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Chapter VII - A WORD TO WORKERS
Some time ago I read this expression in an old author:--"The first duty of a clergyman is
humbly to ask of God that all that he wants done in his hearers should first be truly and fully
done in himself." These words have stuck to me ever since. What a solemn application this is to
the subject that occupied our attention in previous chapters--the living and working under the
fulness of the Holy Spirit! And yet, if we understand our calling aright, every one of us will
have to say, That is the one thing on which everything depends. What profit is it to tell men
that they may be filled with the Spirit of God, if, when they ask us, "Has God done it for you?"
we have to answer, "No, He has not done it"? What profit is it for me to tell men that Jesus
Christ can dwell within us every moment, and keep us from sin and actual transgression, and that
the abiding presence of God can be our portion all the day, if I wait not upon God first to do it
truly and full day by day?
Look at the Lord Jesus Christ; it was of the Christ Himself, when He had received the Holy
Ghost from heaven, that John the Baptist said that "He would baptize with the Holy Ghost." I can
only communicate to others what God has imparted to me. If my life as a minister be a life in
which the flesh still greatly prevails--if my life be a life in which I grieve the Spirit of God,
I cannot expect but that my people will receive through me a very mingled kind of life. But if
the life of God dwell in me, and I am filled with His power, then I can hope that the life that
goes out from me may be infused into my hearers too.
We have referred to the need of every believer being filled with the Spirit; and what is there
of deeper interest to us now, or that can better occupy our attention, than prayerfully to consider
how we can bring our congregations to believe that this is possible; and how we can lead on every
believer to seek it for himself, to expect it, and to accept of it, so as to live it out? But,
brethren, the message must come from us as a witness of our personal experience, by the grace of
God. The same writer to whom I alluded, says elsewhere:--"The first business of a clergyman, when
he sees men awakened and brought to Christ, is to lead them on to know the Holy Spirit." How true!
Do not we find this throughout the word of God? John the Baptist preached Christ as the "Lamb of
God which taketh away the sin of the world;" we read in Matthew that he also said that Christ
would "baptize with the Holy Ghost and with fire." In the gospel by John, we read that the
Baptist was told that upon Whom he would see the Spirit descending and abiding, He it was who
would baptize with the Spirit. Thus John the Baptist led the people on from Christ to the
expectation of the Holy Ghost for themselves. And what did Jesus do? For three years, He was with
His disciples, teaching and instructing them; but when He was about to go away, in His farewell
discourse on the last night, what was His great promise to the disciples? "I will pray the Father,
and He shall give you another Comforter, even the Spirit of truth." He had previously promised to
those who believed on Him, that "rivers of living water" should flow from them; which the
Evangelist explains as meaning the Holy Ghost:--"Thus spake He of the Spirit." But this promise
was only to be fulfilled after Christ "was glorified." Christ points to the Holy Spirit as the
one fruit of being glorified. The glorified Christ leads to the Holy Ghost. So in the farewell
discourse, Christ leads the disciples to expect the Spirit as the Father's great blessing. Then
again, when Christ came and stood at the footstool of His heavenly throne, on the Mount of Olives,
ready to ascend, what were His words? "Ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come
upon you, and ye shall be witnesses unto Me." Christ's constant work was to teach His disciples
to expect the Holy Spirit. Look through the Book of Acts, you see the same thing. Peter on the
day of Pentecost preached that Christ was exalted, and had received of the Father the promise of
the Holy Ghost; and so he told the people; "Repent and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ
for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." So, when I believe
in Jesus risen, ascended, and glorified, I shall receive the Holy Ghost.
Look again, after Philip had preached the gospel in Samaria, men and women had been converted,
and there was great joy in the city. The Holy Spirit had been working, but something was still
wanting; Peter and John came down from Jerusalem, prayed for the converted ones, laid their hands
upon them, "and they received the Holy Ghost." Then they had the conscious possession and
enjoyment of the Spirit; but till that came they were incomplete. Paul was converted by the
mighty power of Jesus who appeared to Him on the way to Damascus; and yet he had to go to
Ananias to receive the Holy Ghost.
Then again, we read that when Peter went to preach to Cornelius, as he preached Christ, "the
Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word;" which Peter took as the sign that these
Gentiles were one with the Jews in the favor of God, having the same baptism.
