Chapter 11
HOLINESS REJECTED PRODUCES A WORLDLY AND BARREN MINISTRY
Every worthy man
will seek to magnify his calling and make it honorable. Every true soul
craves success. The nobler the occupation, the more honorable the
ambition to succeed. Of all
human callings, the most sacred and the most important is to stand as
God's mouthpiece and
ambassador, to plead with guilty souls to be reconciled to God. A man
is dead indeed who would
not be anxious to succeed in a work which rescues men from eternal
ruin, and gets the smile of
God and heaven for a reward. People with monumental courage climb
burning buildings to rescue
the helpless from the flames; they dash through the breakers to rescue
the shipwrecked from the
billows. What ought we to do to snatch men and women from an endless
hell?
And yet there is
not such zeal, we are pained to confess, in the ministry in general as
there
ought to be. Lawyers often plead with more enthusiasm and eloquence
when only the value of an
old cow is at stake than preachers manifest in pleading for souls for
whom Christ died. Richard
Baxter once said: "Nothing is more sad than to see a dead minister in
to dead souls the living
gospel of the living God."
There are two
difficulties or perils that confront every minister:
1. The world
puts upon his spirit a steady pressure, a devitalizing influence. Its
temptations
beat upon him from every quarter as the surf beats upon the rock that
rises out of the deep. His very
position multiplies his perils. His gifts and character make him
welcome and sought after by his
fellows. The prizes of life appeal to his ambition. The smiles of
society greet him, and the
blandishments of the world charm him and bribe him to forget the
seriousness of his purpose.
Honor waves her magic wand, and self-indulgence, like a sorceress,
whispers her incantations to
his tempted soul. All these together, by a constant leaking away of
spiritual forces, exhaust the life,
and the from his loving Lord.
Then other
things than God become his reliance. Fraternities invite him to depend
upon
their friendly help. Culture in the head is substituted for Christ in
the heart. Eloquence and oratory
rather than Holy Spirit are deemed more essential to success. The
newspaper and the supplant the
Holy Word, and the flashy to hungry hearts in the place of the gospel
of the atoning Christ.
Gradually, but none the less surely, the life becomes self-centered
rather than Christ-centered. The
holy abandon of the being to Christ in self-sacrifice, like a seed sown
in the soil, is unknown. The
sublime truth of Jesus, "He that loveth his life shall lose it; and he
that hateth his life in this world
shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep it
unto life eternal," is not
understood. Selfishness becomes the law of action, and it consumes the
heart of piety like a canker.
2. As an
outgrowth of this state of heart and life, truth itself becomes
nebulous and unreal.
Speculation takes the place of a "Thus saith the Lord." Failure in
preaching the old gospel, because
a lack of dependence upon God, nurses the foolish idea that changed;
that new truths and new
measures are essential to the new conditions. The "gospel of Christ"
which Paul was "not ashamed
of" is relegated to the lumber-room, or stake of criticism. The young
preacher is given to by the
theological professor that he must be "up to date" in evolution, higher
criticism, and social
settlements; he goes from the seminary to his first pastorate with
supercilious contempt of
old-fashioned is wholly unphilosophical, and as for SANCTIFICATION, why
should there be a
second blessing when the first is quite superfluous? Education and
confirmation are entirely
sufficient for this wonderful new generation coming on from our Sabbath
schools and our cultured
homes! Thus it comes to pass that revivals in many quarters are
spurned; full salvation, or, for that
matter, any salvation, is discounted; and the old concern for lost
souls does not press, like an
ever-present sorrow, upon the pastor's heart. The church becomes a
social club, and the pastor its
leading lecturer and the toastmaster at periodical suppers!!
God forbid that
I should say that this is the universal condition of the Church! But
that this
is the condition in some quarters, and that the tendency is toward it
in many, cannot be denied.
Hence we have an
educated, polite, fashionable, worldly ministry whose conspicuous
barrenness, in all denominations, is the astonishment of men.
Recently I was
told of a minister who is talented and brilliant, and once was famous
as a
soul winner. At one time he led one of the greatest revivals that ever
occurred in the Southwest, in
which six hundred people found God. After that he was brought face to
face with Pentecost. After
deep deliberation he refused to pay the price of sanctification. Since
then, during several years, I
am informed, it is doubtful if he has won a soul, and he has said with
bitterness "I hate the very
word sanctification." In other words, he deliberately rejected
Pentecost and he is left in barrenness
and bitterness of soul, even hating "the sanctification without which
no man shall see the Lord"
(Heb. 12:14, A. S. V.).