LECTURE XI
A WISE MINISTER WILL BE SUCCESSFUL
He that winneth souls is wise. - Proverbs 11:30.
I lectured last, from the same text, on the methods of dealing with sinners by
"private" Christians. My object at this time is to take up the more public means
of grace, with particular reference to the duties of Ministers.
As I observed in my last Lecture, wisdom is the choice and pursuit of the best
end by the most appropriate means. The great end for which the Christian
ministry is appointed, is to glorify God in the salvation of souls.
In speaking on this subject I propose to show:
I. That a right discharge of the duties of a minister requires great wisdom.
II. That the amount of success in the discharge of his duties (other things
being equal) decides the amount of wisdom employed by him in the exercise of his
office.
I. THE RIGHT DISCHARGE OF MINISTERIAL DUTY.
- 1. A right discharge of the duties of a
minister requires great wisdom: I. On account of the opposition it encounters.
The very end for which the ministry is appointed is one against which is
arrayed the most powerful opposition of sinners themselves. If men were
willing to receive the Gospel, and there were nothing needed to be done but to
tell the story of Redemption, a child might convey the news. But men are
opposed to the Gospel. They are opposed to their own salvation, in this way.
Their opposition is often violent and determined. I once saw a maniac who had
formed designs against his own life, and he would exercise the utmost sagacity
and cunning to effect his purpose. He would be so artful as to make his
keepers believe he had no such design, that he had given it all up; he would
appear mild and sober, but the instant the keeper was off his guard he would
lay hands on himself. So, sinners often exercise great cunning in evading all
the efforts that are made to save them. In order to meet this dreadful
cunning, and overcome it, so as to save men, ministers need a great amount of
wisdom.
- 2. The particular means appointed to be
employed in the work, show the necessity of great wisdom in ministers. If men
were converted by an act of physical omnipotence, creating some new taste, or
something like that, and if sanctification were nothing but the same physical
omnipotence rooting out the remaining roots of sin from the soul, it would not
require so much sagacity and skill to win souls. Nor would there then be any
meaning in the text. But the truth is that regeneration and sanctification are
to be effected by moral means - by argument, and not by force. There never
was, and never will be, any one saved by anything but truth as the means.
- Truth is the outward means, the outward
motive presented first by man and then by The Holy Spirit. Take into view the
opposition of the sinner himself, and you see that nothing, after all, short
of the wisdom of God and the moral power of the Holy Spirit, can break down
this opposition, and bring him to submit Still, the means are to be used by
men - means adapted to the end, and skillfully used. God has provided that the
work of conversion and sanctification shall in all cases be done by means of
that kind of truth, applied in that connection and relation, which is fitted
to produce such a result.
- 3. He has the powers of earth and hell to
overcome, and that calls for wisdom. The devil is constantly at work, trying
to prevent the success of ministers, laboring to divert attention from the
subject of religion, and to get the sinner away from God and lead him down to
hell. The whole framework of society, almost, is hostile to religion. Nearly
all the influences which surround a man, from his cradle to his grave, are
calculated to defeat the design of the ministry. Does not a minister, then,
need great wisdom to conflict with the powers of darkness and the whole
influence of the world, in addition to the sinner's own opposition?
- 4. The same is seen from the infinite
importance of the end itself. The end of the ministry is the salvation of the
soul. When we consider the importance of the end, and the difficulties of the
work, who will not say with the apostle: "Who is sufficient for these things?"
(2 Corinthians 2:16.)
- 5. He must understand how to wake up the
professing Christians, and thus prevent them from hindering the conversion of
sinners. This is often the most difficult part of a minister's work, and
requires more wisdom and patience than anything else. Indeed, to do this
successfully, is a most rare qualification in the Christian ministry. It is a
point where almost all ministers fail. They know not how to wake up the
Church, and raise the tone of piety to a high standard, and thus clear the way
for the work of conversion. Many ministers can preach to sinners very well,
but gain little success, while the counteracting influence of the Church
resists it all, and they have not skill enough to remove the difficulty. There
is only here and there a minister in the country who knows how to probe the
Church when it is in a cold, backslidden state, so as effectually to awaken
the members and keep them awake. The members of the Church sin against such
light, that when they become cold it is very difficult to rouse them up. They
have a form of piety which wards off the truth, while at the same time it is
just that kind of piety which has no power or efficiency. Such professors are
the most difficult individuals to arouse from their slumbers. I do not mean
that they are always more wicked than the impenitent. They are often employed
about the machinery of religion, and pass for very good Christians, but they
are of no use in a revival.
