
By Rev. John Wilbur Chapman
THE PERSONAL SIDE OF MR. MOODY
      
 He was a remarkable man in all ways, 
  not the least of which was his appearance. He was not a striking figure so far 
  as stature was concerned, for he was rather below the average in height, but 
  he was a marked man in a crowd, and every one turned to look at him because 
  the very atmosphere that surrounded him was commanding. He has been likened 
  to Garfield, in his massive frame; they had the same smiling features, the same 
  facility of anecdote, and the same effect of sincerity in everything they said 
  or did. Their style of oratory was almost identical, and both possessed the 
  rare gift of captivating people at. first sight.    Mr. Moody was very quick at repartee. An interesting incident is related of 
  his meeting with Mr. Gladstone. Heartily grasping Mr. Moody's hand the old statesman 
  said, "I wish I had your body." Mr. Moody replied, "I wish I 
  had your head." Mr. Gladstone responded, "I mean I wish I had your 
  lungs;" to which Mr. Moody again replied, "I wish I had your brains," 
  and with hearty good wishes they parted.    PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS    Mr. Moody had a wonderful voice. He could easily hold the attention of thousands, 
  and yet in conversation there was a pathos and tenderness in his inflections 
  that was most fascinating. He had a most attractive face; it was kindly and 
  helpful in its every expression.    He was fond of telling how his picture once did duty for that of Rutherford 
  B. Hayes. During the Hayes campaign a big Republican rally was held in Fort 
  Wayne, Ind. Everything was ready, when it was suggested that the meeting would 
  be incomplete without a picture of General Hayes. This brought out the discovery 
  that, although around the walls of the room were hung-the pictures of many celebrities 
  of the clay, that of Hayes was not among them, nor could a picture of him be 
  found. One of the members of the committee on arrangements, a sign painter, 
  who had a natural gift of drawing, found a copy of Harper's Magazine on the 
  table in which was a small cut of Mr. Moody. He decided it was enough like Hayes 
  to make a copy from, and in half an hour he had a good sized sketch, and labeled 
  the product "Rutherford B. Hayes". It was hung on the stage, and the 
  speakers of the evening pointed to it as they referred to "that statesman," 
  etc. Finally the joke leaked out in the crowd, and almost resulted in breaking 
  up the meeting. Mr. Moody was informed of the affair, and told it to President 
  Hayes.    HIS HOLD UPON HIS FRIENDS    It has been said that he was dictatorial, sometimes extremely so, and it must 
  be confessed that he did insist on his own way; but then, he had studied his 
  work; he knew men, and he knew what would tell with them, and it was a rare 
  thing ever to find him mistaken in his judgment. But even though he was brusque, 
  sometimes almost to the point of rudeness, it is a mighty tribute to the power 
  of his influence over men that he instinctively drew them about him. One of 
  his English friends said of him, "He may make doorkeepers of us, or even 
  door-mats, if he likes, and we will love him." And another has said of 
  him, "Dear old Moody! We all love him, but some of us don't like him." 
  He was, however, the most tender-hearted man I have ever known. Dr. George F. 
  Pentecost has well said of him, "Intentionally he never wounded any one; 
  he simply lacked perception, and did not put himself in the other man's place." 
     His heart was big enough to take in the whole world, and his sympathy with mankind 
  was genuine. An instance of this occurred in New York. While he was in the midst 
  of a sermon a baby commenced to cry, much to the annoyance of some of the audience, 
  who darted cruel looks at the innocent child and the embarrassed mother. The 
  mother waited for a favorable opportunity to go out, but Mr. Moody told her 
  to remain where she was; he guessed his lungs were stronger than the baby's, 
  and if any didn't like it, they could go out.    At the close of the service he made the unique announcement that the next afternoon 
  he would preach to mothers with babies in their arms, and no one unaccompanied 
  by a baby would be admitted. Never before was there such a gathering. The scene 
  touched the heart of the great preacher, and his words the hearts of the mothers. 
  Mr. Moody said afterward that a good many of the women present must have borrowed 
  babies for the occasion.    HIS CHARMING SOCIAL SIDE    He was perfectly delightful socially; he was as genial a man as I have ever 
  known. He would laugh till the tears rolled down his face at some story which 
  he might have heard again and again. He found his recreation in helping others, 
  for he was a tireless worker in one form or another, yet he was never so happy 
  as when he was making others' burdens easier to bear.    From the very day that D. L. Moody came before the eyes of the Christian world, 
  the same characteristics that made him great in later days, were exhibited. 
