03 -- THIS GREAT SALVATION
In the second chapter of
Hebrews and third verse we have one of the greatest questions that
God ever asked man. The question is enough to scare a man to death. It
is the unanswerable
question, "How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?" Just
why the Lord asked man a
question he couldn't answer is a mystery, but still He did it. I
suppose that neither our Heavenly
Father nor man can answer the question. For if a man neglects the
salvation of his soul there is no
escape, for we read in Hebrews, ninth chapter, twenty-seventh verse,
"And as it is appointed unto
men once to die, but after this the judgment." Therefore we are all
headed toward that great day
and we will have to go and stand before the King. It may be possible
that we will find out that,
through the goodness of our Heavenly Father, He asks us this question
in order to wake us up, and
to alarm and arouse our dead, slumbering consciences, that we might
arise and bestir ourselves,
and if possible make the escape from an eternal doom. But as we see
there is no escape and we
can't answer the question, thank the Lord there is still hope, for we
can talk about the greatness of
our salvation.
First, salvation is
great because God himself is the Author of it, and everything God does
is
great. His little things are some of His greatest things. In the days
of King Solomon they used the
little red ants for their college presidents. And when Solomon met a
lazy, trifling, good-for-nothing
fellow he sent him off to college, and when he got there he met a red
ant, and Solomon said, "Learn
wisdom." Again Solomon said, "The spider taketh hold with her hands,
and is in kings' palaces."
The ant represents works, and the spider represents faith. Solomon
said, "The ant layeth up her
store in the harvest time, and the spider is in kings' palaces."
To show you that the ant had
more sense than lots of men, in Jeremiah, eighth chapter,
twentieth verse, Jeremiah said, "The harvest is past, the summer is
ended, and we are not saved."
So if the ant had sense enough to lay up his store in harvest time, and
man fails to do it, then the ant
is more sensible than man. And the spider had taken hold with her
little hands and had gotten into
the palace of the king. The spider, being a representative of faith,
takes hold with her hand and
spins her web out of that which is invisible. No man can see with his
physical eye the material that
the spider uses in making her beautiful gown. And so faith is
invisible, but by faith we take hold
with our hands, and spiderlike, we finally weave us beautiful garments,
the most beautiful things
the human eye ever beheld, as they are woven by that which is invisible.
Now again the old Book says
that our life is like the flying of the shuttle. There are two
things about a shuttle. The first is it goes with great speed, but the
most beautiful things about it is it
pulls the thread as it travels along, and the threads are various
colors. When we have trouble the
shuttle pulls a black thread, when we have happiness it pulls a
beautiful red thread, when we have
joy it pulls a white thread, and when we are overflowing with love it
pulls a beautiful blue thread.
And when the garment has been woven, behold, we have all colors in it,
and it takes these colors
all mingled together to make the beautiful garment.
If it were all trouble the
garment would be only of one color, or if it were all happiness it
would be only of one color, but all of these, the different trials and
blessings mingled together,
will make up the beautiful robe of righteousness that we are to weave
with the hand of faith. And
we will understand what Solomon meant when he said, "The spider taketh
hold with her hands,
and is in kings' palaces." So we see that God's least things are some
of His greatest things, and they
teach us some of the most beautiful lessons as we journey from earth to
heaven.
* * *
SALVATION IS GREAT BECAUSE IT IS BOTH A SECRET AND A MYSTERY
In the twenty-fifth Psalm
and fourteenth verse we read, "The secret of the Lord is with them
that fear him, and he will shew them his covenant." We next notice in
the third chapter of
Ephesians that St. Paul said that salvation is a mystery that hath been
hid from the ages, but is now
revealed by the Lord Jesus Christ. Now there is something peculiar and
strange concerning secrets
and a mystery. As strange as it is, they have always had a wonderful
fascination to the human
family. The average man or woman is loaded down with secrets. Men sit
up at night and watch
their secrets. Women have worn the soles off their shoes trotting over
town looking for a secret
Some men have ridden the goat all night in search of a secret, and some
women have looked for
and trotted after the Eastern Star in the hope that they might hear or
find out some secret. We find
that salvation is both a secret and a mystery united, and we found that
a secret and a mystery are
not exactly the same. Yet they are so closely related that you can
scarcely tell where one ends and
the other begins. I can give you a plain, practical, common-sense
illustration:
Along about the first night
in the month of April a man goes out into his garden and plants
an Irish potato. Nobody saw him plant it there, that was a secret But
two weeks later the potato
comes up and the secret gets out. Two months later he goes to this
potato hill and will scratch out a
washpan full of Irish potatoes. This one little potato multiplied
itself into one dozen big potatoes.
