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Quiet Talks On Power by Gordon, S.D.

S. D. Gordon: There's An Odd Distinction between christians and christians with power. He says a christian said he was a member of church, but didn't believe he was very much. Edward mccaffery: christians have power, but not as much as christians do.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
231 views78 pages

Quiet Talks On Power by Gordon, S.D.

S. D. Gordon: There's An Odd Distinction between christians and christians with power. He says a christian said he was a member of church, but didn't believe he was very much. Edward mccaffery: christians have power, but not as much as christians do.

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QUIET TALKS ON POWER

BY

S. D. GORDON

NEW AND REVISED EDITION

CHICAGO NEW YORK TORONTO

FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY

LONDON AND EDINBURGH

Copyright, 1903, by
FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY

Chicago: 63 Washington Street


New York: 158 Fifth Avenue
Toronto: 27 Richmond Street, W
London: 21 Paternoster Square
Edinburgh: 30 St. Mary Street

CONTENTS
1. CHOKED CHANNELS 9
2. THE OLIVET MESSAGE 33
3. THE CHANNEL OF POWER 61
4. THE PRICE OF POWER 87
5. THE PERSONALITY OF POWER 117

QUIET TALKS ON POWER 1


The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.

6. MAKING AND BREAKING CONNECTIONS 147


7. THE FLOOD-TIDE OF POWER 173
8. FRESH SUPPLIES OF POWER 199

CHOKED CHANNELS.

An Odd Distinction.

A few years ago I was making a brief tour among the colleges of Missouri. I remember one morning in a
certain college village going over from the hotel to take breakfast with some of the boys, and coming back
with one of the fellows whom I had just met. As we walked along, chatting away, I asked him quietly, "Are
you a christian, sir?" He turned quickly and looked at me with an odd, surprised expression in his eye and then
turning his face away said: "Well, I'm a member of church, but—I don't believe I'm very much of a christian."
Then I looked at him and he frankly volunteered a little information. Not very much. He did not need to say
much. You can see a large field through a chink in the fence. And I saw enough to let me know that he was
right in the criticism he had made upon himself. We talked a bit and parted. But his remark set me to thinking.

A week later, in another town, speaking one morning to the students of a young ladies' seminary, I said
afterwards to one of the teachers as we were talking: "I suppose your young women here are all christians."
That same quizzical look came into her eye as she said: "I think they are all members of church, but I do not
think they are all christians with real power in their lives." There was that same odd distinction.

A few weeks later, in Kansas City visiting the medical and dental schools, I recall distinctly standing one
morning in a disordered room—shavings on the floor, desks disarranged—the institution just moving into new
quarters, and not yet settled. I was discussing with a member of the faculty, the dean I think, about how many
the room would hold, how soon it would be ready, and so on—just a business talk, nothing more—when he
turned to me rather abruptly, looking me full in the face, and said with quiet deliberation: "I'm a member of
church; I think I am a deacon in our church"—running his hand through his hair meditatively, as though to
refresh his memory—"but I am not very much of a christian, sir." The smile that started to come to my face at
the odd frankness of his remark was completely chased away by the distinct touch of pathos in both face and
voice that seemed to speak of a hungry, unsatisfied heart within.

Perhaps it was a month or so later, in one of the mining towns down in the zinc belt of southwestern Missouri,
I was to speak to a meeting of men. There were probably five or six hundred gathered in a Methodist Church.
They were strangers to me. I was in doubt what best to say to them. One dislikes to fire ammunition at people
that are absent. So stepping down to a front pew where several ministers were seated, I asked one of them to
run his eye over the house and tell me what sort of a congregation it was, so far as he knew them. He did so,
and presently replied: "I think fully two-thirds of these men are members of our churches"—and then, with
that same quizzical, half-laughing look, he added, "but you know, sir, as well as I do, that not half of them are
christians worth counting." "Well," I said to myself, astonished, "this is a mining camp; this certainly is not
anything like the condition of affairs in the country generally."

But that series of incidents, coming one after the other in such rapid succession, set me thinking intently about
that strange distinction between being members of a church on the one hand, and on the other, living lives that
count and tell and weigh for Jesus seven days in the week. I knew that ministers had been recognizing such a
distinction, but to find it so freely acknowledged by folks in the pew was new, and surely significant.

CONTENTS 2
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
And so I thought I would just ask the friends here to-day very frankly, "What kind of Christians are you?" I do
not say what kind you are, for I am a stranger, and do not know, and would only think the best things of you.
But I ask you frankly, honestly now, as I ask myself anew, what kind are you? Do you know? Because it
makes such a difference. The Master's plan—and what a genius of a plan it is—is this, that the world should
be won, not by the preachers—though we must have these men of God for teaching and leadership—but by
everyone who knows the story of Jesus telling someone, and telling not only with his lips earnestly and
tactfully, but even more, telling with his life. That is the Master's plan of campaign for this world. And it
makes a great difference to Him and to the world outside whether you and I are living the story of His love
and power among men or not.

Do you know what kind of a christian you are? There are at least three others that do. First of all there is
Satan. He knows. Many of our church officers are skilled in gathering and compiling statistics, but they
cannot hold a tallow-dip to Satan in this matter of exact information. He is the ablest of all statisticians,
second only to one other. He keeps careful record of every one of us, and knows just how far we are
interfering with his plans. He knows that some of us—good, respectable people, as common reckoning
goes—neither help God nor hinder Satan. Does that sound rather hard? But is it not true? He has no objection
to such people being counted in as christians. Indeed, he rather prefers to have it so. Their presence inside the
church circle helps him mightily. He knows what kind of a christian you are. Do you know?

Then there is the great outer circle of non-christian people—they know. Many of them are poorly informed
regarding the christian life; hungry for something they have not, and know not just what it is; with high ideals,
though vague, of what a christian life should be. And they look eagerly to us for what they have thought we
had, and are so often keenly disappointed that our ideals, our life, is so much like others who profess nothing.
And when here and there they meet one whose acts are dominated by a pure, high spirit, whose faces reflect a
sweet radiance amid all circumstances, and whose lives send out a rare fragrance of gladness and kindliness
and controlling peace, they are quick to recognize that, to them, intangible something that makes such people
different. The world—tired, hungry, keen and critical for mere sham, appreciative of the real thing—the world
knows what kind of christians we are. Do we know?

There is a third one watching us to-day with intense interest. The Lord Jesus! Sitting up yonder in glory, with
the scar-marks of earth on face and form, looking eagerly down upon us who stand for Him in the world that
crucified Him—He knows. I imagine Him saying, "There is that one down there whom I died for, who bears
my name; if I had the control of that life what power I would gladly breathe in and out of it, but—he is so
absorbed in other things." The Master is thinking about you, studying your life, longing to carry out His plan
if He could only get permission, and sorely disappointed in many of us. He knows. Do you know?

The Night Visitor.

After that trip I became much interested in discovering in John's Gospel some striking pictorial illustrations of
these two kinds of christians, namely, those who have power in their lives for Jesus Christ and those who have
not. Let me speak of only a few of these. The first is sketched briefly in the third chapter, with added touches
in the seventh and nineteenth chapters. There is a little descriptive phrase used each time—"the man who
came to Jesus by night." That comes to be in John's mind the most graphic and sure way of identifying this
man. A good deal of criticism, chiefly among the upper classes, had already been aroused by Jesus' acts and
words. This man Nicodemus clearly was deeply impressed by the young preacher from up in Galilee. He
wants to find out more of him. But he shrank back from exposing himself to criticism by these influential
people for his possible friendship with the young radical, as Jesus was regarded. So one day he waits until the
friendly shadows will conceal his identity, and slipping quietly along the streets, close up to the houses so as
to insure his purpose of not being recognized, he goes up yonder side street where Jesus has lodgings. He
knocks timidly. "Does the preacher from up the north way stop here?" "Yes." "Could I see him?" He steps in

An Odd Distinction. 3
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
and spends an evening in earnest conversation. I think we will all readily agree that Nicodemus believed Jesus
after that night's interview, however he may have failed to understand all He said. Yes, we can say much
more—he loved Him. For after the cruel crucifixion it is this man that brings a box of very precious spices,
weighing as much as a hundred pounds, worth, without question, a large sum of money, with which to
embalm the dead body of his friend. Ah! he loved Him. No one may question that.

But turn now to the seventh chapter of John. There is being held a special session of the Jewish Senate in
Jerusalem for the express purpose of determining how to silence Jesus—to get rid of Him. This man is a
member of that body, and is present. Yonder he sits with the others, listening while his friend Jesus is being
discussed and His removal—by force if need be—is being plotted. What does he do? What would you expect
of a friend of Jesus under such circumstances? I wonder what you and I would have done? I wonder what we
do do? Does he say modestly, but plainly, "I spent a whole evening with this man, questioning Him, talking
with Him, listening to Him. I feel quite sure that He is our promised Messiah; and I have decided to accept
Him as such." Did he say that? That would have been the simple truth. But such a remark plainly would have
aroused a storm of criticism, and he dreaded that. Yet he felt that something should be said. So, lawyer-like,
he puts the case abstractly. "Hmm—does our law judge a man without giving him a fair hearing?" That
sounds fair, though it does seem rather feeble in face of their determined opposition. But near by sits a burly
Pharisee, who turns sharply around and, glaring savagely at Nicodemus, says sneeringly: "Who are you? Do
you come from Galilee, too? Look and see! No prophet comes out of Galilee"—with intensest contempt in the
tone with which he pronounces the word Galilee. And poor Nicodemus seems to shrink back into half his
former size, and has not another word to say, though all the facts, easily ascertainable, were upon his side of
the case. He loved Jesus without doubt, but he had no power for Him among men because of his timidity.
Shall I use a plainer, though uglier, word—his cowardice? That is not a pleasant word to apply to a man. But
is it not the true word here? He was so afraid of what they would think and say! Is that the sort of christian you
are? Believing Jesus, trusting Him, saved by Him, loving Him, but shrinking back from speaking out for Him,
tactfully, plainly, when opportunity presents or can be made. A christian, but without positive power for Him
among men because of cowardice!

I can scarcely imagine Nicodemus walking down the street in Jerusalem, arm in arm with another
Pharisee-member of the Sanhedrin and saying to him quietly, but earnestly: "Have you had a talk with this
young man Jesus?" "No, indeed, I have not!" "Well, do you know, I spent an evening with Him down at His
stopping place, and had a long, careful talk with Him. I am quite satisfied that He is our long-looked-for
leader; I have decided to give Him my personal allegiance; won't you get personally acquainted with Him? He
is a wonderful man." I say I have difficulty in thinking that this man worked for Jesus like that. And yet what
more natural and proper, both for him and for us? And what a difference it might have made in many a man's
life. Powerless for Jesus because of timidity! Is that the kind you are? Possibly some one thinks that rather
hard on this man. Maybe you are thinking of that other member of the Sanhedrin—Joseph of
Arimathea—who was also a follower of Jesus, and that quite possibly he may have been influenced by
Nicodemus. Let us suppose, for Nicodemus' sake, that this is so, and then mark the brief record of this man
Joseph in John's account: "A disciple secretly for fear of the Jews." If we may fairly presume that it was
Nicodemus' influence that led his friend Joseph to follow Jesus, yet he had led him no nearer than he himself
had gone! He could lead him no higher or nearer than that.

[1] John 3:1. 7:50. 12:42 with 9:22. 19:38, 39.

John in his gospel makes plain the fact that Jesus suffered much from these secret, timid, cowardly disciples
whose fear of men gripped them as in a vise. Five times he makes special mention of these people who
believed Jesus, but cravenly feared to line up with Him.[1] He even says that many of the rulers—the very
class that plotted and voted His death—believed Jesus, but that fear of the others shut their lips and drove
them into the shadow when they could have helped Him most. These people seem to have left numerous
descendants, many of whom continue with us unto this day.

The Night Visitor. 4


The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.

Tightly Tied Up.

Turn now to the eleventh chapter and you will find another pictorial suggestion of this same sort of powerless
christian, though in this instance made so by another reason. It is the Bethany Chapter, the Lazarus Chapter.
The scene is just out of Bethany village. There is a man lying dead in the cave yonder. Here stands Jesus.
There are the disciples, and Martha, and Mary, and the villagers, and a crowd from Jerusalem. The Master is
speaking. His voice rings out clear and commanding—"Lazarus, come forth"—speaking to a dead man.
And the simple record runs, "He that was dead"—life comes between those two lines of the
record—"came forth, bound hand and foot with grave-clothes, and his face was bound about with a
napkin." Will you please take a look at Lazarus as he steps from the tomb? Do you think his eyes are dull, or
his cheeks hollow and pale? I think not! When Jesus, the Lord of life, gives life, either physical or spiritual,
He gives abundant life. That face may have been a bit spare. There had been no food for at least four days and
likely longer. But there is the flash of health in his eye and the ruddy hue of good blood in his cheek. He has
life. But look closer. He is bound hand and foot and face. He can neither walk nor work nor speak.

I have met some christian people who reminded me forcibly of that scene. They are christians. The Master has
spoken life, and they have responded to His word. But they are so tied up with the grave-clothes of the old life
that there can be none of the power of free action in life or service. May I ask you very kindly, but very
plainly, are you like that? Is that the reason you have so little power with God, and for God? Perhaps some
one would say, "Just what do you mean?" I mean this: that there may be some personal habit of yours, or
perhaps some society custom which you practice, or it may be some business method, or possibly an old
friendship which you have carried over into the new life from the old that is seriously hindering your christian
life. It may be something that goes into your mouth or comes out of it that prevents those lips speaking for the
Master. Perhaps it is some organization you belong to. If there is lack of freedom and power for Christ you
may be sure there is something that is blighting your life and dwarfing your usefulness. It may possibly be that
practically in your daily life you are exerting no more power for God than a dead man! A christian, indeed,
but without power because of compromise with something questionable or outrightly wrong! Is that so with
you? I do not say it is, for I do not know. But you know. The hungry, critical world knows. Subtle, keen Satan
knows. The Lord Jesus knows. Do you know if that describes you? You may know with certainty within
twenty-four hours if you wish to and will to. May we be willing to have the Spirit's searchlight turned in upon
us to-night.

The Master's Ideal.

There is another kind of christian, an utterly different kind, spoken of and illustrated in this same Gospel of
John, and I doubt not many of them also are here. It is Jesus' ideal of what a christian should be. Have you
sometimes wished you could have a few minutes of quiet talk with Jesus? I mean face to face, as two of us
might sit and talk together. You have thought you would ask Him to say very simply and plainly just what He
expects of you. Well, I believe He would answer in words something like those of this seventh chapter of
John. It was at the time of Feast of Tabernacles. There was a vast multitude of Jews there from all parts of the
world. It was like an immense convention, but larger than any convention we know. The people were not
entertained in the homes, but lived for seven days in leafy booths made of branches of trees. It was the last
day of the feast. There was a large concourse of people gathered in one of the temple areas; not women, but
men; not sitting, but standing. Up yonder stand the priests, pouring water out of large jars, to symbolize the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the nation of Israel. Just then Jesus speaks, and amid the silence of the
intently watching throng His voice rings out: "If any man thirst let him come unto Me and drink; he that
believeth on Me, as the Scripture saith, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." Mark that significant
closing clause. That packs into a sentence Jesus' ideal of what a true christian down in this world should be,
and may be. Every word is full of meaning.

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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
The heart of the sentence is in the last word—"water." Water is an essential of life. Absence of water
means suffering and sickness, dearth and death. Plenty of good water means life. All the history of the world
clusters about the water courses. Study the history of the rivers, the seashores, and lake edges, and you know
the history of the earth. Those men who heard Jesus speak would instinctively think of the Jordan. It was their
river. Travelers say that no valley exceeded in beauty and fruitfulness that valley of the Jordan, made so by
those swift waters. No hillside so fair in their green beauty, nor so wealthy in heavy loads of fruit as those
sloping down to the edge of that stream. Now plainly Jesus is talking of something that may, through us, exert
as decided an influence upon the lives of those we touch as water has exerted, and still exerts, on the history
of the earth, and as this Jordan did in that wonderful, historic Palestine. Mark the quantity of
water—"rivers." Not a Jordan merely, that would be wonderful enough, but Jordans—a Jordan,
and a Nile, and a Euphrates, a Yang Tse Kiang, and an Olga and a Rhine, a Seine and a Thames, and a
Hudson and an Ohio—"rivers." Notice, too, the kind of water. Like this racing, turbulent, muddy
Jordan? No, no! "rivers of living water," "water of life, clear as crystal." You remember in Ezekiel's vision
which we read together that the waters constantly increased in depth, and that everywhere they went there was
healing, and abundant life, and prosperity, and beauty, and food, and a continual harvest the year round, and
all because of the waters of the river. They were veritable waters of life.

Now mark that little, but very significant, phrase—"Out of"—not into, but "out of." All the
difference in the lives of men lies in the difference between these two expressions. "Into" is the world's
preposition. Every stream turns in; and that means a dead sea. Many a man's life is simply the coast line of a
dead sea. "Out of" is the Master's word. His thought is of others. The stream must flow in, and must flow
through, if it is to flow out, but it is judged by its direction, and Jesus would turn it outward. There must be
good connections upward, and a clear channel inward, but the objective point is outward toward a parched
earth. But before it can flow out it must fill up. An outflow in this case means an overflow. There must be a
flooding inside before there can be a flowing out. And let the fact be carefully marked that it is only the
overflow from the fullness within our own lives that brings refreshing to anyone else. A man praying at a
conference in England for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit said: "O, Lord, we can't hold much, but we can
overflow lots." That is exactly the Master's thought. "Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water."

[2] Rom. 5:5.

Do you remember that phrase in the third chapter of Joshua—"For Jordan overfloweth all its banks all
the time of harvest." When there was a flood in the river, there was a harvest in the land. Has there been a
harvest in your life? A harvest of the fruit of the spirit—love, joy, peace, long-suffering; a harvest of
souls? "No," do you say, "not much of a harvest, I am afraid," or it may be your heart says "none at all." Is it
hard to tell why? Has there been a flood-tide in your heart, a filling up from above until the blessed stream had
to find an outlet somewhere, and produce a harvest? A harvest outside means a rising of the tide inside. A
flooding of the heart always brings a harvest in the life. A few years ago there were great floods in the
southern states, and the cotton and corn crops following were unprecedented. Paul reminded his Roman
friends that when the Holy Spirit has free swing in the life "the love of God floods our hearts."[2]

Please notice, too, the source of the stream—"out of his belly." Will you observe for a moment the
rhetorical figure here? I used to suppose it meant "out of his heart." The ancients, you remember, thought the
heart lay down in the abdominal region. But you will find that this book is very exact in its use of words. The
blood is the life. The heart pumps the blood, but the stomach makes it. The seat of life is not in the heart, but
in the stomach. If you will take down a book of physiology, and find the chart showing the circulation of the
blood, you will see a wonderful network of lines spreading out in every direction, but all running, through
lighter lines into heavier, and still blacker, until every line converges in the great stomach artery. And
everywhere the blood goes there is life. Now turn to a book of physical geography and get a map showing the
water system of some great valley like the Mississippi, and you will find a striking reproduction of the other
chart. And if you will shut your eyes and imagine the reality back of that chart, you will see hundreds of cool,

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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
clear springs flowing successively into runs, brooks, creeks, larger streams, river branches, rivers, and finally
into the great river—the reservoir of all. And everywhere the waters go there is life. The only difference
between these two streams of life is in the direction. The blood flows from the largest toward the smallest; the
water flows from the smallest toward the largest. Both bring life with its accompaniments of beauty and vigor
and fruitfulness. There is Jesus' picture of the Christian down in the world. As the red stream flows out from
the stomach, and, propelled by the force-pump of the heart, through a marvelous network of minute rivers
takes life to every part of the body, so "he that believeth on Me"—that is the vital connecting link with
the great origin of this stream of life—out of the very source of life within him shall go a flood-tide of
life, bringing refreshing, and cleansing, and beauty, and vigor everywhere within the circle of his life, even
though, like the red streams and the water streams, he be unconscious of it.

An Unlikely Channel.

What a marvelous conception of the power of life! How strikingly it describes Jesus' own earthly life! But
there is something more marvelous still—He means that ideal to become real in you, my friend, and in
me. I doubt not there are some here whose eager hearts are hungry for just such a life, but who are tremblingly
conscious of their own weakness. Your thoughts are saying: "I wish I could live such a life, but certainly this
is not for me; this man talking doesn't know me—no special talent or opportunity: such strong tides of
temptation that sweep me clean off my feet—not for me." Ah, my friend, I verily believe you are the
very one the Master had in mind, for He had John put into his gospel a living illustration of this ideal of His
that goes down to the very edge of human unlikeliness and inability. He goes down to the lowest so as to
include all. What proved true in this case may prove true with you, and much more. The story is in the fourth
chapter. It is a sort of advance page of the Book of Acts. A sample of the power of Pentecost before the day of
Pentecost. You and I live on the flood-side of Pentecost. This illustration belongs back where the streams had
only just commenced trickling. It is a miniature. You and I may furnish the life-size if we will.

It is the story of a woman; not a man, but a woman. One of the weaker sex, so called. She was ignorant,
prejudiced, and without social standing. She was a woman of no reputation. Aye, worse than that, of bad
reputation. She probably had less moral influence in her town than any one here has in his circle. Could a
more unlikely person have been used? But she came in touch with the Lord Jesus. She yielded herself to that
touch. There lies the secret of what follows. That contact radically changed her. She went back to her village
and commenced speaking about Jesus to those she knew. She could not preach; she simply told plainly and
earnestly what she knew and believed about Him. And the result is startling. There are hundreds of ministers
who are earnestly longing for what came so easily to her. What modern people call a revival began at once.
We are told in the simple language of the Gospel record that "many believed on Him because of the word of
the woman." They had not seen Jesus yet. He was up by the well. They were down in the village. She was an
ignorant woman, of formerly sinful life. But there is the record of the wonderful result of her simple
witnessing—they believed on Jesus because of the word of that woman. There is only one way to
account for such results. Only the Holy Spirit speaking through her lips could have produced them. She had
commenced drinking of the living water of which Jesus had been talking to her, and now already the rivers
were flowing out to others.

What Jesus did with her, He longs to do with you, and far more, if you will let Him; though his plan for using
you may be utterly different from the one He had for her, and so the particular results different. Now let me
ask very frankly why have we not all such power for our Master as she? The Master's plan is plain. He said
"ye shall have power." But so many of us do not have! Why not? Well, possibly some of us are like
Nicodemus—there is no power because of timidity, cowardice, fear of what they will think, or say.
Possibly some of us are in the same condition spiritually that Lazarus was in physically. We are tied up tight,
hands and feet and face. Some sin, some compromise, some hushing of that inner voice, something wrong.
Some little thing, you may say. Humph! as though anything could be little that is wrong! Sin is never little!

An Unlikely Channel. 7
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.

A Clogged Channel.

Out in Colorado they tell of a little town nestled down at the foot of some hills—a sleepy-hollow
village. You remember the rainfall is very slight out there, and they depend much upon irrigation. But some
enterprising citizens ran a pipe up the hills to a lake of clear, sweet water. As a result the town enjoyed a
bountiful supply of water the year round without being dependent upon the doubtful rainfall. And the
population increased and the place had quite a western boom. One morning the housewives turned the water
spigots, but no water came. There was some sputtering. There is apt to be noise when there is nothing else.
The men climbed the hill. There was the lake full as ever. They examined around the pipes as well as possible,
but could find no break. Try as they might, they could find no cause for the stoppage. And as days grew into
weeks, people commenced moving away again, the grass grew in the streets, and the prosperous town was
going back to its old sleepy condition when one day one of the town officials received a note. It was poorly
written, with bad spelling and grammar, but he never cared less about writing or grammar than just then. It
said in effect: "Ef you'll jes pull the plug out of the pipe about eight inches from the top you'll get all the water
you want." Up they started for the top of the hill, and examining the pipe, found the plug which some vicious
tramp had inserted. Not a very big plug—just big enough to fill the pipe. It is surprising how large a
reservoir of water can be held back by how small a plug. Out came the plug; down came the water freely; by
and by back came prosperity again.

Why is there such a lack of power in our lives? The reservoir up yonder is full to overflowing, with clear,
sweet, life-giving water. And here all around us the earth is so dry, so thirsty, cracked open—huge
cracks like dumb mouths asking mutely for what we should give. And the connecting pipes between the
reservoir above and the parched plain below are there. Why then do not the refreshing waters come rushing
down? The answer is very plain. You know why. There is a plug in the pipe. Something in us clogging up the
channel and nothing can get through. How shall we have power, abundant, life-giving, sweetening our own
lives, and changing those we touch? The answer is easy for me to give—it will be much harder for us
all to do—pull out the plug. Get out the thing that you know is hindering.

I am going to ask every one who will, to offer this simple prayer—and I am sure every thoughtful,
earnest man and woman here will. Just bow your head and quietly under your breath say to Him: "Lord Jesus,
show me what there is in my life that is displeasing to Thee; what there is Thou wouldst change." You may be
sure He will. He is faithful. He will put His finger on that tender spot very surely. Then add a second clause to
that prayer—"By Thy grace helping me, I will put it out whatever it may cost, or wherever it may cut."
Shall we bow our heads and offer that prayer, and hew close to that line, steadily, faithfully? It will open up a
life of marvelous blessing undreamed of for you and everyone you touch.

THE OLIVET MESSAGE.

Searchlight Sights.

Coming into Cleveland harbor one evening, just after nightfall, a number of passengers were gathered on the
upper deck eagerly watching the colored breakwater lights and the city lights beyond. Suddenly a general
curiosity was aroused by a small boat of some sort, on the left, scudding swiftly along in the darkness like a
blacker streak on the black waters. A few of us who chanced to be near the captain on the smaller deck above,
heard him quietly say, "Turn on the searchlight." Almost instantly an intense white light shone full on the
stranger-boat, bringing it to view so distinctly that we could almost count the nail-heads, and the strands in her
cordage.

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If some of us here to-night have made the prayer suggested in our last talk together—Lord Jesus, show
me what there is in my life that is displeasing to Thee, that Thou wouldst change—we will appreciate
something of the power of that Lake Erie searchlight. There is a searchlight whiter, intenser, more keenly
piercing than any other. Into every heart that desires, and will hold steadily open to it, the Lord Jesus will turn
that searching light. Then you will begin to see things as they actually are. And that sight may well lead to
discouragement. Many a hidden thing, which you are glad enough to have hidden, will be plainly seen. How is
it possible, you will be ready to ask, for me to lead the life the Master's ambition has planned for me, with
such mixed motives, selfish ambitions, sinfulness and weakness as I am beginning to get a glimpse
of—how is it possible?