  He was one of the most conscientious men I have ever known, and if he felt that 
  anything was his duty, nothing in the world would make him so miserable as to 
  feel that he must leave it undone, and nothing made him so happy as to feel 
  that he could perform it quickly whatever the cost. If he ever wronged any one, 
  he was the first to make that wrong right.    Mr. Moody seldom preached a sermon without emphasizing the fact that true happiness 
  and the richest blessings will never be realized by a professed Christian, if 
  at any time he has wronged a fellow-man and has not made an honest attempt to 
  clear up the wrong, or if he does not perform, willingly and promptly, known 
  duties. That the great evangelist made this teaching one of the cardinal principles 
  of his own life is clearly demonstrated by the following incident, related by 
  him in an address to a body of students at Northfield.    A SINGULAR INSTANCE OF HIS KINDLINESS  
 I drove with him one morning while 
  he was making some final preparation for the coming of the students to their 
  annual conference, when we stopped at a little patch of corn, and he said, "I 
  hoed two rows of corn here this morning before you were up. I have never been 
  able to get out of my mind the imaginary picture of D. L. Moody, with coat and 
  vest off, hoeing corn at Northfield.    HIS EXTREME MODESTY    With all his greatness he was one of the most modest men that you could possibly 
  find. Other men might have been turned with the flattery of the people, but 
  extreme modesty was a striking characteristic of the evangelist's personality. 
  His phenomenal successes in many lines left him a man devoid of all desire for 
  notoriety and fame.    Although thousands of persons would travel long distances to hear him preach, 
  still he invariably maintained that there were any number of ministers who could 
  excel him as a preacher, and he was always willing and eager to give place to 
  others. During the Northfield Conferences, at which, in the minds of the people 
  in attendance, he was the central figure, Mr. Moody seldom preached, unless 
  to take the place of some speaker who was unable to meet his appointment, or 
  unless urgent requests from the audience were repeatedly sent to him. Asked 
  once why he did not speak more often at the conferences, the evangelist replied:  
       
 Again, when urged to preach, he made this announcement from the rostrum one morning: 
 Despite the numerous other sessions 
  during the day, these sunrise services were continued during the rest of the 
  conference, and each session was largely attended by those eager to catch every 
  syllable that fell from Mr. Moody's lips.    HIS WONDERFUL UNSELFISHNESS    He was absolutely unselfish. During the first visit of Messrs. Moody and Sankey 
  to Great Britain they were in need of a book of songs to use at the meetings. 
  No publisher would bring out the book, although Mr. Moody offered to give it 
  to any one who would print it and give him what copies he wanted to use. Finally 
  he was compelled to have the book printed at his own expense. It has since attained 
  a larger circulation than any other publication except the Bible, and is one 
  of the best paying literary properties in the world. Every dollar of the profits 
  of the book has gone to charity in one form or another. Mr. Fleming H. Revell 
  has said: "Some years ago, some of the papers began to say that Mr. Moody 
  was making a good thing financially of his reputation. As a rule Mr. Moody never 
  paid no attention to criticism. He was wont to say that no two people thought 
  alike of everything or received always the same impression. He was friendly 
  toward the public press, claiming that it was a great educator and a great power 
  in spreading of both secular and religious knowledge. But he was deeply grieved 
  at this. He referred to the criticisms one day in the pulpit here in Chicago. 
  There were tears in his eyes, and his voice quivered as he spoke. 'As I know 
  my heart before God,' he said, 'I have never let the desire for money determine 
  my conduct in any way. I know I am weak and sinful in many ways, but the devil 
  has not that hold upon me. I have never profited personally by a single dollar 
  that has been raised through my work. It hurts me, above all other things, to 
  be charged with this. May God forgive those who say this of me.'"    Mr. Revell added, that though Moody received over $125,000 from royalties on 
  his work, he had never used a penny of it for personal purposes, reserving it 
  all to further his work. "Mr. Moody was a good financier," he said. 
  "He took great care of his money, but not to save it and build a fortune. 
  Rather he desired it to use in his work. I fully believe he died a poor man. 
     ANECDOTES OF HIS EARLIER YEARS OF SERVICE    Dr. Edward Eggleston has told the following stories about Mr. Moody: "I 
  have heard Mr. Moody tell how while in the Christian Commission service he was 
  propounding his thorough question to a Tennessee planter, but, as the man was 
  deaf, the repeated vociferation of 'Are you a Christian?' failed to bring a 
  reply. Turning to the black man who stood by he asked, 'Is your master a Christian?' 
