The Qualifications for Soul-Winning
1. Shake off the vipers that are in the Church, formalism, pride, and
self-importance, etc.
2. It is the only happy life to live for the salvation of souls.
3. We must be willing to do little things for Christ.
4. Must be of good courage.
5. Must be cheerful.
God had no children too weak, but a great many too strong to make use of. God
stands in no need of our strength or wisdom, but of our ignorance, of our
weakness; let us but give these to Him, and He can make use of us in winning
souls.
"And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and
they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever." Daniel
12:3.
Now we all want to shine; the mother wishes it for her boy, when she sends
him to school, the father for his lad, when he goes off to college; and here God
tells us who are to shine - not statesmen, or warriors, or such like, that shine
but for a season - but such as will shine for ever and ever; those, namely, who
win souls to Christ; the little boy even who persuades one to come to
Christ.
Speaking of this, Paul counts up five things (1 Cor. 1:27-9) that God makes
use of - the weak things, the foolish things, the base things, the despised
things, and the things which are not, and for this purpose, that no flesh might
glory in his sight - all five being just such as we should despise. He can and
will use us, just when we are willing to be humble for Christ's sake, and so for
six thousand years God has been teaching men; so with an ass's jawbone Samson
slew his thousands (Judges 15:15), so at the blowing of rams' horns the walls of
Jericho fell (Joshua 6:20). Let God work in His own way, and with His own
instruments; let us all rejoice that He should, and let us too get into the
position in which God can use us.
There is much mourning to-day over false "isms," infidelity, and the like,
but sum them all up, and I do not fear them one half so much as that dead and
cold formalism that has crept into the Church of God. The unbelieving world, and
these skeptics holding out their false lights, are watching you and me: when
Jacob put away his idols, he could go up to Bethel and get strength and the
blessing - so will it be with the Church of God. A viper fixes upon the hand of
the shipwrecked Paul; immediately he is judged by the barbarians some criminal
unfit to live; but he shakes it off into the fire, and suffers no harm, and now
they are ready to worship him, and ready too to hear and receive his message:
the Church of God must shake off the vipers that have fastened on hand and heart
too, ere men will hear. Where one ungodly man reads this Bible, a hundred read
you and me: and if they find nothing in us, they set the whole thing aside as a
myth.
Again, a man who has found out what his true work is, winning souls to
Christ, and does it, such is the happiest man. Not the richest are this - least
of all those who have just got converted for themselves, and into the Church -
lost what pleasure the world could give, and found none other. Job's captivity
turned away when he began praying for his friends; and so will all who thus work
for others shine not in heaven alone and hereafter, but here as well, and
now.
But you say "I haven't got the ability." Well, God doesn't call you to do Dr.
Bonar's work, or Dr. Duff's work, else He had given you their ability, their
talent. The word is, "To every man his work." I have a work to do, laid
out for me in the secret counsels of eternity; no other can do it. If I neglect
it, it is not true that some other will do it; it will remain undone. And if,
for the work laid upon us, we feel we have not the ability or talent necessary,
then we have a throne of grace; and God never sends, unless that He is willing
to give the strength and wisdom. The instruments He often uses may seem all
unlikely, yet when did they fail? - when once? and why not? Because He had
fitted them out as well.
He sent Moses to Egypt to deliver His people - not an eloquent, but a
stuttering man. He refuses a while, at last he went; and no man once sent by God
ever did break down.
So was Elisha a most unlikely man to be a successor to the great prophet
Elijah. Men would have chosen some famous man, some professor in the school of
the prophets. God took one from the plough; but He gave him what was needed.
Elisha had but to keep by his master to the end; and he received even a
double portion of the Spirit. And if we want to get it, we too must keep by the
Lord, nor ever lose sight of Him, should He, as Elijah Elisha, in one way or
another try our faith.
And further, we must be ready to do little things for God; many are
willing to do the great things. I dare say hundreds would have been ready to
occupy this pulpit to-day. How many of them would be as willing to teach a dirty
class in the ragged school?
I remember, one afternoon I was preaching, observing a young lady from the
house I was staying at, in the audience. I had heard she taught in the
Sabbath-school, which I knew was at the same hour; and so I asked her, after
service, how she came to be there? "Oh," said she, "my class is but five little
boys, and I thought it did not matter for them." And yet among these there might
have been, who knows, a Luther or a Knox, the beginning of a stream of blessing,
that would have gone on widening and ever widening; and besides, one soul is
worth all the kingdoms of the earth.