Now there is a mystery connected with the secret. But you say, "How can
you apply this to a
Christian experience?" Well, we will do this:
We will say that away back
under the dispensation of the Father the plan was laid and the
potato was planted; and when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, the
potato came up, and the
secret got out, as secrets generally do; and on the Day of Pentecost,
when there were three
thousand converted, that was "potato digging" day. There were the
secret and the mystery united,
and worked out so plain that if a man can get one idea through his
"noggin," he can understand both
a secret and a mystery.
* * *
THE COST OF THIS GREAT SALVATION
Another reason why
salvation is the greatest thing in the world is because it cost more
than
anything else in the world. It is the only thing that ever cost much.
But salvation cost God His Son,
and Jesus Christ every drop of His blood, and thirty-three years'
absence from His home, and it
cost heaven its brightest Jewel. The beautiful city of God was without
the Christ for thirty-three
years. We can't imagine what heaven would be without Jesus, and yet the
home of God had no Son
in it for thirty-three long years.
During that time the Son of
God walked the Judean hills and worked at the carpenter's trade
to make His bread. He preached on the streets of the cities and slept
on the mountainside at night.
He did all this for a lost, perishing, doomed, hopeless world. Bless
His name! He was in search of
fallen humanity. Man had fallen and had lost his holy estate and the
Son of God was in search of
him, and thank God, He found him, and the beautiful story of the
shepherd in search of his sheep is
nothing more nor less than the Son of God looking for me.
Don't let us forget that the devil
had the human family on the auctioneer's block and was
bidding us off and buying us in for the express purpose of damning us
forever. Thank God, Jesus
appeared on the scene just in time to put in the highest bid and
purchase a diamond in the rough,
and bring home the lost sheep. It has been said that He bought man with
the gold of His blood and
the silver of His tears; therefore the redemption of man is the
costliest thing in the world.
We have often heard people
say that everything costs, that they had paid a hundred dollars
for their cow. But God has said long ago that the gold is His and the
cattle are His; therefore the
cow really cost them nothing, for they paid for God's cow with God's
money. But it is different
when it comes to the price of your soul. For Jesus tasted death that we
might taste of life; He
became the Son of Man that we might become the sons and daughters of
the Almighty. Jesus left
heaven and came into this world that He might open up a way by which we
could get out of this
world and go into heaven. He put on humanity that we might put on
divinity. When He bore the
Roman scourge it was for you and for me. He had looked down from the
throne and had seen men
under the lash, but Jesus had never been whipped until He came to
redeem us. He went under the
lash and endured it in order that a way might be opened up by which man
could get out of the life
of sin and bondage into a life of freedom and happiness. Jesus had seen
the human family without a
home, but He was never without a home until He came to redeem us and
then we hear those
beautiful words, but, oh, so sad! "The foxes have holes, and the birds
of the air have nests; but the
Son of man hath not where to lay his head."
Dear reader, isn't that
strange talk for a person to use when He himself had built the world
that He was walking on? and yet it was true. For we read His own words
that He had created all
things, and by Him all things were created, and that He upholdeth all
things by the right hand of His
power, and yet He took the place of a pauper. When He was born into the
world it was so
arranged that He should be born in a wagon yard or a livery stable,
that He was to work at the
carpenter's trade, and pay His own taxes. He literally traveled through
this world as a lonely
Wanderer; and when He hung on the Cross, He was even refused a drink of
water, and instead of a
cup of cool, refreshing, sparkling water, He received a cup of gall.
Yet this was the King of the
world. The first crown He ever wore as a King was the crown of thorns.
While the world was trying
to disgrace Him and heap shame and contempt on Him, their
very attitude toward Jesus and His attitude toward them have won for
Him a name that is above
every other name. And today there is not an infidel club in the world
but has to put on its billheads,
when it announces its services, the birth of Jesus. I say, shame on an
infidel club that denies Jesus
Christ and yet can't hold an infidel meeting and get out its
announcements but what it puts on every
billhead the birth of the Son of God. Every note that is given in a
bank and every deed to a tract of
land and every mortgage that a man gives on his ranch or a team of
mules would be worthless
without the birth of Jesus Christ on it.
