<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#Contents">CONTENTS.</SPAN></p>
<p style=
"text-align:center;font-size:233%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:1.5em">
SOWING AND REAPING</p>
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BY</p>
<p style=
"text-align:center;font-size:138%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:3.7em">
D. L. MOODY.</p>
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<i>‘Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.’</i><br/>
Gal. vi: 7.</p>
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<p style=
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Chicago : New York : Toronto</p>
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Fleming H. Revell Company</p>
<p style=
"text-align:center;font-size:67%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:1.5em">
Publishers of Evangelical Literature</p>
<hr style="margin-top:6.5em;margin-bottom:21em">
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<p style=
"text-align:center;font-size:67%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0.7em">
<i>Copyright 1896 by<br/>
Fleming H. Revell Company.</i></p>
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<hr style="margin-top:25.5em;margin-bottom:15em">
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<SPAN name="Contents" id="Contents">CONTENTS.</SPAN></p>
<hr style="width:2.4em;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0.5em">
<p class="pnn f11">Chap.</p>
<ol>
<li><SPAN href="#Sowing">S<span class="sc">owing and
Reaping</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Mocked">B<span class="sc">e Not Deceived: God Is
Not Mocked</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Expects">W<span class="sc">hen a Man Sows, He
Expects to Reap</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Same">A M<span class="sc">an Reaps the Same Kind as
He Sows</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#More">A M<span class="sc">an Reaps More than He
Sows</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Ignorance">I<span class="sc">gnorance of the Seed
Makes No Difference</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Forgive">F<span class="sc">orgiveness and
Retribution</span></SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#Warning">W<span class="sc">arning</span></SPAN></li>
</ol>
<hr style="margin-top:16.5em;margin-bottom:21em">
<h1><SPAN name="Sowing" id="Sowing">SOWING AND REAPING</SPAN></h1>
<hr style="margin-top:27em;margin-bottom:9em">
<p style=
"text-align:center;font-size:183%;margin-top:0;margin-bottom:1em">
SOWING AND REAPING.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER I.</p>
<p class="prf">“Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for
whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. For he that
soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he
that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life
everlasting.” Galatians vi: 7, 8.</p>
<p class="pn">I think this passage contains truths that no
infidel or sceptic will dare to deny. There are some passages in
the Word of God that need no other proof than that which we can
easily find in our daily experience. This is one of them. If the
Bible were to be blotted out of existence, the words I have
quoted would be abundantly verified by what is constantly
happening around us. We have only to take up the daily papers to
see them being fulfilled before our eyes.</p>
<p class="pn">I remember giving out this text once when a man
stood right up in the audience and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“I don’t believe it.”</p>
<p class="pn">I said, “My friend, that doesn’t change the fact.
Truth is truth whether you believe it or not, and a lie is a lie
whether you believe it or not.”</p>
<p class="pn">He didn’t want to believe it. When the meeting
broke up, an officer was at the door to arrest him. He was tried
and sent to the penitentiary for twelve months for stealing. I
really believe that when he got into his cell, he believed that
he had to reap what he sowed.</p>
<p class="pn">We might as well try to blot the sun out of the
heavens as to blot this truth out of the Word of God. It is
heaven’s eternal decree. The law has been enforced for six
thousand years. Did not God make Adam reap even before he left
Eden? Had not Cain to reap outside of Eden? A king on the throne,
like David, or a priest behind the altar, like Eli; priest and
prophet, preacher and hearer, every man must reap what he sows. I
believed it ten years ago, but I believe it a hundred times more
to-day.</p>
<p class="pn">My text applies to the individual, whether he be
saint or sinner or hypocrite who thinks he is a saint; it applies
to the family; it applies to society; it applies to nations. I
say the law that the result of actions must be reaped is <i>as
true for nations as for individuals;</i> indeed, some one has
said that as nations have no future existence, the present world
is the only place to punish them as nations. See how God has
dealt with them. See if they have not reaped what they sowed.
Take Amalek: “Remember what Amalek did unto thee by the way, when
ye were come forth out of Egypt; how he met thee, by the way, and
smote the hindmost of thee, even all that were feeble behind
thee, when thou wast faint and weary; and he feared not God.”
What was to be the result of this attack? Was it to go
unpunished? God ordained that Amalek should reap as they sowed,
and the nation was all but wiped out of existence under King
Saul.</p>
<p class="pn">What has become of the monarchies and empires of
the world? What brought ruin on Babylon? Her king and people
would not obey God, and ruin came upon them. What has become of
Greece and all her power? She once ruled the world. What has
become of Rome and all her greatness? When their cup of iniquity
was full, it was dashed to the ground. What has become of the
Jews? They rejected salvation, persecuted God’s messengers, and
crucified their Redeemer; and we find that eleven hundred
thousand of them perished at one time. Look at the history of
this country. With an open Bible, our forefathers planted
slavery; but judgment came at last. There was not a family North
or South that had not to mourn over some one taken from them.
Take the case of France. It is said that a century ago men were
spending millions every year in France in the publication and
distribution of infidel literature. What has been the harvest?
Has France not reaped? Mark the result: “The Bible was
suppressed. God was denied. Hell broke loose. Half the children
born in Paris were bastards. More than a million of persons were
beheaded, shot, drowned, outraged, and done to death between
September, 1792, and December, 1795. Since that time France has
had thirteen revolutions in eighty years; and in the republic
there has been an overturn on an average once in nine months.
One-third of the births in Paris are illegitimate; ten thousand
new-born infants have been fished out at the outlet of the city
sewers in a single year; the native population of France is
decreasing; the percentage of suicides is greater in Paris than
in any city in Christendom; and since the French Revolution there
have been enough French men and women slaughtered in the streets
of Paris in the various insurrections, to average more than two
thousand five hundred each year!”</p>
<p class="pn">The principle was not new in Scripture or in
history when Paul enunciated it in his letter to the Galatians.
Paul clothes it in language derived from the farm, but in other
dress the Law of Sowing and Reaping may be seen in the Law of
Cause and Effect, the Law of Retribution or Retaliation, the Law
of Compensation. It is not to my purpose to enter now into a
philosophical discussion of the law as it appears under any of
these names. We see that it exists. It is beyond reasonable
dispute. Whatever else sceptics may carp at and criticise in the
Bible, they must acknowledge the truth of this. It does not
depend upon revelation for its support; philosophers are agreed
upon it as much as they are agreed upon any thing.</p>
<h2>T<span class="sc">he Supremacy of Law</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">The objection may be made, however, that while its
application may be admitted in the physical world, it is not so
certain in the spiritual sphere. It is just here that modern
research steps in. The laws of the spiritual world have been
largely identified as the same laws that exist in the natural
world. Indeed, it is claimed that the spiritual existed first,
that the natural came after, and that when God proceeded to frame
the universe, He went upon lines already laid down. In short,
that God projected the higher laws downward, so that the natural
world became “an incarnation, a visible representation, a working
model of the supernatural.” “In the spiritual world the same
wheels work—without the iron.”</p>
<p class="pn">Our whole life is thus bounded and governed by laws
ordained and established by God, and that a man reaps what he
sows is a law that can be easily observed and verified, whether
we regard sowing to the flesh or sowing to the Spirit. The evil
harvest of sin and the good harvest of righteousness are as sure
to follow the sowing as the harvest of wheat and barley. “Life is
not <i>casual</i>, but <i>causal</i>.”</p>
<p class="pn">We shall see, as we proceed, that <i>the working of
the law is evident in the earliest periods of Bible history</i>.
Job’s three friends reasoned that he must be a great sinner,
because they took it for granted that the calamities that
overtook him must be the results of his wickedness. “Remember, I
pray thee,” said one of them, “who ever perished, being innocent?
or where were the righteous cut off? Even as I have seen, they
that plough iniquity, and sow wickedness, reap the same.”</p>
<p class="pn">In the book of Proverbs we find it written: “The
wicked worketh a deceitful work: but to him that soweth
righteousness shall be a sure reward.” And again: “He that soweth
iniquity shall reap vanity.”</p>
<p class="pn">In Isaiah we find these words: “Say ye to the
righteous that it shall be well with him; for they shall eat the
fruit of their doings. Woe unto the wicked! it shall be ill with
him: for the reward of his hands shall be given him.”</p>
<p class="pn">Hosea prophesied regarding Israel: “They have sown
the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.” “Sow to yourselves
in righteousness,” he advised them, “reap in mercy.”</p>
<h2>T<span class="sc">eaching from Analogy</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">The Bible is full of analogies drawn from nature.
