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				"MORE THAN CONQUERORS." 
				
"Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors 
through Him that loved us."-Rom. viii : 37.
				 
It is a great thing to be a conqueror in Christian life and conflict. It
is a much greater thing to be a conqueror "in all these things" which the
apostle names, a perfect host of trials, troubles and foes. But what does
it mean to be "more than conqueror"?
 
  
    
    It means to have a decisive victory. There are some victories that cost nearly
    as much as defeats, and a few more such triumphs would annihilate us. There
    are some battles which have to be renewed again and again until we are exhausted
    with the ceaseless strife. Many a Christian is kept in constant warfare through
    lack of courage to venture on a bold and final contest and end the strife
    by a decisive victory. It is blessed so to die that we are dead indeed; so
    to yield that the last strand of the heart's reluctance is severed; so to
    say "no" to the enemy that he will never repeat the solicitation. There are
    decisive battles in the world's history, conflicts whose issues settle the
    future of an empire or of a world, and the soul has such battles too. God
    is able to give us the grace so to win in a few en-counters that there shall
    be no doubt about the side on which the victory falls and no danger of the
    contest ever being renewed again. Other battles we may have and shall have,
    but surely it is possible for us to settle the questions that meet us, one
    by one, and settle them forever.
 Beloved, are not some of you weakened by this indecisiveness in your views
    of truth, in your steps of faith, in your refusals of temptation, in your
    surrender to God, in your consecration to His service and your obedience
    to His special call? You have been just uncertain enough to keep the question
    open and tempt the adversary to renew the conflict evermore. We sometimes
    read in God's word after one of David's hardest conflicts, or one of Joshua's
    boldest triumphs, "the land had rest from war!" Thus we have rest by becoming
    "more than conquerors through Him that loved us."
 
    It is to have such a victory as will effectually break the adversary's power
    and not only defend us from his attacks but effectually weaken and destroy
    his strength. This is one of the purposes of temptation, that we may be workers
    together with God in destroying evil. We read of Joshua's battles that "it
    was of the Lord that these kings should come against Joshua in battle for
    this very purpose, that they might be utterly destroyed." It was not enough
    for Israel to beat them off and be saved from their attacks, but God wanted
    them exterminated. And so when God allows the enemy to appear in our lives
    it is that we may do him irreparable and eternal injury, and thus glorify
    God and be workers with Christ in destroying the works of the devil. For
    this purpose God frequently brings to light in our own lives and in our work
    for God, evils that were concealed, not that they might crush us, but that
    we might put them aside. But for their discovery and resistance they might
    still have remained unrevealed and some day have broken out with fatal
    effectiveness. But God allows them to be provoked into activity in order
    to challenge our resistance and lead to our aggressive and victorious advance
    against them. Therefore when we find anything in our own hearts and lives,
    or in connection with the work of our Master committed to our hands, which
    seems to threaten our triumph or His work, let us remember that God has allowed
    it to confront us, that, in His name, it might be forever put aside and rendered
    powerless to injure or oppose again.
 Beloved, are we thus fighting the good fight of faith, resisting the devil
    and rising up for God against them that do wickedly? Are we looking upon
    our adversaries and our obstacles as things that have come, not to crush
    us, but to be put aside and become tributary to our successes and our Master's
    glory? Thus shall we be "more than conquerors through Him that loved us,"
    and as the prophet beautifully expresses it, "Behold, all they that were
    incensed against thee shall be ashamed and confounded: they shall be as nothing;
    and they that strive with thee shall perish. Thou shalt seek them and shalt
    not find them, even them that contended with thee: they that war against
    thee shall be as nothing and as a thing of naught."
 
    It is to have such a victory as brings actual benefit out of the battle and
    makes it tributary to our own and our Master's cause. It is possible in a
    certain sense to take our enemies prisoners and make them fight in our ranks,
    or at least do the menial work of our camp. It is possible to get such good
    out of Satan's assaults that he shall actually become our ally without intending
    it and shall find with eternal chagrin that he has been doing us real service.
    Doubtless he thought, when he stirred up Pharaoh to murder the little children
    of the Hebrews, that he was exterminating a race of which he was afraid.
    But that very act of his brought Moses into Pharaoh's house and raised up
    a deliverer for Israel and the destroyer of Pharaoh. Surely that was being
    "more than conqueror!" The devil was not only beaten but made to work in
    the Lord's chain-gang as a galley slave. Again, he overmatched himself when
    he instigated Haman to build his lofty gallows and send forth the decree
    for Israel's extermination, for he had the misery of seeing Haman hang on
    those gallows and Israel delivered. So again, no doubt, he put the Hebrew
    children into the furnace and Daniel into the den of lions hoping to destroy
    the last remnant of godliness on the earth, but lo! these heroes were "more
    than conquerors." Not only did they escape their destroyer, but their deliverance
    led to the proclamation of Nebuchadnezzar, magnifying the truth of God through
    the entire Babylonian empire, and to the similar confession of Darius,
    recognizing God throughout all the confines of the still greater Persian
    empire. Surely Satan was more than beaten that time!
 His most audacious attempt was the crucifixion of our Lord, and all hell,
    no doubt, held high jubilee on that dark afternoon when Jesus sank to death;
    but lo! the cross has become the weapon by which Satan's head is already
    bruised and his kingdom is yet to be exterminated. So God makes him forge
    the weapons of his own destruction, and hurl the thunderbolts that fall back
    upon his own head. So may we ever thus turn his fiercest assaults to our
    advantage, and to the glory of our King.
 