And all of this makes
me shout, bless God, when I think that Jesus Christ with all the
derision that is heaped on Him is the most popular Being that ever was
in this world, and to think
that this wonderful Saviour is mine!
* * *
SALVATION IS GREAT BECAUSE IT OFFERS A REMEDY FOR SIN
Salvation is the only
thing that is known to man that offers a remedy for sin. Man has tried
many inventions; he has worked overtime to think out some plan that
would put him on his feet and
deliver him from an internal bondage and struggle that he has carried
all of his life, but they have
all failed. He has tried civil law and civic righteousness, education
and charitable institutions, and
so far all remedies that man has ever invented have utterly failed.
Some men for a remedy have
denied that there was any sin; others have denied the existence of
eternal punishment, hoping by so
doing to find a remedy. Others have sneered at the devil and sworn
until they were black in the
face that he was not in existence; others have declared that we have a
universal salvation, that all
men will be saved, both good and bad.
Other men in their
bewilderment and sad predicament have decided that only a special
few, that they term the elect, will be saved; and they imagine that the
elect will be saved, it matters
not how mean they are, and that all the rest of the human family was
long ago predestined to
damnation and will be eternally lost, it matters not how good they are.
But after all, this is no
remedy for the curse of sin. So we see that all human inventions and
man-made remedies are
teetotal failures. We remember that King David said that his enemies
had made them gods of their
own; he said they had eyes and didn't see and had ears and didn't hear;
he said they had throats and
could not speak through them, and he said the sinners of his day were
as bad off as the gods they
had made. The reader will see that the man-made gods were only man's
remedy to get rid of sin,
and yet all have failed.
In our day we have a
wonderful hurrah going on about the fatherhood of God and the
brotherhood of man. Some preachers have even quit the pulpit and given
up preaching Christ, and
are going up and down the land lecturing on the fatherhood of God and
the brotherhood of man.
Then others have decided that the only God there is, is the God that is
in man, that man himself is a
divine being and that he is able to handle the situation. But they have
all gone down in defeat, and
will go down, for there is but one remedy in all the wide, wide world
and that is the salvation
offered to man through the atoning blood of Jesus Christ, which is the
only remedy for sin.
Salvation means deliverance
from sin, and salvation is a double gift and a double blessing,
because sin is a double tragedy and God provided a double remedy. In
the fifty-first psalm, King
David said, "Blot out my transgressions," and in the second verse he
said, "Cleanse me from my
sin," and we find that God provided a double remedy for this double
disease, that is, pardon for
the guilty, and cleansing for the believer. And in order to provide a
double remedy, necessarily the
atonement had to be doubled, for we find in Romans, fifth chapter,
eighth verse, "But God
commendeth his love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us." Here the
reader will see the atonement reaching down to the sinner.
But in the next place we see
the atonement reaching down to the church, for in Ephesians,
fifth chapter, twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth verses, we read,
"Husbands, love your wives, even as
Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; that he might
sanctify and cleanse it with the
washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a
glorious church, not having spot,
or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without
blemish." Here the reader will
see the atonement reaching the church, and while the sinner needs
pardon, the church needs
cleansing, and thank God, we have the remedy for both through the shed
blood of the crucified Son
of God, which is the only remedy for sin in the whole world. Bless God,
we have the remedy! We
have got the goods, and in spite of an unbelieving church and a wicked
world, we are delivering
the goods just the same. Bless God!
* * *
SALVATION IS GREAT BECAUSE OF THE EXTENT OF IT
When we think of the
extent of salvation our minds well-nigh reel and stagger, for we must
evidently think of the depth to which man has fallen and then to the
heights of glory to which God
intends to lift him. First we must see the new birth, and the idea of
being born of the Spirit carries
with it a wonderful mystery. How is it that one moment a man can be a
guilty sinner and far out in a
world of sin, and the next moment a truly regenerated believer and far
up in the world of
righteousness, and yet that takes place when a man is born of the
Spirit! For St. Paul tells us in
Colossians first chapter, thirteenth verse, that the meaning of the new
birth is to be delivered from
the power of darkness and to be translated into the kingdom of God's
dear Son."
So there we see first that
salvation means deliverance from the powers of darkness, and
second, a translation out of the dark world into the Kingdom of light.
For in John, eighth chapter,
twelfth verse, Christ said, "I am the light of the world. he that
followeth me shall not walk in
darkness, but shall have the light of life." And the idea of the new
birth is really something new in
the world; while it looks to us like it is old because we have heard of
it all of our lives, yet the
new birth was never heard of in the world until Jesus was born.