When Christ was on earth, it was His favorite mode of teaching to
convey heavenly truths in earthly dress. “Truths came forth from
His lips,” wrote one, “not stated simply on authority, but based
on the analogy of the universe. His human mind, in perfect
harmony with the Divine mind with which it was united, discerned
the connection of things, and read the eternal will in the
simplest laws of nature. For instance, if it were a question
whether God would give His Spirit to them that asked, it was not
replied to by a truth revealed on His <i>authority:</i> the
answer was derived from facts lying open to all men’s
observation. ‘Behold the fowls of the air’; ‘behold the lilies of
the field’—learn from them the answer to your question. A
principle was there. God supplies the wants He has created. He
feeds the ravens—He clothes the lilies—He will feed with His
Spirit the craving spirits of His children.”</p>
<p class="pn">This is the style of teaching that Paul adopts in
the text. He takes the simple process of sowing and reaping, a
process familiar to all, and reads in it a deeply spiritual and
moral meaning. It is as if he said that every man as he journeys
through life is scattering seed at every step. The seed consists
of his thoughts, his words, his actions. They pass from him, and
by and by (it may be sooner or later), they spring up and bear
fruit, and the reaping time comes.</p>
<h2>L<span class="sc">ife a Seed-Time</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">The analogy contains some solemn lessons. Life is
to be regarded as a seed-time. Every one has his field to sow, to
cultivate, and finally, to reap. By our habits, by our
intercourse with friends and companions, by exposing ourselves to
good or bad influences, we are cultivating the seed for the
coming harvest. We cannot see the seed as it grows and develops,
but time will reveal it.</p>
<p class="pn">Just as the full-grown harvest is potentially
contained in the seed, so the full results of sin or holiness are
potentially contained in the sinful or holy deed. “When lust hath
conceived, it bringeth forth sin, and sin, when it is finished,
bringeth forth death.”</p>
<p class="pn">Just as we cannot reap a good harvest unless we
have sown good seed, so we cannot reap eternal life unless we
have sown to the Spirit. Weeds are easy to grow. They grow
without the planting. And sin springs up naturally in the human
heart. Ever since our first parents broke away from God, the
human heart has of itself been thoroughly vile, and all its
fruits have been evil. “The heart of the sons of men is fully set
in them to do evil.” Do you doubt it? If you do, ask yourself
what would become of a child if it was left to itself—no
training, no guidance, no education. In spite of all that is done
for children, the evil too often gets the upper hand. The good
seed must be planted and cared for, often with toil and trouble:
but the harvest will be sure.</p>
<p class="pn">Do we desire the love of our fellows in our seasons
of trial? Then we must love them when they need its cheering
influence most. Do we long for sympathy in our sorrow and pain?
Then we shall have it if we have also wept with those who weep.
Are we hoping to reap eternal life? Then we must not sow to the
flesh, or we shall reap corruption, but to the Spirit, then the
promise is that we shall reap its immortal fruits.</p>
<p class="pn">Dr. Chalmers has drawn attention to <i>the
difference between the act of sowing and the act of reaping</i>.
“Let it be observed,” he says, “that the act of indulging in the
desires of the flesh is one thing and the act of providing for
the indulgence of them is another. When a man, on the impulse of
sudden provocation, wreaks his resentful feelings upon the
neighbor who has offended him, he is not at that time preparing
for the indulgence of a carnal feeling, but actually indulging
it. He is not at that time sowing, but reaping (such as it is) a
harvest of gratification. This distinction may serve to assist
our judgment in estimating the ungodliness of certain characters.
The rambling voluptuary who is carried along by every impulse,
and all whose powers of mental discipline are so enfeebled that
he has become the slave of every propensity, lives in the
perpetual harvest of criminal gratification. A daughter whose
sole delight is in her rapid transitions from one scene of
expensive brilliancy to another, who dissipates every care and
fills every hour among the frivolities and fascinations of her
volatile society,—she leads a life than which nothing can be
imagined more opposite to a life of preparation for the coming
judgment or the coming eternity. Yet she <i>reaps</i> rather than
<i>sows</i>. It lies with another to gather the money which
purchaseth all things, and with her to taste the fruits of the
purchase. <i>It is the father who sows</i>. It is he who sits in
busy and brooding anxiety over his speculations, wrinkled,
perhaps, by care, and sobered by years into an utter distaste for
the splendors and insignificancies of fashionable life.” The
father sows, and he reaps in his daughter’s life.</p>
<h2>“P<span class="sc">ainting for Eternity</span>.”</h2>
<p class="pn">A famous painter was well known for the careful
manner in which he went about his work. When some one asked him
why he took such pains, he replied:</p>
<p class="pn">“Because I am painting for eternity.”</p>
<p class="pn">It is a solemn thing to think that <i>the future
will be the harvest of the present</i>—that my condition in my
dying hour may depend upon my actions to-day! Belief in a future
life and in a coming judgment magnifies the importance of the
present. Eternal issues depend upon it. The opportunity for
sowing will not last forever; it is slipping through our fingers
moment by moment; and the future can only reveal the harvest of
the seed sown now.</p>
<p class="pn">A sculptor once showed a visitor his studio. It was
full of statues of gods. One was very curious. The face was
concealed by being covered with hair, and there were wings on
each foot.</p>
<p class="pn">“What is his name?” said the visitor.</p>
<p class="pn">“Opportunity,” was the reply.</p>
<p class="pn">“Why is his face hidden?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Because men seldom know him when he comes to
them.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Why has he wings on his feet?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Because he is soon gone, and once gone can never
be overtaken.”</p>
<p class="pn">It becomes us, then, to make the most of the
opportunities God has given us. It depends a good deal on
ourselves what our future shall be. We can sow for a good
harvest, or we can do like the Sioux Indians, who once, when the
United States Commissioner of Indian Affairs sent them a supply
of grain for sowing, ate it up. Men are constantly sacrificing
their eternal future to the passing enjoyment of the present
moment; they fail or neglect to recognize the dependence of the
future upon the present.</p>
<h2>N<span class="sc">othing Trifling</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">From this we may learn that there is no such thing
as a trifle on earth. When we realize that every thought and word
and act has an eternal influence, and will come back to us in the
same way as the seed returns in the harvest, we must perceive
their responsibility, however trifling they may seem. We are apt
to overlook the results that hinge on small things. The law of
gravitation was suggested by the fall of an apple. It is said
that some years ago a Harvard professor brought some gypsy-moths
to this country in the hope that they could with advantage be
crossed with silkworms. The moths accidentally got away, and
multiplied so enormously that the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
has had to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars trying to
exterminate them.</p>
<p class="pn">When H. M. Stanley was pressing his way through the
forests of Darkest Africa, the most formidable foes that he
encountered, those that caused most loss of life to his caravan
and came the nearest to entirely defeating his expedition, were
the little Wambutti dwarfs. So annoying were they that very slow
progress could be made through their dwelling places.</p>
<p class="pn">These little men had only little bows and little
arrows that looked like children’s playthings, but upon these
tiny arrows there was a small drop of poison which would kill an
elephant or a man as quickly and as surely as a Winchester rifle.
