, by Dwight Moody + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEN OF THE BIBLE *** + +***** This file should be named 30740.txt or 30740.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/7/4/30740/ + +Produced by Keith G. 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