Chapter 2
LIFE'S MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION
"Go and make disciples of all nations, baptize them in the name of the
Father and the Son
and the holy Spirit, and teach them to obey all the commands I have laid
on you. And all the time I
will be with you, to the very end of the world." -- Matthew 28:19, 20 (Moffatt)
In the year 1929 there was published a book that had for its theme the
idea that all
philanthropies or kindnesses or gifts had value to the giver in direct
proportion to the secrecy
involved in the transaction. The author of that book is Lloyd C. Douglas.
The title of the book is
Magnificent Obsession.
The idea that an obsession could be called "magnificent" came as a surprise
and shock to
many people. For it was generally understood that a mind obsessed was a
mind insane or, at least,
a mind irrational. But looking for dictionary definitions we come to realize
that an obsession is "an
urgent and inescapable preoccupation with an idea or emotion." The word
"magnificent," of
course, means supreme, sublime, noble, or exalted." Thus a "magnificent
obsession" is the urgent
and inescapable preoccupation with a supreme idea or exalted emotion.
In a real sense, all men who have helped or hindered humanity have been
men obsessed --
men with an urgent and inescapable preoccupation with an idea or emotion.
Some men have been
obsessed with the idea of power, like Napoleon and Mussolini and Hitler
and Stalin. Others have
been obsessed with the idea of wealth, like Morgan and Rockefeller and
the Nizam of Hyderabad,
and countless thousands of others in lesser degree. It is not necessary
for one to possess great
wealth to be obsessed with it.
Today, Paul Robeson, Eugene Dennis, and many thousands of others are
obsessed with the
idea of Communism. Others are obsessed today with the pursuit of pleasure.
But of all these
obsessions -- power, wealth, fame, pleasure, authority -- not one can properly
be called
"magnificent," because not one of them is concerned with ideas and endeavors
that are supreme or
sublime or noble or exalted.
Those men, however, who have helped humanity heavenward have also been
men
obsessed. Christ himself was obsessed -- how gloriously He was preoccupied
with the urgent and
inescapable task of redeeming lost humanity! Paul, too, shared that obsession,
as did Peter and
Wesley and Brainerd and Moody and the other thousands of men and women
who have given
themselves unstintingly and unselfishly in that supreme endeavor of helping
Christ help humanity.
There is only one obsession in the whole wide range of human endeavor
that can properly
and rightly be called "magnificent," and that "magnificent obsession is
the urgent and inescapable
preoccupation with winning men and women to Jesus Christ! Soul winning
and soul winning alone
is life's magnificent obsession!
I. SOUL WINNING IS LIFE'S SUPREME ENDEAVOR
Soul winning is life's supreme endeavor because it enables man to participate
in God's
redemptive purpose and plan. In this chrome-plated, gadgety age of ours,
man is constantly
confronted with a sense of futility -- a feeling that life doesn't mean
anything. The evidences of this
inner anxiety and frustration are everywhere abundant. What we desperately
need, as Robert
Maynard Hutchins says, is "a mooring to something that is lasting, something
that gives Us a sense
of place in the world, of stability of purpose and significance in life.
And," he continues, "if you
have a chance to tie up to something lasting, something effectively representing
the effort to
ennoble human experience, you had better get a firm hold on it without
delay. You will need
something of that sort before you are through with life."
What could be more lasting, what could be more eternally significant,
than that great
redemptive endeavor that began long before the morning stars sang together,
and that will continue
long after time has spilled over into eternity? For "the Lamb [was] slain
from the foundation of the
world," and throughout eternity God will be busy making man more like Jesus.
God's first purpose now is not creative, but redemptive! God's great
purpose now is not to
create more stars or spark more suns; God's first purpose now is to redeem
lost men!
It did not bankrupt heaven's resources to make man. But it did take
heaven's brightest jewel
to redeem man. Creation came from the mind of God. But redemption came
from the heart of God.
Out of the mind of God came the world to nourish and sustain man, but out
of the heart of God
came Jesus to redeem man.
God did not send His only Son into the world merely to teach ignorant
men or merely to
guide groping men or to feed hungry men or to heal sick men. God did send
His Son to die on the
cross to redeem sinful men!
Oh, the lift and lilt and fullness it gives to life to share in God's
eternal purpose and plan in
redeeming lost men! We are not spectators; we are participants in the divine
plan. And so it is that
we fulfill our own highest destiny only as we bring lost men and women
to Christ.
