BRING MEN TO CHRIST!
SERMON BROADCAST OVER STATION WCCO
SERMON BROADCAST OVER STATION WCCO
Text: “He first findeth his own brother, Simon, and saith unto him: we have found the Messiah, which is being interpreted the Christ, and he brought him to Jesus”
(John 1:41-42).
BELOVED in Christ: Grace and Peace be unto you from God our Father and our Savior Jesus Christ, Amen. I keenly feel the responsibility as well as gladly welcome the opportunity in bringing a message from my Lord and Master to the many who from far and near listen in at this hour of evening worship.
If I were permitted to utter but four words and then have my lips sealed forever, the words that I would give with the greatest possible earnestness to my fellow believers in a sin-cursed world would be these: “Bring men to Christ!” This is the great commission of the Master to His disciples, the one great mission of the Christian Church.
Man in his natural state is lost to God. It matters not how highly cultured he may be or what degree of morality in life he may attain. By his own effort he cannot save himself. I know the doctrine of total depravity is not popular. It is resented by the moralist. But the Bible teaches plainly in Old Testament and in New Testament, that we are dead in trespasses and sins, and that man’s heart is evil from his youth. David says in Ps. 51: “Behold I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” Paul says in Romans 3:12: “There is none that doeth good, no, not one.” Isaiah says: “All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way” (Is. 53:6). In the book of Job, 15:14, we read: “What is a man, that he should be clean? And he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?” But we are not left hopeless. “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on Him shall not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16). He came to seek and to save the lost. He is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world. With His death on the cross He redeemed us. He died for us. His blood cleanses from sin. Only they who believe in Christ as Redeemer, as the Atoner for our sins and, who serve Him as their Lord and Master, are saved. Those who teach, preach, and believe in Jesus as a mere man, a prophet, whose moral teachings and noble example we should follow, are lost to God. They have religion, but not Christianity. But everyone who has found Jesus and accepted Him as Savior and Lord and experienced His wonderful love, has also a desire kindled in his heart to win others for Christ. No sooner had Andrew found Jesus and accepted Him as the Messiah before, without delay or hesitation, he finds his brother, Simon, tells him of his own experience, that he has found the promised Messiah, and then brings him to Jesus.
Here we have Christianity applied and practiced. We are not only saved for the sake of being saved. We are won to win others. Christ invites us to come unto Him. The Gospel first says Come. But the Gospel has also a “go” in it. Christ directs His followers to the vineyard, the harvest field, the mission field, and says: “Lift up your eyes and see the fields ripe unto the harvest.” He wants laborers, witnesses. “Go ye into all the world and make disciples of all nations.” “Go, work today in my vineyard.” When He holds up before us the example of the Good Samaritan, He says “Go thou and do likewise.” Whom does He mean? Every believer. That means you and me, as many as are professing Christians. He wants His followers to be His co-laborers. Andrew was an uneducated man, not especially gifted, nor had he received any special command to win others, but the love of Christ and the love for his brother constrained him to go.
Oh, how sadly Christians lose sight of this supreme mission of winning others for Christ! This personal work is left by the many to the few, to the pastor, the missionary, the Sunday school teacher. Our Christian life must and will surely suffer if we neglect this Christian service. If there is a living faith and a love for Christ in your heart, do not wait for a formal command to testify to others of your Savior. Flowers need not be told to blossom and bear fruit. The sun need not be told to shine. It is their nature to do so. Even so is it the nature of the new life in Christ to serve in love. As soon as the sinful woman of Sychar had met Jesus at the well and believed that He was the promised Messiah, she returned at once to her home community and told others of Him. And the result was a revival in that town. Many believed. Salvation means service.
Note also with what certainty Andrew testified. He did not say, “I hope we have found the Messiah,” but “We have found the Messiah!” There was the ring of assurance in his testimony. He spoke from conviction, and therefore his testimony carried the power with it to impress and influence his brother. There are so many Christians, who lack this assurance of their own salvation. If questioned as to their own relation to Jesus, many will say, “I don’t know”; others will reply, “I hope I am saved.” Where the assurance of faith is lacking there can be little power over sin, no real peace and joy. And there can be little or no desire to win others for Christ.
