ENCOURAGING ONE ANOTHER
Over and over again when Moses was preparing to give up his
command to Joshua, he encouraged Joshua and exhorted him to 'be
strong and of a good courage.' And so important was this matter,
that when Moses was dead, God Himself spoke to Joshua and said, 'Be
strong and of a good courage'; and again, 'Only be thou strong and
very courageous'; and a third time, 'Have I not commanded thee? Be
strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou
dismayed, for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.'
(Joshua i. 6, 7, 9.)
Centuries after, we hear David chanting his glorious psalm and
singing, 'Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and He shall
strengthen thine heart; wait, I say, on the Lord.' (Psalm xxvii.
14.)
Hundreds of years later we hear Jesus saying to His little flock,
confronted by a proud, fierce Jewish priesthood and a world
weltering in sin and heathenism: 'Fear not, little flock,' 'Be of
good cheer.
Later still we find Paul, a prisoner of the Lord, when waiting to
face the monstrous Nero, writing to Timothy from Rome, and saying,
'My Son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.' And to the
Ephesians he wrote, 'Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord and
in the power of His might.'
We get a most impressive lesson from the story of the twelve spies
sent by Moses to spy out the land of Canaan. Caleb and Joshua
returned with cheery hearts, full of courage, and exhorted the
people to go up at once and take the land; but ten of the spies gave
an evil report; and the people said, 'Our brethren have discouraged
our heart,' and they, disheartened and afraid, turned back into the
wilderness, and wandered to and fro for forty years, till all of
them perished there, except Joshua and Caleb and the children who
were not responsible for the unbelief and disobedience of the
multitude.
Thus we learn from the example of our Lord, of Moses, David, Paul,
and from the bad effect of the spies' gloomy report, the importance
of encouraging rather than discouraging one another. How shall we do
this?
1. By keeping in such close touch and communion with God that our
faces shine with inward peace, and that the joy in our hearts
bubbles out in hearty, happy, helpful testimony, not only in
Meetings, but wherever we meet a comrade.
2. By talking more about our victories than our defeats; by thinking
and meditating more upon our triumphs than our trials; by counting
our blessings, naming them one by one, and praising God for what He
has done and what He has promised to do.
We should not ignore the dark side of things, but we should not
magnify it and refuse to see the silver lining to the cloud that is
so dark. God is not dead nor dying, and He does not forget His
people who cry to Him night and day, who wait upon Him and do His
will. He can open the Red Sea for His people and drown their enemies
in its floods. He can make Jericho's walls tumble down before His
people who go faithfully about their work and who shout when the
time comes. He can make the valley of dry bones teem with an army of
living men. (Ezekiel xxxvii. 1-14.) Oh, He is a wonderful God, and
He is our God! There is nothing too hard for Him. (Jeremiah xxxii.
17.) Therefore, we should trust Him, and encourage our comrades to
trust Him and to make their prayer unto Him in faith and without
ceasing.
3. By dwelling more upon the good than the bad in other people. If
we would encourage each other, we should talk more about Sister
Brown, who is always in full uniform, who sells 'War Crys,' asks for
an increase in her Self-Denial Target, and teaches a Company every
Sunday, than about Sister Bangs who won't do anything she ought to
do, wears feathers in her hat, and goes to moving picture shows.
We should think and talk more about Captain Smith, who by much
prayer to God and visitation of the people and faithful dealing, is
having souls saved at his Corps, than about Jones who has got
embittered in his heart and has left the Work.
4. By trying to comprehend something of the vast responsibilities
and burdens which press upon our leaders. What a multitude of
perplexities harass their minds and try their patience! Therefore we
should not be too quick to criticize, but be more ready to pray for
them and give them credit for being sincere and doing the best they
can under the circumstances -- probably as well or better than we
ourselves would do if we were in their place. They are helped by
encouragement even as we are.
I know an Officer who received his target for a special effort and,
without praying over it or looking to the Lord at all, immediately
sat down and wrote to his Divisional Officer a sharp letter of
protest and complaint which discouraged him and made it much harder
for him to go happily about his work. I know another old Officer in
that same Division who got his target, which seemed fairly large. He
saw his Divisional Officer, and said, Major, 'I think you ought to
do me a favor.' The poor Major's heart began to get heavy, but at
last he asked, 'Well, what is it?' To his amazement and joy, the
dear Officer replied, 'Major, I love The Army and its work, and I
think you ought to increase my Target.' He encouraged his burdened
brother, the Major. He is an old Officer, who goes from one average
Corps to another, but through all the years and amid all the changes
and trials and difficulties, he has kept cheery and trustful and
sweet in his soul, and God makes him a blessing.
'They helped every one his neighbor and every one said to his
brother, Be of good courage.' (Isaiah xli. 6.) Shall you and I not
take that text for a motto, my comrades? We shall save our-selves as
well as our brother from discouragement if we do.
The influence of one gloomy soul can throw a shadow over a whole
family. One Soldier in a Corps who persistently represents the
difficulties of every undertaking can slow down the pace of all. At
best they go forward burdened with his weight, rather than quickened
by his example. The glorious work of encouraging others is within
the capacity of all. The weakest of us can at least say with loving
zeal, and earnest testimony:
'Oh, magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt His name together. I
sought the Lord, and He heard me, and delivered me from all my
fears. Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the man
that trusteth in Him.' (Psalm xxxiv.) Hallelujah!
Always he was the dullard, always he Failed of the quick grasp and
the flaming word That still he longed for. Always other men Outran
him for the prize, till in him stirred Black presage of defeat, and
blacker doubts Of love and wisdom regnant; and he styled Himself
disciple of the obvious, Predestined failure, blundering foot, and
smiled.
But with the smile went heartbreak. Then one day A little lad crept
wailing to his knee Clasping a broken toy. 'I slipped and fell And
broke it. Make another one for me.' Whereat the answer: 'I am but a
fool, I can make nothing.' 'You can mend it then.' 'At least I'll
try.' And patiently and slow He wrought until the toy was whole
again.
And so he learned his lesson. In the world, The bustling world that
has no time to spare For its hurt children, all compassionate He
sought, and seeking found them everywhere. And here he wove again a
shattered dream, And there bound up a bruised and broken soul; And,
comrade to the fallen and the faint, He steadied wavering feet to
reach their goal.
Forgotten were his dreams of self and fame; For ever gone the
bitterness of loss; Nor counted he his futile struggles vain, Since
they had taught him how to share the cross Of weaker brother wisely;
and henceforth He knew no word but 'service.' In it lay Ambition,
work, and guerdon, and he poured His whole soul in the striving of
the day. And when at last he rested, as Love led, So now it crowned
him. And they came with tears Those sorrowing hearts that he had
comforted Bearing the garnered triumphs of their years. 'Not ours,
but His, the glory. Dreams come true. Temptations conquered, lives
made clean again, All these and we ourselves are work of him Whom
God had set the task of mending man.'
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