FINANCE
The soul-winner, to be successful, must not be over anxious about
finance, but must laugh at the devil and all his fears, and count
God faithful and trust Him to supply all his needs. He should again
and again read over the last part of the sixth chapter of St.
Matthew, beginning with verse 19. What could be stronger and more
positive than the assurance of Jesus that his needs shall be
supplied?
When I was a little fellow I never worried my head or heart about my
next pair of shoes, or where my breakfast was to come from. My
father was dead, so my mother did all that worrying, and I played
and trusted her and had a good time. Well, now, Jesus says we are to
take no thought (by that He means no anxious thought see Revised
Version) what we shall eat or what we shall put on. "Is not the life
more than meat and the body than raiment?" And if God gives you
life, which is the greater, will He not give you meat to sustain
life? And if He allows you still to live in your body for a season,
will He not give you raiment to protect your body? "Behold the fowls
of the air, for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into
barns, yet your Heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better
than they? Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat, or
what shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed? for your
Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things."
Jesus would have me trust my Heavenly Father as I did my mother.
Then I call be a child again, bless the Lord! and all I have to do
is to pray and obey and trust the Lord, and have a good time before
the Lord, and He will supply my needs and the needs of my little
ones whom He has given me. Yes, that is what He means, for He says,
"Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these
things shall be added unto you." And this freedom from worrying
anxiety is the privilege and duty of all soul-winners, from the
carefree worker who has only to get bread for his own mouth to him
who has a large family to feed and clothe, or the man with a
thousand-fold financial responsibility like Moses, or George
Mueller, or Hudson Taylor, or our God-honored and beloved General.
Faith -- simple faith, unmixed faith in God's promise -- can no more
exist in the same heart with worry than can fire and water, or light
and darkness, consort together; one extinguishes the other. Faith in
the plain, unmistakable promise of God, begotten by the Holy Ghost,
so links the soul-winner to Jesus, so yokes them up and unites them
in partnership together, that the burden and care is the Lord's,
since "the cattle on a thousand hills and the silver and the gold
are His;" and He would have His child trust Him, walk the waves with
Him, never doubt Him, shout the victory through Him and triumph over
all fear and all the power of the enemy in Him. I do declare that
according to the Word of God this is His will for the soul-winner,
and this secret every true soul-winner must and does know.
Hallelujah!
God does not send the soul-winner to a warfare at his own charges,
but according to Paul, "will supply all your need according to His
riches in glory by Christ Jesus."
God's commissary department is abundantly full and runs on schedule
time, but the worried and anxious unbeliever wants Him to run ahead
of schedule time. No, no! He may in order to test and strengthen
faith, not provide the second suit until the first one is ready to
be laid aside, and sometimes after supper he may allow you to go to
bed not knowing where the breakfast is to come from, but it will
come at breakfast time. "He knoweth that ye have need of these
things," so trust Him, as does the sparrow. The wee thing tucks its
tiny head under its little wing and sleeps, not knowing where it
will find its breakfast, and when the day dawns it chirps its merry
note of praise, and God opens His great hand and feeds it. "The eyes
of all wait upon Thee and Thou givest them their meat in due season.
Thou openest Thine hand and satisfiest the desire of every living
thing." said the Psalmist (Ps. 145:15, 16), and "Ye are of more
value than many sparrows," said Jesus.
O my anxious brother, trust Him! He will not fail you. In this, as
in all other things, the assurance holds good, that there hath no
temptation taken you but such as is common to man; but God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are
able, but will with the temptation make a way of escape that ye may
be able to bear it." (1 Cor. 10:13.) Hallelujah! I have proved this
in times past, and I may have to prove it again, but "God is
faithful." Glory! Glory! Glory! And the devil is a liar and always
will be.
Finney's clothes got threadbare, but he was so intent on getting
souls saved that he didn't notice it until someone came along and
measured him for a new suit. I had an almost similar experience
once. God knew when the old suit needed replacing by a new one, and
He sent it along on time.
Who can read Muller's "Life of Trust," without seeing God's hand in
the supply of all our needs? And if the experiences of the officers
of The Salvation Army were written, it would make a book equally
interesting, showing the unfailing faithfulness of God in supplying
daily need. Oh, that soul-winners would not lose their simplicity
and forget these mercies and past faithfulness, which are certain
pledges of future ones!
Many a man loses his love for souls and his power to win them by
allowing covetousness or financial anxiety to crowd childlike trust
out of his heart. "Who is there among you that would shut the door
for nought? neither do ye kindle a fire upon mine altars for nought,"
cried the Lord to the backslidden, covetous prophets of old. They
would do nothing until they knew they should be well paid for it. It
was not souls, but money they worked for.
Contrast with this Paul's unselfish, disinterested devotion. He
says: "I have coveted no man's silver or gold or apparel; yea, ye
yourselves know that these hands have ministered unto my necessities
and to them that were with me. I have showed you all things, how
that so laboring ye ought to support the weak and to remember the
words of the Lord Jesus, how He said, "It is more blessed to give
than to receive." And again he says: "I seek not yours but you." He
even goes so far as to say when they gave him anything, "Not that I
desire a gift, but I desire fruit that may abound to your account."
It was not the benefit that he derived from receiving, so much as
the benefit they would derive from giving that rejoiced his heart.
In writing to the Philippians, who had sent him a donation, he gives
us a bit of his inner experience. He says, "I rejoice in the Lord
greatly that now at the last your care of me hath flourished again,
wherein ye were also careful but ye lacked opportunity. Not that I
speak in respect o f want, for I have learned in whatsoever state I
am therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased and how to
abound; everywhere and in all things have I learned the secret" (R.
V.) "both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer
need. I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me."
And in writing to Timothy, he says: "A bishop must not be greedy of
filthy lucre," and Peter says we are to "feed the flock of God not
for filthy lucre but of a ready mind."
In all this I do not contend that God would not have the soul-winner
amply supported and relieved of financial burden and care by the
people for whom he gives his life. God says: "The laborer is worthy
of his hire;" and He forbade the muzzling of the ox that trod out
the corn; and by the tithing system, which all Christians ought to
adopt, every Jew was to assist in the support of the ministry.
But what I do contend for is, that the soul-winner must not be
anxious about his bread, but must beware of covetousness, must seek
to save souls, and if they do not support him as he would wish, must
still love them unto death and seek their salvation, and cheerfully
and triumphantly trust the God who fed Elijah and rained manna from
heaven for forty years to feed a million Israelites to find a way to
feed him. I maintain against all devils and all unbelief, that God
will not disappoint him, but will "feed him with the finest of the
wheat and satisfy him as with marrow and fatness."
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