Their defense was by means of poison and traps. They would steal
through the darkness of the forest and, waiting in ambush, let
fly their deadly arrows before they could be discovered. They dug
ditches and carefully covered them over with leaves. They fixed
spikes in the ground and tipped them with the most deadly poison,
and then covered them. Into these ditches and on these spikes man
and beast would fall or step to their death.</p>
<p class="pn">A lady once writing to a young man in the navy who
was almost a stranger, thought “Shall I close this as anybody
would, or shall I say a word for my Master?” and, lifting up her
heart for a moment, she wrote, telling him that his constant
change of scene and place was an apt illustration of the word,
“<i>Here we have no continuing city</i>,” and asked if he could
say: “I seek one to come.” Tremblingly she folded it and sent it
off.</p>
<p class="pn">Back came the answer. “Thank you so much for those
kind words! I am an orphan, and no one has spoken to me like that
since my mother died, long years ago.” The arrow shot at venture
hit home, and the young man shortly after rejoiced in the fulness
of the blessing of the gospel of peace.</p>
<p class="pn">An obscure man preached one Sunday to a few persons
in a Methodist chapel in the South of England. A boy of fifteen
years of age was in the audience, driven into the chapel by a
snowstorm. The man took as his text the words, “Look unto me and
be ye saved,” and as he stumbled along as best he could, the
light of heaven flashed into that boy’s heart. He went out of the
chapel saved, and soon became known as C. H. Spurgeon, the
boy-preacher.</p>
<p class="pn">The parsonage at Epworth, England, caught fire one
night, and all the inmates were rescued except one son. The boy
came to a window, and was brought safely to the ground by two
farm-hands, one standing on the shoulder of the other. The boy
was John Wesley. If you would realize the responsibility of that
incident, if you would measure the consequences of that rescue,
ask the millions of Methodists who look back to John Wesley as
the founder of their denomination.</p>
<h1><SPAN name="Mocked" id="Mocked">BE NOT DECEIVED; GOD IS<br/> NOT MOCKED.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Let no man deceive you</i>.”—Eph. v: 6.</p>
<p class="pns f11">“<i>As one man mocketh another, do ye so mock
Him?</i>”—Job xiii: 9.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER II.</p>
<h2>B<span class="sc">e Not Deceived</span>: G<span class="sc">od Is Not Mocked</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">We have all lived long enough to know what it is to
be deceived. We have been deceived by our friends, by our
enemies, our neighbors, our relatives. Ungodly companions have
deceived us. At every turn of life we have been imposed upon in
one way or another.</p>
<p class="pn">False teachers have crossed our path, and under
pretence of doing us good, have poisoned our mind with error.
They have held out hopes to us that have proved false; apples of
Sodom, fair without, but full of ashes within. They have told us
that there is no God, no future life, no judgment to come; or
they have said that all men will be saved, that there is ample
time to repent, that we may be saved by doing the best we
can.</p>
<p class="pn">Sin has deceived us. Every sinner is under a
delusion. Sin meets him smilingly, and holds out to him pleasures
and delights that are not pure and lasting.</p>
<p class="pn">During our meetings in Boston a young man came into
the Tabernacle. He looked around, and he thought to himself the
people that came there were great fools—those who had business,
and comfortable homes, and good clothes. He had nothing in the
world—he was a tramp, and went in there to keep himself warm. But
to think that people who had homes would come and spend their
time in listening to such stuff as I preached was more than he
could understand.</p>
<p class="pn">One night after he had been coming there for two
weeks, I happened to point right down where he was sitting, and I
said, “Young man, be not deceived!” God used that as an arrow. He
began to think about himself. His mind went back to the time when
he had a good situation in Boston; when he was a young man
getting a good salary; when he was in good society, and had a
great many friends.</p>
<p class="pn">Then he looked at his present condition. His
friends were all gone, his clothes were gone, his money was gone;
and there he was, an outcast in that city. He said to himself, “I
have been deceived,” and that very hour God waked him. He wanted
to get friends to pray for him; but as he was not able to buy a
piece of paper, or pay for a postage stamp, he got an old piece
of soiled paper, stood up in the street, and wrote a request to
be read in the Tabernacle, that if God would save a poor, lost
man like him, he wanted to be saved. That prayer was answered. As
in the case of Nebuchadnezzar, his friends gathered around him
again, and the Lord restored him to position and to society. His
eyes were opened to see how he had been deceived.</p>
<h2>S<span class="sc">atan</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">How many men all over the world are being deceived
by the god of this world! It has been asserted that during the
late Franco-German war, German drummers and trumpeters used to
give the French beats and calls in order to deceive their
enemies. The command to “halt,” or “cease firing,” was often
given by the Germans, it has been said, and the French soldiers
were thus placed in positions where they could be shot down like
cattle.</p>
<p class="pn">Satan is the arch-enemy of our souls, and he has
often blinded our reason and deceived our conscience by his
falsehoods. He has often come as an angel of light, concealing
his hideousness under a borrowed cloak. He says to a young man:
“Sow your wild oats. Time enough to be religious when you grow
old.” The young man yields himself to a life of extravagance and
excess, under the false hope that he will obtain solid
satisfaction; and it is well if he awakens to the deception
before his appetites become tyrants, dragging him down into
depths of want and woe. Satan promises great things to his
victims in the indulgence of their lusts, but they never realize
the promises. The promised pleasure turns out to be pain, the
promised heaven a hell.</p>
<p class="pn">Beware lest Satan deceive you as he deceived Eve in
the beginning. “There is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie,
he speaketh of his own, for he is a liar, and the father of
it.”</p>
<h2>O<span class="sc">ur Heart</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">But we have been deceived by our own heart most of
all. Who has not proved the truth of the Scripture: “The heart is
deceitful above all things and desperately wicked; who can know
it?” “How many times we have said that we never would do a certain
thing again, and then have done it within twenty-four hours! A
man may think he has fathomed its depths, but he finds there are
further depths he has not reached. What gross self-deception is
due to it! “He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool,” said
Solomon. Luther once said he feared his own heart more than the
Pope and all the cardinals.</p>
<p class="pn">Many a weeping wife has come to me about her
husband, saying: “He is good at heart.” The truth is—that is the
worst spot in him. If the heart was good, all else would be
right. Out of the heart are the issues of life. Christ said:
“From within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts,
adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness,
wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy,
pride, foolishness.” That is Christ’s own statement regarding the
unregenerate heart.</p>
<p class="pn">Some years ago a remarkable picture was exhibited
in London. As you looked at it from a distance, you seemed to see
a monk engaged in prayer, his hands clasped, his head bowed. As
you came nearer, however, and examined the painting more closely,
you saw that in reality he was squeezing a lemon into a
punchbowl!</p>
<p class="pn">What a picture that is of the human heart!
Superficially examined, it is thought to be the seat of all that
is good and noble and pleasing in a man; whereas in reality,
until regenerated by the Holy Ghost, it is the seat of all
corruption. “This is the condemnation, that light is come into
the world, and men <i>loved darkness rather than light</i>.”</p>
<p class="pn">A Jewish rabbi once asked his scholars what was the
best thing a man could have in order to keep him in the straight
path. One said <i>a good disposition;</i> another, <i>a good
companion;</i> another said <i>wisdom</i> was the best thing he
could desire. At last a scholar replied that he thought <i>a good
heart</i> was best of all.</p>
<p class="pn">“True,” said the rabbi, “you have comprehended all
that the others have said. For he that hath a good heart will be
of a good disposition, and a good companion, and a wise man. Let
every one, therefore, cultivate a sincerity and uprightness of
heart at all times, and it will save him an abundance of sorrow.”
