MESSENGER OF THE COVENANT
Behold, I will send My messenger and he shall prepare the
way before Me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to His temple,
even the messenger of the Covenant, whom ye delight in: behold He shall come, saith the Lord of hosts. But who may abide the day of His
coming? and who shall stand when He appeareth. Mal.
8: 14.
This is the very last message from the very last messenger
of the Old Testament dispensation. His very name means "my
messenger," and he was God's last messenger uttering His last message to
that dispensation. When the echo of his voice had died in the distance that
awful silence of four hundred years set in. Not a single word was heard from
the lips of God from the time Malachi closed this last message until "He
who had spoken in times past by His prophets spake
unto us by His Son." O the appalling darkness of those four centuries! It
is always distressingly dark in this world when God is silent. If we can not
hear from God, there settles down upon us such a gloom, such a silence, such an
unbearable silence that people often wring their hands and tear their hair and
walk through the streets, or wood, or open field and scream and cry, and yet to
the echo of their voice there comes no answer. O the silence of God! What if He
should not speak to your soul again? What if you should be standing upon the
threshold of four centuries of appalling silence? Think of it! How glad we
ought to be this afternoon that God ever speaks to us at all. I read that when
Judas received the sop he immediately went out and it was night. It is always
night when a soul goes out from the presence of God! O the blackness and
darkness, of that awful night of gloom, that settles
down upon the soul who can not hear from God! Those who have ever gone through
the awful ordeal of crucifixion appreciate what I am saying when I speak of
that distressing silence which proceeds the breaking of the day; that awful
night that seems like it would never come to an end, the blackness and darkness
which seems unbearable. How glad the soul when God speaks again! O glory to His
name, that He should speak to us at
all!
This old prophet stood upon the heights of revelation and
looked across the dark valley of four hundred years and saw the breaking of the
day. While he announces the coming of Jesus and tried to turn the people back
from their sin to repentance and to God, he calls attention to the fact that
they grieved God, that they had insulted Him, that they had apostatized had gone
away until God would speak to them no more. What an
awful thing! Brother, if you are seeking God this afternoon the darkness in
itself is enough, but supposing it should go on and on and increase, and
century after century pass by and you should never hear a sound from God. It
seems to me it would be hell itself. It certainly would be hell enough for me.
I remember when I was seeking the blessing of entire sanctification I used to
get away from my family, I used to go away from my friends, away out among the
gigantic oaks, under the twinkling stars where I could hear nothing but the
song of crickets, or now and then the mournful cry of a whippoorwill, and even
these seemed to deepen my conviction, and the very silence of those hours
seemed as though it would kill me. I cried and screamed and rolled on the
ground and plead with God. O what a thrilling sensation filled me! What a
breaking of the day! What a sunlight in the East when
God began to answer, when He began to whisper to my soul. I leaned forward to hearken
to what He had to say. O what a mercy that He should speak to us! Again and
again we are commanded to hearken.
Whenever God has something to say, He has something worthy
of our most profound attention. If God would speak to us today out of Heaven it
would be something of great value. If it were only a single sentence we would
do well to frame it and gild it and hang it on the walls of our souls forever.
I want to notice this afternoon that the closing days of the dispensation of
the prophets were strikingly typical of the closing days of the present age. As
certainly as Adam failed in Eden, as certainly as the Antediluvian age went out
in judgment, as the Patriarchal family sank into Egyptian darkness and bondage,
as the conquests of Canaan ended in long captivity, as certainly as the old
dispensation went out in blackness and darkness of four hundred years of awful
night, so this present dispensation will end in apostasy and awful darkness. I
know that people do not seem to see it; nobody seems to realize it but the
truly spiritual. The average Christian does not have the slightest conception
of the awful darkness that surrounds us; it is most distressing. Many a time
the truly sanctified walk the streets or the fields with aching hearts and
streaming eyes, crying to the Lord to come and put an end to this awful reign
of sin. After Israel
was restored from captivity they had a season of prosperity, but this they
could not endure. How few people today are able to stand prosperity.
