"THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER"
OR
"HEROISM--THE LOST CHORD OF CHRISTIANITY"
BY C. T. STUDD
Heroism is the lost chord; the mission note of
present-day
Christianity!
Every true soldier is a hero!
A soldier without heroism is A
chocolate soldier! Who has not been
stirred to scorn and mirth at the very thought of
a Chocolate Soldier! In peace true soldiers are
captive lions, fretting in their cages. War gives
them their liberty and sends them, like boys bounding
out of school, to obtain their heart’s desire
or perish in the attempt. Battle is the soldier’s
vital breath! Peace turns him into a stooping
asthmatic. War makes him a whole man again, and
gives him the heart, strength, and vigor of a hero.
Every true Christian
is A soldier of Christ a
hero “par excellence”! Braver than
the bravest scorning the soft seductions
of peace and her oft-repeated warnings against hardship,
disease, danger, and death, whom he counts among his
bosom friends.
The otherwise Christian
is A chocolate Christian! Dissolving
in water and melting at the smell of fire. “Sweeties”
they are! Bonbons, lollipops! Living
their lives on a glass dish or in a cardboard box,
each clad in his soft clothing, a little frilled white
paper to preserve his dear little delicate constitution.
Here are some portraits of
chocolate soldiers taken by the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself.
“He said, ‘I go, sir,’
and went not”; he said he would go to the heathen,
but stuck fast to Christendom instead.
“They say and do not” they
tell others to go, and yet do not go themselves.
“Never,” said General Gordon to a corporal,
as he himself jumped upon the parapet of a trench
before Sebastopol to fix a gabion which the corporal
had ordered a private to fix, and wouldn’t fix
himself, “Never tell another man to do what you
are afraid to do yourself.”
To the Chocolate Christian the very
thought of war brings a violent attack of ague, while
the call to battle always finds him with the palsy.
“I really cannot move,” he says. “I
only wish I could, but I can sing, and here are some
of my favorite lines:
“I must be carried to the skies
On a flowery bed of ease,
Let others fight to win the prize,
Or sail thro’ bloody seas.
Mark time, Christian heroes,
Never go to war;
Stop and mind the babies
Playing on the floor.
Wash and dress and feed them
Forty times a week.
Till theyre roly poly
Puddings so to speak.
Chorus:
Round and round the nursery
Let us ambulate
Sugar and spice and all that’s nice
Must be on our slate.”
“Thank the good Lord,”
said a very fragile, white-haired lady, “God
never meant me to be a jelly-fish!” She wasn’t!
God never was A chocolate
manufacturer, and never will be.
God’s men are always heroes. In Scripture
you can trace their giant foot-tracks down the sands
of time.
Noah walked with God, he didn’t
only preach righteousness, he acted it. He went
through water and didn’t melt. He breasted
the current of the popular opinion of his day, scorning
alike the hatred and ridicule of the scoffers who
mocked at the thought of there being but one way of
salvation. He warned the unbelieving and, entering
the ark himself, didn’t open the door an inch
when once God had shut it. A real hero untained
by the fear of man.
Learn to scorn the praise of men.
Learn to lose with God;
Jesus won the world thro’ shame!
And beckons us His road.
Abraham, a simple farmer, at
a word from the Invisible God, marched, with family
and stock, through the terrible desert to a distant
land to live among a people whose language he could
neither speak nor understand! Not bad that!
But later he did even better, marching hot foot against
the combined armies of five kings, flushed with recent
victory, to rescue one man! His army? Just
318 odd fellows, armed like a circus crowd. And
he won too. “He always wins who sides with
God.” What pluck! Only a farmer!
No war training! Yet what hero has eclipsed his
feat? His open secret? He was the friend
of god.
Moses the man of God was
a species of human chameleon scholar, general,
law-giver, leader, etc. Brought up as the
Emperor’s grandson with more than a good chance
of coming to the throne, one thing only between him
and it Truth what a choice!
What a temptation! A throne for a lie! Ignominy,
banishment, or likely enough death for the truth!
He played the man! “Refusing to be called
the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, he chose rather
to suffer affliction with the people of God than to
enjoy the pleasures of sin and success for a season,
accounting the reproach of Christ greater riches than
the treasures of Egypt.”