There is one answer to that intense heart-question, and only one. We must have power, some supernatural
power, something outside of us, and above us, and far greater than we, to come in and win the victory within
us and for us.

If that young man whose inner life is passion-swept, one tidal wave of fierce temptation, hot on the heels of
the last, until all the moorings are snapped, and he driven rudderless out to sea—if he is to ride
masterfully upon that sea he must have power.

If that young woman is to be as attractive, and womanly winsome in the society circle where she moves, as
she is meant to be, and yet able to shape her lips into a gently uttered, but rock-ribbed no when certain
well-understood questionable matters come up, she must have power. If society young people are to remain in
the world, and yet not be swayed by its spirit: on one side not prudish, nor fanatical, nor extreme, but cheery,
and radiant, and full-lived, and yet free of those compromising entanglements that are common to society
everywhere, they must have a rare pervasive power.

For that business man down in the sharp competition of the world where duty calls him, to resist the sly
temptations to overreach, to keep keenly alert not to be overreached; and through all to preserve an
uncensorious spirit, unhurt by the selfishness of the crowd—tell me, some of you men—will that
not take power? Aye, more power than some of us know about, yet.

For that same man to go through his store and remove from shelf or counter some article which yields a good
profit, but which he knows his Master would not have there—Ah! that'll take power.

It takes power to keep the body under control: the mouth clean and sweet, both physically and morally: the
eye turned away from the thing that should not be thought about: the ear closed to what should not enter that
in-gate of the heart: to allow no picture to hang upon the walls of your imagination that may not hang upon
the walls of your home: to keep every organ of the body pure for nature's holy function only—that
takes mighty power.

For that young man to be wide-awake, a pusher in business, and yet steadily, determinedly to hold back any
crowding of the other side of his life: the inner side, the outer-helpful side, the Bible-reading- and
secret-prayer- and quiet personal-work-side of his life, that will take real power.

It will take a power that some of us have not known to let that glass go untouched, and that quieting drug
untasted and unhandled. If the rear end of some pharmacies could speak out, many a story would startle our
ears of struggles and defeats that tell sadly of utter lack of power.

It takes power for the man of God in the pulpit to speak plainly about particular sins before the faces of those
who are living in them; and still more power to do it with the rare tactfulness and tenderness of the Galilean
preacher. It takes power to stick to the Gospel story and the old book, when literature and philosophy present
such fine opportunities for the essays that are so enjoyable and that bring such flattering notice. It takes power

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to leave out the finely woven rhetoric that you are disposed to put in for the sake of the compliment it will
bring from that literary woman down yonder, or that bright, brainy young lawyer in the fifth pew on the left
aisle. It takes power to see that the lips that speak for God are thoroughly clean lips, and the life that stands
before that audience a pure life.

It takes power to keep sweet in the home, where, if anywhere, the seamy side is apt to stick out. How many
wooden oaths could kicked chairs and slammed doors tell of! After all the home-life comes close to being the
real test of power, does it not? It takes power to be gracious and strong, and patient and tender, and cheery, in
the commonplace things, and the commonplace places, does it not?

Now, I have something to tell you to-night that to me is very wonderful, and constantly growing in wonder. It
is this—the Master has thought of all that! He has thought into your life. Yes, I mean your particular
life, and made an arrangement to fully cover all your need of power. He stands anew in our midst to-day, and
putting His pierced hand gently upon your arm, His low, loving, clear voice says quietly, but very distinctly,
"You—you shall have power." For every subtle, strong temptation, for every cry of need, for every low
moan of disappointment, for every locking of the jaws in the resolution of despair, for every disheartened look
out into the morrow, for every yearningly ambitious heart there comes to-night that unmistakable ringing
promise of His—ye shall have power.

The Olivet Message.

Our needs argue the necessity of power. And the argument is strengthened by the peculiar emphasis of the
Master's words. Do you remember that wondrous Olivet scene? In the quiet twilight of a Sabbath evening a
group of twelve young men stand yonder on the brow of Olives. The last glowing gleams of the setting sun fill
all the western sky, and shed a halo of yellow glory-light over the hilltop, through the trees, in upon that
group. You instantly pick out the leader. No mistaking Him. And around Him group the eleven men who have
lived with Him these months past, now eagerly gazing into that marvelous face, listening for His words. He is
going away. They know that. Coming back soon, they understand. But in His absence the work He has begun
is to be entrusted to their hands. And so with ears and eyes they listen intently for the good-bye
word—His last message. It will mean so much in the coming days.

Two things the Master says. The first is that ringing "go ye" so familiar to every true heart. The second is a
very decisive, distinct "but tarry ye." What, wait still longer! Tarry, now, when your great work is done!
Listen again, while His parting words cut the air with their startling distinctness "but tarry ye—until ye
be endued with power."

I could readily imagine impulsive Peter quickly saying, "What! shall we tarry when the whole world is dying!
Do we not know enough now?" And the Master's answer would come in that clear, quiet voice of His, "yes,
tarry: you have knowledge enough, but knowledge is not enough, there must be power."

There is knowledge enough within the christian church of every land—aye, knowledge enough within
the walls of this building to-night to convert the world, if knowledge would do it. Into many a life, through
home training, and school, and college, has come knowledge, while power lingers without—a stranger.
Knowledge—the twin idol with gold to American hearts—is essential, but, let it be plainly said,
is not the essential. Knowledge is the fuel piled up in the fireplace. The mantel is of carved oak, and the
fenders so highly polished they seem almost to send out warmth, but the thermometer is working down
toward zero, and the people are shivering. The spark of living fire is essential. Then how all changes! There
must be fire from above to kindle our knowledge and ourselves before any of the needed results will come.

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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
There is no language strong enough to tell how absolutely needful it is that every follower of Jesus Christ
from the one most prominent in leadership down to the very humblest disciple, shall receive this promised
power.

Look at these men Jesus is talking to. There is Peter, the man of rock, and John and James, the sons of
thunder. They were with the Lord on the Transfiguration Mount, and when He raised the dead. They were
near by during the awful agony of Gethsemane. They were admitted nearer to the Master's inner life than any
others. There is quiet matter-of-fact Andrew, who had a reputation for bringing others to Jesus. There is
Nathanael, in whom is no guile. It is to these men that there comes that positive command to tarry. If they
needed such a command, do not we?

"Yes," someone says, "I understand that this power you speak of is something the leaders and preachers must
have, but you scarcely mean that there is the same necessity for us people down in the ranks, and that we are
to expect the same power as these others, do you?" Will you please call to mind that original Pentecost
company? There were one hundred and twenty of them. And while there was a Peter being prepared to preach
that tremendous sermon, and a John to write five books of the New Testament and probably a James to
preside over the affairs of the Jerusalem Church, and possibly a Stephen, and a Philip, yet these are only a
few. By far the greater number, both men and women, are unnamed and unknown. Just the common,
every-day folk, the filling-in of society; aye, the very foundation of all society. They had no prominent part to
play. But they accepted the Master's promise of power, and His command to wait, as made to them. And as a
result they, too, were filled with the Holy Spirit, that wonderful morning. I think, very likely, "the good man
of the house" whose guest Jesus was that last night was there, and all the Marys, including the Bethany Mary,
who simply sat at His feet, and the Magdalene Mary, and housekeeper Martha, and maybe that little lad whose
loaves and fishes had been used about a year before. That was the sort of company that prayerfully, with one
accord, not only waited but received that never-to-be-forgotten filling of the Holy Spirit.

Certainly, as some of you think, the preacher must have this power peculiarly for his leadership. But just as
really he needs it because he is a man for his living, to make him sweet and gentle and patient down in his
home: to make him sympathetic and strong in his constant contact with the hungry hearts he must meet. That
young mechanic must have this promised power if he is to live an earnest, manly life in that shop. That school
girl, whose home duties crowd her time so; that keen-minded student working for honors amid strong
competition; these society young people; these all need, above all else, this promised power that in, and
through, and around and above all of their lives may be a wholesomely sweet, earnest Christliness, pervading
the life even as the odor of flowers pervades a room.

[3] Gal., 5:22.

Do you remember Paul's list of the traits of character that mark a christian life—love, joy, peace,
long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, meekness, faithfulness, self-control?[3] Suppose for a moment you think
through a list of the opposites of those nine characteristics—bitterness, envy, hate, low-spiritedness,
sulkiness, chafing, fretting, worrying, short-suffering, quick-temper, hot-temper, high-spiritedness,
unsteadiness, unreliability, lack of control of yourself. May I ask, have you any personal acquaintance with
some of these qualities? Is there still some need in your life for the other desirable traits? Well, remember that
it is only as the Holy Spirit has control that this fruit of His is found. For notice that it is not we that bear this
fruit, but He in us. We furnish the soil. He must have free swing in its cultivation if He is to get this harvest.
And notice, too, that it does not say "the fruits of the Spirit," as though you might have one or more, and I
have some others. But it is "fruit"—that is, it is all one fruit and all of it is meant to be growing up in
each one of us. And let the fact be put down as settled once for all that only as we tarry and receive the
Master's promise of power can we live the lives He longs to have us live down here among men for Him.

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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
If that father is so to live at home before those wide-awake, growing boys that he can keep up the family altar,
and instead of letting it become a mere irksome form, make it the green, fresh spot in the home life, he must
have this promised power, for he cannot do it of himself. I presume some of you fathers know that.

There is that mother, living in what would be reckoned a humble home, one of a thousand like it, but charged
with the most sacred trust ever committed to human hands—the molding of precious lives. If there be
hallowed ground anywhere surely it is there, in the life of that home. What patience and tirelessness, and love
and tact and wisdom and wealth of resource does that woman not need! Ah, mothers! if any one needs to tarry
and receive the power promised by the Son of that Mary, who was filled with the Holy Spirit from before His
birth for her sacred trust, surely you do.

Here sits one whose life plans seem to have gone all askew. The thing you love to do, and had fondly planned
over, removed utterly beyond your reach and you compelled to fit in to something for which you have no
taste. It will take nothing less than the power the Master promised for you to go on faithfully, cheerfully just
where you have been placed, no repining, no complaining, even in your innermost soul, but, instead, a glad,
joyous fitting into the Father's plan with a radiant light in the face. Only His power can accomplish that
victory! But His can. And His may be yours for the tarrying and the taking.

Let me repeat then with all the emphasis possible that as certainly as you need to trust Jesus Christ for your
soul's salvation, you also need to receive this power of the Holy Spirit to work that salvation out in your
present life.

A Double Center.

It has helped me greatly in understanding the Master's insistent emphasis upon the promise of power to keep
clearly in mind that the christian system of truth revolves around a double center. It is illustrated best not by a
circle with its single center, but by an ellipse with its twin centers. There are two central truths—not
one, but two. The first of the two is grained deep down in the common Christian teaching and understanding.
If I should ask any group of Sabbath school children in this town, next Sabbath morning, the question: What is
the most important thing we christians believe? Amid the great variety in the form of answer would come, in
substance, without doubt, this reply: "The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin." And they would be
right. But there is a second truth—very reverently and thoughtfully let me say—of equal
importance with that; namely, this: the Holy Spirit empowereth against all sin, and for life and service. These
two truths are co-ordinate. They run in parallel lines. They belong together. They are really two halves of the
one great truth. But this second half needs emphasis, because it has not always been put into its proper place
beside the other.

Jesus died on the cross to make freedom from sin possible. The Holy Spirit dwells within me to make freedom
from sin actual. The Holy Spirit does in me what Jesus did for me. The Lord Jesus makes a deposit in the
bank on my account. The Spirit checks the money out and puts it into my hands. Jesus does in me now by His
Spirit what He did for me centuries ago on the cross, in His person.

Now these two truths, or two parts of the same truth, go together in God's plan, but, with some exceptions,
have not gone together in men's experience. That explains why so many christian lives are a failure and a
reproach. The Church of Christ has been gazing so intently upon the hill of the cross with its blood-red
message of sin and love, that it has largely lost sight of the Ascension Mount with its legacy of power. We
have been so enwrapt with that marvelous scene on Calvary—and what wonder!—that we have
allowed ourselves to lose the intense significance of Pentecost. That last victorious shout—"It is
finished"—has been crowding out in our ears its counterpart—the equally victorious cry of
Olivet—"All power hath been given unto Me."

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The christian's range of vision must always take in two hill-tops—Calvary and Olivet.
Calvary—sin conquered through the blood of Jesus, a matter of history. Olivet—sin conquered
through the power of Jesus, a matter of experience. When the subject is spoken of, we are apt to say: "Yes,
that is correct. I understand that." But do we understand it in our experience? So certainly as I must trust Jesus
as my Saviour so certainly must I constantly yield my life to the control of the Spirit of Jesus if I am to find
real the practical power of His salvation.

As surely as men are now urged to accept Jesus as the great step in life, so surely should they be instructed to
yield themselves to the Holy Spirit's control that Jesus' plan for their lives may be carried through.

You remember in the olden time the Hebrew men were required to appear before God in the appointed place
three times during the year. At the Passover, and at Pentecost, and again at the harvest home feast of
Tabernacles. So it is required of every man of us who would fit his life into God's plan that he shall first of all
come to the Passover feast, where Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us. And then that he shall as certainly
come to the great Pentecost feast, or feast of first fruits where a glorified Passover Lamb breathes down His
Spirit of power into the life. And then he is sure to have a constant attendance at a first-fruits feast all his days,
with a great harvest home festival at the end.

I said there were two central truths. Will you notice that the gospels put it also in this way, that Jesus came to
do two things—not one thing, but two things—in working out our salvation. That the first is
dependent for its practical power upon the second, and the second is the completing or carrying into effect of
the power of the first. That the first—let me say it with great reverence—is valueless without the
second.

What was Jesus' mission? Would you not expect His forerunner to understand it? Listen, then, to his words.
When questioned specifically by the official deputation sent from the national leaders at Jerusalem, he pointed
to Jesus, and declared that He had come for a two-fold purpose. Listen: "Behold the Lamb of God who
beareth away the sin of the world"; and then he added, and the word comes to us with the peculiar emphasis of
repetition by each of the four gospel scribes—"this is He that baptizeth with the Holy Spirit." That was
spoken to them originally without doubt in a national sense. It just as surely applies to every one of us in a
personal sense.

Mark also the emphasis of Jesus' own teachings regarding this second part of His mission. At the very
beginning He spoke the decided words about the necessity of being born of the Spirit. And we are all
impressed with that fact. But observe that several times, in the brief gospel record, He refers the disciples to
the overshadowing importance of the Spirit's control in the life. And that He devotes a large part of that last
long confidential talk which John records, to this special subject, pointing out the new experiences to come
with the coming of the Spirit, and holding out to them as the greatest evidence of His own love the promise of
power.

It adds intense emphasis to all this to note that Jesus Himself, very Son of God, was in that wonderful human
life of His utterly dependent upon the Holy Spirit. At the very outset, before venturing upon a single act or
word of His appointed ministry, He waits at the Jordan waters, until the promised anointing of power came.
What a picture does that prayerfully waiting Jesus present to powerless men to-day! From that moment every
bit and part of His life was under the control of that Holy Spirit. Impelled into the wilderness for that fierce
set-to with Satan, coming back to Galilee within the power of the Spirit, He himself clearly stated more than
once, that it was through this anointing that He preached, and taught, and healed, and cast out demons. The
writer to the Hebrews assures us that it was through the power of the Eternal Spirit that He was enabled to go
through the awful experiences of Gethsemane and Calvary. And Luke adds that it was through the same
empowering Spirit that He gave commandment to the apostles for the stupendous task of world-wide
evangelization. And then at the very last referring them to that life of His, He said: "As the father hath sent Me

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even so send I you." Let me ask if He, very God of very God, yet in His earthly life intensely human, needed
that anointing, do not we? If He waited for that experience before venturing upon any service, shall not you
and I?

But we must turn to the book of Acts to get fully within the grip of this truth. For it, with the epistles fitting
into it, is peculiarly the Holy Spirit book, even as the Old Testament is the Jehovah book and the gospels with
Revelation the Jesus book. The climax of the gospels is in the Acts. What is promised in the gospels is
experienced in the Acts.

Jesus is dominant in the gospels; the Spirit of Jesus in the Acts. He is the only continuous personality from
first to last. He is the common denominator of the book. The first twelve chapters group about Peter, the
remaining sixteen about Paul, but distinctly above both they all group about the Holy Spirit. He is the one
dominant factor throughout. The first fourth of the book is fairly aflame with His presence at the
center—Jerusalem. Thence out to Samaria, and through the Cornelius door to the whole outer
non-Jewish world; at Antioch the new center, and thence through the uttermost parts of the Roman empire
into its heart, His is the presence recognized and obeyed. He is ceaselessly guiding, empowering, inspiring,
checking, controlling clear to the abrupt end. His is the one mastering personality. And everywhere His
presence is a transforming presence. Nothing short of startling is the change in Peter, in the attitude of the
Jerusalem thousands, in the persecutor Saul, in the spirit of these disciples, in the unprecedented and
unparalleled unselfishness shown. It is revolutionary. Ah! it was meant to be so. This book is the living
illustration of what Jesus meant by His teaching regarding His successor. It becomes also an acted illustration
of what the personal christian life is meant to be.

The Spirit's presence and the necessity of His control is deep-grained in the consciousness of the leaders in
this book. Leaving the stirring scenes at the capital the eighth chapter takes us down to Samaria. Multitudes
have been led to believe through the preaching of a man who has been chosen to look after the business
matters of the church. Peter and John are sent down to aid the new movement. Note that their very first
concern is to spend time in prayer that this great company may receive the Holy Spirit.

The next chapter shifts the scene to Damascus. A man unknown save for this incident is sent as God's
messenger to Saul. As he lays his hand upon this chosen man and speaks the light-giving words he
instinctively adds, "and be filled with the Holy Spirit." That is not recorded as a part of what he had been told
to do. But plainly this humble man of God believes that that is the essential element in Saul's preparation for
his great work.

In the tenth chapter the Holy Spirit's action with Cornelius completely upsets the life-long, rock-rooted ideas
of these intensely national, and intensely exclusive Jews. Yet it is accepted as final.

With what quaint simplicity does the thirteenth chapter tell of the Holy Spirit's initiation of those great
missionary journeys of Paul from the new center of world evangelization? "the Holy Spirit said, etc." And
how like it is the language of James in delivering the judgment of the first church council:—"it seemed
good to the Holy Spirit and to us."

Paul's conviction is very plain from numerous references in those wonderful heart-searching and
heart-revealing letters of his. But one instance in this Book of Acts will serve as a fair illustration of his
teaching and habit. It is in the nineteenth chapter. In his travels he has come as far as to Ephesus, and finds
there a small company of earnest disciples. They are strangers to him. He longs to help them, but must first
find their need. At once he puts a question to them. A question may be a great revealer. This one reveals his
own conception of what must be the pivotal experience of every true follower of Jesus. He asks: "Did ye
receive the Holy Spirit when ye believed?"

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But they had been poorly instructed, like many others since, and were not clear just what he meant. They had
received the baptism of John—a baptism of repentance; but not the baptism of Jesus—a baptism
of power. And Paul at once gives himself up to instructing and then praying with them until the promised gift
is graciously bestowed. That is the last we hear of those twelve persons. Some of them may have been
women. Some may have come to be leaders in that great Ephesian Church. But of that nothing is said. The
emphasis remains on the fact that in Paul's mind because they were followers of the Lord Jesus they must
have this empowering experience of the Holy Spirit's infilling.

Plainly in this Book of Acts the pivot on which all else rests and turns is the unhindered presence of the Holy
Spirit.

Five Essentials.

If you will stop a while to think into it you will find that a rightly rounded christian life has five essential
characteristics. I mean essential in the same sense as that light is an essential to the eye. The eye's seeing
depends wholly on light. If it does not see light, by and by, it cannot see light. The ear that hears no sound
loses the power to hear sound. Light is essential to the healthful eye: sound to the ear: air to the lungs: blood
to the heart. Just as really are these five things essential to a strong healthful christian life.

The second of these is a heart-love for the old Book of God. Not reading it as a duty—taking a chapter
at night because you feel you must. I do not mean that just now. But reading it because you love to; as you
would a love letter or a letter from home. Thinking about it as the writer of the one hundred and nineteenth
psalm did. Listen to him for a moment in that one psalm, talking about this book: "I delight," "I will delight,"
"My delight"—in all nine times. "I love," "Oh! how I love," "I do love," "Consider how I love," "I love
exceedingly," again nine times in all. "I have longed," "My eyes fail," "My soul breaketh," speaking of the
intensity of his desire to get alone with the book. "Sweeter than honey," "As great spoil," "As much as all
riches," "Better than thousands of gold," "Above gold, yea, above fine gold." And all that packed into less
than two leaves. Do you love this Book like that? Would you like to? Wait a moment.

The third essential is right habits of prayer. Living a veritable life of prayer. Making prayer the chief part not
alone of your life, but of your service. Having answers to prayer as a constant experience. Being like the
young man in a conference in India, who said, "I used to pray three times a day: Now I pray only once a day,
and that is all day." Feet busy all the day, hands ceaselessly active, head full of matters of business, but the
heart never out of communication with Him. Has prayer become to you like that? Would you have it so? Wait
a moment.

The fourth essential is a pure, earnest, unselfish life. Our lives are the strongest part of us—or else the
weakest. A man knows the least of the influence of his own life. Life is not mere length of time but the daily
web of character we unconsciously weave. Our thoughts, imaginations, purposes, motives, love, will, are the
under threads: our words, tone of voice, looks, acts, habits are the upper threads: and the passing moment is
the shuttle swiftly, ceaselessly, relentlessly, weaving those threads into a web, and that web is life. It is woven,
not by our wishing, or willing, but irresistibly, unavoidably, woven by what we are, moment by moment, hour
after hour. What is your life weaving out? Is it attractive because of the power in it of His presence? Would
you have it so? Would you know the secret of a life marked by the strange beauty of humility, and fragrant
with the odor of His presence? Wait just a moment.

The fifth essential is a passion for winning others one by one to the Lord Jesus. A passion, I say. I may use no
weaker word than that. A passion burning with the steady flame of anthracite. A passion for winning: not
driving, nor dragging, but drawing men. I am not talking about preachers just now, as preachers, but about
every one of us. Do you know the peculiar delight there is in winning the fellow by your side, the girl in your

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social circle, to Jesus Christ? No? Ah, you have missed half your life! Would you have such an intense
passion as that, thrilling your heart, and inspiring your life, and know how to do it skillfully and tactfully?

Let me tell you with my heart that the secret not only of this, but of all four of these essentials I have named
lies in the first one which I have not yet named, and grows out of it. Given the first the others will follow as
day follows the rising sun.

What is the first great essential? It is this—the unrestrained, unhindered, controlling presence in the
heart of the Holy Spirit. It is allowing Jesus' other Self, the Holy Spirit, to take full possession and maintain a
loving but absolute monopoly of all your powers.

Tarry.

My friend, have you received this promised power? Is there a growing up of those four things within you by
His grace? Does the Holy Spirit have freeness of sway in you? Are you conscious of the fullness of His love
and power—conscious enough to know how much there is beyond of which you are not conscious?
Does your heart say, "No." Well, things may be moving smoothly in that church of which you are pastor, and
in that school over which you preside. Business may be in a satisfactory condition. Your standing in society
may be quite pleasing. Your plans working out well. The family may be growing up around you as you had
hoped. But let me say to you very kindly but very plainly your life thus far is a failure. You have been
succeeding splendidly it may be in a great many important matters, but they are the details and in the main
issue you have failed utterly.

And to you to-night I bring one message—the Master's Olivet message—"tarry ye." No need of
tarrying, as with these disciples, for God to do something. His part has been done, and splendidly done. And
He waits now upon you. But tarry until you are willing to put out of your life what displeases Him, no matter
what that may mean to you. Tarry until your eyesight is corrected; until your will is surrendered. Tarry that
you may start the habit of tarrying, for those two Olivet words, "Go" and "tarry," will become the
even-balancing law of your new life. A constant going to do His will; a continual tarrying to find out His will.
Tarry to get your ears cleared and quieted so you can learn to recognize that low voice of His. Tarry earnestly,
steadily until that touch of power comes to change, and cleanse, and quiet, and to give you a totally new
conception of what power is. Then you can understand the experience of the one who wrote:—

"My hands were filled with many things


That I did precious hold,
As any treasure of a king's—
Silver, or gems, or gold.
The Master came and touched my hands,
(The scars were in His own)
And at His feet my treasures sweet
Fell shattered, one by one.
'I must have empty hands,' said He,
'Wherewith to work My works through thee.'
"My hands were stained with marks of toil,
Defiled with dust of earth;
And I my work did ofttimes soil,
And render little worth.
The Master came and touched my hands,
(And crimson were His own)
But when, amazed, on mine I gazed,

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Lo! every stain was gone.
'I must have cleansed hands,' said He,
'Wherewith to work My works through thee.'
"My hands were growing feverish
And cumbered with much care!
Trembling with haste and eagerness,
Nor folded oft in prayer.
The Master came and touched my hands,
(With healing in His own)
And calm and still to do His will
They grew—the fever gone.
'I must have quiet hands,' said He,
'Wherewith to work My works for Me.'
"My hands were strong in fancied strength,
But not in power divine,
And bold to take up tasks at length,
That were not His but mine.
The Master came and touched my hands,
(And might was in His own!)
But mine since then have powerless been,
Save His are laid thereon.
'And it is only thus,' said He,
'That I can work My works through thee.'"

THE CHANNEL OF POWER.

A Word that Sticks and Stings.

I suppose everyone here can think of three or four persons whom he loves or regards highly, who are not
christians. Can you? Perhaps in your own home circle, or in the circle of your close friends. They may be nice
people, cultured, lovable, delightful companions, fond of music and good books, and all that; but this is true of
them, that they do not trust and confess Jesus as a personal Savior. Can you think of such persons in your own
circle? I am going to wait a few moments in silence while you recall them to mind, if you will—Can
you see their faces? Are their names clear to your minds?

Now I want to talk with you a little while to-night, not about the whole world, but just about these three or
four dear friends of yours. I am going to suppose them lovely people in personal contact, cultured, and kindly,
and intelligent, and of good habits even though all that may not be true of all of them. And, I want to ask you
a question—God's question—about them. You remember God put His hand upon Cain's arm,
and, looking into his face, said: "Where is Abel, thy brother?" I want to ask you that question. Where are these
four friends? Not where are they socially, nor financially, nor educationally. These are important questions.
But they are less important than this other question: Where are they as touching Him? Where are they as
regards the best life here, and the longer life beyond this one?

