| THE SOUL-WINNER AND THE CHILDREN
			
												Not only did Jesus say, "Suffer the little children to come unto 
			Me, and forbid them not," but He gave to Peter the positive command, 
			"Feed My lambs," and in that command laid a responsibility upon 
			soul-winners for the children, for "of such is the Kingdom of 
			Heaven," and in no other field and among no other class can they 
			work with such immediate success, and such far-reaching results. 
 Children are not hard to reach with the Gospel, if the soul-winner 
			will but be simple and use common sense in dealing with them. They 
			are not hardened in sin, their consciences are tender and their 
			hearts open, their minds receptive, their wills pliable, their faith 
			simple; they are keenly alive to the love of Jesus, the glories of 
			heaven, the terrors of hell, and the omnipresence of God. They learn 
			readily to pray in faith about everything, and to cast all their 
			care upon God. No eyes are so keen as theirs to see the Light that 
			lighteneth every man, and no hands are so ready to do His bidding, 
			and no feet so ready to run in His ways.
 
 And yet effort must be put forth ceaselessly to win them and keep 
			them after they are won, for the corruption of their own natures and 
			the evil example and teaching of a hostile world and the wiles of 
			the vigilant and tireless enemy of all souls will soon blind their 
			eyes and harden their hearts and utterly ruin them, if they are not 
			soon won to Jesus and filled with His love. You may feel yourself 
			unfitted for this task, but it is your business to fit yourself for 
			it, if God has called you to be a worker for souls. The first thing 
			necessary is to believe in the possibility of the conversion of the 
			children; and certainly the plain teachings of Jesus, the examples 
			found in the Bible, and the multitude of examples that anyone can 
			see with his own eyes if he will open them and look, ought to 
			convince the most skeptical of this possibility.
 
 Almost from babyhood the Lord spoke to Samuel, and filled his heart 
			and mind with wisdom, so that none of his words fell to the ground 
			(1 Sam. 2:26, and 3:1-21) From a child God ordained Jeremiah a 
			prophet unto the nations, and filled him with His Spirit (Jer. 
			1:5-10), and if this was possible under the law, how much more 
			gloriously is it possible under the Gospel?
 
 Jonathan Edwards, in one of his works, tells of a wee girlie, only 
			five years of age, going to and from her bedroom looking most sad 
			and disconsolate. Her mother asked her what was the matter, and the 
			little thing replied, "Mamma, when I pray God doesn't come."
 
 The mother tried to comfort her, but her little heart was filled 
			with hunger which only the Comforter Himself could satisfy, and she 
			still continued to go disconsolately to her bedroom. But one glad 
			day she ran from her room, leaped into her mother's bosom, threw her 
			arms around her neck and cried, "O mamma, mamma, when I pray now, 
			God comes!"
 
 And up through the years of her childhood and youth and womanhood 
			she lived such a life of Christian humility and grace and truth as 
			was the wonder of all who knew her.
 
 Secondly, since they can be won, you must make up your mind that you 
			will win them; you must put from your mind forever the thought that 
			"anything will do for the children." It will require much prayer, 
			and patience, and love, and tact, and divine wisdom to win them to 
			the Saviour, and to keep them after they are won. They must have 
			"line upon line, precept upon precept." If one teaching of the 
			lesson is not sufficient then they must be taught it again and yet 
			again. "Why do you tell Charles the same thing twenty times over?" 
			asked the father of John and Charles Wesley of the mother. "Because 
			nineteen times won't do," replied the wise and particular mother.
 
 "Hear, O Israel," said the Lord; "the Lord is one God, and thou 
			shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul 
			and with all thy mind, and these words which I command you this day 
			shall be in thine heart, and thou shalt teach them diligently unto 
			thy children, and thou shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy 
			house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest down and 
			when thou risest up, and thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thy 
			hand and they shall be for frontlets between thy eyes, and thou 
			shalt write them on the posts of thine house, and upon thy gates." 
			This was the way that the children of the old Israelites were to be 
			taught, and this must be the standard the soul-winner sets for 
			himself and for his people today.
 
 The children should be noticed; and I am increasingly convinced that 
			in every meeting where there are children present something should 
			be said that is suitable to them, and the invitation to come to 
			Jesus should include them.
 
