| THE STUDIES OF THE SOUL-WINNER
			
												"Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth 
			not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. -- Paul to 
			Timothy." (2 Tim. 2:15.) 
 "Give attendance to reading, to exhortation, to doctrine. Neglect 
			not the gift that is in thee. Meditate upon these things; give 
			thyself wholly to them; that thy profiting may appear to all." (1 
			Tim. 4:13,15.)
 
 No man or woman need hope to be a permanently successful soul-winner 
			who is not a diligent student of the truth, of the will and ways of 
			God, of men and of methods. A man cannot successfully build a house, 
			or write a poem, or govern a city, or manage a store, or even shoe a 
			horse or make a mousetrap without thoughtful study.
 
 A doctor must think and study, and that diligently and continuously, 
			if he would understand the delicate human organism and the subtle 
			diseases to which it is subject and the various remedies by which 
			these diseases are to be antagonized.
 
 A lawyer must be a diligent student if he would win cases before 
			judges and juries in the face of self-interest and skillful 
			opponents.
 
 How much more then should the soul-winner study in order that he may 
			understand the diseases of the soul, the ramifications of evil, the 
			deceitfulness of the human heart and the application of the great 
			remedy God has provided to meet all the needs of the soul; or, to 
			change the figure, how must he study to win his case at the bar of 
			man's conscience, when the man's own deceitful heart is the opposing 
			counsel, assisted by that old adversary, the devil, who for six 
			thousand years has been deceiving the children of men and leading 
			them down to hell!
 
 Oh, that every man who sets himself to be a soul-winner might fully 
			recognize the tremendous odds against which he fights and set 
			himself by much believing prayer and joyous diligent study to show 
			himself a man "approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be 
			ashamed!" Thank God no one called of Him need be discouraged or 
			dismayed. Only let him not bury his talent in a napkin, nor spend 
			his time in idle dreaming, but let him stir up the gift that is in 
			him and faithfully give a little time each day to those studies that 
			will enlighten the mind and fit him for the work God has called him 
			to, and he shall surely be blessed of God and find himself 
			"furnished unto every good work."
 
 1.The first thing and the last to be studied is the Bible. The 
			doctor may know all about law and art, history and theology, but if 
			he is unacquainted with his medical books he is a failure as a 
			doctor. The lawyer may have devoured libraries, traveled the wide 
			world over and become a walking encyclopedia and dictionary, but if 
			he is unacquainted with his law books, as a lawyer he is a failure.
 
 So the worker for souls may read ten thousand books, may be able to 
			quote poetry by the mile, may be acquainted with all the facts of 
			science and history, and may even be a profound theologian, but 
			unless he is a diligent student of the Bible, he will not 
			permanently succeed as a soul-winner. He must become full of the 
			thoughts of God. He must eat the Word and digest it and turn it into 
			spiritual blood and bone and muscle and nerve and sinew, until he 
			becomes, as someone has said, "A living Bible, eighteen inches wide 
			by six feet long, bound in human skin"
 
 Finney used to get up at 4 o'clock in the morning and read his Bible 
			until 8. During one of his revival services in Boston he said: "I 
			gave myself to a great deal of prayer. After my evening services I 
			would retire as early as I could, but rose at 4 o'clock in the 
			morning because I could sleep no longer, and immediately went to the 
			study and engaged in prayer. And so deeply was my mind exercised, 
			and so absorbed in prayer, that I frequently continued from the time 
			I arose at 4 o'clock, till called to breakfast at 8 o'clock My days 
			were spent as far as I could get time, in searching the Scriptures I 
			read nothing else all that winter but my Bible, and a great deal of 
			it seemed new to me. Again the Lord took me, as it were, from 
			Genesis to Revelation. He let me see the connection of things, the 
			promises, the threatenings, the prophecies and the fulfillment; and 
			indeed the whole Scripture seemed to me all ablaze with light. and 
			not only light, but it seemed as if God's Word was instinct with the 
			very life of God."
 
 This diligent attention to the Word of God is a command He said to 
			Joshua, "This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth, but 
			thou shalt meditate therein day and night" The object of this 
			earnest study was, "That thou mayest observe to do according to all 
			that is written therein," and the result, "for then thou shalt make 
			thy way prosperous and then thou shalt have good success." David's 
			"blessed man" is not one who simply refuses to keep company with the 
			ungodly and abstains from their ways, "but his delight is in the law 
			of the Lord and in His law doth he meditate day and night." (Ps. 
			1:2.) And the difference between him and the ungodly is the 
			difference between a fruitful tree planted by the river and "the 
			chaff which the wind driveth away."
 
 Jesus declared the importance of the Word when He told the devil 
			that "man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word which 
			proceedeth out of the mouth of God."
 
 Mrs. General Booth read her Bible through a number of times before 
			she was twelve years old. No wonder God made her a "mother of 
			nations." She was full of truth, and she could never open her mouth 
			without saying something that was calculated to expose shams and 
			falsehoods, overthrow the devil's kingdom of lies and build up God's 
			kingdom of righteousness and truth in the hearts of men.
 
