“And it came to pass
on the morrow, when the Philistines came
to strip the slain, that they
found Saul and his three sons
fallen in Mount Gilboa.” I.
Sam. xxxi: 8.
Some of you were at South Mountain,
or Shiloh, or Ball’s Bluff, or Gettysburg, and
I ask you if there is any sadder sight than a battle-field
after the guns have stopped firing? I walked across
the field of Antietam just after the conflict.
The scene was so sickening I shall not describe it.
Every valuable thing had been taken from the bodies
of the dead, for there are always vultures hovering
over and around about an army, and they pick up the
watches, and the memorandum books, and the letters,
and the daguerreotypes, and the hats, and the coats,
applying them to their own uses. The dead make
no resistance. So there are always camp followers
going on and after an army, as when Scott went down
into Mexico, as when Napoleon marched up toward Moscow,
as when Von Moltke went to Sedan. There is a similar
scene in my text.
Saul and his army had been horribly
cut to pieces. Mount Gilboa was ghastly with
the dead. On the morrow the stragglers came on
to the field, and they lifted the latchet of the helmet
from under the chin of the dead, and they picked up
the swords and bent them on their knee to test the
temper of the metal, and they opened the wallets and
counted the coin. Saul lay dead along the ground,
eight or nine feet in length, and I suppose the cowardly
Philistines, to show their bravery, leaped upon the
trunk of his carcass, and jeered at the fallen slain,
and whistled through the mouth of the helmet.
Before night those cormorants had taken everything
valuable from the field: “And it came to
pass on the morrow, when the Philistines came to strip
the slain, that they found Saul and his three sons
fallen in Mount Gilboa.”
Before I get through to-day I will
show you that the same process is going on all the
world over, and every day, and that when men have
fallen, Satan and the world, so far from pitying them
or helping them, go to work remorselessly to take
what little is left, thus stripping the slain.
There are tens of thousands of young
men every year coming from the country to our great
cities. They come with brave hearts and grand
expectations. They think they will be Rufus Choates
in the law, or Drapers in chemistry, or A.T.
Stewarts in merchandise. The country lads sit
down in the village grocery, with their feet on the
iron rod around the red-hot stove, in the evening,
talking over the prospects of the young man who has
gone off to the city. Two or three of them think
that perhaps he may get along very well and succeed,
but the most of them prophesy failure; for it is very
hard to think that those whom we knew in boyhood will
ever make any stir in the world.
But our young man has a fine position
in a dry-goods store. The month is over.
He gets his wages. He is not accustomed to have
so much money belonging to himself. He is a little
excited, and does not know exactly what to do with
it, and he spends it in some places where he ought
not. Soon there come up new companions and acquaintances
from the bar-rooms and the saloons of the city.
Soon that young man begins to waver in the battle
of temptation, and soon his soul goes down. In
a few months, or few years, he has fallen. He
is morally dead. He is a mere corpse of what
he once was. The harpies of sin snuff up the taint
and come on the field. His garments gradually
give out. He has pawned his watch. His health
is failing him. His credit perishes. He is
too poor to stay in the city, and he is too poor to
pay his way home to the country. Down! down!
Why do the low fellows of the city now stick to him
so closely? Is it to help him back to a moral
and spiritual life? Oh, no! I will tell
you why they stay; they are the Philistines stripping
the slain.
Do not look where I point, but yonder
stands a man who once had a beautiful home in this
city. His house had elegant furniture, his children
were beautifully clad, his name was synonymous with
honor and usefulness; but evil habit knocked at his
front door, knocked at his back door, knocked at his
parlor door, knocked at his bedroom door. Where
is the piano? Sold to pay the rent. Where
is the hat-rack? Sold to meet the butcher’s
bill. Where are the carpets? Sold to get
bread. Where is the wardrobe? Sold to get
rum. Where are the daughters? Working their
fingers off in trying to keep the family together.
Worse and worse, until everything is gone. Who
is that going up the front steps of that house?
That is a creditor, hoping to find some chair or bed
that has not been levied upon. Who are those two
gentlemen now going up the front steps? The one
is a constable, the other is the sheriff. Why
do they go there? The unfortunate is morally
dead, socially dead, financially dead. Why do
they go there? I will tell you why the creditors,
and the constables, and the sheriffs go there.
They are, some on their own account, and some on account
of the law, stripping the slain.