 It is very interesting to look at the old frontispiece in Wickliffe' s Bible,
    where a group of figures are gathered round a fire which is bursting through
    the open pages of a holy Bible. Their countenances all wear a look of
    consternation, and with one consent they are gathered round the fire, trying
    to blow it out. There are bishops and archbishops of the church of Rome,
    and the devil at the head of the crowd, all blowing lustily with swollen
    cheeks and strained countenances. But lo! the more they blow the more it
    burns, until at last the fierce blaze leaps up so high and out so far and
    wide that they are obliged to shrink back, and even Satan himself, though
    used to such an atmosphere, is glad to escape from its consuming flame. So
    let us overcome and more than overcome our spiritual foes.
 
 The best thing they do for us often is the discipline they bring us in our
    spiritual life. In this way, and in this alone, do we learn to exercise
    victorious faith and endure hardness as good soldiers of Jesus Christ. The
    two things that the Christian needs most are the power to believe and the
    power to suffer, and these the enemy often comes to teach us. Not until we
    are ready to sink beneath the pressure do we often learn the secret of triumph.
    It was a great thing for the American nation that she had the Mexican War
    before she had the War of the Rebellion. It was there that her officers were
    trained and fitted to lead the armies of the greater struggle. So the Lord
    lets the devil act as drill sergeant in His army, and teach His children
    the use of His spiritual weapons. So we may "count it all joy when we fall
    into divers temptations; knowing that the trying of our faith worketh
    patience."
 
 This, indeed, is to be "more than conqueror," to learn such lessons from
    the enemy as will fit us for his next assaults and prepare us to meet him
    without fear of defeat. There are some things that cannot easily be learned.
    Our spiritual senses seem to require the pressure of difficulty and suffering
    to awaken all their capacities and to constrain us to prove the full resources
    of heavenly grace. God's school of faith always is trial, and God's school
    of love is provocation and wrong. Instead therefore of murmuring against
    our lot and wondering why we are permitted to be so tried, let us glorify
    God and put our adversary to shame by wringing a blessing from Satan's hate
    and hell's hostility, and we shall find, after a while, that the enemy will
    be glad to let us alone for his own sake if not for ours.
 
    To be " more than conqueror" is not only to have the victory, but the spoils
    of victory. When Jehoshaphat's army won their great deliverance from the
    hordes of Moab and Ammon, it took them three days to gather all the spoils
    of their enemies camps. When David captured the camp of Ziklag' s destroyers
    he won so vast a booty that he was able to send rich presents over all Israel
    among his brethren. When the lepers found their way to the deserted camp
    of the Syrians they found such abundance that in a single hour the famine
    of Samaria was turned into satiety. And so our spiritual conflicts and conquests
    have their rich reward in the treasures recovered from the hands of the enemy.
    How many things there are which Satan possesses which we might and should
    enjoy! Oh, the rich delight which fills the heart when we expel the giants
    of ill-temper, irritation, haste, hatred, malice and envy who long have ravaged
    and preyed upon all the sweetness of our life. What a luxuriant land we now
    enter into, when we overcome these foes, and how delightfully the spoils
    of peace and love and sweetness and heavenly joy are enriching us in the
    very things where once they reigned! How rich the spoils recovered from the
    cruel adversary when through the name of Jesus he is driven from our body,
    and the suffering frame which had groaned and trembled under his oppression
    springs into health and freedom and yields all the fullness of its strength
    to the service of God and the joy of a victorious life. Oh, the rich reward
    that comes to the home that has been rescued from the dominancy of the devil,
    perhaps in the form of drunkenness in a husband and father, or of shameful
    lust, or sinful vanity, or empty frivolity, or heartless worldliness, or
    bitter strife, evil speaking and anger in some other heart, and life once
    more becomes a happy Eden, with love and peace enthroned by the hearth and
    altar of a Christian home. Oh, the rich spoils that are to come from a world
    rescued from the hand of its cruel usurper. How it will bloom again in beauty,
    fruitfulness and blessedness, and yield its riches to its benignant and rightful
    King and to those who dare to conquer it for Him and shall share with Him
    its happy Millennial sway!
 God takes special delight in making that a blessing to us which has been
    recovered from Satan's power. The two mightiest strongholds of ancient Canaan
    were Hebron and Zion. The former was the seat of the Anakim, the giant chieftains
    of Canaan; but the brave, heroic Caleb dared to challenge them in their lair,
    and in the strength of God was "more than conqueror" over their terrific
    strength, and won the heights of Hebron as his special inheritance. But not
    only did he receive the dear old city of Abraham as his portion and spoil,
    but God took peculiar delight in subsequently blessing and honoring this
    very place, it would seem, just because it had been snatched from the very
    jaws of the enemy; for Hebron was the chosen seat where David's throne was
    subsequently established, and where God began the kingdom of Israel which
    He Himself is yet to rule in the coming age of Israel's
    restoration.
 
