THE SPECIAL CAMPAIGNER
I
'And He gave some . . . Evangelists.' For many years now my own
work has been the work of an evangelist or campaigner. For five
years, long before I met The Army, I resisted the Lord's call to
preach. I wanted to be a lawyer and enter politics. To my youthful
mind -- foolish, darkened, proud, ambitious -- all the supreme
prizes of life lay in that direction. I respected preachers, but not
their job; it looked small to me, not a man's size. But at last a
woe, a solemn, inescapable, eternal woe faced me if I preached not,
and I surrendered. Then I discovered that there were prizes,
position, and places of power in the ministry. But the job of the
Evangelist seemed to me to be beneath the dignity of a full-orbed
man. Then one day, when in an agony of desire for purity of heart
and the baptism of the Holy Ghost, God graciously sanctified me. The
Holy Spirit took possession of my yielded, open heart. Christ was
revealed in me, and a great passion for the saving and the
sanctifying of men burned within me. About that time a
multimillionaire had built one of the finest churches in my native
State, and the congregation through him was looking for a pastor. To
my surprise I found that the vice-president of my old university had
recommended me, and one day I received a call to the pastorate of
that Church. I was elated. I felt that God Himself had opened a
great door of opportunity and of usefulness to me.
While still considering this call, I went three hundred miles to a
holiness convention to sit under the ministry of some great teachers
whose books had blessed me. Then God laid His hand upon me, and I
knew that I was not to accept the call to that Church, and lo! I
found that which I had least esteemed, had most despised, was the
work to which God called me, and for which He had set me apart. I
must be an Evangelist. I felt ordained to this.
I was young, unknown, in debt for a part of my education. I had no
one to advise me. I was utterly alone and had no assurance that any
Church would welcome my evangelistic services. But on my knees I
talked it over with the Lord as I would with an earthly friend, and
by faith into evangelistic work I plunged. Doors opened and I saw
many souls saved and sanctified, and from that work, within ten
months, I was led into The Salvation Army, where I found myself in
London, blacking boots, scrubbing floors, selling 'War Crys,' as a
Cadet in the International Training Garrison. After receiving my
Commission, I returned to the U.S.A. and had command of three Corps,
two Divisions under a Provincial Commander, and was Provincial
Secretary or Chancellor of the two principal Metropolitan Provinces
in that country, with Headquarters in Chicago and New York.
But God's 'gifts and calling are without repentance,' and the inner
urge to do the work of an Evangelist was ever with me. The worst
storm that ever struck us in America had overtaken The Army. Our
ranks were broken. Our people were full of distress and anxious
questionings. Our battle-line from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
three thousand miles long, was in confusion, and I felt, when in my
office, a consuming desire to get out on the Field, to meet our
people face to face, to hearten, reassure and cheer, to exhort, to
teach, to lead them, distraught and sore perplexed, into 'the
fullness of the blessing of the Gospel of Christ,' and to win
sinners to the Saviour. One day I sought and obtained an audience
with the Consul, asked her if I might speak to her about myself and
my work as I would of any Officer, and then told her my convictions.
Within three months I was appointed National Spiritual Special, and
for about thirty years now I have been a Campaigner.
It has not been an easy job. It has oftentimes been lonely and
wearying to the point of exhaustion. It has taxed my mind,
challenged my will and utmost devotion, drunk up my spirit, drained
me to the dregs till there seemed to be no virtue left in me, and I
have had to slip away into solitude, like my Master, to the
mountains, for quiet communion, for the replenishing of exhausted
reserves of power and the renewing of all life's forces. It has been
a fight but not a defeat, Hallelujah! I have not been forsaken! His
presence has not failed me. He has assured me that the battle was
not mine but His, and He has called on me to trust Him and be not
afraid. Again and again I have heard His whisper in my heart: 'Have
I not commanded thee? Be strong and of good courage; be not afraid,
neither be thou dismayed; for the Lord thy God is with thee
whithersoever thou goest. Be steadfast, unmovable. Your labor is not
in vain in the Lord.' Sometimes the whisper has been sweet and full
of comfort as the tender, cooing voice of a mother to a weary,
distressed child; and sometimes it has been sharp and imperative as
the staccato notes of a military command on a field of battle. I
have not been mollycoddled. I have never been for an instant
permitted to think I was God's pet, and that I could expect special
favors from Him. He has called me to share His cross, and to endure
hardness as a good Soldier, not pleasing myself, not entangling
myself with worldly interests or affairs that did not concern me,
but to attend strictly to the work He has given me to do.
And now, out of some thirty years of experience as a Campaigner, let
me write.
