HOME
RADIO
MUSIC
COMMENT
Winning People Over To Christ
By David J. Stewart
We read in Acts 4:13, "Now when they saw the boldness
of Peter and John, and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, they
marvelled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus." Our
message to the unsaved should be the Gospel, not our own cute and well thought
out methods. We read in Romans 1:16 that the Gospel is the POWER of God unto
salvation to every one that believes upon Christ. Now, it is ok to use various
methods of presenting the Gospel; BUT, we must never stray away from the
fundamental Biblical truth that it is the Gospel that saves, not our eloquent
words. If a lost sinner won't obey the Gospel of Jesus Christ, then nothing else
we say will matter. It is not our human wisdom that convicts men's sinful
hearts; but the Word of God.
Also, every soul winner ought to claim the Lord's promise that He would be with
us as we go soul winning, "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen." Jesus promised to be with us,
in power, as we go soul winning. What a wonderful truth! Perhaps you are afraid
and think you cannot be a soul winner. Just keep in mind that the Gospel is the
message, and the Lord is with you to strengthen you. This is all we need to win
people to Christ. You don't need to be an eloquent speaker. You don't need to be
experienced. You don't need to be a theologian. You just need to tell people how
you got saved, and give them an opportunity to do the same, and trust the Holy
Spirit to do the rest.
How to Directly Present the Gospel
This is where you simply walk up to a complete stranger and witness to them.
There are MANY introduction lines you can make. Of course, it is always a good
idea to start with your name, your purpose for being there, and that you are a
Christian. I could give you many examples, but it all depends upon where you're
at, and the circumstances. If I were waiting for a train, at a train depot. I
would introduce myself in the following way ... "Hi, my name is ____. You
probably don't recognize me, but I ride this train quite often. I am a
Christian, and I like to share my faith in Christ with others. I was hoping,
perhaps, that you'd be so kind as to give me a moment or two of your time." Even
if they refuse, you've just confronted them about the state of their soul. The
Holy Spirit can use that for His glory. Most people won't listen to you, some
will even walk away or ignore you. Others may curse you. BUT, some will listen,
or will share their faith in the Lord with you as well.
Also, it is recommended that you always go soul winning with someone else if
you're going to be in a secluded area. Safety first. Yes, Jesus said He would go
with us; but He also gave us a mind to think. There is a fine line between faith
and foolishness. Never knowingly place yourself in harms way. This is good
sense.
We meet many people every day, as we go about our daily schedule. These are
wonderful opportunities to share our faith in Christ with others.
Street preaching is a great way to directly present the Gospel to large crowds.
How to Indirectly Present the Gospel
It can seem very awkward, walking up to a complete stranger, and outright asking
them if they're a Christian; but, this is definitely something that every soul
winner should learn to do. However, for those new believers who may be afraid to
witness in such an aggressive manner, there are many helpful alternatives. One
method I prefer is to talk with people about world events, or recent news
events. As you progress through the conversation, at some point interject a
statement about God. For example: If I'm talking with someone about a war in the
news, I'll say something like ... "It's a shame that there's so much killing in
the world, the world sure needs God." This is my foot in the door, a launching
pad to present the Gospel. Oftentimes, people will agree with such a statement,
and then you can guide the conversation along from there, with a Gospel
presentation as the goal.
I've also experienced many people who will clam up, say they're running late, or
just plainly tell me they don't believe the Bible. Romans 10:17 teaches that
"Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God." If a person is
willing to listen, we should be willing to teach them. However, there are some
people who love to debate. They have no intentions of getting saved, and only
want to argue for the sport of it. Please keep in mind that most people in this
world have never heard the Gospel. Why spend all of our soul winning time
debating with one stubborn person?, when so many people are still waiting to
hear the Gospel. We must use our time wisely. It's not too difficult to
differentiate between someone who has sincere questions about the Bible, and
someone who has a preconceived rebuttal answer for everything. I simply don't
waste my time with people who think they know it all. The Apostle Paul said in
Titus 3:10 and 11, "A man that is an heretic after the first and second
admonition reject; Knowing that he that is such is subverted, and sinneth, being
condemned of himself." This is not to say that we should ever give up on people,
it simply means that a person who refuses to get saved after hearing the Gospel
is rebellious against God. Some conversations can shed more heat than light, and
are best kept short. If you discern that a person is not interested in getting
saved, then politely end the conversation. I am more direct nowadays, as an
older believer. I tell such people outright that they have a right to believe
whatever they want; but I respectfully totally disagree, and there is no need
for any further discussion, since we are both adamant in our beliefs.