An ex-member of Congress, one of the
most eloquent men that ever stood in the House of
Representatives, said in his last moments: “This
is the end. I am dying dying on a
borrowed bed, covered by a borrowed sheet, in a house
built by public charity. Bury me under that tree
in the middle of the field, where I shall not be crowded,
for I have been crowded all my life.” Where
were the jolly politicians and the dissipating comrades
who had been with him, laughing at his jokes, applauding
his eloquence, and plunging him into sin? They
have left. Why? His money is gone, his reputation
is gone, his wit is gone, his clothes are gone, everything
is gone. Why should they stay any longer?
They have completed their work. They have stripped
the slain.
There is another way, however, of
doing that same work. Here is a man who, through
his sin, is prostrate. He acknowledges that he
has done wrong. Now is the time for you to go
to that man and say: “Thousands of people
have been as far astray as you are, and got back.”
Now is the time for you to go to that man and tell
him of the omnipotent grace of God, that is sufficient
for any poor soul. Now is the time to go to tell
him how swearing John Bunyan, through the grace of
God, afterward came to the celestial city. Now
is the time to go to that man and tell him how profligate
Newton came, through conversion, to be a world-renowned
preacher of righteousness. Now is the time to
tell that man that multitudes who have been pounded
with all the flails of sin and dragged through all
the sewers of pollution at last have risen to positive
dominion of moral power.
You do not tell him that, do you?
No. You say to him: “Loan you money?
No. You are down. You will have to go to
the dogs. Lend you a shilling? I would not
lend you five cents to keep you from the gallows.
You are debauched! Get out of my sight, now!
Down; you will have to stay down!” And thus
those bruised and battered men are sometimes accosted
by those who ought to lift them up. Thus the last
vestige of hope is taken from them. Thus those
who ought to go and lift and save them are guilty
of stripping the slain.
The point I want to make is this:
sin is hard, cruel, and merciless. Instead of
helping a man up it helps him down; and when, like
Saul and his comrades, you lie on the field, it will
come and steal your sword and helmet and shield, leaving
you to the jackal and the crow.
But the world and Satan do not do
all their work with the outcast and abandoned.
A respectable, impenitent man comes to die. He
is flat on his back. He could not get up if the
house were on fire. Adroitest medical skill and
gentlest nursing have been a failure. He has come
to his last hour. What does Satan do for such
a man? Why, he fetches up all the inapt, disagreeable,
and harrowing things in his life. He says:
“Do you remember those chances you had for heaven,
and missed them? Do you remember all those lapses
in conduct? Do you remember all those opprobrious
words and thoughts and actions? Don’t remember
them, eh? I’ll make you remember them.”
And then he takes all the past and empties it on that
death-bed, as the mail-bags are emptied on the post-office
floor. The man is sick. He can not get away
from them.
Then the man says to Satan: “You
have deceived me. You told me that all would
be well. You said there would be no trouble at
the last. You told me if I did so and so, you
would do so and so. Now you corner me, and hedge
me up, and submerge me in everything evil.”
“Ha! ha!” says Satan, “I was only
fooling you. It is mirth for me to see you suffer.
I have been for thirty years plotting to get you just
where you are. It is hard for you now it
will be worse for you after awhile. It pleases
me. Lie still, sir. Don’t flinch or
shudder. Come now, I will tear off from you the
last rag of expectation. I will rend away from
your soul the last hope. I will leave you bare
for the beating of the storm. It is my business
to strip the slain.”
While men are in robust health, and
their digestion is good, and their nerves are strong,
they think their physical strength will get them safely
through the last exigency. They say it is only
cowardly women who are afraid at the last, and cry
out for God. “Wait till I come to die.
I will show you. You won’t hear me pray,
nor call for a minister, nor want a chapter read me
from the Bible.” But after the man has been
three weeks in a sick-room his nerves are not so steady,
and his worldly companions are not anywhere near to
cheer him up, and he is persuaded that he must quit
life: his physical courage is all gone.
He jumps at the fall of a teaspoon
in a saucer. He shivers at the idea of going
away. He says: “Wife, I don’t
think my infidelity is going to take me through.
For God’s sake don’t bring up the children
to do as I have done. If you feel like it, I
wish you would read a verse or two out of Fannie’s
Sabbath-school hymn-book or New Testament.”