Now, preaching and teaching are not the only ways of winning souls. Comparatively few possess the qualifications and can effectively perform this office. Our lives, our daily conduct and conversation, the love expressed by words of sympathy and deeds of kindness, touch hearts and prepare them for the Gospel message. Actions speak louder than words. The exercise of Christian love is the part and privilege of all believers. If we believe in the priesthood of believers, we must also practice it.
Jesus Himself, the Head of the church, in the days of His visible presence on earth, preached and wrought deeds of mercy. And, He says: “Be merciful, even as your Father in heaven is merciful.” “And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the kingdom and healing every sickness and every disease among the people” (Matt. 9:35). With His deeds of love and mercy He paved the way for the message of salvation. He also gave His disciples power and instruction to do likewise. He said: “As ye go and preach saying, the kingdom of heaven is at hand, heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils” (Matt. 10:7-8).
The first Christian congregation exercised the two God- given hands of the ministry of the Word and the ministry of mercy. Spirit-filled laymen and also women engaged in caring for the sick and poor. We read that “Stephen, full of faith and power, did great wonders and miracles among the people” (Acts 6:10). Both men and women were engaged in this everyday ministry of mercy in the early church (Rom. 16:1). But the church has sadly neglected the exercise of the left hand. The Second Pentecost of the church, the Reformation, gave back to the church the ministry of the Word, but the ministry of mercy has not been brought back to function in the manner it did in the mother-church. The church to a great extent has lost the power of her left hand. What you don’t use, you lose. This means that much dead, fruitless faith has resulted; a condition of spiritual indifference, lukewarmness, and laxity. This again has meant a great loss and leakage in membership, as the church has lost much of her power to hold her members and win others. And as a result, the state has to a great extent taken over the care of the sick, poor, destitute, wayward, and neglected. But state institutions and humanitarian social service can at the best care only for the needs of the body. It is therefore a hopeful sign of late that there is an awakening realization of this defect in our church life.
If the Christian Church shall not lose her opportunity, she must call into use the much neglected hand of the ministry of mercy, develop and exercise it to the fullest extent in works of personal and practical Christian service, flowing from the consecrated believing hearts in her membership. Like the priest and Levite in the parable, altogether too often have pastor and parishioners gone up to the temple as orthodox religionists to preach, pray, and worship, and gone back into the everyday life of the world, passing neglectfully by the unfortunate and helpless brothers and sisters that have fallen by the wayside. We need the compassionate heart, the observing eye, the open ear, the willing feet, the helping hand, the cheerful gift of the Good Samaritan—the ministry of mercy.
What a wonderful mission in its possibilities! Think of the unchurched masses—a condition largely resulting from the failure of the church to function properly in going to the unsaved, unfortunate, wayward, and lost, and ministering to their wants, both physically and spiritually, in the spirit of sympathy and love. Preaching and teaching are not the only ways of bringing cheer and hope to the discouraged and hopeless. Nor are these always the first. You can bring Jesus to a sinner by your example of life as well as by your word of testimony. And with these neglected and unchurched, who are often found to be prejudiced against church and Christianity, the testimony of deed must go before the testimony of the Word. The ministry of mercy must remove prejudice and pave the way for the saving truth. When people see Christ in our life they will listen with confidence to our testimony.
During the war, a chaplain passing over the fields saw a wounded soldier lying on the ground. He stooped down and said to him, “Would you like for me to read you something from the Bible?” The wounded boy said, “I am so thirsty, I would rather have a drink of water.” The chaplain hurried off as quickly as possible and brought water. After the soldier drank the water, he said, “Could you lift my head and put something under it?” The chaplain took off his own overcoat, rolled it up, and tenderly lifting him, put it as a pillow for his tired head to rest upon. “Now,” said the soldier, “if I only had something over me. I am cold.” There was only one thing to do. The chaplain took his coat off and covered him. As he did this the wounded soldier looked up into his face and said, “If there is anything in that book that makes a man do for another what you have done for me, let me hear it.” The application is evident. There are multitudes in our day who will never see Jesus unless they first see Him in our lives and in our unselfish ministry.