  'No, Massa, he is a Presbyterian.'  
 A volume could be written of the 
  things which the friends of this mighty man of God have said since his death. 
  The words of two representative men may, however, with peculiar appropriateness 
  be presented.    THE SIMPLICITY OF HIS HABITS AND TASTES    The Rev. George F. Pentecost his said: "Had he lived in the early days 
  of Israel's trials, he should have judged Israel, and delivered them out of 
  the hand of their enemies. He was like Gideon, and his latent powers were known 
  only to God. He was the most reticent man I ever knew. One of his marked characteristics 
  was his strong, practical common sense and fine knowledge of men. Once in the 
  Boston Tabernacle, just before going on the platform, some one came to see him. 
  'There is a man outside wishes to see you. 'Well,' said the evangelist, 'I have 
  no time to see him.' 'But,' replied the usher, 'He says he must see you.' 'What 
  kind of a man is he?' 'He is tall and thin, with long hair.' 'That settles it," 
  said Mr. Moody, 'I don't want to see any long-haired men nor short-haired women.' 
  It was a rare thing for him to make a mistake in any of the men gathered about 
  him.  
 The Rev. G. Campbell Morgan has said 
  of him: "My personal acquaintance with Dwight Lyman Moody was not of long 
  duration according to the measure of the calendar. If, however, 'we could count 
  time by heart throbs,' then I might claim to have known him; for it has been 
  one of the greatest privileges of my life to have come very near him in the 
  ripest years of his life.    I first saw him in 1883 during his second visit to Birmingham. Bingley Hall 
  was being crowded by day with eager crowds who had come by train from the whole 
  surrounding district. The city was moved to its very center. The impression 
  of those days, therefore, is that of the man in the midst of the rush of work. 
  He was keen, alert, forceful. No detail of arrangement escaped his notice. A 
  vacant seat, the opening and closing of doors, a tendency to drag the singing, 
  all these he noted and uttered directions about. Yet he was by no means a man 
  who cared for detail's sake. The greater was ever the reason for the less, and 
  the less was important only as part of the greater. The supreme passion of his 
  life was the winning of men for Christ, and no detail that would hinder or help 
  was too small for consideration.    HOW HE APPEARED IN HIS NATIVE TOWN  
 MR. MOODY AS HOST    After the evening meeting, at his invitation, I gathered with the speakers at 
  his house. Then, for the first time, I saw him in a new role, that of the host. 
  He sat in his chair at the head of the table and helped the ice-cream, directed 
  the conversation, and listened with the patience and simplicity of a child to 
  every word that others spoke. That night the talk turned on the most serious 
  subjects, the inner life of the people of God and its bearing on the work of 
  the churches among the people. As we broke up I went to bid him good-bye, as 
  I was to depart by an early train on the morrow. 'O!' said he, 'I shall see 
  you in the morning; you are to preach at ten o'clock.' That was my first notice. 
  What did I do? I preached, as he told me, as others and better men have ever 
  been glad to do. That was his way. He printed no programme of the Northfield 
  Conferences. He gathered around him a band of teachers and speakers, and then 
  as the days moved on he manipulated them according to the necessities of the 
  case. After speaking next morning I hurried away, but in that brief stay Moody 
  had become much to me. Strong, tender, considerate, from that day I more than 
  reverenced him, I loved him."    In the summer of 1897 I was asked to go to Kinsman, Ohio, to fill an engagement 
  which properly belonged to Mr. Moody, but he was so busily engaged with his 
  own Northfield work, and was so fearful of taking a long journey in the heat 
  of summer, that Professor James MeGranahan insisted that I should come to Kinsman 
  to speak to thousands of people who gathered every summer on the Fair grounds. 