We need to make the prayer of David—“Create in me a clean heart,
O God, and renew a right spirit within me!”</p>
<h2>G<span class="sc">od Is Not Mocked</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Bear in mind, the God of the Bible has never
deceived anyone, and never can, and never will; that is the
difference between the God of the Bible and the god of this
world. He beholds the ways of men; He looks into their hearts; He
knows their secret ways; they need not tell Him or try to conceal
anything from Him.</p>
<p class="pn">However successfully we may deceive or be deceived
by ourselves or others, we cannot deceive Him. Adam and Eve tried
it in Eden when they hid themselves from the presence of Jehovah
amongst the trees of the garden. Saul tried it when he spared the
best of the sheep and oxen of the Amalekites under the pretence
of sacrificing them to God. Ananias and Sapphira tried it when
they kept back part of the price of the land they sold. “Why hath
Satan filled thine heart to lie unto (deceive) the Holy Ghost? *
* * Thou hast not lied unto men, but unto God.”</p>
<p class="pn">Men try it every day. They have got it into their
heads that God can be mocked. Because they can deceive their
pastor, and their employer, and their friends, they think they
can deceive God. They put on false appearances, they use empty
words, they perform unreal service, they make idle excuses, they
indulge in all kinds of hypocrisy. But it is of no avail. God
cannot be imposed upon. He sees the corruption inside the whited
sepulchre.</p>
<h2>W<span class="sc">arning to Christians</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">It is worth noticing that this warning was given by
Paul to Christian men—converts in the Galatian church. After all,
a man is not all the time deceived about the grosser sins. The
drunkard realizes in his sober moments what must be the end of a
course of intemperance. Loss of self-respect and of the esteem of
friends, the marks he soon begins to bear in his body—unsteady
hands and discolored features—these things are the quick harvest
of drunkenness, and may easily be detected as they ripen. The
licentious man, also, reaps the early fruit of his sin in
diseases of the body, which are often effective warnings against
continuing in such a dangerous path. But with “respectable” sins
it is different. A man may be sowing for years, and not even
realize it himself.</p>
<p class="pn">You remember that in the parable of the sower some
seeds fell among thorns, and the thorns sprung up and choked
them. Our Master, expounding this parable, said: “He that
received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word: but
<i>the care of this world and the deceitfulness of riches</i>
choke the word, and he becometh unfruitful.” Who would have
expected this result of the world or of riches? But it has been
said that Christ never spoke of riches except in words of
warning. We are not apt to regard them in that light to-day. Men
are trampling each other down in the pursuit of wealth. “Be not
deceived.” He who sets his heart upon money is sowing to the
flesh, and shall of the flesh reap corruption. “Adversity hath
slain her thousands, but prosperity her tens of thousands.”</p>
<p class="pn">“What is the value of this estate?” said a
gentleman to another, as they passed a fine mansion surrounded by
fair and fertile fields.</p>
<p class="pn">“I don’t know what it is valued at; I know what it
cost its late possessor.”</p>
<p class="pn">“How much?”</p>
<p class="pn">“His soul.”</p>
<p class="pn">An English clergyman was called to the death-bed of
a wealthy parishioner. Kneeling beside the dying man the pastor
asked him to take his hand as he prayed for his upholding in that
solemn hour, but he declined to give it. After the end had come,
and they turned down the coverlet, the rigid hands were found
holding the safe-key in their death-grip. Heart and hand, to the
last, clinging to his possessions, but he could not take them
with him.</p>
<p class="pn">A man may be proud, and his very sin reckoned a
virtue. Hear what the Word of God says: “Haughtiness of eyes and
a proud heart is <span class="sc">sin</span>”; “every one that is
proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord.”</p>
<p class="pn">These are the mistakes men make. They are leading
respectable lives, and they think that all is well. They do not
recognize the taint of corruption upon many of the most cherished
objects of their hearts. Christian professors, most of all, need
to beware lest they are being deceived.</p>
<h2>N<span class="sc">eglect</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">How watchful men should be of their thoughts, their
practices, their feelings! The reason of deception is, for the
most part, neglect. Men do not stop to examine themselves, to lay
their hearts and minds bare as in the sight of God, and judge
themselves by His most holy will. A man need not shoot himself in
order to commit suicide: he need only neglect the proper means of
sustenance, and he will soon die. Where an enemy is strong and
aggressive, an army is doomed to sure defeat and capture unless a
sharp look-out is kept, every man wide awake at his post of
duty.</p>
<p class="pn">It has been noticed that there are more accidents
in Switzerland in fine seasons than in stormy ones. People are
apt to undertake expeditions that they would not take under less
favorable conditions, and they are less careful in their conduct.
And so it is that moral and spiritual disaster usually overtakes
men when they are off their guard, careless against temptation.
They become proud and self-reliant in seasons of prosperity,
whereas adversity drives them to the living God for guidance and
comfort.</p>
<p class="pn">Dr. Johnson once said that it is more from
carelessness regarding the truth than from intentional lying that
there is so much falsehood in the world.</p>
<p class="pn">Hence the necessity of continual watchfulness. The
Persians had an annual festival when they slew all the serpents
and venomous creatures they could find; but they allowed them to
swarm as fast and freely as ever until the festival came round
once more. It was poor policy. Sins, like serpents, breed
quickly, and need to be constantly watched.</p>
<p class="pn">And we ought to watch on every side. Many a man has
fallen at the very point where he thought he was safest. The
meekness of Moses has passed into a proverb. Yet he lost the
Promised Land, because he allowed the children of Israel to
provoke him, and “he spake unadvisedly with his lips.” Peter was
the most zealous and defiant of the disciples, bold and
outspoken; yet he degenerated for a short time into a lying,
swearing, sneaking coward, afraid of a maid.</p>
<p class="pn">There is an old fable that a doe that had but one
eye used to graze near the sea; and in order to be safe, she kept
her blind eye toward the water, from which side she expected no
danger, while with the good eye she watched the country. Some
men, perceiving this, took a boat and came upon her from the sea
and shot her. With her dying breath, she said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Oh! hard fate! that I should receive my
death-wound from that side whence I expected no harm, and be safe
in the part where I looked for most danger.”</p>
<p class="pn">Let danger and need drive you closer to God. He
never slumbers or sleeps, and in His keeping you will be safe.
Seize hold of Him in prayer. “Watch and pray.”</p>
<h2>C<span class="sc">hristianity Not Responsible</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Christianity is not responsible for the deception
that exists among its professing disciples. The illustration has
been used before that you might just as reasonably hold the
Cunard company responsible for the suicide of a passenger who
jumps overboard one of their vessels at sea. Had the person
remained on the vessel, he would have been safe; and had the
disciple remained true to his principles, he would never have
turned out a hypocrite. Was anybody ever more severe in
denouncing hypocrisy than Christ? Do you want to know the reason
why, every now and then, the church is scandalized by the
exposure of some leading church member or Sabbath school
superintendent? It is not his Christianity, but his lack of it.
Some secret sin has been eating at the heart of the tree, and in
a critical moment it is blown down and its rottenness
revealed.</p>
<h2>T<span class="sc">he Deception Can Not Last Forever</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">It is impossible for the deception to last forever.
Lincoln had a saying that you may be able to deceive all the
people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time,
but you will not be able to deceive all the people all of the
time. Death will uncover the deception, if it has not been
detected sooner; and the unfortunate victim will stand,
undeceived, in the presence of a God who cannot be mocked.</p>
<h1><SPAN name="Expects" id="Expects">WHEN A MAN SOWS, HE<br/> EXPECTS TO REAP.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Behold, the husbandman waiteth for the
precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it, until
he receive the early and latter rain</i>.”—James v: 7.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER III.</p>
<h2>W<span class="sc">hen a Man Sows, He Expects to Reap</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Notice these four things about sowing and reaping:
A man expects to reap when he sows; he expects to reap the same
kind of seed that he sows; he expects to reap more; and ignorance
of the kind of seed makes no difference.</p>
<p class="pn">First: <i>When a man sows, he expects to
reap</i>.</p>
<p class="pn">If a farmer went on sowing, spring after spring,
and never reaping in the autumn, you would say he was a fit
subject for the lunatic asylum. No; he is always looking forward
to the time when he will reap the reward of his toil. He never
expects that the seed he has sown will be lost.</p>
<p class="pn">A young man serves a long apprenticeship to some
trade or profession; but he expects by and by to reap the fruit
of all those years of patient industry. Ask an engineer why he
works so hard for five, six, or seven years in the endeavor to
learn his profession. He replies that he is looking forward to
the reaping time, when his fortune and reputation will be made.
