| The Ivory
Palaces of the King By The Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman, D.D. |
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Chapter 3
THE ENLARGING BLESSING Many people have supposed that when once they had
accepted the offers of mercy through
Jesus Christ that that was the Christian life. I once
occupied this position myself, I now believe
that it was but stepping over the threshold and that all
the chambers of the king's palace from this
point on await our exploration and enjoyment. There is
an ever increasing, enlarging blessing
which we may have by simply receiving it. This is not at
all a question of regeneration. It is a
question of the life more abundant; of deep abiding
peace and of power with God and men. It
touches not so much the Father nor the Son; it brings
you face to face with the third person of the
blessed Trinity, the Holy Ghost. There is no question
which could be better put to us than the one
Paul asked of the Corinthian church members, as he met
them in Ephesus. "Have ye received the
Holy Ghost since ye believed." There may be life without
the answer -- there certainly cannot be
power. There is t woeful amount of ignorance concerning
the Holy Ghost. We do not seem to be
impressed with His personality. We not infrequently use
an impersonal pronoun in our petitions
and remarks in referring to Him, when the fact is he
shares with God the Father and the Son, the
honor and power of the Godhead. The successful Christian
everywhere is the one who honors Him
and makes room for His entrance and control over their
entire being. What a change there would be in our Christian living and
in our Christian experience, did
we but have a definite testimony concerning this one
question. One of my friends in New York city,
has given up a high social position and all selfish
interests that she may work among the fallen
women of the metropolis. She has opened the "Door of
Hope" for every one who would apply for
admission. One evening, leaving her home, she took a
pink rose, saying she would give it to the
vilest woman she would meet in her wanderings. In a
Mulberry street dive, she found her subject;
a young girl with face bruised and bleeding, eyes
blood-shot, clad in rags and surrounded by a
band of New York's worst characters; the vilest
profanity was proceeding out of her mouth. My
friend pushed her way through the crowd and put the pink
rose in her hand with the request that if
she ever needed a friend she would call upon her. The
girl received the gift with a sneer. My
friend passed on about her work, but with a prayer that
God might touch her heart. Some days
afterwards she found her sitting in the entry of the
"Door of Hope" looking even more wretched
than when her eyes first beheld her. Her first thought
was to send her away, thinking that she was
too low to be saved. Her second thought was, what would
the Master do if he were here in my
stead; and then with a great rush of love because she
beheld a soul for whom Christ died, she
stooped and took her sin stained face in her hands and
kissed her twice. The touch of love broke
the girl's heart. She fell upon her knees in the entry
and then and there gave herself to God. She
became transformed, almost transfigured. She went up and
down the streets of New York City into
the lowest haunts of sin, herself a missionary and
evangelist to her fallen sisters. Wherever she
went she carried the light of heaven. Whenever she spoke
it was with the power of God. A few
months later she lay in her coffin at the "Door of
Hope." Hundreds flocked to look at the face
which was like an angel's and went away to thank God
that she had not lived in vain. With a record
of only a short Christian experience, my friend writes
me that more than a hundred souls had been
converted to Jesus Christ through her ministry. This
change was all wrought because first of all she
received the Son of God as her personal Saviour, and
then that she threw open every door of her
nature for the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. The change
was great but not greater than would be
witnessed in the life of any child of God who would make
an unconditional surrender to the spirit
of God bidding him at any cost, at any sacrifice, to
come in and abide with him. It is very encouraging to know that we do not need to
pray for the spirit of God as if He
were afar off. In one sense the hymn is wrong where we
say "come Holy Spirit heavenly dove" for
he is here and is but waiting to completely fill us.
There is a beautiful figure in the Old Testament
which some one has used with great blessing. In the days
of the flood Noah opened the window of
the ark and the little dove flew forth and finding no
place to rest the sole of its foot it came back
again to the outstretched hand. The second time he
opened the window the dove flew forth and
finding an olive branch bore it back to the hand of
Noah. The third time he opened the window of
the ark, the dove flew hither and thither and finding a
resting place for the sole of its foot, it came
back no more forever. The dove is always a figure
representing the Holy Spirit. He came first in
the Old Testament touching Abraham and Moses and Isaiah
and others, but does not seem to abide
permanently; he came again when Jesus Christ was
crucified and plucking the olive branch from
the cross, he made his way back to God saying, "peace
hath been made in the death of the Son." He
came the third time at Pentecost with a rushing sound as
of a mighty wind filling all the place
where the people sat, resting upon them with cloven
tongues like as of fire and he has never gone
back since the day of Pentecost. He is here, waiting to
fill us if we but fulfill the conditions. For many years in my Christian experience I was somewhat
troubled by the fact that I could
not tell just the day or the hour in which I was
converted. It has ceased to trouble me now, and
first, because I should know I were living in this
world, even if I did not know my birthday. And
secondly, because there is something far better than
knowing just the time you were converted and
that is, a definite experience concerning the receiving
fully of the Holy Ghost. It is a very serious
question in my mind whether any one can have a full
experience of power, until first of all, they
have had definite experience concerning the receiving of
the Holy Ghost. Have you had this? There are some things which might be suggested which may
make the way plainer for us
all. There must be a deep longing for his coming, even
as we longed for salvation through Jesus
Christ. When we are satisfied with nothing else, when we
long for nothing more, I believe He will
come in and fill us and the result will be power. Some
times we find people longing for such an
experience in order that they may have peace or
blessedness. Not infrequently ministers cry out for
Him that they may have more power in preaching. I am
convinced that He will never fill us so long
as these are the first thoughts. Bid Him come in that he
may have power over yourself first, and you
are on the way to enlarging blessings. Let Him come in
that he may drive out everything contrary to
the will of God and you will find yourself very shortly
in a full possession of His power. There is
another suggestion which must not be over-looked,
namely, there must be a full surrender. He can
never fill the heart that is only partially given up.