Again I see him. Now an old man
and alone, marching stolidly back to Egypt, after
forty years of exile, to beard the lion in his den,
to liberate Pharaoh’s slaves right under his
very nose, and to lead them across that great and
terrible wilderness. A wild-cat affair,
if ever there was one! When were God’s
schemes otherwise? Look at Jordan, Jericho, Gideon,
Goliath, and scores of others. Tame tabby-cat
schemes are stamped with another hall mark that
of the Chocolate Brigade! How dearly they love
their tabbies yet think themselves wise men!
Real Christians Revel in desperate
ventures for Christ, expecting from
God great things and attempting the same with exhilaration.
History cannot match these feats of Moses. How
was it done? He consulted not with flesh and
blood, he obeyed not men but God.
Once again I see the old grey-beard,
this time descending the Mount with giant strides
and rushing into the camp, his eyes blazing like burning
coals. One man against three million dancing dervishes
drunk with debauchery. Bravo! Well done,
old man! First class! His cheek pales not,
but his mouth moves, and I think I catch his words,
“If God be for me who can be against me?
I will not be afraid of 10,000 of the people that
have set themselves against me. Though a host
should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear.”
And he didn’t. He wins again. Whence
this desperate courage? Listen! “Now
the man Moses was very meek above all the men which
were upon the face of the earth.” “The
Lord spake unto Moses face to face as a man speaketh
unto his friend.” “My servant, Moses,”
said his Master, “is faithful in all Mine house,
with him will I speak mouth to mouth.” Such
is the explanation of Moses the chameleon, the man
and friend of God and consequently a first-class hero.
David the man after
God’s own heart was a man of war and
a mighty man of valour. When all Israel were
on the run, David faced Goliath alone ...
with God and he but a stripling, and well
scolded too by his brother for having come to see
the battle. What a splendid fool Eliab must have
been! as though David would go to see a battle and
not stay to fight. They are chocolate
soldiers who merely go to
see Battles, and coolly urge
others to fight them. They
had better save their journey money and use it to
send out real fighters instead. Soldiers don’t
need dry nurses, and if they did the Holy Ghost is
always on the spot and ready to undertake any case
on simple application. No! David went to
the battle and stayed to fight, and won! Wise
beyond his years, he had no use for Saul’s armour.
It cramped his freedom of action. He tried it
on and took it off, quick sharp. And, besides,
it made such a ghastly rattle, even when he walked,
that he could not hear the still small voice of God,
and would never have heard Him saying afterwards,
“This is the way to the brook, David! and there
are the five smooth stones! Trust only in Me
and them. Your own home-made sling will do first
class, and there! that’s the shortest cut to
Goliath.” The chocolates ran
away they were all Chocolates but
David ran upon Goliath. One smooth stone was
enough.
David’s secret was that he had
but one Director, and He, the Infallible One.
He directed the stone, as He directed the youth.
Too many directors spoil the sport, and two are too
many by just one. Thus Christ said to His soldiers:
“He shall teach you all things, he
shall guide you into all the truth.”
“This is My Beloved Son: Hear
him.”
“One mediator only, between God
and Man, the man Christ Jesus.”
One director of Christian
men god the holy ghost.
Whose directions require indeed instant obedience,
but not the endorsement of any man.
The devil needs Red-hot
shot, Fresh from the Foundry
of the holy ghost. He laughs at
cold shot or tepid, and as for that made of half-iron
and half-clay, half-divine and half-human, why you
might just as well pelt him with snowballs.
Whence did this raw youth derive his
pluck and skill? Not from military camps, nor
theological schools, nor religious retreats. “To
know The Only True God and Jesus Christ,” is
enough. Paul determined to know only Jesus Christ,
and look at the grand result! Whilst others were
learning pretty theories, David, like John, had been
alone with God in the wilds, practising on bears and
lions. The result? He knew god
and did exploits. He knew God only.
He trusted God only. He obeyed God only.
That’s the secret. God alone gives strength.
God adulterated with men entails the weakness of iron
and clay Chocolate brittleness!