And so we might go through many of the Epistles, where we find the same truth taught. Look at
that wonderful epistle to the Romans. The doctrine of justification by faith is established in
the first five chapters. Then in the sixth and seventh, though the believer is represented as
dead to sin and the law, and married to Christ, yet a dreadful struggle goes on in the heart of
the regenerate man as long as he has not god the full power of the Holy Spirit. But in the eighth
chapter, it is the "law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus" that maketh us free from "the law
of sin and death." Then we are "not in the flesh, but in the Spirit," with the Spirit of God
dwelling in us. All the teaching leads up to the Holy Spirit.
Look again at the epistle to the Galatians. We always talk of this epistle as the great source
of instruction on the doctrine of justification by faith: but have you ever noticed how the
doctrine of the Holy Spirit holds a most prominent place there? Paul asks the Galatian church:
--"Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?" It was the
hearing of faith that led them to the full enjoyment of the Spirit's power. If they sought to be
justified by the works of the law, they had "fallen from grace." "For we through the Spirit wait
for the hope of righteousness by faith." And then at the end of the fifth chapter, we are told:
--"If we live in the Spirit, let us walk in the Spirit."
Again, if we go to the epistles to the Corinthians, we find Paul asking the Christians in
Corinth:--"Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you?" If we
look into the epistle to the Ephesians, we find the doctrine of the Holy Spirit mentioned twelve
times. It is the Spirit that seals God's people; "Ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise."
He illumines them; "That God may give the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him."
Through Christ, both Jew and Gentile "have access by one Spirit unto the Father." They "are
builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit." They are "strengthened with might
by His Spirit in the inner man." With "all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering,
forbearing one another in love," they "endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace." By not "grieving the Holy Spirit of God," we preserve our sealing to the "day of
redemption." Being "filled with the Spirit," we "sing and make melody in our hearts to the Lord,"
and thus glorify Him. Just study these epistles carefully, and you will find that what I say is
true--that the apostle Paul takes great pains to lead Christians to the Holy Ghost as the
consummation of the Christian life.
It was the Holy Ghost Who was given to the church at Pentecost; and it is the Holy Ghost Who
gives Pentecostal blessings now. It is this power, given to bless men, that wrought such
wonderful life, and love, and self-sacrifice in the early church; and it is this that makes us
look back to those days as the most beautiful part of the Church's history. And it is the same
Spirit of power that must dwell in the hearts of all believers in our day to give the Church its
true position. Let us ask God then, that every minister and Christian worker may be endued with
the power of the Holy Ghost; that He may search us and try us, and enable us sincerely to answer
the question, "Have I known the indwelling and the filling of the Holy Spirit that God wants me
to have? Let each one of us ask himself: "Is it my great study to know the Holy Ghost dwelling
in me, so that I may help others to yield to the same indwelling of the Holy Spirit; and that He
may reveal Christ fully in His divine saving and keeping power?" Will not every one have to
confess: "Lord, I have all too little understood this; I have all too little manifested this in
my work and preaching"? Beloved brethren, "The first duty of every clergyman is to humbly ask
God that all that he wants done in his hearers may be first fully and truly done in himself."
And the second thing is his duty towards those who are awakened and brought to Christ, to lead
them on to the full knowledge of the presence and indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
Now, if we are indeed to come into full harmony with these two great principles, then there
come to us some further questions of the very deepest importance. And the first questions is:
--"Why is it that there is in the church of Christ so little practical acknowledgment of the
power of the Holy Ghost?" I am not speaking to you, brethren, as if I thought you were not sound
in doctrine on this point. I speak to you as believing in the Holy Ghost as the third person in
the ever-blessed Trinity. But I speak to you confidently as to those who will readily admit that
the truth or the presence and of the power of the Holy Ghost is not acknowledged in the church
as it ought to be. Then the question is, Why is it not so acknowledged? I answer because of its
spirituality. It is one of the most difficult truths in the Bible for the human mind to
comprehend. God has revealed Himself in creation throughout the whole universe. He has revealed
Himself in Christ incarnate--and what a subject of study the person, and word, and works of
Christ form! But the mysterious indwelling of the Holy Spirit, hidden in the depths of the life
of the believer, how much less easy to comprehend!
In the early pentecostal days of the church, this knowledge was intuitive; they possessed the
Spirit in power. But soon after the spirit of the world began to creep into the church and
mastered it. This was followed by the deeper darkness of formality and superstition in the Roman
Catholic Church, when the spirit of the world completely triumphed in what was improperly styled
the Church of Christ. The Reformation in the days of Luther restored the truth of justification
by faith in Christ; but the doctrine of the Holy Ghost did not then obtain its proper place, for
God does not reveal all truth at one time. A great deal of the spirit of the world was still
left in the reformed churches; but now God is awakening the church to strive after a fuller
scriptural idea of the Holy Spirit's place and power. Through the medium of books, and
discussions, and conventions many hearts are being stirred.
