CHAPTER I. SPIRITUAL FARMING. NO. 1.
DRAINING.
If the men who farmed England in the
olden time could return, few things would surprise
them more than the condition of the land. Many
a field now bearing good crops each year, was in “the
good old times” moorland or fen. Sheep
and cattle graze where once only wild birds could live.
Drainage has made the change. The land, once
too cold and wet to allow anything valuable to grow,
has been by grips and drain pipes, made to produce
food for man and beast.
Is it not so on God’s farm?
“Ye are His husbandry,” and just as the
farmer knows that if he cannot have his wet land drained,
his seed will be starved, or the young corn perish
with the cold, so we who toil in the Lord’s
fields need to learn that in many places the first
thing to be done is to
Drain the land.
Do any of our readers complain that
they cannot get an answer to their prayers for a revival,
and that all the preaching and teaching seem to be
wasted? Let us advise them to look under the
surface. Are there not
Causes for the failure?
Would it not be well to try what draining
the land would do? Are the most influential
men cold and unresponsive to the call of the Spirit?
What sort of people take the lead in the prayer meetings?
Are they left to the zealous poor? Does every
man of wealth and culture hurry home and leave the
preacher to shift for himself? Who are the stewards?
Are they men who will do their utmost to welcome
strangers, or does their example tell on others so
much that a visitor never has a word of welcome or
a grip of the hand? What is the singing like?
Is it of the colourless, tame style, whose only sign
of life is the rapid gallop which kills devotion in
so many places?
How is the Bible read by the preacher?
Does he confine himself to the narrow round which
he has read so often in the ears of the people that
it has lost its charm or does he seek out
that which will be sure to interest; and does he read
as if he believed it?
We think our readers know some congregations
in which there can be no revival until the drainer
has been at work, and that which starves the seed
removed. What we want is to have the question
asked at the next leader’s or quarterly meeting.
What will it cost to get
some drain-pipes?
A good Shilling is
better than
A bad Sovereign.