Yet hero as he was, even David alas!
once played the rôle of Chocolate Soldier. He
stayed at home when he should
have Gone to war. His army,
far off, in danger, fighting the enemy, won. David,
at home, secure, within sight of God’s house
and often going there, suffered the one great defeat
of his life, entailing such a bitter, life-long reaping
as might well deter others from the folly of sowing
wild oats. David’s sin is a terrific sermon
(like Lot’s preaching in Sodom must have been),
its theme Don’t be
A chocolate soldier!”
In his simple, quick, and full confession,
David proved himself a man again. It takes a
real man to make a true confession a Chocolate
Soldier will excuse or cloak his sin. He tumbles
in the mud, flounders on, wipes his mouth to try to
get the bad taste of his acted lie out of it, and
then goes on his way saying, “I have done no
wickedness.” A self-murdering fool!
Killing his conscience to save his face, like Balaam
beating the ass who sought to save his master’s
life. Being a Chocolate Soldier nearly did for
David. Beware!
Nathan was another real Christian
Soldier. He went to his king and rebuked him
to his face, like Peter’s dealing with Ananias
(only David embraced his opportunity and confessed),
and unlike the Chocolate Soldiers of today who go
whispering about and refusing either to judge, rebuke,
or put away evil because of the entailed scandal forsooth.
Veritable Soapy Sams. They say “It is nothing!
nothing at all! A mere misunderstanding!”
As though God’s cause would suffer more through
a bold declaration and defense of the truth and the
use of the knife, than by the hiding up of sin, and
the certain development of mortification in the member,
involving death to the whole body. “He
that doeth righteousness is righteous,” and “he
that doeth sin is of the devil,” and ought to
be told so. He that is a second time led captive
by the devil needs neither plaster nor treacle, but
the brace rebuke and summons to repentance of a righteous
man to effect his salvation. We are
badly in need of Nathans
today, who fear God and nought else, no, not even
a scandal.
Daniel was another hero.
Of course he was! Was he not the man greatly
beloved of God who sent an angel to tell him so?
I love to watch him as he walks, with
firm step and radiant face, to the lions’ den,
stopping but once like his Master en route
to Calvary to comfort his weeping and agonized
emperor. God shut the mouths of the lions against
Daniel, but opened them wide against those who had
opened their mouths against His servant.
A man is known by his works, and the
works of Daniel were his three friends, who, rather
than bow down to men or gold, braved the fiery furnace.
Again we see him going to the banquet
hall, and hear his conductor whisper in his ear, “Draw
it mild, Daniel, be statesmanlike. Place and
power again for you if you are tactful and wise especially
tactful!” And Daniel’s simple reply, “Get
thee behind me, Satan!” There he stands before
the king, braving torture or instant death but
it’s the king who quails, not Daniel who
tells him to his face the whole hot truth of God,
diminishing not a jot.
John the Baptist a
man taught and made and sent of God good
old John! Who doesn’t love and admire him?
Why, even Herod did. A genuine deficiency of
oil and treacle in his composition. He always
told the bang flat truth, with emphasis. As he
loved, so he warned. He knew not how to fawn.
He wooed with the Sword, and
“Men” Loved him the
better for it. They always do.
The leaders of religion sent to John
to ask him the dearly loved question of every Pharisee,
“By what authority doest thou these (good) things?”
They asked that of Christ Himself, and crucified Him
for the doing of them. John’s answer was
plain and pungent, “I will tell you what you
ask, and more. (John was always liberal!) I? I
am nobody, but ye and your masters are a generation
of vipers.” A good hot curry, that!
John never served his curries with butter sauce, but
he was always very liberal with chutney a man of God no Sugar Plum
nor chocolate soldier he!
Thus also he faced Herod after six
months in an underground dungeon, and he a man of
“God’s Open-air Mission”. Brought
straight in before the king; surrounded with all the
might and majesty of camp and court; blinking at the
unaccustomed sight of light, but by no means putting
blinkers on the truth, he blurted out his hot and thunderous
rebuke, “Thou shalt not have that woman to be
thy wife.” A whole sermon in one sentence,
as easy to remember as impossible to forget.
John had preached like that before; like Hugh Latimer,
he was not above repeating a good sermon to a king,
word for word, when the king had not given sufficient
heed to it.