- I know ministers are sometimes amazed to
hear it said that Churches are not awake. No wonder such ministers do not know
how to wake a sleeping Church. There was a young licentiate heard Brother
Foote the other day, in this city, pouring out truth, and trying to waken up
the Churches; and he knew so little about it that he thought Mr. Foote was
abusing the Churches. So perfectly blind was he that he really thought the
Churches in New York were all awake on the subject of religion. So, some years
ago, there was a great controversy and opposition raised, because so much was
said about the Churches being asleep. It was all truth, yet many ministers
knew nothing about it, and were astonished to hear such things said. When it
has come to this, that ministers do not know when the Church is asleep, no
wonder we have revivals! I was invited once to preach at a certain place. I
asked the minister what was the state of the
Church. "Oh," said he, "to a man they are awake." I was delighted at the idea
of laboring in such a Church, for it was a sight I had never yet witnessed, to
see every single member awake in a revival. But when I got there I found them
sleepy and cold, and I doubt whether one of them was awake.
Here is the great difficulty in keeping up revivals, to keep the Church
thoroughly awake and engaged. It is one thing for members to get up in their
sleep and bluster about and run over each other; and a widely different thing
for them to have their eyes open, and their senses about them, and be wide
awake, so as to know how to work for Christ.
- 6. He must know how to see the Church to
work, when it is awake. If a minister attempts to go to work singly,
calculating to do it all himself, it is like attempting to roll a great stone
up a hill, alone. The Church can do much to help forward a revival. Churches
have sometimes had powerful revivals without any minister. But when a minister
has a Church that is awake, and knows how to set his people to work, and how
to sit at the helm, and guide them, he may feel strong, and oftentimes may
find that they do more than he does himself in the conversion of sinners.
- 7. In order to be successful, a minister
needs great wisdom to know how to keep the Church to the work. Often the
Church seems just like an assembly of children. You set children to work, and
they appear to be all occupied, but as soon as your back is turned, they will
stop and go to play. The great difficulty in continuing a revival, lies here.
And to meet it requires great wisdom. To know how to break them down again,
when their hearts get lifted up because they have had such a great revival; to
wake them up afresh when their zeal begins to flag; to keep their hearts full
of zeal for the work; these are some of the most difficult things in the
world. Yet if a minister would be successful in winning souls, he must know
when they first begin to get proud, or to lose the spirit of prayer; when to
probe them, and how to search them; in fact, how to keep the Church in the
field, gathering the harvest of the Lord.
- 8. He must understand the Gospel. But you
will ask: "Do not all ministers understand the Gospel?" I answer that they
certainly do not all understand it alike, for they do not all preach alike.
- 9. He must know how to divide it, so as to
bring forward the particular truths, in that order, and at such times, as will
be calculated to produce a given result. A minister should understand the
philosophy of the human mind, so as to know how to plan and arrange his labors
wisely. Truth, when brought to bear upon the mind, is in itself calculated to
produce corresponding feelings. The minister must know what feelings he wishes
to produce, and how to bring to bear such truth as is calculated to produce
those feelings. He must know how to present truth which is calculated to
humble Christians, or to make them feel for sinners; or to awaken sinners, or
to convert them.
- Often, when sinners are awakened, the
ground is lost for want of wisdom in following up the blow. Perhaps a rousing
sermon is preached Christians are moved, and sinners begin to feel, and yet,
the next Sabbath, something will be brought forward that has no connection
with the state of feeling in the congregation, and that is not calculated to
lead the mind on to the exercise of repentance, faith, or love. It shows how
important it is that a minister should understand how to produce a given
impression, at what time it may and should be done, and by what truth, and how
to follow it up till the sinner is broken down and brought in.
A great many good sermons that are preached, are lost for the want of a little
wisdom on this point. They are good sermons, and calculated, if well timed, to
do great good; but they have so little connection with the actual state of
feeling in the congregation, that it would be more than a miracle if they
should produce a revival. A minister may preach in this random way till he has
preached himself to death, and never produce any great results.
He may convert here and there a scattered soul; but he will not move the mass
of the congregation unless he knows how to follow up his impressions - so to
execute a general plan of operations as to carry on the work when it is begun.