Also, I often lay Gospel tracts down as I walk through stores. It's a wonderful
way to get the Gospel out. I was at a store in a mall this week, buying some
candy with my kids. The woman was unfriendly, and didn't even say thank you. As
I was about to leave, I laid a Gospel tract on her counter. The tract was
titled, "Eternal Life is a Free Gift." I also left a tract at another store we
went to. I've gotten my kids into the habit of leaving Gospel tracts laying
around in the places we go. It's a lot of fun, and so sneaky...lol. Sometimes
when I'm coming out of a store, I'll lift the windshield wiper of the car next
to me in the parking lot, and place a tract under it. You might want to be
careful with this method though, because some people go nuts when it comes to
their cars. Tracts can be left in public restrooms, phone booths, on bus
seats--just about anywhere! It's a great way to witness to people you'll likely
never meet. That Gospel tract may be the seed that one day springs forth into a
new birth in Christ.
Keep It Simple
Salvation is as simple as this: We are Hell-deserving sinners, and Jesus is the
Savior. The big issue which needs to be dealt with in one's salvation is SIN.
Many people trust upon some religious experience, or a prayer, or mass, or
baptism, or church membership to save them. However, none of these things can
take our sins away. Only through Christ, by the precious blood that He shed, can
our sins be taken away.
Soul Winning Efforts are Never in Vain!
The Bible teaches that those who plant seeds will receive an equal reward, to
those who actually have the privilege of leading that soul to Christ down the
road. 1st Corinthians 3:8 states, "Now he that planteth and he that watereth are
one: and every man shall receive his own reward according to his own labour."
Our labor is NEVER in vain in the Lord. Everything that we do for Jesus' sake
and the Gospel's will be rewarded. In fact, Jesus said that anything we do even
in a disciple's name will be rewarded, "And whosoever shall give to drink unto
one of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple,
verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward." So anything we do
to help the man of God, a church, or another Christian, will be rewarded. If God
is going to hold us accountable for every idle word spoken, then you can count
on it that He will reward us for even the most seemingly insignificant acts of
faith.
--------------
Winning People Over To Christ
...( take 2 )
By Charles H. Spurgeon
We all believe that we must go to soul-winning, desiring in God's name to see
all things made new. This old creature is dead and corrupt, and must be buried;
and the sooner the better. Jesus has come that there may be a passing away of
the old things, and a making of all things new. In the process of our work, we
endevour to bless men by trying to make them temperate; may God bless all work
of that sort! But we should think ourselves to have failed if we had produced a
world of total abstainers, and had left them all unbelievers.
We drive at something more than temperance; for we believe that men must be born
again. It is good that even a corpse should be clean, and therefore that the
unregenerate should be moral. It would be a great blessing if they were cleansed
of the vices which make this city to reek in the nostrils of God and good men.
But that is not so much our work as this: that the dead in sin should live, that
spiritual life should quicken them, and that Christ should reign where the
prince of the power of the air now hath sway. You preach, brethren, with this
object, that men may quit their sins, and fly to Christ for pardon, that by His
blessed Spirit they may be renovated, and become as much in love with everything
that is holy as they are now in love with everything that is sinful. You aim at
a radical cure; the axe is laid at the root of the trees; the amendment of the
old nature would not content you, but you seek for the imparting, by a divine
power, of a new nature, that those who gather round you in the streets may live
unto God.
Our object is to turn the world upside down; or, in other words, that where sin
abounded grace may much more abound. We are aiming at a miracle: it is well to
settle that at the commencement. Some brethren think that they ought to lower
their note to the spiritual ability of the hearer; but this is a mistake.