 Whitefield read the Bible through many times on his knees with 
			Henry's notes. Again and again the writer has read his Bible through 
			on his knees, and it is ever new and as David said, "sweeter also 
			than honey or the honeycomb." And like Job he can say "I have 
			esteemed the words of His mouth more than my necessary food"
 
 Wesley in his old age called himself "A man of one book." It is from 
			this armory that the soul-winner is to draw his weapons with which 
			he fights all hell. It is here that he is to study the mind and 
			heart of God, the truth about Jesus Christ, sin and the way of 
			escape from it, and the facts about heaven and hell, a Judgment Day 
			and eternity. Here he is to find a law for the lawless, warnings for 
			the careless, promises for the penitent, encouragement for the 
			distressed, balm for the wounded, healing for the sick, life for the 
			dead. He is to "preach the Word," for it is "profitable for 
			doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in 
			righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly 
			furnished unto every good work" And in preaching it, if he preaches 
			as they did of old, "with the Holy Ghost sent down from Heaven," he 
			will find it living and active and "sharper than any two-edged 
			sword, and piercing even to the dividing of soul and spirit, of the 
			joints and marrow, and quick to discern the thoughts and intents of 
			the heart." I have sometimes read or quoted the Word of God to 
			people, and it fitted their case so pat that it smote them like a 
			lightning bolt.
 
 "Is not My Word like a fire? saith the Lord, and like a hammer that 
			breaketh the rock in pieces?"
 
 But the soul-winner must not study it simply that he may preach it, 
			but that he may himself live by it, be furnished, strengthened, 
			enlightened, corrected and made wise by it. It must pass through his 
			own soul and become a part of his own spiritual life before he can 
			preach it with power and apply it effectually to the saving of men. 
			And in order to do this he must be filled with the Holy Ghost. In 
			fact, it is only as he is filled with the Spirit that he will be 
			able to get much benefit from the Word of God or have much love for 
			it.
 
 The Bible is a sealed book to unspiritual people, but when the 
			Comforter comes it is unsealed and its wondrous meaning made clear. 
			I read recently of a lad, who could not read, receiving the baptism 
			of the Holy Ghost. Then he got his unsaved sister to read the Bible 
			to him and he explained it to her. Hallelujah! The Holy Ghost in him 
			enabled him to understand what the Holy Ghost in holy men of old 
			enabled them to write. Only the Holy Ghost can help men to 
			understand His Book.
 
 An old colored lady loved her Bible very much. A friend who found 
			her reading it frequently, gave her a commentary to assist her in 
			getting at its meaning. A few days later seeing her, he asked, 
			"Well, Auntie, how do you like that book I gave you?" She replied, 
			"Oh, dat be a very good book, but de Bible do throw a lot o' light 
			on dat 'er book."
 
 The Bereans show us the way to read the Bible (Acts 17:11). 1. They 
			received the Word with all readiness. 2. They searched the 
			Scriptures. It was not with them just a hasty, careless, thoughtless 
			reading; they searched as men would search for hidden treasure. 3. 
			They did this daily.
 
 Personally for years I have given the best hour of the day to the 
			Bible, until I want it more than I want my food.
 
 It should be read early in the day, before other things crowd in 
			What is read should be remembered. In eating it is not the amount we 
			eat, but the amount we digest that does us good, and just so is it 
			in reading and studying. It is not the amount we read, but what we 
			remember and make our own that does us good.
 
 2. Besides the Bible, the soul-winner ought to lay out a course of 
			reading for himself, and stick to it, reading a few pages each day. 
			Ten pages a day will mean from ten to fifteen books a year.
 
 Every Salvation Army officer ought to read the General's "Letters," 
			"Holiness Readings," the "F. O.," and Mrs. Booth's works. "Books 
			that Bless," by the Chief, will prove invaluable.
 
 "Holy Living and Dying," by Taylor; Law's "Call," "Saint's Rest," by 
			Baxter; Edwards' "Life of Brainerd," Wesley's works, "Life of 
			Fletcher," "Life of Bramwell," "Pilgrim's Progress," "Half Hours 
			with St. Paul," by Daniel Steele; "Holiness and Power," by Rev. A M. 
			Hills, and Finney's and Caughey's works will make a library that can 
			be read again and again with untold profit by soul-winners.
 
 Not too much time should be spent over newspapers. It would probably 
			not be wise to discard them altogether, but better do that than let 
			them rob you of the time that should be spent in deep study and 
			earnest prayer. I once heard the General say, "I have not read a 
			newspaper for ten days." All useful knowledge may prove valuable to 
			the soul-winner, and he should seek information everywhere. It is 
			well to carry a notebook and constantly make notes. Gladstone made 
			notes on the margins of books he read.
 
 The soul-winner should study not only books, but men and methods. 
			John Wesley became a supreme master in practical and experimental 
			theology and a matchless soul-winner largely through his study of 
			men. He examined thousands of people -- men, women and children, 
			with reference to their religious experience, and especially their 
			experiences of sanctification, until he became acquainted with the 
			human heart and the workings of the Holy Spirit as few men have ever 
			done. I know of no better and surer method of acquainting one's self 
			with the human heart and the way the Holy Spirit works with men to 
			save than by this close, personal, private conversation and inquiry 
			about the religious experiences of the Christians around us. This is 
			the scientific method applied to the study of the human heart, the 
			Christian life and religious experience, and it can be carried on 
			wherever you can find a human being to talk with you. "He that 
			winneth souls is wise."
 
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