God Wants the Best.
Salvation is for all. Service
is for those chosen for it. All may serve.
That all do not is simply because service requires
qualities which all do not have. Yet, again,
all may have them who will, for the required qualities
are heart qualities. And every one of us
can cultivate the heart qualities. There is special
service, chiefly of leadership, requiring brain qualities
as well as heart. But the Master attends to the
choosing of men for such service.
And where His spirit has touched human
hearts there will be a glad doing of just what service
He appoints. It will be an honor to do just what
He asks because He asks. What it may happen to
be will be a small matter in itself. It is for
Him, at His desire, and that is full enough to bring
out the best we have.
Our old Tarsus and Antioch friend
and leader has written a special word about this matter
of being chosen for service. It is in his first
letter to the recently organized church at Corinth.
It is really his second letter, for he seems to have
written one before it that has not been preserved.
There were some very serious matters in this new church
requiring strong treatment by its much-loved founder.
Among them was one about service.
There were some who had gifts in service
that seemed more attractive and desirable than others
had, it might be said more showy. And their brethren,
not free from the old worldly spirit, were envious
and jealous. And these who had such gifts were
not free from a boasting spirit. Factions or
parties had arisen as a result. It was the bad
world spirit of competition and rivalry in among Christ’s
followers where it should never come, yet where it
still does come. In writing this letter Paul throughout
blends great plainness and common sense with great
tenderness.
In the beginning of his letter he
calls attention to the fact that there are not many
among them of those who were reckoned by the world’s
standards as wise or mighty or noble. On the contrary,
in choosing His leaders God had purposely chosen those
reckoned by the world’s standards foolish that
He might show plainly the shallowness of what they
deem wise. And so things reckoned weak had been
chosen to give the conception of what true strength
is. And things even base, and despised, and not
counted at all had been used that so men might learn
the God-standards of wisdom and strength and honor
and of what is worth while. The purpose being
that men should quit glorying in themselves and glorify
Him from whom everything had come, and was ever coming.
The passage has oftentimes been quoted
as though God prefers weakness; never put so bluntly
as that perhaps, but plainly meaning that. That
of course is not true. God wants the best we
have. He needs the best. And for leadership
often His plans must wait till a man of the sort needed
can be gotten. And gotten frequently means broken,
shattered, and then made over wholly new, that the
native strength may be used according to true standards.
Jacob was chosen rather than his elder
brother Esau, not because of Jacob’s goodness
but because of Esau’s weakness. God was
narrowed to these two grandsons in carrying out the
promise to Abraham. Jacob was contemptible in
his moral dealings, but he had qualities of leadership
wholly lacking in his brother. His moral character
was a serious hindrance. God had to handle him
heroically before He could get the use of his stronger
mental equipment. Jacob had to get a bad throw-down
before he would be willing to let God have His way.
His body must be weakened before his mental power
would yield. That was the weakness of his stubbornness.
Stubbornness is strength not strong enough to yield.
God’s Use of Weak Things.
It is true that over and over again
God has used men utterly weak and foolish and despised
in the light of life’s common standards.
He wants men of the best mental strength, of the finest
mental training, and He uses such when they are willing
to be used, and governed by the true God-standards
of life. But talent seems specially beset with
temptation. The very power to do great things
seems often to bewilder the man possessing it.
Wrong ambition gets the saddle and the reins and whip
too, and rides hard.
Frequently some man who had not guessed
he had talent, born in some lonely walk of life, without
the training of the schools, is used for special leadership.
It takes longer time always. Early mental training
is an enormous advantage. Carey the cobbler had
mental talents to grace a Cambridge chair. It
took a little longer time to get him into shape for
the pioneer work he did in India. Duff’s
training gave him a great advantage.
But God is never in a hurry.
He can wait. What He asks is that we shall bring
the best we have natively, with the best possible training,
and let Him use us absolutely as He may wish.
And always remember that every mental power is a gift
from Him; that actual power in life must be through
Him only; and that mental gifts are not serviceable
save as they are ever inbreathed by His own Spirit.
This word of Paul’s finds most
graphic illustration in the book of Judges. Judges
should be put alongside of the first chapter of First
Corinthians. It is a series of pictorial illustrations
of what Paul is saying there. These two books,
Joshua and Judges, side by side in the Old Testament
stand in sharpest contrast. The keynote of Joshua
is victory; of Judges defeat. There’s music
in both, but contrasted music. Joshua rings with
songs in the major key, triumphant, militant, joyous,
victorious.
