| SAVING TRUTH 
												All truth is precious, but not all truth is adapted to secure the 
			immediate conversion and sanctification of men, any more than all 
			medicine is adapted to cure heart-disease or rheumatism. 
 There are certain truths which, preached in the power of the Holy 
			Ghost, are as much adapted to convert and sanctify souls as food to 
			satisfy hunger, or fire to melt ice; while there are other truths, 
			equally Biblical, that will no more secure such results than will 
			the truths of the multiplication table comfort a brokenhearted 
			mother while mourning for her lost children, or those of astronomy 
			quiet a guilty conscience roused from the slumber of sin.
 
 Some time since I read the amazing and humbling statement that 
			"there were over 3,000 churches in two of the leading denominations 
			of this country that did not report a single member added by 
			profession of faith last year." Well may the writer add, "Think of 
			more than 3,000 ministers in two denominations world-renowned for 
			their schools and culture, preaching a whole year, and aided by 
			deacons and Sabbath-school teachers and Christian parents and church 
			members and prayer meetings and Sabbath schools and Christian 
			Endeavor Societies, and helps and helpers innumerable, and all 
			without one conversion!"
 
 Why this stupendous failure? It cannot be that truth was not 
			preached and taught in the Sunday schools and prayer meetings. These 
			preachers and teachers and parents were orthodox, cultured, and 
			skilled in Biblical lore. No doubt they preached and taught truth 
			from one end of the year to the other, but it was not the truth -- 
			the truth that saves, the truth that first smites the conscience, 
			lays bare the secrets of the heart, and arouses the slumbering soul 
			until, self-convicted, it feels that every man it meets is 
			acquainted with its guilt, and every wind and every footfall is an 
			accusing voice, and no cover can hide from God's searching eye, and 
			when conviction has wrought its purpose, and penitence is complete, 
			whispers of forgiveness and peace, and offers mercy and salvation 
			full and free through the bleeding Lamb of God, "before the world's 
			foundation slain."
 
 Such truth preached faithfully and constantly in these pulpits and 
			churches -- not timidly and feebly, like powder and shot buried by a 
			child's hand, but rather with power, like thunderbolts from the 
			cannon's mouth -- might have set the nation in a blaze of revival 
			fire.
 
 The fact is there are different kinds or grades of truth for 
			different classes of people, just as there are different medicines 
			for various diseases, and food for different ages and constitutions. 
			Jesus declares this when He says, "I have yet many things to say 
			unto you, but ye cannot bear them now." (John 16:12.) The 
			soul-winner must recognize this fact, and seek rightly to divide the 
			word of truth. The Christian needs a different kind and application 
			of truth from that needed by the sinner or backslider, and the 
			sanctified man can receive the strong meat of God's Word, while 
			babes in Christ must be fed on milk. (1 Cor. 3:1, 2; Heb. 5:12, 14.)
 
 With the sinner, the principal attack should be made on the 
			conscience and the will; he may be moral, and more or less amiable 
			in his family and social relations, and honorable among his business 
			associates, but be sure that under this is secret selfishness and 
			heart sin. He seeks his own way, is disobedient to the light, 
			careless to the dying love of Jesus, and in reality, if not in 
			profession, he is an enemy to God, and must be convinced of these 
			facts, and faithfully and lovingly and firmly warned of his utter 
			ruin if he does not repent. Repentance, deep, thorough and 
			heartfelt, that leads to a confession and an utter, eternal 
			renunciation of all sin and a complete amendment of life and a 
			making right as far as possible of all past wrong, must be presented 
			as the "strait gate" through which alone he can enter the highway to 
			heaven. We must insist on an immediate and unconditional surrender 
			to all the light God gives, and offer him mercy and tender love 
			through Jesus Christ only if he yields.
 
 The motives that lead to repentance are drawn from eternity, and 
			there is a whole armory of truth with which the sinner can and must 
			be bombarded to bring him to terms, such as the certainty that what 
			he sows he shall reap; that his sins will surely find him out; that 
			death will speedily overtake him; and that if, refusing mercy, he 
			presumes on the goodness of God, and continues in selfishness and 
			sin, hell shall be his portion forever; while a life of peace and 
			joy here, a happy deathbed, and eternal glory can be offered him as 
			the alternative, on condition of obedient faith.
 
 About the same kind of truth is necessary for the backslider, except 
			that the proportions may have to be varied. If he is stubborn, 
			thunder the law at him until he hoists the white flag and sues for 
			mercy. If he is sorry he has backslidden, but fears it is vain to 
			try again, then he should be encouraged in every possible way to 
			look up and trust, and the infinite love and pity of God revealed in 
			Jesus should be pressed upon his attention, and he should be urged 
			to cast himself upon God's mercy.
 