According to these brethren, you ought not to exhort a man to repent and believe
unless you believe that he can, of himself, repent and believe. My reply is a
confession: I command men in the name of Jesus to repent and believe the gospel,
though I know they can do nothing of the kind apart from the grace of God; for I
am not sent to work according to what my private reason might suggest, but
according to the orders of my Lord and Master. Ours is the miraculous method
which comes of the endowment of the Spirit of God, who bids His ministers
perform wonders in the name of the holy child Jesus. We are sent to say to blind
eyes, "See," to deaf ears, "Hear," to dead hearts, "Live," and even to Lazarus
rotting in that grave, wherein, by this time, he stinketh,—"Lazarus, come
forth."
Dare we do this? We shall be wise to begin with the conviction that we are
utterly powerless for this unless our Master has sent us, and is with us. But if
He that sent us is with us, all things are possible to him that believeth. O
preacher, if thou art about to stand up to see what thou canst do, it will be
thy wisdom to sit down speedily; but if thou standest up to prove what thine
almighty Lord and Master can do through thee, then infinite possibilities lie
about thee! There is no bound to what God can accomplish if He works by thy
heart and voice. The other Sabbath morning, before I entered the pulpit, when my
dear brethren, the deacons and elders of this church, gathered about me for
prayer, as they are wont to do, one of them said, "Lord, take him as a man takes
a tool in his hand when he gets a firm hold of it, and then uses it to work his
own will with it." That is what all workers need; that God may be the Worker by
them. You are to be instruments in the hands of God; yourselves, of course,
actively putting forth all your faculties and forces which the Lord has lent to
you; but still never depending upon your personal power, but resting alone upon
that sacred, mysterious, divine energy which worketh in us, and by us, and with
us, upon the hearts and minds of men.
Brethren, we have been greatly disappointed, have we not, with some of our
converts? We shall always be disappointed with them so far as they are our
converts. We shall greatly rejoice over them when they prove to be the Lord's
work. When the power of grace works in them, ("Glory!") then it will be, as my
brother says, "Glory!" and nothing else but glory; for grace brings glory, but
mere oratory will only create sham and shame in the long run. When we are
preaching, and we think of a very pretty, flowery passage, a very neat, poetical
paragraph, I wish we could be restrained by that fear which acted upon Paul when
he said that he would not use the wisdom of words, "lest the cross of Christ
should be made of none effect." It is the duty of the gospel preacher, indoors
or outdoors, to say, "I can say that very prettily, but then they might notice
how I said it; I will, therefore, so say it that they will only observe the
intrinsic value of the truth which I would teach them."
It is not our way of putting the gospel, nor our method of illustrating it,
which wins souls, but the gospel itself does the work in the hands of the Holy
Ghost, and to Him we must look for the thorough conversion of men. A miracle is
to be wrought by which our hearers shall become the products of that mighty
power which God wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead, and set Him
at His own right hand in the heavenly place far above all principality and
power; and for this we must look out of ourselves to the living God. Must we
not? We go in, then, for thorough downright conversion; and therefore we fall
back upon the power of the Holy Spirit. If it be a miracle, God must work it,
that is clear; it is not to be accomplished by our reasoning, or persuasion, or
threatening, it can only come from the Lord.
In what way, since the winning of souls lies here, can we hopefully expect to be
endowed with the Spirit of God, and to go forth in His power?' I reply, that a
great deal depends upon the condition of the man himself. I am persuaded we have
never laid enough stress on the work of God within our own selves in its
relation to our service of God. A consecrated man may be charged with the divine
energy to the full, so that everybody round about him must perceive it. They
cannot tell what it is, nor whence it comes, nor, perhaps, whither it goes; but
there is something about that man which is far beyond the common order of
things. At another time that same person may be feeble and dull, and be
conscious to himself that he is so. See! he shakes himself as at other times,
but he can do no mighty deed. It is clear that Samson himself must be in a right
condition, or he can win no victories. If the champion's locks be shorn, the
Philistines will laugh at him; if the Lord be gone from a man, he has no power
left for useful service. Dear brethren, look carefully to your own condition
before God. Take care of the home farm; look well to your own flocks and herds.