Brethren, it is our privilege to take part in this great movement; and let us engage in the
work more earnestly than ever. Let each of us say my great work is, in preaching Christ, to lead
men to the acknowledging of the Holy Spirit, who alone can glorify Christ. I may try to glorify
Christ in my preaching, but it will avail nothing without the Spirit of God. I may urge men to
the practice of holiness and every Christian virtue, but all my persuasion will avail very
little unless I help them to believe that they must have the Holy Ghost dwelling in them every
moment enabling to live the life of Christ. The great reason why the Holy Spirit was given from
heaven was to make Christ Jesus' presence manifest to us. While Jesus was incarnate, His
disciples were too much under the power of the flesh to allow Christ to get a lodgement in their
hearts. It was needful, He said, that He should go away, in order that the Spirit might come;
and He promised to those who loved Him and kept His commandments, that with the Spirit, He would
come, and the Father would also come, and make Their abode with them. It is thus the Holy
Spirit's great work to reveal the Father and the Son in the hearts of God's people. If we
believe and teach men that the Holy Spirit can make Christ a reality to them every moment, men
will learn to believe and accept Christ's presence and power, of which they now know far too
little.
Then another question presents itself, viz., What are we to expect when the Holy Spirit is
duly acknowledged and received? I ask this question, because I have frequently noticed something
with considerable interest--and, I may say, with some anxiety. I sometimes hear men praying
earnestly for a baptism of the Holy Spirit that He may give them power for their work. Beloved
brethren, we need this power, not only for work, but for our daily life. Remember, we must have
it all the time. In Old Testament times, the Spirit came with power upon the prophets and other
inspired men; but He did not dwell permanently in them. In the same way, in the church of the
Corinthians, the Holy Spirit came with power to work miraculous gifts, and yet they had but a
small measure of His sanctifying grace. You will remember the carnal strife, envying, and
divisions there were. They had gifts of knowledge and wisdom, etc.; but alas! pride,
unlovingness, and other sins sadly marred the character of many of them. And what does this
teach us? That a man may have a great gift of power for work, but very little of the indwelling
Spirit. In 1 Cor. xiii., we are reminded that though we may have faith that would remove
mountains, if we have not love, we are nothing. We must have the love that brings the humility
and self-sacrifice of Jesus. Don't let us put in the first place the gifts we may possess; if we
do, we shall have very little blessing. But we should seek, in the first place, that the Spirit
of God should come as a light and power of holiness from the indwelling Jesus. Let the first
work of the Holy Spirit be to humble you deep down in the very dust, so that your whole life
shall be a tender, broken-hearted waiting on God, in the consciousness of mercy coming from
above.
Do not seek large gifts; there is something deeper you need. It is not enough that a tree
shoots its branches to the sky, and be covered thickly with leaves; but we want its roots to
strike deeply into the soil. Let the thought of the Holy Spirit's being in us, and our hope of
being filled with the Spirit, be always accompanied in us with a broken and contrite heart. Let
us bow very low before God, in waiting for His grace to fill and to sanctify us. We do not want
a power which God might allow us to use, while our inner part is unsanctified. We want God to
give us full possession of Himself. In due time, the special gift may come; but we want first
and now, the power of the Holy Ghost working something far mightier and more effectual in us
than any such gift. We should seek, therefore, not only a baptism of power, but a baptism of
holiness; we should seek that the inner nature be sanctified by the indwelling of Jesus, and
then other power will come as needed.
There is a third question:--Suppose some one says to me:--"I have given myself up to be
filled with the Spirit, and I do not feel that there is any difference in my condition; there is
no change of experience that I can speak of. What must I then think? Must not I think that my
surrender was not honest?" No, do not think that. "But how then? Does God give no response?"
Beloved, God gives a response, but that is not always within certain months or years. "What,
then, would you have me do?" Retain the position you have taken before God, and maintain it
every day. Say, "Oh God, I have given myself to be filled, here I am an empty vessel, trusting
and expecting to be filled by Thee." Take that position every day and every hour. Ask God to
write it across your heart. Give up to God an empty, consecrated vessel that He may fill it with
the Holy Spirit. Take that position constantly. It may be that you are not fully prepared. Ask
God to cleanse you; to give you grace to separate from everything sinful--from unbelief or
whatever hindrance there may be. Then take your position before God and say, "My God, Thou art
faithful; I have entered into covenant with Thee for Thy Holy Spirit to fill me, and I believe
Thou wilt fulfill it." Brethren, I say for myself, and for every minister of the gospel, and for
every fellow worker, man or woman, that if we thus come before God with a full surrender, in a
bold, believing attitude, God's promise must be fulfilled.