More people become spiritual under deepest sorrow and severest trials than
under prosperity. The old prophet stood up and called their attention to the
fact that there had arisen among them a mercenary spirit, and all their free
will service and all their self denial was a thing of the past.
"Why," he said, "we have reached the place where nobody will
close the doors of the temple without a salary.
We can not find anybody who will kindle a fire up on the
altar without pay." We have reached a time now in spiritual declension
when men are religious for mercenary gain, and people are members of the Church
for what they can get out of it. Thousands of people are members of our worldly
and popular churches for financial gain. The merchant patronizes the Church
that the Church may patronize him. The tinner, or the
saddler, or the shoemaker, on entering a village and settling down, inquires
for the most popular Church, and attends service there that he may gain the
patronage of the members. O these days of large salaries and no revivals,
salaried organists, salaried choristers, paid singers, and no conversions! Do
not these days resemble the days of Malachi? These mercenary
times when it seems as if everybody wants big pay for everything they do for
the Lord or for the Church. The awful apostasy of the closing days of
this age is already upon us. God help us to see that these are awful times, and
that we have awful things to encounter, and that if we are going to stand, we
will have to be girded with more than human strength; we must have something
that will fix us so, no matter what the storm may be, nor how raging the
billows, we will ride serenely on. We see that the old prophet calls their
attention to a state of apostasy in which they have offered polluted bread.
When the bread was too old for them to eat they offered it to the Lord. You can
hardly imagine such a thing; but is it not a fact that the offerings of these
days are simply, in many instances, what we do not need, or what we can
conveniently do without. He says, "You have offered the blind and
sacrificed the lame and the sick." They reached a place, in those days of
spiritual declension. when they would hunt out a one-eyed
animal, or one that went on three legs, or one that was sick or lame, for an
offering unto the Lord. This seems ridiculous, but it is exactly what I
am faced with all about me.
The sacrifices and offerings of the people are lame and
sick. They are not full, fat offerings, they are not whole offerings, they are seldom free will offerings. I believe that one dollar
of sanctified money will go further than ten dollars of sick money. A free will
offering of one dollar, backed up by prayer and a holy life, is worth more than
ten dollars raised by fairs, festivals, or bean suppers in the churches. Who of
you would give a one-eyed or a lame animal to God? and yet is it not true that
any who hold back any part of their tenth are making a
lame offering? Is it not true that all who give grudgingly, or sparingly, are
offering the halt, the lame and the blind? We are to give the very best and the
very first fruits to God. Instead of that, many so called Holiness people are
holding on to their dollars, and giving their pennies. God can receive the
widow's mite but He never accepts the sick or the lame or the blemished offering.
What God wants, in these days, is a self-denying,
self-sacrificing people. He asks for the best, not because He is in
need, but because in giving it we show forth the intensity of our love and
devotion to Him. Thank God, it is an experience that will cause us to bring the
best, the firstlings of the flocks, in fact all we have, and lay it down at His
feet.
The prophet here is talking about the coming of the present
dispensation. He is announced as the messenger of the Covenant the ushering in of
the Holy Ghost dispensation: the grandest age of the world's history. Our
privileges of today surpass everything that has ever been. I used to think that
if I could have been with the Lord when He was here in person, and walked with
Him from hamlet to hamlet, and from village to village, and listened to the
gracious words that fell from His lips, that would have been a great privilege,
but, beloved, the Holy Ghost opens our eyes to see that there is something even
better than the dispensation of the Son. Something that
towers above all the past and lifts us into the dispensation of the Holy Ghost.
It is one of the grandest privileges of all the ages, and one can do more for
God in one of these days than they could in fifty of the former. Everything is
contributing to the possibilities of a sanctified Church. Everything seems to
be working toward the objective point of getting ready to evangelize the world.