Unless your walk be close with God, unless you dwell in that clear light which
surrounds the throne of God, and which is only known to those who are in
fellowship with the Eternal, you will go forth from your chamber, and hasten to
your work, but nothing will come of it. The vessel, it is true, is but an
earthen one; yet it has its place in the divine arrangement, but it will not be
filled with the divine treasure unless it is a clean vessel, and unless in other
respects it is a vessel fit for the Master's use. Let me show you some ways in
which much must depend in soul-winning upon the man himself.
We win some souls to Christ by acting as witnesses. We stand up and testify for
the Lord Jesus Christ concerning certain truths. Now, I have never had the great
privilege of being bamboozled by a barrister. I have sometimes wondered what I
should do if I were put into the witness-box to be examined and cross-examined.
I think I should simply stand up, and tell the truth as far as I knew it, and
should not make an attempt to display my wit, or my language, or my judgment. If
I simply gave straightforward answers to his questions, I should beat any lawyer
under heaven. But the difficulty is, that so often when a witness is put into
the box, he is more conscious of himself than of what he has to say; therefore,
he is soon worried, teased, and bored, and, by losing his temper, he fails to be
a good witness for the cause. Now the devil's barristers are sure to come to
you, he has a great number of them constantly retained in his service. The one
thing you have to do is to bear witness to the truth. If you enquire in your own
mind, "How shall I answer this man cleverly, so as to get a victory over him?"
you will not be wise. A witty answer is often a very proper thing; at the same
time, a gracious answer is better. Try to say to yourself: "It does not, after
all, matter whether that man proves me to be a fool or not, for I know that
already I am content to be thought a fool for Christ's sake, and not to care
about my reputation. I have to bear witness to what I know, and by the help of
God I will do so right boldly. If the interrupter questions me about other
things, I shall tell him that I do not come to bear witness about other matters,
but this one thing I do. To one point I will speak, and to no other."
Brethren, the witnessing man, then, must himself be saved, and he should be sure
of it. I do not know whether you doubt your own salvation. Perhaps I should
recommend you to preach even when that is the case; since, if you are not saved
yourself, you yet wish others to be. You do not doubt that you once enjoyed full
assurance; and now, if you have sorrowfully to confess, "Alas ! I do not feel
the full power of the gospel on my own heart," you can truly add, "Yet I know
that it is true, for I have seen it save others, and I know that no other power
can save me." Perhaps even that faltering testimony, so truly honest, might
bring a tear into your opponent's eye, and make him feel sympathy for you. "I
preached," said John Bunyan, "sometimes without hope, like a man in chains to
men in chains, and when I heard my own fetters rattle, yet I told others that
there was deliverance for them, and I bade them look to the great Deliverer." I
would not have stopped Mr. Bunyan in preaching so. At the same time, it is a
great thing to be able to declare from your own personal experience that the
Lord hath broken the gates of brass, and cut the bars of iron in sunder. Those
who hear our witness say, "Are you sure of it?" Sure of it? I am as sure of it
as I am sure that I am a living man. They call this dogmatism. Never mind about
that. A man ought to know what he is preaching about, or else let him sit down.
If I had any doubt about the matters I preach from this pulpit, I should be
ashamed to remain the pastor of this church; but I preach what I do know, and
testify what I have seen. If I am mistaken, I am heartily and intensely
mistaken; and I risk my soul and all its eternal interests upon the truth of
what I preach. If the gospel which I preach does not save me, I shall never be
saved, for what I proclaim to others is my own personal ground of trust. I have
no private lifeboat; the ark to which I invite others holds myself and all that
I have.
A good witness ought himself to know all that he is going to say; he should feel
himself at home in his subject. He is brought up as a witness, say, in a certain
case of robbery; he knows what he saw, and has to make a declaration of that
only. They begin to question him about a picture in the house, or the colour of
a dress which was hanging in the wardrobe. He answers, "You are going beyond my
record; I can only witness to that which I saw." What we do know, and what we do
not know, would make two very large books, and we may safely ask to be let alone
as to the second volume.