And I shall not ask you what you think about it. For I am not concerned just now with what you think. Nor
shall I tell you what I think. For I am not here to tell you what I think, but to bring a message from the Master
as plainly and kindly as I can. So I shall ask you to notice what this old book of God says about these friends

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of yours. It is full of statements regarding them. I can take time for only a few.

Turn, for instance, to the last chapter of Mark's Gospel, and the sixteenth verse, and you will find these words:
"He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; he that believeth not shall be—." You know the last
word of that sentence. It is an ugly word. I dislike intensely to think it, much less repeat it. It is one of those
blunt, sharp, Anglo-Saxon words that stick and sting. I wish I had a tenderer tone of voice, in which to repeat
it, and then only in a low whisper—it is so awful—"damned."

Let me ask you very gently: Does the first part of that sentence—"he that
believeth—trusteth—not," does that describe the four friends you are thinking of now? And
please remember that that word "believeth" does not mean the assent of the mind to a form of creed: never
that: but the assent of the heart to a person: always that. "Yes," you say "I'm afraid it does: that is just the one
thing. He is thoughtful and gentlemanly; she is kind and good; but they do not trust Jesus Christ personally."
Then let me add, very kindly, but very plainly, if the first part is an accurate description of your friends, the
second part is meant to apply to them, too, would you not say? And that is an awful thing to say.

What a strange book this Bible is! It makes such radical statements, and uses such unpleasant words that grate
on the nerves, and startle the ear. No man would have dared of himself to write such statements.

I remember one time visiting a friend in Boston, engaged in christian work there; an earnest man. We were
talking one day about this very thing and I recall saying: "Do you really believe that what the Bible says about
these people can be true? Because if it is you and I should be tremendously stirred up over it." And I recall
distinctly his reply, after a moment's pause, "Well, their condition certainly will be unfortunate." Unfortunate!
That is the Bostonese of it. That is a much less disagreeable word. It has a smoother finish—a sort of
polish—to it. It does not jar on your feelings so. But this book uses a very different word from that, a
word that must grate harshly upon every ear here.

I know very well that some persons have associated that ugly word with a scene something like this: They
have imagined a man standing with fist clenched, and eyes flashing fire, and the lines of his face knotted up
hard, as he says in a harsh voice, "He that believeth not shall be damned," as though he found pleasure in
saying it. If there is one person here to-night who ever had such a conception, will you kindly cut it out of
your imagination at once? For it is untrue. And put in its place the true setting of the word.

Have you ever noticed what a difference the manner, and expression of face, and tone of voice, yes, and the
character of a person make in the impression his words leave upon your mind? Now mark: It is Jesus talking
here. Jesus—the tenderest-hearted, the most mother-hearted man this world ever listened to. Look at
Him, standing there on that hilltop, looking out toward the great world He has just died for, with the tears
coming into His eyes, and His lips quivering with the awfulness of what He was saying—"he that
believeth not shall be damned," as though it just broke his heart to say it. And it did break His heart that it
might not be true of us. For He died literally of a broken heart, the walls of that great, throbbing muscle burst
asunder by the strain of soul. That is the true setting of that terrific statement.

Please notice it does not say that God damns men. You will find that nowhere within the pages of this book.
But it is love talking; love that sees the end of the road and speaks of it. And true love tells the truth at all risks
when it must be told. And Jesus because of His dying and undying love seeks to make men acquainted with
the fact which He sees so plainly, and they do not.

Now turn for a moment to a second statement. You will find it in Galatians, third chapter, tenth verse. Paul is
quoting from the book of Deuteronomy these words: "Cursed"—there is another ugly
word—"cursed is everyone who continueth not in all the words of the book of this law to do them." Let
me ask: Does that describe your friends? Well, I guess it describes us all, does it not? Who is there here that

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has continued in all the words of the book of this law to do them? If there is some one I think perhaps you
would better withdraw, for I have no message for you to-night. The sole difference between some of us, and
these friends you have in your mind is that we are depending upon Another who bore the curse for us. But
these friends decline to come into personal touch with Him. Do they not? And this honest spoken book of God
tells us plainly of that word "cursed" which has been written, and remains written, over their faces and lives.

The Bible is full of such statements. There is no need of multiplying them. And I am sure I have no heart in
repeating any more of them. But I bring you these two for a purpose. This purpose: of asking you one
question—whose fault is it? Who is to blame? Some one is at fault. There is blame somewhere. This
thing is all wrong. It is no part of God's plan, and when things go wrong, some one is to blame. Now I ask
you: Who is to blame?

A Mother-Heart.

Well, there are just four persons, or groups of persons concerned. There is God; and Satan; and these friends
we are talking about; and, ourselves, who are not a bit better in ourselves than they—not a
bit—but who are trusting some One else to see us through. Somewhere within the lines of those four
we must find the blame of this awful state of affairs. Well, we can say very promptly that Satan is to blame.
He is at the bottom of it all. And that certainly is true, though it is not all of the truth. Then it can be added,
and added in a softer voice because the thing is so serious, and these friends are dear to us, that these people
themselves are to blame. And that is true, too. Because they choose to remain out of touch with Him who died
that it might not be so. For there is no sin charged where there is no choice made. Sin follows choice. Only
where one has known the wrong and has chosen it is there sin charged.

But that this awful condition goes on unchanged, that those two ugly words remain true of our dear friends,
day after day, while we meet them, and live with them, is there still blame? There are just two left out of the
four: God, and ourselves who trust Him. Let me ask very reverently, but very plainly: Is it God's fault? You
and I have both heard such a thing hinted at, and sometimes openly said. I believe it is a good thing with
reverence to ask, and attempt to find the answer, to such a question as that. And for answer let me first bring
to you a picture of the God of the Old Testament whom some people think of as being just, but severe and
stern.

Away back in the earliest time, in the first book, Genesis, the sixth chapter, and down in verses five and six
are these words: "And the Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and"—listen to
these words—"that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."

What an arraignment! "Every imagination," "evil," "only evil;" no mixture of good at all; "only evil
continually," no occasional spurts of good even—the whole fabric bad, and bad clear through, and all
the time. Is not that a terrific arraignment? But listen further: "And it repented the Lord that He had made man
on the earth, and"—listen to these last pathetic words—"it grieved Him at His heart."

Will you please remember that "grieve" is always a love word? There can be no grief except where there is
love. You may annoy a neighbor, or vex a partner, or anger an acquaintance, but you cannot grieve except
where there is love, and you cannot be grieved except wherein you love.

I have sometimes, more often than I could wish, seen a case like this. A young man of good family sent away
to college. He gets in with the wrong crowd, for they are not all angels in colleges yet, quite. Gets to smoking
and drinking and gambling, improper hours, bad companions, and all that. His real friends try to advise him,
but without effect. By and by the college authorities remonstrate with him, and he tries to improve, but
without much success after the first pull. And after a while, very reluctantly, he is suspended, and sent home

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in disgrace. He feels very bad, and makes good resolutions and earnest promises, and when he returns he does
do much better for a time. But it does not last long. Soon he is in with the old crowd again, the old round of
habits and dissipations, only now it gets worse than before; the pace is faster. And the upshot of it all is that he
is called up before the authorities and expelled, sent home in utter disgrace, not to return.

And here is his chum who roomed with him, ate with him, lived with him. He says, "Well, I declare, I am all
broken up over Jim. It's too bad! He was "hail-fellow, well met," and now he has gone like that. I'm awfully
sorry. It's too bad! too bad!!" And by and by he forgets about it except as an unpleasant memory roused up
now and then. And here is one of his professors who knew him best perhaps, and liked him. "Well," he says,
"it is too bad about young Collins. Strange, too, he came of good family; good blood in his veins; and yet he
seems to have gone right down with the ragtag. It's too bad! too bad!! I am so sorry." And the matter passes
from his mind in the press of duties and is remembered only occasionally as one of the disagreeable things to
be regretted, and perhaps philosophized over.

And there is the boy's father's partner, down in the home town. "Well," he soliloquizes, "it is too bad about
Collins' boy. He is all broken up over it, and no wonder. Doesn't it seem queer? That boy has as good blood as
there is: good father, lovely mother, and yet gone clean to the bad, and so young. It is too bad! I am awfully
sorry for Collins." And in the busy round of life he forgets, save as a bad dream which will come back now
and then.

But down in that boy's home there is a woman—a mother, heart-broken—secretly bleeding her
heart out through her eyes. She goes quietly, faithfully about her round of life, but her hair gets thinner, and
the gray streaks it plainer, her form bends over more, and the lines become more deeply bitten in her face, as
the days come and go. And if you talk with her, and she will talk with you, she will say, "Oh, yes, I know
other mothers' boys go wrong; some of them going wrong all the time; but to think of my Jim—that I've
nursed, and loved so, and done everything for—to think that my Jim—" and her voice chokes in
her throat, and she refuses to be comforted. She grieves at her heart. Ah! that is the picture of God in that
Genesis chapter. He saw that the world He had made and lavished all the wealth of His love upon had gone
wrong, and it grieved Him at His heart.

This world is God's prodigal son, and He is heartbroken over it. And what has He done about it. Ah! what has
He done! Turn to Mark's twelfth chapter, and see there Jesus' own picture of His Father as He knew Him. In
the form of a parable He tells how His Father felt about things here. He sent man after man to try and win us
back, but without effect, except that things got worse. Then Jesus represents God talking with Himself. "What
shall I do next, to win them back?—there is My son—My only boy—Jesus—I
believe—yes, I believe I'll send Him—then they'll see how badly I feel, and how much I love
them; that'll touch them surely; I'll do it." You remember just how that sixth verse goes, "He had yet one, a
beloved Son; He sent Him last unto them, saying, they will reverence my Son." And you know how they
treated God's Son, His love gift. And I want to remind you to-night that, speaking in our human
way—the only way we can speak—God suffered more in seeing His Son suffer than though He
might have suffered Himself. Ask any mother here: Would you not gladly suffer pain in place of your child
suffering if you could? And every mother-heart answers quickly, "Aye, ten times over, if the child could be
spared pain." Where did you get that marvelous mother-heart and mother-love? Ah, that mother-heart is a bit
of the God-heart transferred. That is what God is like. Let me repeat very reverently that God suffered more in
giving His Son to suffer than though He had Himself suffered. And that is the God of the Old Testament! Let
me ask: Is He to blame? Has He not done His best?

Let it be said as softly as you will, and yet very plainly, that those awful words, "damned" and "cursed,"
whatever their meaning may be, are true of your friends. Then add: It is not so because of God's will in the
matter, but in spite of His will. Remember that God exhausted all the wealth of His resource when He gave
His Son. There can come nothing more after that.

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Your Personality Needed.

Then there is a second question from God's side to ask about those ugly words: thoughtfully, and yet
plainly—Is it the fault of Jesus, the Son of God? And let anyone here listen to Him speaking in that
tenth chapter of John. "I lay down My life for the sheep. No man taketh it from Me. I lay it down of Myself. I
have power to lay it down and power to take it again." And then go out yonder to that scene just outside the
Jerusalem wall. There hangs Jesus upon that cross, suspended by nails through hands and feet. He is only
thirty-three. He is intensely human. Life was just as sweet to Him that day as it is to you and me to-night.
Aye, more sweet: for sin had not taken the edge off his relish of life. Plainly He could have prevented them.
For many a time had He held the murderous mob in check by the sheer power of His presence alone. Yet there
He hangs from nine until noon and until three—six long hours. And He said He did it for you, for me.
Do not ask me to tell how His dying for us saves. I do not know. No one statement seems to tell all the truth.
When I study into it I always get clear beyond my depth. In a tremendous way it tells a double story; of the
damnable blackness of sin; and of the intensity of love. I do know that He said He did it for us, and for our
salvation, and that it had to be done. But as we look to-day on that scene, again the question: does any of the
blame of the awful statements this book makes regarding your friends belong to Him, do you think? And I
think I hear your hearts say "surely not."

Well, the Father has done His best. No blame surely attaches there. The Son has gone to the utmost limit. No
fault can be found there. There is just one other left up yonder, of the divine partnership—the Holy
Spirit. What about Him. Listen. Just as soon as the Son went back home with face and form all scarred from
His brief stay upon the earth, He and the Father said, "now We will send down the last one of Us, the Holy
Spirit, and He will do His best to woo men back," and so it was done. The last supreme effort to win men back
was begun. The Holy Spirit came down for the specific purpose of telling the world about Jesus. His work
down here is to convict men of their terrible wrong in rejecting Jesus, and of His righteousness, and of the
judgment passed upon Satan. Only He can convince men's minds and consciences. A thousand preachers with
the logic of a Paul and the eloquence of an Isaiah could not convince one man of sin. Only the Spirit can do
that. But listen to me as I say very thoughtfully—and this is the one truth I pray God to burn into our
hearts to-night—that to do His work among men He needs to use men. He needs you. "Oh!" you say, "it
is hardly possible that you mean that: I am not a minister: I have no special ability for christian work: I am
just an obscure, humble christian: I have no gift in that direction." Listen with your heart while I remind you
that He needs not your special abilities or gifts, though He will use all you have, and the more the better, but
He needs your personality as a human channel through which to touch the men you touch. And I want to say
just as kindly and tenderly as I can and yet with great plainness that if you are refusing to let Him use you as
He chooses—shall I say the unpleasant truth?—the practical blame for those ugly words, and the
uglier truth back of them come straight home to you.

That is a very serious thing to say, and so I must add a few words to make it still more clear and plain. The
Spirit of God in working among men seeks embodiment in men, through whom He acts. The amazing truth is
that not only is He willing to enter into and fill you with His very presence, but He seeks for, He wants, yes,
He needs your personality as a channel or medium, that living in you He may be able to do His work among
the men you touch even though you may not be conscious of much that He is doing through you. Is not that
startling? He wants to live in your body, and speak through your lips, and look out of your eyes, and use your
hands, really, actually. Have you turned your personality over to Him as completely as that?

Remember the law of God's communication with men; namely, He speaks to men through men. Run carefully
through the Bible, and you will find that since the Cain disaster, which divided all men into two great groups,
whenever God has a message for a man or a nation out in the world He chooses and uses a man in touch with
Himself as His messenger.

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Listen to Jesus' own words in that last night's long talk in John's Gospel, chapter fourteen, verse seventeen.
Speaking about the coming Spirit, He says, "Whom the world cannot receive." That is a strange statement.
Though an important part of the Spirit's great mission is to the world yet it cannot receive Him. But chapter
sixteen, verses seven and eight gives the explanation: "I will send Him unto you, and He when He is come
(unto you) will convince," and so on. That is to say, a message from God to one who has come within the
circle of personal relation with Jesus—that message comes along a straight line without break or crook.
But a message to one who remains outside that circle comes along an angled line—two lines meeting at
an angle—and the point of that angle is in some christian heart. The message He sends out to the outer
circle passes through some one within the inner circle. To make it direct and personal: He needs to use you to
touch those whom you touch.

God's Sub-Headquarters.

[4] 1 Chron. xii: 18.

[5] 2 Chron. xxiv: 20.

Let me bring you a few illustrations of how God uses men, though the fact of His using them is on almost
every page of this Bible. Back in the old book of Judges is a peculiar expression which is not brought out as
clearly as it might be in our English Bibles. The sixth chapter and thirty-fourth verse might properly read: "the
Spirit of Jehovah clothed Himself with Gideon." It was a time of desperate crisis in the nation. God chose this
man for leadership among his fellows. If you take his life throughout you will not think him an ideal
character. But he seems to be the best available stuff there was. He became the general guiding an army in
what, to human eyes, was a perfectly hopeless struggle. Men saw Gideon moving about giving orders. But this
strangely significant phrase lets us into the secret of his wise strategy and splendid victory. "The Spirit of
Jehovah clothed Himself with Gideon." Gideon's personality was merely a suit of clothes which God wore
that day in achieving that tremendous victory for His people. The same expression is used of Amasai, one of
David's mighty chieftains,[4] and of Zechariah, one of the priests during Joash's reign.[5]

A New Testament illustration is found in the book of Acts in the account of Philip and the Ethiopian stranger.
This devout African official had a copy of the old Hebrew Scriptures, but needed an interpreter to make plain
their newly acquired significance. The Holy Spirit, the interpreter of Scripture, longs to help him. For that
purpose He seeks out a man, of whom He has control, named Philip. He is directed to go some distance over
toward the road where this man is journeying. We are told of Philip that he was "full of the Spirit." And a
reading of that eighth chapter makes plain the controlling presence of the Spirit in Philip's personality. In the
beginning He gives very explicit direction. "The Spirit (within Philip) said, go near, join thyself to this
chariot." And at the close "the Spirit of the Lord caught away Philip."

These are a few illustrations of what seems to be a common law of God's intercourse with men. The language
of the Bible throughout fits in with this same conception. Strikingly enough the same seems to be true in the
opposing camp, among the forces of the Evil One. Repeatedly in the gospels we come across the startling
expressions—"possessed with demons," "possessed of demons," evidently speaking of men whom
demons had succeeded in getting possession of, and clothing themselves with. It seems to be a law of spirit
life that a spirit needs to be embodied in dealing with embodied beings. And God conforms to this law in His
dealings with men.

My friend, will you ask your heart, has the Holy Spirit gotten possession of you like that? With reverence I
repeat that He is seeking for men in whom He may set up a sort of sub-headquarters, from which He may
work out as He pleases. Has He been able to do that with you? Or, have you been holding back from Him,
fearing He might make some changes in you or your plans? If that is so, may I say just as kindly as these lips

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can speak it, but also as plainly, that then the practical blame for those cutting words about your friends
comes straight back to you.

Hugh McAllister Beaver, son of the former governor of Pennsylvania, and one of the rarest christian young
men that ever lived, felt impelled at a conference of students at Northfield, in '97, to tell this bit of his inner
experience, though naturally reluctant to do so. While at college, arrangements were made for a series of
meetings every night for a week. "One day going down the hallway of the college building," he said, "I met a
boy we all called Dutchy, one of the toughest fellows in school. I said to him, 'Dutch, come to the meeting
to-night.'" Instead of laughing or swearing, to Beaver's surprise, he paused a moment as though such a thing
was possible, and Beaver said, "I prayed quietly to myself, and urged him to come." And he said, "Well, I
guess I will." And that night to every one's surprise Dutch came to the meeting. When Beaver rose to speak, to
his surprise this fellow was not simply intensely interested but his eyes were full of tears. And Beaver said "a
voice as distinct as an audible voice said to me, 'Speak to Dutchy!' But I did not." Again the next night Dutchy
came of his own accord, and one of the boys putting his arm on Beaver's shoulder said, "Speak to Dutchy. We
boys never saw him like this before." And he said he would. But he did not. And some time after he had a
dream and thought he would not walk this earth any more. It did not trouble him except that his brother was
crying. But he thought he met the Master, who looked into his face, and said, "Hugh, do you remember, I
asked you to speak to Dutchy?" "Yes." "And you did not." "No." "Would you like to go back the earth and
win him?" And he finished the story by saying, "it's hard work, but he's coming now."

I wonder if the Master has ever tried to use your lips like that, and you have refused?

A prominent clergyman in New England tells this experience of his. In the course of his pastoral work he was
called to conduct the funeral service of a young woman who had died quite unexpectedly. As he entered the
house he met the minister in charge of the mission church, where the family attended, and asked him, "Was
Mary a christian?" To his surprise a pained look came into the young man's face as he replied, "Three weeks
ago I had a strong impulse to speak to her, but I did not; and I do not know." A moment later he met the girl's
Sunday school teacher and asked her the same question. Quickly the tears came, as she said, "Two weeks ago,
Doctor, a voice seemed to say to me, 'Speak to Mary,' and I knew what it meant, and I intended to, but I did
not, and I do not know." Deeply moved by these unexpected answers, a few minutes later he met the girl's
mother, and thinking doubtless to give her an opportunity to speak a word that would bring comfort to her
own heart, he said quietly, "Mary was a christian girl?" The tears came quick and hot to the mother's eyes, as
she sobbed out, "One week ago a voice came to me saying, 'Speak to Mary,' and I thought of it, but I did not at
the time, and you know how unexpectedly she went away and I do not know."

Well, please understand me, I am not saying a word about that girl. I do not know anything to say. I would
hope much and can understand that there is ground for hope. But this is what I say: How pathetic, beyond
expression, that the Spirit tried to get the use of the lips of three persons, a pastor, a teacher, aye, a mother! to
speak the word that evidently He longed to have spoken to her, and He could not!

Has He tried to use you like that?

The Highest Law of Action.

But these two illustrations are narrower than the truth. They speak of the lips. He wants to use your lips; but,
even more, He wants to use your life. Much as He may use your lips, He will use your personality, your
presence, your life ten times more, when you are wholly unconscious of it. He loves men so much. He longs
to save them. But He needs us—you and me—as channels through which His power shall flow
to touch and mightily influence those whom we touch. How often has He turned away disappointed because
the channel had broken connections, or could not be used?

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"He was not willing that any should perish;
Jesus, enthroned in the glory above,
Saw our poor fallen world, pitied our sorrows,
Poured out His life for us, wonderful love.
Perishing, perishing, thronging our pathway,
Hearts break with burdens too heavy to bear;
Jesus would save, but there's no one to tell them,
No one to save them from sin and despair."
Someone says: "You are putting an awful responsibility upon us. Would you have us go out and begin
speaking to everyone we meet?" No, that is not what I am saying just now. Though there is a truth there. But
this: Surrender yourself to Jesus as your Master, for Him to take possession. Turn the channel over to Him,
that He may tighten the connections, upward and outward, and clean it out, and then use as He may choose.
He has a passion for winning men, and He has marvelous tact in doing it. Let Him have His way in you. Keep
quiet and close to Him, and obey Him, gladly, cheerily, constantly, and He will assume all responsibility for
the results.

There is a law of personal service. It is this: Contact means opportunity; opportunity means responsibility. To
come into personal contact with a man gives an opportunity of influencing him for Christ, and with
opportunity goes its twin partner—responsibility.

There is another law—a higher law—the highest law of the christian life. It is this: In everything
hold yourself subject to the Holy Spirit's leading. Whenever these two laws come into conflict remember that
the lower law always yields to the higher. It is a law of life that where two laws come into conflict the lower
law always gives way to the higher. That is a supreme law both of nature and in legislation. Now, the highest
law of the christian life is to yield constantly to the leading of our Companion—the Holy Spirit. Then
quiet time alone with the Master daily over His word for the training of the ear, and the training of the
judgment, and the training of the tongue becomes the great essential.

But to-night the great question is: Have you turned the channel of power—your
personality—over to Him to be flushed and flooded with His power? Will you?

"Only a smile, yes, only a smile,


That a woman o'erburdened with grief
Expected from you; 'twould have given relief,
For her heart ached sore the while.
But, weary and cheerless, she went away,
Because, as it happened that very day,
You were out of touch with your Lord.
"Only a word, yes, only a word,
That the Spirit's small voice whispered, 'Speak';
But the worker passed onward, unblessed and weak,
Whom you were meant to have stirred
To courage, devotion and love anew,
Because, when the message came to you,
You were out of touch with your Lord.
"Only a note, yes, only a note,
To a friend in a distant land;
The Spirit said, 'Write,' but then you had planned
Some different work, and you thought
It mattered little. You did not know
'Twould have saved a soul from sin and woe—

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You were out of touch with your Lord.
"Only a song, yes, only a song,
That the Spirit said, 'Sing to-night;
Thy voice is thy Master's by purchased right.'
But you thought, ''Mid this motley throng,
I care not to sing of the City of God';
And the heart that your words might have reached grew cold—
You were out of touch with your Lord.
"Only a day, yes, only a day,
But oh! can you guess, my friend,
Where the influence reaches and where it will end
Of the hours that you frittered away?
The Master's command is, 'Abide in Me';
And fruitless and vain will your service be
If out of touch with your Lord."

THE PRICE OF POWER.

Law of Exchange.

Every man needs power. Every earnest man covets power. Every willing man has the Master's promise of
power. But every man does not possess the promised power. And many, it is to be feared, never will. Many a
man's life to-day is utterly lacking in power. Some of us will look back at the close of life with a sense of keen
disappointment and of bitter defeat. And the reason is not far to seek, nor hard to see through. If we do not
have power it is because we are not willing to pay the price.

Everything costs. There is a law of exchange that rules in every sphere of life. It is this, "to get, you must
give." It rules in the business world. If I want a house or a hat I must give the sum agreed upon. It rules in the
intellectual world. If a young man wants a disciplined mind he must give time, and close application, and
some real, hard work. It holds true in the spirit realm. If you and I wish to have business transactions in this
upper world of spirit-life we must be governed by this same law. To have power in our lives over sin and
selfishness, and passion, and appetite; over tongue, and temper, and self-seeking ambition; to have power in
prayer, and in winning others over from sin to Jesus Christ, one must first lay down the required price.

What is the price of power? Turn to Jesus' talk with Peter and the others in the latter part of the sixteenth
chapter of Matthew's gospel. Jesus has been telling them of the awful cross-experiences which He clearly saw
ahead. Peter probably fearful that whatever came to his Master might possibly come to himself also, and
shrinking back in horror from that, has the hardihood to rebuke Jesus. The Master, recognizing the suggestion
as coming from a far subtler individual than Peter, who is using ignorant Peter's selfishness to repeat the
suggestion of the wilderness, again bids him begone. Then in a few simple words of far-reaching significance,
He states first the standard of power, and then the price to be paid by one who would reach that standard.
Listen to Him: "If any man would come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow Me."

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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.

In the Footprints of Jesus.

Let us look a little into these familiar words. "If any man would come after Me"—that is the standard
set before us. Not to be regarded as a pillar in the church, a leader in religious circles, a good Bible student, a
generous giver, an earnest speaker, an energetic worker, a spiritually minded person, but, what may not be
coupled with any or all of these admirable things, to tread in the footprints of Jesus.

Think back into that marvelous life. A human life, remember. For though He was Son of God He lived His
life down here as a son of man. Think of His power over temptation, not alone at the outset in the fierce
wilderness struggle, but through those succeeding years of intense conflict; His power over Satan, over
man-possessing demons, over disease; His power in dealing with the subtle schoolmen trying their best to trip
Him up, as well as over His more violent enemies who would have dashed Him over yon Nazareth precipice,
or later stoned the life out of His body in Jerusalem. Recall the power of His rare unselfishness; His combined
plainness and tenderness of speech in dealing with men; His unfailing love to all classes; His power as a soul
winner, as a man of prayer, as a popular preacher, lovingly wooing men while unsparingly rebuking their sins.
There is the suggestion of Jesus' standard of power. Would you go after Him? You may. For as the Father sent
Him even so sends He us, to do the same work and live the same life.