All mechanical invention, all recent developments, all modem discoveries, are
meant to aid a sanctified Church in accomplishing the plan and purpose of her
glorified Head. This is a fast age: an age when men will not wait for time:
whether awake or asleep we are on the run. The other night I went to sleep in Chicago
and woke up in Cincinnati.
If the results of human genius could carry me three hundred
miles while I was taking a nap, what could a sanctified Church do if she were
adjusted to all the appliances and wisdom of Heaven.
These are days of tremendous progress, days of lightning express trains. This
old world is turned into one vast whispering gallery. I sit in my office and
converse familiarly with my friends at great distances. O, if the saints of God
were on fire and were up with the times, what we might accomplish. A man who
knows the Holy Ghost can go into a closet here and pray a little prayer and
hang up the receiver and go off and God will answer him in India,
Africa, or Japan.
O beloved, who shall abide the day of His coming? God has always used certain
symbols for the forceful illustration of His truth. Here we find that we are
taught by the "fullers' soap," and the "refiner's fire. Soap, of
course, goes with washing. That is the first blessing: the washing of
regeneration. Fullers' soap is strong soap, and the washing of regeneration is
a very strong washing. It not only removes all guilt, all the pollution of
committed sin, but whatever remains of the depravity caused by committed sin,
so there is nothing left in the human soul which has a good case of
regeneration but the depravity that was born there originally. All the increase
of human depravity which comes as a result of a long period of disobedience is
taken away in this strong washing of regeneration. Then come
the fire of the Holy Ghost. Water is for washing, but fire is for destroying.
Beloved, if we get a good case of regeneration it does for
us far more than is ordinarily believed. I understand that the fullers' soap
not only removes the dirt and the grease, but takes the shrinkage out and fixes
the cloth so that when the garment is cut it will remain the same size as the
pattern. This makes me know that a great many people have never been
regenerated. They puff up, they shrink down, they are
not reliable. There is a grace even before entire sanctification that makes us
stand true to God. It is true it is with difficulty; it may sometimes be hard,
but there generated man goes through with God and conquers, and this fallacy I
love to repudiate, that we have got to get sanctified wholly in order to have
victory. There is great victory and there can be no perpetual justification
without tremendous victory over all the forces of evil. Who shall be able to
stand when He appeareth for He is like a refiner's
fire and like fullers' soap.
A few weeks ago I went through the smelters in Denver,
Colorado. I started at the beginning where
they were dumping whole car loads of Cripple Creek
ore into the great furnaces, mixed with lime, stone, and other materials, tons
and tons of it. It was black and dirty and did not look much like gold. They
took me down to where the ladles were filled. I saw great ladles holding a half
ton, filled with beautiful flowing metal, and I said, "O that is
fine!" They said, "That is no good," and they sent it off to the
dump; hundreds and hundreds of tons they were dumping and called it slag. They
would open the furnace and run out several hundred pounds of white, hot,
flowing metal, but still they said, "That is only slag." I
said," Where is the gold?" They took me around on the other side and shewed me a little basin. It looked like it would hold
about two quarts but was not half full. They said, "This is where the gold
comes out." I said, "Is that all?" I waited along time for the
little basin to fill up sufficiently for them to mold a brick. I can never
think of a gold smelter without thinking of tons and tons of slag, and only a
few spoonfuls of gold. This all carried me back to when I went through the
furnace being sanctified wholly. I remember the fire of separation revealed an
alarming amount of dross and slag, and almost no gold at all. As one after
another of my heart's idols were committed to the flames and carried to the
dump, it seemed to me that there was nothing worth saving. This is the way you
feel when you are under fire. The baptism with the Holy Ghost will greatly
decrease the bulk but greatly increase the value. The real stuff will stand the
fire; the more you burn it the more it improves it. You can not injure gold by
burning it. O beloved, this is what we want, something that will not burn. The
judgment is coming; there is coming a test that will destroy everything that is
combustible. The fire never comes until after we are saved. If it would it
would destroy us entirely, but regeneration gives us a new nature, an
indestructible nature, and that is why God holds back the fire for the second
blessing. When God gives us the Divine nature then we will not burn, and when
He turns on the fire it will only free us from everything that will burn. It is
very humiliating to see nothing but a spoonful of gold, but it is a glorious
relief to feel that the slag is gone. Glory to God! He wants everything about
us that will burn consumed now. If we have been through the refiner's fire
here, the fires of hell will not be able to take hold upon us hereafter. We do
not want false gold, we want the real thing; we want something, the more you
burn it the better it is; the smaller it gets the more valuable it is. Who
shall be able to stand? Nobody will be able to stand except those who have
surrendered absolutely to God. If you hold onto a single thing, if you do not
turn against yourself, you will never
stand.