II
When they sought him where he had last been seen, all they could
find was a small streak of ashes; he had been consumed by the flood
of flame which swept over the doomed city, burning to ashes in five
hours 69,000 houses that in five minutes had been cast to the ground
by the heaving earth. He was an exporter of silk, a wealthy Parsee
from India, with great warehouses in Yokohama. One month before the
earthquake and fire, the Swedish Officer, who told me this story,
had visited him in his office asking for a donation to help The
Salvation Army in its work for sailors in that city. He listened to
the Officer's plea, and then replied: 'If you can tell me one thing
you Officers of The Salvation Army do which has not as its ultimate
object the winning of men to Christ, then I will give you a liberal
donation. But you cannot do it; you wear uniform, you march the
streets, you carry banners, you beat drums and blow instruments, you
conduct Meetings, you open Shelters and Soup Kitchens, you build
Citadels, conduct Training Colleges, Rescue Homes, Men's Shelters,
publish books and papers and solicit money for just one object -- to
help you win men to Christ and make them followers of Him. I do not
believe in Christ. I do not need your Christ. I am rich, but I will
give you nothing.' A month later the earthquake, the all-consuming
fire and the poor little handful of ashes!
The proud, self-complacent Parsee had grasped the central purpose of
The Salvation Army. All its Officers and workers have or should have
this supreme object always in full view. But while there is one
spirit and one object, there are manifold ministries to express that
spirit and secure that object. There are 'some apostles, some
prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers.' Some serve
tables as did Stephen, Philip, and others; and some give themselves
wholly to the ministry of the word and prayer, as did Peter and the
other Apostles (Acts vi. 1-8). But all have one object to attain --
the winning of souls from sin through faith in Christ, and the
binding of them in vital union to Christ, and making them channels
of His saving grace to others.
The Evangelist or Campaigner is the man who probably more directly
than any other labors to accomplish this great work. The Corps
Officer, the Divisional Commander, the Departmental Officer, the
Commissioner, has many executive and administrative duties which do
not bear so directly upon the saving of men as does the work of the
Campaigner. Their work is a vitally essential work in preparing the
way for and conserving the work of soul-winning, but much that they
do bears only indirectly upon the Salvation of men. The Campaigner's
work, however, is direct, immediate, unchanging. This one thing he
does. The burden of caring for the flock, of collecting and
administering finance, of erecting buildings, of directing affairs,
does not fall upon him as upon others. His sole burden, his one
responsibility, is for the souls of men. It is a secret burden, a
responsibility which is laid upon him and which he assumes in the
silence and secret place of his own soul. It is elusive, known and
measured only by God and himself. It cannot be measured by a yard
stick. It cannot be weighed on man-made scales. It cannot be
tabulated in statistics. The Campaigner belongs to a Divine order,
just as the prophet and the Apostle. He has a Divine calling. His
gift is a Divine bestowment, and he himself is one of God's gifts to
men. 'And He gave some -- Evangelists ' -- counterparts of The
Salvation Army Campaigner, who is the Evangelist of the New
Testament and whose sole business is the saving of men, the
perfecting of the saints and the building up of the body of Christ
on earth, which is composed of all true Christians.
If we judge the importance of his work in the mind of God by the
place Paul assigns him when he mentions the various orders of
ministry, then he stands next to the Apostles and Prophets and
before the pastor and teacher.
When we consider his work we will see that this relationship is
perfectly logical. He receives the revelation, the good news of
God's love and plan of Salvation through faith in Christ from
Apostles and Prophets, and then by bold and loving presentation of
this revelation, this good news, he saves men and turns them over to
the pastor to be shepherded, and to the teacher to be instructed in
the things of God. His great work is not the training of souls but
the saving of them; having accomplished this work he passes on to
other fields of labor. He does not erect the building, he provides
the material; or, to change the figure, he lays the foundations,
others build thereon. He is a fisher of men: his business is to
catch them. He is a reaper of souls on the world's vast harvest
fields; that is his one work, and to that he should give himself
with great joy and full and unwearied devotion. He may have other
gifts, and, if so, he should not neglect them but cultivate them to
the full and make them contribute to and support his God-given gift
and calling as an Evangelist. He should not minify his calling. He
should not vex and discourage himself by comparing it with that of
other men, with that of the Divisional Commander and Commissioner
who handle great affairs, control great commands, and direct their
own appointments within their commands, as I knew one Special do,
much to his own distress and the crippling, in some measure, of his
splendid powers.
The Campaigner should magnify his office. It is true that he is a
lone man without authority to command and direct others and
administer great business, and at times he may be oppressed with a
feeling of his own insignificance. But he has spiritual authority,
the authority which eternal truth bestows and with which God clothes
chosen workers who work and labor in the power of the Holy Ghost.
However small he may feel within himself, he must not minify his
office. His work is vital. It is God-ordained, and he is walking in
the footsteps of the Master who, without any semblance of worldly
power, or man-made authority, was the first Campaigner.
His one weapon is 'the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of
God.' His enduement of power for his work is none less than God the
Holy Ghost. The Almighty Holy Ghost goes with him to hearten, to
guide, to give him insight and wisdom and courage, boldness in
attack, patience in difficulty, and faith and hope in the blackest
night. However lonely at times he may feel, he is not alone, 'never,
no, never alone.' He must stir up his faith and recognize the Divine
Presence, humbly acknowledge his dependence, boldly claim Divine
help, and draw freely upon the Divine resources placed at the
disposal of his faith.