But wait a moment before answering that question. There is another side in His life to that "come-after-me."
Opposites brought into contact produce a violent disturbance. Such a life as that of Jesus, down in the
atmosphere of this world will of necessity provoke bitter enmities, both then and now. Listen. He was
criticized and slandered. They said He was peculiar and fanatical. His friends thought Him "beside Himself,"
swept off His feet by excessive, hot-headed enthusiasm. They "laughed Him to scorn," and reviled Him. They
picked His words, and nagged His kindliest acts, and dogged His steps. Repeated attempts were made upon
His life, both at Nazareth and by stoning at Jerusalem. A determined conspiracy against His life was planned
by the Jerusalem officials six months before the end actually came. He was practically a fugitive for those
months. At the last He was arrested and mocked and spit upon, struck with open hand and clenched fist,
derisively crowned with thorns, and finally killed—a cruel, lingering, tortured death.

"If any man would come after Me." Plainly this language of Jesus put back into its original setting begins to
assume a new significance.

A Fixed Purpose.

But look at these words a little more closely. "If"—it is an open question, this matter of following
Jesus. It is kept open by many people who want to be known as christian, but who hesitate over what a plain
understanding of Jesus' words may involve. Some of us may be disposed to shrink back from the simple
meaning these words will yet disclose.

"If any man would"—would is the past tense of will. The word will is one of the strongest in our
language. A man's will is the imperial part of him. It is the autocrat upon the throne; the judge upon the bench
of final appeal. Jesus is getting down to the root of matters here. He is appealing to the highest authority. No
mere passing sentiment is this. Not attending a meeting and being swept along with the crowd by the hour's
influence. But a fixed purpose, calmly, resolutely settled upon, rooted away down deep in the very vitals of
the will to follow Jesus absolutely, no matter what it may cost or where it may cut.

I wonder how many of us would form such a purpose, to follow Jesus blindly, utterly regardless of what it
might be found to mean as the days come and go? "Oh, well," I hear some one say, "why talk like that.
Nobody is required to suffer to-day as He did." Do you think not? I am not so sure about that. There is a
young man in Southern India, bright fellow, full of power, of high class family, who heard of Jesus, and felt

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the personal appeal to himself of that marvelous story. He thought a good while of what it meant, and what it
might involve, and at length resolutely formed his decision to accept and follow Jesus. As he had anticipated,
his dear ones remonstrated with him, coaxed, pleaded, threatened, and finally, his own father violently put
him out of his life-long home, and he has remained since an outcast from home and loved ones. These words
of Jesus surely are full of significance to him.

"But that was in India, far off, heathen India," you say. Well, here is something of a similar sort at home. I
knew a young woman in a certain New England town visiting away from home. She attended some meetings
where she was visiting, and decided to be a christian. She was betrothed to a young man, not a christian, in her
home town. At once she wrote him explaining her new step thinking, doubtless how glad he would be. For
most men seem very willing to have their wives christian. But he wrote back that if she were determined to be
a christian that must put an end to their engagement. He was not a christian and did not want his wife to be
one. Every one here must know how serious a question that brought up for decision. For she was a true
woman, and love's tendrils twine with wondrous tenacity about a woman's heart. And I presume, too, that
everyone of you has already thought while I am speaking, of the temptation that, quick as a flash, went
through her mind. "You need not make a public matter of this. Just be a true christian in heart and life, and in
that way you'll win him over afterwards." I imagine some of you have heard something like that before. But
she remembered that her new Master said "Confess" as well as "believe." It was a crisis; a severe struggle of
soul. But she felt she must follow her Master's leading regardless of what it involved. And so she decided.
You are not surprised to know that she was ill for a time. The intense strain of spirit affected her body.
"If—any—man—would—come—after—Me" meant much to her. Did
it not?

Without doubt if some of us listening to-day were to follow Jesus quietly, but absolutely, in all things as His
own Spirit plainly led, we would find as sharp a line of separation drawn against us, as did He in Palestine,
and these young people in India and America.

Many a social door would be shut in our faces. O, shut politely of course! Society thinks it in very bad form to
get unduly excited about mere matters of religious opinion. But the door is shut, and barred, too. Some of us
would possibly be searching for other business positions before to-morrow's light faded away if we were
determined to go only where He clearly pointed the way.

But we have only begun to get at the meaning of Jesus' words. Is there still a fixed purpose to follow
regardless of what meaning these words may yet disclose? Not impossibly the company of those willing to go
straight through this verse with a calm, determined "yes" to every word of Jesus, will grow smaller as we go
on.

A Character Sketch.

Let us go a little farther. "If any man would come after Me let him deny himself." "Deny
himself"—what does that mean? Well, deny means to say "no," plainly and positively. Himself is the
smoother English word for his self. Let him say "no" to his self. Please notice that Jesus is not speaking of
what is commonly called self-denial. That is, repressing some desire for a time, sacrificing something
temporarily in order to gain an advantage later. That sort of thing is not peculiar to the christian life, but is
practiced by all classes, even among the lowest. He is not speaking of that, but of something far more radical.
Reading the verse through again, it will be seen that there are three distinct persons referred to by Jesus. First,
the "any man" He speaks of, and then the two others represented by these words "himself" and "Me," either
one or the other of whom is influencing this "any man's" life. "Say no to his self" is coupled with "follow Me."
And the opposite is implied—if any man will not do as I desire, he will continue to do as he is now
doing, namely, deny Me and follow his self.

A Fixed Purpose. 27
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
These two persons self and Jesus are placed here in sharpest contrast. An uncompromising antagonism exists
between them. They are sworn foes, and every man must decide to which he will yield his allegiance. To
agree with either one is to oppose the other one. For a man to settle some matter that comes up for decision by
saying "yes" to the desires or demands of his self involves his saying "no" to Jesus. And on the other hand his
yielding assent to the plans and wishes of this "me," namely Jesus, is plainly equivalent to saying "no" to his
self.

What is this self in each of us that Jesus sets in such antagonism to Himself, and instructs us to say a hard,
uncompromising, unceasing "no" to? There are a few words in common use that give some suggestion of its
character. There is the word selfish, that is, being absorbed in one's own self; in getting every stream to flow
by his own door. That is commonly regarded, even in absolutely worldly circles, as a detestable trait. Its
opposite, self-forgetful, being full of forgetting one's self in thinking of others, is as commonly regarded in all
circles as a charming, winsome trait of character. The words self-centered, and self-willed, are as familiar and
suggestive.

The fact is, there is an individual living inside each one of us whom Jesus refers to, by this word "his self."
This individual takes on the degree of intensity and other local coloring of the person it inhabits. It may be
polished, scholarly, cultured; or, coarse, ignorant and ill-mannered. But "scratch a Russian and you find a
Tartar." Scratch through the veneering here and, whether coarse or highly polished, you will find the same
individual—self.

There are some quite marked characteristics by which its presence may be recognized. They may not all be
noticeable together in any one person. But one or more will be found in every person whom it succeeds in
influencing and dominating. One characteristic is this: it covets praise. It feeds and fattens on commendation.
It constantly seeks to be highly esteemed, to have its worth properly appraised. It is immensely impressed
with its own importance, its value to society, its keenness, wisdom or aptness, and wishes others to be so
impressed also. It is fond of a mirror, especially one made to magnify. It seeks recognition. It presses forward,
rudely or politely, according as its habitat has been trained in rude or polite circles. It may put on the garb of
humility, and use the language of depreciation. But its ear is none the less keenly alert to hear the agreeable
things and to cherish them.

Another characteristic, which really is simply the other side of this first named one, is this: it shrinks from
criticism. How it writhes and twists at the least touch of unfavorable criticism! It is always on the defensive.
The cheek colors at the suggestion of its being wrong, or having blundered, or of being peculiar.

How quickly it explains and defends and brings evidence of its being in the right. It is extremely sensitive. "It
is that touchy thing in you." It is chronically troubled with "the disease of touchiness." Its feelings are readily
hurt. It is easily slighted. It remembers grievances. It has an interrogation point constantly on sentinel duty,
namely, What will they think? What will they say? It lives in constant fear, under the lash of that huge, vague,
awful they.

I remember knowing a Sunday school teacher who had a mission class of rather rough boys from
non-christian homes. I asked one day how she was getting along with them. "Going to give them up," she
replied. "Is that so? They have all become christians?" No, none of them were christians, and they liked her,
and said they would not come if she gave them up, but she felt discouraged, and anyway she had decided to
give them up. Lawyers and women do not always give their reasons, very wisely. I ventured to suggest that
before giving them up, she have the boys come up to her home, one at a time, perhaps for tea; have a pleasant
chatty time at tea and afterwards, and then before the boy left have a quiet friendly talk with him by himself
about being a christian, and, a few words of prayer with him. Wouldn't she try that before giving them up?
And I remember distinctly that her face blushed as red as a bright red rose, as she replied, "Why, Mr. Gordon,
he'd laugh at me!" And she could not bear the possible chance of being laughed at for the other more likely

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possibility of winning a soul—a man—a life. That was "self" in her, shrinking back from a
laugh; dreading that look of possibly contemptuous surprise that might come.

Another person, speaking about certain recreations very common in society, and which he was in the habit of
joining, though freely questioning the propriety of so doing, said, "O, I don't care much for those things. I
could easily give them up, but people think you are so queer if you decline, and you feel as if you were a back
number." Ah! there was the rub. The desire to be thought well of; the dislike of being considered peculiar; the
fear of that thinly veiled sneering curl on the lip—that was self in him asserting its presence, and even
more, ruling his action. Do you recognize the individual inside of you that Jesus is speaking of?

There is a third tell-tale ear-mark of self that is difficult to conceal—it is assertive. It dearly loves to
have its own way. It has plans and ambitions, and proposes to carry them through regardless of man,
or—let the plain truth be spoken softly—of God. Its opinions are held tenaciously. Its favorite
pronoun is I, capitalized, with variations of my and me. The personal equation is extremely powerful and
persuasive.

The true follower of Jesus holds every plan subject to change from above. But this self, if allowed to rule,
takes the bit in its tightly-shut teeth, and drives determinedly ahead, reckless of either man's or God's
preferences, even though religious phraseology may be upon its tongue.

Still another trait of character of this self whose closer acquaintance we are making is this: It has an insatiable
appetite. It grows hungrier by that on which it feeds. Its capacity is beyond the measuring line. If given free
rein it will debase the holiest functions of the body, and degrade the highest powers of the mind to appease its
gnawing, passion-bitten hunger. The noblest gifts, the purest emotions, the most sacred relationships, are
dragged down to the slimy gutter to tempt and temporarily stay its jaded palate.

Unmasked.

That is something of a suggestion of the character of this other master than Jesus, who seeks to get control of
us, and from whose relentless, vise-like grip Jesus would fain free us. He says there is only one thing to do
with it. No half-way compromise—the great American expedient—will do here. The Master says
plainly it is to be denied, repressed, put determinedly down, starved, strangled. To every suggestion or
demand there is to be a prompt, positive, jaw-locked no.

There is war to the knife, and the knife clear up to the hilt, between these two claimants for the control of our
powers—self and Jesus. Paul understood this antagonism thoroughly. It comes out repeatedly in his
writings. His name for this inner enemy, by an accidental turn in English, is Jesus' word "self" spelled
backwards with the letter "h" added—f-l-e-s-h. His remarks in Romans, eighth chapter, verses four to
eight, and twelve to thirteen, are simply an enlargement of these words in the sixteenth of Matthew's gospel. If
one will read these verses, substituting Jesus' word "self" for Paul's word he will be surprised to find how
strikingly Paul is expressing this very thought of Jesus. A free translation of part of these verses would read
like this: Verse five—"They that choose to walk after self (as a slave walked after, or behind, his
master) will show their choice by obeying the desires of self, and they that choose to walk after the Spirit will
obey the desires of the Spirit." Verse seven—"For the purposes of self are opposed to God's purposes;
for it does not hold itself subject to God's wishes; indeed, in its very nature it cannot; and they that choose to
obey self cannot please God." Verse thirteen—"If by the Holy Spirit's aid ye kill off the plans and
doings of self, ye shall therein find real true life, and only so."

Plainly, the deep searching experiences of Paul's great soul, and his wide observation of others, in his
ceaseless travels, confirm the statements already made, that there is the intensest hatred, the bitterest

Unmasked. 29
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antagonism, between these two personalities represented by Jesus' words, "himself" and "me." There can be
no patched-up truce here. The only way the lion and the lamb can lie down together in this case is for the one
to lie down underneath the other—conquered; or inside the other—devoured.

In his other letters Paul sometimes uses still another name, "the old man," and names the characteristics of this
omnipresent self, which crop out with varying degrees of prominence, in different persons, and under different
circumstances. Notice only a few of these: In Galatians, fifth chapter, nineteenth verse: "The deeds of self are
... improper sexual intercourse, impurity, shameless looseness...." It will, wherever possible, debase the holiest
functions of the body. In Colossians, third chapter, fifth verse, speaking of the "old man": "And covetousness,
which is reckoning of highest worth that which is less worthy than God." That is to say, the ambitious
longings of self, will if unchecked become the ruling passion, thrusting all else ruthlessly aside and degrading
the highest powers of the mind to satisfying its feverish desire. In Ephesians, fourth chapter, thirty-first verse:
"Bitterness, passion, anger, loud disputing, evil-speaking ... malice." Its assertiveness, and demand for a due
recognition of its worth, its rights, its opinions, its proper place, bring bitterest burnings, and worse. It will not
be needful to review congressional, and political, and society life for illustrations. They may be found much
nearer one's own door.

Was there ever such a list? Such a being whose heart begets and nurses such progeny! This being has the
smell of hell, and of the evil one himself. Ah! now we are getting at the straight truth. Self is Satan's personal
representative in every human heart. Its door of entrance is the door of disobedience. It can have control only
where one allows himself to get out of intelligent sympathy with God. The self in Peter was recoiling from
that cross of which Jesus spoke. How keen Jesus was in recognizing the suggestor of the thought that found
expression through Peter's lips—"Get thee behind me, Satan." Self is Satan, condensed into each man's
life, though in some he dare not exhibit his coarser traits; and in others he is being constantly conquered by
that power of the Spirit of Jesus which comes through absolute, glad surrender to Him.

This sly Satan-self may often be recognized by a favorite question it asks among christian people about a great
many so-called unimportant matters:—What's the harm? But a true follower of Jesus never lives down
upon the plane of "what's-the-harm?" He lives up in a higher sphere with his Master, who "pleased not
Himself," but made it the steady, unfaltering aim of His life to do always those things that were pleasing to
His Father. Men thought Him narrow and fanatical, but He cared not so long as He could daily hear that clear,
sweet voice saying "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." The final touchstone which the
follower of Jesus applies to every matter is this: Would it please Him?

Let everyone here who earnestly desires to fit into, and to fill out, Jesus' plan for his life, take paper and pencil
and make a list of his personal habits; such as his eating, what he eats and how; his drinking, other things he
puts into his mouth, his dress, the use and care of his body, his recreations, his reading, his conversation, his
use of money, his use of time, his life plans and his daily plans, his social engagements; and regarding each
ask plainly the question—what is the motive that controls me in this? Is it my own preference or
enjoyment? Or, is it to please and honor Jesus? Let him further go through the list of his business methods, his
friendships, the various organizations he belongs to, with the same question. If he will do thorough work he
will probably have some stiff fighting on hand both at the start and afterwards. Many a life would thereby be
radically changed. For example, I know a christian storekeeper who has on his shelves a certain article bearing
the label of a tonic medicine, but he knows perfectly well, as does anyone who stops to think about it, that the
stuff back of the label is one form of an intoxicant. There can be no question of what the Master would say
about it. But it brings a good profit. And his money-fevered self asserts its mastery and carries the day. And
the man tightly grips the profits, while Satan chuckles with unholy glee, and souls are being damned by this
christian man's aid. Certainly there can be none of the power of God in such a life. Let us rather speak the
truth and say that this man is exerting a positive power for Satan and for hell.

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All this is included in these few simple words, "let him deny himself." Is there still a fixed purpose to follow
Jesus without regard to what it may cost us, or where the keen edge of separation may cut in?

The Battle of the Forks.

Here is a forking of the road. I bring this whole company up to this dividing, and therefore deciding, point. Let
each choose his own road deliberately, prayerfully, with open eyes. This road to the left has as its law,
yielding to self; saying "yes" to the desires and demands of self; with some modifications possibly, here and
there, for I am talking to professing christian people. Yes to Jesus sometimes, but at other times, when it suits
circumstances and inclinations better to do otherwise—well, a pushing of the troublesome question
aside. And that means a decided yes to self, with as positive a negative to Jesus' desires implied thereby. That
is the left-hand fork.

This right-hand road knows only one law to which exception is never made, namely: Yes to Jesus,
everywhere, always, regardless of consequences, though it may entail loss of friendships, or money, or
position, or social standing, or personal preference, or radical change of plans, or, what not.

Judas assented to the cravings of his ambitious self and said "no" to his Master, thinking possibly, with his
worldly shrewdness, thereby to force Jesus to assert His power. He little knew what a time of crisis it was, and
what terrific results would follow.

Peter stood on the side of his cowardly, shrinking self in the court-yard that dark night, and against his Master.
And though with matchless love he was forgiven, he never forgave himself, nor was able to get that night's
doings out of his memory. Judas and Peter were brothers in action that night, and there are evidences that
many other disciples are standing over in the same group. Are you? Which road do you choose to-night:
this—to the left? Or, this—to the right?

I knew a young man who was deeply attached to an admirable young woman, both refined christian persons,
much above the average in native ability, and in culture. He made known to her his feelings. But as many a
woman who does not trust her best Friend in such matters is apt to do she held him off, testing him repeatedly,
to find out just how real his attachment was. Finally revealing indirectly her own feeling she still withheld the
consent he pleaded for, until he would yield acquiescence in a certain plan of hers for him. The plan, proper
enough in itself, was an ambitious one, and tended decidedly toward swinging him away from the high,
tenderly spiritual ideals that had swayed his life in college and afterwards, though he probably was not clearly
conscious of this tendency. The only safe thing to do under such strong circumstances was to take time, aside,
alone, for calm, poised, thought and prayer, to learn if her plan was also the Master's plan for him. But the
personal element proved too strong for such deliberation. The possibility of losing her swung him off of his
feet. It was no longer a question between her plan and the Master's plan. The latter dropped out of view,
probably half-unconsciously because hurriedly. He must have her, he thought. That rose before his eyes above
all else. And so the decision was made. With what result? He is to-day prominent in christian service, an
earnest speaker, a tireless worker, with a most winsome personality. But his inner spiritual life has perceptibly
dwarfed. His ideals, still high and noble, are distinctly lower than in his earlier life. Intellectual ideals,
admirable in themselves, but belonging in second place in a christian life, now command the field. His
conceptions and understanding of spiritual truth have undergone a decided change.

The proposal of the self-life came in very fascinating guise to him. He hastily said "yes" to it: that meant as
decided a refusal of Another's plan for him, which had once been clearly recognized, and accepted, but was
now set aside, be it sadly said, as he swung quickly off to the left fork of the road.

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There is an incident told of a European pastor, an earnest, eloquent man. The realization came in upon him
that he had not been fully following the Master. In much of his life self was still ruling. He came to this
forking of the road, and the battle was a fierce one, for self dies hard. But finally "by the Spirit," he got the
victory, as every one may, and calmly stepped off to the right. He has vividly described that battle of the forks
in language, the accuracy of which will be recognized by others who have been in action on that field.

"Oh, the bitter shame and sorrow,


That a time could ever be
When I let the Saviour's pity
Plead in vain, and proudly answered:
'All of self, and none of Thee.'
"Yet He found me: I beheld him
Bleeding on the accursed tree;
Heard Him pray, 'forgive them, Father,'
And my wistful heart said faintly:
'Some of self and some of Thee.'
"Day by day, His tender mercy,
Healing, helping, full and free,
Sweet and strong, and oh, so patient,
Brought me lower, while I whispered:
'Less of self and more of Thee.'
"Higher than the highest heaven,
Deeper than the deepest sea,
Lord, thy love at last has conquered;
Grant me now my soul's desire,
'None of self and all of Thee.'"
Is there still a fixed purpose? Will you take this right fork? Let those who will, and those who linger
reluctantly listen to the further word that Jesus adds: "Let him deny himself and take up his cross." "Take up
his cross"—what does that mean? The cross has come to be regarded in these days as a fine ornament.
It looks beautiful bejeweled; on the end of a sword; or worked into regalia. It makes such an artistic finish to a
church building, finely chiseled in stone, or enwreathed with ivy. It looks pretty in jewelry and flowers. But to
Jesus and the men of His time it had a grim, hard, painful significance. In Roman usage a man condemned to
this death was required to take up the crude wooden cross provided, carry it out to the place of execution, and
there be transfixed upon it. Plainly to these men listening, Jesus' words meant: Let him say "no" to his self,
and then nail it up on the cross and leave it there to die.

Paul understood this thoroughly. To help the young christians in Galatia he explains his own experience by
saying: "I have been crucified with Christ;" and to the unknown friends in Rome he writes: "if ye by the Spirit
put to death the doings of the self life ye shall live." The only thing to do with this self is to kill it.

In Luke's account an intensely practical word is added to Jesus' remark: "Let him take up his cross daily." A
cat is said to have nine lives, because it is so hard to kill. I do not know what your experience may have been,
but, judged by this rule, the self in me is tougher-lived than that. It has about ninety-nine, or nine hundred and
ninety-nine lives. I put it on the cross to-day in the purpose of my will by the power of the Spirit, and I find it
trying to sneak down and step into active control again to-morrow through some sly, subtle suggestion which
it hopes may get past the vigilance of my sentinel. That word daily becomes, of necessity, my constant
keynote—a daily conflict, a daily sleepless vigilance, and, thank God, a daily victory.

Every man's heart is a battlefield. If self has possession, Jesus is lovingly striving to get possession. If
possession has been yielded to Jesus, there is a constant besieging by the forces of self. And self is a skilled
strategist. In every heart there is a cross, and a throne, and each is occupied. If Jesus is on the throne, ruling,

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self is on the cross, dying. But if self is being obeyed, and so is ruling, then it is on the throne. And self on the
throne means that Jesus has been put on the cross. And it seems to be only too pathetically true that not only
in New Testament times, but in these times, there are numbers of professing christians, who, in the practice of
daily life, are crucifying the Son of God afresh, and openly exposing Him to shame before the eyes of the
crowd.

Suppose that to-night I determine to make this absolute surrender to Jesus as my Master. To-morrow in some
matter, possibly a small matter—speaking a word to some one—asking a silent blessing at the
meal—making a change in some personal habit—or some other apparently trivial
matter—the Spirit quietly makes clear His wish as to what I should do. But I hesitate: it seems hard. I
do not say that I will not obey, but actually I do not. Let me plainly understand that in such a single failure to
obey, self is again mounting the throne, and Jesus is being dethroned and put over yonder on the cross.

Do some of us still hesitate at this forking of the roads, irresolute? A crowned Christ is attractive. But self's
tendrils, though small, are tenaciously tough, and twine into so many corners and around some hidden things.
And the uprooting and outcutting mean sharp pain. Is that so? And you hesitate? Please take another frank
look.

Lock-Step.

These two forks differ radically. They differ in direction. One is to the left; the other to the right. And these
two words are significant of more than direction. They differ in grade. This left-hand road does not seem to
have any grade. It is smooth and level, and straightaway, apparently. But a keener look reveals a slant down,
very slight at first, but steadily increasing, not only in its downward grade, but in the proportionate grade
down.

This right-hand road has a decided grade up from the beginning, a steep slant, that causes many to avoid it,
though they feel impelled to take it. Those who take it say that after the first decided step into it the slant does
not seem nearly so hard as before starting, and that climbing it makes splendid muscle and gives an inspiring
sense of exhilaration from the very start. The atmosphere is rare and purifying and invigorating. It is not
traveled by so many, though the number keeps increasing. But such rare companionship, hitherto unknown,
they afford!

The striking peculiarity of this road, however, is this, that each one keeps lock-step with a certain One who
leads the way. This One is remarkable in appearance. His face combines all the strength and resolution of the
strongest man's with all the fineness and gentleness of the finest woman's. But He bears peculiar marks as
though He had been through some terrible experience. His face has a number of small scars as though it had
been torn by thorns and cut by thongs. His hands and feet look as though huge spikes had been forced through
them. But the glory-light of another world is in His eyes, and illumines His face radiantly, and a glad ring is in
His low, musical, singularly clear voice.

The walking in step with Him is so close that one can feel the tender throbbing of His heart, and can talk
confidentially with Him in low, quiet tones, and can hear distinctly His gentle still-like voice in reply.

As one steps off quietly, determinedly to the right from the battle of the forks he hears the closing words of
Jesus' remarks to Peter—"and follow Me." Jesus sends no one ahead alone. He blazes out every path
through the unknown, unbroken forest, and asks us simply to come along after Him. He did what He asks us
to do. The self-life was alluringly and repeatedly presented to Him by Satan, in the wilderness, in the remark
of Peter, by the visit of the Greeks, in Gethsemane where the struggle of soul almost broke the tie that held
body and spirit together, and many other times. In many a hard battle—for the divine Jesus was

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intensely human in His earthly life—He repeatedly said a never-varying "no" to the self-life, and lived
a constant victory until the very last triumphant shout of victory on Calvary. It was a life of constant conflict,
but of splendid, calming, scarce-broken peace within, and of marvelous power without.

Earnestly, lovingly, gently, yet passionately, He stands just ahead in that path now, with pierced hands
outstretched in open invitation, with a heart-yearning in the depths of His great eyes, wooing us on to follow
where He goes on before.

Let us follow. It may be, it will be, in some measure, through the experiences of the wilderness temptation,
and of Gethsemane, and of Calvary, but it will also be to share the victory which was always coupled with
every testing He met. It will as certainly be following Him in power, and victory, on past Calvary to the new
life of the resurrection morning, that saw the greatest display of power. And even past that, to the upper
chamber where His words burn their way into our hearts—"as the Father sent Me (clothed with power
unconquerable) even so send I you." And then to Olivet where the victorious words ring out, "All power hath
been given unto me in heaven and on earth, therefore go ye and make disciples."