 If these foundation truths of repentance toward God and faith in our 
			Lord Jesus Christ are fully, affectionately, and prayerfully 
			presented, and the sinner or backslider grasps and trusts them, he 
			will be converted, accepted by the Lord, and adopted into His 
			family. He must now be fed upon truths different from those he was 
			fed on before. He will have a tender heart, and so it will be most 
			unwise to thunder the law at him, though he should be fully 
			instructed as to the spirituality of the law, and that it is the law 
			by which God wishes us to order our conduct, and for which abundant 
			grace will be given. Nor should he now be asked to surrender since 
			he is saved; but he should be intelligently instructed as to the 
			nature and extent of the consecration that is expected from him, and 
			he should be urged, and wisely and tenderly encouraged to make the 
			consecration, presenting his body a living sacrifice and yielding 
			himself to God, "as those that are alive from the dead."
 
 He should now be instructed as to the fact of inbred sin, which he 
			will soon find stirring within him, and the importance and 
			possibility of having this enemy cast out. Holiness should be 
			presented not so much as a stern demand of a holy God, but rather as 
			his glorious privilege as a child of God. He should be taught that 
			it is an experience in which "perfect love casteth out fear" -- a 
			rest of soul, in which, as our bones and sinews are so covered with 
			flesh as to be unperceived, so the fact of duty, while still 
			remaining in force, is yet clothed upon and hidden by love.
 
 Therefore, while the necessity of holiness should be presented, and 
			a gentle and constant pressure be brought to bear upon the will, yet 
			the principal effort should be made to remove slavish fear by 
			instructing the understanding, and so drawing out the confidence and 
			affections that the soul which in conversion bowed at the feet of 
			Jesus as its Conqueror, will now intelligently and rapturously yield 
			to Him as its Heavenly Bridegroom and fall so desperately in love 
			with Him by the incoming of the Holy Spirit that it shall cry out 
			with David, "I delight to do Thy will, O God!" and with Jesus "My 
			meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me."
 
 If the soul-winner does not keep a clear, warm, tender experience of 
			full salvation himself, there is a danger of driving the people to a 
			legal experience instead of leading them into a "perfect-love" 
			experience. A legal experience is one in which the man braces up to 
			his duty because the law demands it, in which he is prodded and 
			pushed up to it by the terrors of the law rather than led up to it 
			by the sweet wooings and gentle drawings of love.
 
 In a holiness meeting, where there are sinners and backsliders, 
			there will be a strong temptation to address them, and as the kind 
			of truth they need differs from that needed by converts, if this is 
			done, confusion is likely to result and an uncertain experience 
			engendered in the hearts of Christians. It will usually be found 
			wisest to leave the sinners and backsliders alone in this meeting, 
			and go straight for the Christians, to get them sanctified. The Lord 
			has been pleased to give me victory along this line, and usually I 
			find also there are some sinners saved in my holiness meetings.
 
 Jesus likens a Christian to a sheep. Our duty then in the holiness 
			meeting is not to club them with the law, but rather to feed them 
			with the promises and assurances of the Gospel, and to teach them to 
			discern the voice of the good Shepherd and to remove all fear, that 
			they may gladly follow Him.
 
 The staple diet of all saints should be the promises, seasoned with 
			the commandments to give them a healthy relish.
 
 The promises draw us on in the narrow way, and the commandments 
			hedge us in that we do not lose the way. The promises should be so 
			presented and the fullness there is in the Gospel and in Jesus so be 
			brought to view that the souls of the people will run hard after Him 
			and not need continual beatings to keep them from breaking through 
			the hedge on to the devil's territory.
 
 To discern clearly and apply skillfully the truth needed by the 
			souls we are set to save, requires heavenly wisdom, and well does 
			Paul exhort Timothy, "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a 
			workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of 
			truth." But our study will be in vain unless we, in lowliness of 
			mind, sit at the feet of Jesus, seek wisdom from God, and submit 
			ourselves in glad, prayerful faith to the Spirit of truth who can 
			and will guide "into all truth." (John 16:13.)
 
 The Bible, which contains the revealed truth necessary to salvation, 
			will surely puzzle and mystify all who come to it in the big and 
			swelling conceit of worldly wisdom, but it will open its treasure to 
			the plain and humble men who come to it full of the Spirit that 
			moved holy men of old to write it.
 
 O Lord, evermore give to Thy people leaders and teachers filled with 
			this Spirit, and clothed with this wisdom!
 
 |