The music of Judges is in the minor,
sad and weeping, with the harps hanging on the willows.
Joshua is upon the mountain top with sun shining and
air bracing and outlook inspiring. Judges is down
in the valley bottoms, dark and gloomy, and depressing.
Yet Judges has bright spots, and has spurts of good
music interspersed. It is a study in lights and
shadows, bright lights, and dark shadowings, but with
the blacker tints intensifying and overcoming the
others.
There are here seven striking illustrations
of God’s use of strange unusual means, such
as are reckoned weak and trivial. A left-handed
man uses that peculiarity to get a great victory and
eighteen years of freedom for the nation. A farmer
with as homely a weapon as an ox-goad delivers
his people from oppression. Men came to be so scarce,
that is men that were men enough to take their true
place as leaders, that a woman had to step
into the breach, and assume leadership. But the
student of history and of modern times is used to that.
The result was great victory, and a forty years’
rest from the nation’s enemies.
A nail or tent-pin,
only a wooden peg, in the hands of a woman with a
hammer helps to make the enemy’s defeat more
decisive. Three hundred young men with
pitchers and trumpets completely rout the three
armies of three nations, and bring another deliverance.
Another time a piece of a millstone shoved
over the wall by a woman turns the tide of battle
favorably. And as contemptible a thing as the jawbone
of an ass in the hands of one strong man is used
to slay a thousand men.
Call for Volunteers.
It is of one of these, one of the
most striking of these, that we are to talk together
awhile; the graphic story of Gideon and his band of
three hundred young fellows. Things were in bad
shape in the nation; about as bad in every way as
they could be. This time it was the Midianites
who overran the land, and held the leaderless people
in most abject slavery. With them were joined
two other nations, the Amalekites and the Children
of the East. When the crops were almost ready
to harvest, these raiders swooped in in great numbers
and destroyed all the crops and drove away all the
stock.
They harried the Israelites so that
life was made very miserable for them. They were
forced to flee from their farms and take refuge in
caves and dens and the fastnesses among the hills.
Then, as usual, when they got into bad shape the people
remembered God, and cried for help, and, as usual
with Him, He at once forgave them and planned another
great deliverance.
First of all Gideon the leader is
chosen out, and put through a bit of schooling.
That is a fascinating story of great helpfulness.
Then this trained young leader gathers his band of
helpers. And we want to mark keenly how these
three hundred men were sifted out of the thousands
for service. They were sifted out. They
sifted themselves out. In that army of thousands
were just three hundred who had the needed qualifications
for the bit of service God wanted done.
Look over the gathered thousands:
which are the chosen three hundred? No man knew.
They didn’t know themselves until the tests came.
They chose themselves out by the way they stood the
three tests applied. Even so is God ever sifting
out men for service. The more difficult the service,
the higher the grade of leadership needed, the severer
the test. The testing both reveals the qualities,
and in part makes them.
The first quality these men had was
willingness. They were all volunteers.
When the call came they rallied to the leader’s
side. Gideon sent runners, criers, out throughout
that whole section. They went first to his own
family clan, then to his tribe, then to three neighboring
tribes. They said that God had called upon Gideon
to lead a movement against the Midianites and their
allies and he wanted every man to come and help.
The messengers went swiftly through the whole territory
of these neighboring tribes, arousing the men to action
and calling for volunteers.
A good many did not respond to the
summons. Some were simply indifferent. They
could not help hearing the call, but there was no response
without or within. No change of expression in
the eye or face. They went right on in their
heavy, dull way as though they hadn’t heard.
They were utterly indifferent to the call. Some
were reluctant. They stopped and listened, but
with a heavy slant backwards to their bodies.
Their heels bore most of their weight. It was
a good idea to get up such a movement, the enemy ought
to be driven back and out, but-but-and
their eyes are half shut already.
Some criticised. Who was Gideon?
A young upstart! trying to push himself forward as
a leader. He had no skill or experience.
And the people had no weapons. The enemy had
stolen everything of the sort away. And they were
clear outnumbered. There wasn’t a ghost
of a show. It would only make bad matters worse.