  Mr. Moody had started this meeting two or three years before, and he insisted 
  that it should not be given up.    PRAYER SAVED THE SHIP    When I reached the beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs. McGranahan I found that my 
  helper in the meeting was to be that grand old hero of many a battle-field and 
  devoted soldier of the cross, General O.O. Howard. Sitting together with the 
  friends who had come in from the surrounding country to attend the meeting, 
  the name of Mr. Moody was mentioned, and General Howard said, "I was with 
  him on the steamship Spree, when, Mr. Moody says, 'God heard our prayer and 
  saved the ship.' A good many people have criticised this statement," said 
  General Howard, "and there was much controversy in the newspapers; but 
  Moody always believed it. Over 700 people were with us on the ship. One morning, 
  about daybreak, I was awakened by a sound like an explosion, and I heard the 
  people rushing along the halls, and then some one said the main shaft had been 
  snapped asunder, and falling down had made a break in the ship. The passengers 
  were terror stricken. The bulkheads were quickly closed, and the bailing and 
  the pumping began, but when they reached the third compartment of the ship, 
  they found it almost impossible to clear it, and the aft part of the ship was 
  sunk to the gunwale. Mr. Moody, with his son, I found on deck. He was lying 
  back in a chair looking very ill, but after a moment he said, 'General Howard, 
  won't you come with me?' And followed by his son we made our way to the stateroom, 
  and there he fell upon his knees and prayed as only he knew how to pray. He 
  told the Lord that He was the God of the sea, and asked Him that, like as He 
  had stilled the Sea of Galilee, He might save these people in peril on the ship. 
  He asked the Lord to send him a ship to take them safe home that they might 
  finish their work; and when he had prayed, and his son had followed, he opened 
  his Bible and read the ninety-first Psalm, and then said, 'This Psalm is just 
  made for this occasion, isn't it?'    A SERVICE OF PRAISE ON THE STEAMER  
 There was a hush on the little assembly, 
  and I know of one at least who offered up a prayer of thanksgiving that D. L. 
  Moody had not only helped save the people on board the Spree, but had been used 
  of God to save thousands of others just as truly drifting, and whose case was 
  just as apparently hopeless.    The Rev. F. B. Meyer, of Christ Church, London, knew Mr. Moody most intimately, 
  and loved him not only for his work's sake, but also because of the peculiar 
  charm and fascination of his great personality. He has recently said in an English 
  paper:  
 HOW MR. MOODY FIRST BLESSED MR. 
  MEYER'S WORK    I met him first in York, in 1873, on his arrival with Mrs. Moody and his two 
  eldest children. Accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Sankey, they had come to our country, 
  as it appeared, by a divine prompting, and had just landed at Liverpool. Some 
  time before, the secretary of the Y. M. C. A. had impressed upon him the two 
  words, "Bennett, York;" and not knowing where else to turn, two of 
  his friends having suddenly died, Moody telegraphed to Mr. Bennett, saying, 
  'I will be in York to-night.'"    This was Saturday. On the following day he preached at the chapel built for 
  the Rev. James Parsons, and then occupied by the Rev. John Hunter (now of Glasgow). 
  During the following week he held evening services in the old Londal Chapel, 
  and noon prayer meetings at the Y. M. C. A. After two or three days with the 
  Wesleyans, he came to the Baptist Chapel, of which I was minister, and conducted 
  meetings there for about a fortnight, with ever-increasing numbers and marvelous 
  results. He and Mr. Sankey have often spoken of that little vestry, where we 
  three spent much time in prayer, little weening that the earnestness of our 
  desires and intercessions were the travail pangs of so great a spiritual movement 
  as followed.    All who have heard him will recall the quiver in his voice when he told some 
  pathetic story; but I never guessed the intensity of his tenderness till I saw 
  him with his grandchildren. He used to drive them about in his carriage, or 
  carry them in his arms.    "One of the most striking incidents in my memory was when he stood with 
  them beside his mother's grave, in a summer sunset, and asked us to pray that 
  they might be in the coming century what she had been in this. And when little 
  Irene was dying, he used to be on the watch below her window to keep all quiet, 
  would steal down from the meetings to hear the latest news, would be the nurse 
  and playmate of her little cousin, that all might devote themselves to the chamber 
  of sickness.    MR. MOODY'S SURE FAITH  
 I am delighted thus to quote Mr. Meyer. I know of few men better qualified to speak than he. While in conversation the other day with Mr. Fleming H. Revell (Mr. Moody's brother-in-law), he said to me. "If you would like to find in print a good description of Mr. Moody's last hours and his triumphant entrance into the presence of God, you have only to read the closing lines of Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, for in the passing over of Mr. Stand-fast, there is the most striking description of the passing away of Mr. Moody." For the help of my readers I here quote it. 
 And so I bring my tribute to a close, thanking God, now, as I thanked Him at the beginning, that I have had the privilege of writing; and saying of Mr. Moody yet again - he was the best friend I ever had, and more helpful to me than any other man that ever lived in all my knowledge of the world. Other men have known him longer than I, but no one, I am sure, could ever have been more helped by him. I say of him as Paul said of the Philippians, "I thank my God upon every remembrance of you."  | 
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