THE COST OF SAVING SOULS
Some years ago a young woman-Officer wrote the Colonel in command
of a Continental Territory telling him she meant to resign if she
could not get souls saved. But she did not resign.
A pastor, famous for the revivals which swept his churches and moved
the communities where he labored, was sent to a big church in New
York city. As he walked into a gathering of ministers, he heard them
whispering among themselves 'He will find New York different. It is
the graveyard of revival reputations.' And right there he resolved
and publicly declared that there should be a revival in his church
or there would be a funeral in his parsonage.
Little faith sees the difficulties and often accepts defeat without
a fight. Great faith sees God and fights manfully against all odds,
and though the enemy apparently triumphs, wins moral and spiritual
victory, as did Christ on Calvary, and as did the martyrs who
perished in flame. What could be more complete to doubting hearts
and the eyes of unbelief than the defeat of Christ on the cross, or
of Cranmer and Ridley in the fire! And yet it as then that their
victory over the enemy was supreme. The spirit of Jesus is the
spirit of conquest.
When Paul, filled with passionate love for Christ, whom he had
persecuted, and burning with eager desire to save men with the great
Salvation that had reached him, went forth to evangelize the Roman
Empire, the Jews everywhere confronted and hunted him with the same
deadly hate and murderous opposition that he had once shown to the
Jerusalem Christians; while every city he entered reeked with
unmentionable vices and reveled in licentious idolatries. He had no
completed Bible, no religious Press, no missionary organization
behind him to ensure his support, and the very name of Christ was
unknown, while Caesar was honored as a god.
The wealth, the learning, the philosophy, the political power, the
religions, the vested interests of the world and the age-long
habits, passions, and inflamed appetites of men were all opposed to
him. Don Quixote's valorous attack on windmills did not appear more
absurd than Paul's assault on the sin, the corruption, the
entrenched evils of the world of his day with no other weapon than
his personal testimony and the story of a crucified, resurrected
Jewish peasant Carpenter, whom he heralded as the Son of God and the
Saviour and Judge of the world, before whom all men, from the
Emperor to the lowest slave, must some day appear to be judged for
his deeds and be rewarded with eternal bliss or doomed to endless
shame and woe. Paul died, but he won souls.
Immeasurable difficulties faced the Wesleys when they and Whitefield
began their career that quickened Christendom. The clergy were, as a
class, utterly unspiritual, given over to drinking, horse-racing,
and fox-hunting with the gentry; the educated classes were, in large
measure, skeptical and licentious, while the lower classes, in the
cities, were only too often debased and drunken, and found their
pleasures in cock-fighting and racing dogs on Sundays. But in the
midst of these desolate and desperate conditions the Wesleys started
the greatest revival that had been known since the Apostolic Age,
and snatched souls by the myriads from the very jaws of Hell.
And amid conditions almost, if not equally, as dark and forbidding,
the Founder of The Salvation Army began and carried on his work that
has directly touched and won millions of souls and an even larger
number indirectly, quickening the faith and lifting the spiritual
level of the whole Christian world, and touching with soul-saving
power and life-giving hope great heathen populations in many lands.
But none of these world-embracing, epoch-making revivals began in a
large way. Paul usually made an address and gave his testimony in a
synagogue -- a small meeting-place of the Jews -- until he was
excluded, and then he went up some home or room that was opened to
him. This was followed by house-to-house visitation, often after a
day's work at tentmaking. The Wesleys began in the same humble way,
and so did the Founder.
Great revivals among God's people and awakenings among the ungodly
never begin in a great way. They begin as oak trees begin. There is
nothing startling and spectacular about the beginning of an oak
tree. In darkness, in loneliness, an acorn gives up its life, and
the oak, at first only a tiny root and a tiny stem of green, is born
out of the dissolution and death of the acorn. So revivals are born,
so souls are won, so the Kingdom of God comes. Some one, no longer
trying to save himself or to advance his own interests, dies -- dies
to self, to the world, to the praise of men, to the ambition for
promotion, for place, for power, and lives unto Christ, lives to
save men, and the awakening of sinners comes; souls are born into
the kingdom of God, they rally round their leader and in turn become
soul-winners. 'Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die,
it abideth alone : but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit,'
said Jesus. And so He 'endured the cross, despising the shame,' and
died that He might win souls, save men, and 'bring many sons unto
glory.'