Brother, say what you know, and sit down. But be calm and composed while
speaking of that with which you have personal acquaintance. You will never
properly indulge your emotions in preaching, so as to feel at home with the
people, until you are at home with your subject. When you know what you are at,
you will have your mind free for earnestness. Unless you know the gospel from
beginning to end, and know where you are in preaching it, you cannot preach with
due emotion; but when you feel at home with your doctrine, stand up and be as
bold, and earnest, and importunate as you please. Face the people feeling that
you are going to tell them something worth hearing, about which you are quite
sure, which to you is your very life. There are honest hearts in every outdoor
assembly, and every indoor assembly, too, that only want to hear honest beliefs,
and they will accept them, and be led to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ.
But you are not only witnesses, you are pleaders for the Lord Jesus Christ. Now,
in a pleader, much depends upon the man. It seems as if the sign and token of
Christianity in some preachers was not a tongue of fire, but a block of ice. You
would not like to have a barrister stand up and plead your cause in a cool,
deliberate way, never showing the slightest care about whether you were found
guilty of murder or acquitted. How could you endure his indifference when you
yourself were likely to be hanged? Oh, no! you wish to silence such a false
advocate. So, when a man has to speak for Christ, if he is not in earnest, let
him go to bed. You smile; but is it not better that he should go to bed than
send a whole congregation to sleep without their going to bed? Yes, we must be
in downright earnest. If we are to prevail with men, we must love them. There is
a genuine love to men that some have, and there is a genuine dislike to men that
others have. I know gentlemen, whom I esteem in a way, who seem to think that
the working-classes are a shockingly bad lot, to be kept in check, and governed
with vigour. With such views, they will never convert the working-men. To win
men, you must feel: "I am one of them. If they are a sad lot, I am one of them;
if they are lost sinners, I am one of them; if they need a Saviour, I am one of
them." To the very chief of sinners you should preach with this text before you,
"Such were some of you." Grace alone makes us to differ, and that grace we
preach. Genuine love to God and fervent love to man make up the great
qualification for a pleader.
I further believe, although certain persons deny it, that the influence of fear
is to be exercised over the minds of men, and that it ought to operate upon the
mind of the preacher himself. "Noah, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the
saving of his house." There was salvation for this world from perishing in the
flood in the fears of Noah; and when a man gets to fear for others, so that his
heart cries out, "They will perish, they will perish, they will sink to hell,
they will be for ever banished from the presence of the Lord," and when this
fear oppresses his soul, and weighs him down, and then drives him to go out and
preach with tears, oh, then he will plead with men so as to prevail! Knowing the
terror of the Lord, he will persuade men. To know the terror of the Lord is the
means of teaching us to persuade, and not to speak harshly. Some have used the
terrors of the Lord to terrify; but Paul used them to persuade. Let us copy him.
Say, "We have come out to tell you, men and brethren, that the world is on fire,
and you must flee for your lives, and escape to the mountain, lest ye be
consumed." We must give this warning with the full conviction that it is true,
or else we shall be but as the boy who in foolishness cried, "Wolf!" Something
of the shadow of the last tremendous day must fall upon our spirit to give the
accent of conviction to our message of mercy, or we shall miss the pleader's
true power. Brethren, we must tell men that there is pressing need of a Saviour,
and show them that we ourselves perceive their need and feel for them, or else
we are not likely to turn them to the Saviour.
He that pleads for Christ should himself be moved with the prospect of the
judgment-day. When I come in at yonder door at the back of the pulpit, and the
sight of that vast crowd bursts upon me, I frequently feel appalled. Think of
these thousands of immortal souls gazing through the windows of those wistful
eyes, and I am to preach to them all, and be responsible for their blood if I be
not faithful to them. I tell you, it makes me feel ready to start back. But then
fear is not alone. I am borne up by the hope and belief that God intends to
bless these people through the Word which He will enable me to deliver. I
believe that everybody in that throng is sent there by God for some purpose, and
that I am sent to effect that purpose. I often think to myself, when I am
preaching, "Who is being converted now?" It never occurs to me that the Word of
the Lord will fail. No, that can never be. I often feel sure that men are being
converted, and at all times that God is glorified by the testimony of His truth.
You may depend upon it that your hopeful conviction that God's Word cannot
return to Him void is a great encouragement to your hearers as well as to
yourself. Your enthusiastic confidence that they will be converted may be like
the little finger of a mother held out to her babe, to help it to make its way
to her. The fire within your hearts may dart a spark into their souls by which
the flame of spiritual life shall be kindled in them. Do let us all learn the
art of pleading with the souls of men.