 Still more defiant was the strength of the citadel of Zion. It was the last
    stronghold that the Canaanites relinquished. All through the days of Joshua
    and his successors they succeeded in holding it; all through the centuries
    of the Judges, all through the days of Saul, all through the early days of
    even David's kingdom. The fortress was impregnable so that the haughty Canaanites
    told their enemies in scorn that they would only deign to garrison it with
    the blind and the lame and they challenged them to capture it from its feeble
    and crippled defenders. But David met the challenge and Joab executed it
    by a glorious assault and took by storm the heights of Zion from the last
    chieftains of Canaan. Then it was that Israel found its true metropolis and
    the rescued stronghold was set apart by God Himself to be the very seat of
    the sacred kingdom and the monument of the glorious victory which had been
    achieved. There it was that David reigned; there it was that Solomon in all
    his glory swayed his glorious sceptre; there it was that the temple rose
    from the adjoining heights of Moriah full in view of Zion; there it is that
    Jesus is coming soon to reign once more. Oh, how rich and glorious the recompense
    of a single victory! How different the world's history if the old Canaanites
    had still been permitted to hold the heights of Jebus!
 
 Beloved, the richest treasure of your life is held by Satan. He is too shrewd
    to waste his strength upon what is worthless. He has put his hand upon the
    sweetest, dearest and most precious things of life, and whether in your heart,
    in your home, or in your circle of acquaintance, there you may be sure there
    is a Hebron or a Zion that God wants you to overcome, and in overcoming which
    you shall find the richest inheritance of your life and your eternity, and
    shall forever say with rejoicing, as you realize the full meaning of your
    victory, "more than conqueror through Him that loved us."
 
    "More than conquerors" means not only the spoils of war and triumph over
    all the assaults of our foes, but it means new territory, aggressive warfare,
    and positive and even larger conquests for the glory of our Lord and the
    salvation of others. Merely to beat back your foes is but a small part of
    the great commission of the Christian soldier. He is called not only to wield
    the shield of faith but also the sword of the Spirit by which he moves against
    the conquered foe and claims new territory with each advance. We have the
    armor of righteousness on the right hand and on the left. The armor on the
    left is for defense, but the armor on the right is for aggression. We are
    called, not only to "withstand in the evil day," but to go forth and reclaim
    the world for Christ. Such conflicts meet us in our Christian work at every
    step, in the souls we seek to win for Jesus, in the progress of truth, the
    spread of the gospel, the awakening and reviving of the church of God, the
    elevation of Christian life and holiness, the suppression of evil in all
    its myriad and gigantic forms around us, the evangelization of the world
    and the hastening of our Master's Kingdom and Coming. Surely we should not
    be ever occupied in holding our own salvation. Indeed, we shall hold it best
    by leaving it with God and pressing on to claim the salvation of
    others.
 In the last great European war the aggressors were the victors. If Germany
    had waited to be attacked and simply defended herself, probably she might
    have failed. But with wise and prompt aggression she hurled her hosts across
    the Rhine and into the battlefields of France and marched from victory to
    victory, her recompense being not only the conquest of her enemy's country,
    but the security of her own as well and her citizens, from even the touch
    of the enemy.
 
 This is the best way to keep the devil off our territory; keep him busy on
    his own, defending his kingdom from our bold attacks. Beloved, have we settled
    the question of our own salvation and Christian life, and are we at leisure
    for the battles of the Lord and thus "more than conquerors through Him that
    loved us" ?
 