He must not only be able to blow the trumpet so loud as to start the sinner up
from his lethargy, but when he is awakened, he must lead him by the shortest
way to Jesus Christ; and not, as soon as sinners are roused by a sermon,
immediately begin to preach about some remote subject that has no tendency to
carry on the work.
- 10. To reach different classes of sinners
successfully requires great wisdom on the part of a minister. For instance, a
sermon on a particular subject may impress a particular class of persons among
his hearers.
- Perhaps they will begin to look serious, or
to talk about it, or to cavil about it. Now, if the minister is wise, he will
know how to observe those indications, and to follow right on, with sermons
adapted to this class, until he leads them into the Kingdom of God. Then, let
him go back and take another class, find out where they are hid, break down
their refuges, and follow them up, till he leads them also, into the Kingdom.
He should thus beat about every bush where sinners hide themselves, as the
voice of God followed Adam in the garden: ADAM, WHERE ART THOU? till one class
of hearers after another is brought in, and so the whole community converted.
Now, a minister must be very wise to do this. It never will be done till a
minister sets himself to hunt out and bring in every class of sinners in his
congregation - the old and young, male and female, rich and poor.
- 11. A minister needs great wisdom to get
sinners away from their present refuge of lies, without forming new
hiding-places for them. I once sat under the ministry of a man who had
contracted a great alarm about heresies, and was constantly employed in
confuting them. And he used to bring up heresies that his people had never
heard of. He got his ideas chiefly from books, and mingled very little among
the people to know what they thought. And the result of his labors often was,
that the people would be taken with the heresy, more than with the argument
against it.
- The novelty of the error attracted their
attention so much that they forgot the answer. And in that way he gave many of
his people new objections against religion, such as they had never thought of
before. If a man does not mingle enough with mankind to know how people think
nowadays, he cannot expect to be wise to meet their objections and
difficulties.
I have heard a great deal of preaching against Universalists, that did more
harm than good, because the preachers did not understand how Universalists of
the present day reason. When ministers undertake to oppose a present heresy,
they ought to know what it actually is, at present. It is of no use to
misrepresent a man's doctrines to his face, and then try to reason him out of
them. He will say of you: "That man cannot argue with me on fair grounds; he
has to misrepresent my doctrines in order to confute me." Great harm is done
in this way. Ministers do not intend to misrepresent their opponents; but the
effect of it is, that the poor miserable creatures who hold these errors go to
hell because ministers do not take care to inform themselves what are their
real errors. I mention this to show how much wisdom a minister must have to
meet the cases that occur.
- 12. Ministers ought to know what measures
are best calculated to aid in accomplishing the great end of their office, the
salvation of souls. Some measures are plainly necessary. By measures, I mean
the things which should be done to secure the attention of the people, and
bring them to listen to the truth. Erecting buildings for worship, visiting
from house to house, etc., are "measures," the object of which is to get the
attention of people to the Gospel. Much wisdom is requisite to devise and
carry forward all the various measures that are adapted to favor the success
of the Gospel.
- What do politicians do? They get up
meetings, circulate handbills and pamphlets, blaze away in the newspapers,
send ships about the streets on wheels with flags and sailors, send
conveyances all over the town, with handbills, to bring people up to the polls
- all to gain attention to their cause, and elect their candidate. All these
are their "measures," and for their end they are wisely calculated. The object
is to get up an excitement, and bring the people out. They know that unless
there can be an excitement it is in vain to push their end. I do not mean to
say that their measures are pious, or right, but only that they are wise, in
the sense that they are the appropriate application of means to the end.
The object of the ministry is to get all the people to feel that the devil has
no right to rule this world, but that they ought all to give themselves to
God, and "vote in" the Lord Jesus Christ as the Governor of the universe.
Now, what shall be done? What measures shall we take? Says one: "Be sure and
have nothing that is new." Strange! The object of our measure is to gain
attention, and you must have something new. As sure as the effect of a measure
becomes stereotyped, it ceases to give attention, and then you must try
something new. You need not make innovations in everything. But whenever the
state of things is such that anything more is needed, it must be something
new, otherwise it will fail. A minister should never introduce innovations
that are not called for. If he does, they will embarrass him. He cannot alter
the Gospel; that remains the same. But new measures are necessary, from time
to time, to awaken attention, and bring the Gospel to bear upon the public
mind. And a minister ought to know how to introduce new things, so as to
create the least possible resistance or reaction. Mankind are fond of form in
religion. They love to have their religious duties stereotyped, so as to leave
them at ease; and they are therefore inclined to resist any new movement
designed to rouse them up to action and feeling. Hence it is all-important to
introduce new things wisely, so as not to give needless occasion for
resistance.