"If any man


would come alter me,
let him say "no" to his self,
and nail it to the cross daily,
and follow me."
Jesus, Master, by the Holy Spirit's help, I will.

THE PERSONALITY OF POWER.

A Personally Conducted Journey.

Everyone enjoys the pleasure of travel; but nearly all shrink back from its tiresomeness and drudgery. The
transportation companies are constantly scheming to overcome this disagreeable side for both pleasure and
business travel. One of the popular ways of pleasure travel of late is by means of personally conducted tours.
A party is formed, often by the railroad company, and is accompanied by a special agent to attend to all the
business matters of the trip. A variation of this is to arrange for a group of congenial people to accompany
some well-known accomplished gentleman. This gives the trip, not alone the convenience of having all
business matters cared for, but also the decided enjoyment which this gentleman's wide knowledge and
experience, and personal contact incidentally give. There are some criticisms however of such parties, from
the standpoint of greatest comfort and of freedom in moving about.

Probably the very pleasantest way—the ideal way, to travel anywhere, either in our own home land, or
abroad—is to form a party of only a very few persons, mutually congenial, and personally agreeable,
one of whom is an experienced traveler, to whom checking baggage, buying tickets, studying timetables,
planning connections and all the rest of that sort of thing which, to most, is disagreeable drudgery, to whom
all that is mere pleasant detail; and who in addition knows all the ground you will cover, the best hotels, the
inconveniences to avoid, the desirable places and things, and who finds rare enjoyment in making the trip
delightful and inspiring, and restful too, to these dear friends of his.

For instance if the trip is a foreign one beginning with a run through Great Britain it would add immensely to
have such a friend in London who knew that great whirling world-metropolis, as you know your own home.

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After a bit you may slip over the Channel to Holland. It is only a few hours away, but the strange language,
new custom-house rules, new usages, new sights, different sort of people, all make it a totally different world.
A few hours will bring you into Sweden, or west from the hollow-landed Dutch to the higher-landed
Germans, or south through Belgium into sunny France, and so on. And in each place the customs, and
language, and sights, and people, the food, the sleeping arrangements, and apparently everything, especially to
a stranger, are totally different. It is this very variety—the constant change of surroundings—that
constitutes much of the charm of it all. There is nothing so refreshing and invigorating as that. But on the
other hand to an entire stranger who has no guide, it is apt to be confusing and wearisome. And the tiresome
side often overcomes the pleasant side. Now this is what I am saying, that, if there are just a few together, and
this experienced traveler, who is also a dear friend, is one of them, the trip is radically changed. You move in
a new world. He can talk Dutch in Holland, and German in Germany, Swedish in Scandinavia, and French in
Switzerland. He sees the baggage past the customs officials, and provides restful stopping places, and keeps
the disagreeables away from you. He knows the places to visit, and is familiar with the historic occurrences,
and is a quiet, cheery companion, and if with it all he has an unlimited letter-of-credit, and makes you feel that
somehow you are favoring him by letting him help you out when you run short—that, I say, would be
the ideal way of traveling.

Now why take so much time speaking about all that? Listen! I will tell you why. Living is like traveling. Life
is a journey. It is a trip through a strange land where you have never been before, and you never know a
moment ahead where you are going next. Strange languages, strange scenes, strange dilemmas; new tangles,
new experiences, and some old ones with new faces so you do not know them. It is just as chock-full of
pleasure and enjoyment as it can be, if you could only make some provision for the drudgery and hard things
that seem to crowd in so thick and fast sometimes, as to make people forget the gladness of it.

Now I have something to tell you that seems too utterly good to be believed, and yet keeps getting better all
the way along. It is this: the Master has planned that your life journey shall be a personally conducted one on
this ideal plan. It was said a night or two ago that the Master has thought into your life and made arrangement
for all its needs. Let me add to-night this further fact: He has arranged with His best friend, who is an
experienced traveler, to go with you and devote Himself wholly to your interests.

Some of you, I am afraid, will smile, and think that I am just indulging in a fancy sketch—drawing on
my imagination. And so I pray our Master to burn into our hearts that it is plain, matter-of-fact truth, for every
day life. I would say that it is cold fact were it not that such a fact can never be cold.

Power is a Person.

Each of these talks, you have noticed, has led up to the one idea of surrender. That word surrender stands for
one side only of a transaction—our side. As in all transactions, there is another side—His side to
whom the surrender is made. To-night we want to take a step in advance and talk about the part which Jesus
has in this surrender-transaction. All truth goes in pairs. The partnership word with surrender is mastery.
Surrender on my part is followed by mastery on His part. There are two personalities in this transaction. You
are one: an important one, but only one. To-night we shall try to get a better acquaintance with the other One.
The One who assumes control of the surrendered life, who is to be our personal guide and friend.

Will you recall again the Master's good-bye Olivet message, and notice just what it means? Listen to the very
words: "Ye shall receive power." Let me ask you—what is power? Will some one give a simple
definition of that word? There are four words, four of the commonest, most familiar in our language, for
which I have not been able to find a definition. If some one here can help me I will be grateful. They are the
words life, light, love, and power. What do they mean? I can find plenty of statements about them,
descriptions of what each of these is like, but no definitions.

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What is life? Recently I looked into the statement regarding life made by three of the most famous English
scientists of the nineteenth century, whose names are household words. I read them carefully. The wisdom
and keenness of observation they show are amazing. But when I had studied and read them repeatedly I found
myself asking—what is life? They have described rarely the functions and characteristics of life, but
have not told what it is. They do not seem to know. Do you?

What is light? Will some one tell me? The corpuscular theory, which the famous Newton advocated, is long
since abandoned. The later wave theory is pretty generally accepted, and yet they can not all agree upon that.
These people say that light is a part of the kind of energy called radiant energy. Now, we all know what light
is! The sun of course is not light, only a light-holder and distributer. According to the oldest record we have of
the creation, light existed before these light-holders, the sun and moon and stars.

What is love? Well, you all know, I hope. Pity the poor man who does not know by experience what love is.
But you cannot tell what it is. "Oh!" you say, "it is emotion." Yes, so is hate, its very opposite. "Well, love is
affection." Yes. What is affection? "Well, it is a pleasurable feeling, or regard, which may be very intense, and
which leads us to unlimited sacrifice if need be. It is a devotion that grips the soul tremendously." That is true;
yet that is only telling what love is like. No simple, plain definition of love, or light or life has ever been
formed yet by man so far as I can learn.

What is power? You may say it is force. And what is force? "Well, force is a form of energy." What is
energy? "Well," you reply, "it is a strong inward movement whose strength is very impressive." Some one
says "power is ability." And ability? "Well, that is the innate power to do something." And so we get to use
our word in the attempted definition itself, which is simply talking in a circle. We can find good descriptive
words, but no defining words.

Now mark a singular fact. In the writings of John, in this old book I have here, you will find a few statements
regarding these things which combine wondrous simplicity of language with marvelous, yes, unfathomable,
depth of meaning. First, about life: in chapter one, verse four, of the gospel:—"in Him was life," being
an evident allusion to the remarkable Genesis statement: "the Lord God breathed into his nostrils the breath of
life, and man became a living soul." Then, about love: in chapter four, verse seven, of his first
epistle:—"love is of God"; coupled with the twice spoken words "God is love" in the same chapter.
About light: in chapter one, verse five, of the same epistle, "God is light."

I know some of you, perhaps some skilled theologian here, is saying to himself, "Those are statements of
moral truths." And I understand that that is the common conception. But I want to state here my own profound
conviction, based on the Spirit-breathed words of John, that some day, when we shall know about all these
deep things, we shall be finding that there is a basis not only of moral truth, but of far more than moral truth
underlying those profoundly simple statements.

And I believe in that day we shall find that life—all life—is, in some actual, marvelous way, the
outbreathing of God's own being. And that light is the inherent radiance of His person and face, and that the
universal passion of love is the throbbing pulse-beat of His own great heart.

Now why take time to speak about these things to-night when we are talking about power? I will tell you why.
Because they give the intensest practical significance to a similar statement about that word power with which
we are greatly concerned just now.

Mark the language Luke uses in describing that memorable Olivet scene in which we are so deeply interested
in these talks together. The old King James version reads: "ye shall receive power after that the Holy Spirit is
come upon you." The revised version puts it in this way, "ye shall receive power when the Holy Spirit is come
upon you." Some of you have probably noticed that some editions give a marginal note, which, in this case,

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proves to be the literal reading namely: ye shall receive power the Holy Spirit coming upon you. Not "after,"
nor "when," but simply "the Holy Spirit coming," etc. That is to say, the Holy Spirit is power. That you will
observe fits in with the form of statement John uses. The Holy Spirit in control, unhindered, unhampered,
means power manifest in the life. That is the profound truth of God's book. And as a bit of side evidence it is
striking to observe that all Scripture statements throughout fit in with that conception. Power is a person. Not
some thing, nor influence, nor sentiment, nor some working upon our hearts at a distance by God seated up
yonder on the throne. That were wonderful indeed. But a person, called the Holy Spirit, living in
me—shall I make it very definite by saying, living in my body?—that is power. If restrained by
sin, or disobedience, or ignorance, or wilfulness of any sort, then power restrained, held in check, not evident.
If utterly unrestrained, given free sway and control—ah! then power manifest, limitless, wonderful, all
exercised in carrying out God's will in, and with, and through me.

And the marvelous message I bring you from the old book of God is this: The Master has sent a dear friend of
His, and of yours, who is experienced, and strong, and loving, personally to conduct you through your daily
life, and His presence unrestrained, means power unlimited.

A Significant Name.

Do you remember that heart-to-heart talk that Jesus had with the eleven disciples that last night they spent
together in the upper room? John tells us about it in chapters thirteen to sixteen. The Master talks a great deal
that night, about some One else, who was coming to take His place with them. They did not understand what
He meant till afterwards. He packs more into that one evening's talk about this coming One than all He had
said before put together. Notice that now He gives a name, a new name, to this person, repeated four times
that night. It is an intensely significant name—the Comforter. Will you remember, and keep constantly
in mind, the actual meaning of that new name? it is simply this: one called alongside to help.

Let me attempt to suggest a little of its practical meaning.

Here is a little girl standing on the curbstone down town on Broadway in New York, with a bundle in her
arms. She has been sent on an errand, and wants to get across the street. But the electric cars are whizzing past
in both directions, and wagons, and carriages, and omnibuses, and horses jam the street from curb to curb, and
she cannot get across. She stands there gripping her bundle, watching eagerly for a chance, and yet afraid to
venture. But the jam seems endless, and she grows very tired, and by and by the corners of her mouth begin to
twitch down suspiciously, and a big tear is just starting in each eye. Just then a big policeman steps up, one of
the finest, six feet tall, and heavy and broad. He seems like a giant to her. He stoops down. Would you
imagine he had such a gentle voice? "What's the matter?" "Can't—get—'cross." Oh! is that all;
he'll fix that. And he takes her little hand in his with a reassuring "come along." And along she goes, past cars,
under horses' heads, close up to big wheels. She is just as small as before, and just as weak. But though her
eyes stay pretty big, the tears are gone, and there is an air of confidence, because this big, kind-hearted giant
by her side is walking across the street as though he owned the whole place, and he is devoting his entire
attention to her. That policeman is a comforter in the strict meaning of the word.

Here is a boy in school, head down close to the desk, puzzling over a "sum." It won't "come out." He figures
away, and his brow is all knitted up, and a worried look is coming into his face for he is a conscientious little
fellow. But he cannot seem to get it right and the clouds gather thicker. By and by the teacher comes up and
sits down by his side. It awes him a little to have her quite so close. But her kindliness of manner mellows the
awe. "How are you getting along?" "Won't come out right"—in a very despondent tone. "Let me see,
did you subtract that...?" "Oh-h-h! I forgot that," and a little light seems to break, as he scratches away for a
few moments; then pauses. "And this figure here, should it be...." "Oh-h-h, I see." More scratching, and a soft
sigh of relief, and the knitting brows unravel, and the face brightens. The teacher did not do the problem for

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him. She did better. She let him feel her kindly interest first of all, and gave just the light, experienced touch
that showed him the way out, and yet allowed him the peculiar pleasure of getting through himself. That is
what "Comforter" means.

One summer a friend suggested to me spending a week on Lake Chautauqua. I did not have the money to
spare, and so told him I was not sure I could arrange to get away. But he seemed to divine the basis of my
objection, and insisted on my going along. We went. I had very little money with me. I got on the train
without a ticket, took a seat in the parlor car, stopped at the best hotel, had a choice room on the ground floor,
patronized the well-ordered dining-room regularly, and made free use of the place. And all the time I had
practically no money with me. But would you believe me I was not a particle concerned about paying for
those privileges. Never felt less concern about anything in my life. You know why. I had a trustworthy friend,
with me who was concerned for me.

Now these are simple suggestions, illustrating partly the meaning of that marvelous name Jesus gave to the
Holy Spirit. I will send another Comforter, one who will be right by your side to help, sympathetic,
experienced, strong; and He will stay with you all the time. In the kitchen, in the sitting-room, the sick-room,
with the children, when work piles up, when things jangle or threaten to, when the baby's cross, and the
patching and sweeping and baking, and all the rest of it seem endless, on the street, in the office, on the
campus, in the store, when tempted—almost slipped, when opportunity opens for a quiet personal
word, everywhere, every time, in every circumstance, one alongside to help. Is not that wonderful?

A Pictorial Illustration.

There is one bother about illustrations: they never do tell all the truth. They never are as vivid, nor as good as
the truth, that is when you are talking about our Master, or His arrangements. The very best illustrations of
Bible truth are Bible illustrations. Now there is a striking pictorial illustration back in the Old Testament of
the meaning of this name of the Holy Spirit. It is in the story of a most remarkable journey from Egypt to the
border line of Palestine. The journey was remarkable for two things. First, for the sort of country it was
through. It is a trackless waste of sand, that spreads over thousands of square miles. It was infested with
venomous serpents and scorpions, and is described as "all that great and terrible wilderness," "a waste howling
wilderness," and "a land of deserts and pits, of drought and of the shadow of death, that none passed through,
and where no man dwelt." Think of taking a trip through a country like that! But it was even more remarkable
because of the transformation that took place in the travelers. For a mob of four millions of people was
changed into a well-organized nation. The explanation given is fully as remarkable as the trip, and the
transformation. It must strike very strangely on the cold, matter-of-fact ears of this materialistic world we
dwell in. It is this: that the Lord God Himself actually went with them in person, and lived with them, and
took immediate charge of everything. He had promised Moses, their leader, that He would do this. Just how
definite or indefinite a thing that meant to Moses' mind we cannot know. But it became very definite and
tangible that memorable night of departure from the iron furnace of Egypt. For there was a real physical
evidence of His presence. There appeared a column or pillar of fleecy-like cloud which came down close to
the ground, and which every one could plainly see. At night time it shone and flamed as a pillar full of partly
concealed fire. God's voice spake out of it in their hearing. And that presence-cloud never left them. In spite
of complaints, and criticisms, and rebellions of the most mean and exasperating kind, it never left them until
they had safely arrived at the border line of the promised Palestine.

[6] See note at the end.

Now it is extremely fascinating in tracing that journey to notice just what that cloud came to mean to them. If
you will run rapidly through the three wilderness books, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers, you will find there
twenty distinct incidents[6] which illustrate how God's actual presence in that cloud was made very real to

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them in practical affairs. In those incidents there are ten different ways in which they were made to feel that
powerful Presence.

At the outset it is mentioned that the chief purpose was "to lead them the way," and, by night "to give them
light." Five incidents speak of bodily nourishment, including fresh food daily, with occasional extras, and a
full supply of pure living water. Five speak of protection from bodily harm. Two tell of the defeat of an
enemy. Once there is chiding for ingratitude. Six times rebuke or punishment for sin. In four they are held
back when dead-set on a very wrong course. Twice there is instruction in their leader's plan for them. Three
times a fuller manifestation of Himself, and each time this is preceded by obedience on their part in some
particular matter. Once there is a special plan suggested for relief in managing the nation's affairs. And then
the fact is stated that whenever Moses went apart to talk with God the cloud descended lower, that is, God
came nearer when Moses desired to talk with Him. So you see, the cloud meant guidance through that
trackless desert, food supplies, protection, defeat for the enemy, chiding, restraint, punishment, instruction,
help in business matters, a more intimate manifestation of the glorious personality of their Guide, and a
gracious coming nearer whenever desired. Was not that a real practical presence of the great God with them
all those days?

Now that is the Bible's own graphic illustration of the meaning of that new name given to the Holy Spirit, by
Him who knew Him best, Comforter—one alongside to help.

On a Higher Level.

Before we leave that illustration we must notice a very significant thing which is no small part of the truth
illustrated. Though the cloud appeared the very night of that sudden going out of Egypt, and was never absent
from them, by day or by night, yet a full year afterwards there was a new experience. By God's direction a
special tent was made and set up in which He said He would dwell. It was known as God's dwelling place, the
tent of meeting, the tabernacle, the tent of testimony. When everything concerning its setting up had been
fully done as specified then there was an experience the most remarkable they had yet had with God. It was a
new manifestation of the glorious presence of their unseen Friend-Guide. It is twice said that the tent was
"filled" with His glory. And this nearer disclosure, which God gave of Himself, was so marvelously glorious
and overpowering that even Moses, who had spent almost twelve weeks in that mount with God, in closer
intimacy than any one else—even Moses was not able to enter into the tent, so over-awing was that
Presence.

Now it is of intensest interest to mark four things about that experience. First of all, before it came, there was
obedience to God's instructions. Eighteen times within the narrow limits of the last two pages of the Exodus
record, it is said that Moses and the people did everything, in every particular, just exactly as "the Lord
commanded Moses." There was explicit obedience before anything else. Then followed the wondrous infilling
of the tent with God's presence. The third thing is particularized very carefully: all their movements were
directed and controlled by that Presence. Clearly the only safe rule for living in that terrible desert, was to plan
to live a planless life so far as their own planning was concerned. Besides the last two verses of Exodus which
emphasize this, I find that in my revised Oxford edition forty-five lines in the ninth chapter of Numbers are
given to telling how exactly they were guided, and how explicitly they followed their Guide. It seems almost
at first reading as though there was a decidedly needless repetition. You seem to understand the thing easily
enough without that. But as one reads it again, and yet again, slowly, it begins to dawn upon the mind that the
purpose is to put marked emphasis on this feature of their new life in the wilderness. The people would rise in
the morning, and probably the first thing done was to look out toward the cloud to learn if there was to be any
change that day. And so during the day there would come to be an instinctive habit of watching that cloud.
They might remain in a new camping place for months, or only for a few weeks, or, possibly only for a few
days. They never knew a day ahead. They lived literally a day at a time. It was certainly a hand-to-mouth

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existence so far as the daily manna was concerned. But then it was from His hand to their mouths and that
made a great difference. It was equally so in their movements and in all of their new life. When, one morning
as thousands of heads peep out, the cloud is seen to have lifted up from over the tent, the next question
was—which direction? It might be toward the west, or it might be just the opposite, toward the east.
Both the time of going, and the direction, and the pace were regulated by the presence of their Friend in that
cloud. Their life was a life of obedience to the will of their wise, loving Companion.

The fourth thing was intimacy of intercourse. It is a little unfortunate that in reading our Bibles we sometimes
allow the gaps that come in the printing to break the continuity of thought. There is a break for instance
between the last verse of Exodus and the first verse of Leviticus. The reading is meant to be continuous, and
shows that after the infilling, and the explanation about guidance, that God "called" Moses to Him and
commenced talking about their new life. Now in connection with that call, and all their after talks, notice a
remarkable statement in the last verse of that long seventh chapter of Numbers. It explains just how God
talked with Moses. Listen: "Whenever Moses went into the tent of meeting to speak with Him, then he heard
the voice speaking unto him from above the mercy-seat that was upon the ark of the testimony, from between
the two cherubim; and He speaketh unto him." There was the living, loving voice of their Companion-God,
which Moses could plainly hear, and which others heard, talking familiarly and intimately about all their
affairs. Several times when in doubt what to do Moses promptly went off into the tent, then the cloud would
come down nearer, and Moses would state his difficulty, and back would come that clear distinct voice with
an answer. Group up those four things—obedience; the never-to-be-forgotten infilling; the controlling
guidance; and intimate companionship.

That is the very best illustration I can find of the meaning of that word which Jesus now chooses out and uses
as the new name which would most vividly tell what the Holy Spirit was to be to all believers after His own
departure. All that the presence of God in that pillar was to those people, and to Moses personally, all that the
Holy Spirit will be to you. And my own conviction is that Jesus had that Old Testament scene in His mind.
For if you will turn again to that last night's talk you will find a striking repetition of the steps or peculiarities
of that wilderness experience. Though here the whole experience is on a much higher, finer plane. There is a
closeness of personal regard, a depth of that deepest of all loves, friendship love, that is not found in the Old
Testament story, except perhaps between Moses himself and God.

But now read the twenty-first verse of the fourteenth chapter of John: "He that hath My commandments and
keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me; and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father and I will love him,
and will manifest Myself unto him." And the twenty-third verse adds to it: "If a man love Me, he will keep My
word: and My Father will love him, and We will come unto him and make Our abiding place with him."
Notice: there is obedience; it is accepted as an evidence of love: there is a return love—a new, higher,
reciprocal love: then there is a revealing of Himself; and, constant abiding. Now run your eye through the
remaining part of that evening's conversation and you can quickly pick out these words: "teach," "bring to
your remembrance," "guide," "bear witness of me," "tell you coming things," "tell you about me."

Does that not parallel remarkably the wilderness experience? Only it is all put on such a higher plane. There is
a fullness, and richness, and tenderness, of personal intimacy here. The Presence in the wilderness was for the
national life: here it is peculiarly for the personal life. There He dwelt actually in the heart of the nation. Here
He dwells actually in one's own very person. And then, too, now He can do so much more in us because so
much more has been done for us through the person of Jesus.

How to Find the Meaning.

May I say right here plainly: there seems to be even yet in some quarters a hazy idea about the Holy Spirit
being a person. It is extremely common, even among people of excellent christian training, to find Him

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referred to, both in prayer and speech as it. Could anything be more disrespectful or insulting, if it were
intentional instead of being thoughtless or, in ignorance, as I am sure it really is. Imagine my speaking of the
pastor of this church in that way. "It is a good preacher. It is a helpful pastor." You smile, and he smiles. But if
I said it repeatedly, and in sober earnest, you know how insulted he would be. I suppose that the use of the
word "itself" for the Holy Spirit in the eighth chapter of Romans is largely responsible for this. The revisers
have properly substituted the word "himself." That very usage so common has doubtless accustomed many
persons to a vague idea of the personality of the Spirit. And yet apart from that, there is without doubt much
mistiness, and uncertainty, in some minds, because of the difficulty of thinking of a person without a form. It
seems impossible for our minds to grasp the idea of existence without bodily shape, yet of course we believe
in a personal God. Probably another reason is that the Holy Spirit's work is not to speak of Himself but of
Another—of Jesus. He is Jesus' representative, and is constantly absorbed in filling us with thoughts of
His Chief. And when our minds are most deeply stirred with thoughts of Jesus then it is that in that very fact
of being so stirred we have clearest evidence of the Holy Spirit's presence within us. His very faithfulness to
His mission has led to Himself suffering depreciation at our hands, through our ignorance.

I am sure it must help us all decidedly in getting a clear-cut, sharply defined idea of His personality to notice
the language Jesus uses in speaking of Him that night. For instance, notice that in our English version the
personal pronouns "he," "whom," "him," "which" (used in the sense of who as is common with the British
translators), occur twenty-four times. A study of the actual words used would prove helpful and interesting.
One of them, used several times, is peculiarly emphatic, its meaning being equivalent to the expression "that
person there."

And then notice the words used to describe what this person will do: "He shall teach," "bring to your
remembrance," "bear witness of Me," "convict the world of" three distinct things, "shall guide," "shall hear,"
"shall speak," "shall declare," "shall glorify Me," "shall take of Mine and declare it unto you." Everyone of
these ten different expressions imply intelligence and discrimination, and therefore of course personality. And
then added to this is the name given to Him here of which so much has been said.

May we take just another look at that name—The Comforter—as we close our talk together? I
wish with my whole heart, and I pray, that a vivid sense of the meaning of that name may be one result of this
evening's meeting. I was traveling alone in Germany one hot July day on a train going down to the city of
Worms. It was quite hot and I was very tired, and my head aching, I distinctly remember. The conductor came
along and objected to my ticket. Before leaving this country, I thought I knew a little of German, enough to
worry through on. My ideas on that subject changed a trifle over there, however. That day my tired ears
refused to recognize any familiar sounds on the conductor's lips, and my tired tongue refused to utter anything
satisfactory to him. And there I was, a complete stranger in a strange land too tired to think or have any
mental resources, not knowing but I might be put off at the next station. In fact just tired enough for fine
worrying. It looked blue for a few moments. But not for long. A young man by my side, a Jew, spoke to me in
excellent English. Was any sound ever so welcome! He straightened the conductor out, and then we fell to
talking together. He proved to be a very intelligent, agreeable companion. I found his home was in the city
where I was going. So we got off there together, and he simply devoted himself to me for the day. He took me
up to a good hotel, and while I was eating dinner, went and got his brother who had been in America, and who
entertained me while I ate. Then he took me to his father's home, a large old mansion, overlooking the famous
Luther monument where I rested a while. And then a quick run to a few interesting points, and finally when
leaving time came, he insisted on accompanying me to the station, and making sure I had a good seat, and
then bade me a gracious good-bye.

That day lingers in my memory as one of the green spots of that trip. It touched me to think that my Master
graciously sent one of His own despised race to be my friend. Do you not think that that man, experienced
where I was ignorant, and so sympathetic, was a living illustration to me of Jesus' name for the Holy
Spirit—one called alongside to help?

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One day recently, riding on a Lake Shore train in Ohio, I chanced to notice the conductor stopping to speak to
a little girl sitting behind me. Then I noticed that she was alone and crying a little, quietly. She did not answer
his questions, but he must have been a father, I thought, because he seemed to understand so well. Speaking to
a kind-faced motherly looking woman in the next seat he had the little girl go back and sit beside her, next the
window. They did not talk much, if any, I noticed. But the girl was snuggled up close, and I knew from her
face that she felt the warm sympathy of that friendly presence, and that the terrible feeling of loneliness had
gone. Is not that woman another illustration of that name Comforter? Her mere presence was all that was
needed to clear the skies and change the atmosphere for the little lone and lonely traveler.