John received the unique distinction
of a first-class character from both God and the agent
of the devil. Hark to the Savior indulging in
an outburst of exquisite sarcasm, “What think
ye of John? A reed shaken by the wind? A
man clothed in soft raiment?” A Chocolate Christian?
(How delicious! The Chocolates were right in front
of Jesus at the time Pharisees, Sadducees,
priests, scribes, lawyers, and other hypocrites.
How the crowd must have enjoyed it!) “A prophet?
Nay, much more than a prophet! Of men born of
women there is none greater than John.”
And what did the devil’s agent say when, after
John’s death, he heard of Jesus? “This,”
I tell you, “is John risen from the dead.”
What a character! Fancy Jesus being mistaken
for anyone! He could have been mistaken only for
John. Nobody envies him the well-deserved honour,
great though it was, for John was a man pure
granite right through, with not a grain of chocolate
in him.
Had John but heard Jesus say, “Ye
shall be My witnesses unto the uttermost parts of
the earth,” I very much doubt if Herod’s
dungeon, or his soldiers, could have detained him.
He surely would have found some means of escape, and
run off to preach Christ’s Gospel, if not in
the very heart of Africa, then in some more difficult
and dangerous place. Yet Christ said, referring
to His subsequent gift of the Holy Ghost to every
believer, “He that is least in the kingdom of
God is greater than he,” intimating that even
greater powers than those of John are at the disposal
of every Christian, and that what John was, each one
of us can be good, straight, bold, unconquerable,
heroic.
But here are other foot-tracks outrageous ones: they
can belong only to one man that
grandest of Christian paradoxes the
little giant Paul whose
head was as big as his body, and his heart greater
than both. Once he thought and treated every
Christian as a combination of knave and fool.
Then he became one himself. He was called “fool”
because his acts were so far beyond the dictates of
human reason, and “mad” because of his
irresponsible fiery zeal for Christ and men. A
first-class scholar, but one who knew how to use scholarship
properly; for he put it on the shelf, declaring the
wisdom of men to be but folly, and determined to know
nothing else save Jesus Christ and Him crucified.
The result he made the world turn somersault.
His life was a perpetual gamble for God. Daily
he faced death for Christ. Again and again he
stood fearless before crowds thirsting for his blood.
He stood before kings and governors and “turned
not a hair”. He didn’t so much as
flinch before Nero, that vice-president of hell.
His sufferings were appalling; read them. He trod
in his Master’s footsteps, and so received God
is always just in His favors the same splendid
compliment that Jesus did. “All forsook
him.” So there were some Chocolate Christians
in those days too. Anyone who forsook Paul must
have been made of Chocolate. Doubtless the “Chocolates”
excused themselves as they do today. “Who
could abide such a fanatical, fiery fool? such an
uncompromising character? Nobody could work with
him, or he with them!” (What a lie! Jesus
did, and they got on well together.) A tactless enthusiast,
who considered it his business to tell every man the
unvarnished truth regardless of consequences.
He won his degree hands down, and without a touch of
the spur. A first-class one, too that
of the headman’s axe next best to
that of the cross.
And so the tale goes on. Go where
you will through the Scriptures or history, you find
that men who really knew God, and didn’t merely
say they did, were invariably Paragons of Pluck; Dare-Devil
Desperadoes for Jesus; Gamblers for God. “Fools
and Madmen,” shout the world and the Chocolates.
“Yes, for Christ’s sake,” add the
Angels!
Nobly they fought to win the prize,
Climbing the steep ascents of heaven,
Thro’ peril, toil, and
pain.
O God, to us let grace be given,
To follow in their train.
The Chocolate Christians of today
can at least boast of having ancient pedigrees.
There are chocolates A La Reuben, who
have great searchings of heart, and make great resolves
of heart too. But somehow they still sit among
the sheepfolds, listening to the pipings of their
much-loved organs and church choirs. It’s
good to have a great heartsearching. It’s
better to make a great heart-resolve. But, if
instead of obeying, we squat among the sheep, leaving
our few hard-pressed brethren to tackle the wolves
by themselves, verily we are but Chocolate Christians.
You made a great resolve to go to Africa for Christ
a year or two ago. Where are you now? In
England? Yes! Yes! Lollipop! (Judges
5:16.)
There are chocolates Meroz,
who earned the curse of the angel of the Lord.