This young upstart Gideon would soon be sorry enough
when he butted his head against the experienced Midianite
leaders. And-and-and-there
they are talking, criticising, but not responding to
the call. Such critics seldom respond, and helpers
criticise in a very different way. It takes less
brain to criticise unwisely, captiously, far less
than to help. Almost any hare-brain can tear a
thing to pieces. And nothing is commoner than
just such criticism.
Some ridiculed. “Ha! ha!
ha! Gideon going to be national leader; ha! ha!
ha! And whip the enemy. Ridiculous!
Absurd!” And some were outrightly opposed.
They objected. The people would be aroused, their
hopes awakened only to be dashed. The whole thing
was wrong, for it was impossible. And these men
tried to keep others from going.
A Willing People.
But many came. A crowd of volunteers
came hurrying from farms and caves, bringing such
weapons probably as they had been able to keep in hiding.
They were willing to respond. It was a motley
crowd, no doubt. There were thirty-two thousand
of them. These four tribes had once numbered as
many as one hundred and eighty-four thousand five
hundred fighting men. And at another, later,
enumeration they had two hundred and twelve thousand
men of war age. Their numbers may be smaller
now, though possibly not. It looks as though
only a small minority of all had responded, maybe one
in six or so.
These men had the first great qualification
for service, they were willing. They were actively
willing. They willed to come down to the front
and help fight the enemy, and deliver their nation.
It is a great quality this of being willing.
That prophetic One Hundred and Tenth Psalm mentions
this as the great characteristic of those who shall
rally about God’s King in a coming day of power.
God reckons our service not by our ability but by
our willingness.
Whatever is given out of a warm, willing
heart is eagerly accepted by Him. The Hebrew
tabernacle was constructed of free-will offerings.
The people came willingly with their offerings and
left them for Moses’ use. Some brought
gold and silver, some finely woven tapestries and silks.
Here was one poor woman who wanted to give but had
very little. So she went out to her little flock
of goats whereby her living came to her, and cut off
a big bunch of goat’s hair, and then with much
pains dyed it red.
And then one day she went up to where
they were presenting their gifts and timidly laid
her bunch of goat’s hair on the pile of offerings,
and quietly, quickly slipped away. It seemed
very small on that pile of gold and silver and richly-colored
weavings. But it was the gift of her heart.
They had to have goat’s hair as well as gold.
And her offering was acceptable because it came from
a willing heart. Willingness is a heart quality.
It is the heart volunteering.
“Our wills are ours
to make them Thine.”
This was the first test. Thirty-two
thousand out of four tribes stood this test.
Gideon’s army had one great qualification at
the start.
Courageous Volunteers.
Now these men are put to a second
test. The next morning God surprised Gideon by
telling him that he had too many men. If a victory
was given them with so many men they would feel that
they had done the thing themselves. They would
grow so large as to shut God out of their landscape.
There would be no getting along with them. Each
man would feel that he was the essential factor.
They would go back to the homefolks to tell of themselves.
God seems to know us folk down on the earth fairly
well.
Now He would lessen their numbers,
but in doing it He will pick out the best. The
men are encamped on the hillsides overlooking a valley.
Across the valley to the north lay the encamped armies
of three nations. They were a vast host.
They were spread out as thick as the grasshoppers of
Egypt had been years before. Everywhere you looked
there they were swarming.
Gideon spoke to his men. He said,
“Gentlemen, Fellow-Israelites, there is the
enemy. Take a good look at them.” And
his followers looked, and as they looked some of them
began to get scared. They had not realized just
what was involved. Their footwear seemed to grow
too large. They were shaking in their boots.
And their eyes grew big and their faces white under
the tan.
Then Gideon said, “Now, every
man of you that thinks it can’t be done-I
wish you would get right out of this, and go back home.”
And he watched. And I imagine even Gideon shook
a bit inside as he watched. They commenced to
move away in squads, in scores, in fifties. Great
gaps were left in the mob of men. Here is a fellow
standing, looking. He thinks, “It looks
pretty bad, sure enough; but then, I suppose, if God
is planning-” hello, the fellow by
his side has gone, and on this other side too-“I
guess I’d better go too.” And off
he goes. Fear is very contagious. There
is great power in feeling a man by your side.
And two-thirds of them disappear over the hills.