- 13. Not a little wisdom is sometimes needed
by a minister to know when to put a stop to new measures. When a measure has
novelty enough to secure attention to the truth, ordinarily no other new
measure should be introduced. You have secured the great object of novelty.
Anything more will be in danger of diverting the public mind away from the
great object, and fixing it on the measures themselves. And then, if you
introduce novelties when they are not called for, you will go over so large a
field that, by and by, when you really want something new, you will have
nothing else to introduce, without doing something that will give too great a
shock to the public mind. The Bible has laid down no specific course of
measures for the promotion of revivals of religion, but has left it to
ministers to adopt such as are wisely calculated to secure the end. And the
more sparing we are of our new things, the longer we can use them, to keep
public attention awake to the great subject of religion. By a wise course this
may undoubtedly be done for a long series of years, until our present measures
will, by and by, have sufficient novelty in them again to attract and fix
public attention. And so we shall never want for something new.
- 14. A minister, to win souls, must know how
to deal with careless, with awakened, and with anxious sinners, so as to lead
them right to Christ in the shortest and most direct way. It is amazing to see
how many ministers there are who do not know how to deal with sinners, or what
to say to them in their various states of mind. A good woman in Albany told
me, that when she was under concern she went to her minister, and asked him to
tell her what she must do to get relief. He said that God had not given him
much experience on the subject, and advised her to go to a certain deacon, who
perhaps could tell her what to do. The truth was, he did not know what to say
to a sinner under conviction, although there was nothing peculiar in her case.
Now, if you think this minister a rare case, you are quite deceived. There are
many ministers who do not know what to say to sinners.
- A minister once appointed an anxious
meeting, which he duly attended, but instead of going round to speak to the
individuals, he began to ask them the catechism question: "Wherein doth Christ
execute the office of a priest?" About as much in point to a great many of
their minds as anything else.
I know a minister who held an anxious meeting, and went to attend it with a
written discourse, which he had prepared for the occasion. This was just as
wise as it would be if a physician, going out to visit his patients, should
sit down at leisure and write all the prescriptions beforehand. A minister
needs to know the state of mind of individuals, before he can know what truth
it will be proper and useful to administer. I say these things, not because I
love to do it, but because truth and the object before me, require them to be
said. And such instances as I have mentioned are by no means rare.
A minister should know how to apply truth to all the situations in which he
may find dying sinners going down to hell. He should know how to preach, how
to pray, how to conduct prayer meetings, and how to use all the means for
bringing the truth of God to bear upon the kingdom of darkness. Does not this
require wisdom? And who is sufficient for these things?
II. SUCCESS PROPORTIONATE TO WISDOM.
The amount of a minister's success in winning souls (other things being equal)
invariably decides the amount of wisdom he has exercised in the discharge of his
office.
- 1. This is plainly asserted in the text.
"He that winneth souls is wise."
- That is, if a man wins souls, he does
skillfully adapt means to the end, which is, to exercise wisdom. He is the
more wise, by how much the greater is the number of sinners that he saves. A
blockhead may, indeed, now and then, stumble on such truth, or such a manner
of exhibiting it, as to save a soul. It would be a wonder indeed if any
minister did not sometimes have something, in his sermons that would meet the
case of some individual. But the amount of wisdom is to be decided, other
things being equal, by the number of cases in which he is successful in
converting sinners.
Take the case of a physician. The greatest quack may now and then stumble upon
a remarkable cure, and so get his name up with the ignorant.
But sober and judicious people judge of the skill of a physician by the
uniformity of his success in overcoming disease, the variety of diseases he
can manage, and the number of cases in which he is successful in saving his
patients. The most skillful saves the most. This is common sense. It is the
truth. And it is just as true in regard to success in saving souls, and true
in just the same sense.
- 2. This principle is not only asserted in
the text, but it is a matter of fact, a historical truth, that "He that
winneth souls is wise." He has actually employed means adapted to the end, in
such a way as to secure the end.
- 3. Success in saving souls is evidence that
a man understands the Gospel, and understands human nature; that he knows how
to adapt means to his end; that he has common sense, and that kind of tact,
that practical discernment, to know how to get at people. And if his success
is extensive, it shows that he knows how to deal, in a great variety of
circumstances, with a great variety of characters, who are all the enemies of
God, and to bring them to Christ. To do this requires great wisdom.