We have not only to be witnesses and pleaders, but we have also to be examples.
One of the most successful ways of taking wild ducks is the use of the decoy
bird. The decoy duck enters the net itself, and the others follow it. We need to
use more, in the Christian Church, the holy art of decoy; that is to say, our
example, in ourselves coming to Christ, in ourselves living godly lives in the
midst of a perverse generation, our example of joy and sorrow, our example of
holy submission to the divine will in the time of trouble, our example in all
manner of gracious ways, will be the means of inducing others to enter the way
of life. Our walk and conversation should be the most powerful part of our
ministry. This is what is called being consistent, when lips and life agree.
It is extremely helpful to be connected with an earnest living church which will
pray for you; and if you cannot find such a church where you labour, the next
best thing is to get half-a-dozen brothers or sisters who will back you up, and
go out with you, and, especially, will pray with you. Some preachers are so
independent that they can do without helpers, but they will be wise if they do
not affect solitude. May they not look at the matter in this way: by bringing in
half-a-dozen men to go out with me I shall be doing good to these young men, and
shall be training them to be workers? If you can associate with yourself
half-a-dozen who are not all very young men, but somewhat advanced in their
knowledge of divine truth, the association will be greatly to your mutual
advantage. I confess to you all that, although God has largely blessed me in His
work, yet none of the credit is due to me at all, but to those dear friends at
the Tabernacle, and, indeed, all over the world, who make me the special subject
of their prayers. A man ought to do well with such a people around him as I
have. My dear friend and deacon, Mr. William Olney, once said, "Our minister has
hitherto led us forward, and we have followed heartily. Everything has been a
success; do you not believe in his leadership?" The people cried, "Yes." Then
said my dear friend, "If our pastor has brought us up to a ditch which looks as
if it could not be passed, let us fill it up with our bodies, and carry him
across." This was grand talk: the ditch was filled, nay, it seemed to fill
itself up at once. If you have a true comrade, your strength is more than
doubled.
It is a very great assistance to join in brotherly league with some warm-hearted
Christian who knows more than we do, and will benefit us by prudent hints. God
may bless us for the sake of others when He might not bless us for our own. You
have heard, I daresay, the monkish story of the man who had preached, and had
won many souls to Christ, and congratulated himself upon it. One night, it was
revealed to him that he should have none of the honour of it at the last great
day; and he asked the angel in his dream who then would have the credit of it,
and the angel replied, "That deaf old man who sits on the pulpit stairs, and
prays for you, was the means of the blessing." Let us be thankful for that deaf
man, or, that old woman, or those poor praying friends who bring down a blessing
upon us by their intercessions. The Spirit of God will bless two when He might
not bless one. Abraham alone did not get one of the five cities saved, although
his prayer was like a ton weight in the scale; but yonder was his nephew Lot,
who was about the poorest lot that could be found. He had not more than
half-an-ounce of prayer in him; but that tiny fragment turned the scale, and
Zoar was preserved. Add then your odd half-ounce to the mightier weight of the
pleadings of eminent saints, for they may need it.
And, first, we must work at our preaching. I hope you do not weary of it, though
you certainly sometimes must weary in it. Go on with your preaching. Cobbler,
stick to your last; preacher, stick to your preaching. In the great day, when
the muster-roll shall be read, of all those who are converted through fine
music, and church decoration, and religious exhibitions and entertainments, they
will amount to the tenth part of nothing; but it will always please God by the
foolishness of preaching to save them that believe. Keep to your preaching; and
if you do anything beside, do not let it throw your preaching into the
background. In the first place preach, and in the second place preach, and in
the third place preach.