Every door of the nature, every impulse of the
will, every affection of the heart must be surrendered
to Him. Then we may expect Him. Rev. F. B. Meyer has made two helpful suggestions just
here. If you cannot at once reach
this position, then come before Him and say, "Lord I am
willing to be made willing about
everything," and "if you cannot give up everything for
God then say 'I will let thee take
everything.'" Then another suggestion is this, we must
receive him by faith. The foundation for it is
in Galatians 3:14, "That you might receive the promise
of the spirit through faith." I am convinced
that if one fulfills the conditions, he has a perfect
right to stand before God claiming the promise of
the Holy Spirit, with a faith which may be utterly
devoid of emotion, just as one has the right to
claim the free gift of salvation when he has surrendered
his will unto God. Why have we not received the Holy Ghost? It may be
because we have disobeyed some
clear command. Mr. Meyer well says "if one has broken
one of God's commands, or has been a
disobedient child, he can never be filled with the power
of God, neither can he claim His
blessings, until he goes back to the place where he made
the mistake and makes it right with his
God." It may be because we have not confessed our sins The
trouble with us is not so much that
we sin, but rather than when we sin, we do not
immediately confess it before God The abiding of
an unforgiven sin in the heart of the Christian will
absolutely prevent the infilling of the Holy
Ghost. It may because we have too little communion with
God in his word. When one of my
friends was presiding at a great convention in the City
of Wash-ington a number of years ago, in
the midst of the deliberations a number of Indian chiefs
who had been conferring with the President
came into the convention. They looked about with
interest. At last an old chief through an
interpreter rose and spoke. He said, "what is the secret
of all this happiness? Our men do not look
like yours; their faces are sad; their hearts heavy. Our
women are not like yours. Our children are
growing up in ignorance. Our homes are miserable. Tell
us if you can, what the medicine is which
we must take." Then General O. O. Howard, with his empty
coat sleeve, his arm being left on the
battle field, sprang forward, and, lifting up the Bible
in one hand, cried out "Mr. Speaker tell him
that this is the good medicine." And it is quite true,
it is the medicine which will cure the world's
sickness; it is the medicine which will fill you with a
new life, purging your heart from all that is
evil, making your heart free from all that is sinful,
making your heart throb with new impulses
emotions and desires. Your trouble may be here. Not long ago, a woman died in London. A few years ago
she was utterly unknown, but at
her funeral a great concourse of people passed through
the great church to look upon her face.
There were representatives of royalty; lords and ladies,
people of high degree. Then the poorer
people came. Finally there came one woman carrying a
little babe on one arm and holding another
child by the hand. She reached the casket, put the baby
down and was just bending over to kiss the
glass that covered the sweet face when the guard
exclaimed, "move on, move on." Stopping for a
moment and looking at him, she lifted up her hand and
shouted out until every one in the church
heard her. "I will not move on. This woman saved my boy
and I have a right to look." It was Mrs.
Booth who was resting in her coffin. One of the grandest
women of all God's family; she had been
transformed by the Holy Ghost and thus became a winner
of souls. So may we all be. Out in the hill country of Scotland a shepherd counted
his flock and found that three sheep
were missing. Going to the kennel where the shepherd dog
was resting with her young, he pointed
to the wilderness and said "three sheep are missing,
go." The dog looked for a moment at her
young and then at her master, and was lost in the night.
She was gone an hour, then came back
bruised by the thorns and beaten by the wolves but she
had the two sheep that were lost. The
shepherd counted his flock once more; finding one still
missing. He stood again at the kennel door
while the mother was resting with her little ones.
Pointing to the wilderness once more, he said
"go." With a look of mute despair first at her little
ones, then into his face, she rose up and was lost
in the darkness. Two hours passed and then three, then
she came back bruised, bleeding, almost
dying, but she had the one sheep that was lost. The
shepherd picked it up, wrapped it in his
shepherd's plaid and turned away to his fold, while the
dog staggering back to her young, reached
the kennel door and fell dead. When I read it, I said, Oh, that a dumb beast of the
field with no thought of God, no hope of
eternity, no prospects of hearing the Master say "well
done, well done," should be so faithful to its
master's command, while we sit with folded arms as our
Master, with his pierced palm is pointing
to the wilderness saying," the thousands, are lost, go,
go." If we were but filled with the Spirit of
God we would heed His cry. "Have you received the Holy Ghost since
you believed?"
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