The motto of these disappearing men
was this: “It can’t be done.”
They must have organized themselves into a society
to perpetuate their own idea. If so the society
has shown great vitality. Many of its members
abide with us until this day. No, probably they
didn’t organize. They didn’t have
enough gumption to. And such a sentiment grows
like a weed without any cultivation.
I recall a certain town in Ohio where
I had gone to talk about an enlargement and re-vitalizing
of the Young Men’s Christian Association.
Thousands of young men in the place needed just such
help as that organization is supposed to provide.
I outlined the plan to a clergyman. He said it
was a good plan, there was great need, the thing should
be done, “but,” he said, with an air of
settling the thing, “it can’t be done
in this town.”
Among others I talked with a business
man. He listened attentively, approved the plans,
agreed upon the great need, and then settling back
in his chair with the same air of finality, used exactly
the same words, with the same emphasis, “It
can’t be done in this town.”
I got that same reply from several men that day.
And I said to myself, “They are right; it can’t
be done with them; but it can be done without
them.” And it was.
Irresistible Logic.
But there remained ten thousand.
These men by their staying said, “It ought to
be done. What ought to be done can be done.
What can be done we can do. What we can
do we will do.” Here is another man
standing looking at that vast host across the valley.
He is thinking that it is a desperate case, but he
thinks of God’s call through Gideon. Just
then he notices that his neighbor on the left has
taken to his heels, and on his right also. That
shakes him for a moment. His heels say, “You
go too.” His heart said, “No, stay.”
He obeyed his heart. He said, “I’ll
stay if I stay alone.”
That was the stuff in these remaining
ten thousand. They stood a double test in remaining,
the desperate situation seen in the presence of such
an enormous army, and the desertion of their fellows.
They had courage; not only willingness but
courage. Courage is a heart quality. Courage
is the heart fighting. It faces fearful odds
and keeps right straight ahead regardless.
A prize was offered once for the best
definition of “pluck.” The definition
that won the prize said, “Pluck is fighting with
the scabbard after the sword is broken.”
What a picture in a single sentence! The man
is fighting with might and main in the thick of the
enemy, up and down, parry and thrust, and just about
holding his own, when suddenly, without a moment’s
warning, the blade snaps close up to the hilt.
The game’s up now surely. This accident
decides the day. Maybe-for some
men. But not for this fellow. He simply
sets his jaws a bit firmer as, quick as lightning,
he grabs the scabbard by his side and fights with it.
Such a man can’t be whipped.
He doesn’t know when he is whipped. And
the man who doesn’t know when he is whipped,
never is whipped. No man can be whipped
without his own consent. I said courage is a heart
quality. These ten thousand were not chicken-hearted
nor downhearted. They were lion-hearted, stout-hearted.
They had hearts of oak.
It was a keen stroke of generalship
on Gideon’s part that sent the timid, discouraged
ones back home. Nothing is more demoralizing than
the presence of such people. And there was no
discipline much finer for those who remained than
to feel their fellows leaving them. It’s
hard to be left by those who have been in touch.
It is hard to stand alone.
There is no harder test of character
than that. And too there is no finer thing to
make character. Think how the fiber of those ten
thousand toughened and strengthened as they stood
there, with men on every side hurrying away.
This was the second test. But the men who can
stand testing are growing fewer. Thirty-two thousand
men were willing. Only a third of them are both
willing and courageous. These men are more than
volunteers. They have seen the foe. Their
fiber has stood the test, and toughened in the test.
They are courageous volunteers.
Hot Hearts.
But there is a third test. God
comes to Gideon and says, “You have too many
men yet, Gideon.” And Gideon’s eyes
bulge out a bit. Too many! Yes, this is
to be a quality fight. No common fighting here.
God works best with the men who come nearest to having
His own thought of things. Numbers don’t
count. You can’t count men for service.
You must weigh them, and feel the firmness of their
fiber.
There is a little running brook down
the valley. Gideon gives an order to his men
to advance a bit. And he watches them. Most
of them as they come to the water stretch out leisurely
on the ground and putting their mouths to the water
take a good long drink, and another, and again.
They seem to say by their action, “Well, there’s
some tough work ahead, but we must take care of ourselves.
A man must look out for number one. We must not
get unduly stirred up over the thing. We’re
not fighting yet.”