Requires Total Response
Soul winning is life's supreme endeavor because it requires a total
response from man. No
one can be a part-time soul winner any more than one can be a part-time
Christian. One of the more
pathetic sights in life is to see a person with wide talents and a wonderful
potential merely
puttering around with a task that requires only a fraction of his energies
and abilities.
Success in soul winning, however, can never be achieved without total
response to its
demands. Redeeming men required God's best effort, and it requires man's
all-out best. There is no
other task in all of life that is so total in its demands upon the energies
of the individual. Nothing
else so drains the energies as soul winning. The forces and energies and
abilities of the whole
personality are required in the high and sacred business of winning men
to Christ.
Soul winning is not just a pouring out of the emotions. It is not just
an exercise of the mind.
It is not merely the activity of the will. Soul winning demands all three
-- emotions that are pure, a
mind that is alert, and a will that is quick to respond to human need.
Soul winning is not a Sunday supplement to life. It is not a task reserved
for revivals. Soul
winning is a seven-day-a-week responsibility, and it demands our best and
it demands our all!
Demands Divine Assistance
Soul winning is life's supreme endeavor because it demands divine assistance.
There is no
one intelligent enough, or educated enough, or cultured enough, or forceful
enough to win a lost
soul to Christ. There is no one who through sheer ability alone can really
win a lost soul. It takes
God's help to do that!
Jesus said that if we would follow Him He would "make" us "fishers of
men." In other
words, no one, regardless of ability or talent or intellect, is sufficient
to win souls. Christ must
"make" us soul winners. Again, Jesus said, "I will make you to become fishers
of men," implying
that no one without God's help and power is a ready-made soul winner. That
very fact should be an
encouragement to those who say, "I am not talented enough to win souls."
Exactly! No one is!
Christ must "make" us soul winners!
There are those, of course, who feel that they are sufficient in themselves.
They feel that
they are educated enough or talented enough to win souls. Education may
help. But no one can
become a soul winner merely by reading a book on soul winning. One must
not only have the
"know-how"; one must also have the "wherewithal," and only God can supply
that!
T. DeWitt Talmage said: "I never knew a man to be saved by a brilliant
argument. You
cannot hook men into the kingdom of God by the horns of a dilemma. There
is no grace in
syllogisms." Education in itself is not the equipment for soul winning.
Technical know-how does
not make one a soul winner. Smooth, facile speech is not the real requirement.
Even the desire to
win souls does not equip one to be a soul winner. The one essential and
indispensable equipment
of the soul winner is the Holy Spirit.
The apostles, of course, were weak and inadequate men. But Jesus told
them that they
would receive power when the Holy Spirit was poured out upon them and then
they would be
witnesses and soul winners. It took the filling with the Holy Spirit to
make the apostles soul
winners, and it will take that for us to be soul winners! It takes human
personality plus God to win
souls!
II. SOUL WINNING IS THE CHRISTIAN LIFE'S INESCAPABLE ENDEAVOR
Soul winning is inescapable because Christ commands it.
Soul winning is not a pious extra. Soul winning is not a sanctimonious
side line. Soul
winning is not a segment on Christianity's circumference reserved for the
enthusiasts. Soul winning
is the one central vocation and duty and privilege of every true child
of God.
So many professing Christians have diluted the Great Commission until
their service is not
only weak and inadequate, but their concept of responsibility and service
does not even challenge
them. There has never been a cheap and easy way to win men to Christ. There
was no short cut to
Calvary, and there is no short cut in bringing men to the foot of Calvary's
cross. But to bring men
there is Christ's central command.
There is absolutely no way to compensate for our failure in winning
souls. We can't teach
our way out of that failure. We can't sing our way out. We can't testify
our way out. We can't
administrate our way out. We can't preach our way out. We can't finance
our way out. We can
never fully discharge our soul-winning responsibility with a checkbook!
There is an increasing number of church members who will pay to see
souls saved, but they
themselves will not provide one ounce of spiritual momentum to get souls
saved. Christ didn't
merely say send or pay. Christ said Go!
It is never enough to be a church member. We must be soul-winning church
members. It is
never enough to be a Sunday-school teacher. We must be soul-winning teachers.
It is never enough
to be a church board member. We must be soul-winning board members. It
is never enough to be a
song leader. We must be soulwinning song leaders. It is never enough to
be a superintendent. We
must be soul-winning superintendents. It is never enough to be a preacher.
We must be soulwinning
preachers! For only as we win souls are we obeying Christ's first and central
command!
