Chapter 3
The Enduement Of
The Spirit
Since the publication
in the Independent of my article on "The Power from on High" I have
been confined with protracted illness. In the meantime I have received numerous
letters of inquiry upon that subject. They relate mostly to three particular
points of inquiry:
1. They request further
illustrations of the exhibition of this power.
2. They inquire,
"Who have a right to expect this enduement?"
3. How or upon what
conditions can it be obtained?
I am unable to answer
these inquiries by letters to individuals. With your leave I propose, if my
health continues to improve, to reply to them in several short articles through
your columns. In the present number I will relate another exhibition of this
power from on high, as witnessed by myself.
Soon after I was
licensed to preach I went into a region of country where I was an entire
stranger. I went there at the request of a Female Missionary Society, located in
Oneida County, New York. Early in May, I think, I visited the town of Antwerp,
in the northern part of Jefferson County. I stopped at the village hotel, and
there learned that there were no religious meetings held in that town at the
time. They had a brick meeting-house, but it was locked up. By personal efforts
I got a few people to assemble in the parlor of a Christian lady in the place,
and preached to them on the evening after my arrival. As I passed round the
village I was shocked with the horrible profanity that I heard among the men
wherever I went. I obtained leave to preach in the school-house on the next
Sabbath; but before the Sabbath arrived I was much discouraged, and almost
terrified, in view of the state of society which I witnessed. On Saturday the
Lord applied with power to my heart the following words, addressed by the Lord
Jesus to Paul (Acts 18:9, 10): "Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy
peace; for I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee; for I have
much people in this city." This completely subdued my fears; but my heart
was loaded with agony for the people.
On Sunday morning I
arose early, and retired to a grove not far from the village to pour out my
heart before God for a blessing on the labors of the day. I could not express
the agony of my soul in words, but struggled with much groaning, and, I believe,
with many tears, for an hour or two, without getting relief. I returned to my
room in the hotel; but almost immediately came back to the grove. This I did
thrice. The last time I got complete relief, just as it was time to go to
meeting. I went to the school house, and found it filled to its utmost capacity.
I took out my little pocket Bible, and read for my text: "God so loved the
world that He gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should
not perish, but have everlasting life." I exhibited the love of God as
contrasted with the manner in which He was treated by those for whom He gave up
His Son. I charged home their profanity upon them; and, as I recognized among my
hearers several whose profanity I had particularly noticed, in the fullness of
my heart and the gushing of my tears I pointed to them, and said, "I heard
these men call upon God to damn their fellows." The Word took powerful
effect. Nobody seemed offended, but almost everybody greatly melted.
At the close of the
service the amiable landlord, Mr. Copeland, rose and said that he would open the
meeting house in the afternoon. He did so. The meeting house was full, and, as
in the morning, the Word took powerful effect. Thus a powerful revival commenced
in the village, which soon after spread in every direction.
I think it was on the
second Sabbath after this, when I came out of the pulpit in the afternoon, an
aged man approached, and said to me: "Can you not come and preach in our
neighborhood? We have never had any religious meetings there." I inquired
the direction and the distance, and appointed to preach there the next
afternoon, Monday, at five o'clock, in their school-house. I had preached three
times in the village, and attended two prayer meetings on the Lord's Day; and on
Monday I went on foot to fulfill this appointment. The weather was very warm
that day, and before I arrived there I felt almost too faint to walk, and
greatly discouraged in my mind. I sat down in the shade by the wayside, and felt
as if I was too faint to reach there; and if I did, too much discouraged to open
my mouth to the people. When I arrived I found the house full, and immediately
commenced the service by reading a hymn. They attempted to sing, but the
horrible discord agonized me beyond expression. I leaned forward, put my elbows
upon my knees and my hands over my ears, and shook my head withal, to shut out
the discord, which even then I could barely endure. As soon as they had ceased
to sing I cast myself down upon my knees, almost in a state of desperation. The
Lord opened the windows of heaven upon me, and gave me great enlargement and
power in prayer.
Up to this moment I had
no idea what text I should use on the occasion. As I rose from my knees the Lord
gave me this: "Up, get you out of this place, for the Lord will destroy
this city." I told the people, as nearly as I could recollect, where they
would find it, and went on to tell them of the destruction of Sodom. I gave them
an outline of the history of Abraham and Lot, and their relations to each other;
of Abraham's praying for Sodom, and of Lot, as the only pious man that was found
in the city. While I was doing this I was struck with the fact that the people
looked exceedingly angry about me. Many countenances appeared very threatening,
and some of the men near me looked as if they were about to strike me. This I
could not understand, as I was only giving them, with great liberty of spirit,
some interesting sketches of Bible history. As soon as I had completed the
historical sketch I turned upon them, and said that I had understood they had
never had any religious meetings in that neighborhood; and, applying that fact,
I thrust at them with the sword of the Spirit with all my might. From this
moment the solemnity increased with great rapidity. In a few moments there
seemed to fall upon the congregation an instantaneous shock. I cannot describe
the sensation that I felt, nor that which was apparent in the congregation; but
the word seemed literally to cut like a sword. The power from on high came down
upon them in such a torrent that they fell from their seats in every direction.
In less than a minute nearly the whole congregation were either down on their
knees, or on their faces, or in some position prostrate before God. Everyone was
crying or groaning for mercy upon his own soul. They paid no further attention
to me or to my preaching. I tried to get their attention; but I could not.
I observed the aged man
who had invited me there as still retaining his seat near the center of the
house. He was staring around him with a look of unutterable astonishment.
Pointing to him, I cried at the top of my voice, "Can't you pray?" He
knelt down and roared out a short prayer, about as loud as he could holler, but
they paid no attention to him.
After looking round for
a few moments, I knelt down and put my hand on the head of a young man who was
kneeling at my feet, and engaged in prayer for mercy on his soul. I got his
attention, and preached Jesus in his ear. In a few moments he seized Jesus by
faith, and then broke out in prayer for those around him. I then turned to
another in the same way, and with the same result; and then another, and
another, till I know not how many had laid hold of Christ and were full of
prayer for others. After continuing in this way till nearly sunset I was obliged
to commit the meeting to the charge of the old gentleman who had invited me, and
go to fulfill an appointment in another place for the evening.
In the afternoon of the
next day I was sent for to go down to this place, as they had not been able to
break up the meeting. They had been obliged to leave the school-house, to give
place to the school; but had removed to a private house near by, where I found a
number of persons still too anxious and too much loaded down with conviction to
go to their homes. These were soon subdued by the Word of God, and I believe all
obtained a hope before they went home.
Observe, I was a total
stranger in that place, had never seen or heard of it, until as I have related.
But here, at my second visit, I learned that the place was called Sodom, by
reason of its wickedness; and the old man who invited me was called Lot, because
he was the only professor of religion in the place.
After this manner the
revival broke out in this neighborhood.
I have not been in that
neighborhood for many years; but in 1856, I think, while laboring in Syracuse,
New York, I was introduced to a minister of Christ from St. Lawrence County by
the name of Cross. He said to me, "Mr. Finney, you don't know me; but do
you remember preaching in a place called Sodom?" I said, "I shall
never forget it." He replied, "I was then a young man, and was
converted at that meeting." He is still living, a pastor in one of the
churches in that county, and is the father of the principal of our preparatory
department. Those who have lived in that region can testify of the permanent
results of that blessed revival. I can only give in words a feeble description
of that wonderful manifestation of power from on high attending the preaching of
the Word.

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
Return to Power from on High