III
It is the Campaigner himself, and not the details of his
campaign, about which I write. Probably no two Campaigners if left
to themselves would plan a campaign exactly alike. Personally, I
have never attempted anything spectacular, although I would not
discourage this in others. Pageants, spectacular marches and
uniforms, striking subjects, special music, all may be most useful
to reach the crowd. Cottage Prayer Meetings and Half Nights of
Prayer before a Campaign, with personal visitations, announcements,
and invitations, I have found most helpful. They stir up interest
and a devout, prayerful, expectant spirit that make victory assured.
The Campaigner cannot make this initial preparation himself. The
Divisional Officer, the Corps Commander, Locals and Soldiers, should
do this work in advance of the Campaign, and if they do it with
heart and soul, and their own hearts are prepared for the visitation
of the Spirit, victory is already in sight.
In all my campaigns it is this preliminary work and this heart
preparation for which I have pleaded, and for which I have in secret
prayed.
IV
1. The Campaigner must spend time and give all diligence to the
preparation of his own heart. If his own heart is broken, he can
then break the hearts of others. If his heart is aflame, he can
kindle a flame in other hearts. A striking program, a brilliant
address, a beautiful song may dazzle the crowd and play on the
surface of their emotions, but it is only the passion of the Cross
that will bring them in contrition and brokenness of heart to the
Cross. Other things are important, but this preparation of the heart
is the one thing without which all other things are empty and vain.
The Founder always blamed himself if he did not succeed. It is true
that other factors are at work for or against the campaign, and the
Campaigner should not be too quick to assume all the blame of
failure. We know there were places where the Master could do not
mighty works, because unbelief frustrated Him. And so it may be with
the Campaigner. But usually, if he is warm and tender, joyous and
bold, and 'full of faith and of the Holy Ghost,' no man will be able
to stand before him. Results rich and enduring will reward his labor
(Joshua i. 5).
The Campaigner must study to show himself approved unto God, a
workman that needeth not to be ashamed. God is not a hard Master,
but He will not, cannot, lightly approve us. We must not presume on
His good will: but with all watchfulness and diligence so work that
He can approve, and that our hearts will not condemn, but will
reassure us.
2. The Campaigner must exercise his spiritual sense lest, having
eyes to see, he see not, and having ears to hear, he hear not. He
must have eyes that pierce through appearances: that can see the
horses and chariots of fire where others see only the arrogant,
encircling hosts of Syria. He must have ears to hear the assuring
voice of his Captain, and distinguish it from the voices of
self-interest, of expediency, and of the fiend who sometimes
simulates, and is 'transformed into an angel of light.'
The Apostle speaks in commendation of those 'who by reason of use
have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil.' But
beyond discernment of good and evil, the Campaigner must have eyes
to see victory where others see foredoomed defeat. The smallest
crowd may have immeasurable possibilities in it. A Luther, a Wesley,
a William Booth, may be looking out through the eyes of some little
child or some awkward, shy, or mischievous, adolescent boy. An
Elizabeth Fry, a Catherine Booth, or a Hannah Ouchterlony may spring
forth from the chrysalis of some reserved girl who listens with rapt
attention. Personally, I seldom speak to a congregation without
thinking that I may be addressing directly or indirectly some one
who shall yet be a prophet of the Highest, a herald to nations.
Possibly I have been somewhat influenced by the results of my first
sermon in my first appointment as a young preacher. In that first
service two people, a young man and a young woman, yielded to
Christ, were saved, and the young man, principal of the public
school, preached for me before the end of the year and went later as
a missionary to India. Sometimes we reach them indirectly. We get
some nobody saved and God uses that nobody to reach somebody who
becomes 'Great in the sight of the Lord.' Let us have no hesitancy
in permitting our spiritual imagination to reinforce our faith and
enkindle our hope and so sustain our courage in the face of massed
and mocking foes and threatened defeat.
3. The true Campaigner is a humble man. He seeks nothing for
himself. He is willing for others to carry off the so-called prizes
of this life. He is not a lord over Christ's heritage; he is a
shepherd of the sheep, 'an ensample to the flock.' He holds no
dominion over the faith of his brethren, but he is a helper of their
joy (2 Corinthians i. 24). Like John the Baptist, he is quite
willing to decrease, if only Christ increases; his joy is that of
the friend of the Bridegroom (John iii. 29, 30). Like Paul he is
jealous over his comrades with a godly jealousy, desirous above all
things to espouse them to one husband and present them as a chaste
virgin to Christ; and he fears lest by any means that old serpent
who beguiled Eve through his subtlety, should corrupt them from the
simplicity that is in Christ (2 Corinthians xi. 2, 3). And like
Epaphras, he labors fervently in prayer that they may stand perfect
and complete in all the will of God (Colossians iv. 12).
4. Finally, this lonely man, coming to a Division and Corps, with no
power to command, but only to preach and pray, to help and inspire
and to seek the lost, should be received as the messenger of God,
and supported by love and prayers and understanding sympathy and
helped in his mission in every possible way, that Christ may be
glorified, souls won, little children gathered into the fold, and
all comrades quickened and sanctified.
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