MY TESTIMONY
(1860 -- 59 -- 1919)
Today (June 1, 1919) I am fifty-nine years old, and there is not
a cloud in my spiritual heaven. My mouth is full of laughter and my
heart is full of joy. I feel so sorry for folks who don't like to
grow old, and who are trying all the time to hide the fact that they
are growing old, and who are ashamed to tell how old they are. I
revel in my years. They enrich me. If God should say to me, 'I will
let you begin over again, and you may have your youth back once
more,' I should say, 'O dear Lord, if Thou dost not mind, I prefer
to go on growing old!'
I would not exchange the peace of mind, the abiding rest of soul,
the measure of wisdom I have gained from the sweet and bitter and
perplexing experiences of life, the confirmed faith I now have in
the moral order of the universe, and in the unfailing mercies and
love of God, for all the bright but uncertain hopes and tumultuous
joys of youth. Indeed, I would not!
These are the best years of my life -- the sweetest, the freest from
anxious care and fear. The way grows brighter, the birds sing
sweeter, the winds blow softer, the sun shines more radiantly than
ever before. I suppose my outward man is perishing, but my inward
man is being joyously renewed day by day.
Victor Hugo said (I quote from memory): 'For fifty years I have been
expressing myself in sonnet and song, in history, biography, essays,
philosophy, drama, tragedy, and fiction, but I have not expressed a
thousandth part of what is within me.' And then he added, 'The
frosts of seventy winters are upon my head, but the springtime of
eternal youth is in my heart.' Truly, that is the way I feel these
days
One of the prayers of my heart, as I grow older, is that of David:
'Now, also, when I am old and grey-headed, O God, forsake me not
until I have showed Thy strength unto this generation and Thy power
to every one that is to come!' David was jealous for the glory of
God and for the highest well-being of his own generation and every
generation that was to follow, and he prayed no selfish prayer, but
poured out his heart to God that he might so live and speak and
write that God's glory and goodness and power might be made known to
the men of his own time and to all that should come after him. And
how wonderfully God heard and answered his prayer! Oh, that God
would grant me a like grace!
If the eye of any friend falls upon this testimony, let me beseech
you to unite with me and for me in this prayer of David, which I
make my own.
This past year has been wonderful. Since the first of January
considerably over three thousand souls have knelt at the
penitent-form in my Meetings, seeking pardon and purity. Seldom have
I seen such manifestations of God's presence and power as during
these months. I rejoice in God my Saviour, and my soul doth magnify
the Lord.
I wish I knew more of it and could better tell to others the secret
of growing old gladly. But some lessons that I have learned, or
partially learned, I here pass on:
1. Have faith in God -- In His providence, In His superintending
care, in His unfailing love.
2. Accept the bitter with the sweet and rejoice in both. The bitter
may be better for us than the sweet. Don't grow impatient and
fretful. If you fall into divers temptations, count it all joy,
knowing that the trial of your faith worketh patience; and let
patience have her perfect work, that you may be perfect and entire,
wanting nothing.
What a high state of grace that is -- to be 'perfect and entire,
wanting nothing! ' And yet it is to be attained through the joyful
acceptance of annoying trials and petty vexations, as a part of
God's discipline. (James i. 2-7.)
3. Keep a heart full of love toward everybody. Learn to be patient
with folks who try your patience. If you can't love them with
complacency, then love them with compassion and pity; but love them,
pray for them, and don't carry around hard thoughts and feelings --
toward them.
Here is a tender little poem by Whittier, our Quaker poet:
My heart was heavy, for its trust had been Abused, its kindness
answered with foul wrong; So, turning gloomily from my fellow-men,
One summer Sabbath Day I strolled among The green mounds of the
village burial-place, Where, pondering how all human love and hate
Find one sad level; and how, soon or late, Wronged and wrong-doer,
each with meekened face, And cold hands folded over a still heart,
Pass the green threshold of our common grave, Whither all footsteps
tend, whence none depart, Awed for myself and pitying my race, Our
common sorrow, like a mighty wave, Swept all my pride away, and,
trembling, I forgave
4. Don't waste time and fritter away faith by living in the past, by
mourning over the failures of yesterday and the long ago. Commit
them to God and look upward and onward. 'Forgetting those things
which are behind,' said Paul, 'and reaching forth unto those things
which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high
calling of God in Christ Jesus.'
Some one has said that there are two things we should never worry
over and two days about which we should never be anxious. First, we
should not worry over the things that we can help, but set to work
manfully to help them; second, we should not worry, over the things
that we cannot help, but commit them to God and go on with the
duties close at hand. Again, we should not be anxious about
yesterday. Our anxieties will not mend its failures nor restore its
losses. Second, we should not be anxious about tomorrow. We cannot
borrow its grace. Why, then, should we borrow its care?
5. Give good heed to failing bodily strength. The Founder once said
that the body and soul, being very near neighbors, have a great
influence upon each other. We must remember that our bodies are to
be treated like our beast, and Solomon says that 'a righteous man
regardeth the life of his beast.' When young we could stay up all
night, eat ice-cream, nuts, and cake at midnight, and go about our
work next day, not much the worse, so far as we could judge, for the
shameful mistreatment of our bodies; but woe unto the man or woman,
growing old, who thinks he can treat his body so!
We must remember that our bodies are the temple of the Holy Ghost;
hence, while they need sufficient nourishing food and restful sleep,
they must in no sense be pampered, and all nervous excesses must be
strictly avoided, or the body will react upon the mind and the
spirit, and weakness and impatience and gloom will cloud the soul.
And then, instead of ripening into mellow sweetness with age, the
soul will turn bitter and sour; and what can be more pitiful than an
embittered and soured old soul?
Oh, the joy of living a life of sobriety, of faith, of quietness and
confidence, of meekness, of service, of love, of 'growing up unto
Him in all things, which is the Head -- Even Christ! ' Such a life
is never old, but eternally renewing itself, eternally youthful,
like a springing, sparkling fountain that is fed by unfailing waters
that flow down from the heights of the everlasting hills.
Hallelujah!
In Thee, O Lord, do I put my trust! Oh, how great is Thy goodness,
which Thou hast laid up for them that fear Thee; which Thou hast
wrought for them that trust in Thee before the sons of men! (Psalm
xxxi. 1-19.)
Grow old along with me! The best is yet to be, The last of life, for
which the first was made: Our times are in His hand Who saith, 'A
whole I planned, Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be
afraid.'
Then welcome each rebuff That turns earth's smoothness rough, Each
sting that bids nor sit nor stand but go! Be our joys three parts
pain! Strive, and hold cheap the strain; Learn, nor account the
pang; dare, never grudge the throe!
He fixed thee 'mid the dance Of plastic circumstance, This Present,
thou, forsooth, wouldst fain arrest; Machinery just meant To give
thy soul its bent, Try thee and turn thee forth, sufficiently
impressed.
The Future I may face now I have proved the Past.
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