 When they do come, they should be dealt with most thoroughly, their 
			little hearts should be probed, their sins searched out and thorough 
			repentance required. Their fears must be tenderly removed by showing 
			them the fullness of God's love, and the certainty of salvation when 
			they give up sin. Their thought should be turned to Jesus and their 
			faith fixed on Him and grounded in His Word.
 
 Give them His sure promises, such as, "If we confess our sins He is 
			faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all 
			unrighteousness."
 
 Above all you must be simple and make things very plain for the 
			children. They do not know the meaning of many big words that you 
			understand quite well, therefore you must take pains to make 
			yourself understood.
 
 The other day I was talking to some juniors, and I gave them this 
			text, "Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth." I asked 
			them if they knew what the word "Creator" meant, and none of them 
			knew, neither did they know what the word "youth" meant. So I had to 
			explain that the text meant that they were to remember and think 
			about God and love Him while they were little boys and girls.
 
 Again I gave them the text, "Behold how pleasant it is for brethren 
			to dwell together in unity." But none of them knew the meaning of 
			the word "unity."
 
 One said that meant home, and that was a pretty good guess, but I 
			had to explain that the text meant that it was good and pleasant for 
			little brothers and sisters, and big ones, too, to live together in 
			peace, without quarreling and fighting, and they understood that.
 
 The following story from a Boston paper will illustrate my meaning 
			further: "The songs which were sung for Dewey by the school children 
			included so many references to Columbia that a teacher in a certain 
			South End public school thought that she would find out how many of 
			her pupils understood what the word Columbia meant. She put the 
			question and received these answers among others:
 
 "A ship."
 
 "A man that came over from Spain and discovered our country."
 
 "A bisikkel."
 
 "A captain"
 
 But not one pupil in the class (seventh grade) knew that Columbia 
			was another name for the United States of America.
 
 You will have to put on your thinking caps, and set your brains to 
			work to make your teaching simple for the children; but love will 
			help you.
 
 Some time ago I heard a Junior worker singing lustily to a lot of 
			juniors:
 
 Get your baggage on the deck And don't forget to get your check, 
			etc., but he didn't explain that it simply meant that they were to 
			give themselves to Jesus, and throw away their sins, and be sure and 
			get His love in their hearts. So when he got through I felt sure 
			that there was nothing but a confused rattle of "baggage, deck, 
			check, quick," in the ears of the juniors, with no useful or saving 
			idea in their little heads and hearts.
 
 If you will pray to God for wisdom and love He will help you to make 
			the deepest spiritual truths plain to the children.
 
 Through simplifying my talks God gives me the joy of seeing many 
			juniors seeking Him for salvation, and occasionally I have seen some 
			gloriously sanctified.
 
 Some time ago, in one of my Sunday afternoon meetings, I had a 
			penitent-form full of juniors, with each of whom I dealt personally. 
			I asked one little fellow:
 
 "What are you here for, darling?"
 
 "To get saved," said he.
 
 "Get saved from what?" I inquired.
 
 "From my sins."
 
 "And what are your sins?"
 
 "I fight," and then he broke down and cried.
 
 "And what are you here for?" I asked a little girl.
 
 She too, was there to get saved, and I asked what her sins were. She 
			hesitated a little and then said: "I'm cruel to my sister and 
			brother;" and then she broke down and cried.
 
 Another little girl swore, and another disobeyed her mother. One 
			little boy told lies, another smoked cigarettes, and another was 
			disobedient to his teacher; and so they told of their sins and broke 
			down and wept and prayed and asked God to forgive them and make them 
			good, and I have hope that most of them got saved.
 
 In one of my meetings a little girl of ten got saved and sanctified 
			and lived a holy life for about three years and then died happy, 
			sending me word that the Lord still sanctified her and kept her to 
			the end.
 
 But after we have done all, we must remember that they are only 
			lambs, and not sheep; that they are growing children, not grown men 
			and women; that they are in the formative state, tender and 
			inexperienced; that life and the world are full of interest to them; 
			that they have a personality and individuality of their own, and are 
			not always willing to take the simple word of their elders, nor to 
			yield to admonition and instruction, but desire to prove their own 
			powers, and to taste and see all things for themselves. Therefore it 
			will be necessary not only to talk much to them about God, but to 
			talk even more to God about them, and to depend upon the mighty, 
			constant co-operation of the Holy Spirit in securing their 
			salvation, and keeping them in the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.
 
 We must show all diligence in our efforts until, if possible, we can 
			at least say with Paul to Timothy, that "from a child thou hast 
			known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto 
			salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus."
 
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