But Satan breaks in, and says: “You have
always thought religion trash and a lie; don’t
give up at the last. Besides that, you can not,
in the hour you have to live, get off on that track.
Die as you lived. With my great black wings I
shut out that light. Die in darkness. I rend
away from you that last vestige of hope. It is
my business to strip the slain.”
A man who had rejected Christianity
and thought it all trash, came to die. He was
in the sweat of a great agony, and his wife said:
“We had better have some prayer.”
“Mary, not a breath of that,” he said.
“The lightest word of prayer would roll back
on me like rocks on a drowning man. I have come
to the hour of test. I had a chance, and I forfeited
it. I believed in a liar, and he has left me in
the lurch. Mary, bring me Tom Paine, that book
that I swore by and lived by, and pitch it in the
fire, and let it burn and burn as I myself shall soon
burn.” And then, with the foam on his lip
and his hands tossing wildly in the air, he cried
out: “Blackness of darkness! Oh, my
God, too late!” And the spirits of darkness
whistled up from the depth, and wheeled around and
around him, stripping the slain.
Sin is a luxury now; it is exhilaration
now; it is victory now. But after awhile it is
collision; it is defeat; it is extermination; it is
jackalism; it is robbing the dead; it is stripping
the slain. Give it up to-day give
it up! Oh, how you have been cheated on, my brother,
from one thing to another! All these years you
have been under an evil mastery that you understood
not. What have your companions done for you?
What have they done for your health? Nearly ruined
it by carousal. What have they done for your
fortune? Almost scattered it by spendthrift behavior.
What have they done for your reputation? Almost
ruined it with good men. What have they done for
your immortal soul? Almost insured its overthrow.
You are hastening on toward the consummation
of all that is sad. To-day you stop and think,
but it is only for a moment, and then you will tramp
on, and at the close of this service you will go out,
and the question will be: “How did you
like the sermon?” And one man will say:
“I liked it very well,” and another man
will say: “I didn’t like it at all;”
but neither of the answers will touch the tremendous
fact that, if impenitent, you are going at eighteen
knots an hour toward shipwreck! Yea, you are
in a battle where you will fall; and while your surviving
relatives will take your remaining estate, and the
cemetery will take your body, the messengers of darkness
will take your soul, and come and go about you for
the next ten million years, stripping the slain.
Many are crying out: “I
admit I am slain, I admit it!” On what battle-field,
my brothers? By what weapon? “Polluted
imagination,” says one man; “Intoxicating
liquor,” says another man; “My own hard
heart,” says another man. Do you realize
this? Then I come to tell you that the omnipotent
Christ is ready to walk across this battle-field,
and revive, and resuscitate, and resurrect your dead
soul. Let Him take your hand and rub away the
numbness; your head, and bathe off the aching; your
heart, and stop its wild throb. He brought Lazarus
to life; He brought Jairus’ daughter to life;
He brought the young man of Nain to life, and these
are three proofs anyhow that he can bring you to life.
When the Philistines came down on
the field, they stepped between the corpses, and they
rolled over the dead, and they took away everything
that was valuable; and so it was with the people that
followed after our army at Chancellorsville, and at
Pittsburg Landing, and at Stone River, and at Atlanta,
stripping the slain; but the Northern and Southern
women God bless them! came on
the field with basins, and pads, and towels, and lint,
and cordials, and Christian encouragement; and
the poor fellows that lay there lifted up their arms
and said: “Oh, how good that does feel
since you dressed it!” and others looked up
and said: “Oh, how you make me think of
my mother!” and others said: “Tell
the folks at home I died thinking about them;”
and another looked up and said: “Miss,
won’t you sing me a verse of ’Home, Sweet
Home,’ before I die?” And then the tattoo
was sounded, and the hats were off, and the service
was read: “I am the resurrection and the
life;” and in honor of the departed the muskets
were loaded, and the command given: “Take
aim fire!” And there was a shingle
set up at the head of the grave, with the epitaph
of “Lieutenant in the Fourteenth
Massachusetts Regulars,” or “Captain
in the Fifteenth Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers.”
And so to-night, across this great field of moral
and spiritual battle, the angels of God come walking
among the slain, and there are voices of comfort, and
voices of hope, and voices of resurrection, and voices
of heaven.
Christ is ready to give life to the
dead. He will make the deaf ear to hear, the
blind eye to see, the pulseless heart to beat, and
the damp walls of your spiritual charnel-house will
crash into ruin at His cry: “Come forth!”
