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Chapter 1
Power From On High
Please permit me
through your columns to correct a misapprehension of some of the members of the
late Council at Oberlin of the brief remarks which I made to them; first on
Saturday morning, and afterwards on the Lord's Day. In my first remarks to them
I called attention to the mission of the Church to disciple all nations, as
recorded by Matthew and Luke, and stated that this commission was given by
Christ to the whole Church, and that every member of the Church is under
obligation to make it his lifework to convert the world. I then raised two
inquiries:
1. What do we need to
secure success in this great work?
2. How can we get it?
Answer. 1. We need the
endowment of power from on high. Christ had previously informed the disciples
that without Him they could do nothing. When He gave them the commission to
convert the world, He added, "But tarry ye in Jerusalem till ye be endued
with power from on high. Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days
hence. Lo, I send upon you the promise of My Father." This baptism of the
Holy Ghost, this thing promised by the Father, this endowment of power from on
high, Christ has expressly informed us is the indispensable condition of
performing the work which he has set before us.
2. How shall we get it?
Christ expressly promised it to the whole Church, and to every individual whose
duty it is to labor for the conversion of the world. He admonished the first
disciples not to undertake the work until they had received this endowment of
power from on high. Both the promise and the admonition apply equally to all
Christians of every age and nation. No one has, at any time, any right to expect
success, unless he first secures this endowment of power from on high. The
example of the first disciples teaches us how to secure this endowment. They
first consecrated themselves to his work, and continued in prayer and
supplication until the Holy Ghost fell upon them on the Day of Pentecost, and
they received the promised endowment of power from on high. This, then, is the
way to get it.
The Council desired me
to say more upon this subject; consequently, on the Lord's Day, I took for my
text the assertion of Christ, that the Father is more willing to give the Holy
Spirit to them that ask Him than we are to give good gifts to our children.
1. I said, This text
informs us that it is infinitely easy to obtain the Holy Spirit, or this
endowment of power from the Father.
2. That this is made a
constant subject of prayer. Everybody prays for this, at all times, and yet,
with all this intercession, how few, comparatively, are really endued with this
spirit of power from on high! This want is not met. The want of power is a
subject of constant complaint. Christ says, "Everyone that asketh receiveth,"
but there certainly is a "great gulf" between the asking and
receiving, that is a great stumbling-block to many. How, then, is this
discrepancy to be explained? I then proceeded to show why this endowment is not
received. I said:
(1) We are not willing,
upon the whole, to have what we desire and ask.
(2) God has expressly
informed us that if we regard iniquity in our hearts He will not hear us. But
the petitioner is often self-indulgent. This is iniquity, and God will not hear
him.
(3) He is uncharitable.
(4) Censorious.
(5) Self-dependent.
(6) Resists conviction
of sin.
(7) Refuses to confess
to all the parties concerned.
(8) Refuses to make
restitution to injured parties.
(9) He is prejudiced
and uncandid.
(10) He is resentful.
(11) Has a revengeful
spirit.
(12) Has a worldly
ambition.
(13) He has committed
himself on some point, and become dishonest, and neglects and rejects further
light.
(14) He is
denominationally selfish.
(15) Selfish for his
own congregation.
(16) He resists the
teachings of the Holy Spirit.
(17) He grieves the
Holy Spirit by dissension.
(18) He quenches the
Spirit by persistence in justifying wrong.
(19) He grieves Him by
a want of watchfulness.
(20) He resists Him by
indulging evil tempers.
(21) Also by
dishonesties in business.
(22) Also by indolence
and impatience in waiting upon the Lord.
(23) By many forms of
selfishness.
(24) By negligence in
business, in study, in prayer.
(25) By undertaking too
much business, too much study, and too little prayer.
(26) By a want of
entire consecration.
(27) Last and greatest,
by unbelief. He prays for this endowment without expecting to receive it.
"He that believeth not God, hath made Him a liar." This, then, is the
greatest sin of all. What an insult, what a blasphemy, to accuse God of lying!
I was obliged to
conclude that these and other forms of indulged sin explained why so little is
received, while so much is asked. I said I had not time to present the other
side. Some of the brethren afterward inquired, "What is the other
side?" The other side presents the certainty that we shall receive the
promised endowment of power from on high, and be successful in winning souls, if
we ask, and fulfill the plainly revealed conditions of prevailing prayer.
Observe, what I said upon the Lord's Day was upon the same subject, and in
addition to what I had previously said. The misapprehension alluded to was this:
If we first get rid of all these forms of sin, which prevent our receiving this
endowment, have we not already obtained the blessing? What more do we need?
Answer. There is a
great difference between the peace and the power of the Holy Spirit in the soul.
The disciples were Christians before the Day of Pentecost, and, as such, had a
measure of the Holy Spirit. They must have had the peace of sins forgiven, and
of a justified state, but yet they had not the endowment of power necessary to
the accomplishment of the work assigned them. They had the peace which Christ
had given them, but not the power which He had promised. This may be true of all
Christians, and right here is, I think, the great mistake of the Church, and of
the ministry. They rest in conversion, and do not seek until they obtain this
endowment of power from on high. Hence so many professors have no power with
either God or man. They prevail with neither. They cling to a hope in Christ,
and even enter the ministry, overlooking the admonition to wait until they are
endued with power from on high. But let anyone bring all the tithes and
offerings into God's treasury, let him lay all upon the altar, and prove God
herewith, and he shall find that God "will open the windows of heaven, and
pour him out a blessing that there shall not be room enough to receive it."
Chapter
1. Power from on high
Chapter
2. What is it?
Chapter
3. The enduement of the spirit
Chapter
4. Enduement of power from on high
Chapter
5. Is it a hard saying?
Chapter
6. Prevailing prayer
Chapter
7. How to win souls
Chapter
8. Preacher, save thyself
Chapter
9. Innocent amusements
Chapter
10. How to overcome sin
Chapter
11. The decay of conscience
Chapter
12. The psychology of faith
Chapter
13. Psychology of righteousness
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