War was declared; the battle about to begin; the odds
were outrageous, and Meroz remained in England attending
conventions until the battle was over, then he went,
in comfort and security, as a Cook’s tourist!
Doubtless they said, “They couldn’t fight
till they had been properly ordained, and, besides,
there was so very much to be done in fat, overfed
Meroz, and surely to feed a flock of fat sheep in
a safe place has always been considered the ideal training
of war”; as though the best training for the
soldier was to become a nurse-maid!!! (Judges 5:23.)
Chocolates Du Balaam
begin first-class, and earn the name of prophets.
Then they develop a squint, melt, and finally run out
of the frying-pan into the fire, thus Balaam.
One day he couldn’t get his
left eye to look at God. It would look at earth
and mammon and that chit of a girl, Miss Popularity.
He ought to have done as God told him, and plucked
it out. But he said that was too much to ask
of any man, and besides he wanted the best of both
worlds. He had a hearty desire to die the death
of the righteous, but he wasn’t willing to pay
the price of a righteous life. He hadn’t
the pluck to curse God’s people, so he made plans
for others to make them sin. But one day, while
his dupes were putting his chestnuts into the fire,
they fell in themselves, and Balaam with them (Numbers
22-24).
“I counsel thee to buy of me
eyesalve, that thou mayest once again have a single
eye, and be enabled to see the folly of flirting with
the world.”
Chocolate Demas, who left
old fiery hard-hitting Paul for an easier path.
He said he thought Paul should wink at, or slobber
over sin, instead of rebuking it. “He was
so very fond of the knife, you know; and he never
would use sticking-plaster, because he said it never
healed the sore but made it burrow underneath and become
bigger, worse, and dangerous” (2 Timothy 4:10).
Mark joined the Chocolate Brigade
once. He left Paul and Barnabas in the lurch,
and went back to Jerusalem for a rest cure a
religious retreat. Thank God he got sick of it
ere long, resigned his commission, and re-enlisting
in God’s army became a useful soldier (Acts
13:13).
Many Fine youngsters
are turned into chocolates by
old prophets. Old prophets who have
lost their fire, or fire off words instead of deeds,
usually become Great Chocolate Manufacturers.
That poor young prophet. He did so well when
he obeyed God only, but it was all over with him when
he listened to another voice, even though that of an
old prophet. Didn’t the old prophet say
he was a prophet? and say he’d got the message
straight from God? What a damnable lie! The
floor of Christendom and elsewhere is littered with
wrecks made by old prophets. God won’t
stand nonsense from any man. Every man has to
choose between Christ and Barabbas, and every Christian
between God and some old prophet. Better be a
silly donkey in the estimation of an old prophet than
listen to his soft talk and flattery, and afterwards
become a wreck. “This is My beloved Son,
hear him.” No! not even Moses, nor
Elijah, nor both. “Hear him.”
“You have an anointing from God, and you have
no need that any man teach you.” You say
you believe the Bible! do your deeds give the lie to
your words? (1 Kings 13).
The ten Spies were
chocolates. They melted and ran over the
whole congregation of Israel, turning them into chocolate
creams “softies”, afraid
to face the fire and water before them. God put
them all into the saucepan again and boiled them for
forty years in the desert, and left them there.
He has no use for Chocolates. It’s not
small things He despises, but “Chocolates”;
for He said, “Your little ones shall inherit
the promised land which you have forfeited through
listening to men and despising Me” (Numbers 13).
Jonah became a Chocolate Soldier
once. Told to go to Africa, he went to Liverpool
and took ship for America. Luckily he met a storm
and a whale which, after three days’ instruction,
taught him how to pray and obey, and set him once
again on the right track (Jonah 1).
There’s nothing that shows up
chocolates so much as a bit of a breeze among
God’s people. Paul and Barnabas had one
once. Judging from experience, I guess there
were some Chocolates about then who got into a fog
right away! Before that, they had vowed they would
go to the heathen; but this breeze between P. and
B. put them off. If they hadn’t been made
of chocolate they would have said, “This
affair between Paul and Barnabas only makes it more
necessary for me to keep close to God, and do what
He told me to do more exactly and punctually; so I
shall go a bit sooner to Africa that’s
all!”