- And the minister who does it shows that he
is wise.
- 4. Success in winning souls shows that a
minister not only knows how to labor wisely for that end, but also that he
knows where his dependence is.
- Fears are often expressed respecting those
ministers who are aiming most directly and earnestly at the conversion of
sinners. People say: "Why, this man is going to work in his own strength; one
would imagine he thinks he can convert souls himself." How often has the event
showed that the man knew very well what he was about, and knew where his
strength was, too.
He went to work to convert sinners so earnestly, just as if he could do it all
himself; but that was the very way he should do. He ought to reason with
sinners and plead with them, as faithfully and as fully as if he did not
expect any interposition of the Spirit of God. But whenever a man does this
successfully, it shows that, after all, he knows he must depend for success
upon the Spirit of God alone.
There are many who feel an objection against this subject, arising out of the
view they have taken of the ministry of Jesus Christ. They ask us: "What will
you say of the ministry of Jesus Christ - was not He wise?"
I answer: "Yes, infinitely wise." But in regard to His alleged "want of
success" in the conversion of sinners, you will observe the following things:
(a) That His ministry was vastly more successful than is generally
supposed. We read in one of the sacred writers, that after His resurrection
and before His ascension, "He was seen of above five hundred brethren at once"
(1 Corinthians 15:6). If so many as five hundred brethren were found assembled
together at one place, we judge that there must have been a vast number of
them scattered over the country.
(b) Another circumstance to be observed is that His public ministry was
very short, less than three years.
(c) Consider, too, the peculiar design of His ministry. His main object
was to make Atonement for the sins of the world. It was not aimed so much at
promoting revivals. The "dispensation of the Spirit" was not yet given. He did
not preach the Gospel so fully as His apostles did afterwards. The prejudices
of the people were so fixed and violent that they would not bear it. That He
did not, is plain from the fact that even His apostles, who were constantly
with Him, did not understand the Atonement. They did not get the idea that He
was going to die; and consequently, when they heard that He was actually dead,
they were driven to despair, and thought the thing was all gone by, and their
hopes blown to the winds. The fact was that He had another object in view, to
which everything else was made to yield; and the perverted state of the public
mind, and the obstinate prejudices prevailing, showed why results were not
seen any more in the conversion of sinners. The state of public opinion was
such that they finally murdered Him for what He did preach.
Many ministers who have little or no success are hiding themselves behind the
ministry of Jesus Christ, as if He were an unsuccessful preacher.
Whereas, in fact, He was eminently successful, considering the circumstances
in which He labored. This is the last place, in all the world, where a
minister who has no success should think of hiding himself.
REMARKS.
- 1. A minister may be very learned and yet
not wise. There are many ministers possessed of great learning; they
understand all the sciences, physical, moral, and theological; they may know
the dead languages, and possess all learning, and yet not be wise in relation
to the great end about which they are chiefly employed. Facts clearly
demonstrate this. "He that winneth souls is wise."
- 2. An unsuccessful minister may be pious as
well as learned, and yet not wise. It is unfair to infer that because a
minister is unsuccessful, therefore he is a hypocrite. There may be something
defective in his education, or in his mode of viewing a subject, or of
exhibiting it, or such a want of common sense, as will defeat his labors, and
prevent his success in winning souls, while he himself may be saved, "yet so
as by fire."
- 3. A minister may be very wise, though he
is not learned. He may not understand the dead languages, or theology in its
common acceptation; and yet he may know just what a minister of the Gospel
wants most to know, without knowing many other things. A learned minister, and
a wise minister, are different things. Facts in the history of the Church in
all ages prove this. It is very common for Churches, when looking out for a
minister, to aim at getting a very learned man. Do not understand me to
disparage learning. The more learned the better, if he is also wise in the
great matter he is employed about. If a minister knows how to win souls, the
more learning he has the better. But if he has any other kind of learning, and
not this, he will infallibly fail of achieving that which should be the end of
his ministry.
- 4. Want of success in a minister (other
things being equal) proves
- (a) That he never was called to
preach, but has taken it up out of his own head; or
(b) That he was badly educated, and was never taught the very things he
needs most to know; or
(c) If he was called to preach, and knows how to do his duty, he is too
indolent and too wicked to do it.