Believe in preaching the love of Christ, believe in preaching the atoning
sacrifice, believe in preaching the new birth, believe in preaching the whole
counsel of God. The old hammer of the gospel will still break the rock in
pieces; the ancient fire of Pentecost will still burn among the multitude. Try
nothing new, but go on with preaching, and if we all preach with the Holy Ghost
sent down from heaven, the results of preaching will astound us. Why, there is
no end after all to the power of the tongue! Look at the power of a bad tongue,
what great mischief it can do; and shall not God put more power into a good
tongue, if we will but use it aright? Look at the power of fire, a single spark
might give a city to the flames; even so, the Spirit of God being with us, we
need not calculate how much, or what we can do: there is no calculating the
potentialities of a flame, and there is no end to the possibilities of divine
truth spoken with the enthusiasm which is born of the Spirit of God. Have great
hope yet, brothers, have great hope yet, despite yon shameless midnight streets,
despite yon flaming gin-palaces at the corner of every street, despite the
wickedness of the rich, despite the ignorance of the poor. Go on; go on; go on;
in God's name go on, for if the preaching of the gospel does not save men,
nothing will. If the Lord's own way of mercy fails, then hang the skies in
mourning, and blot out the sun in everlasting midnight, for there remaineth
nothing before our race but the blackness of darkness. Salvation by the
sacrifice of Jesus is the ultimatum of God. Rejoice that it cannot fail. Let us
believe without reserve, and then go straight ahead with the preaching of the
Word.
I recollect that a brother was speaking to me one Monday night, and suddenly he
vanished before he finished the sentence which he was whispering. I never quite
knew what he was going to say; but I speedily saw him in that left-hand gallery,
sitting in the pew with a lady unknown to me. After the service, I said to him,
"Where did you go?" and he said, "A gleam of sunlight came in at the window, and
made me see a face which looked so sad that I hurried upstairs, and took my seat
in the pew close to the woman of a sorrowful countenance." "Did you cheer her?"
"Oh, yes! she received the Lord Jesus very readily; and just as she did so, I
noticed another eager face, and I asked her to wait in the pew till after the
service, and I went after the other—a young man." He prayed with both of these,
and would not be satisfied until they had given their hearts to the Lord. That
is the way to be on the alert. We need a body of sharp-shooters to pick out
their men one by one. When we fire great guns from the pulpit, execution is
done, but many are missed. We want loving spirits to go round, and deal with
individual cases in the singular by pointed personal warnings and
encouragements.
Last Sunday night, my dear brother told us a little story which I shall never
forget. He was at Croydon Hospital one night, as one of those appointed to visit
it. All the porters had gone home, and it was time to shut up for the night. He
was the only person in the hospital, with the exception of the physician, when a
boy came running in, saying that there was a railway accident, and someone must
go round to the station with a stretcher. The doctor said to my brother, "Will
you take one end of the stretcher if I take the other?" "Oh, yes!" was the
cheerful reply; and so away went the doctor and the pastor with the stretcher.
They brought a sick man back with them. My brother said, "I went often to the
hospital during the next week or two, because I felt so much interest in the man
whom I had helped to carry." I believe he will always take an interest in that
man, because he once felt the weight of him. When you know how to carry a man on
your heart, and have felt the burden of his case, you will have his name
engraven upon your soul. So you that privately talk to people, you are feeling
the weight of souls; and I believe that this is what many regular preachers need
to know more of; and then they will preach better.
When preaching and private talk are not available, you have a tract ready, and
this is often an effectual method. Some tracts would not convert a beetle: there
is not enough in them to interest a fly. Get good striking tracts, or none at
all. But a telling, touching gospel tract may often be the seed of eternal life;
therefore, do not go out without your tracts.
What power there is also in a letter to an individual! Some people still have a
kind of superstitious reverence for a letter; and when they get an earnest
epistle from one of you reverend gentlemen, they think a great deal of it; and
who knows?—a note by post may hit the man your sermon missed. Young people who
are not able to preach might do much good if they would write letters to their
young friends about their souls; they could speak very plainly with their pens,
though they might be diffident in speaking with their tongues. Let us save men
by all the means under heaven; let us prevent men going down to hell. We are not
half as earnest as we ought to be. Do you not remember the young man, who, when
he was dying, said to his brother, "My brother, how could you have been so
indifferent to my soul as you have been?" He answered, "I have not been
indifferent to your soul, for I have frequently spoken to you about it." "Oh,
yes!" he said, "you spoke; but somehow, I think, if you had remembered that I
was going down to hell, you would have been more earnest with me; you would have
wept over me, and, as my brother, you would not have allowed me to be lost." Let
no one say this of you.
______________
printable tract here