I verily believe there are souls in this house who
are now dead in sin, who in half an hour will be alive
forever. There was a thrilling dream, a glorious
dream you may have heard of it. Ezekiel
closed his eyes, and he saw two mountains, and a valley
between the mountains. That valley looked as
though there had been a great battle there, and a
whole army had been slain, and they had been unburied;
and the heat of the land, and the vultures coming there,
soon the bones were exposed to the sun, and they looked
like thousands of snow-drifts all through the valley.
Frightful spectacle! The bleaching skeletons
of a host!
But Ezekiel still kept his eyes shut;
and lo! there were four currents of wind that struck
the battle-field, and when those four currents of
wind met, the bones began to rattle; and the foot came
to the ankle, and the hand came to the wrist, and
the jaws clashed together, and the spinal column gathered
up the ganglions and the nervous fiber, and all
the valley wriggled and writhed, and throbbed, and
rocked, and rose up. There, a man coming to life.
There, a hundred men. There, a thousand; and
all falling into line, waiting for the shout of their
commander. Ten thousand bleached skeletons springing
up into ten thousand warriors, panting for the fray.
I hope that instead of being a dream it may be a prophecy
of what we shall see here to-day. Let this north
wall be one of the mountains, and the south wall be
taken for another of the mountains, and let all the
aisles and the pews be the valley between, for there
are thousands here to-day without one pulsation of
spiritual life.
I look off in one direction, and they
are dead. I look off in another direction, and
they are dead. Who will bring them to life?
Who shall rouse them up? If I should halloo at
the top of my voice I could not wake them. Wait
a moment! Listen! There is a rustling.
There is a gale from heaven. It comes from the
north, and from the south, and from the east, and
from the west. It shuts us in. It blows upon
the slain. There a soul begins to move in spiritual
life; there, ten souls; there, a score of souls; there,
a hundred souls. The nostrils throbbing in divine
respiration, the hands lifted as though to take hold
of heaven, the tongue moving as in prayer and adoration.
Life! immortal life coming into the slain. Ten
men for God fifty a hundred a
regiment an army for God! Oh, that
we might have such a scene here to-day! In Ezekiel’s
words, and in almost a frenzy of prayer, I cry:
“Come from the four winds, O Breath! and breathe
upon the slain.”
You will have to surrender your heart
to-day to God. You can not take the responsibility
of fighting against the Spirit in this crisis which
will decide whether you are to go to heaven or to hell to
join the hallelujahs of the saved, or the lamentations
of the lost. You must pray. You must repent.
You must this day fling your sinful soul on the pardoning
mercy of God. You must! I see your resolution
against God giving way, your determination wavering.
I break through the breach in the wall and follow
up the advantage gained, hoping to rout your last
opposition to Christ, and to make you “ground
arms” at the feet of the Divine Conqueror.
Oh, you must! You must!
The moon does not ask the tides of
the Atlantic Ocean to rise. It only stoops down
with two great hands of light, the one at the European
beach, and the other at the American beach, and then
lifts the great layer of molten silver. And God,
it seems to me, is now going to lift this audience
to newness of life. Do you not feel the swellings
of the great oceanic tides of Divine mercy? My
heart is in anguish to have you saved. For this
I pray, and preach, and long, glad to be called a
fool for Christ’s sake, and your salvation.
Some one replies: “Dear
me, I do wish I could have these matters arranged
with my God. I want to be saved. God knows
I want to be saved; but you stand there talking about
this matter, and you don’t show me how.”
My dear brother, the work has all been done. Christ
did it with His own torn hand, and lacerated foot,
and bleeding side. He took your place, and died
your death, if you will only believe it only
accept Him as your substitute.
What an amazing pity that any man
should go from this house unblessed, when such a large
blessing is offered him at less cost than you would
pay for a pin “without money and without
price.” I have driven down to-day with
the Lord’s ambulance to the battle-field where
your soul lies exposed to the darkness and the storm,
and I want to lift you in, and drive off with you
toward heaven. Oh, Christians, by your prayers
help to lift these wounded souls into the ambulance!
God forbid that any should be left on the field, and
that at last eternal sorrow, and remorse, and despair
should come up around their soul like the bandit Philistines
to the field of Gilboa, stripping the slain.