- 5. Those are the best educated ministers
who win the most souls.
- Ministers are sometimes looked down upon,
and called very ignorant, because they do not know the sciences and languages;
although they are very far from being ignorant of the great thing for which
the ministry is appointed. This is wrong. Learning is important, and always
useful. But after all, a minister may know how to win souls to Christ, without
great learning; and he has the best education for a minister, who can win the
most souls to Christ.
- 6. There is evidently a great defect in the
present mode of educating ministers. This is a SOLEMN FACT, to which the
attention of the whole Church should be distinctly called, that the great mass
of young ministers who are educated accomplish very little.
- When young men come out of the seminaries,
are they fit to go into a revival? Look at a place where there has been a
revival in progress, and a minister is wanted. Let them send to a theological
seminary for a minister.
Will he enter into the work, and sustain it, and carry it on? Seldom. Like
David with Saul's armor, he comes in with such a load of theological trumpery,
that he knows not what to do. Leave him there for two weeks, and the revival
is at an end. The Churches know and feel that the greater part of these young
men do not know how to do anything that needs to be done for a revival, and
the complaint is made that the young ministers are so far behind the Church.
You may send all over the United States, to theological seminaries, and find
but few young ministers fitted to carry forward the work. What a state of
things!
There is a great defect in educating ministers. Education ought to be such, as
to prepare young men for the peculiar work to which they are destined.
But instead of this, they are educated for anything else. The grand mistake is
this: that the mind is directed too much to irrelevant matters; it is carried
over too wide a field, so that attention is diverted from the main thing and
the young men get cold in religion. When, therefore, they get through their
course, instead of being fitted for their work, they are unfitted for it.
Under a pretense of disciplining the mind, attention is in fact scattered, so
that when the young men come to their work, they are awkward, and know not how
to take hold, or how to act, to win souls. This is not universally the case,
but too often it is so.
It is common for people to talk loudly and largely about "an educated
ministry." God forbid that I should say a word against an educated ministry!
But what do we mean by an education for the ministry? Do we mean that they
should be so educated, as to be fitted for the work? If they are so educated,
the more education the better. Let education be of the right kind, teaching a
young man the things he needs to know, and not the very things he does not
need to know. Let them be educated for the work.
Do not let education be such, that when young men come out, after spending
six, eight, or ten years in study, they are not worth half as much as they
were before they went. I have known young men come out after what they call "a
thorough course," who could not manage a prayer meeting, so as to make it
profitable or interesting. An elder of a Church in a neighboring city,
informed me of a case in point. A young man, before he went to the seminary,
had labored as a layman with them, conducting their prayer meetings, and been
exceedingly useful among them. After he had been to the seminary, they sent
for him and desired his help; but, oh, how changed! He was so completely
transformed, that he made no impression; the members soon began to complain
that they would "die" under his influences; and he left, because he was not
prepared for the work.
It is common for those ministers who have been to the seminaries, and are now
useful, to affirm that their course of studies there did them little or no
good, and that they had to unlearn what they had there learned, before they
could effect much. I do not say this censoriously, but it is a solemn fact,
and in love I must say it.
Suppose you were going to make a man a surgeon in the navy. Instead of sending
him to the medical school to learn surgery, would you send him to the nautical
school, to learn navigation? In this way, you might qualify him to navigate a
ship, but he is no surgeon. Ministers should be educated to know what the
Bible is, and what the human mind is, and how to bring the one to bear on the
other. They should be brought into contact with mind, and made familiar with
all the aspects of society. They should have the Bible in one hand, and the
map of the human mind in the other, and know how to use the truth for the
salvation of men.
- 7. A want of common sense often defeats the
ends of the Christian ministry. There are many good men in the ministry, who
have learning, and talents of a certain sort, but they have no common sense to
win souls.
- 8. We see one great defect in our
theological schools. Young men are confined to books, and shut out from
intercourse with the common people, or contact with the common mind. Hence
they are not familiar with the mode in which common people think. This
accounts for the fact that some plain men, who have been brought up to
business, and are acquainted with human nature, are ten times better qualified
to win souls than those who are educated on the present principle, and are in
fact ten times as well acquainted with the proper business of the ministry.
These are called "uneducated men." This is a grand mistake. They are not
learned in science, but they are learned in the very things which they need to
know as ministers. They are not ignorant ministers, for they know exactly how
to reach the mind with truth. They are better furnished for their work, than
if they had all the machinery of the schools.