But one fellow comes along with a
quick, nervous step, and his eye still on the enemy.
He is all on tenter-hooks. His eye flashes fire.
He reaches down with a quick movement and gathers
up some water in his hand, up to his mouth, and hurries
on. Then a second fellow, and a third, and more.
Gideon is watching. As each of these comes along
he calls him off to one side. When the whole
number of men have passed the brook there are just
three hundred of the hot-hearted, intense-spirited
fellows.
God said, “Gideon, keep these
men; send the others back.” These thousands
sent back were sturdy men. They would make good
fighters in many a campaign, but they would not do
for this higher kind of campaigning planned for that
day. The little band remaining had stood a third
test, they were willing, and courageous, and enthusiastic.
Enthusiasm is the heart burning.
These fellows had spring and snap to them. Yet
it was a tempered spring and snap, the sort
that would last. By their action at the brook
they said, “If there’s fighting to be done,
let’s do it quickly; let’s go at the enemy
with a vim and a rush. Oh! let us at them.”
God Still Sifting.
Yet, mark you, their enthusiasm was
seasoned. It grew under fire, or
practically so, in the presence of the danger.
There is always an abundance of the green article
of enthusiasm, but it’s not worth much for steady
ditch-work. There is a sort of wood enthusiasm,
apple-wood. You know how apple-wood burns in
a fire. It catches quickly, throws out a good
many sparks, makes a loud crackling noise, but doesn’t
last long.
There is another sort, a soft-coal
enthusiasm. It’s better than wood.
But it needs a lot of attention continually to keep
a steady fire. Then there’s the hard-coal
enthusiasm that will burn steadily and faithfully by
the hour. Yet no kind, mark you, will run long
without fresh fuel. We need in our service more
of the seasoned enthusiasm.
It has been said of General Grant
that one great reason for his success as a soldier
was in his coolness. While the fighting and firing
were hottest he sat on his horse quietly, coolly watching,
listening, and giving his orders. And much of
his power has been attributed to that quality.
Well, if coolness is a qualification for success in
Christian service there seems to be a large number
of persons splendidly qualified. They are cool
all the time; cool as icebergs at the North Pole; cool
from the topmost layer of hair to the bottommost cuticle-about
certain things.
We want coolness of head such as General
Grant had and hotness of heart such as he had, too.
The ideal combination is a cool head and a hot heart.
The head should resemble a refrigerator, and the heart
a flaming furnace. There is one bother, however,
among many people. Either the coolness of the
head works down too much and affects the heart, and
that is bad, or, else the heat of the heart gets up
into the head, and a hot head is always bad.
Yet there is a sure key to preserving
the poise between the two. It is in the quiet
time daily with Jesus, over the Book, with the knee
bent, and the ear keen, and the spirit quiet.
In that time there comes, and comes ever more, the
calmness for the brain, and the fresh fuel for the
heart, and new steadiness for the will that holds
all under its strong hand.
Many difficulties will yield only
to fire. When you cannot reason your way through
a problem, or a difficulty, or into a man’s heart,
burn your way through. Nothing can withstand
fire. It is very remarkable that the symbol used
most for God in the Bible is fire. A man never
amounts to anything until he catches fire.
The proportions are worth noticing
here. Thirty-two thousand were volunteers.
A third of that number are courageous volunteers.
About a thirty-third of these, less than a hundredth
of the original, are hot-hearted, courageous
volunteers.
This is Gideon’s Band; three
hundred young men fresh from the farm, who were willing,
and courageous, and hot-hearted, all
heart qualities. They stood every test.
They had faced a foe that humanly they had no chance
to overcome, and because of God’s call they were
not only willing, and stout-hearted, but intense in
their desire to get at the fighting.
Then under Gideon’s leadership
they were well fed, and organized; they proved individually
faithful in the thick of the fight, and they pushed
persistently on even when bodily tired out. And
the nation knew a great victory over its enemies,
and a time of prosperity for years after.
God is still sifting men for service.
He will use gladly every man who is willing to be
used. When a man stands the first test well, there
comes a second. That, stood well, means others.
These are our promotion tests. He lets those
who stand all testings into the thickest of the fight
and up to the highest heights of victory.
Master, help us to endure every test
as seeing Him who is invisible.