    "More than conquerors" means not only to win your battle and save your territory,
    but to do honor to your Captain and your God, to be a credit to your cause
    and so to acquit yourself in the campaign that God shall be glorified. Many
    of our battles are fought in view of heaven alone. That is a strange picture
    that the apostle gives of his trials, "We are made a gazing-stock to angels
    and principalities." Have you not felt, beloved, in some quiet hour, in the
    secret of your closet, that you were going through a decisive battle which
    no mortal saw. Within the silent walls of your chamber an issue was being
    decided which would affect all eternity. The question was, should you be
    true to God, should you trust Him, should you obey God, or should you compromise?
    It was a great thing for you that you gained the victory, but it was a greater
    thing for your Lord. Oh, how intently He watches these spectacles! How the
    ranks of hell and heaven look on as some David and Goliath fight alone amidst
    the gaze of other worlds! How your Saviour's brow flushes with shame if you
    betray Him, or even shrink! How the ranks of hell shout with satisfaction
    when you betray the slightest weakness! And how your Master smiles with glad
    approval and sees of the travail of His soul with satisfaction, as like some
    ancient hero you dare to answer, "Our God is able to deliver us, but if not
    we will not bow down to the graven image which thou hast set up."
 Do you know, beloved, that Christ's greatest victories were alone with God
    and the devil? No human eye saw that victory in the wilderness, but God saw
    it and was glorified. Shall we stand for Him, and so stand that He can count
    us, as He did His ancient prophet, His very towers and fortresses behind
    which He can intrench Himself and His cause, and say to us, "I have made
    thee this day a defenced city and an iron pillar and brazen walls against
    the whole land. They shall fight against thee, but they shall not prevail
    against thee. I have made thy face strong against their faces and thy forehead
    against their foreheads. As an adamant, harder than flint have I made thy
    forehead; fear them not, neither be dismayed at their looks though they be
    a rebellious house." God wants men and women today, on whom He can depend,
    to stand as bulwarks and battlements against the shocks of hell's artillery.
    Men and women of whom he can say, "upon this rock have I built my church
    and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." Shall we, beloved, be
    not only conquerors, but trusted soldiers whom God can use as His battle-axes
    and His weapons of war, as His mighty iron-clads, to carry the battle to
    the very ships of the enemy, not fearing their hardest blows, and hurling
    against them the thunder-bolts of His victorious power?
 
    "More than conquerors" means not only victory but final triumph and eternal
    reward. How Heaven will recompense her victors some glorious day! Two cities
    today are struggling for the tomb of the man who was honored in this land
    as the leader of the victorious army that won the battle of the Rebellion.
    He is honored simply because he was a conqueror. How little these earthly
    victories will seem some day in the light of the triumph of a Stephen, a
    Paul, a David Livingstone, or some gentle woman or lowly man, who stood faithful
    to God on some quiet battlefield which decided the issues of life, perhaps
    the future of nations and ages!
 
For four things Paul expected a crown, but the first of them was because
he had fought the good fight of faith. Among the special recompenses of the
Day of His Appearing there is a crown, not only for the martyr, not only
for the faithful minister, not only for those who love His appearing, but
for "the man that endureth temptation." "Blessed is the man that endureth
temptation, for when he is tried he shall receive the crown of life which
the Lord hath promised to them that love Him." There is a chance for all
of you. There is a chance for you who think that you have the hardest time
of any human being.
 
Beloved, it is but an opportunity for coronation. Will you not only triumph,
but so triumph that you shall wear a crown of life in which these tears which
you shed today shall flash as crystal diamonds, and these scars of battle
shall be transformed into marks of eternal beauty and everlasting honor?
 
But mere enthusiasm or even high and glorious purpose will not accomplish
this great result. It is "through Him that loved us" that we must overcome.
Thank God that is possible for us all! He whom Joshua saw as Captain of the
Lord's Host and whom Joshua took as his Great Commander-in-chief waits to
lead your battle and claim your victory too. "I have overcome for thee,"
He stands exclaiming by thy side. Commit thy conflict to His hands, take
Him into thy heart as strength, "be strong in the Lord and the power of His
might," and "put on the whole armor of God that ye may stand against the
wiles of the devil." "The battle is not yours but God's." "The Lord shall
fight for you, and ye shall hold your peace," and when all is accomplished
and the banner waves in triumph and the crown is bestowed, we shall drape
our battle-flags around His throne, and lay our diadems at His feet, and
cry, not the old version, "Thanks be unto God which always causeth us to
triumph," but "thanks be unto God which leadeth us in triumph through Jesus
Christ our Lord." "In all these things we are more than conquerors through
Him that loved us."
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