'If any man serve Me, let him follow Me,' said Jesus. Let him lose
his old life, his old ambitions, his old estimate of values for My
sake, My cause, and the souls he would win and for whom I died. He
that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in
this world shall keep it unto life eternal.'
That is the way to become a soul-winner; that is the price that must
be paid. The Master could find no easier way, and He can show no
easier way to us. It is costly. But shall we wish to win eternal and
infinite values cheaply? 'For the joy that was set before Him, He
endured the cross.' What joy? The joy of having the Father's
approval and of saving souls from eternal death and of 'bringing
many sons unto glory.' And shall we hope to share that joy by some
cheap service that calls for no uttermost devotion, no whole
burnt-offering, no final and complete sacrifice? Not otherwise has
any man ever become a soul-winner. We may move upon the surface of
men's lives, we may touch their emotions, we may lead them to easy,
nonsacrificial religious exercises and activities, and think we are
saving souls, but we do not really win them until we constrain them
to follow us, as we follow Christ, through death -- death to sin,
death to the flesh and the world, into newness of life unto
Holiness.
This was Paul's way. 'I go bound in the Spirit not knowing what
shall befall me save that the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every city,
saying that bonds and afflictions abide me. But none of these things
move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might
finish my course with joy, and the ministry, which I have received
of the Lord Jesus' (Acts xx. 22-24). It was not easy for Paul. He
counted the cost. He paid the price. He turned neither to the right
hand nor the left. He marched straight forward.
He was commissioned 'to open men's eyes, and to turn them from
darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they
may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which
are sanctified by faith ' in Christ. And he adds: 'I was not
disobedient unto the heavenly vision.' 'What things were gain to me,
those I counted loss for Christ, yea, doubtless, and I count all
things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus
my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do
count them but dung, that I may win Christ.'
It is as we thus count all things but loss and so win Christ that we
are empowered to win souls. This is the standard we must set for
ourselves, and to which we must woo and draw by the compulsion of
love and faithful teaching and example our younger comrades.
The Psalmist, in his penitential prayer, cried to God for a clean
heart and a right spirit, for the joy of Salvation, and the enabling
of the Holy Spirit. 'Then,' said he, 'will I teach transgressors Thy
ways: and sinners shall be converted unto Thee.' David felt that if
he would effectively teach and convert sinners his heart must be
pure, his spirit must be right. So then the cost of winning souls
includes the price that must be paid for a pure heart. I must be
clean, my spirit must be right, I must hold back no part of the
price, I must bring all the tithes into God's storehouse, if I would
be a soul winner.
'He that winneth souls is wise,' wrote Solomon. Then, if I would be
a soul-winner, I must pay the price of wisdom. Wisdom cannot be
bought with silver and gold. It cannot be passed on like an
inheritance from father to son. It cannot be learned, as we learn
mathematics or the sciences, in schools and colleges. It comes only
through experience in following Christ.
Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers, and he bears a laden breast,
Full of sad experience, moving toward the stillness of his rest.
He who wants wisdom must not shrink from suffering. 'Being reviled,
we bless; being persecuted, we suffer it; being defamed, we intreat,'
wrote Paul. Suffering did not daunt him. Abuse and neglect did not
embitter him. When his converts were turned against him, he wrote:
'I will not be burdensome to you: for I seek not yours, but you. . .
And I will very gladly spend and be spent for you; though the more
abundantly I love you, the less I be loved. . . . We do all things,
dearly beloved, for your edifying.' A man with that spirit is full
of wisdom, the wisdom of God, the wisdom that is from above, which
is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated,
full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without
hypocrisy,' and he wins souls. His life, his example, his spirit,
his speech are compelling, and he wins and knits men to Christ.
