CHAPTER XXXII. JESUS AT THE WELL.
A WORD TO PREACHERS.
Jesus Christ travelled three years
in a very poor circuit. There were no stewards
to provide for His wants, and at times, we are told,
He had not where to lay His head. But all the
three years He was a perfect example to us, whether
we are Locals or Itinerants, and, perhaps, never more
than when talking to the woman at the well of Samaria.
From His conduct there we may learn
I. Never be daunted by a small congregation.
It is very nice to have a crowd, but
then that is not the lot of us all, and we must not
keep our best sermons for large audiences. It
may be that the few are able to appreciate our best
efforts. Jesus Christ said some of His best
things to individuals. John ii was not said
to a crowd, but to one. Indeed, if we were to
take out of the gospels what Jesus said to small audiences,
we should rob them of their choicest portions.
So, if, when we get to the chapel we find that there
are more pews than people, let us preach to those
who are there. Why grumble at the few who have
come, perhaps a long way? Let us feed these with
the choicest of the wheat. It may be an historic
time for anything you know. There may be someone
there whom your sermon may lead to Jesus, and who
himself may become a preacher.
II. Interest your Audience.
How skilfully Jesus went to work to
lay hold of this giddy woman! He spoke of what
to a native of the East must have been a surprise,
and a delightful idea. He goes on to tell of
being delivered from that plague of those hot climates,
thirst, and excites her wonder by speaking of a well
of water springing up in a man!
To our younger brethren, let us say
that it is not easy to succeed if we do not make what
we say interesting. We do not love sensationalism,
but we do love savouryness. Let all your sermons
be seasoned with salt. Not a few of us fail
because we forget to make what we say savoury.
Let us excite the imagination of those who listen
to us, and then we may pour into the attentive ear
that which will be of solid benefit. How shopkeepers
strive to strike the eye of the passengers by skilfully
dressing their windows, so as to catch the attention!
Shall it be said that they take more pains to sell
their goods than we do to get the gospel into the
hearts of our hearers!
III. Make your hearers conscious of the supernatural.
“Sir,” said the woman,
“I perceive thou art a prophet.”
And this we can all do. We can every one be
on such terms with heaven as to make those who listen
to us know that we hold commerce with the skies.
We may not be eloquent or learned, but we may be
prayerful and impassioned. Preaching is unlike
all other kinds of speaking. We have no business
in the pulpit except when under the direct influence
of the Holy Ghost. We knew a man who, for some
years of his ministry, was dull and unpractical, but
there came upon him a baptism of power, and then we
heard his preaching described as “white heat.”
Why should not this be in every one of us?
It is not possible for us to be alike, nor is it desirable,
but we may all make our hearers say, “This man
comes from God. His prayers and his preaching
convince us that he is owned by the God of Elijah.”
IV. Set your converts to work.
We read “The woman then left
her waterpot, and went into the city,” and soon
there was a crowd round the Saviour. It is not
said that Jesus told her to do so, but she had heard
words that were like fire in her bones. She had
been convinced of sin, and knew that God had spoken
to her. Is not this the way to fill our chapels?
Say things that wake up the conscience, and alarm
the sinner, and he must tell about it. Or shew
the cross so plainly that the anxious one finds the
Lord, and is able to rejoice, and very soon there
will be an unpaid agency at work. Of course
it will not obtain to the same extent in every case.
We are among those who have to mourn that our preaching
is not as effective as it ought to be, but we are
taking our own physic, and can testify that since we
have acted on the lines we have laid down, God has
been pleased to give us greater power over our congregations,
and we have seen greater results follow the preaching,
poor as it is.
For preachers who make the
people think.
The Grindstone is the most
useful Tool in the
carpenter’s shop.