Beloved, let us quit talking about ourselves, and go to
talking about God. Honor God and He will honor you. The judgment is coming,
Gabriel is coming to sound the trumpet, the world is
going to be sanctified by a baptism of fire. We must be built of something that
will not burn; not wood, hay, or stubble, but gold, silver, and precious
stones.
Then, I want to notice, beloved, that this blessing of
entire sanctification is something that comes suddenly. He will come suddenly
to His temple, not to yours. Abandon yourself to the Holy Ghost and talk about
God's faithfulness, the certainty of His promises. Begin to reason with Him;
tell Him He never has failed and that He never can. Talk to Him about His
faithfulness a little while; wait patiently for Him, and He will come. He will
never come while you are all the time talking about your consecration; "I
have consecrated," "I have given up all," "I will do
anything; Lord, I, I, I." This will never bring the blessing. Get away
from your great "I," and begin to talk about God. Tell Him how
faithful He has been in the past, and how you expect Him to fulfill every word
promised; tell Him how the Scriptures can not be broken, and when He sees that
you really mean to trust Him, He will come and will not tarry. Very few people
believe God; nobody hardly trusts Him fully. How
seldom you hear anybody say a nice thing to the Lord. I heard a person say the
other day, "I am trying my level best to believe the Lord will help
us." What an awful thing! Suppose I should say to my wife, "I am
trying my level best to believe what you say. I wish I could trust you; I am
trying to put my confidence in you. Please help me to believe you."
Shocking! God have mercy on us. O beloved, how can we dare to insult God by
talking about our efforts to believe.
When the Holy Ghost comes He comes to stay. What if I had
concluded He had left me every time my emotions subsided; that would leave me
in a pickle. I do not want to feel like jumping over the moon all the time. I
want to settle down in a rocking chair part of the time. I want to rest and the
Holy Ghost rest us. We must not get into bondage to each other, or to each
other’s experience. Do not lay any plans at all; let the Holy Ghost do the
whole business. He will come suddenly but He will stay gradually. If you should
chance to sleep in a draft and wake up with a headache, and your religious
emotions absent, you must not conclude you have backslidden. After the Lord
says He has come to stay, He has come to stay. Sanctification is not a question
of feeling it is a question of facts. If you have a good set of facts you can
praise the Lord without feelings. Do not let the devil get you into a snare and
browbeat you because you do not feel like someone else, or like you have felt
at some other time. Remember God's covenant is to endure forever; an
everlasting covenant. Unless you violate it, it will go unviolated.
A marriage covenant, if it is made right, is enough to last a lifetime. Nobody
who is really married ever thinks of getting married again. All this Christian
Endeavor idea of consecrating once a month is the worst of folly. The Holy
Ghost comes to abide. You will not grieve Him without His letting you know it,
and He will let you know it in time. He will be with you when you retire at
night and when you wake in the morning. He will be with you in sickness and
trouble, no matter what the emergency, He will always be there on time; He will
never be late. When the waves are tossing, and it seems as if everything is
going to fail, He may be in the other end of the ship asleep, but He will wake
up in time. He is faithful and can not fail. Glory to His name forever!