The lawyer studies long and hard; but he, too, anticipates the
time when his clients will be numerous, and he will be repaid for
his toil. A great many medical students have a hard time trying
to support themselves while they are at college. As soon as they
get their diploma and become doctors they expect that the reaping
time is coming; that is what they have been working for.</p>
<p class="pn">Some harvests ripen almost immediately, but as a
rule we find it true in the natural world that <i>there is
delay</i> before the seed comes to maturity. It is growing all
the time, however; first the little green shoot breaking through
the soil, then the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the
ear. The farmer is not disappointed because all his crops do not
spring up in a night like mushrooms. He looks forward with
patience, knowing that the reaping time will come in due
season.</p>
<p class="pn">So with the harvest of our actions. Few men, if
any, would indulge in sin unless they expected pleasure out of
it. A drunkard does not drink for the mere sake of drinking, but
in the hope of present enjoyment. A thief does not steal for the
mere sake of stealing, but for the sake of gain. And similarly
with the good man. He does not make sacrifices merely for the
sake of sacrifice, but because thereby he hopes and expects to do
good, and help others. All these things are means to ends: there
is always expectation of a harvest.</p>
<h2>T<span class="sc">he Certainty of the Reaping</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">The text bids us look forward to the certainty of
the reaping: “Whatsoever a man soweth, that <span class="sc">shall</span> he also reap.”</p>
<p class="pn">We know what it is to have a failure of the crops,
but in the spiritual world no such failure is possible. Wet soil
may rot the seed, or frost may nip the early buds, or the weather
may prove too wet or too dry to bring the crops to maturity, but
none of these things occur to prevent the harvest of one’s
actions. The Bible tells us that God will render to every man
according to his deeds. “To them who by patient continuance in
well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, eternal
life: but unto them that are contentious, and do not obey the
truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath,
tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doeth evil.”
How careful we should be of our actions in all departments of our
being, physical, moral, intellectual! The deeds we do, the words
we speak, the thoughts we harbor, are all recorded, and shall
meet their just reward, for God is no respecter of persons.</p>
<p class="pn">And it must not be overlooked that <i>the harvest
comes as a necessary consequence of the sowing</i>. It has been
said that God is not a sort of a moral despot, as He is so
frequently regarded. He does not sit on a throne, attaching
penalties to particular actions as they come up for judgment. He
has laid down certain laws, of which the law of sowing and
reaping is one, and punishment is the natural outcome of sin.
There is no escape. It must be borne; and though others may have
to reap <i>with</i> you, no one can reap <i>for</i> you.</p>
<p class="pn">The text teaches, further, that <i>the harvest is
one or other of two kinds</i>. There are two, and only two,
directions in which the law leads: Sowing to the flesh, and a
harvest of corruption—sowing to the Spirit, and a harvest of
everlasting life.</p>
<h2>S<span class="sc">owing to the Flesh</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">“Sowing to the flesh” does not mean simply taking
due care of the body. The body was made in the image of God, and
the body of a believer is a temple of the Holy Ghost, and we may
be sure that due care for the image is well-pleasing to God. The
expression refers rather to pandering to the lusts of the body,
pampering it, providing gratification for its unlawful desires at
the expense of the higher part of a man, indulging the animal
propensities which in their excess are sinful. “Sowing to the
flesh” is scattering the seeds of selfishness, which always must
yield a harvest of corruption.</p>
<p class="pn">“When we were in the flesh, the motions of sins did
work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death.” And what
does Paul say are the works of the flesh? “Adultery, fornication,
uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred,
variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies,
envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like.”</p>
<p class="pn">I was at the Paris exhibition in 1867, and I
noticed there a little oil painting, only about a foot square,
and the face was the most hideous I have ever seen. On the paper
attached to the painting were the words “Sowing the tares,” and
the face looked more like a demon’s than a man’s. As he sowed
these tares, up came serpents and reptiles, and they were
crawling up on his body, and all around were woods with wolves
and animals prowling in them. I have seen that picture many times
since. Ah! the reaping time is coming. If you sow to the flesh
you must reap the flesh. If you sow to the wind you must reap the
whirlwind.</p>
<p class="pn">And yet it must not be thought that indulgence in
the grosser vices is the only way of sowing to the flesh. Every
desire, every action that has not God for its end and object is
seed sown to the flesh. If a man is sowing for a harvest of money
or ambition, he is sowing to the flesh, and will reap corruption,
just as surely as the liar and adulterer. No matter how “polite”
and “refined” and “respectable” the seed may be, no matter how
closely it resembles the good seed, its true nature will out, the
blight of corruption will be upon it.</p>
<p class="pn">How foolish are the strivings of men in view of
this judgment! Many a man will sacrifice time, health—even his
character—for money. What does he gain? C<span class="sc">orruption</span>; something that is not eternal, that has
not the qualities of “everlasting life.” John said, “The world
passeth away, and the lust thereof.” Peter said, “All flesh is as
grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass
withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away.” None of these
fleshly things have their roots in the eternal. You may even
outlive them in your own short life.</p>
<h2>N<span class="sc">o Bridge Between</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Now, men make this mistake—they sow to the flesh,
and they think they will reap the harvest of the spirit; and on
the other hand, they sow to the spirit and are disappointed when
they do not reap a temporal harvest.</p>
<p class="pn">A teacher had been relating to his class the
parable of the rich man and Lazarus, and he asked:</p>
<p class="pn">“Now, which would you rather be, boys, the rich man
or Lazarus?”</p>
<p class="pn">One boy answered, “I would rather be the rich man
while I live, and Lazarus when I die.”</p>
<p class="pn">That cannot be: it is flesh and corruption, or,
Spirit and everlasting life. There is no bridge from one to the
other.</p>
<p class="pn">“Seed which is sown for a spiritual harvest has no
tendency whatever to procure temporal well-being. Christ
declared, ‘Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see God;
blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for
they shall be filled’ (with righteousness); ‘blessed are they
that mourn, for they shall be comforted.’ You observe the
beatific vision of the Almighty—fulness of righteousness—divine
comfort. There is nothing earthly here, it is spiritual results
for spiritual labor. It is not said that the pure in heart shall
be made rich; or that they who hunger and thirst after
righteousness shall be filled with bread, or that they who mourn
shall rise in life, and obtain distinction. Each department has
its own appropriate harvest, reserved exclusively to its own
method of sowing.</p>
<p class="pn">“Everything reaps its own harvest, every act has
its own reward. And before you covet the enjoyment which another
possesses, you must first calculate the cost at which it was
procured.</p>
<p class="pn">“For instance, the religious tradesman complains
that his honesty is a hindrance to his success; that the tide of
custom pours into the doors of his less scrupulous neighbor in
the same street, while he himself waits for hours idle. My
brother, do you think that God is going to reward honor,
integrity, high-mindedness, with this world’s coin? Do you fancy
that He will pay spiritual excellence with plenty of custom? Now
consider the price that man has paid for his success. Perhaps
mental degradation and inward dishonor. His advertisements are
all deceptive, his treatment of his workmen tyrannical, his cheap
prices made possible by inferior articles. Sow that man’s seed,
and you will reap that man’s harvest. Cheat, lie, be unscrupulous
in your assertions, and custom will come to you. But if the price
be too high, let him have his harvest, and you take yours—a clear
conscience, a pure mind, rectitude within and without. Will you
part with that for his harvest?”</p>
<h2>S<span class="sc">owing to the Spirit</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">“Sowing to the Spirit” implies self-denial,
resistance of evil, obedience to the Spirit, walking in the
Spirit, living in the Spirit, guidance by the Spirit. We sow to
the Spirit when we use our abilities and means to advance
Spiritual things; when we support and encourage those who are
extending the influence of the Spirit. We sow to the Spirit when
we crucify the flesh and all its lusts, when we yield ourselves
to Him as we once yielded ourselves to the flesh. A Jewish rabbi
once said: “There are in every man two impulses, good and evil.