An Inner Compulsion
Soul winning is inescapable because of an inner compulsion. Jesus said,
"Tarry, then go."
If we tarry long enough, we will go! -- we'll have to! It is impossible
to love Christ and not love
lost men. Only loving hearts are burdened, and only burdened hearts can
win men. You can deal
with a soul without a burden, but you can't win a soul without a burden.
It is love for God that
nourishes and sustains and necessitates burden for men. If we have the
joy of salvation in our own
soul, we have to let others know about it!
Every help toward soul winning is welcome. But it is never necessary
for a burdened heart
to join a club or league or society in order to witness for Christ or to
win souls to Christ. From the
first disciples to the present time, men and women with the great gladness
of God in their hearts
have been constrained by an irresistible inner compulsion to win others
to Christ.
There is no external pressure, no external compulsion that can sustain
the burden for souls.
Out of the deep reservoir of spirituality flow the compassion and love
for lost men that make soul
winning a spiritual necessity. It is that inner compulsion, that holy urge
from within, that drives us
on when all external pressure is released. Without that inner "must," without
that inner joy that
finds outlet only in witnessing and winning, all revivals and crusades
and campaigns are but weak
and temporary stimulants.
We don't need more P-80's. We need more B-29's. P-80's are jet-fighters
that have great
bursts of speed for a few minutes. B-29's carry heavy loads over long distances.
We don't need
more people who get stirred to activity only during revivals. We need more
men and women who
will carry heavy burdens for lost souls for the long pull -- beyond any
revival or campaign or
crusade.
While in Honolulu I met a young Japanese woman by the name of Alice
Kimoto. Alice was
formerly a singer in a tearoom, and she was also a Buddhist. But when her
pagan gods failed her,
she turned to Christ and Is now one of the most radiant Christians one
could meet. She goes out
several days each week from house to house to tell the people about Jesus
and what He has done
for her -- witnessing to people of all nationalities, telling them how
happy she is now that she has
accepted Christ and is wholly surrendered to Him.
Her pastor didn't ask her to do that. She didn't sign a pledge card
that she would do it. No
one told her to go out and win people. But she witnesses and wins because
of a sense of great debt
and because of a great love for God in her heart that simply must find
outlet in service to others.
We are always ready and willing to ring doorbells when the joy-bells
of heaven are
ringing in our own souls! Oh, for that inner joy and compassion and compulsion
that will make us
soul winners everywhere and all the time!
Challenge from Without
Soul winning is inescapable because of the constant challenge from without.
The story is
told of a Hindu philosopher who was discoursing beautifully to some friends
on his religion, when
he was interrupted by the cries of a little child dying of cold and hunger
and exposure just outside
his window. He rose quietly and went to the window, closing it -- shutting
out the sound!
How many professing Christians are like that! They can pronounce all
the shibboleths of
their religion. They can talk beautifully about Jesus. They know and sing
all the pretty songs about
Him. They can even get very sentimental about their religion -- and yet,
while they talk, they close
the windows of their hearts, shutting out the cries of lost and dying souls
pleading for help. They
can't be bothered with that!
Oh, the cries of hurt hearts that are drowned out by high and pious
talk about religion!
You there, Christian, do you hear the cries of those neighbors who are
without Christ and
dying in sin? Do you hear the cries of the man behind the counter who is
dying without God? Do
you hear the cries of the one just outside your window -- or even beneath
your own roof -- who is
cold and hungry and destitute and dying without God? Or have you drowned
out their cries by your
incessant professing and by the constant whir of your religious routines?
Or do you, Christian, hear the cries of lost souls and shut the window
and resume
preaching? Or shut the window and start singing? Or shut the window and
start testifying? Or shut
the window and start praying? Yes, you can drown out the cries of the lost
and dying by preaching
or singing or praying or testifying when you know in your heart you should
go out and bring those
souls to Christ!
Oh, that God might help us to go out and, with arms of love, lift those
poor souls who are
cold and hungry and dying and bring them to Christ -- where their shivering
souls may be warmed
by His love, and where their hungry hearts may be fed by His bread, and
where their hurt hearts
may be healed by His blood.
How can any true Christian look out upon a world rotting in sin, cold
and hungry and
confused and perplexed and fearful and frustrated and sinful and lost,
and then be complacent and
dry-eyed and halfhearted and lukewarm? O God, that we might rise to the
challenge of the lost
souls not only in India and China and Africa, but those also who are crying
and dying just outside
our own window!