If you were to ask me of my own experience, I would say this:--That there have been times
when I hardly knew myself what to think of God's answer to my prayer in this matter; but I have
found it my joy and my strength to take and maintain my position, and say: "My God, I have given
myself up to Thee. It was Thine own grace that led me to Christ; and I stand before Thee in
confidence that Thou wilt keep Thy covenant with me to the end. I am the empty vessel; Thou art
the God that fillest all." God is faithful, and He gives the promised blessing in His own time
and method. Beloved, for God's sake, be content with nothing less than full health and full
spiritual life. "Be filled with the Spirit."
Let me return now to the two expressions with which I began: "the first duty of every
clergyman is humbly to ask of God that all that he wants done in those who hear his preaching may
be first truly and fully done in himself." Brethren, I ask you, is it not the longing of your
hearts to have a congregation of believers filled with the Holy Ghost? Is it not your unceasing
prayer for the Church of Christ, in which you minister, that the Spirit of holiness, the very
Spirit of God's Son, the spirit of unworldliness and of heavenly-mindedness, may possess it; and
that the Spirit of victory and of power over sin may fill its children? If you are willing for
that to come, your first duty is to have it yourself.
And then the second sentence:--"the first duty of every clergyman is to lead those who have
been brought to Christ to be entirely filled with the Holy Ghost." How can I do my work with
success? I can conceive what a privilege it is to be led by the Spirit of God in all that I am
doing. In studying my Bible, praying, visiting, organizing, or whatever I am doing, God is
willing to guide me by His Holy Spirit. It sometimes becomes a humiliating experience to me that
I am unwatchful, and do not wait for the blessing; when that is the case, God can bring me back
again. But there is also the blessed experience of God's guiding hand, often through deep
darkness, by His Holy Spirit. Let us walk about among the people as men of God, that we may not
only preach about a book, and what we believe with our hearts to be true, but may preach what we
are and what we have in our own experience. Jesus calls us witnesses for Him; what does that
mean? The Holy Ghost brought down to heaven from men a participation in the glory and the joy of
the exalted Christ. Peter and the others who spoke with Him were filled with this heavenly
Spirit; and thus Christ spoke in them, and accomplished the work for them. O brethren, if you
and I be Christ's we should take our places and claim our privilege. We are witnesses to the
truth which we believe--witnesses to the reality of what Jesus does and what He is, by His
presence in our own souls. If we are willing to be such witnesses for Christ, let us go to our
God; let us make confession and surrender, and by faith claim what God has for us as ministers
of the gospel and workers in His service. God will prove faithful. Even at this very moment, He
will touch our hearts with a deep consciousness of His faithfulness and of His presence; and He
will give to every hungering, trustful one that which we continually need.
CONSECRATION
"But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this
sort? for all things come of Thee, and of Thine own have we given Thee."
To be able to offer anything to God is a perfect mystery. Consecration is a miracle of grace.
"All things come of Thee, and of Thine own have we given Thee." In these words there are four
very precious thoughts I want to try and make clear to you: -
1. God is the Owner of all, and gives all to us.
2. We have nothing but what we receive--but everything we need we may receive from God.
3. It is our privilege and honour to give back to God what we receive from Him.
4. God has a double joy in His possessions when he receives back from us what He gave.
And when I apply this to my life--to my body, to my wealth, property, to my whole being with
all its powers--then I understand what Consecration ought to be.
1. It is the glory of God, and His very nature, to be always GIVING. God is the owner of all.
There is no power, no riches, no goodness, no love, outside of God. It is the very nature of God,
that He does not live for Himself, but for His creatures. His is a love that always delights to
give. Here we come to the first step in consecration. I must see that everything I have is given
by Him; I must learn to believe in God as the great Owner and Giver of all. Let me hold that fast.
I have nothing but what actually and definitely belongs to God. Just as much as people say,
"this money in my purse belongs to me," so God is the Proprietor of all. It is His and His only.