Difficulties, dangers, disease, death,
or divisions don’t deter any but Chocolates
from executing God’s Will. When someone
says there’s a lion in the way, the real Christian
promptly replies, “That’s hardly enough
inducement for me; I want a bear or two besides to
make it worth my while to go.”
Chocolates are very fond of talking
loud and long against some whom they call fanatics,
as though there were any danger of Christians being
fanatics nowadays! Why, fanatics among Christians
are as rare as the “dodo”. Now, if
they declaimed against “tepidity”, they
would talk sense. God’s real people have
always been called fanatics. Jesus was called
mad; so was Paul; so was Whitfield, Wesley, Moody,
Spurgeon. No one has graduated far in God’s
School who has not been paid the compliment of being
called a fanatic. We Christians of today are
indeed a tepid crew. Had we but half the fire
and enthusiasm of the Suffragettes in the past, we
would have the world evangelized and Christ back among
us in no time. Had we the pluck and heroism of
the Flyers, or the men who volunteered for the North
or South Polar Expeditions, or for the Great War,
or for any ordinary dare-devil enterprise, we could
have every soul on earth knowing the name and salvation
of Jesus Christ in less than ten years.
Alas! What stirs ordinary men’s
blood and turns them into heroes, makes most Christians
run like a flock of frightened sheep. The Militants
daily risked their lives in furtherance of their cause,
and subscribed of their means in a way that cried
“Shame” on us Christians, who generally
brand the braving of risks and fighting against odds
as a “tempting of God”.
Chocolate caramels “stick-jaw”,
boys call them jawing, “I go, sir,”
and sticking fast in Christendom. No conquest
is made in assured safety, and conquest for Christ
certainly cannot so be made.
We Christians too often substitute
prayer for playing the Game.
Prayer is good: but when used as a substitute
for obedience, it is naught but a blatant hypocrisy,
a despicable Pharisaism. We need as many meetings
for action as for prayer perhaps more.
Every orthodox prayer-meeting is opened by God saying
to His people, “Go work today; pray that laborers
be sent into My vineyard.” It is continued
by the Christian’s response, “I go, Lord,
whithersoever Thou sendest me, that Thy Name may be
hallowed everywhere, that Thy Kingdom may come speedily,
that Thy Will may be done on earth as in heaven.”
But if it ends in nobody going anywhere, it had better
never have been held at all. Like faith, prayer
without works is dead. That is why many prayer-meetings
might well be styled “much cry, yet little wool”.
Zerubbabel didn’t only hold prayer-meetings;
he went and cut down trees, and started to build.
Hence God said, “From this day will I bless
thee.”
Report says that someone has re-discovered
the secret of the old masters. Cannot we Christians
re-discover, and put into practice, that of our Great
Master and His former pupils, Heroism? He and
they saved not themselves; they loved not their lives
to the death, and so kept on saving them by losing
them for Christ’s sake.
We are FRITTERING away
time and money in A multiplicity
of conventions, conferences, and retreats,
when the real need is to go straight and full steam
into battle, with the signal for “close action”
flying.
The “Vox Humana” plays
too important a part in our Christian organs and organizations
today. The music, whoever plays, is bound to be
thin when the tops of “Instant Obedience”
and “Fiery Valor” are missing or unused,
and without them to play the “Lost Chord”
of Heroism is an impossibility.
“Whatsoever he saith unto you,
do it,” said the Blessed Virgin. Do what?
Not put treacle and spice into the soft holy vessels
inside the house, but pour the Water of Life into
those empty stone ones outside. Cana’s
marriage feast would have ended in shame had the wine
run short. Christ’s marriage feast begins
only when the wine is sufficient a blend
from every tongue and kindred and tribe and nation.
The supply is assured, as soon as the water is poured
out as Christ directed, into “the uttermost
parts of the earth”. The mischief today
is the reluctance of the servants to do the outside
work. They all want to serve indoors, wear smart
clothes, listen to the conversation, and make a terrible
lot of themselves in the butler’s pantry.
Do let us make
A real Start now at
once. For years, like Mr. Winkle, we’ve
declared we were just about to begin, and then never
began at all.
We must divorce Chocolate and Disobedience,
and marry Faith and Heroism.
