Chapter 1
CONSCIENCE, RECORD AND JUDGMENT
Now while everybody prays, I shall invite your prayerful attention to
three passages of Scripture:
Acts 24:16 – "And herein do I exercise myself, to have always a
conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men."
St. John 19:22 – "Pilate answered, what I have written I have written."
Eccl. 12:14 – "For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every
secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil."
My subject for this hour is "Conscience, Record and Judgment."
Conscience and Record are like two index fingers pointing toward yonder
Judgment, where our lives will be unfolded like an open book.
Man is the only being that has that wonderful faculty known as
conscience. Conscience is that power that lifts us a million leagues above the
brute life. The word conscience is not found in the Old Testament; it is a New
Testament word. It is the region of our higher and spiritual nature.
There is so much so-called religion in these last days that is merely
emotional and sentimental, which never stirs nor awakens the higher spiritual
nature where conscience has its seat and throne. That is why we have so
many so-called revivals and shams today; conscience has never been
awakened.
There are a number of definitions for conscience, such as:
* The voice of God in the soul
* A living witness
* God's umpire
* That which decides moral character as to one's own actions
* That which condemns the wrong and approves the rights
But let it be understood that the foregoing definitions of conscience hold
true only of a conscience that has not been violated, stifled, hardened or
seared.
At no time is an unenlightened conscience a safe guide. It is only as it is
quickened and enlightened that it is safe to follow. The burden of this hour,
and my purpose in this passage, is to show you the power of an awakened
conscience. I call your attention to two Bible scenes recorded in the New
Testament.
The first is the flash of an awakened conscience seen in the life of King
Herod. The alarm bells were turned on three different times in his life. The first
awakening took place under the ministry of that fearless preacher, the
fore-runner, path blazer, wilderness prophet, John the Baptist. Had you been
living in those days, you would have seen great multitudes making their way
to the wilderness to hear the great truths as they fell like lightning bolts. All
roads in those days led the people to the wilderness to hear the fiery prophet
with a burning message. The rich and the poor alike were held spellbound by
the eloquence of this forceful preacher. Herod the King hears of this great
man, and he to goes out to the big meeting.
I can see him now as he comes in his splendor and glory, riding in a
royal chariot, drawn by two snowy white horses. Seated by the side of this
unclean king is another man's wife. No doubt, some of the brethren call John
the Baptist's attention to him, and say, "Brother, yonder comes Herod the
King; give us one of your best sermons today. Haven't you got a sermon on
love? You have preached on repentance until we all are nearly dead with
conviction." John the Baptist looks the king over, cries out and says, "It is not
lawful for you to have your brother's wife." My, my, meeting is out! Herod
goes back in a rage, and finally has John the Baptist put in prison. But that
does not ease his conscience. The original brings out the thought, as Moffatt
renders it, that John kept saying, "It is not lawful to have her." It was
Conscience, the voice of God in the soul, crying out against the awful sin of
adultery. Before any man can take the other fellow's wife and get by with it, he
must drown the voice of Conscience.
The second time we see the alarm bells turned in to awaken Herod was
on his birthday. The daughter of Herodias danced before the king, no doubt a
lewd dance, but it so pleased him that he promised with an oath, to give her
whatever she asked for. She, being instructed by her wicked, ungodly mother
(whom John the Baptist rebuked for living a double life), asked for the head of
John the Baptist. We are told that the king was sorrowful. Why? Conscience
was troubling him. Brother, that is something you cannot get away from.
Distance has nothing to do with conscience. A guilty conscience will
follow you to the uttermost parts of the earth and still condemn you. Years
have nothing to do with conscience. The brothers of Joseph sold him into
slavery, and lied to their old father about him. Years roll by; let us see what
happens. The sons of Jacob go down to Egypt to buy corn, the governor talks
in a rough, harsh voice to them, and when they leave his presence they say,
"We are very guilty concerning our brother." Who said anything about
Joseph? That slumbering conscience that had been lulled to sleep for twenty
years awakened, and turned on the alarm bells.
The last time we see conscience troubling Herod was when he heard of
the fame of Jesus. He cried out and said, "This is John the Baptist, risen from
the dead." Although he professed not to believe in the resurrection of the
dead, conscience got the best of him. After this, conscience seems to bother
him no more, because he crossed the deadline.