And it is his life and delight to be always giving. Oh, take that precious thought--there is
nothing that God has that He does not want to give. It is His nature, and therefore when God asks
you anything, He must give it first Himself, and He will. Never be afraid whatever God asks; for
God only asks what is His own; what He asks you to give He will first Himself give you. The
Possessor, and Owner, and Giver of all! This is our God. You can apply this to yourself and your
powers to all you are and have. Study it, believe it, live in it, every day, every hour, every
moment.
2. Just as it is the nature and glory of God to be always giving, it is the nature and glory
of man to be always receiving. What did God make us for? We have been made to be each of us a
vessel into which God can pour out His life, His beauty, His happiness, His love. We are created
to be each a receptacle and a reservoir of divine heavenly life and blessing, just as much as
God can put into us. Have we understood this, that our great work--the object of our creation--is
to be always receiving? If we fully enter into this, it will teach some precious things. One
thing--the utter folly of being proud or conceited. What an idea! Suppose I were to borrow a very
beautiful dress, and walk about boasting of it as if it were my own, you might say, "What a fool!"
And here it is the Everlasting God owns everything we have; shall we dare to exalt ourselves on
account of what is all His? Then what a blessed lesson it will teach us of what our position is!
I have to do with a God whose nature is to be always giving, and mine to be always receiving.
Just as the lock and key fit each other, God the Giver and I the receiver fit into each other.
How often we trouble about things, and about praying for them, instead of going back to the root
of things, and saying, "Lord, I only crave to be the receptacle of what the Will of God means for
me; of the power and the gifts and the love and Spirit of God." What can be more simple? Come as
a receptacle--cleansed, emptied and humble. Come, and then God will delight to give. If I may
with reverence say it, He cannot help Himself; it is His promise, His nature. The blessing is
ever flowing out of Him. You know how water always flows into the lowest places. If we would but
be emptied and low, nothing but receptacles, what a blessed life we could live! Day by day just
praising Him--Thou givest and I accept. Thou bestowest and I rejoice to receive. How many tens of
thousands of people have said this morning: "What a beautiful day! Let us throw open the windows
and bring in the sunlight with its warmth and cheerfulness!" May our hearts learn every moment to
drink in the light and sunshine of God's love.
"Who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this
sort? for all things come of Thee, and we have given Thee of Thine own."
3. If God gives all and I receive all, then the third thought is very simple--I must give all
back again. What a privilege that for the sake of having me in loving, grateful intercourse with
Him, and giving me the happiness of pleasing and serving Him, the Everlasting God should say,
"Come now, and bring Me back all that I give." And yet people say, "Oh, but must I give
everything back?brother, don't you know that there is no happiness or blessedness except in
giving to God! David felt it. He said: "Lord, what an unspeakable privilege it is to be allowed
to give that back to Thee which is Thine own!" Just to receive and then to render back in love to
Him as God, what He gives. Do you know what God needs you for? People say, "Does not God give us
all good gifts to enjoy?" But do you know that the reality of the enjoyment is in the giving back?
Just look at Jesus--God gave Him a wonderful body. He kept it holy and gave it as a sacrifice to
God. This is the beauty of having a body. God has given you a soul; this is the beauty of having
a soul--you can give it back to God. People talk about the difficulty they meet with in having
so strong a will. You never can have too strong a will, but the trouble is we do not give that
strong will up to God, to make it a vessel in which God can and will pour His Spirit, so as to
fit it to do splendid service for Himself.
We have now had the three thoughts: God gives all; I receive all; I give up all. Will you do
this now? Will not every heart say, "My God, teach me to give up everything?" Take your head,
your mind with all its power of speaking, your property, your heart with its affections--the
best and most secret--take gold and silver, everything, and lay it at God's feet and say, "Lord,
here is the covenant between me and Thee. Thou delightest to give all, and I delight to give
back all." God teach us that. If that simple lesson were learnt, there would be an end of so
much trouble about finding out the Will of God, and an end of all our holding back, for it would
be written, not upon our foreheads, but across our hearts, "God can do with me what He pleases;
I belong to Him with all I have." Instead of always saying to God, "Give, give, give," we should
say, "Yes, Lord, Thou dost give, thou dost love to give, and I love to give back." Try that life
and find out if it is not the very highest life.