III. SOUL WINNING IS LIFE'S MOST URGENT ENDEAVOR
Soul winning is urgent because Jesus is coming soon. One does not need
to know all the
theories concerning the second coming of Christ to know that that climactic
event is at hand. For
the whole wide world today is full of the signs of His coming.
The very fact of His soon return should give to every Christian a keen
sense of urgency in
winning men and women to Christ. For us to know that the darkness of night
will soon envelop us
should charge us with an intense and holy urgency in the accomplishment
of our first and central
task.
What if He should come tonight? Would He find us urgently preoccupied
in winning souls?
You, teacher, if Jesus should come tonight, would He find you thinking
first of all about winning
souls? You, businessman, if Jesus should come tonight would He find you
preoccupied with life's
biggest business -- that of soul winning? You, farmer, if Jesus should
come tonight, would He find
you urgently busy in the all-important harvest of souls? You, housewife,
if Jesus should come
tonight would He find you working at winning your family to Christ? You
cook for them, you sew
for them, but are you really working at the first task of winning them
to Christ? You, preacher, if
Jesus should come tonight, would He find you all-out for souls?
Oh, that everyone would make absolutely certain that if Christ should
come tonight He
would find us urgently preoccupied with life's greatest endeavor -- that
of winning souls!
Threat of Impending Doom
Soul winning is urgent because of the awful threat of impending doom.
Man lives today
under constant fear of atomic destruction. The awful power of the unleashed
atom is so mysterious
and horrible that the merest mention of the atomic bomb sends shudders
through the soul.
Men, with their brains and hands, have finally devised a destructive
force that can literally
blow them off the face of the earth. It is not the preachers who are scared
now; it is the scientists
and the military men who are most effectively drawing the outlines of doom.
People used to think that the preaching of imminent doom was just a
false emotional scare
that preachers exploited. Today the preachers don't have to talk about
it; the theme has become
highly scientific, and the scientists and the military men and the statesmen
are doing the preaching.
President Truman says: "We cannot stand another global war. We can't
even have another
war unless it is a total war, and that means the end of our civilization
as we have known it"
Raymond Fosdick says: "At long last we have come to the end of the road,
face to face
with our final choice. This time we cannot postpone the issue. This time
the stakes are life or death
on a terrestrial scale."
General MacArthur warns: "We have had our last chance. If the flesh
is to be saved now, it
must be by the spirit."
There is one tremendous truth piercing the gathering clouds and it is
this: Only Christ can
save us now! It is no longer Christ or confusion. It is no longer Christ
or chaos. It is now Christ or
doom! Christ or death! Christ or damnation!
As an individual sinner must often come to the brink of disaster before
he awakens to his
sense of need, just so God, in His vast providence, may be letting this
shattered and sinful world
come to the very lip of disaster to bring men to their senses and cause
them to realize that it is not
more culture that they need, but Christ. Not more science, but salvation!
Cry it out in the United Nations Assembly: "Deliberation is not enough.
Only Christ can
save us now!" Speak it in the congresses and parliaments of the world:
"Legislation is not enough.
Only Christ can save us now!" Preach it from the pulpits of the earth:
"Social program is not
enough. Only Christ can save us now!" Whisper it to every sin-weary soul:
"New resolution is not
enough. Only Christ can save you now!" Shout it out everywhere and all
the time: "Either Christ
saves us or we perish!"
Let us go into this darkening, divided, dying world and with cool heads
and hot hearts and
resolute wills point men and women to the Christ who is Light and Love
and Life.
The Opening Doors
Soul winning is urgent because of doors opening today that have been
closed for centuries.
There are in the world today immense vacuums. Russia rushes into the political
vacuums. America
pours her billions into the economic vacuums. But the greatest and most
significant vacuum in the
world today is the spiritual vacuum. No one knows the full extent of it,
but it is vast.
Old patterns of life are breaking up. The allegiances of men today are
very fluid.
Everything is in flux. What a tremendous challenge for the church with
a world vision to move into
that vacuum with the powerful and glorious gospel of Christ!
The call from Macedonia is coming from every country of the world today.
Yes, even in
Russia, where thousands of true Christians have gone underground rather
than to surrender their
faith. But the Early Church proved the power of its faith -- underground.
So the paganism of the
present may be defeated and overthrown by the seeds of living faith sown
in the Christian cells
driven underground by that godless government.