When He introduced the
subject to the great and learned Nicodemus, it was the most
astonishing thing that ever entered the head of that wonderful Jewish
teacher. I don't wonder that
the doctor scratched his head and said, "How can these things be?" He
had thought much of sin, but
he didn't know how to get out of it. How new it was when Jesus said,
"Nicodemus, the way to get
out of sin is to be born out of it"! Nicodemus had thought that
changing climates and changing
localities and changing your surroundings and your environments was
probably a good remedy, but
all the changes he had made had had no effect in the world on his moral
condition, and he never
heard of a remedy until he met Jesus. Thank God, some of the rest of us
have heard of that remedy,
have accepted it, and have shouted ourselves hoarse over the fact that,
bless God, we have got it
now.
So Jesus is the Author
of the new birth. And it was something new under heaven. But it is
just as new today as it was then, and our nation is now drifting to the
place where many are
rejecting the new birth because it is unexplainable by the theological
teachers of our universities.
Beloved, when it comes to an
explanation of the new birth the president of a university has
no advantage over the wash-woman. And for all this I say, "Glory to
God!" That wonderful
question of Nicodemus, "How can these things be?" is still ringing down
over the hills of Judea,
but it has reached down over the plains of earth, it has crossed the
mighty deep. Beloved, an
explanation of the new birth is not found under a plug hat, nor under
the lapel of a double-breasted
broadcloth coat. Thank God, it can be fully understood in the bosom of
an uneducated man. One of
the greatest mysteries connected with the salvation of a man's soul is
seen in the fact that the
unlearned knows as much about it as the cultured and brilliant.
I remember one morning when
my heart was leaping for joy and bubbling over with the
perfect love of God, a college president seemed to be insulted and with
a look of defiance on his
face he said to me, "Sir, you are just a gosling and have not shed off
your down yet, and how dare
you stand up and profess to be made perfect in love?" I said, "Doctor,
I have been saved for
twelve years, and if the Son of God can't make a man perfect in love in
twelve years, I defy you to
prove that He can do it in twelve thousand." The doctor failed to make
good, and I kept the
blessing, thank God.
But here is another little
point that I don't want to forget while we are talking about the new
birth. When Jesus said, "Ye must be born again," He absolutely left you
without a choice. He didn't
say you could take it or let it alone and get to heaven. He said, "Ye
must," and, beloved, if "ye
must," then "ye must." And then He added this clause, "Without it ye
cannot see the kingdom of
God." And when the learned turn up their noses and sneer, God never
modifies it nor rounds off the
corners, and has never taken it back from that hour till this. It
stands out there in letters of fire, and
reaches down to the gates of hell and up to the beautiful walls of the
city above, and will stand out
for ever and ever and ever -- "Ye must be born again, or ye cannot see
the kingdom of God."
I used to sing in the
Salvation Army:
"How well I remember in sorrow's dark night
How the lamp of His love shed its beautiful light!
More grace He has given, and burdens removed,
And over and over His goodness I've proved.
And shall I turn back into the world?
Oh, no, not I, not I.
And shall I turn back into the world?
Oh, no, not I."
Many a dark, drizzly night I
have stood on the street corner and sung that song
and beat the
drum and called the wanderers to Jesus. I have
seen them kneel on the cold, muddy streets and in
less than a minute I have seen them born of the
Spirit and translated out of the kingdom of darkness
into the Kingdom of light. I have seen the tears plow a
furrow down through their dirty faces.
Thank God! Amen!
* * *
SALVATION IS GREAT BECAUSE OF THE FULLNESS OF THE BLESSING
Dear reader, we want
you to see that a wonderful experience is promised to the sons and
daughters of our Heavenly Father in the seventeenth and eighteenth
verses of the fifth chapter of
Ephesians. Now listen to these wonderful words of the inspired apostle:
"Wherefore be ye not
unwise, but understanding what the will of the Lord is. And be not
drunk with wine, wherein is
excess; but be filled with the Spirit." Here we have a direct command
from the inspired apostle to
be filled. It doesn't mean half full, or three-quarters, but to be
full. And we must remember, and we
do remember, and then we don't propose to forget, that the most
beautiful life in the world is a
Spirit-filled life. No life is so beautiful as the Spirit-filled life.
No life is so useful as the
Spirit-filled life.