Away in America, a young lady was sent to a boarding-school, and was there
led to Christ; not only so, but taught that she ought to work for Him, By-and-by
she goes home, and now she seeks, in one way and another, to work for Him, but
without finding how. She asks for a class in her church Sunday-school, but the
superintendent is obliged to tell her that he has already more than enough of
teachers. One day, going along the street, she sees a little boy struck by his
companion, and crying bitterly. She goes up and speaks to him; asks him what the
trouble is? The boy thinks she is mocking him, and replies sullenly. She speaks
kindly, tries to persuade him to school. He does not want to learn. She coaxes
him to come and hear her and the rest singing there; and so next Sunday he comes
with her. She gets a corner in the school of well-dressed scholars for herself
and her charge. He sits and listens, full of wonder. On going home, he tells his
mother he has been among the angels. At first at a loss, she becomes angry, when
a question or two brings out that he has been to a Protestant Sunday-school; and
the father, on coming home, forbids his going back, on pain of flogging. Next
Sunday, however, he goes, and is flogged, and so again, and yet again, till one
Sunday, he begs to be flogged before going, that he may not be kept thinking of
it all the time. The father relents a little, and promises him a holiday every
Saturday afternoon, if he will not go to Sunday-school. The lad agrees, sees his
teacher, who offers to teach him then. How many wealthy young folks would give
up their Saturdays to train one poor ragged urchin in the way of salvation? Some
time after, at his work, the lad is on one of the railway cars. The train starts
suddenly; he slips through, and the wheels pass over his legs; he asks the
doctor if he will live to get home; it is impossible. "Then," says he, "tell
father and mother that I am going to heaven, and want to meet them there." Will
the work she did seem little now to the young lady? Or is it nothing that even
one thus grateful waits her yonder?
Another thing we want is, to be of good courage. Three or four times
this comes out in the first chapter of Joshua; and I have observed that God
never uses a man that is always looking on the dark side of things: what we do
for Him let us do cheerfully, not because it is our duty - not that we should
sweep away the word but because it is our privilege. What would my wife or
children say if I spoke of loving them because it was my duty to do so?
And my mother - if I go to see her once a year, and were to say - "Mother, I am
come all this way to discharge what feel to be my duty in visiting you;" might
she not rightly reply - "My son, if this is all that has brought you, you might
have spared coming at all!" and go own in broken-hearted sorrow to the
grave?
A London minister, a friend of mine, lately pointed out a family of seven,
all of whom he was just receiving into the Church. Their story was this: going
to church, he had to pass by a window, looking up at which one day, he saw a
baby looking out; he smiled - the baby smiled again. Next time he passes he
looks up again, smiles, and the baby smiles back. A third time going by, he
looks up, and seeing the baby, throws it a kiss - which the baby returns to him.
Time after time he has to pass the window, and now cannot refrain from looking
up each time: and each time there are more faces to receive his smiling
greeting; till by-and-by he sees the whole family grouped at the window -
father, mother, and all. The father conjectures the happy, smiling stranger must
be a minister, and so, next Sunday morning, after they have received at the
window the usual greeting, two of the children, ready dressed, are sent out to
follow him: they enter his church, hear him preach, and carry back to their
parents the report that they never heard such preaching; and what preaching
could equal that of one who had so smiled on them? Soon the rest come to the
church too, and are brought in - all by a smile. Let us not go about, hanging
our heads like a bulrush; if Christ gives joy, let us live it! The whole world
is in all matters for the very best thing - you always want to get the best
possible thing for your money; let us show, then, that our religion is the very
best thing: men with long, gloomy faces are never wise in the winning of
souls.
I was preaching in Jacksonville, and, at the house in which I stayed, my
attention was attracted by a little boy, who bore a different name from the
household, and yet was in all things and in all respects treated as one of
themselves; to the other children he was "brother," and they were "brothers" and
"sisters" to him, and with them he came up to the mother for the same good-night
kiss.
By-and-by I asked the lady of the house who it was. She told me the father of
the boy was a missionary out in India; some years before, father and mother had
come home with their five children to have them educated. After being home a
short time, the father resolved to return to India; wishing to leave the mother
with the children till their education should be finished. She wanted to go back
with him; he opposed to it, saying it was hard enough for him to leave them, for
her it must be impossible. Still she wished to go, - she had received and been
some blessing in India, and she would give up even all for Christ.
Ultimately it was arranged that the children should be received into various
families, - treated as part of them, - and that father and mother together
should return. So with the boy the mother came to this friend's and stayed a few
days along with him. The night before she had leave, sitting with the lady of
the house, she told her how anxious she was that her boy should receive the
impression that his mother had for Christ's sake cheerfully left him behind, and
that for this end she wished to leave him without a tear at parting. The
struggle this would cost the lady well knew, especially as the boy was of a
peculiarly amiable disposition.
Next morning, passing the door of the mother's room, the lady overheard a
sobbing, struggling prayer for strength to do what was on her heart to do. In a
short time the mother came down with smiling, cheerful face; and looking so, she
took leave of her boy, to go by rail some miles further on to bid a like
farewell to another of her family. She went with her husband to India.
A short year after, a still, quiet voice came to her, to come up to meet her
Saviour. And would not a welcome await her there, who had so loved Him here, and
so cheerfully served Him?
"They that be wise shall shine, as the brightness of the firmament; and they
that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever." (Daniel 12:3).
The Lord help us as humbly, devoutly, and cheerfully to abound in His work!
Sermon delivered by Dwight L. Moody in Dr. Bonar's church, Edinburgh,
Scotland, 7th December, 1873.