Hear Japan's eighty million crying for the gospel. Listen to China with
her four hundred
million crying for Christ. Who can fail to hear the call of India with
her three hundred and forty
million souls in heathen darkness? Listen to Africa's one hundred and seventy-five
million crying,
"Come over and help us." And what of the cries of the millions of lost,
sinful, weary, fearful men
and women of Europe who need Christ? And the voices of seventy million
unchurched in America
together with the other millions of church members who have never been
saved!
O God! O great God! Have mercy upon us if we fail in this, our greatest
opportunity. Have
mercy upon us if we go on about our business as usual. Great God in heaven,
forgive us if we
waste these fateful hours and days in running through our little routines
and giving our little reports
and patting one another on the back and saying we're doing a great job,
when the whole wide
world of suffering and sinful men cries to high heaven for help and hope
and salvation!
Soul Winning Is Everybody's Job
There are always those, of course, who feel that this challenge of soul
winning is only for
the evangelists and the enthusiasts. Great God! Help us to realize that
soul winning is everybody's
job! A number of months ago, some preacher wrote to Dr. J. B. Chapman saying
that, since he was
more of the intellectual type, he had trouble in making his preaching evangelistic.
As though those
two words were exclusive! I admired Dr. Chapman even more than before when
he answered in
the Preacher's Magazine that he had always found it easier to be evangelistic
in his preaching when
he himself was most conscious of the nearness of Christ.
Was Paul intellectual? Indeed so. For sheer brain power the world has
seldom, if ever,
produced his equal. Yet the fires of holy evangelism blazed so intensely
in his mind and soul that
he burned his way across his world preaching, crying, cajoling, threatening,
begging, entreating
men and women to accept Jesus Christ as their personal Saviour. How magnificently
obsessed was
Paul! As I knelt before the tomb of Paul's headless body in Rome, I prayed,
"O God, if it be
possible will You somehow spark my feeble heart by the fire of Your apostle's
burning zeal!"
Was Wesley intellectual? Indeed so. For breadth and scope of intelligence,
England has
seldom produced a greater. Yet Wesley was so inflamed by the fires of holy
evangelism that in
spite of all hell that was marshaled against him, and in spite of scoffing
ecclesiastics and jeering
critics, he traveled on foot and on horseback over two hundred thousand
miles, preaching over
forty thousand sermons, warning, witnessing, and entreating by life and
logic the godless men and
women of his day to accept Jesus Christ and to accept Him in all His fullness!
O Wesley, teach our
puny little minds and our stuffy, stuck-up little souls the real meaning
and grandeur of evangelism!
Yes, Jonathan Edwards and Charles Finney and Dwight Moody and Dr. Bresee,
you who
were obsessed with the idea of winning souls, teach us by all the powers
of your great minds and
vast lives that it is never a mark of intelligence to be cold and complacent.
Teach us that it is never
a mark of intelligence to be dry-eyed. Teach us that it is never a mark
of intelligence to be
unmoved and unconcerned over a world of lost and dying men. Teach us by
all the wisdom at your
command that it is never dignified to be dead!
No. The task of soul winning is not reserved for the professional enthusiasts.
It is not
reserved for the emotional and erratic fringe. Soul winning is so great
and so urgent a task that it
demands the best from everybody!
If the awful and urgent and terrific challenge of this day does not
compel us to action, then
what will?
If we who profess holiness of heart cannot be stirred, then who can
be?
If we cannot be bothered over lost souls, then who will be?
If we do not care, who will?
The Lost Child
In April of 1949 the whole nation was stirred and moved by the tragedy
of a little girl
falling into an abandoned well. Time Magazine ran the story under the title
"The Lost Child." It
happened in San Marino, California. Little Kathy Fiscus, aged three, was
running with her sister
and her cousin across a vacant lot when all of a sudden Kathy vanished
out of sight. She had fallen
into an abandoned water well. The pipe was only fourteen inches across,
and it was rusted and
corroded. The mother frantically called down into the hole, and Kathy answered
once or twice.
Then there was silence.
The police rushed to the scene and put down a rope, but it was useless
and so they gave up.
Drills, derricks, bulldozers, and trucks were rushed to the lot from a
dozen towns. Three giant
cranes came from Los Angeles. Firemen ran an air hose down the well, and
pumped air down the
hole by a rotary pump. Little more than an hour after her fall a power-drill
crew began to sink a
shaft alongside the abandoned well. On the other side, big, clam-shell
shovels clawed an open pit
for exploration. Fifty floodlights were rushed from Hollywood studios.
Volunteer workers,
engineers, sand hogs, retired miners rushed to help.
By midnight Saturday there were twelve thousand people standing in the
chilly spring night.