The soul-winner must not despise the day of small things. It is
better to speak to a small company and win a half-dozen of them to
the Saviour, than to speak to a thousand and have no one saved or
sanctified, though they all go away lauding the leader and
exclaiming, Wasn't the Meeting grand!' Some years ago I went to a
large city, where we owned a Hall seating nearly a thousand people,
and where I thought we had a flourishing Corps. The Officer and his
wife had unusual ability, but had become stale and spiritually
lifeless. Where hundreds should have greeted me, fifty tired,
listless people were present, twenty of whom were unkempt children.
When I rose to give out the first song, there were three Song-Books
among us, one of which was mine. The Officer ran off downstairs to
pick up a few more books, and while we waited I was fiercely tempted
to walk off the platform and leave the place, telling him I would
not spend my strength helping a man with no more spirit and interest
than he manifested. Then I looked at the people before me -- tired
miners, poor and wearied wives, and little, unshepherded children --
peering at me with dull, quizzical eyes as though wondering whether
I would club them or feed them, give them stones or bread for their
hunger. And my heart was swept with a great wave of pity for them --
'sheep without a shepherd.' And I set myself with full purpose of
heart to bless and feed them, to save them, and in the next six days
the big Hall was crowded and we rejoiced over ninety souls seeking
the Saviour. The true soul-winner counts not his life dear unto
himself. He gives himself desperately to his task, and there are
times when, as Knox prayed, 'Give me Scotland, or I die,' so he sobs
and cries, 'Give me souls, or I die.'
That New York pastor had a revival in the church. There was no
funeral in the parsonage. Day and night he cried to God for souls.
Every afternoon he was out visiting the people in their homes, their
offices, their shops. He climbed so many stairways that he said if
they had been piled one on the other they would have taken him well
up toward the moon. For a month or more he devoted his mornings to
study of the Bible, to reading the biographies of soul-winners,
books on revivals, revival lectures and sermons, revival songs, and
revival stories and anecdotes. He saturated his mind and heart with
the very spirit of revivals. He looked into the grave, into Hell,
into Heaven. He studied Calvary. He meditated on eternity. He
stirred up his pity and compassion for the people. He cried to God
for the Holy Ghost, for power, for faith, for wisdom, for fervor and
joy and love. He waked up in the night and prayed and planned his
campaign. He enlisted such members of his church as were spiritual
to help him. When he won a man for Christ he enlisted him as a
helper in the fight, and God swept the church with revival fire, and
hundreds were won to Christ. Hallelujah! Oh, how unfailing is God.
How ever present and ready to help is the Holy Ghost! How surely is
Jesus present where men gather in His name!
That woman-Officer to whom I have referred did not resign. One
night, as she closed the Meeting, she asked the Soldiers to remain
with her for a short while. Then she opened her heart to them. She
told them of her letter to the Colonel. She said she could not
continue in the work unless she could see souls saved. Many
drunkards were in the city. The streets were infested by them. Their
homes were being ruined, their wives neglected, and they were
hastening to Hell because of the drink. Would not the comrades
remain and spend an hour in prayer with her and for her, and for the
Salvation of souls, and especially of the drunkards of the city?
They stayed, and for an hour they prayed, and God heard and drew
nigh, and Jesus was in the midst.
After the next public Meeting she again requested the Soldiers to
remain, and again they prayed for an hour or more, and Jesus was
there. And after every public Meeting for a week or ten days, or
more, the Soldiers stayed with the Officer and prayed, and Jesus was
in the midst. And then one night, somewhat to their surprise --
strange that we should be surprised at answered prayer -- the worst
drunkard in the city, with several of his pals, came to the Meeting
and was converted; then his whole family was won, and they all
became Soldiers. In a brief time twelve drunkards were converted,
and lo! that woman had a blessed revival on her hands, and not only
were sinners converted, but an Officer was saved to The Army.
We may be sweet singers, eloquent and moving preachers, skillful
organizers, masters of men and assemblies, wizards of finance,
popular and commanding leaders, but if we are not soul-winners, if
we do not make men and women see the meaning and winsomeness of
Jesus, and hunger for His righteousness and purity, and bow to Him
in full loyalty, then one thing, the chief thing for an Army
Officer, we lack. And yet that one thing is within the reach of us
all if we live for it, if we put it first, if we shrink not from the
cost. We may be, we should be, Oh, we shall be at all cost, winners
of souls!
|