But Jesus Himself has a very striking way of making clear just what He meant, by coupling another word with
that new name the first time He used it. He says, "I will send another Comforter." The comparison is with
Himself. He is one comforter. The Holy Spirit another one. The only other time this word is used is by John in
his first epistle, and is translated by our word advocate, and refers to Jesus. Jesus practically says: "You know
what I have been to you these months past." And they would think through, the close intimacy of nearly two
years. How He had spoken with unmistakable plainness when they were in the wrong, but also how loving
with a strong love He had been, how patient, and gentle, and resourceful, and how He seemed to yearn over
them that they might grow into His ideal for them. "Now," He says, "I am going away, but I will send you
another one who will be to you all that I have been—and more." And more! That comparative more,
either spoken or implied, runs all through this last long confidential talk. "More, much more, because I go
unto the Father." Jesus crucified, risen, glorified can do much more by far in us by His other self, the Holy
Spirit, than He could in person on the earth those years. And the wondrous meaning of that "another
comforter" to you and me, my friends, to-night is simply this: it is the same as though the Lord Jesus had
actually come back again and you had Him all to yourself—and more.

But I cannot tell you the meaning of that wonderful name. Nor yet the wondrous charm of Him who, for our
sakes, embodies it. You may put together all these illustrations in the attempt to get a real, close-up, idea of
what Jesus meant in that love-gift of His to you. And then you will not know. There is really only one way to
gain that knowledge. It is this: take the step which belongs to your side of the transaction between you and the
Master. Surrender yourself to Him to be changed and cleansed and used as He may choose. Then He will
begin at once working out the side that belongs to Him. You shall be filled with His presence. Then you will
begin to know. Then you can sing—

"I have a wonderful guest,


Who speeds my feet, who moves my hands,
Who strengthens, comforts, guides, commands,
Whose presence gives me rest.
"He dwells within my soul,
He swept away the filth and gloom;
He garnished fair the empty room,
And now pervades the whole."
And you shall go on knowing more and better until the day dawn and the shadows flee away.

Of the twenty incidents referred to three do not directly mention the cloud, and in two others it is over the
mount, with its characteristics much intensified. The references are given for those who will want to get closer
up to this famous illustration.

Guidance: Ex. xiii: 21-22, with Numbers xiv: 14.

Bodily nourishment. Ex. xv: 25; xvi: 13-14, 45; xvii: 6. Numbers xi: 31-32. xx: 1-12.

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Protection from bodily harm: The nation—Ex. xiv: 19-20. The leaders—Num. xiv: 10 and on.
xvi: 19 and on. xvi: 42 and on. xx: 1-12.

Defeat of an enemy: Ex. xiv: 24-31, xvii: 8-16.

Chiding: Ex. xvi: 4-7, 10-12.

Rebuke or punishment for sin: Numbers xi: 33; xii: 1-10; xiv: 10 and on; xvi: 19 and on; 42 and on; xx: 1-12.

Held back from wrong: Numbers xiv: 10 and on; xvi: 19 and on; 42 and on; xx: 1-12.

Instruction and training: Ex. xix: 9, 16 and on; xxiv: 15-18.

Fuller manifestation: Ex. xxxiv: 5 and on; xi: 34-38. Lev. ix: 6, 23.

Special plan of relief in managment: Numbers xi: 16, 17, 25.

Coming nearer: Ex. xxxiii: 7-11, revised version.

MAKING AND BREAKING CONNECTIONS.

Many Experiences, but One Law.

In mechanics power depends on good connections. A visit to any great machine shop makes that clear. There
must be good connections in two directions—inward toward the source of power, and outward for use.
The same law holds true in spiritual power as in mechanical. There must be good connections.

These nights we have been together a few things have seemed clear. We have seen that from the standpoint of
our lives there is need of power, as well as from the standpoint of the Master's use of us among others. Jesus'
promise and insistent words make plain the necessity of our having power if His plan for us is not to fail. His
words about the price of power have set many of us to doing some honest thinking and heart-searching. And
we have gotten some suggestion, too, of the meaning of that word power, and of the personality back of the
word.

To-night I want to talk with you a little about how to secure good connections between the source of power
and the channel through which it is to flow out to others; and, once secured, how to preserve the connections
unbroken.

It has been one of the peculiar characteristics of recent years in religious circles that much has been spoken
and written about the Holy Spirit. Thousands of persons have been led into a clearer understanding of His
personality and mission, and into intimate relationship with Himself. And yet, may I say frankly, that I read
much and listened to much without being able to get a simple workable understanding of how I was to receive
the much-talked-of baptism of power. That may quite likely have been due to my own dullness of
comprehension. But whatever the cause, my failing to understand led to a rather careful study of the old Book
itself until somewhat clearer light has come. And now in this convention I am anxious to put the truth as
simply as I may that others may not blunder and bungle along and lose precious time as I have done.

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Many an earnest heart, conscious of weakness and failure, is asking, how may I have power to resist
temptation, and live a strong, useful, christian life? In the search for an answer some of us have run across two
difficulties. One of these is in other people's experiences. It is very natural to try to find out how someone else
has succeeded in getting what we are after. Many a godly man has told of his experience of waiting and
pleading with God before the thing he sought came. Personal experiences are intensely interesting, and often
helpful. But there are apt to be as many different sorts of experiences as there are persons. Yet there is one
unchanging law of God's dealing with men underlying them all. But unless one is more skilled than many of
us are in analyzing experiences and discovering the underlying law, these experiences of others are often
misleading. We are so likely to think at once of the desirability of having the same experience as someone
else, rather than trying to find God's law of spirit life in them all. And so, some of the written experiences
have clouded rather than cleared the sky. We should rather try first to get something of a clear understanding
of God's law of dealing with men as a sort of basis to build upon. And then fit into that, even though it may
develop differently in our circumstances. We may then get much help from others' experiences. If possible,
we want to-night to get something of an inkling of that law.

Another difficulty that has bothered some of us is in the great variety of language used in speaking of this life
of power; a variety that seems confusing to some of us. "The baptism of the Holy Spirit," "the induement,"
"the filling," "refilling," "many fillings," "special anointings"—these terms are familiar, though just the
distinctive meaning of each is not always clear. Let us look a little at the language of the Book at this point. A
run through the New Testament brings out five leading words used in speaking of the Holy Spirit's relation to
us. These words are "baptized," "filled," "anointed," "sealed," and "earnest." It seems to take all five words to
tell all of the truth. Each gives a different side.

[7] 1 Cor. xii. 13.

[8] Luke xxiv. 49.

The word baptized is the distinctive word always used before the day of Pentecost, in speaking of what was to
occur then. It is not used afterward except in referring back to that day. It belongs peculiarly to the day of
Pentecost. Each of the gospels tells that John the Baptist said that Jesus was to baptize with the Holy Spirit.
Jesus Himself uses the word, during the forty days, in Acts, first chapter. Peter, in Acts, eleventh chapter,
recalls this remark. Paul uses it once in referring back to Pentecost.[7] These seem to be the only instances
where the word is used in speaking of the Holy Spirit. One other word is used once in advance of Pentecost.
"Tarry until ye be endued or clothed upon."[8] We shall see in a few moments that the meaning of this fits in
with the meaning of baptized, emphasizing one part of its meaning.

[9] That is to make perfectly plain that this experience was for all: a very difficult fact for these intensely
Jewish disciples to grasp.

1. Not limited to the original one hundred and twenty, but for the whole body of Jewish
disciples—Acts iv.
2. For the hated half-breed Samaritans—Acts viii.
3. For the "dogs" of Gentiles—Acts x.
4. For individual disciples anywhere, and at any distance in time from Pentecost—Acts xix.

"Baptized" may be called the historical word. It describes an act done once for all on that great day of
Pentecost, with possibly four accessory repetitions to make clear that additional classes and groups were
included.[9] It tells God's side.

[10] Acts i: 8; ii: 17, 33; viii: 15; x: 45; xix: 6.

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In this connection it will be helpful to note the significance of the word baptize. Of course you will understand
that I am not speaking now of the matter or mode of water baptism. But I am supposing that originally or
historically the word means a plunging or dipping into. We commonly think of the act of immersion-baptism
from the side of the object immersed because the action is on the side of the thing or person which is plunged
down into the immersing flood. But in the historical baptism of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost the standpoint is
reversed. Instead of a plunging down into there is a coming down upon, exactly reversing the order with
which we are familiar, but with the same result—submersion. Notice the phrases in Acts used in
describing the baptism of the Holy Spirit on that historical Pentecost: "Coming upon you," "pour out,"
"poured forth," "fallen upon," "fell upon," "poured out," "fell on them," "came upon,"[10] all suggesting an
act from above.

A Four-Sided Truth.

Now notice that the word used at the time of the actual occurrence and afterwards is another
word—"filled" and "full," which occurs eleven times in the first nine chapters of Acts. It tells what was
experienced by those persons at Pentecost and afterwards. It describes their side. Baptism was the act; filling
was the result. If you plunge a book into water you are submerging the book: that is your side. The leaves of
the book quickly become soaked, filled with the water: that is the other side. When a baby is born it is plunged
out into the atmosphere. That is an immersion into air. It begins at once to cry and its lungs become filled with
the air into which it has been plunged. So here "filled" is the experience word; it tells our side.

[11] (1) Luke iv. 18, quo. from Isa. lxi: 1. (2) Acts iv: 27. (3) Acts x: 38. (4) Heb. i: 9, quotation from Ps. xlv:
7.

[12] 2 Cor. i: 21.

[13] 1 John i: 20, 27.

The third word, "anointed," indicates the purpose of this filling; it is to qualify for living and for service. It is
the word commonly used in the Old Testament for the setting apart of the tabernacle to its holy use; and of
priests and kings, and sometimes prophets for service and leadership. In the New Testament it is four times
used of Jesus, each time in connection with His public ministry.[11] Paul uses it of himself in answering those
who had criticised his work and leadership at Corinth.[12] And John uses it twice in speaking of ability to
discern and teach the truth.[13] It is the power word, indicating that the Holy Spirit's coming is for the specific
purpose of setting us apart, and to qualify us for right living, and for acceptable and helpful service.

[14] 2 Cor. i: 22. Eph. i: 13; iv: 30.

The fourth word, "sealed," explains our personal connection with the Lord Jesus. It is used once by Paul in
writing to his friends at Corinth, and twice in the Ephesian epistle.[14] The seal was used, and still is to mark
ownership. In our lumber regions up in the Northwest it is customary to clear a small spot on a log and strike
it with the blunt end of a hatchet containing the initials of the owner, and then send it adrift down the stream
with hundreds of others, and though it may float miles unguarded, that mark of ownership is respected. On the
Western plains it is common to see mules with an initial branded on the flank. In both cases the initial is the
owner's seal, recognized by law as sufficient evidence of ownership. So the Holy Spirit is Jesus' ownership
mark stamped upon us to indicate that we belong to Him. He is our sole Owner. And if any of us are not
allowing Him to have full control of His property, we are dealing dishonestly. Sealed is the property or
ownership word.

[15] 2 Cor. i: 22; v: 5. Eph. i: 14.

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The last one of these words, "earnest," is a peculiarly interesting one. It is found three times in Paul's
epistles.[15] An earnest is a pledge given in advance as an evidence of good faith. We are familiar with the
usage of paying down a small part of the price agreed upon to make a business transaction binding. In old
English it is called caution money. My mother has told me of seeing her mother many a time pay a shilling in
the Belfast market-house to insure the delivery of a bag of potatoes, paying the remainder on its delivery.

[16] Romans viii: 23.

Now here the Holy Spirit is called "the earnest of our inheritance unto the redemption of the purchased
possession." That means two things to us: First—that the Holy Spirit now filling us is Jesus' pledge that
He has purchased us, and that some day He is coming back to claim His possessions; and then that the
measure of the Spirit's presence and power now is only a foretaste of a greater fullness at the time of coming
back; a sort of partial advance payment which insures a payment in full when the transaction is completed.
Paul speaks of this to the Romans as the first fruits of the Spirit.[16]

So, if you will take all five words you will get all of the truth about our friend the Holy Spirit, and just what
His coming into one's life means. The first word, "baptism," is the historical word, pointing us back to the day
of Pentecost. The other four words, taken together, tell us the four sides of the Holy Spirit's relation to us now.
"Filled" is the experience word, pointing us inward to what actually takes place there. "Anointed" is the power
word, pointing us outward to the life and service among men to which we are set apart. "Sealed" is the
personal-relation word, pointing us upward to our Owner and Master. "Earnest" is the prophetic word,
pointing us forward to the Master's coming back to claim His own, and to bestow the full measure of the
Spirit's presence.

And to-night we want to get some hint of how to have this infilling, which shall also be an anointing of power
and a seal of ownership and an earnest of greater things at Jesus' return.

Broken Couplings.

But perhaps some one is saying, "Have not we all received the Holy Spirit if we are christians?" Yes, that is
quite true. It is the Holy Spirit's presence in us that makes us christians. His work begins at conversion.
Conversion and regeneration are the two sides of the same transaction. Conversion, the human side:
regeneration, the divine side. My turning clear around to God is my side, and instantly His Spirit enters and
begins His work. But here is a distinction to be made: the Holy Spirit is in every christian, but in many He is
not allowed free and full control, and so there is little or none of His power felt or seen. Only as He has full
sway is His power manifest. If at the time of conversion or decision there is clear instruction and a
whole-hearted surrender, there will be evidence of the Spirit's presence at once. And if the new life goes on
without break there will be a continuance of that power in ever-increasing measure. But many a time, through
ignorance, or through some disobedience or failure to obey, there has come a break, a slipping of a cog
somewhere, and so an interruption of the flow of power. Many a time lack of instruction regarding the
cultivation of the Spirit's friendship has resulted in just such a break. And so a new start is necessary. Then a
full surrender is followed by a new experience or, shall I better say, a re-experience of the Spirit's presence.
And this new experience sometimes is so sharply marked as to begin a new epoch in the life. Some of the
notable leaders of the Church have gone through just such an experience.

Yet, I know a man—have known him somewhat intimately for years—one of the most saintly
men it has been my privilege to know. For some years he was a missionary abroad, but now is preaching in
this country. His private personal life is fragrant, and his public speech is always accompanied with rare
power. In conversation with a young minister at a summer conference, he said he had never known this
second blessing or experience on which such stress was being laid there. And I think I can readily understand

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that he had not. For, apparently, so far as one can see, his first surrender or decision had been a whole-hearted
one. He had followed simply, fully, as he saw the way. There had been no break, but a steady going on and
up, and an ever-increasing manifestation of the Spirit's presence from the time of that first decision. So that it
may be said, quite accurately, I think, that in God's plan there is no need of any second stage, but in our actual
experience there has been a second stage, and sometimes more than a second, too, because with so many of us
the connections have been broken, making a fresh act on our part a necessity.

The Real Battlefield.

But now the main topic we are to talk about is making and breaking connections. First, making connections
with the source of power. How may one who has been willing to go thus far in these talks go a step further
and have power in actual conscious possession?

There are many passages in this old Book that answer that question. But let me turn you to one which puts the
answer in very simple shape. John's gospel, seventh chapter, verses thirty-seven to thirty-nine. Listen: "Now,
on the last day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, if any man thirst, let him come unto
me and drink. He that believeth on me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living
water." Then John, writing some fifty years or so afterwards, adds what he himself did not understand at the
time: "But this spake He of the Spirit who they that believed on Him were to receive; for not yet was the Spirit
given, because not yet was Jesus glorified."

There are four words here which tell the four steps into a new life of power. Sometimes these steps are taken
so quickly that they seem in actual experience like only one. But that does not matter to us just now, for we
are after the practical result. Four words—thirst, glorified, drink, believe—tell the whole story.
Thirst means desire, intense desire. There is no word in our language so strong to express desire as the word
thirst. Physical thirst will completely control your actions. If you are very thirsty, you can do nothing till that
gnawing desire is satisfied. You cannot read, nor study, nor talk, nor transact business. You are in agony when
intensely thirsty. To die of thirst is extremely painful. Jesus uses that word thirst to express intensest desire.
Let me ask you—Are you thirsty for power? Is there a yearning down in your heart for something you
have not? That is the first step. No good to offer food to a man without appetite. "Blessed are they that hunger
and thirst." Pitiable are they that need and do not know their need. Physicians find their most difficult work in
dealing with the man who has no desire to live. He is at the lowest ebb. Are you thirsty? There is a special
promise for thirsty ones. "I will pour water on him that is thirsty." If you are not thirsty for the Master's power,
are you thirsty to be made thirsty? If you are not really thirsty in your heart for this new life of power, you
might ask the Master to put that thirst in you. For there can be nothing before that.

The second word is the one added long afterwards by John, when the Spirit had enlightened his
understanding—"glorified." "For not yet was the Spirit given, because not yet was Jesus glorified."
That word has two meanings here: the first meaning a historical one, the second a personal or experimental
one. The historical meaning is this: when Jesus returned home all scarred in face and form from His trip to the
earth, He was received back with great enthusiasm, and was glorified in the presence of myriads of angel
beings by being enthroned at the Father's right hand. Then the glorified Jesus sent the Holy Spirit down to the
earth as His own personal representative for His new peculiar mission. The presence of the Spirit in our hearts
is evidence that the Jesus whom earth despised and crucified is now held in highest honor and glory in that
upper world. The Spirit is the gift of a glorified Jesus. Peter lays particular stress upon this in his Pentecost
sermon, telling to those who had so spitefully murdered Jesus that He "being at the right hand of God exalted
... hath poured forth this." That is the historical meaning—the first meaning—of that word
"glorified." It refers to an event in the highest heaven after Jesus' ascension. The personal meaning is this:
when Jesus is enthroned in my life the Holy Spirit shall fill me. The Father glorified Jesus by enthroning Him.
I must glorify Him by enthroning Him. But the throne of my heart was occupied by another who did not

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propose to resign, nor to be deposed without resistance. So there had to be a dethronement as well as an
enthronement. I must quietly but resolutely place the crown of my life, my love, my will upon Jesus' brow for
Him henceforth to control me as He will. That act of enthroning Him carries with it the dethronement of self.

Let me say plainly that here is the searching test of the whole matter. Why do you want power? For the rare
enjoyment of ecstatic moods? For some hidden selfish purpose, like Simon of Samaria, of which you are
perhaps only half conscious, so subtly does it lurk underneath? That you may be able to move men? These
motives are all selfish. The streams turn in, and that means a dead sea. Better stop before you begin. For thy
heart is not right before God. But if the uppermost and undermost desire be to glorify Jesus and let Him do in
you, and with you what He chooses, then you shall know the flooding of the channel-ways of your life with a
new stream of power.

Jesus Himself, when down here as Son of Man, met this test. With reverence be it said that His highest
purpose in coming to earth was not to die upon the cross, but to glorify His Father. That memorable passage
opening the sixty-first chapter of Isaiah, which Jesus applied to Himself in the Nazareth synagogue, contains
eight or nine statements of what He was to do, but closes with a comprehensive statement of the underlying
purpose—"that He might be glorified." As it turned out, that could best be done by yielding to the
awful experiences through which He passed. But the supreme thought of pleasing His Father was never absent
from His thought. It drove Him to the wilderness, and to Gethsemane, and to Calvary.

Is that the one purpose in your heart in desiring power? He might send some of us out to the far-off foreign
mission field. He might send some down to the less enchanted field of the city slums to do salvage service
night after night among the awful social wreckage thrown upon the strand there; or possibly it would mean an
isolated post out on the frontier, or down in the equally heroic field of the mountains of the South. He might
leave some of you just where you are, in a commonplace, humdrum spot, as you think, when your visions had
been in other fields. He might make you a seed-sower, like lonely Morrison in China, when you wanted to be
a harvester like Moody. Here is the real battlefield. The fighting and agonizing are here. Not with God but
with yourself, that the old self in you may be crucified and Jesus crowned in its place.

Will you in the purpose of your heart make Jesus absolute monarch whatever that may prove to mean? It may
mean great sacrifice; it will mean greater joy and power at once. May we have the simple courage to do it.
Master, help us! Thou wilt help us. Thou art helping some of us now as we talk and listen and think.

Power Manifest in Action.

Well, then, if you have won on that field of action, the rest is very simple. Indeed, after a victory there, your
whole life moves up to a new level. The third word is drink. "Let him come unto Me and drink." Drinking is
one of the easiest acts imaginable. I wish I had a glass of water here just to let you see how easy a thing it is.
Tip up the glass and let the water run in and down. Drink simply means take. It is saying, "Lord Jesus, I take
from Thee the promised power.... I thank Thee that the Spirit has taken full control." But you say, "Is that
all?" Yes. "Why, I do not feel anything." Do you remember saying something like that when you were urged
to take Jesus as your Savior? And some kind friend told you not to wait for feeling, but to trust, and that when
you did that, the light came? Now, the fourth word is believe. The law of God's dealing with you has not
changed. Jesus says, "Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." You are to believe His word. "But,"
you say, "how shall I know I have this power?" Well, first, by believing that Jesus has done what He agreed.
He promised the Spirit to them that obey Him. The Holy Spirit fills every surrendered heart. Then there is a
second way—you will experience the power as need arises. How do you know anything? Here is this
chair. Suppose I tell you I have power to pick it up and hold it out at arm's length. Well, you think, I look as
though I might have that much power in my arm. But you do not know. Perhaps my arm is weak and does not
show it. But now I pick it up and hold it out—(holding chair out at arm's length)—now you know

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I have at least that much power in my arm. Power is always manifest in action. That is a law of power. How
did that man by the pool of Bethesda in Jerusalem, who had not walked for thirty-eight years—how did
he know that he had received power to walk? He got up and walked! He did not know he had received the
power till he got up. Power is shown in action always. Faith acts. It pushes out, in obedience to command.
And when you go out of here to-day, as the need arises you will find the power rising within you to meet it.
When the hasty word comes hot to your lips, when that old habit asserts itself, when the actual test of sacrifice
comes, when the opportunity for service comes, as surely as the need comes, will come the sense of His power
in control. Believe means expect.

"Thirst," "glorify," "drink," "believe"—desire, enthrone, accept, expect—that is the simple story.
Are you thirsty? Will you put Jesus on the throne? Then accept, and go out with your eyes open, expecting,
expecting, expecting, and He will never fail to reveal His power. Shall we bow in silence a few moments and
settle the matter, each of us, with the Master direct?

Three Laws of Continuous Power.

Power depends on good connections. In mechanics: the train with the locomotive; the machinery with the
engine; the electrical mechanism with the power house. In the body: the arm with the socket; the brain with
the heart. In the christian life the follower of Jesus with the Spirit of Jesus. We have been talking together
about making connections, and I believe some of us have made the vital connection this hour, which means
new inflow and outflow of power.

Now there will be time for only a brief word about breaking connections. "But," you say, "we do not want to
break connections." No, you do not. But there is someone else who does. Since you have put yourself into
intimate contact with Jesus this someone else has become intensely interested in breaking that contact. And
this enemy of ours, this Satan, the hater, is subtle and deep and experienced and more than a match for any of
us. But greater is He that is now in you than he that is in the world. Satan will do his best by bold attack and
cunning deceit to tamper with your couplings.

One of the saddest sights, and yet a not uncommon one, is to see a man who has been mightily used of God,
but whose usefulness is now wholly gone. One can run back through only recent years and recall, one after
another, those through whom multitudes were blessed, but who, yielding to some subtle temptation, have
utterly and forever lost their opportunity Of service. The same is true of scores in more secluded circles whose
lives, spiritually blighted and dwarfed, tell the same sad story.

These recent instances are but repetitions of older ones. Three times the writer of Judges tells of Samson that
"the spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him," and then is added the pathetic sentence—"but he wist
not that the Lord was departed from him." And between the two occurs the story of an act of disobedience.
Twice the same thing is recorded of King Saul, "the spirit of God came mightily upon him," and the same
sequel follows, "the spirit of the Lord had departed." And between the two is found an act of disobedience to
God's command. The ninth of Luke tells a similar story. The disciples had been given power; had used the
power for others; were requested to relieve a demonized boy; had tried to; had expected to; but utterly failed,
to their own chagrin, and the father's disappointment, amid the surprise and criticism of the crowd. The
Master explains that a slipshod connection with God was at the bottom of their failure. Power is not stored in
us apart from God's presence. It merely passes through as He has sway. Once the connection between Him
and you is disturbed, the flow of power is interrupted. We do not run on the storage battery plan, but on the
trolley plan. Constant communication with the source of power is absolutely essential. The spirit of God never
leaves us. We do not lose His presence. But whatever grieves Him prevents His presence being manifest. The
evidence of His presence may be lost through wrongdoing. So I want to give you in very brief compass the
three laws of the life of power—continued and increasing power. I wish some one had given them to

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me long ago. It might have saved me many a bad break.

The first law can be put in a single word—obey. Obedience is the great foundation law of the christian
life. Indeed it is the common fundamental law of all organization, in nature, in military, naval, commercial,
political and domestic circles. Obedience is the great essential to securing the purpose of life. Disobedience
means disaster. If you turn to scripture you must read almost every page if you would get all the statements
and illustrations of obedience and its opposite. Begin with the third of Genesis, where the first disastrous act
of disobedience brought a ruin still going on. Run through the three wilderness books, where the new nation is
grouped about the smoking mountain. Listen in Deuteronomy to the old man Moses talking during the thirty
days' conference they had in Moab's plains before he was taken away. Then into Joshua's book of victory and
the Judges' dark story of defeats, through the kingdom books, and the prophecies, and you will find the
changes rung more frequently upon obedience than anything else. The same is true of the New Testament
clear to the last column of the last page.

The fact is, every heart is a battlefield whose possession is being hotly contested. If Jesus is in possession
Satan is trying his best by storm or strategy to get in. If Satan be in possession whether as a coarse or a
cultured Satan, then Jesus is lovingly storming the door. Satan can not get in without your consent, and Jesus
will not. An act of obedience to God is slamming the door in Satan's face, and opening it wider for Jesus'
control. Listen with your heart! An act of disobedience, however slight, as you think, is slamming the door of
your heart in Jesus' face and flinging it open to Satan's entrance. Is that mere rhetoric? It is cold fact. No, it is
hot fact. The first great simple law is obedience.