Finally they had to dig by hand. No one thought of pay. The city engineer
said, "I haven't even
heard the word mentioned." All over the nation citizens swamped newspaper
and radio stations for
news. Midgets, schoolboys, jockeys volunteered to go down. The men worked
on regardless of
danger or fatigue. Finally at six o'clock Sunday night, the announcement
came that Kathy was dead
and apparently had been dead since she was last heard speaking. The whole
nation grieved and
many wept at the news. Yes, a whole nation was shocked and stirred and
moved over a little
three-year-old girl lost in an abandoned water well. And rightly so. I
listened and sorrowed with
everyone else.
But wait. While a whole nation was grieving over a little girl lost
and dying in an
abandoned water well, a hundred million men and women and young people
in America were on
their way to hell -- lost and dying and without God. But who cared about
that!
We can't be bothered about lost souls! We're too busy! We have other
things to do! We
have to look after our homes and our business and our jobs; we can't be
disturbed about a few
million lost souls!
A man came to the altar a few months ago with hot tears running down
his face. Oh, the
agony on his face and in his voice as he looked up and said: "There is
another soul in hell tonight,
and I am partly responsible. I have worked by the side of a man for seven
years, and during all that
time I never spoke to him about his soul. I invited him to church many
times, of course, but I never
really tried to win him to Christ. This morning, when I got to work, he
wasn't there, and they told
we that he had died last night. He died and went to hell -- while I was
sitting here in church! Seven
years, and I never spoke to him one time about his soul! Oh, what can I
do? He's gone to hell, and I
am partly to blame!"
O mother, father, will that son or daughter look you in the face at
the Judgment and say,
"Why didn't you talk to me about my soul? You clothed me, you fed me, you
schooled me, you
talked to me about everything else. Why didn't you talk to me more about
God?" What will you say
then?
You, businessman, what will you say when that partner comes up to you
at the Judgment
and says: "Why didn't you ever mention God and salvation and heaven and
hell to me? You talked
to me about everything else, but why didn't you talk to me about my soul?"
You, preacher, what will you say when those souls come to you at the
Judgment and say:
"Why weren't you more interested in my soul? You visited us and you joked
with us and you
invited us to your church, but why didn't you talk to us about our souls
and pray with us in our
homes that we might yield to God? We expected you to. We wanted you to.
You talked about
everything else. Why didn't you talk to us about God and heaven and hell
and where we were going
to spend eternity?"
Magnificently Obsessed
O Christian, O church member, let us go about our homes obsessed with
the idea of
winning our families to Christ. Let us go to our work obsessed with the
idea of winning our fellow
workmen to Christ. Let us go to school obsessed with winning other students
to Christ. Let us
associate with our neighbors and friends obsessed with the idea of winning
them to Christ. To win
souls! -- that must be our obsession!
Oh, that we might be so magnificently obsessed that we can say with
Paul, "I count not my
life dear ... I am ready to die for the Lord Jesus ... But I must warn
everyone night and day with
tears."
Oh, that we might be so magnificently obsessed that we can cry with
Brainerd, "I care not
where I live or what hardships I endure, so that I may gain souls for Christ!"
Oh, that we might be so magnificently obsessed that we can pray and
plead with
Whitefield, "O God, give me souls -- or take my soul!"
That should be our prayer! That must be our prayer! That will be our
prayer! "O God, give
me souls -- or take my soul!!"
Let us then rise with warm hearts and burdened souls to the challenge
of our redemptive
task, and with the call and command of Christ charging our souls with holy
urgency, and with the
insistent voice of our own conscience demanding action, and the clamoring
cries of sin-sick souls
forever shattering our indifference and complacency. Let us go with a burning
passion for the lost,
with our minds and our emotions and our wills aflame with Life's Magnificent
Obsession!
Prayer:
Show us, O Christ, Thy pierced hands. Show us, O Christ, Thy two spiked
feet. Let us feel
now the jagged wound of Thy pierced side. Let us look again, O Master,
upon Thy broken,
bleeding body and that brutal, blood-soaked cross. Then through the holes
of Thy hands and feet
may we look upon the nice houses we live in, the soft beds we sleep in,
the nice cars we drive,
and the fine clothes we wear, and the good food we eat; and may we, O Christ,
feel that
burning sense of shame for having done so little, and cared so little,
and cried so little, and
suffered so little, and sacrificed so little for such a suffering Christ,
and for such a sinful world!
This we ask in Jesus' name. Amen.