He who offers God his evil impulses offers the best
sacrifice.”</p>
<p class="pn">The fruit of such sowing is “love, joy, peace,
longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,
temperance.”</p>
<p class="pn">In this world the harvest is growth of character,
deeper respect, increasing usefulness to others; in the next
world, acceptance with God, everlasting life.</p>
<p class="pn">Among the last recorded words of Henry Lloyd
Garrison in his public speeches in England were these “I began my
advocacy of the anti-slavery cause in the Northern States of
America, in the midst of brickbats and rotten eggs; and I ended
it on the soil of South Carolina almost literally buried beneath
the wreaths of flowers which were heaped upon me by her liberated
bondmen.”</p>
<p class="pn">A young man was employed by a large commission firm
in New York City during the late civil war, to negotiate with a
certain party for a lot of damaged beans. The beans were
purchased, delivered, and spread out upon the upper floor of the
building occupied by the firm.</p>
<p class="pn">Men were employed to turn them over and over, and
to sprinkle them with a solution of soda, so as to improve their
appearance and render them more salable. A large lot of the first
quality of beans was then purchased; some of the good beans were
first put into barrels, then the barrels were nearly filled with
the poor ones; after this the good ones were again put on the top
and the barrels headed up for sale.</p>
<p class="pn">The employer marked the barrels, “Beans—A 1.” The
clerk seeing this, said: “Do you think, sir, that it is right to
mark those beans A 1?”</p>
<p class="pn">The employer retorted sharply: “Are you head of the
firm?”</p>
<p class="pn">The clerk said no more. The barreling and heading
went on. When all was ready, the beans (many hundreds of barrels)
were put on the market for sale. Specimens of the best quality
were shown in the office to buyers.</p>
<p class="pn">At length a shrewd purchaser came in (no man is so
sharp in business but he will often meet his equal), examined the
samples in the office, inquired the price, and then wished to see
the stock in bulk. The clerk was ordered to go with the buyer to
the upper loft and show him the stock. An open barrel was shown
apparently of the same quality of the sample. The buyer then said
to the clerk:</p>
<p class="pn">“Young man, the samples of beans shown me are of
the first quality, and it is impossible to purchase beans
anywhere in the market for the price at which you offer them;
there is something wrong here. Tell me, are these beans the same
quality throughout the entire barrel as they appear on the
top?”</p>
<p class="pn">The clerk now found himself in a strange position.
He thought, “Shall I lie for my employer, as he undoubtedly means
I shall; or shall I tell the truth, come what will?” He decided
for the truth, and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“No, sir, they are not.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Then,” said the customer. “I do not want them”;
and he left.</p>
<p class="pn">The clerk enterers the office. The employer said to
him: “Did you sell that man those beans?”</p>
<p class="pn">He said, “No, sir.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Why not?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Well, sir, the man asked me if those beans were of
the same quality through the entire barrel as they appeared on
the top. I told him they were not. He then said: ‘I do not want
them,’ and left.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Go to the cashier,” said the employer, “and get
your wages; we want you no longer.”</p>
<p class="pn">He received his pay and left the office, rejoicing
that he had not lied for the purposes of abetting a sordid
avariciousness, and benefiting an unprincipled employer.</p>
<p class="pn">Three weeks after this the firm sent after the
young clerk, entreated him to come back again into their employ,
and offered him three hundred dollars salary more per year than
they had ever before given him.</p>
<p class="pn">And thus was his honesty and truthfulness rewarded.
The firm knew and felt that the man was right, although
apparently they had lost largely by his honesty. They wished to
have him again in their employ, because they knew that they could
trust him, and never suffer through fraud and deception. They
knew that their financial interests would be safe in his custody.
They respected and honored that young man.</p>
<h2>T<span class="sc">he Lesson of Patience</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Let us learn the lesson of patience. “Behold the
husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath
long patience for it, until he receive the early and latter
rain.” Delay does not mean denial. Too often one generation sows
and another has to reap. God is a jealous God, “visiting the
iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and
fourth generation of them that hate Him.”</p>
<p class="pn">In the early years of Israel’s existence as a
separate people, God commanded them to give the land of Canaan
rest every seventh year.</p>
<p class="pn">“Six years thou shalt sow thy land, and shalt
gather in the fruits thereof: but the seventh year thou shalt let
it rest and lie still; that the poor of thy people may eat, and
what they leave the beasts of the field shall eat. In like manner
thou shalt deal with thy vineyard, and with thy olive yard.” From
the anointing of Saul to be king this law was not observed. After
four hundred and ninety years God gave the nation into captivity
for seventy years. During this period the land had rest; seventy
sabbath years to compensate for the sabbath years of which it had
been deprived. Those Israelites sowed the bitter seed of
disobedience, and their descendants had to reap the harvest in
exile and captivity.</p>
<p class="pn">A leading surgeon performed a critical operation
before his class one day. The operation was successful, as far as
his part was concerned. But he turned to the class and said: “Six
years ago a wise way of living might have prevented this disease.
Two years ago a safe and simple operation might have cured it. We
have done our best to-day as the case now stands, but Nature will
have her word to say. She does not always repeal her capital
sentences.” Next day the patient died, reaping the fruit of his
excesses.</p>
<p class="pn">Paul says: “Let us not be weary in well-doing; in
due season we shall reap if we faint not.”</p>
<p class="pn">In a recent chat with an interviewer, Mr. Edison
quite unconsciously preached a most powerful sermon on
perseverance and patience.</p>
<p class="pn">He described his repeated efforts to make the
phonograph reproduce the aspirated sound, and added: “From
eighteen to twenty hours a day for the last seven months I have
worked on this single word ‘specia.’ I said into the phonograph,
‘specia, specia, specia,’ but the instrument responded, ‘pecia,
pecia, pecia.’ It was enough to drive one mad! But I held firm,
and I have succeeded.”</p>
<p class="pn">An insurance case was brought to Daniel Webster
when he was a young lawyer in Portsmouth. Only a small amount was
involved, and a twenty-dollar fee was all that was promised. He
saw that to do his client full justice, a journey to Boston would
be desirable, in order to consult the law library. He would be
out of pocket by the expedition, and for the time he would
receive no adequate compensation. But he determined to do his
best, cost what it might. He accordingly went to Boston and
looked up the authorities, and gained the case.</p>
<p class="pn">Years after, Webster, who had meanwhile become
famous, was passing through New York. An important insurance case
was to be tried that day, and one of the counsel had suddenly
been taken ill. Money was no object, and Webster was begged to
name his terms and conduct the case.</p>
<p class="pn">“I told them,” said Mr. Webster, “that it was
preposterous to expect me to prepare a legal argument at a few
hours notice. They insisted, however, that I should look at the
papers; and this I finally consented to do. It was my old
twenty-dollar case over again; and as I never forget anything, I
had all the authorities at my fingers’ ends. The court knew that
I had no time to prepare, and were astonished at the range of my
acquirements. So you see, I was handsomely repaid both in fame
and money for that journey to Boston; and the moral is that good
work is rewarded in the end.”</p>
<p class="pn">Two men were digging in California for gold. They
worked a good deal and got nothing. At last one of them threw
down his tools and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“I will leave here before we starve”; and he
left.</p>
<p class="pn">The next day his comrade’s patience was rewarded by
finding a nugget that supported him until he made a fortune.</p>
<p class="pn">“Because sentence against an evil work is not
executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is
fully set in them to do evil. Though a sinner do evil an hundred
times, and his days be prolonged, yet surely I know that it shall
be well with them that fear God, which fear before Him; but it
shall not be well with the wicked, neither shall he prolong his
days, which are as a shadow; because he feareth not before
God.”</p>
<p class="pn">The idea that because a person does a thing in the
dark it will never be brought to light, is fatal—God says it
<i>shall</i> be brought to light. It is folly for a man who has
covered his sins to think there shall be no resurrection of them
and no final adjudication. Look at the sons of Jacob. They sold
Joseph and deceived their father. Twenty long years rolled away,
and away down to Egypt their sin followed them; for they said:
“We are guilty of the blood of our brother.” The reaping time had
come at last, for those ten boys who sold their brother.</p>
<p class="pn">I was once preaching in Chicago, and a woman who
was nearly out of her mind came to me. You know there are some
people who mock at religions meetings, and say that religion
drives people mad. It is <i>sin</i> that drives people mad. It is
the want of Christ that sinks people into despair. This was the
woman’s story: She had a family of children. One of her neighbors
had died, and her husband had brought home a little child. She
said, “I don’t want the child,” but her husband said, “You must
take it and look after it.” She said she had enough to do with
her own, and she told her husband to take that child away. But he
would not. She confessed that she tried to starve the child; but
it lingered on. One night it cried all night; I suppose it wanted
food. At last she took the clothes and threw them over the child,
and smothered it. No one saw her; no one knew anything about it.