- I wish to be understood. I do not say, that
I would not have a young man go to school. Nor would I discourage him from
going over the field of science. The more the better, if together with it he
learns also the things that the minister needs to know, in order to win souls
- if he understands his Bible, and understands human nature, and knows how to
bring the truth to bear, and how to guide and manage minds, and to lead them
away from sin and lead them to God.
- 9. The success of any measure designed to
promote a revival of religion, demonstrates its wisdom; with the following
exceptions:
- (a) A measure may be introduced for
effect, to produce excitement, and be such that when it is looked back upon
afterwards, it will seem nonsensical, and appear to have been a mere trick. In
that case, it will react, and its introduction will have done more harm than
good.
(b) Measures may be introduced, and the revival be very powerful, and
the success be attributed to the measures, when in fact, it was other things
which made the revival powerful, and these very measures may have been a
hindrance. The prayers of Christians, and the preaching, and other things, may
have been so well calculated to carry on the work, that it has succeeded in
spite of these measures.
(c) But when the blessing evidently follows the introduction of the
measure itself, the proof is unanswerable, that the measure is wise. It is
profane to say that such a measure will do more harm than good. God knows
about that. His object is, to do the greatest amount of good possible. And of
course He will not add His blessing to a measure that will do more harm than
good. He may sometimes withhold His blessing from a measure that is calculated
to do some good, because it will be at the expense of a greater good. But he
never will bless a pernicious proceeding. There is no such thing as deceiving
God in the matter. He knows whether a given measure is, on the whole, wise or
not. He may bless a course of labors notwithstanding some unwise or injurious
measures. But if He blesses the measure itself, it is rebuking God to
pronounce it unwise. He who undertakes to do this, let him look to the matter.
- 10. It is evident that much fault has been
found with measures which have been pre-eminently and continually blessed of
God for the promotion of revivals. If a measure is continually or usually
blessed, let the man who thinks he is wiser than God, call it in question.
TAKE CARE how you find fault with God!
- 11. Christians should pray for ministers.
Brethren, if you felt how much ministers need wisdom to perform the duties of
their great office with success, and how insufficient they are of themselves,
you would pray for them a great deal more than you do; that is, if you cared
anything for the success of their labors. People often find fault with
ministers, when they do not pray for them. Brethren, this is tempting God; for
you ought not to expect any better ministers, unless you pray for them. And
you ought not to expect a blessing on the labors of your minister, or to have
your families converted by his preaching, when you do not pray for him. And so
for others, for the waste places, and the heathen: instead of praying all the
time, only that God would send out more laborers, you have need also to pray
that God would make ministers wise to win souls, and that those He sends out
may be properly educated, so that they shall be scribes well instructed in the
kingdom of God.
- 12. Those laymen in the Church who know how
to win souls are to be counted wise. They should not be called "ignorant
laymen"; and those Church members who do not know how to convert sinners, and
who cannot win souls, should not be called wise - as Christians. They are not
wise Christians; only "he that winneth souls is wise." They may be learned in
politics, in all sciences, or they may be skilled in the management of
business, or other things, and they may look down on those who win souls, as
nothing but plain, simple-hearted and ignorant men. If any of you are inclined
to do this, and to undervalue those who win souls, as being not so wise and
cunning as you are, you deceive yourselves. They may not know some things
which you know; but they know those things which a Christian is most concerned
to know, and which you do not.
- It may be illustrated by the case of a
minister who goes to sea. He may be learned in science, but he knows not how
to sail a ship. And he begins to ask the sailors about this thing and that,
and what this rope is for, and the like. "Why," say the sailors, "these are
not ropes, we have only one rope in a ship; these are the rigging; the man
talks like a fool." And so this learned man becomes a laughing-stock, perhaps,
to the sailors, because he does not know how to sail a ship. But if he were to
tell them one half of what he knows about science, perhaps they would think
him a conjurer, to know so much. So, learned students may understand their
Latin very well, and may laugh at the humble Christian, and call him ignorant,
although he may know how to win more souls than five hundred of them.
I was once distressed and grieved at hearing a minister bearing down upon a
young preacher, who had been converted under remarkable circumstances, and who
was licensed to preach without having pursued a regular course of study. This
minister, who was never, or at least very rarely, known to convert a soul,
bore down upon the young man in a very lordly, censorious manner, depreciating
him because he had not had the advantage of a liberal education - when, in
fact, he was instrumental in converting more souls than any five hundred
ministers like the one who criticized him.
