Chapter 4
Enduement Of Power
From On High
In this article I
propose to consider the conditions upon which this enduement of power can be
obtained. Let us borrow a little light from the Scriptures. I will not cumber
your paper with quotations from the Bible, but simply state a few facts that
will readily be recognized by all readers of the Scriptures. If the readers of
this article will read in the last Chapter of Matthew and of Luke the commission
which Christ gave to His disciples, and in connection read the first and second
Chapters of the Acts of the Apostles, they will be prepared to appreciate what I
have to say in this article.
1st. The disciples had
already been converted to Christ, and their faith had been confirmed by His
resurrection. But here let me say that conversion to Christ is not to be
confounded with a consecration to the great work of the world's conversion. In
conversion the soul has to do directly and personally with Christ. It yields up
its prejudices, its antagonisms, its self-righteousness, its unbelief, its
selfishness; accepts Him, trusts Him, and supremely loves Him. All this the
disciples had, more or less, distinctly done. But as yet they had received no
definite commission, and no particular enduement of power to fulfill a
commission.
2nd. But when Christ
had dispelled their great bewilderment resulting from His crucifixion, and
confirmed their faith by repeated interviews with them, He gave them their great
commission to win all nations to Himself. But He admonished them to tarry at
Jerusalem till they were endued with power from on high, which He said they
should receive not many days hence. Now observe what they did. They assembled,
the men and women, for prayer. They accepted the commission, and, doubtless,
came to an understanding of the nature of the commission, and the necessity of
the spiritual enduement which Christ had promised. As they continued day after
day in prayer and conference they, no doubt, came to appreciate more and more
the difficulties that would beset them, and to feel more and more their
inadequacy to the task. A consideration of the circumstances and results leads
to the conclusion that they, one and all, consecrated themselves, with all they
had, to the conversion of the world as their life-work. They must have renounced
utterly the idea of living to themselves in any form, and devoted themselves
with all their powers to the work set before them. This consecration of
themselves to the work, this selfrenunciation, this dying to all that the world
could offer them, must, in the order of nature, have preceded their intelligent
seeking of the promised enduement of power from on high. They then continued,
with one accord, in prayer for the promised baptism of the Spirit, which baptism
included all that was essential to their success. Observe, they had a work set
before them. They had a promise of power to perform it. They were admonished to
wait until the promise was fulfilled. How did they wait? Not in listlessness and
inactivity; not in making preparations by study and otherwise to get along
without it; not by going about their business, and offering an occasional prayer
that the promise might be fulfilled; but they continued in prayer, and persisted
in their suit till the answer came. They understood that it was to be a baptism
of the Holy Ghost. They understood that it was to be received from Christ. They
prayed in faith. They held on, with the firmest expectation, until the enduement
came. Now, let these facts instruct us as to the conditions of receiving this
enduement of power.
1. We, as Christians,
have the same commission to fulfill. As truly as they did, we need an enduement
of power from on high. Of course, the same injunction, to wait upon God till we
receive it, is given to us.
2. We have the same
promise that they had. Now, let us take substantially and in spirit the same
course that they did. They were Christians, and had a measure of the Spirit to
lead them in prayer and in consecration. So have we. Every Christian possesses a
measure of the Spirit of Christ, enough of the Holy Spirit to lead us to true
consecration and inspire us with the faith that is essential to our prevalence
in prayer. Let us, then, not grieve or resist Him: but accept the commission,
fully consecrate ourselves, with all we have, to the saving of souls as our
great and our only life-work. Let us get on to the altar with all we have and
are, and lie there and persist in prayer till we receive the enduement. Now,
observe, conversion to Christ is not to be confounded with the acceptance of
this commission to convert the world. The first is a personal transaction
between the soul and Christ relating to its own salvation. The second is the
soul's acceptance of the service in which Christ proposes to employ it. Christ
does not require us to make brick without straw. To whom He gives the commission
He also gives the admonition and the promise. If the commission is heartily
accepted, if the promise is believed, if the admonition to wait upon the Lord
till our strength is renewed be complied with, we shall receive the enduement.
