11 -- MOUNT CALVARY
We have now come to Mount
Cavalry, which is the hope of this world. We read in the four
Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, of the crucifixion of the
blessed Son of God. Of course
all the mountains are very interesting, and something wonderful has
taken place on them all, but the
thing that is worth most to this lost world is the thought that the
blessed Christ was crucified on the
mountain top for the redemption of this world.
The hope of heaven hangs on the
Mount of Calvary. The hope of heaven is seen there; the
hope of the poor sinner is there, and the hope of the believer is
there. The songs that have stirred
the world have been songs that were written in the blood of the blessed
Son of God. He had to die
to shed His blood, and He died on the top of Mount Calvary, so we have
to look in that direction to
see salvation, or heaven, or hope, or light, or life, or anything that
lifts and elevates man and puts
him at his best for God and the world, with its suffering humanity.
We all look from the beautiful
church with its hardwood pews and Brussels carpets and
thundering organ and red-wood pulpit, to the cross of Christ on the
mountain.
We read that without the
shedding of blood there is no remission, and back behind the
shedding of the blood is the cross, and the cross stood on Mount
Calvary. Just why the Son of God
went to Calvary to die I don't know, but we know that he did, and that
is enough for us to know.
We never will get out of reach of Calvary. There is no sin that is
known to the human family,
outside of the sin against the Holy Ghost, but there is power enough at
Mount Calvary to blot out.
All the sins of the universe have been piled on the Son of God at
Calvary and He bore them all
away. I used to think that there, on that great occasion, He made
atonement for all the sins that had
ever been committed, but it covered more ground than that, for it had
to reach forward to all the
sins that ever would be committed, and make a provision for them all.
About 1900 years after
the blessed Christ hung on the cross of Calvary, I was born and
went into a life of sin. At the age of twenty-one I heard of the death
of the blessed Christ for the
remission of my sins, and I wept my way to the altar, and repented of
my sins, and confessed my
sins, and forsook my sin, and believed on the blessed Son of God. And
from Calvary there came
out pardon, full and free, and the bloodstained cross stood out before
me and I saw that there was
hope for the guilty sinner. My faith took hold of the shed blood, the
light of heaven broke in on my
poor lost soul, and I got up out of the straw with the shine on my
face, and the glory in my soul.
From that day until this I have had springs in my heels and a well in
my soul and the glory in my
eye and a hope that reached away beyond the grave and out into the
eternities. Well, glory to God!
it is enough to make a fellow shout just to talk about it.
So we go up and down in this old
world singing such songs as "At the cross, at the cross
where I first saw the light, And the burden of my heart rolled away."
Somebody else will take up the
chorus and begin to sing
"Calvary's stream is flowing."
Somebody else will take up another
old hymn and begin to sing
"It was there on its side Jesus suffered and died
To redeem a poor sinner like me."
We have found
out that a religion that has no cross in it and no Calvary in it and no
blood
in it is a dead religion, and a hopeless religion. A lifeless religion
is man-made and dies with its
creator, which is man.
The Apostle Paul, the greatest
preacher that the world ever saw, said, "God forbid that I
should glory save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the
world is crucified unto me
and I unto the world." The Apostle was dead to the world, and the world
was dead to him. He did
not want anything that belonged to the world, and the world did not
want anything that belonged to
him. Calvary means death to the world. It is a disgrace to the cause of
Christ to hear church
members, who trot to the theater and card table and ball room, talk of
crucifixion. To my mind it is
a real sport for the devil. In the name of the Christ Who shed His
blood on Mount Calvary, how
can they dare to stand in the presence of God and talk about being
crucified when there is nothing
they are dead to but scriptural salvation! They are as much alive to
the works of the devil as he
himself is, and they are as dead to the works of the Church as the
devil. In many places these
people are the leaders in the house of God. I don't wonder that the Son
of God said upon one
occasion that the "harlots go into the kingdom of heaven before you."
When He spoke those awful
words He was talking to the elders and chief priests, at that time the
rulers of the house of God.
The latest thing that
comes to my hearing is in one of the little cities out in Ohio. There,
in
the First Methodist Church, is a young lady who sings in the choir on
Sunday morning. While I was
in the town holding a revival there was a big ball in the city, and the
girl danced with the devil.
They had the thing all arranged, and she was dressed for the great
occasion, and of course the devil
was all arranged to act his part. The lights were turned low, or turned
out, I don't know which, and
the devil came in and this young lady danced with the devil. Of course
she knew the devil; he was
a young man in the city whom she kept company with and he a sinner. A
sinner keeping company
with a woman who passed herself for a Christian, and in the ball room
dancing with a man who is
supposed to be the devil! What faith could he have in the religion of
that young woman? She is as
sure to put him in the pit of despair as the world stands, if he is led
by her influence. Wouldn't she
be a pretty spectacle up in the choir next Sunday morning? Just think
of a woman in the choir on
Sunday morning, and in the arms of the devil on Tuesday night.
There is no Mount Calvary
there; there is no pleading for the lost there;
there is no life hid
with Christ in God there; there is no witness of the Spirit
there; there is no baptism with the Holy
Ghost there. Just listen to a few words from the
Methodist discipline: "Dost thou renounce the
devil and all his works, and the vain pomp
and glory of the world, with all covetous
desires of the
same, so that thou shalt not follow or be led by them?" And
she said, "I renounce them all."
Well, there is but one hope,
and that is to keep our eyes on Mount Calvary and press our
claims to the gates of the devil for a devil that can degrade the women
of the earth and leave them
hopeless and in dark despair, and come into a Christian nation and into
the Methodist Church and
drag the women of America down on his level, is a pretty shrewd devil.
We had better sing
"The cleansing stream, I see, I see,
I plunge and oh! it cleanseth me."
Amen and Amen.
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