I would say nothing to undervalue, or lead any to undervalue, a thorough
education for ministers. But I do not call that a thorough education, which
they receive in our colleges and seminaries. It does not fit them for their
work. I appeal to all experience, whether our young men in seminaries are
thoroughly educated for the purpose of winning souls. Do THEY DO IT?
Everybody knows they do not. Look at the reports of the Home Missionary
Society. If I recollect right, in 1830, the number of conversions in
connection with the labors of the missionaries of that society did not exceed
five to each missionary. I believe the number has increased since, but is
still exceedingly small to what it would have been had they been fitted, by a
right course of training, for their work. I do not say this to reproach them,
for, from my heart, I pity them; and I pity the Church for being under the
necessity of supporting ministers so trained, or of having none at all. They
are the best men the Missionary Society can obtain.
I suppose I shall be reproached for saying this. But it is too true and too
painful to be concealed. Those fathers who have the training of our young
ministers are good men, but they are ancient men, men of another age and stamp
from what is needed in these days, when the Church and world are rising to new
thought and action. Those dear fathers will not, I suppose, see with me in
this; and will perhaps think hardly of me for saying it; but it is the cause
of Christ. Some of them are getting back toward second childhood, and ought to
resign, and give place to younger men, who are not rendered physically
incapable, by age, of keeping pace with the onward movements of the Church.
And here I would say, that to my own mind it appears evident, that unless our
theological professors preach a good deal, mingle much with the Church, and
sympathize with her in all her movements, it is morally, if not naturally,
impossible, that they should succeed in training young men to the spirit of
the age. It is a shame and a sin, that theological professors, who preach but
seldom, who are withdrawn from the active duties of the ministry, should sit
in their studies and write their Letters, advisory or dictatorial, to
ministers and Churches who are in the field, and who are in circumstances to
judge what needs to be done. The men who spend all, or at least a portion, of
their time in the active duties of the ministry, are the only men who are able
to judge of what is expedient or inexpedient, prudent or imprudent, as to
measures, from time to time. It is as dangerous and ridiculous for our
theological professors, who are withdrawn from the field of conflict, to be
allowed to dictate, in regard to the measures and movements of the Church, as
it would be for a general to sit in his bedchamber and attempt to order a
battle.
Two ministers were one day conversing about another minister, whose labors
were greatly blessed - in the conversion of some thousands of souls. One of
them said: "That man ought not to preach any more; he should stop and go to -
(a theological seminary which he named), and proceed through a regular course
of study." He said the man had "a good mind, and if he were thoroughly
educated, he might be very useful." The other replied: "Do you think he would
be more useful for going to that seminary? I challenge you to show by facts
that any are more useful who have been there. No, sir, the fact is, that since
this man has been in the ministry, he has been instrumental in converting more
souls than all the young men who have come from that seminary in the time."
Finally: I wish to ask, who among you can lay any claim to the possession of
this Divine wisdom? Who among you, laymen? Who among you, ministers? Can any
of you? Can I? Are we at work, wisely, to win souls?
Or are we trying to make ourselves believe that success is no criterion of
wisdom? It is a criterion. It is a safe criterion for every minister to try
himself by. The amount of his success, other things being equal, measures the
amount of wisdom he has exercised in the discharge of his office.
How few of you have ever had wisdom enough to convert so much as a single
sinner? Do not say: "I cannot convert sinners. How can I convert sinners? God
alone can convert sinners." Look at the text: "He that winneth souls is wise,"
and do not think you can escape the sentence. It is true that God converts
sinners. But there is a sense, too, in which ministers convert them. And you
have something to do; something which, if you do it wisely, will ensure the
conversion of sinners in proportion to the wisdom employed. If you never have
done this, it is high time to think about yourselves, and see whether you have
wisdom enough to save even your own souls.
Men! Women! You are bound to be wise in winning souls. Perhaps already souls
have perished, because you have not put forth the wisdom which you might, in
saving them. The city is going to hell. Yes, the world is going to hell, and
must go on, till the Church finds out what to do, to win souls. Politicians
are wise. The children of this world are wise; they know what to do to
accomplish their ends, while we are prosing about, not knowing what to do, or
where to take hold of the work, and sinners are going to hell.
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Revival Lectures by Charles G. Finney - Public Domain [Copy Freely]