The child was buried. Years had passed away; and she said, “I
hear the voice of that child day and night. It has driven me
nearly mad.” No one saw the act; but God had seen it, and this
retribution followed it. History is full of these things. You
need not go to the Bible to find it out.</p>
<h1><SPAN name="Same" id="Same">A MAN EXPECTS TO REAP<br/> THE SAME KIND AS HE SOWS.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Herb yielding seed after his kind, and the
tree yielding fruit . . . after his kind</i>.”—Gen. i: 12.</p>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles?</i>”—Matt. vii: 16.</p>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall
die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the
body, ye shall live</i>.”—Romans viii: 13.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER IV.</p>
<h2>A M<span class="sc">an Expects to Reap the Same Kind as He Sows</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">If I should tell you that I sowed ten acres of
wheat last year and that watermelons came up, or that I sowed
cucumbers and gathered turnips, you wouldn’t believe it. It is a
fixed law that you reap the same kind of seed you sow. Plant
wheat and you reap wheat, plant an acorn and there comes up an
oak, plant a little elm and in time you have a big elm.</p>
<p class="pn">One day, the master of Lukman, an Eastern fabulist,
said to him, “Go into such a field, and sow barley.” Lukman sowed
oats instead. At the time of harvest his master went to the
place, and, seeing the green oats springing up, asked him:</p>
<p class="pn">“Did I not tell you to sow barley here? Why, then,
have you sown oats?”</p>
<p class="pn">He answered, “I sowed oats in the hope that barley
would grow up.”</p>
<p class="pn">His master said, “What foolish idea is this? Have
you ever heard of the like?”</p>
<p class="pn">Lukman replied, “You yourself are constantly sowing
in the field of the world the seeds of evil, and yet expect to
reap in the resurrection day the fruits of virtue. Therefore I
thought, also, I might get barley by sowing oats.”</p>
<p class="pn">The master was abashed at the reply and set Lukman
free.</p>
<p class="pn">Like produces like in vegetation, and like produces
like in labor. If a man has learnt the trade of a carpenter, he
does not expect to excel as a watchmaker. If he has toiled hard
to acquire a knowledge of the law, he does not expect to practice
medicine for a livelihood. Men expect to reap in the same line as
they have learned.</p>
<p class="pn">This law is just as true in God’s kingdom as in
man’s kingdom; just as true in the spiritual world as in the
natural world. If I sow tares, I am going to reap tares; if I sow
a lie, I am going to reap lies; if I sow adultery. I am going to
reap adulterers; if I sow whisky, I am going to reap drunkards.
You cannot blot this law out, it is in force. No other truth in
the Bible is more solemn.</p>
<p class="pn">Suppose that a neighbor, whom I don’t want to see,
comes to my house and I tell my son to tell him, if he asks for
me, that I am out of town. He goes to the door and lies to my
neighbor; it will not be six months before that boy will lie to
me; I will reap that lie.</p>
<p class="pn">A man said to me some time ago, “Why is it that we
can not get honest clerks now?”</p>
<p class="pn">I replied, “I don’t know, but perhaps I can imagine
a reason. When merchants teach clerks to say that goods are all
wool when they are half cotton, and to adulterate groceries and
say they are pure, when they grind up white marble and put it
into pulverized sugar, and the clerk knows it, you will not have
honest clerks.”</p>
<p class="pn">As long as merchants teach their clerks to lie and
to misrepresent, to put a French or an English tag on domestic
goods and sell them for imported goods, so long they will have
dishonest clerks. Dishonest merchants make dishonest clerks. I am
not talking fiction, I am talking truth. It is not poetry, but
solemn prose that a man must reap the same kind of seed that he
sows.</p>
<p class="pn">This is a tremendous argument against selling
liquor. Leaving out the temperance and religious aspects of the
question, no man on earth can afford to sell strong drink. If I
sell liquor to your son and make a drunkard of him, some man will
sell liquor to my son and make a drunkard of him. Every man who
sells liquor has a drunken son or a drunken brother or some
drunken relative. Where are the sons of liquor dealers? To whom
are their daughters married? Look around and see if you can find
a man who has been in that business twenty years who has not a
skeleton in his own family.</p>
<p class="pn">I threw that challenge down once, and a man said to
me the next day, “I wasn’t at your meeting last night, but I
understand you made the astounding statement that no man had been
in the liquor business twenty years who hadn’t the curse in his
own family.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Yes,” I said, “I did.”</p>
<p class="pn">“It isn’t true,” he said, “and I want you to take
it back. My father was a rumseller, and I am a rumseller, and
the curse has never come into my father’s family or into
mine.”</p>
<p class="pn">I said, “What! two generations selling that
infernal stuff, and the curse has never come into the family! I
will investigate it, and if I find I am wrong I will make the
retraction just as publicly as I did the statement.”</p>
<p class="pn">There were two prominent citizens of the town in
the room, on whose faces I noticed a peculiar expression as the
man was talking. After he left, one of them said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Do you know, Mr. Moody, that man’s own brother was
a drunkard and committed suicide a few weeks ago and left a widow
with seven children; they are under his roof now! He was a
terrible drunkard himself until the shock of his brother’s
suicide cured him.”</p>
<p class="pn">I don’t know how you can account for it unless he
thought his brother wasn’t a relative. Perhaps he was a sort of a
Cainite, saying, “Am I my brother’s keeper?”</p>
<p class="pn">When I was a pastor of a church in Chicago we were
trying to get hold of the working-men. They used to say:</p>
<p class="pn">“Come down to the factory at dinner-time and we
will give you a chance to speak.”</p>
<p class="pn">I would ask them, “Why won’t you come to the
church?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Oh,” they would say, “you have it all your own way
there, and we can’t answer back; but come to the factory and we
will put a few questions to you.”</p>
<p class="pn">So I went down, and they made it pretty hot for me
sometimes. One of the favorite characters that they brought up
was Jacob. Many a time I have had men say, “You think Jacob was a
saint, don’t you? He was a big rascal.” Many have said they
thought Jacob wasn’t as good as Esau. Notice this fact. You read
in the Bible, “I will punish Jacob according to his doings.” This
law of retribution runs through his Life; although he was a
friend of God, a kinsman of Abraham, and was third in the line of
the covenant, yet God made Jacob reap the same kind of seed he
sowed. Some one has said that “Jacob’s misfortunes were uniformly
calculated to bring back to his recollection the picture as well
as the punishment of his faults.”</p>
<p class="pn">When Isaac in his old age wanted some venison, and
sent Esau out to get it, Jacob slipped out and took a kid from
his father’s flock, and Rebekah, his mother, cooked it; he
brought it to his old blind father and said he was Esau. The old
man recognized his voice, but he had very cunningly put the skin
of the kid on his hands and neck; so that the old man felt him
and said;</p>
<p class="pn">“The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the hands are the
hands of Esau.”</p>
<p class="pn">By this lie he got his brother’s birthright
blessing, but he paid ten thousand times more for it than it was
worth. “Who steals my purse steals trash.” A man who steals my
pocketbook is the chief sufferer, not I. When Jacob had grown to
be an old man, he lived in continual suspicion that his sons were
deceiving him. The sin of deceiving his own father bore
fruit.</p>
<p class="pn">Jacob was the great loser in this transaction. When
Esau returned he had to flee for his life. Then God met him at
Bethel. “And behold, the Lord stood above it and said, I am the
Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac: the land
whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed: and
thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth: and thou shalt spread
abroad to the west and to the east and to the north and to the
south, and in thee and in thy seed shall all the families of the
earth be blessed.</p>
<p class="pn">“And, behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in
all places whither thou goest, and will bring thee again unto
this land, for I will not leave thee, until I have done that
which I have spoken to thee of.”</p>
<p class="pn">Men will read that far in the life of Jacob and
say, “I don’t want anything more to do with a God who will deal
in grace with a man who had done so mean a thing.” My friend,
hold on. Follow him to Padanaram. He was there twenty years, and
during that time his wages were changed ten times. He worked
seven years for the lovely Rachel, and then had another woman put
upon him. Jacob had by deception obtained the blessing of the
first-born son, but Laban sarcastically reminded him, “It must
not be so done in my country to give the younger before the
first-born.” He found that Laban could drive as sharp a bargain
as he. Wherever you find a sharp, shrewd man, you will always
find that he draws just such men around him, and that he who
cheats will himself be cheated. “Birds of a feather flock
together”; blasphemers get together, and sharp, shrewd men get
together. Jacob found in Laban just such a man as himself. It was
“diamond cut diamond.”</p>
<p class="pn">Look a little further. Jacob had twelve sons, but
he loved Joseph and Benjamin more than the others because they
were the sons of his beloved Rachel. He was partial to Joseph,
and had a coat made of many colors for him. Partiality will raise
the old Adam in any family.</p>
<p class="pn">One morning Joseph, in the innocence of his heart,
tells a dream in which his father and all his brothers had bowed
down to him. Then his brothers began to plan to get him out of
the way, and when his father sent him to find them when they were
tending the flocks, they said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Now we have him; let us slay him and cast him into
a pit, and say that some beast has devoured him.”</p>
<p class="pn">Later they sold him, and took his coat of many
colors and dipped it in the blood of a kid, and, taking it to
their father, said: “This have we found; know now whether it be
thy son’s coat or no.” And he knew it and said, “It is my son’s
coat; an evil beast hath devoured him.”</p>
<p class="pn">Now notice: Jacob deceived his father with the skin
of a kid, and his sons deceived him with the blood of a kid.
