| ZEAL 
												It is said that Sheridan went to battle with all the fury of a 
			madman, and recklessly exposed himself to the shot and shell of the 
			enemy. He told General Horace Porter that he never went into a 
			battle from which he cared to come back alive unless he came as a 
			victor. This desperation made him an irresistible inspiration to his 
			own troops, and enabled him to hurl them like thunderbolts against 
			his foes. If he became so desperate in killing men, how much more 
			desperate, if possible, should we become in our effort and desire to 
			save them! 
 It was written of Jesus, "The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me up," 
			and so it can be of every great soul-winner.
 
 Not until a man can say with Paul, "Neither count I my life dear 
			unto myself;" and "I am ready to die for the name of the Lord 
			Jesus," can he hope to be largely used in winning souls. He that is 
			anxious about his dinner and eager to get to bed at a reasonable 
			hour and concerned about his salary, and over solicitous about his 
			health, and querulous about his reputation, and the respectability 
			and financial condition of his appointment, and afraid of weariness 
			and painfulness and headache and heartache, and a sore throat, may 
			make a very respectable field officer or parson, but not a great 
			soul-winner.
 
 There are various kinds of zeal which should be avoided as deadly 
			evils.
 
 First: Partial zeal like that of Jehu. (2 Kings 10:15-31.) God set 
			him to destroy the wicked house of Ahab and the worship of Baal, and 
			he did so with fury, "but Jehu took no heed to walk in the law of 
			the God of Israel with all his heart, for he departed not from the 
			sins of Jeroboam which made Israel to sin," and in due time God had 
			to cut off his house as well.
 
 This kind of zeal is frequently seen in those who violently attack 
			one sort of sin, while probably they themselves are secretly 
			indulging in some other sin. Such people are usually not only 
			intolerant of the sin, but also of the sinner, while true zeal makes 
			one infinitely tender and patient towards the sinner, while 
			absolutely uncompromising with his sin.
 
 Second: Party zeal like that of the Pharisees and Sadducees. In 
			these days it takes the form of excessive sectarian and 
			denominational zeal, and makes bigots of men. Zeal for the 
			particular church or organization to which one belongs is right 
			within certain limits. We are converted through the instrumentality 
			of a certain religious organization, and we become children of its 
			household, or we are led into it by the Holy Spirit through a 
			blessed, divine affinity with its members, methods, spirit and 
			doctrine, and we should in that case be loyal and true to its 
			leaders who are over us in the Lord and who watch for our souls, and 
			follow them as they follow Christ. We should also be loyal to the 
			principles of the organization so far as they harmonize with the 
			word of God, and we should seek in all true ways, by prayer and 
			supplication and ceaselessly zealous work to build up this 
			organization in holiness and righteousness, and this we can do with 
			all our might, if we do it in the Holy Spirit, and can be assured 
			that God is well pleased with us. But we must at the same time 
			beware of a party spirit that would despise other work and workers 
			or tear them down that we may rise on their ruins. Such zeal is from 
			beneath and not from above. It is contrary to that love which 
			"seeketh not her own," and looketh not upon her own things, but 
			"also upon the things of others," and will come back, 
			boomerang-like, upon our own pates, and bring ruin upon ourselves.
 
 "For the love of God is broader Than the measure of man's mind, And 
			the heart of the Eternal Is most wonderfully kind."
 
 And true zeal makes men like that.
 
 Third: The zeal of ignorance. Paul said of his kinsmen, the Jews, 
			"My heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they might 
			be saved, for I bear them record that they have a zeal for God, but 
			not according to knowledge, for they, being ignorant of God's 
			righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness, 
			have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God (Romans 
			10:1-3.)
 
 True zeal is from above. Its source is in the mountains of the 
			Lord's holiness, and its springing fountains in the deep cool 
			valleys of humility. It is born of the Holy Sprit and springs from a 
			knowledge of "the truth as it is in Jesus." This knowledge is 
			twofold:
 
 First: It is the knowledge of the dread condition of the sinner 
			without Christ -- his slavery to Satan; the inherited depravity of 
			his nature; his bondage to sin, his love of it; his enmity toward 
			God, of which he is probably not aware; his guilt; his helplessness 
			and his ignorance of the way back to his Heavenly Father's house and 
			happiness, and his awful danger, if he neglects the offer of 
			salvation and life in Jesus Christ.
 
 Second: It is the knowledge of the unspeakable gift of God, of the 
			possibilities of grace for the vilest sinner, of the Father's 
			pitying, yearning love, of sins forgiven, guilt removed, adoption 
			into the Father's family, illumination, consolation, guidance, 
			keeping, depravity destroyed, cleansing through the Blood, 
			sanctification by the baptism of the Holy Spirit, of salvation, from 
			the uttermost to the uttermost; of unbroken fellowship with the 
			Father and His Son Jesus Christ through the eternal Spirit, of a 
			life of blessed service and fruit-bearing and of a faith and hope 
			that bear the spirit up over sorrows and trials and losses and pain 
			and sickness, enabling it at last to cry out in supreme victory and 
			holy triumph: "O Death, where is thy sting, O grave, where is thy 
			victory? Thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our 
			Lord Jesus Christ."
 
 True zeal makes one faithful to Jesus and the souls for whom He 
			died. It led Paul during his three years' appointment at Ephesus "to 
			warn everyone night and day with tears to serve the Lord with all 
			humility," to keep back no truth that was profitable for the people, 
			but to show them and teach them "publicly and from house to house, 
			testifying both to the Jews and also to the Greeks, repentance 
			toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ." (Acts 20.) He 
			was not content simply to get sinners to accept Jesus as their 
			Saviour, but taught them that "Christ in you is the hope of glory, 
			whom we preach, warning every man and teaching every man in all 
			wisdom that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus, 
			whereunto I labor, striving according to his working, which worketh 
			in me mightily." (Col. 27:29.) Paul was jealous for the perfection 
			in love and loyalty of all his converts, and his zeal led him to 
			seek with all his might to lead them all into this blessed 
			experience. And as was Paul, so also was Baxter, who labored 
			indefatigably in spite of lifelong sickness, and at times almost in 
			intolerable pain, for the perfection of his people. And so also was 
			Wesley and Fox and General and Mrs. Booth, and so will be every 
			soul-winner who is full of the zeal of God.
 
 True zeal is sacrificial. Jesus, consumed with zeal for the glory of 
			God in the saving and sanctifying of men, "was led as a lamb to the 
			slaughter." Isaiah, who foresaw the humiliation and sacrificial life 
			and death of Jesus, said by inspiration, "I gave my back to the 
			smiters and my cheek to them that plucked off the hair; I hid not my 
			face from shame and spitting." And again Isaiah said, "He is 
			despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows and acquainted with 
			grief; He was despised and we esteemed Him not. Surely He hath borne 
			our griefs and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem Him stricken, 
			smitten of God and afflicted. But he was wounded for our 
			transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement 
			of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. The 
			Lord hath laid on Him the the iniquity of us all." (Isa. 53.) He 
			poured out His soul unto death for us, He gave His life a ransom for 
			Men. Bless His name! And the gift of His Spirit kindles and sustains 
			this same sacrificial zeal in the hearts of all true soul-winners.
 
 "Enlarge, inflame and fill my heart With boundless charity divine, 
			So shall all my strength exert. And love them with a zeal like Thine; 
			And lead them to Thy open side. The sheep for whom their Shepherd 
			died."
 
 |