3. It is of supreme
importance that all Christians should understand that this commission to convert
the world is given to them by Christ individually.
Everyone has the great
responsibility devolved upon him or her to win as many souls as possible to
Christ. This is the great privilege and the great duty of all the disciples of
Christ. There are a great many departments in this work. But in every department
we may and ought to possess this power, that, whether we preach, or pray, or
write, or print, or trade, or travel, take care of children, or administer the
government of the state, or whatever we do, our whole life and influence should
be permeated with this power. Christ says: "If any man believe in Me, out
of his belly shall flow rivers of living water" that is, a Christian
influence, having in it the element of power to impress the truth of Christ upon
the hearts of men, shall proceed from Him. The great want of the Church at
present is, first, the realizing conviction that this commission to convert the
world is given to each of Christ's disciples as his life-work. I fear I must say
that the great mass of professing Christians seem never to have been impressed
with this truth. The work of saving souls they leave to ministers.
The second great want
is a realizing conviction of the necessity of this enduement of power upon every
individual soul. Many professors of religion suppose it belongs especially and
only to such as are called to preach the Gospel as a life-work. They fail to
realize that all are called to preach the Gospel, that the whole life of every
Christian is to be a proclamation of the glad tidings.
A third want is an
earnest faith in the promise of this enduement. A vast many professors of
religion, and even ministers, seem to doubt whether this promise is to the whole
Church and to every Christian. Consequently, they have no faith to lay hold of
it. If it does not belong to all, they don't know to whom it does belong. Of
course they cannot lay hold of the promise by faith.
A fourth want is that
persistence in waiting upon God for it that is enjoined in the Scriptures. They
faint before they have prevailed, and, hence, the enduement is not received.
Multitudes seem to satisfy themselves with a hope of eternal life for
themselves. They never get ready to dismiss the question of their own salvation,
leaving that, as settled, with Christ. They don't get ready to accept the great
commission to work for the salvation of others, because their faith is so weak
that they do not steadily leave the question of their own salvation in the hands
of Christ; and even some ministers of the Gospel, I find, are in the same
condition, and halting in the same way, unable to give themselves wholly to the
work of saving others, because in a measure unsettled about their own salvation.
It is amazing to
witness the extent to which the Church has practically lost sight of the
necessity of this enduement of power. Much is said of our dependence upon the
Holy Spirit by almost everybody; but how little is this dependence realized.
Christians and even ministers go to work without it. I mourn to be obliged to
say that the ranks of the ministry seem to be filling up with those who do not
possess it. May the Lord have mercy upon us! Will this last remark be thought
uncharitable? If so, let the report of the Home Missionary Society, for example,
be heard upon this subject. Surely, something is wrong.
An average of five
souls won to Christ by each missionary of that Society in a year's toil
certainly indicates a most alarming weakness in the ministry. Have all or even a
majority of these ministers been endued with the power which Christ promised? If
not, why not? But, if they have, is this all that Christ intended by His
promise? In a former article I have said that the reception of this enduement of
power is instantaneous. I do not mean to assert that in every instance the
recipient was aware of the precise time at which the power commenced to work
mightily within him. It may have commenced like the dew and increased to a
shower. I have alluded to the report of the Home Missionary Society. Not that I
suppose that the brethren employed by that Society are exceptionally weak in
faith and power as laborers for God. On the contrary, from my acquaintance with
some of them, I regard them as among our most devoted and self-denying laborers
in the cause of God. This fact illustrates the alarming weakness that pervades
every branch of the Church, both clergy and laity. Are we not weak? Are we not
criminally weak? It has been suggested that by writing thus I should offend the
ministry and the Church. I cannot believe that the statement of so palpable a
fact will be regarded as an offense. The fact is, there is something sadly
defective in the education of the ministry and of the Church.
The ministry is weak,
because the Church is weak. And then, again, the Church is kept weak by the
weakness of the ministry. Oh for a conviction of the necessity of this enduement
of power and faith in the promise of Christ!

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