Jesus, by His own example and in His teachings, has emphasized this personal work in soul-winning. He says, “Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor, the maimed, and the halt, and the blind!” And again, as if to press home the urgency of persevering work, He continues, “Go out into the highways and hedges and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled.”
The ways in which we can come into personal touch with these many unsaved, are varied and numerous. The constraining Christian love is inventive and will find ways and means by which the Lost Coin is found, the Lost Sheep is reclaimed, and the helpless stranger by the wayside rescued and relieved. By establishing missions and downtown churches in the neglected centers of our cities and employing Spirit-filled men and women who will do personal work among the many, who can thus he reached. By conducting institutions of charity, such as rescue homes, emigrant missions, children’s homes, home-finding societies, kindergartens, day nurseries, boarding homes for men and women, and mission hotels. Through these institutions, with well-trained and consecrated workers in charge, much effective preventive, relief, and rescue work can be done to reach, regain, and retain the weak and way. ward. To these inns of mercy along the Jericho road of life, the Good Samaritans can bring those who are rescued or restrained from evil and dangerous ways.
Much can be done by the city congregations to reach out and regain the unchurched masses, by employing well-trained and consecrated parish workers to assist the pastor and parishioners in this ministry of mercy. The pastor cannot begin to do it alone, and very few of our lay church members are practicing the duties of the priesthood of believers. They leave it to the pastor, and for a busy city pastor it is a physical impossibility to do this urgent personal work. I hope the time will soon be here when every self-supporting city congregation will have a parish sister, and that the Home Mission Board will place such sisters of mercy in every important home mission city field. I am convinced that it will result in numerical growth, salvation of souls, and rich blessings to the congregations themselves. May the Lord of the harvest open the eyes of our city congregations and Home Mission Boards to this ministry of mercy as an effective way of winning the unchurched back to Christ. And may He call many consecrated young women to prepare themselves for these various departments of inner mission work in the ministry of mercy.
Love, true compassion is the motive of service. Love for Jesus must be the prime condition. Before Peter was told to feed the sheep and care for the lambs, he was asked three times: “Lovest thou me?”
But if there is love for Jesus, there will be love for souls. There will be the appreciation of the value of a soul, as well as of the salvation of a soul. Being saved ourselves, there will and must be a desire to save others. Our heart will go out to the unfortunate, wayward, and lost, regardless of condition, race, or nationality. This love will mean more than sympathy and words. It spells service — unselfish, sacrificing service. Like the Good Samaritan, you cannot pass by. In willing obedience constrained by love you must say with the Master Himself: “I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is day; the night cometh when no man can work” (John 9:4). This is the road to true greatness. Jesus says: “Whosoever will be great among you let him be your minister, and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant” (Matt. 20:26-27). What a worthwhile ministry! It strengthens, ennobles, preserves, enriches, and blesses our own spiritual life. Think of the satisfaction and joy in seeing sinners saved from sin and shame and for the Master’s use. And then the supreme joy of knowing that you are serving the Lord in serving others. Jesus says: “Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward” (Matt. 10:42).
For this ministry of mercy, women are eminently fitted. The church has not made sufficient use of consecrated women in this practical, personal work of ministering to the needy and neglected. With her compassionate, tender heart, her gentle ways and her loving patience, the Christian woman can most successfully approach and favorably impress the unchurched families and neglected individuals. As a big sister, an angel of mercy, she can tactfully and effectively bring the love, light, and cheer of practical and genuine Christianity into sin-darkened homes and unhappy hearts.
The need of the church is a spiritual awakening, a Pentecost outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the hearts of our Christians. Our churches are full of nominal Christians. They do not realize their personal responsibility in soul-winning. How can they, if they are unsaved themselves? There can be no response to the call of saving others. A woman stood for a long time and talked to a wooden Indian in front of a cigar store. People laughed at her, but she replied, “I’d rather talk to a wooden man than to be a wooden Christian and not talk to anybody.”
When the men in the pulpit and the people in the pews are Spirit-filled and Spirit-led, there will be an earnest, prayerful, successful, and united effort by all believers to strengthen the weak and bring back the wayward and straying to the fold of the church. Not until the church collectively rouses herself shall we see men flocking into the kingdom. Souls are not only saved by preaching of the Word by the pastor but by the Word lived and spoken by the parishioners. Andrew does not preach to his brother; he simply talks to him. He does not argue. He simply tells his experience with Jesus.