“Who shall begin the battle?”
asked the king. “Thou,” replied the
prophet, and when the king and the young princes led
the way, though the odds against them were terrific,
they won with ridiculous ease. So, too, the
apostles led in the war of
god to the uttermost parts of the earth.
Likewise in the Crusades, the kings and princes of
State and Church led; then why not today in the
crusade of Christ to evangelize
the world?
God’s summons today
is to the young men and
women of great Britain and
America and Christendom, who call
themselves by the name of
Christ. “New wine,” said Christ,
“must be placed in New bottles.”
Those superfluously labelled and patched-up old-fashioned
ones are as hopeless as the New Theology. They
can’t be moved lest they burst with pride and
spill the wine in the wrong place.
Listen: “And it shall be
in the last days, I will pour forth of My Spirit upon
all flesh. Your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, your young men shall see visions (of faith),
your old men shall dream dreams (of valorous obedience);
yea, and on My bondmen and on my bondmaidens in those
days will I pour forth of My Spirit, and they shall
prophesy; and I will show wonders in the heaven above
and signs in the earth beneath; and it shall be that
whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall
be saved.” But how can they call on Him
of whom they have not even heard? Must you stay,
young man? Can’t you go, young woman, and
tell them? Verily we are in the last the
Laodicean stage that of the Lukewarm Church.
Wilt thou be to Christ the partner
of His throne or an emetic (Revelation 3:21); a Militant
or a Chocolate Christian? Wilt thou fear or wilt
thou fight? Shall your brethren go to war and
shall ye sit here? When He comes, shall He find
faith on the earth?
A thousand times you have admitted Christ’s
Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands your life, your soul, your all.
Wilt thou be a miser and withhold
what honour demands of thee? Wilt thou give like
Ananias and Sapphira, who, pretending to give all,
gave only part?
Possessing and enjoying the vineyard,
wilt thou, like the husbandman, refuse the agreed
rent? Wilt thou fear death, or devil, or men?
And wilt thou not fear shame?
Some shall rise to everlasting life,
and some to shame and everlasting contempt.
Shall we refuse to emulate the heroes of old, or shall we
accomplish the double fulfillment of those glorious words?
All these being men of war came with
a perfect heart to make Jesus King over all the world.
They were all mighty men of valor for the war!
He that was least was equal to a hundred, and the greatest
to a thousand! They were not of double heart!
Their faces were like the faces of lions! They
were as swift as the roes upon the mountains (to do
their Lord’s commands)! Ye sought in time
past, for Jesus to be King over you. Now,
then, do it. (Compare 1 Chro:8,
33 and 38, and 2 Samuel 3:17 and 18.)
Shall we not reply: Thine are
we, Jesus, and on Thy side. God do so to me,
and more also, if as God has sworn unto Him, I do not
even so to Jesus to translate the kingdom
from the house of Satan, and set up the throne of
Jesus Christ over all the world. (Compare 1 Chro:18 and 2 Sa:10.)
Come, then, let us restore the Lost Chord of Christianity heroism to
the world, and the crown of the world to Christ.
Christ Himself asks thee, “Wilt thou be a Malingerer
or a Militant?”
To your knees, man! and to your Bible!
Decide at once! Don’t hedge! Time
flies! Cease your insults to God, quit consulting
flesh and blood. Stop your lame, lying, and cowardly
excuses.
Enlist! Here are your papers
and oath of allegiance. Scratch out one side
and sign the other in the presence of God and the recording
angel. Mark God’s endorsements underneath:
Henceforth:
For me To live is Christ.
To die is gain.
I’ll be a militant.
A man of God.
A gambler for Christ.
A hero.
Sign here
..................
OR
For me Chocolate my name.
Tepidity my temperature.
A malingerer I.
A child of Men.
A self-excuser.
A humbug.
Sign here
..................
God’s promises are sure in either case:
“Lo, I am with you alway.”
OR
“I will spew thee out of My mouth.”
Good Lord!
Baptize us with the Holy Ghost, and with fire;
Cure us of all this dread plague of
Sleeping Sickness, this crazy talking in our sleep,
that even as we unceasingly pray,
Thy Name may be hallowed everywhere;
Thy Kingdom come speedily;
Thy Will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Amen and Amen!