But someone asks, "How shall I know what—whom, to obey? Sometimes the voices coming to my ear
seem to be jarring voices; they do not agree. Pastors do not all agree: churches are not quite agreed on some
matters: my best friends think differently: how shall I know?" Here comes in the second law, Obey the book of
God as interpreted by the Spirit of God. Not the book alone. That will lead into superstition. Not to say the
Spirit without the book He has indited. That will lead to fanaticism. But the book as interpreted by the Spirit,
and the Spirit as He speaks through His book. There is a voice of God, and a Spirit of God and a book of God.
God speaks by His Spirit through His word Sometimes He speaks directly without the written word. But very,
very rarely. The mental impressions by which the Spirit guides are frequent. But I am speaking now, not of
that but of His audible inner voice. He is chary in the use of that. And when he so speaks the test is that, of
necessity, the voice of God always agrees with itself. The spoken word is never out of harmony with the
written word. And as He has given us the written word, it becomes our standard of His will. This book of God
was inspired. It is inspired. God spoke in it. He speaks in it to-day. You will be surprised to find how light on
every sort of question will come through this in-Spirited book.

But someone with a practical turn of mind is thinking: "but it is such a big book. I do not know much about it.
I read the psalms some, and some chapters in Isaiah, and the gospels and some in the epistles, but I have no
grasp of the whole book; and your second law seems a little beyond me." Then you listen to the third law,
namely: time alone with the book daily. It should be unhurried time. Time enough not to think about time. At
least a half hour every day, I would suggest, and preferably the first half hour of the morning, rising at least
early enough to get this bit of time before any duty can claim you. It may seem very difficult for some. But it
is an absolute essential, for the first two laws depend on this one for their practical force.

When Joshua, trembling, was called upon to assume the stupendous task of being Moses' successor, God came
and had a quiet talk with him. In that talk He emphasized just one thing as the secret of his new leadership.
Listen: "This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth, but thou shalt meditate therein day and night,
that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein." There are the three laws straight from
the lips of God, packed into a single sentence.

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Let us plan to get alone with the Master daily over His word, with the door shut, other things shut out, and
ourselves shut in, that we may learn His will, and get strength to do it. And when in doubt wait.

THE FLOOD-TIDE OF POWER.

God's Highest Ideal.

A flood-tide is a rising tide. It flows in and fills up and spreads out. Wherever it goes it cleanses and fertilizes
and beautifies. For untold centuries Egypt has depended for its very life upon the yearly flood-tide of the Nile.
The rich bottom lands of the Connecticut Valley are refertilized every spring by that river's flood-tide. The
green beauty and rich fruitage of some parts of the Sacramento Valley, whose soil is flooded by the artificial
irrigation-rivers, are in sharp contrast with adjoining unwatered portions.

The flood-tide is caused by influences from above. In the ocean and the portions of rivers under its influence
by the heavenly bodies. In the rivers by the fall of rain and snow swelling successively the upper streams and
lakes.

God's highest ideal for men is frequently expressed under the figure of a river running at flood-tide. Ezekiel's
vision of the future capital of Israel gives prominence to a wonderful river gradually reaching flood-tide and
exerting untold influence.

John's companion vision of the future church in the closing chapters of Revelation finds its radiating center in
an equally wonderful river of water of life. When Jesus would give a picture of a christian man up to His ideal
He exclaims, "Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." John's explanation years after was that He
was speaking of the Holy Spirit's presence in the human life. Jesus' ideal would put our lives at the flood-tide.
No ebb-tide there. No rise and fall. But a constant flowing in and filling up and flooding out.

Love is ambitious. God is love. And therefore God is ambitious for us. In the best sense of the word He is
ambitious for our lives. The old impression has been that salvation is for the soul, and for heaven. Well, it is
for the soul, and it is for heaven, but it is for the present life and for this earth. Some of God's most
far-reaching plans have to do with this earth. To-night we want to get a glimpse of God's ambitious ideal for
our lives down here; something of an understanding of the results of the unrestrained presence within us of
His Holy Spirit.

[17] Exodus xxxi: 1-5.

[18] Numbers xi: 16, 17.

[19] Luke i: 13-17, 41.

It is not surprising that there have been some mistaken ideas about the results. It has been a common
supposition that somehow the baptism of the Holy Spirit is always connected with an evangelistic gift and,
further, connected with marked success in soul-winning. Men have thought of Mr. Moody facing great
crowds, who were swayed and melted at his words, and of people in great multitudes accepting Christ.
Probably the world has never had a finer illustration of a Spirit-filled man than in dear old Moody. And it is
not to be wondered at that the rare evangelistic gift of service with which he was endowed and the great
results attending it should be so closely allied in our minds with the Spirit-filled life which he exemplified so

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unusually. In sharp contrast however with that conception will you note that we are told over here in Exodus
of a man named Bezalel[17] who was filled with the Spirit of God that he might have skill in carpentry, in
metal working, and weaving of fine fabrics, for the construction of the old tent of God. Will you note further
that a company of seventy men[18] were filled in a like manner that they might be skilled in conducting the
business affairs of the nation; and that Luke tells of Elizabeth[19] being filled that she might become a true
mother for John.

A second misconception has been that marked success always accompanies the Spirit's control. In contrast
with that will you please note the results in some of the Spirit-swayed men whom God used in Bible times.
Isaiah was called to a service that was to be barren of results, though long continued; and Jeremiah's was not
only fruitless but with great personal peril. Jesus' public work led through a rough path to a crown of thorns
and a cross. Stephen's testimony brought him a storm of stones. And Paul passed through great danger and
distress to a cell, and beyond, a keen-edged ax. These are leaders among Spirit-filled men.

[20] 1 Cor. xii: 4-6, 11.

Paul's teaching in the Corinthian epistle helps one to a clear understanding about results. He explains that
while it is one Spirit dwelling in all who acknowledge Jesus as Lord, yet the evidence of His presence differs
widely in different persons. It is one God working all things in all persons, but with great variety in the gifts
bestowed, in the service with which they are intrusted, and in the inner experiences they are conscious of.[20]

What results then may be expected to follow the filling of the Holy Spirit? It may be said in a sentence that
Jesus fills us with the same Spirit that filled Himself that He may work out in us His own image and ideal, and
make use of us in His passionate reaching out after others. If we attempt to analyze these results we shall find
them falling into three groups. First—results in the life, that is in the inner experiences, and the habits.
Second—results in the personality, that is in the appearance, and the mental faculties.
Third—results in service. Let us look a little at each of these.

A Transfigured Life.

First regarding the inner experiences. Without doubt the first result experienced will be a new sense of peace:
a glad, quiet stillness of spirit which nothing seems able to disturb. The heart will be filled with a peace still as
the stars, calm as the night, deep as the sea, fragrant as the flowers.

How many thousands of lips have lovingly lingered over those sweet strong words: "The peace of God, which
passeth all understanding, shall guard your heart and thought in Christ Jesus." It is God's peace. It acts as an
armed guard drawn up around heart and thoughts to keep unrest out. It is too subtle for intellectual analysis,
but it steals into and steadies the heart. You cannot understand it but you can feel it. You cannot get hold of it
with your head, but you can with your heart. You do not get it. It gets you. You need not understand in order
to experience. Blessed are they that have not understood and yet have yielded and experienced.

"Peace beginning to be
Deep as the sleep of the sea
When the stars their faces glass
In its blue tranquillity:
Hearts of men upon earth
That rested not from their birth
To rest, as the wild waters rest,
With the colors of heaven on their breast."

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With that will come a new intense longing to do the Master's will; to please Him. As the days come and go
this will come to be the master-passion of this new life. It will drive one with a new purpose and zest to
studying the one book which tells His will. That book becomes literally the book of books to the
Spirit-dominated man.

With that will come a new desire to talk with this new Master, who talks to you in His word, and is ever at
your side sympathetically listening. His book reveals Himself. And better acquaintance with Him will draw
you oftener aside for a quiet talk. The pleasure of praying will grow by leaps and bounds. Nothing so inspires
to prayer as reverent listening to His voice. Frequent use of the ears will result in more frequent use of the
voice in prayer and praise. And more: Prayer will come to be a part of service. Intercession will become the
life mission.

But I must be frank enough to tell you of another result, which is as sure to come as these—there will
be conflict. You will be tempted more than ever. Temptations will come with the subtlety of a snake; with the
rush of a storm; with the unexpected swiftness of a lightning flash. You see the act of surrender to Jesus is a
notice of fight to another. You have changed masters, and the discarded master does not let go easily. He is a
trained, toughened fighter. You will think that you never had so many temptations, so strong, so subtle, so
trying, so unexpected. But listen—there will be victory! Truth goes in pairs. You will be tempted. The
devil will attend to that. That is one truth. Its companion truth is this: you will be victorious over temptation as
the new Master has sway. Your new Master will attend to that. Great and cunning and strong is the tempter.
Do not underrate him. But greater is He that is in you. You cannot overrate Him. He got the victory at every
turn during those thirty-three years, and will get it for you as many years and turns as shall make out the span
of your life. Your one business will be to let Him have full control.

Still another result, of the surprising sort, will be a new feeling about sin. There will be an increased and
increasing sensitiveness to sin. It will seem so hateful whether coarse or cultured. You will shrink from
contact with it. There will also be a growing sense of the sinfulness of that old heart of yours, even while you
may be having constant victory over temptation. Then, too, there will grow up a yearning, oh! such a
heart-yearning as cannot be told in words, to be pure, really pure in heart.

A seventh result will be an intense desire to get others to know your wonderful Master. A desire so strong,
gripping you so tremendously, that all thought of sacrifice will sink out of sight in its achievement. He is such
a Master! so loving, so kind, so wondrous! And so many do not know Him: have wrong ideas about Him. If
they only knew Him—that surely would settle it. And probably these two—the desire to please
Him, and the desire to get others to know Him will take the mastery of your ambition and life.

The All-Inclusive Passion.

[21] Rom. v: 5.

But all of these and much more is included in one of Paul's packed phrases which may be read, "the love of
God hath flooded our hearts through the Holy Spirit given unto us."[21] The all-inclusive result is love. That
marvelous tender passion—the love of God—heightless, depthless, shoreless, shall flood our
hearts, making us as gentle and tender-hearted and self-sacrificing and gracious as He. Every phase of life will
become a phase of love. Peace is love resting. Bible study is love reading its lover's letters. Prayer is love
keeping tryst. Conflict with sin is love jealously fighting for its Lover. Hatred of sin is love shrinking from
that which separates from its lover. Sympathy is love tenderly feeling. Enthusiasm is love burning. Hope is
love expecting. Patience is love waiting. Faithfulness is love sticking fast. Humility is love taking its true
place. Modesty is love keeping out of sight. Soul-winning is love pleading.

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[22] Gal. v: 22-23.

[23] 1 Cor. xiii.

[24] Luke vi: 35. R. V., margin.

Love is revolutionary. It radically changes us, and revolutionizes our spirit toward all others. Love is
democratic. It ruthlessly levels all class distinctions. Love is intensely practical. It is always hunting
something to do. Paul lays great stress on this outer practical side. Do you remember his "fruit of the
Spirit"?[22] It is an analysis of love. While the first three—"love, joy, peace"—are emotions
within, the remaining six are outward toward others. Notice, "long-suffering, gentleness, goodness,
faithfulness, meekness," and then the climax is reached in the last—"self-control." And in his great love
passage in the first Corinthian epistle,[23] he picks out four of these last six, and shows further just what he
means by love in its practical working in the life. "Long-suffering" is repeated, and so is "kindness" or
"goodness." "Faithfulness" is reproduced in "never faileth." Then "self-control" receives the emphasis of an
eight-fold repetition of "nots." Listen:—"Envieth not," "boasteth not," "not puffed up," "not unseemly,"
"seeketh not (even) her own," "is not provoked," "taketh not account of evil" (in trying to help others, like
Jesus' word "despairing of no man"[24]), "rejoiceth not in unrighteousness" (that is when the unrighteous is
punished, but instead feels sorry for him). What tremendous power of self-mastery in those "nots"! Then the
positive side is brought out in four "alls"; two of them—the first and last—passive qualities,
"beareth all things," "endureth all things." And in between, two active "hopeth all things," "believeth all
things." The passive qualities doing sentinel duty on both sides of the active. These passive traits are intensely
active in their passivity. There is a busy time under the surface of those "nots" and "alls." What a wealth of
underlying power they reveal! Sometimes folks think it sentimental to talk of love. Probably it is of some stuff
that shuffles along under that name. But when the Holy Spirit talks about it, and fills our hearts with it there is
seen to be an intensely practical passion at work.

Love is not only the finest fruit, but it is the final test of a christian life. How many splendid men of God have
seemed to lack here. What a giant of faith and strength Elijah was. Such intense indignation over sin! Such
fearless denunciation! What tremendous faith gripping the very heavens! What marvelous power in prayer.
Yet listen to him criticising the faithful remnant whom God lovingly defends against his aspersions. There
seems a serious lack there. God seems to understand his need. He asks him to slip down to Horeb for a new
vision of his Master. And then He revealed Himself not in whirlwind nor earthquake nor lightning. He
doubtless felt at home among these tempestuous outbreaks. They suit his temper. But something startlingly
new came to him in that exquisite "sound of gentle stillness," hushing, awing, mellowing, giving a new
conception of the dominant heart of his God. Some of us might well drop things, and take a run down to
Horeb.

I know an earnest scholarly minister with strong personality, and fearless in his preaching against sin, but who
seems to lack this spirit of love. He is so cuttingly critical at times. The other ministers of his town whom he
might easily lead, shy off from him. There is no magnetism in the edge of a razor. His critical spirit can be felt
when his lips are shut. I recall a woman, earnest, winsome when she chooses to be, an intelligent Bible
student, keen-scented for error, a generous giver, but what a sharp edge her tongue has. One is afraid to get
close lest it may cut.

When the Holy Spirit takes possession there is love, aye, more, a flood of love. Have you ever seen a flood? I
remember one in the Schuylkill during my boyhood days and how it impressed me. Those who live along the
valley of that treacherous mountain stream, the Ohio, know something of the power of a flood. How the
waters come rushing down, cutting out new channels, washing down rubbish, tearing valuable property from
its moorings, ruling the valley autocratically while men stand back entirely helpless.

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Would you care to have a flood-tide of love flush the channelways of your life like that? It would clean out
something you have preferred keeping. It would with quiet, ruthless strength, tear some prized possessions
from their moorings and send them adrift down stream and out. Its high waters would put out some of the fires
on the lower levels. Better think a bit before opening the sluice-ways for that flood. But ah! it will sweeten
and make fragrant. It will cut new channels, and broaden and deepen old ones. And what a harvest will follow
in its wake. Floods are apt to do peculiar things. So does this one. It washes out the friction-grit from between
the wheels. It does not dull the edge of the tongue, but washes the bitter out of the mouth, and the green out of
the eye. It leaves one deaf and blind in some matters, but much keener-sighted and quicker-eared in others.
Strange flood that! Would that we all knew more of it.

The Fullness of the Stature of a Man.

Now note some of the changes in the personality which attend the Spirit's unrestrained presence. Without
doubt the face will change, though it might be difficult to describe the change. That Spirit within changes the
look of the eye. His peace within the heart will affect the flow of blood in the physical heart, and so in turn the
clearness of the complexion. The real secret of winsome beauty is here. That new dominant purpose will
modulate the voice, and the whole expression of the face, and the touch of the hand, and the carriage of the
body. And yet the one changed will be least conscious of it, if conscious at all. Neither Moses nor Stephen
knew of their transfigured faces.

It is of peculiar interest to note the changes in the mental make-up. It may be said positively that the original
group of mental faculties remain the same. There seems to be nothing to indicate that any change takes place
in one's natural endowment. No faculty is added that nature had not put there, and certainly none removed.

But it is very clear that there is a marked development of these natural gifts, and that this change is brought
about by the putting in of a new and tremendous motive power, which radically affects everything it touches.

Regarding this development four facts may be noted.

First fact:—Those faculties or talents which may hitherto have lain latent, unmatured, are aroused into
use. Most men have large undeveloped resources, and endowments. Many of us are one-sided in our
development. We are strangers to the real possible self within, unconscious of some of the powers with which
we are endowed and intrusted. The Holy Spirit, when given a free hand, works out the fullness of the life that
has been put in. The change will not be in the sort but in the size, and that not by an addition but by a growth
of what is there.

Moses complains that he is slow of speech and of a slow tongue. God does not promise a new tongue but that
he will be with him and train his tongue. Listen to him forty years after in the Moab Plains, as with brain
fired, and tongue loosened and trained he gives that series of farewell talks fairly burning with eloquence.
Students of oratory can find no nobler specimens than Deuteronomy furnishes. The unmatured powers lying
dormant had been aroused to full growth by the indwelling Spirit of God.

Saintly Dr. A. J. Gordon, whose face was as surely transfigured as was Moses' or Stephen's used to say that in
his earlier years he had no executive ability. Men would say of him, "Well, Gordon can preach but—"
intimating that he could not do much else; not much of the practical getting of things done in his makeup.
When he was offered the chairmanship of the missionary committee of the Baptist Church, he promptly
declined as being utterly unfit for such a task. Finally with reluctance he accepted, and for years he guided and
molded with rare sagacity the entire scheme of missionary operation of the great Baptist Church of the North.
He was accustomed with rare frankness and modesty to speak of the change in himself as an illustration of
how the Spirit develops talents which otherwise had lain unsuspected and unused.

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The second fact: ALL of one's faculties will be developed, to the highest normal pitch. Not only the
undeveloped faculties, but those already developed will know a new life. That new presence within will
sharpen the brain, and fire the imagination. It will make the logic keener, the will steadier, the executive
faculty more alert.

The civil engineer will be more accurate in his measurements and calculations. The scientific man more
keenly observant of facts, better poised in his generalization upon them, and more convincing in his
demonstrations. The locomotive engineer will handle his huge machine more skillfully. The road saves money
in having a christian hand on the throttle. The lawyer will be more thorough in his sifting of evidence, and
more convincing in the planning of his cases. The business man will be even more sharply alive to business.
The college student can better grasp his studies, and write with stronger thought and clearer diction. The cook
will get a finer flavor into the food. And so on to the end of the list. Why? Not by any magic, but simply and
only because man was created to be animated and dominated by the Spirit of God. That is his normal
condition. The Spirit of God is his natural atmosphere. The machine works best when run under the inventor's
immediate direction. Only as a man—any man—is swayed by the Holy Spirit, will his powers
rise to their best. And a man is not doing his best, however hardworking and conscientious, and therefore not
fair to his own powers, who lives otherwise.

Some one may enter the objection, that many of the keenest men with finely disciplined powers may be found
among non-christian men. But he should remember two facts, first, that a like truth holds good in the opposite
camp. There are undoubtedly men whose genius is brilliant because inspired by an evil spirit. There are
cultured scholarly men, and keen shrewd business men who have yielded their powers to another than God
and are greatly assisted by evil spirits, though it is quite likely that they are not conscious that this is the true
analysis of their success.

The second fact to note is that no matter how keen or developed a man's powers may be either as just
suggested, or, by dint of native strength and of his own effort they are still of necessity less than they would
be if swayed by the Spirit of God. For man is created to be indwelt and inspired by God's Spirit, and his
powers can not be at their best pitch save as the conditions of their creation are met.

The third fact:—There will be a gradual bringing back to their normal condition of those facilities
which have been dwarfed, or warped, or abnormally developed through sin and selfishness. Sometimes these
moral twists and quirks in our mental faculties are an inheritance through one or more generations. The man
with excessive egotism often carries the evidence of it in the very shape of his head. But as he yields to the
new Spirit dominant within, a spirit of humility, of modesty will gradually displace so much of the other as is
abnormal. The man of superficial mind will be deepened in his mental processes. The man of hasty judgment
or poor judgment will grow careful in his conclusions. The lazy man will get a new lease of ambition and
energy.

These results will be gradual, as all of God's processes are. Sometimes painfully gradual, and will be strictly
in proportion as the man yields himself unreservedly to the control of the indwelling Spirit. And the process
will be by the injection of a new and mighty motive power. The shallow-minded man will have an intense
desire to study God's wondrous classic so as to learn His will. And though his studies may not get much
farther, yet no one book so disciplines and deepens the mind as that. The lazy man will find a fire kindling in
his bones to please his Master and do something for Him, that will burn through and burn up his indolence.
The man of hasty judgment will find himself stopping to consider what his Master would desire. And the mere
pause to think is a long step toward more accurate judgment. He will become a reverent student of the word of
God, and nothing corrects the judgment like that.

The self-willed, headstrong man will likely have the toughest time of any. To let his own plan utterly go, and
instead fit into a radically different one will shake him up terrifically. But that mighty One within will

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lovingly woo and move him. And as he yields, and victory comes, he will be delighted to find that the highest
act of the strongest will is in yielding to a higher will when found. He will be charmed to discover that the
rarest liberty comes only in perfect obedience to perfect law.

And so every sort of man who has gotten some moral twist or obliquity in his mental make-up will be
straightened out to the normal standard of his Maker, as he allows Him to take full control.

The fourth fact:—All this growth and development will be strictly along the groove of the man's natural
endowment. The natural mental bent will not be changed though the moral crooks will be straightened out.
Peter's rash, self-assertive twists are corrected, but he remains the same Peter mentally. He does not possess
the rare logical powers of Paul, nor the judicial administrative temper of James, before the infilling, and is not
endowed with either after that experience. John's intensity which would call down fire to burn up supposed
foes is not removed but turned into another channel, and burns itself out in love. Jonathan Edwards retains and
develops his marvelous faculty of metaphysical reasoning and uses it to influence men for God. Finney's
intensely logical mind is not changed but fired and used in the same direction.

Moody has neither of these gifts, but has an unusually magnetic presence, and a great executive faculty which
leaves its impress on his blunt direct speech. His faculties are not changed, nor added to, but developed
wonderfully and used. Geo. Mueller never becomes a great preacher like these three; nor an expositor, but
finds his rare development in his marked administrative skill. Charles Studd remains a poor speaker with
jagged rhetoric and with no organizing knack, though the fire of God in his presence kindles the flames of
mission zeal in the British universities, and melts your heart as you listen. Shaftsbury's mental processes show
the generations of aristocratic breeding even in his costermonger's cart lovingly winning these men, or after
midnight searching out the waifs of London's nooks and docks. Clough is refused by the missionary board
because of his lack of certain required qualifications, and when finally he reaches the field none of these
qualities appears, but his skill as an engineer gives him a hold upon thousands whom his presence and
God-breathed passion for souls win to Jesus Christ. Carey's unusual linguistic talent, Mary Lyon's teaching
gift are not changed but developed and used. The growth produced by the Spirit's presence is strictly along the
groove of the natural gift. But note that in this great variety of natural endowment there is one trait—a
moral trait, not a mental—that marks all alike, namely a pervading purpose, that comes to be a passion,
to do God's will, and get men to know Him, and that everything is forced to bend to this dominant purpose. Is
not this glorious unity in diversity?

Saved and Sent to Serve.

The third group of results affects our service. We will want to serve. Love must act. We must do something
for our Master. We must do something for those around us. There will be a new spirit of service. Its peculiar
characteristic and charm will be the heart of love in it. Love will envelop and undergird and pervade and
exude from all service. There will be a fine graciousness, a patience, a strong tenderness, an earnest
faithfulness, a hopeful tirelessness which will despair of no man, and of no situation.

The sort of service and the sphere of service will be left entirely to the direction of the indwelling Holy Spirit,
"dividing to every man as He will." There will be no choosing of a life work but a prayerful waiting till His
choice is clear, and then a joyous acceptance of that. There will be no attempt to open doors, not even with a
single touch or twist of the knob, but only an entering of opened doors.

If the work be humble, or the place lowly, or both, there will be a cheery eager using of the highest powers
keyed to their best pitch. If higher up, a steady remembering that there can be no power save as the Spirit
controls, and a praying to be kept from the dizziness which unaccustomed height is apt to produce. Large
quantities of paper and ink will be saved. For many letters of application and indorsement will remain

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unwritten.

The Master's say-so is accepted by Spirit-led men as final. He chooses Peter to open the door to the outer
nations, and Paul to enter the opened door. He chooses not an apostle but Philip to open up Samaria, and Titus
to guide church matters in Crete. A miner's son is chosen to shake Europe, and a cobbler to kindle anew the
missionary fires of Christendom. Livingston is sent to open up the heart of Africa for a fresh infusion of the
blood the Son of God. A nurse-maid, whose name remains unknown, is used to mold for God the child who
became the seventh Earl of Shaftsbury, one of the most truly Spirit-filled men of the world. Geo. Mueller is
chosen for the signal service of re-teaching men that God still lives and actually answers prayer. Speer is used
to breathe a new spirit of devotion among college students, and Mott to arouse and organize their service
around the world. Geo. Williams and Robert McBurney become the leaders, British and American, in an
in-Spirited movement to win young men by thousands. An earnest woman is chosen to mother and to shape
for God the tender years of earth's greatest queen, who through character and position exerted a greater
influence for righteousness than any other woman. The common factor in all is the Chooser. Jesus is the Chief
Executive of the campaign through His Spirit. The direction of it belongs to Him. He knows best what each
one can do. He knows best what needs to be done. He is ambitious that each of us shall be the best, and have
the best. He has a plan thought out for each life, and for the whole campaign. His Spirit is in us to administer
His plan. He never sleeps. He divideth to every man severally as He will. And His is a loving, wise will. It can
be trusted.

A Spirit-mastered man slowly comes to understand that service now is apprenticeship-service. He is in


training for the time when a King shall reign, and will need tested and trusted and trained servants. He is in
college getting ready for commencement day. That may explain in part why some of the workers whom we
think can be least spared, are called away in their prime. Their apprentice term is served. School's out. They
are moved up.

The Music of the Wind Harp.

Please remember that these are flood-tide results. Some good people will never know them except in a very
limited way. For they do not open the sluice-gates wide enough to let the waters reach flood-tide. These
results will vary in degree with the degree and constancy of the yielding to the Spirit's control. A full yielding
at the start, and constantly continued will bring these results in full measure and without break, though the
growth will be gradual. For it is a rising flood, ever increasing in height and depth and sweep and power.
Partial surrender will mean only partial results; the largest and finest results come only as the spirit has full
control, for the work is all His, by and with our consent.

In one of her exquisite poems Frances Ridley Havergal tells of a friend who was given an æolian harp which,
she was told, sent out unutterably sweet melodies. She tried to bring the music by playing upon it with her
hand, but found the seven strings would yield but one tone. Keenly disappointed she turned to the letter sent
before the gift and found she had not noticed the directions given. Following them carefully she placed the
harp in the opened window-way where the wind could blow upon it. Quite a while she waited but at last in the
twilight the music came:

"Like stars that tremble into light


Out of the purple dark, a low, sweet note
Just trembled out of silence, antidote
To any doubt; for never finger might
Produce that note, so different, so new:
Melodious pledge that all He promised should come true.

