| AN UNDIVIDED HEART 
												Unite my heart. -- David. 
 He who thinks to succeed in this infinite business of saving souls 
			with a heart that is divided as yet knows nothing as he ought to 
			know concerning the matter.
 
 That a man may by personal magnetism, grace of manners, power or 
			persuasiveness of speech, and a certain skill in playing upon the 
			emotions and self-interest of the people, create an excitement that 
			fairly simulates a revival; and yet have a divided heart, I admit; 
			but that he can bring men to a thorough repentance and renunciation 
			of sin, a hearty embrace of the Cross, an affectionate surrender to 
			Jesus as a personal Saviour and Master who requires deep humility 
			and meekness and tender love as the marks of His disciples is hard 
			to be proved.
 
 As certainly as like begets like, so certainly will the soul-winner 
			put the mark of his own spirit and consecration upon the people he 
			influences; if he is himself not more than half won to the cause of 
			his lowly Master, he will not more than half win others. His task is 
			the mightiest to which men were ever set.
 
 The physical scientist manipulates and changes dead matter, the 
			newspaper man seeks principally to amuse or interest people for the 
			passing hour; the lawyer and politician simply seek to change and 
			mold the opinions of men; but the soul-winner is dealing with 
			fundamentals. His object is not merely to change the opinions and 
			conduct, but to change character; to work a moral revolution in the 
			affections, the dispositions, the wills of men; to turn them from 
			temporal things which they see, to eternal things, which they do not 
			see, from all vices to virtues, from utter selfishness to utter 
			self-sacrifice, and often in spite of all present self-interest, and 
			in the face of the combined opposition of the world, the flesh and 
			the devil. His object is not alone to save them from the guilt and 
			penalty of sin, but from the pollution and the power and the love of 
			sin. Nor is it merely to save men from sin, which is rather a 
			negative work, but to save them into all goodness and love and 
			holiness through a vital and eternal union with Jesus -- a union 
			that gives perpetual vigor and energy and fruitfulness in 
			righteousness to all the powers of the soul, filling it with grace 
			and truth.
 
 This is no little work, and can never be the work of a man with a 
			divided heart. It is like turning Niagara Falls back upon its 
			source, or causing the sun and the moon to stand still on Ajalon; it 
			can only be done by God's power, and that power is only fully 
			bestowed upon, and only works freely in and through those whose 
			hearts are perfect toward Him.
 
 The soul-winner, then, must once and for all, abandon himself to the 
			Lord and to the Lord's work, and, having put his hand to the plow, 
			must not look back, if he would succeed in this mighty business.
 
 He must love his Lord and love his work, and stick to it through all 
			difficulties, perplexities and discouragements, and not be given to 
			change, for there is no discharge in this war.
 
 Here it is that many fail; they have not a single eye. They make 
			provisions for retreat. They are double-minded, like an officer I 
			knew, who dabbled in photography till it divided his life and heart, 
			and got him out of the work; like a minister of whom I heard the 
			other day, who reads another man's sermons to his people, while he 
			studies law, saying that when he gets a poor appointment he will 
			fall back on the law and leave the ministry, forgetting Paul's words 
			to Timothy: "No man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs 
			of this life; that he may please Him that hath chosen him to be a 
			soldier." (2 Tim. 2:4.)
 
 By and by such men leave the work God sets them to do, because, as 
			they say, they have not been treated well, when the fact is, their 
			minds being divided, they cease to work well; they no longer give 
			themselves wholly to it, and the people feel a lack of interest and 
			power, hungering souls that look for bread receive a stone, poor 
			sinners, on the road to hell, and possibly on the brink of ruin, go 
			from their cold and heartless services unawakened and unsaved. They 
			lost their grip first on God and then on the crowd, and their 
			superiors, perplexed to know what to do with them, and where to 
			place them, since the people no longer want them, are blamed. But 
			blame others as they will, the blame still lies with themselves.
 
 No great work has ever been accomplished without abandonment to it.
 
 Michael Angelo said his work was his wife and the statues he made 
			were his children.
 
 Edison is so wedded to his work that all other things are forgotten 
			and set aside in the pursuit of his marvelous inventions.
 
 Demosthenes, the greatest of ancient orators, if not the greatest of 
			all time, was hissed off the platform at his first appearance. His 
			figure was unprepossessing, and his voice weak and harsh, but he 
			determined to be heard. He devoted himself to his studies, shaved 
			one side of his head lest he should be led into society, and 
			practiced elocution by day and by night. To perfect his enunciation 
			he filled his mouth half-full of pebbles and practiced while 
			climbing a hill; and that he might successfully contend against the 
			thunders of the Athenian mob, he went to the seashore and 
			strengthened his voice by practicing it against the thunder of the 
			waves.
 
 Lord Beaconsfield stood for parliament five times, and at last won 
			his seat. When he first attempted to speak he was laughed from the 
			floor but he sat down saying, "You will listen to me yet;" and they 
			did, when, as prime minister of England, he arbitrated the destinies 
			of Europe and crowned Victoria Empress of India.
 
 "How long did it take you to prepare that address?" was asked of a 
			great speaker. "All my lifetime in general, and fifteen minutes in 
			particular," he replied.
 
 When Benjamin Franklin, as a poor boy, opened a printing-shop, a 
			prosperous competitor said he would drive him out of town. Franklin 
			showed him a piece of black bread from which he dined, and a pail of 
			water from which he drank, and asked if he thought a man who could 
			live on fare like that and work sixteen hours a day could be driven 
			out of town!
 
 Who knows the name of that competitor? and who has not heard of 
			Franklin?
 
 If men engaged in secular pursuits are thus given up to their work 
			and consumed with their purpose, how much more should the 
			soul-winner be, he who is fighting for righteousness and holiness, 
			for the kingdom of love upon earth, rescuing souls from the power of 
			sin and the danger of eternal burnings?
 
 If God has set you to win souls, O my brother, make no provision for 
			the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof. Cut the bridge down behind 
			you. Remember Paul's words to Timothy: "Give thyself wholly to them, 
			that thy profiting may appear to all."
 
 Let your eye be single, make no plan for retreat, allow no thought 
			of it. Remember Paul's "Woe is me, if I preach not the Gospel."
 
 Like Jesus, set your face steadfastly toward your Jerusalem, your 
			cross, your kingdom, your glory, when, having turned many to 
			righteousness, you "shall shine as the stars for ever and ever." 
			(Dan. 12:3.)
 
 You may be ignorant and illiterate, your abilities may be very 
			limited, you may have a stammering tongue, and be utterly lacking in 
			culture, but you can have an undivided a perfect heart toward God 
			and the work He has set you to do, and this is more than all culture 
			and all education, all gifts and graces of person and brain. If God 
			has bestowed any of these upon you, see to it that they are 
			sanctified, and that your trust is not in them. But if He has denied 
			them to you, He yet hath called you to the fellowship of His Son, 
			and to His service. Be not dismayed; it is not the perfect head, but 
			the perfect heart which God blesses. For has He not said, "The eyes 
			of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to show 
			Himself strong in behalf of them whose heart is perfect toward Him"?
 
 At this point none need fail, and yet, what an awful thing! -- some 
			will fail, and after having, as they say, prophesied in His name, 
			and in His name cast out devils, and in His name done many wondrous 
			works, shall hear Him profess, "I never knew you; depart from Me, ye 
			that work iniquity."
 
 "Let nothing now my heart divide, Since with Thee I am crucified, 
			And live to God in Thee. Dead to the world and all its toys, Its 
			idle pomps and fading joys. Jesus, my glory be."
 
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