In the second Bible scene, we see conscience doing its work as a faithful
witness in the life of Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor. Conscience turned
on the alarm bells when Pilate looked into the face of the Son of God, no
doubt, for the first time in his life. The blood-thirsty mob, with a backslidden
church, a fallen preacher, found Jesus at midnight in the garden, in prayer,
sweating great drops of blood. They arrested Him, led Him bound and
fettered, to the hall of the Jewish Sanhedrin. He was arraigned first before the
white-headed High Priest Annas, then to his son-in-law Caiaphas. In spite of
the fact that nothing was found against Him, both Annas and Caiaphas found
Him guilty. During the night the prisoner was brutally mistreated. They spat on
His face, indicating He was vile. They slapped Him with their hands and
clenched fists, smote Him with rods, and crowned Him with thorns. With
matted hair, bleeding face, He was led to Pilate. One glimpse of that
thorn-crowned brow smites him with conviction. We are told that he sought to
let Jesus go, but that the bloodthirsty mob yelled like demons for His blood,
and cried, "Crucify Him!" Right in the midst of this awful scene, a servant
rushes into the court with a note from Pilate's wife, in which she says, "Have
thou nothing to do with this just Man." Again conscience smites him. An awful
struggle is going on in his breast.
Pilate, in order to silence the voice of conscience, turns Jesus over to
Herod. The old, cunning fox sends Him back to Pilate. Now a real battle goes
on, in which Conscience cries out, "Have thou nothing to do with this just
Man." In order to try and appease the wrath of the bloodthirsty mob, Pilate
takes Jesus into the judgment hall and scourges Him. He brings Him back with
lacerated back, and bloody robe as the blood oozes from the fresh wounds.
But again the mob cries, "Crucify Him!" Conscience once more warns, checks
and threatens but not so loud, as its voice has been choked and smothered.
The last scene we witness is the cowardly Governor taking a basin of water
and trying to wash his hands of the blood of Jesus. But all the waters that have
ever fallen, or ever will fall, can never wash the guilt of a condemning
conscience away.
I am not through with Pontius Pilate. What finally became of him? We
are told that in three years from the time of the crucifixion, he is an exile, and
still brooding over that awful scene that took place in the judgment hall. He
sees that thorn-crowned brow, the matted hair and bleeding face...conscience
turns into remorse, his guilty soul is lashed as with a stinging scorpion, until he
goes mad with remorse and shame. Leaping from the window of a third story
prison, he tries to drown out its voice in death, only to meet an outraged
conscience in another world.
Suppose we take a trip to Hell! As we stand on the brink of damnation,
midst the wailing of the damned and shouts of tormenting devils, I see a form
in a bending attitude. It is Pontius Pilate, the Roman Governor, trying to wash
his hands of the guilt of Jesus’ death. I look again, and I see poor Judas
Iscariot as he drags his lost soul through the ashes of Hell, crying, "I have
betrayed innocent blood." Friends, unconfessed sins never die. They will cross
continents and face you in the dying hour, and dog your lost soul throughout
all eternity.
Some years ago, we heard a leading evangelist tell that while he was
preaching in a large city church (made up mostly of worldly rich members)
The Spirit came on him in an unusual way. He dropped his index finger on a
banker's wife, and cried out, "God knows you, woman!" At once she fainted
and fell in the aisle. Believe me, there was some excitement in that big, proud,
worldly church. Ladies from the choir were gathering around her, calling for
water and fans, but the evangelist made them all sit down and leave her alone.
Finally, when she regained consciousness, she called for her husband, and
confessed to being untrue to him.
Some time ago in one of the northern camps, after we had preached on
the Judgment, awful conviction was settling down on the people. A very
prominent lady worker in the camp said to us, “May I see you a moment, and
have a personal talk with you?” After an awful struggle, she finally said, "Must I
go home and confess to my husband?" I answered that I did not know, but
asked her had she sinned against her husband. She said that she had. Then I
said, "I think you owe him a confession." It seemed that she would die right
there under conviction, but she obeyed God and conscience, and won out.
Oh, folks! You will never get an experience that abides over a stinging
conscience. There is no such thing as vital Christianity without a quickened,
live conscience. Believe me, if we had more preaching of the Finney type that
appeals to men's consciences and wills, instead of their emotions, we would
have converts that would stick from January to January.
