Fearlessness.
Peter the fearless.
There was a man among the one hundred
and twenty “upper room believers” in whom
Pentecost effected a most apparent and almost spectacular
change. It was Peter. We remember him as
the man at whom the young girl pointed her finger
and laughed. We recall that he was so cowardly
that he denied his Lord on the spot, swearing that
he did not know Him. Behold this same Peter on
the day of Pentecost. He is charging home the
murder of Christ. Fear is gone, and gone forever.
He faces men and does not flinch an iota. Carnality,
the source of cowardice, has been removed, and the
weakling is turned into a Lord Nelson for bravery,
and a Savonarola for faithfulness to men’s souls.
Shall we tremble?
Fear of man is one of the most illogical
things in the world. Men sell the blood of Jesus
and hope of heaven and eternal happiness because of
“what people say.” Think of it, afraid
of a man who will die and be hurried under ground
before he rots! Frightened at a thing dressed
in a long black coat and a white cravat with a golden-headed
cane and a tall hat and a frown; a thing which will
stop breathing some fine day and the worms will eat!
Shall I tremble when an ecclesiastical Leo utters a
roar? Shall I halt and stammer because a top-heavy
lad from a theological seminary, hopelessly in love
with himself, scowls at the word “sanctification”?
Queer courage.
There are some who bolster their courage
by saying ostentatiously, “I don’t care
what folks say,” but their very vehemence shows
that they do care a very great deal. We
boys all remember how we used to whistle when we passed
a graveyard after dark to show we “weren’t
afraid”; and how hard it was to keep our mouths
puckered and how shaky our legs felt!
Afraid to break step.
The folks we are afraid of are afraid
of us. What a situation! A great regiment
of people marching straight down to hell, everyone
afraid to break step for fear the others will laugh!
That is precisely the condition of nearly every sinner.
Courage of thermopylaec.
Sanctification takes away the shrinking
timidity and puts in a courage like that at Thermopylae.
There was once a young man who, previous to his sanctification,
was so timid that he frequently stayed away from church
for no other reason than that he feared God might ask
him to testify. He enjoyed meetings and loved
to hear preaching, but the very idea of testimony
would frighten him almost ill. Now he frequently
addresses many hundreds and never feels the slightest
embarrassment.
Unmask pruriency.
The ministry is sadly in need of a
blessing which will give it courage to attack sin
of all kinds and degrees. We need men who will
rip the mask off the putrid face of corruption and
pronounce God’s sentence upon it; who will lift
up the trap-door of the cess-pools of men’s
hearts and bid them look within at their own slime
and filth; who will “cry aloud and spare not,”
though the infuriated cohorts of bat-winged demons
snarl and shriek.
Speak plainly.
There will be a day when men will
curse us because we have not preached more plainly.
You can call a spade “a spade” or you can
designate it as “an iron utensil employed for
excavating purposes,” but if you want folks
to understand what you are driving at use the shorter
term.
Shooting over men’s heads.
There is too little plain Anglo-Saxon
preaching. We shoot far over the heads of our
congregations and do not even scar the varnish on the
gallery banister. We dwell on the points of distinction
between Calvinism and Arminianism when the greater
part of our people do not know the difference between
an Arminian and an Armenian, and some good old sister
thinks we are preaching on the cruelty of the Turks.
Here I am discussing “The Dangers of Imperialism”
and “The Anglo-American Friendship,” while
men are starving for the Bread of Life! Brethren
in the ministry, let us be less anxious about the
syllogistic accuracy of our sermons and be more eager
to help men live right and quit sin and go to heaven.
The pulpit Cannon.
There are many sins which few men
have the courage to antagonize in public. Theoretically
the pulpit is supposed to cannonade all sin of every
variety and species, but, alas, it is usually too cowardly.
The Spirit-filled man fears no one from Sandow down
to Tom Thumb, from a plug-hat Bishop to a little pusilanimous
dude preacher.
Ghastly crimes.
It is not that ministers are unawares
of the prevalence of black and ghastly crimes, but
that they dare not speak openly against them.
Too many are contaminated with evil and involved in
guilt for the preacher to voice with impunity the
truths which burn in his soul. He knows only
too well that if he dares assert his manhood and exercises
the prerogative of Christ’s minister, the retribution
will be swift and terrible, viz: ejectment from his pastorate!
Murder.
How ominous is the silence concerning
murder. And yet the land is swarming with crimson-handed
murderers and murderesses. Many of them are members
of our “best churches” and move in the
most select society. Some of them read with animation
the responses in church service and repeat the Lord’s
Prayer with the greatest gusto. A few not
many, we devoutly trust talk about “sanctification.”
Poor, deluded, hoodwinked souls! they are blinded
by Satan. Their hands are red with blood, and
their hearts are black as hell. Were they to ever
approach the heaven of which they sanctimoniously
prate, they would be met at the gate with the curse
of murdered infants who never saw the light.
Infanticide.
If there is a pitiable sight in all
God’s great universe, if there is a scene over
which angels shed tears and demons shriek laughter,
it is an old cruel-eyed mother, who has seared her
conscience and sinned away all noble womanliness and
blasted her own soul, whispering into the unsoiled
ears of her daughter the way in which to murder her
own offspring; and if there is a hot hell, such a
mother will make her bed in it.
Poodle-dogs.
The duties and cares of maternity
are too irksome, and so the women who might be the
mothers of John Wesleys and Fenelons and Metchers and
Inskips and Cookmans are petting poodle-dogs and rat-terriers.
The vitriol of wrath.
How many preachers dare speak in clarion
tones what religion and science concur in asserting
concerning vice? But know ye by these presents,
all of Adam’s race, that what depraved humanity
pronounces all right and harmless, the Almighty God
who whirls the worlds will corrode and scald with
the burning vitriol of His wrath, and woe! woe! woe!
to the man or woman with whom is found sin.
Gilt-edged frauds.
Any tyro knows who drowned Morgan,
but the clergyman who “opens up” on Masonry
is a curiosity. Why, how can the ministers say
anything when they are the chaplains of these gilt-edged
frauds called “lodges”? It does not
take much calculation to show that an institution which
spends three dollars in giving away one has no right
to exist. Some of the more weak-minded and puerile
of the clergy are doubtless in fear lest their “tongues
should be torn out by the roots and their hearts buried
in the rough sands of the seashore.” Brave
men are not so easily scared.
Bologna sausage.
Secretism in itself is suspicious.
Solon said that he wanted his house so constructed
that the people could see him at all hours and thus
know him to be a good man. A system which is
so built that the public is kept in the dark is entitled
to the attention of a Pinkerton. Bologna sausage
made in a factory at the door of which is a huge sign,
“No Admittance,” may be all right, but
you can not make people think so.
The entertainment.
There are few preachers so foolish
and illogical as to believe that the entertainment
plan is the best way to raise money for church work,
yet scarcely one of them declares his honest straight-forward
conviction about it. Now and then a Hale, more
daring than the rest, writes a remonstrative article
for the Forum, but the great mass keep quiet.
A Pentecostal ministry will wheel its guns into position
and load and fire into the supper and festival crowd
notwithstanding the voices of objectors.
Heroism.
Whatever may be the matter under consideration
the sanctified man dares anything right. God
is with him, and he feels His presence. Right
is right, and by the grace of God he will stand by
it though all the world howl and roar.