By Rev. John Wilbur Chapman
THE
GREATNESS OF MR. MOODY by Henry Drummond
WERE one asked what on the human side were the effective ingredients in Mr.
Moody's sermons, one would find the answer difficult. Probably the foremost
is the tremendous conviction with which they are uttered. Next to that are
their point and direction. Every blow is straight from the shoulder and every
stroke tells. Whatever canons they violate, whatever faults the critics may
find with their art, their rhetoric, or even with their theology, as appeals
to the people they do their work with extraordinary power. If eloquence is measured by its effect upon an audience and not by its balanced
sentences and cumulative periods, then there is eloquence of the highest order.
In sheer persuasiveness, Mr. Moody's has few equals, and, rugged as his preaching
may seem to some, there is in it a pathos of a quality which few orators have
ever reached, and appealing tenderness which not only wholly redeems it, but
raises it not unseldom almost to sublimity. In largeness of heart, in breadth of view, in single-eyedness and humility,
in teachableness and self-obliterations in sheer goodness and love, none can
stand beside him. THE
LAST OF THE GREAT GROUP by Newell Dwight Hillis
WHEN long time hath passed, some historian, recalling the great epochs and
religious teachers of our century, will say, "There were four men sent
forth by God; their names Charles Spurgeon, Phillips Brooks, Henry Ward Beecher
and Dwight L. Moody." Each was a herald of good tidings; each was a prophet
of a new social and religious order. God girded each of these prophets for
his task, and taught him how to "dip his sword in Heaven."
In characterising the message of these men we say that Spurgeon was expositional,
Phillips Brooks devotional, Henry Ward Beecher prophetic and philosophical,
while Dwight L. Moody was a herald rather than teacher, addressing himself
to the common people - the unchurched multitudes. The symbol of the great
English preacher is a lighted lamp, the symbol of Brooks a flaming heart,
the symbol of Beecher an orchestra of many instruments, while Mr. Moody was
a trumpet, sounding the advance, sometimes through inspiration and sometimes
through alarm. The first three were commanders, each over his regiment, and worked from fixed
centre, but the evangelist was the leader of a flying band who went everywhither
into the enemy's country, seeking conquests of peace and righteousness. Be
the reasons what they may, the common people gladly heard the great evangelist.
MOODY
AS A PROPHET
by Rev. F. B. Meyer, B. A.
GOD'S best gifts to man are men. He is always sending forth men. When the
time is ripe for a man, God sends him forth. When for a moment the race seems
to be halting in its true progress, then, probably from the ranks of the common
people, rises he who leads a new advance. "There came a man sent from
God." Yes, God constantly sends men. But the greatest gift is a prophet.
When New Testament times dawned the touch of the priest had lost its power
forever but around those times prophets have power gathered - John the Baptist,
Savonarola, Luther, Latimer, White-field, Wesley, Spurgeon, and it is not
fulsome flattery which includes the name of Moody.
WHAT IS A PROPHET?
A prophet is one who sees God's truth by a distinct vision; who speaks as
one upon whose eyeballs has burned the Light of the Eternal, and, thus speaking,
compels the crowd to listen; he is one whose strong, elevated character is
a witness to the truth in which he believes and which he declares. These are
the three necessary conditions of a prophet. It matters not in what diction
he speaks, whether in the rough, unpolished tongue of the people, or in the
choice, well-balanced language of the schools. A man who possesses those three
qualities is a prophet, and has a mission from God. Such a one was Moody.
There were certain traits in the prophets and in John the Baptist which we
recognize also for the most part in Moody. For instance, the prophet generally
rises from the ranks of the people. Again and again from the common people
have been supplied the leaders of men. Those in the upper grades of society,
from whom we should naturally expect the most, would seem very largely to
have worn themselves out with luxury and self-indulgences. History is full
of the stories of prophets who came from a lowly stock. And Moody was the
child of humble New England parents. His father died early, and Moody's boyhood
was spent face to face with privation. He had to fight his way from the ranks
of the people. We have to thank this fact for the strong common sense which
distinguished him. Moody had the practical insight to humor which belong especially
to those who toil upon the land. And this man, with his close relationship
to the life of the people, came to be able to hold ten thousand of them spellbound
in the grasp of his powerful influence.
TAUGHT OF GOD'S SPIRIT
Again, it will generally be found that a prophet is not learned in the teaching
of the schools. John the Baptist received his college education in the desert,
amid the elements of Nature. These were his great kindergarten, in which his
soul was prepared for its great work. When men go to the conventional colleges
they learn to measure their language with the nicest accurateness. Was Moody's
lack in this and in similar directions a loss to him? Nay, he was taught of
God's Spirit. He bathed himself in a book, in that one volume which is in
itself a library, the intimate knowledge of which is alone sufficient to make
men cultured.
There is often a brusqueness about the prophet. We see that in John the Baptist.
He was not a man to be found in king's courts. Without veneer, brusque, gaunt,
strong, he lived and laboured. Moody partook the same characteristics. It
is not unlikely, however, that he assumed a certain attitude of brusqueness
because he felt afraid of being made an idol of the people. Having seen the
evils of popularity, he wished to avoid them. To timid, friendless women,
to individual sinners, he was wonderfully gentle and kind in manner. Amongst
his grandchildren, whose simple playmate he became, he was tenderness itself.
The brusqueness belonged only to the rind, to the character which had known
deep experiences.
Moody had very distinct experiences. The manner of his conversion led him
to expect immediate decisions in the souls of others. Under his Sunday school
teacher's influence he had been led on the moment to give himself to Christ,
and he looked for others to do nothing less, nothing more tardy.
HIS BAPTISM OF THE HOLY GHOST
Again, the prophet has known a touch of fire. Mr. Moody once told me that
a number of poor women in Chicago who heard him speak said one day, "You
are good; but there is something you have not got; we are praying that it
may come. Later, one afternoon in New York, he was walking along, when an
irresistible impulse came upon him to be alone. He looked around. Where could
he go? What was to be done? He remembered a friend living not far away. So
into his house he rushed, and demanded a room where he could be alone. There
he remained several hours, and there he received the baptism of the Holy Ghost.
When he returned to Chicago and began to speak, the godly women who had spoken
to him beforetime said, "You have it now." And the wonderful power
which Moody henceforward exercised over his fellow-men he owed to that touch
of fire. It never left him. People were attracted. What happened when he visited
England, happened wherever he went. The prophet had the real ring about him.
He dealt with things as they are.
There was genuine greatness of heart in Mr. Moody, and it constantly triumphed
over sect differences. When his mother died three years ago the Roman Catholics
of the neighborhood asked that they might be pallbearers.
A prophet, of course, has his message. His office is not so much that of teacher
or preacher as of herald. He sounds the alarm and cries "fire."
With Moody it was not repentance because of hell-fire. The love of God was
his proclamation. And how he could speak about that! I have seen him break
down, as with trembling voice and tears in his eyes he pleaded with men for
the love of God's sake to be reconciled with Him. A prophet is humble. In
this respect Moody was true to the type. He seemed the one person who did
not know there was a Moody. He did not know half so much about himself as
the newspapers told. This is true greatness.
And now he has gone. My world is very much thinner. A great tree has fallen.
One more throbbing voice is silent. Spurgeon is gone. Moody is gone. The voices
are dying. Listen to-day to the voice of the Son of God. |
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