In fact, the hope of your
own soul and the hope of your family and the hope of your church
of which you are a member, and the hope of the world in which you live,
is only seen in this
wonderful Spirit-filled life. No man is a success for God or himself
who is not completely filled,
led, and controlled by the Holy Ghost. Without the Holy Ghost we would
be failures. Without Him
we would be helpless; indeed, without Him we would be hopeless. But,
thank God, with Him
difficulties are saddle horses, surrounding circumstances are
stepladders, and impossibilities are
springboards to leap off and land right in the middle of a glorious
victory.
"When the Holy Ghost
comes," Christ said, "He will take the things of Mine and show them
to you." More than that, He said, "When He is come, He will bring all
things to your remembrance,
whatsoever I have said unto you. He even went so far as to say, "For I
will give you a mouth and a
wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor
resist" (Luke 21:15). This
refers, of course, to the incoming of the blessed Holy Ghost, which is
to do two things for you.
First, He is to cleanse the temple, and second, He is to fill it. Then
we might add a third clause and
say that He is to rule it. For the Holy Ghost is today the Executive of
the Godhead in this world.
And the men of the church that stubbornly reject Him have closed every
avenue of victory and have
shut the door of hope and success in their own faces.
There is no institution in
the world that is deader and more lifeless and hopeless than a
church without the Holy Ghost. We can take the nominal church and we
will see at a glance that
they never had better buildings, their pews were never better made,
their carpets are the best, their
organs cannot be improved on, they have a beautiful ritual, and, bless
your heart, they know it.
They can sing a verse and the pastor and the official board, their
choir leader and all the
congregation can say, "AH-MEN," and draw it out as long as your arm,
and stand up so precisely it
looks like if they were to smile it would break their faces all to
pieces, and they would ruin their
religious service; and yet as beautiful as those things are, they are
no more signs of life and juice
and unction and glory, not a bit more, than if there were no such
things in existence. The machinery
is good, but there is no oil on it.
We might ask, "What is
the matter with this wonderful institution?" No thinking man has to
study for a minute to get the answer. They have just rejected the Holy
Ghost, and they are running
their institution without God. In many places we fear that He has taken
His everlasting flight and
He may never return. It is true that a church of this description will
add members to its enrollment.
They will send out cards beautifully printed; the very type itself is
well set, the cards are
gilt-edged. Some will sign them up and drop them in the collection
basket; others will come in by
hitting the trail. Many others will come in on Decision Day. And we are
not abusing those
methods; we are only stating that they can gather in members by those
methods, but, beloved, does
that look to you like an old-fashioned revival of heartfelt, Holy Ghost
religion?
Sad to say that many
of the people that come by those methods never go back to see how
the institution is progressing. At a glance you can see they have no
interest there because they have
received nothing. But you let the pastor preach a series of sermons on
the awfulness of sin, the
horrors of hell, the glory of heaven, and eternal life until conviction
seizes the hearts of men. They
will weep their way to a place of prayer, become really born again, and
come into the church of
Jesus Christ by the gateway of the new birth. Then her altars will be
the most sacred place to them
of any place in the world, and you can hardly keep them away from
church.
Then later on let the
pastor preach a series of sermons on the Spirit-filled life, the power
of
the incoming of the Holy Ghost, the burning, surging glory of the
sanctified experience, the beauty
of perfect love, and such glorious themes, until his entire church
becomes so hungry for the fullness
of the blessing that they will weep their way to a place of prayer,
consecrate all, look up through
their tears with simple faith, and receive the Holy Ghost. Beloved, you
will have a church that will
march through this old world, and the devil will weep as the angels
rejoice while the saints shout
for joy. This church will be composed of a company of sky-openers and
fire-pullers, sin-killers,
devil-drivers, trench-diggers, water-haulers; and it takes all of the
above to make a true soldier,
and the Spirit-filled life will make you a soldier of the Cross.
Bless God for the
privilege of preaching this great salvation and seeing multiplied
thousands pull till the skies open and dig till they strike water, and
today they are feasting on the fat
of the land, for they are living in the land of Canaan. You remember
the beautiful song that we sing,
that
'Tis good to live in Canaan,
Where grapes of Eschol grow,
'Tis good to live in Canaan
Where milk and honey flow.
We will now act like the church where
they all say, "AH-MEN." For, glory to Jesus, the
word "Amen" means; "Yes, Lord, and I'll pay my part."
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