Dear Christian friend, neglect not your sacred obligation to the many unsaved. Do not plead inability or advance other excuses for not doing your duty as your brother’s keeper. Just a word prompted by the Spirit and earnestly and lovingly spoken will do more to touch some unsaved heart than a sermon.
There was once an infidel blacksmith with whom no one could deal. One day the pastor sent an elder of the church, a clever, pious man, to see him. He argued but could not convince him. There was an old farmer who had prayed many years for this infidel. Early one morning he took his horse and rode to see this man ‘who greeted him thus, “Well, what brings you here at this early hour?” The old farmer stammered badly, and when thus addressed could not utter a word. The infidel laughed. This made matters worse. At last the old man burst into tears and stammered out, “I’m so anxious about your soul,” and hurried away. These words and the earnestness of the farmer won the blacksmith to Christ. How true are the words of Richard Cecil: “The warm blundering man can do more than the cold correct man.”
Paul says: “Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am become a sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal.” Hearts that know and love Jesus and have a passion for souls can be used by the Holy Spirit in impressing other hearts.
At a testimonial dinner there were present among others a great actor and an old minister. The toastmaster called on the actor, who responded by reciting very dramatically the Twenty-Third Psalm, “The Lord is my Shepherd.” It was so effectively done that the room rang with applause. Later, the old minister was asked to say a few words. To the surprise of all he, too, recited the Twenty-Third Psalm. When he had finished there was no sound of applause, but every eye was filled with tears. The actor leaned over to the minister and said, “I know the psalm, but you know the Shepherd.” Worship is not knowing the liturgical service, it is fellowship with God in Christ Jesus. And that is the secret of soul winning.
I have seen two pictures representing salvation. The scene in both cases is a shipwreck on the stormy sea. A woman is represented clinging with both hands to a cross firmly fixed in a rock rising over the turbulent sea. She is saved. The other picture represents the woman clinging to the cross with one hand and reaching out the other hand to help a sister out of the deep to the place of safety. She is saved to serve. She is saved by faith that worketh by love. With the hand of faith she clings to the cross, while she extends the hand of love to her sinking sister. The first picture represents the attitude of many Christians, so called. The second sets forth Christianity applied: “Salvation and Service.” Where this is not the case I fear there is not the right hold on the cross of Christ.
With the hand of FAITH I cling
To the Cross on Calvary,
For my gracious Savior-King
On the Cross did die for me;
When the waves roll strong and high
On His mercy I rely!
With the hand of LOVE I try
To reclaim and save the lost
Who are sinking soon to die,
I must help at any cost;
Clinging to the Cross, I live,
And my service gladly give!
What a source of joy it must have been to Andrew in after years, when his brother Peter had become one of the most brilliant and successful soul-winners in that age, to recall that it was his hand and word that had led him to Jesus.
A deep drain was being dug in one of our large cities. Some of the shoring gave way and tons of
earth fell on several men at work. There was much excitement. A man stood on the brink watching the men digging out the earth. Presently a woman came up, put her hand on his shoulders and exclaimed, “Bill, your brother is in there!” Oh, the sudden change! He threw off his coat, sprang into the trench and worked as if he had the strength of ten men. 0 friends, these many unsaved people around us, many that we meet frequently, are our brothers and sisters. They are worse than buried alive. They are dead in trespasses and sins, lost for time and eternity. Why then this indifferent, neglectful attitude on the part of those who call themselves Christians? Christian mother, is your son, your daughter a stranger to Jesus? Christian wife, is your husband going to ruin? Christian father, is your boy perishing? Are your relatives, friends, associates unsaved? Don’t leave this work to some one else. God holds you responsible. He counts on you to go and bring them to Jesus.
Come now, fellow-believers, pray for a passion for souls. Time is short and fleeting. Precious souls are dying. May we all by the grace of God, work while it is day in winning others for Christ and His Kingdom.
Jesus Christ, who rescued me,
Strengthen Thou my faith and love,
Help me win some souls for Thee,
Ere I reign with Thee above;
On the Rock, in faith I stand,
As I lend a helping hand!