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"Anon a thrill of all the strings;
And then a flash of music, swift and bright,
Like a first throb of weird Auroral light,
Then crimson coruscations from the wings
Of the Pole-spirit; then ecstatic beat,
As if an angel-host went forth on shining feet.
"Soon passed the sounding starlit march,
And then one swelling note grew full and long,
While, like a far-off cathedral song,
Through dreamy length of echoing aisle and arch
Float softest harmonies around, above,
Like flowing chordal robes of blessing and of love.
"Thus, while the holy stars did shine
And listen, the æolian marvels breathed;
While love and peace and gratitude enwreathed
With rich delight in one fair crown were mine.
The wind that bloweth where it listeth brought
This glory of harp-music—not my skill or thought."
And the listening friend to whom this wondrous experience is told, who has had a great sorrow in her life, and
been much troubled in her thoughts and plans replies:

" ... I too have tried


My finger skill in vain. But opening now
My window, like wise Daniel, I will set
My little harp therein, and listening wait
The breath of heaven, the Spirit of our God."
May we too learn the lesson of the wind-harp. For man is God's æolian harp. The human-taught finger skill
can bring some rare music, yet by comparison it is at best but a monotone. When the instrument is set to catch
the full breathing of the breath of God, then shall it sound out the rarest wealth of music's melodies. As the life
is yielded fully to the breathing of the Spirit we shall find the peace of God which passeth all understanding
filling the heart; and the power of God that passeth all resisting flooding the life; and others shall find the
beauty of God, that passeth all describing, transfiguring the face; and the dewy fragrance of God, that passeth
all comparing, pervading the personality, though most likely we shall not know it.

FRESH SUPPLIES OF POWER.

"As the Dew."

There is another very important bit needed to complete the circle of truth we are going over together in these
quiet talks. Namely, the daily life after the act of surrender and all that comes with that act. The steady pull
day by day. After the eagle-flight up into highest air, and the hundred yards dash, or even the mile run, comes
the steady, steady walking mile after mile. The real test of life is here. And the highest victories are here, too.

I recall the remark made by a friend when this sort of thing was being discussed:—"I would make the
surrender gladly but as I think of my home life I know I cannot keep it." There was the rub. The day-by-day
life afterwards. The habitual steady-going when temptations come in, and when many special aids, and
stimulating surroundings are withdrawn. This last talk together is about this afterlife. What is the plan for

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that? Well, let us talk it over a bit.

Have you noticed that the old earth receives a fresh baptism of life daily? Every night the life-giving dew is
distilled. The moisture rises during the day from ocean, and lake, and river, undergoes a chemical change in
God's laboratory and returns nightly in dew to refresh the earth. It brings to all nature new life, with rare
beauty, and fills the air with the exquisite fragrance drawn from flowers and plants. Its power to purify and
revitalize is peculiar and remarkable. It distils only in the night when the world is at rest. It can come only on
clear calm nights. Both cloud and wind disturb and prevent its working. It comes quietly and works
noiselessly. But the changes effected are radical and immeasurable. Literally it gives to the earth a nightly
baptism of new life. That is God's plan for the earth. And that, too, let me say to you, is His plan for our
day-by-day life.

[25] Hosea xiv: 5.

It hushes one's heart with a gentle awe to go out early in the morning after a clear night when air and flower
and leaf are fragrant with an indescribable freshness, and listen to God's voice saying, "I will be as the dew
unto Israel." That sentence is the climax of the book where it occurs.[25] God is trying through Hosea to woo
His people away from their evil leaders up to Himself again. To a people who knew well the vitalizing power
of the deep dews of an Oriental night, and their own dependence upon them, He says with pleading voice, "I
will be to you as the dew."

The setting of that sentence is made very winsome. The beauty of the lily, and of the olive-tree; the strength of
the roots of Lebanon's giant cedars, and the fragrance of their boughs; the fruitfulness of the vine, and the
richness of the grain harvest are used to bring graphically to their minds the meaning of His words: "as the
dew."

Tenderly as He speaks to that nation in which His love-plan for a world centered, more tenderly yet does He
ever speak to the individual heart. That wondrous One who is "alongside to help" will be by the atmosphere of
His presence to you and to me as the dew is to the earth—a daily refreshing of new life, with its new
strength, and rare beauty and fine fragrance.

[26] John vii: 37-39.

[27] Ezekiel xlvii: 1-12.

Have you noticed how Jesus Himself puts His ideal for the day-by-day life? At that last Feast of Tabernacles
He said, "He that believeth on me out of his inner being shall flow rivers of water of life."[26] Jesus was fairly
saturated with the Old Testament figures and language. Here He seems to be thinking, of that remarkable
river-vision of Ezekiel's.[27] You remember how much space is given there to describing a wonderful river
running through a place where living waters had never flowed. The stream begins with a few strings of water
trickling out from under the door-step of the temple, and rises gradually but steadily ankle-deep, knee-deep,
loin-deep, over-head, until flood-tide is reached, and an ever rising and deepening flood-tide. And everywhere
the waters go is life with beauty, and fruitfulness. There is no drought, no ebbing, but a continual flowing in,
and filling up, and flooding out. In these two intensely vivid figures is given our Master's carefully, lovingly
thought out plan for the day-by-day life.

In actual experience the reverse of this is, shall I say too much if I say, most commonly the case? It seems to
be so. Who of us has not at times been conscious of some failure that cut keenly into the very tissue of the
heart! And even when no such break may have come there is ever a heart-yearning for more than has yet been
experienced. The men who seem to know most of God's power have had great, unspeakable longings at times
for a fresh consciousness of that power.

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There is a simple but striking incident told of one of Mr. Moody's British campaigns. He was resting a few
days after a tour in which God's power was plainly felt and seen. He was soon to be out at work again.
Talking out of his inner heart to a few sympathetic friends, he earnestly asked them to join in prayer that he
might receive "a fresh baptism of power." Without doubt that very consciousness of failure, and this longing
for more is evidence of the Spirit's presence within wooing us up the heights.

The language that springs so readily to one's lips at such times is just such as Mr. Moody used, a fresh
baptism, a fresh filling, a fresh anointing. And the fresh consciousness of God's presence and power is to one
as a fresh act of anointing on His part. Practically it does not matter whether there is actually a fresh act upon
the Spirit's part, or a renewed consciousness upon our part of His presence, and a renewed humble depending
wholly upon Him. Yet to learn the real truth puts one's relationship to God in the clearer light that prevents
periods of doubt and darkness. Does it not too bring one yet nearer to Him? In this case it certainly suggests a
depth and a tenderness of His unparalleled love of which some of us have not even dreamed. So far as the
Scriptures seem to suggest there is not a fresh act upon God's part at certain times in one's experience, but His
wondrous love is such that there is a continuous act—a continuous flooding in of all the gracious
power of His Spirit that the human conditions will admit of. The flood-tide is ever being poured out from
above, but, as a rule, our gates are not open full width. And so only part can get in, and part which He is
giving is restrained by us.

Without doubt, too, the incoming flood expands that into which it comes. And so the capacity increases ever
more, and yet more. And, too, we may become much more sensitive to the Spirit's presence. We may grow
into better mediums for the transmission of His power. As the hindrances and limitations of centuries of sin's
warping and stupefying are gradually lessened there is a freer better channel for the through-flowing of His
power.

A Transition Stage.

Such seems to be the teaching of the old Book. Let us look into it a little more particularly. One needs to be
discriminating in quoting the Book of Acts on this subject. That book marks a transition stage historically in
the experience possible to men. Some of the older persons in the Acts lived in three distinct periods. There
was the Old Testament period when a salvation was foretold and promised. Then came the period when Jesus
was on the earth and did a wholly new thing in the world's history in actually working out a salvation. And
then followed the period of the Holy Spirit applying to men the salvation worked out by Jesus. All these
persons named in the Book of Acts lived both before and after the day of Pentecost, which marked the descent
of the Holy Spirit. The Book of Acts marks the clear establishing of the transition from the second to the third
of these three periods. Ever since then men have lived after Pentecost. The transitional period of the Book of
Acts is behind us.

Men in Old Testament times both in the Hebrew nation and outside of it were born of the Spirit, and under
His sway. But there was a limit to what He could do, because there was a limit to what had been done. The
Holy Spirit is the executive member of the Godhead. He applies to men what has been worked out, or
achieved for them, and only that. Jesus came and did a new thing which stands wholly alone in history. He
lived a sinless life, and then He died sacrificially for men, and then further, arose up to a new life after death.
The next step necessary was the sending down of the divine executive to work out in men this new
achievement. He does in men what Jesus did for them. He can do much more for us than for the Old
Testament people because much more has been done for us by God through Jesus. The standing of a saved
man before Pentecost was like that of a young child in a rich family who cannot under the provisions of the
family will come into his inheritance until the majority age is reached. After the Son of God came, men are
through Him reckoned as being as He is, namely in full possession of all rights conferred by being a born son
of full age. Now note carefully that this Book of Acts marks the transition from the one period to the other.

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And so one needs to be discriminating in applying the experiences of men passing through a transition period
to those who live wholly afterwards.

The After-Teaching.

The after-Pentecost teaching, that is the personal relation to the Spirit by one who has received Him to-day,
may best be learned from the epistles. Paul's letters form the bulk of the New Testament after the Book of
Acts is passed. They contain the Spirit's after-teaching regarding much which the disciples were not yet able
to receive from Jesus' own lips. They were written to churches that were far from ideal. They were composed
largely of people dug out of the darkest heathenism. And with the infinite patience and tact of the Spirit Paul
writes to them with a pen dipped in his own heart.

[28] 1 Thessalonians iv: 8


1 Corinthians xii: 1-11.
2 Corinthians xi: 4
Galatians iii: 2-5; iv: 6; v: 5, 18, 22-25.
Romans viii: 1-27, xv: 13.
Colossians i: 8.
Philippians iii: 3.
Titus iii: 5-6.

[29] Acts xix: 1-7.

A rather careful run through these thirteen letters brings to view two things about the relation of these people
to the Holy Spirit. First there are certain allusions or references to the Spirit, and then certain exhortations.
Note first these allusions.[28] They are numerous. In them it is constantly assumed that these people have
received the Holy Spirit. Paul's dealing with the twelve disciples whom he found at Ephesus[29] suggests his
habit in dealing with all whom he taught. Reading that incident in connection with these letters seems to
suggest that in every place he laid great stress upon the necessity of the Spirit's control in every life. And now
in writing back to these friends nearly all the allusions to the Spirit are in language that assumes that they have
surrendered fully and been filled with His presence.

[30] 1 Thessalonians v: 19.

[31] Galatians v: 16.

[32] Ephesians iv: 30.

[33] Eph. v: 18.

There are just four exhortations about the Holy Spirit. It is significant to notice what these are not. They are
not exhorted to seek the baptism of the Holy Spirit nor to wait for the filling. There is no word about
refillings, fresh baptisms or anointings. For these people, unlike most of us to-day, have been thoroughly
instructed regarding the Spirit and presumably have had the great radical experience of His full incoming. On
the other hand notice what these exhortations are. To the Thessalonians in his first letter he says, "Quench not
the Spirit."[30] To the disciples scattered throughout the province of Galatia who had been much disturbed by
false leaders he gives a rule to be followed, "Walk by the Spirit."[31] The other two of these incisive words of
advice are found in the Ephesian letter—"Grieve not the Spirit of God,"[32] and "be ye filled with the
Spirit."[33]

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These exhortations like the allusions assume that they have received the Spirit, and know that they have. The
last quoted, "be ye filled," may seem at first flush to be an exception to this, but I think we shall see in a
moment that a clearer rendering takes away this seeming, and shows it as agreeing with the others in the
general teaching.

This letter to the Ephesians may perhaps be taken as a fair index of the New Testament teaching on this matter
after the descent of the Spirit; the after-teaching promised by Jesus. It bears evidence of being a sort of
circular letter intended to be sent in turn to a number of the churches, and is therefore a still better illustration
of the after-teaching. The latter half of the letter is dealing wholly with this question of the day-by-day life
after the distinct act of surrender and infilling. Here are found two companion exhortations. One is negative:
the other positive. The two together suggest the rounded truth which we are now seeking. On one side is
this:—"Grieve not the Spirit of God," and on the other side is this:—"be ye filled with the
Spirit." Bishop H. C. G. Moule calls attention to the more nearly accurate reading of this last,—"be ye
filling with the Spirit." That suggests two things, a habitual inflow, and, that it depends on us to keep the inlets
ever open. Now around about these two companion exhortations are gathered two groups of friendly counsels.
One group is about the grieving things which must be avoided. The other group is about the positive things to
be cultivated. And the inference of the whole passage is that this avoiding and this cultivating result in the
habitual filling of the Spirit's presence.

Cross-Currents.

Fresh supplies of power then seem to be dependent upon two things. The first is this:—Keeping the life
dear of hindrances. This is the negative side, though it takes very positive work. It is really the abnormal side
of the true life. Sin is abnormal, unnatural. It is a foreign element that has come into the world and into life
disturbing the natural order. It must be kept out. The whole concern here is keeping certain things out of the
life. The task is that of staying in the world but keeping the world-spirit out of us. We are to remain in the
world for its sake, but to allow nothing in it to disturb our full touch with the other world where our
citizenship is. The christian's position in this world is strikingly like that of a nation's ambassador at a foreign
court. Joseph H. Choate mingles freely with the subjects of King Edward, attends many functions, makes
speeches, grants occasional interviews, but he is ever on the alert with his rarely keen mind, and long years of
legal training not to utter a syllable which might not properly come from the head of his home government.
Never for one moment is he off his guard. His whole aim is to keep in perfect sympathy with his home
country as represented by its head. He never forgets that he is there as a stranger, sojourning for a while,
belonging to and representing a foreign country. So, and only so, all the authority and power of his own
government flows through his person and is in every word and act. Such a man invariably provides himself
with a home in which is breathed the atmosphere of his far away homeland. Now we are strangers, sojourners,
indeed more, ambassadors, representatives of a government foreign to the present prince of this world. It is
only as we keep in perfect sympathy with the homeland and its Head that there can flow into and through us
all the immeasurable power of our King. Whatever interrupts that intercourse with headquarters interrupts the
flow of power in our lives and service. We must guard most jealously against such things.

Electricity helps a man here, in the similes it suggests. For instance the electric current passing into a building
is sometimes mysteriously turned aside and work seriously interrupted. A cross-wire dropping down out of
place, and leaning upon the feed-wire has drawn the power into itself and off somewhere else. The cross is apt
to be in some unknown place, and much searching is frequently necessary before it can be found and fixed.
And all the work affected by that feed-wire waits till the fixing is done.

The spirit atmosphere in which we live is full, chock-full, of cross-currents. And a man has to be keenly alert
to keep his feed-wire clear. If it be crossed, or grounded, away goes the power, while he may be wondering
why.

Cross-Currents. 63
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
What are some of the cross-currents that threaten to draw the power of the feed-wire? Well, just like the
electric currents some of them seem very trivial. Here are a few of the commoner ones:—

Failure to keep bodily appetites under control. Intimate fellowship with those who are enemies of our Lord, it
may be in some organization, or otherwise. The absence of a spirit of loving sympathy. The dominance in
one's life of a critical spirit which saps the warmth out of everything it touches. Jealousy, and the whole brood
which that single word suggests. Keeping money which God would have out in service for himself.
Self-seeking. Self-assertion. A frivolous spirit, instead of a joyous winsomeness, or a sweet seriousness.
Overworking one's bodily strength, which grows out of a wrong ambition, and is trusting one's own efforts
more than God's power, and which always involves disobedience of His law for the body. Over-anxiety which
robs the mind of its freshness, and the spirit of its sweetness, and whose roots are the same as overwork.

The hot hasty word. The uncontrolled temper. The pride that will not confess to having been in the wrong.
Lack of rugged honesty in speech. Carelessness in money matters. Lack of reverence for the body. The unholy
use between two, whose relation is the most sacred of earth, of that hallowed function of nature which has
rigidly but one normal use.

Some personal habit which may be common enough, and for which plausible arguments can be made, but
which does take the fine edge off of the inner consciousness of the Master's approval. Keen shrewd scheming
for position by those in holy service.

Paul's Galatian letter supplies these items:—wrangling; wordy disputes; passionate outbursts of anger;
wire-pulling or electioneering, that is, using the world's methods to attain one's ends by those in God's service.

These are some of the cross-currents that are surely drawing the power out of many a life to-day. But how
may one know surely about the wrong thing? Well, that One who resides within the heart is very sensitive and
is very faithful. If I will jealously keep on good terms, aye on the best terms, with Him, ever listening, ever
obeying, I will come to know at first touch the thing that disturbs His sensitive spirit. And to keep that thing
out, uncompromisingly, unflinchingly out, is the only safeguard here.

But there will be continual testings and temptings. Testings by God. Temptings by Satan. There will be
testings by God that the realness of the surrender may be made clear, and, too, that in these repeated siftings
the dross may all go, and only the pure gold remain. The will must be exercised in rejecting and accepting that
its fiber may be toughened. No man knows how deep is his conviction until the test comes. God will test for
love's sake to strengthen. Satan will tempt for hate's sake to trip up and weaken. God's testings will give
strength for Satan's temptings. And out of this double furnace the gold comes doubly purified.

Some circumstance arises involving a decision. There is a clear conviction of what the inner One prefers but it
runs against our plans in which friends or loved ones are concerned who may not see eye-to-eye with us. To
follow the conviction means misunderstanding and some sacrifice. And so the test is on. To be tactful, and
gentle in following rigidly the clear conviction will take grace, and, will bring a refining of life's strength and
fabric.

To run through this old Book and call the names is to bring to mind the men who have gone through just such
testings and temptings; some with splendid victory, and some with shameful defeat.

So it comes to pass that surrender is not simply the initial act into this life of power. It must become the
continuous habit. There must be a habitual living up to the act. Surrender comes to be an attitude of the will
affecting every act and event of life. And by and by the instinctive measuring of everything by its relation to
Jesus comes to be the involuntary habit of the life.

Cross-Currents. 64
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.

Friends with God.

The second thing upon which fresh supplies of power hinge is the cultivation of personal friendship with God.
This is the positive side of the new life. This is the true natural life. It is the living constantly in the
atmosphere of the Spirit's presence.

The highest and closest relation possible between any two is friendship. The basis of friendship is sympathy,
that is, fellow-feeling. The atmosphere of friendship is mutual unquestioning trust. In the original meaning of
the word, a friend is a lover. A friend is one who loves you for your sake alone, and steadfastly loves,
regardless of any return, even return-love. Friendship hungers for a closer knowledge, and for a deeper
intimacy. Friendship grows with exchange of confidences. Friends are confidants.

"As in a double solitude, ye think in each other's hearing."

A man's friendships shape his life more than aught else, or all else.

Now this is the tender relation which God Himself desires with each of us. Did Jesus ever speak more tenderly
than on that last Thursday night when He said to those constant companions of two years, "I have called you
friends, for all things that I heard from My Father I have made known unto you"? Out of his own experience
David writes, "The friendship of the Lord is with those that reverently love Him, and He will give evidence of
His friendship by showing to them His covenant, His plans, and His power." And David knew. Abraham had
the reputation of being a friend of God. He even trusted his darling boy's life to God when he could not
understand what God was doing. And he found God worthy of his friendship. He spared that darling boy even
though later He spared not His own darling boy. It thrills one's heart to hear God saying, "Abraham my
friend." Friendship with God means such oneness of spirit with Him that He may do with us and through us
what He wills. This and this alone is the true power—God in us, and God with us free to do as He wills.

Now trust is the native air of friendship. A breath of doubt chills and chokes. If one is filled and surrounded
by trust in God as the atmosphere of his life his touch with God then becomes most intimate. Satan cannot
breathe in that atmosphere. It chokes him. Air is the native element of the bird. Away from air it gasps and
dies. Water is the native element of the fish. Out of water it chokes and gasps and dies. Trust is the native
element of friendship—friendship with God. A constant feeling of confidence in GOD that believes in
His overruling power, and in His unfailing love, and rests in Him in the darkness when the thing you prize
most is lying bound on the stony altar.

The Spirit of God is a friend, a lover. He is ever wooing us up the heights. Let us climb up. He is every
wooing us into the inner recesses of friendship with Himself. Shall we not go along with Him? This is the
secret of a life ever fresh with the presence of God. It is the only pathway of increasing youthfulness in the
power of God.

"And in old age, when others fade,


They fruit still forth shall bring;
They shall be fat, and full of sap,
And aye be flourishing."
A Bunch of Keys.

To those who would enter these inner sacred recesses here is a small bunch of keys which will unlock the
doors. Three keys in this bunch; a key-time, a key-book, and a key-word. The key-time is time alone with God
daily. With the door shut. Outside things shut outside, and one's self shut in alone with God. This is the
trysting-hour with our Friend. Here He will reveal Himself to us, and reveal our real selves to ourselves. This

Friends with God. 65


The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
is going to school to God. It is giving Him a chance to instruct and correct, to strengthen and mellow and
sweeten us. One must get alone to find out that he never is alone. The more alone we are so far as men are
concerned the least alone we are so far as God is concerned. It must be unhurried time. Time enough to forget
about time. When the mind is fresh and open. One must use this key if he is to know the sweets of friendship
with God.

[34] One beauty of the revised version is its paragraphing.

The key-book is this marvelous old classic of God's Word. Take this book with you when you go to keep tryst
with your Friend. God speaks in His Word. He will take these words and speak them with His own voice into
the ear of your heart. You will be surprised to find how light on every sort of question will come. It is
remarkable what a faithful half-hour daily with a good paragraph[34] Bible in wide, swift, continuous reading
will do in giving one a swing and a grasp of this old Book. In time, and not long time either, one will come to
be saturated with its thought and spirit. Reading the Bible is listening to God. It is fairly pathetic what a hard
time God has to get men's ears. He is ever speaking but we will not be quiet enough to hear. One always
enjoys listening to his friend. What this Friend says to us will change radically our conceptions of Himself,
and of life. It will clear the vision, and discipline the judgment, and stiffen the will.

The key-word is obedience: a glad prompt doing of what our Friend desires because He desires it. Obedience
is saying "yes" to God. It is the harmony of the life with the will of God. With some it seems to mean a servile
bondage to details. It should rather mean a spirit of intelligent loyalty to God. It aims to learn His will, and
then to do it. God's will is revealed in His word. His particular will for my life He will reveal to me if I will
listen, and, if I will obey, so far as I know to obey. If I obey what I know, I will know more. Obedience is the
organ of knowledge in the soul. "He that willeth to do His will shall know."

God's will includes His plan for a world, and for each life in the world. Both concern us. He would first work
in us, that He may work through us in His passionate outreach for a world. His will includes every bit of one's
life; and therefore obedience must also include every bit. A run out in a single direction may serve as a
suggestion of many others.

The law of my body, which obeyed brings or continues health is God's will, as much as that which concerns
moral action. Our bodies are holy because God lives in them. Overwork, insufficient sleep, that imprudent diet
and eating which seems the rule rather than the exception, carelessness of bodily protection in rain or storm or
drafts or otherwise:—these are sins against God's will for the body, and no one who is disobedient here
can ever be a channel of power up to the measure of God's longing for us.

And so regarding all of one's life, one must ever keep an open mind Godward so as to get a well balanced
sense of what His will is. Practice is the great thing here. This is school work. By persistent listening and
practising there comes a mature judgment which avoids extremes in both directions. But the rule is this:
cheery prompt obeying regardless of consequences. Disobedience, failure to obey, is breaking with our
Friend.

These are the three keys which will let us into the innermost chambers of friendship with God. And with them
goes a key-ring on which these keys must be strung. It is this:—implicit trust in God. Trust is the native
air of friendship. In its native air it grows strong and beautiful. Whatever disturbs an active abiding trust in
God must be driven out of doors, and kept out. Doubt chills the air below normal. Anxiety overheats the air. A
calm looking up into God's face with an unquestioning faith in Him under every sort of
circumstance—this is trust. Faith has three elements: knowledge, belief and trust. Knowledge is
acquaintance with certain facts. Belief is accepting these facts as true. Trust is risking something that is very
precious. Trust is the life-blood of faith. This is the atmosphere of the true natural life as planned by God.

A Bunch of Keys. 66
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Quiet Talks on Power, by S. D. Gordon.
"If a wren can cling
To a spray a-swing
In a mad May wind, and sing, and sing,
As if she'd burst for joy;
Why cannot I,
Contented lie,
In His quiet arms, beneath His sky,
Unmoved by earth's annoy?"
Shall we take these keys, and this key-ring and use them faithfully? It will mean intimate friendship with God.
And that is the one secret of power, fresh, and ever freshening.

There is a simple story told of an old German friend of God which illustrates all of this with a charming
picturesqueness. Professor Johan Albrecht Bengal was a teacher in the seminary in Denkendorf, Germany, in
the eighteenth century. "He united profound reverence for the Bible with an acuteness which let nothing
escape him." The seminary students used to wonder at the great intellectuality, and great humility and
Christliness which blended their beauty in him. One night, one of them, eager to learn the secret of his holy
life, slipped up into his apartments while the professor was out lecturing in the city, and hid himself behind
the heavy curtains in the deep recess of the old-fashioned window. Quite a while he waited until he grew
weary and thought of how weary his teacher must be with his long day's work in the class-room and the city.
At length he heard the step in the hall, and waited breathlessly to learn the coveted secret. The man came in,
changed his shoes for slippers, and sitting down at the study table, opened the old well-thumbed German
Bible and began reading leisurely page by page. A half-hour he read, three-quarters of an hour, an hour, and
more yet. Then leaning his head down on his hands for a few minutes in silence he said in the simplest most
familiar way, "Well, Lord Jesus, we're on the same old terms. Good-night."

If we might live like that. Begin the day with a bit of time alone, a good-morning talk with Him. And as the
day goes on in its busy round sometimes to put out your hand to Him, and under your breath say, "let's keep
on good terms, Lord Jesus." And then when eventide comes in to go off alone with Him for a quiet look into
His face, and a good-night talk, and to be able to say, with reverent familiarity: "Good-night, Lord Jesus, we
are on the same old terms, you and I, good-night." Ah! such a life will be fairly fragrant with the very
presence of God.

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