4. God gives all, I receive all, I give all. Now comes the fourth thought: God does so
rejoice in what we give to Him. It is not only I that am the receiver and the giver, but God is
the Giver and the Receiver too, and, may I say it with reverence, has more pleasure in the
receiving back than even in giving. With our little faith we often thing they come back to God
again all defiled. God says, "No, they come back beautiful and glorified"; the surrender of the
dear child of His, with his aspirations and thanksgivings, brings it to God with a new value and
beauty. Ah! child of God you do not know how precious the gift that you bring to your Father, is
in His sight. Have I not seen a mother give a piece of cake, and the child comes and offers her
a piece to share it with her? How she values the gift! And your God, oh, my friends, your God,
His heart, His Father's heart of love, longs, longs, longs to have you give Him everything. It
is not a demand. It is a demand, but it is not a demand of a hard Master, it is the call of a
loving Father, who knows that every gift you bring to God will bind you closer to Himself, and
every surrender you make will open your heart wider to get more of his spiritual gifts. Oh,
friends! a gift to God has in His sight infinite value. It delights Him. He sees of the travail
of His soul and is satisfied. And it brings unspeakable blessing to you. These are the thoughts
our text suggests; now comes the practical application. What are the lessons? We here learn what
the true dispositions of the Christian life are.
To be and abide in continual dependence upon God. Become nothing, begin to understand that
you are nothing but an earthen vessel into which God will shine down the treasure of His love.
Blessed is the man who knows what it is to be nothing, to be just an empty vessel meet for God's
use. Work, the Apostle says, for it is God who worketh in you to will and to do. Brethren, come
and take tonight the place of deep, deep dependence on God. And then take the place of child-like
trust and expectancy. Count upon your God to do for you everything that you can desire of Him.
Honour God as a God who gives liberally. Honour God and believe that He asks nothing from you but
what he is going first to give. And then come praise and surrender and consecration. Praise Him
for it! Let every sacrifice to Him be a thank-offering. What are we going to consecrate? First
of all our lives. There are perhaps men and women--young men and women--whose hearts are asking,
"What do you want me to do--to say I will be a missionary?" No, indeed, I do not ask you to do
this. Deal with God, and come to Him and say, "Lord of all, I belong to Thee, I am absolutely at
Thy disposal." Yield up yourselves. There may be many who cannot go as Missionaries, but oh,
come, give up yourselves to God all the same to be consecrated to the work of His Kingdom. Let
us bow down before Him. Let us give Him all our powers--our head to think for His Kingdom, our
heart to go out in love for men, and however feeble you may be, come and say: "Lord, here I am,
to live and die for Thy Kingdom. Some talk and pray about the filling of the Holy Spirit. Let
them pray more and believe more. But remember the Holy Spirit came to fit men to be messengers
of the Kingdom, and you cannot expect to be filled with the Spirit unless you want to live for
Christ's Kingdom. You cannot expect all the love and peace and joy of heaven to come into your
life and be your treasures, unless you give them up absolutely to the Kingdom of God, and posses
and use them only for Him. It is the soul utterly given up to God that will receive in its
emptying the fullness of the Holy Spirit. Dear friends we must consecrate not only ourselves--body
and soul--but all we have. Some of you may have children; perhaps you have an only child, and
you dread the very idea of letting it go. Take care, take care; God deserves your confidence,
your love, and your surrender. I plead with you; take your children and say to Jesus: "Anything
Lord, that pleases Thee." Educate your children for Jesus. God help you to do it. He may not
accept all of them, but He will accept of the will, and there will be a rich blessing in your
soul for it. Then there is money. When I hear appeals for money from every Society; when I hear
calculations as to what the Christians of England are spending on pleasure, and the small amount
given for Missions, I say there is something terrible in it. God's children with so much wealth
and comfort, and giving away so small a portion! God be praised for every exception! But there
are many who give but very little, who never so give that it costs them something, and they feel
it. Oh, friends! our giving must be in proportion to God's giving. He gives you all. Let us take
it up in our Consecration prayer: "Lord, take it all, every penny I possess. It is all Thine."
Let us often say "It is all His." You may not know how much you ought to give. Give up all, put
everything in His hands, and He will teach you if you will wait.
We have heard this precious message from David's mouth. We Christians of the nineteenth
century, have we learned to know our God who is willing to give everything? God help us to.
And then the second message. We have nothing that we do not receive, and we may receive
everything if we are willing to stand before God and take it.
Thirdly. Whatever you have received from God give it back. It brings a double blessing to
your own soul.
Fourthly. Whatever God receives back from us comes to Him in Heaven and gives Him infinite
joy and happiness, as he sees His object has been attained. Let us come in the spirit of David,
with the spirit of Jesus Christ in us. Let us pray our Consecration Prayer. And may the Blessed
Spirit give each of us grace to think and to say the right thing, and to do what shall be
pleasing in the Father's sight.
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