By Rev. John Wilbur Chapman
HIS BIBLE
Mr. MOODY loved his Bible. He knew
it so well that his eyes and fingers could find any passage that he wanted from
Genesis to Revelation, and it mattered not how hurriedly he was speaking, it
was as easy for him to find the text he wished as for the master musician to
find the notes on the keyboard of a piano, and yet, he tells us himself that,
when he first entered the Sunday-school class in Boston, he did not know the
difference between the Old Testament and the New. MORE THAN PRECIOUS TO HIM The Bible as a book was more than precious to him. His own Bible was a storehouse
of richest treasure. He was never heard even by his closest friends to make
a play on Bible words and phrases, and he was always quick to rebuke those who
did. He really had no patience at all with the so-called higher criticism of
God's word. He was one day approached by a newspaper reporter who asked for
some word from him regarding the higher criticism. "I'm not up to that
sort of thing," he said, with a twinkle in his eye. "You see, I never
studied theology, and I'm precious glad I didn't. There are so many things in
the Bible that everybody can understand that I'm going to preach about them
until they are exhausted, and then, if I have any time left, I'll take up the
texts I don't understand." "Aren't you ever asked to discuss difficult
passages of Scripture?" was the inquiry. "Mercy, yes" answered
Mr. Moody, "almost every day, but I always answer people just as I have
answered you, and tell them that there is satisfaction and consolation enough
in the promises of the Savior, all that anybody can want. The single verse,
'Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest,'
contains all the theology and religion that I need, or any other man or woman.
The page taken from the Bible he studied, and giving us a picture of his notes
made on the ninety-first Psalm, is but an illustration of the entire book. Almost
every page contained an illustration or reference to an incident which shed
light upon the truth of God: A VALUABLE ADVICE Years ago Harry Moorehouse, the English Bible reader, said to him while visiting
his church in Chicago, "If you will stop preaching your own words and preach
God's Word, you will make yourself a great power for good." This prophecy
made a deep impression on Mr. Moody's mind, and from that day he devoted himself
to the study of the Bible as he had never done before. He had been accustomed
to draw his sermons from the experiences of Christians and the life of the streets,
now he began to follow the counsel of his friend, and preach the Word. His first series of sermons on characters of the Bible was preached during the
summer before the Chicago fire, and at once attracted great attention. He also
began to compare Scripture with Scripture. " If I don't understand a text,"
said his friend Moorehouse, " I ask another text to explain it, and then,
if it is too hard for me, I take it to the Lord and ask Him to explain it for
me. This method Mr. Moody adopted, and this was one of the secrets of his power.
He was mighty in the Scriptures, and spoke as with. authority from God. He had a large library at his house at Northfield, much of which had been presented
to him by admiring friends; but it is safe to say that there are not half a
dozen books in the world, besides the books of the Old and New Testaments, of
which he could give the names and a general outline of their contents; hence
there was room in his head for God's Word, and with it he kept himself continually
full and running over. His method of Bible study was like the method of a humming
bird studying a clover blossom. From the cells of sweetness down into which
he thrust his questions and his prayers, he brought up the honey which God has
stored away; he reveled in the profusion and preciousness of the promises, like
a robin in a tree full of ripe cherries. It was enjoyable just to see how heartily
he enjoyed the Word of God, and almost convincing to see with what absolute
faith he clung to it for his own salvation, and with what absolute assurance
he urged others to do the same. To Mr. Moody the Word of God was food, drink,
lodging, and clothes; he climbed by it toward Heaven, as a sailor climbs the
rigging; it was an anchor to hold him; a gale to drive him; it was health, hope,
happiness, eternal life. COMMENTS ON HOPE AND FAITH It was by his loving, prayerful, trustful study of the Scriptures that he had
acquired his skill as a practical commentator. Take, as a specimen of his off-hand
comments, this from one of the Bible readings on Hope: "Hope is the anchor
of the soul. Now none of you ever saw an anchor but was used to hold something
down. It goes down to the bottom of the sea, and takes hold of the ground, and
holds the ship to it. But this anchor, this hope, is to hold us up: it enters
within the veil; it takes hold of the throne of God." On the text, "Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God,"
he said: "A great many people are mourning their want of faith; but there
is no wonder that they haven't any faith; they don't study the Word of God 'How
do you suppose you are to have faith in God when you don't know anything about
Him? It is those who haven't any acquaintance with God that stumble and fall;
but those who know Him can trust Him and lean heavy on His arm. If a man would
rather read the Sunday newspapers than read God's Word, I don't see how Christ
is going to save him. There is no room in him for the Gospel when he has filled
himself with the newspapers. For years I have not touched a Sunday newspaper,
or a weekly religious paper either, on Sunday. Some people lay aside those religious
papers for Sunday reading, but that is not a good way. Let us lay aside all
other reading for one day in the week, and devote ourselves to the study of
God's Word. But you say, 'O, we must study science and literature, and such
things, in order to understand the Bible.' What can a botanist tell you about
the 'Rose of Sharon' and the 'Lily of the Valley'? What can the geologist tell
you about the 'Rock of Ages'? What can the astronomer tell you about the 'Bright
and Morning Star'? GET RID OF DOUBTS
Mr. Moody's Bible was a real storehouse
of treasure. Every page of it was marked - almost every verse had some special
illustration connected with it, so that he had only to open the book to have
a perfect flood of light upon its pages. It was for this reason that he was
always helpful and always interesting. The following is one of his most characteristic statements, and really was the
beginning of my marking my own Bible. He always practiced what he preached,
and he advised other people to mark their Bibles because it had been such a
blessing to him:
He had many references to the twenty-third Psalm; this is one of the best. "I suppose I have heard as many good sermons on the twenty-third Psalm as on any other six verses in the Bible. I wish I had begun to take notes upon them years ago when I heard the first one. Things slip away from you when you get to be fifty years of age.
Blessed is the day,' says an old
divine, 'when Psalm twenty-three was born!' It has been more used than almost
any other passage in the Bible.' Mr. Moody was never more interesting, than when giving his Bible readings. He
could hold his great audiences spellbound with his plain, practical, and yet
powerful interpretations of the Scripture. He had no use at all for the so-called
higher criticism. At one of the last conferences held in New York, he said to
a company of ministers:
The last conversation of any length, that I had with him, he must have talked for half an hour, concerning his absolute confidence in the Bible and his growing love for it. |
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