This brings us up to the second part of our theme, namely: "Record."
"What I have written I have written." These words with their gripping, forceful
meaning were uttered by Pontius Pilate in answer to the question raised
concerning the title he wrote and put on the Cross: "Jesus of Nazareth the King
of the Jews." When the chief priests saw it they said, "Write not the King of the
Jews, but that he said, 'I am the King of the Jews'." Then Pilate answered,
"What I have written, I have written." My record is as much a part of me as my
conscience is. I cannot get away from it. It is that something that will follow a
person into eternity.
Just a few years ago, a beautiful young woman sang for a phonograph
record company. Shortly after this she died, but her voice went right on. At her
funeral a machine was placed at the head of the grave, and while her body
was being lowered in the grave, some friends started the machine with this
special record on, and she sang at her own funeral. But long before the talking
machine and wax record were invented, God was making a record of human
lives.
Think of the records some people are making. Don't forget, God is
keeping books, and at the Judgment our lives will be revealed for a whole
universe to see. The Judgment is going to be an awful scene, when the record
of each life is opened.
What about your record as a father? Come, answer the question now.
Would you be willing for your boy to follow in your footsteps? Does your life
tell for Jesus, or is it a blight to the home?
How about your record as a mother? Come on mother, answer the
question. If that worldly, unsaved daughter of yours was to die right now while
I am speaking, could God hold you blameless at the Judgment?
In a great testimony meeting, sometime ago, among the number who
testified, was a middle-aged man. He arose, emotion rested on his face, and
told the following: "Friends, you know I am rated as the richest man in our
county, but I would gladly give every dollar I have, if I could call back part of
my life. Two years ago, I was called to the bedside of our eldest son, who was
yet in his teens, and was dying. When I bent over him and asked him if he
knew he was dying, he looked up and began to cry, saying, 'Papa, I cannot
die, I cannot die, I don't want to die, I am unprepared to die. Papa, pray for
me.' I said, ‘Son, your father does not know how to pray.' I had to stand by his
dying bed and hear him cry to the last, ‘I am unprepared to die.' Friends, I am
saved now, but my boy is gone." Oh! the record of that day...
Finally, I call your attention to the last part of my subject, "the
Judgment." The longer I live and travel up and down this country, the more I
am convinced that there must be a Judgment.
The Judgment is a day when God is going to examine every spiritual fig
tree. He is going to show up the pure gold of a man's life. The Bible calls the
Judgment, a Great Day. In conclusion, let us notice why it is a Great Day.
First, it is great because everybody is going to be there. The time is
coming when God is going to speak to the dust of Adam, and his body will get
up from its long sleep. Mother Eve will join him, and all the sleeping dead will
come forth, and go marching off to the Judgment. Don't forget you are going
to be in that procession.
Second, it is great because the secrets of all hearts will be disclosed in
that day. For six thousand years man has been trying to cover up sin, but the
time is coming when God is going to uncover every secret sin of the ages. In
that day, the sea is going to become sick to its stomach, and vomit up its dead.
Every pond, pool or old well that holds the body of some strangled infant, will
give up its dead...who may point their bony fingers in some of your faces. God
is going to shake this old world, rip her open with earthquakes...the sun will be
blown out, stars will fall, the moon is going to become as blood; the Heavens
are going to roll together. Amidst the rolling Heavens, falling stars, blown out
sun, bleeding moon, reeling earth and opening graves, the Judge is going to
descend, and before Him will gather all nations, great and small, and the
records will be opened.
Third, it is going to be a great day because Jesus is to be the Judge.
Now He will be your Saviour, now He is a merciful High Priest. His five
bleeding wounds plead for you. This is a day of opportunities, mourner's
benches, revival meetings, with a pleading Holy Ghost. But in that day, He will
be a Judge. Mercy will be over, probation will be ended. You may cry, "Come
back, Holy Spirit!", "Come back, opportunities!"... but that day is final, and
forever what is done is done. When once the Judge utters those awful words,
"Depart from me," it will echo through your lost soul throughout the cycles of
eternity.
If you will make your way to Him now, while the Spirit is pleading and
Christ is interceding, in that day of all days, He will be your Friend. Will you
do it now?
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