Jacob lied to his father, and his sons lied to him. The lie came
home. Every lie is bound to come back to you. You cannot dig a
grave so deep but that it will have a resurrection. Tramp, tramp,
your sins will all come back.</p>
<p class="pn">“Be sure your sin will find you out.” You may think
you are very shrewd and far-sighted, and can plan and cover up,
but it is the decree of high heaven that no sin shall be covered;
God will uncover it. You cannot deceive the Almighty. Jacob found
that out. He had to reap what he sowed.</p>
<p class="pn">Again, look at David. A man said to me some years
ago:</p>
<p class="pn">“Don’t you think David fell as low as Saul?”</p>
<p class="pn">Yes, he fell lower, because God had lifted him
higher. The difference is that when Saul fell there was no sign
of repentance, but when David fell, a wail went up from his
broken heart; there was true repentance. No man in all the
Scripture record rose so high and fell so low as David. God took
him from the sheepfold and placed him on the throne. He gave him
riches and lands in abundance. He was on a pinnacle of glory, and
was loved and honored among men. But one day, you remember, David
was walking upon the roof of the king’s house, and he saw
Bathsheba, and lusted after her, and committed the awful sin of
adultery; and then, to cover up that sin, he made Bathsheba’s
husband drunk, and had him murdered. The decree came: “I will
raise up evil in thy family and the sword shall never leave thy
house.” Amnon, David’s son, commits adultery with David’s own
daughter. Absalom makes a feast for Amnon and has him murdered.
Not long after he comes with an army to drive David, his father,
from the throne, and publicly commits adultery with David’s
concubines on the roof of the king’s house; if God had not been
overruling, he would have killed his father.</p>
<p class="pn">David sowed adultery and reaped it in his own
family. He sowed murder and reaped it in his own family. I
believe that what brought the bitter wail from that father’s
heart when he said, “Oh, my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom!
Would God I had died for thee,” was the fact that these were the
wages of his own sin. From the time he fell into that sin with
Uriah’s wife until he went down to his grave, it was one billow
after another rolling over him.</p>
<p class="pn">If God did not spare David, do you think He will
spare us if we fall into sin and do not confess and turn from our
sins? If ever a man had an opportunity to cover his sins, David
had. No judge or jury dared to pronounce judgment against him.
The thing was done in the dark, but his sin found him out. Nathan
was sent across his path, and, young man, Nathan will appear to
you some day. Some messenger will smite you in the way if you do
not repent and turn from your sins. My friend, why not call on
God now as David did when he came to himself? make the same
prayer—how thankful we should be that we have the prayer! why not
make it on your knees now?</p>
<h2>D<span class="sc">avid’s Prayer for Forgiveness</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">“Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy loving
kindness: according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot
out my transgressions.</p>
<p class="pn">Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse
me from my sin. For I acknowledge my transgressions; and my sin
is ever before me.</p>
<p class="pn">Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done
this evil in thy sight; that thou mightest be justified when thou
speakest, and be clear when thou judgest.</p>
<p class="pn">Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my
mother conceive me.</p>
<p class="pn">Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts;
and in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom.</p>
<p class="pn">Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash
me, and I shall be whiter than snow.</p>
<p class="pn">Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the bones
which thou hast broken may rejoice.</p>
<p class="pn">Hide thy face from my sins, and blot out all mine
iniquities.</p>
<p class="pn">Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a
right spirit within me.</p>
<p class="pn">Cast me not away from thy presence; and take not
thy Holy Spirit from me.</p>
<p class="pn">Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; and
uphold me with thy free Spirit.</p>
<p class="pn">Then will I teach transgressors thy ways; and
sinners shall be converted unto thee.</p>
<p class="pn">Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of
my salvation; and my tongue shall sing aloud of thy
righteousness.</p>
<p class="pn">O Lord, open thou my lips; and my mouth shall shew
forth thy praise.</p>
<p class="pn">For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give
it; thou delightest not in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God
are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou
wilt not despise.”</p>
<h2>E<span class="sc">xamples From History</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">But you say you don’t believe in the Bible. Then
look at history, and see if this law is not true. Maxentine built
a false bridge to drown Constantine, but was drowned himself.
Bajazet was carried about by Tamerlane in an iron cage which he
intended for Tamerlane. Maximinus put out the eyes of thousands
of Christians; soon after a fearful disease of the eyes broke out
among his people, of which he himself died in great agony. Valens
caused about eighty Christians to be sent to sea in a ship and
burnt alive: he was defeated by the Goths and fled to a cottage,
where he was burnt alive.</p>
<p class="pn">Alexander VI. was poisoned by wine he had prepared
for another. Henry III. of France was stabbed in the same chamber
where he had helped to contrive the cruel massacre of French
Protestants. Marie Antoinette, riding to Notre Dame Cathedral for
her bridal, bade the soldiers command all beggars, cripples, and
ragged people to leave the line of the procession. She could not
endure the sight of these miserable ones. Soon after, bound in
the executioner’s cart, she was riding toward the place of
execution amidst crowds who gazed on her with hearts as cold as
ice and hard as granite. When Foulon was asked how the starving
populace was to live, he said: “Let them eat grass.” Afterward,
the mob, maddened with rage, caught him in the streets of Paris,
hung him, stuck his head upon a pike and filled his mouth with
grass.</p>
<h1><SPAN name="More" id="More">A MAN REAPS MORE THAN<br/> HE SOWS.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>But other fell into good ground, and
brought forth fruit, some a hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some
thirtyfold</i>.”—Matt. xiii: 8.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER V.</p>
<h2>A M<span class="sc">an Reaps More Than He Sows</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">If I sow a bushel, I expect to reap ten or twenty
bushels. I can sow in one day what will take ten men to reap. The
Spaniards have this proverb: “Sow a thought and reap an act. Sow
an act, and reap a habit. Sow a habit, and reap a character. Sow
a character and reap a destiny.” <i>And it takes a longer time to
reap than to sow</i>. I have heard of a certain kind of bean that
reproduces itself a thousand fold. One thistle-down which blew
from the deck of a vessel is said to have covered with thistles
the entire surface of a South Sea island. The oak springs from an
acorn, the mighty Mississippi from a little spring.</p>
<p class="pn">One glass of whisky may lead to a drunkard’s death.
One lie may ruin a man’s career. One error in youth may follow a
man all through life. Some one has said that many a Christian
spends half his time trying to keep down the sprouts of seed sown
in his young days. Unless it is held in check, the desire to
“have a drink” will become a consuming thirst; the desire to
“play a game of cards” an irresistible gambler’s passion.</p>
<p class="pn">Abraham gave up his only son at God’s bidding, and
as the fruit of that act of obedience God gave him seed as
numerous as the stars of the heaven and as the sands upon the
seashore.</p>
<p class="pn">Jacob told one lie, and his ten sons came back with
his lie multiplied tenfold. For twenty years Jacob mourned for
Joseph, supposing that he was dead. I have no doubt that night
after night he wept for Joseph, and in his dreams saw the boy
torn to pieces, and heard his cries for help. It took him a long
time to reap the harvest.</p>
<p class="pn">Israel murmured against God because of the report
of the land of Canaan brought back by the spies. Had they not to
reap a multiplied harvest? Listen: “After the number of the days
in which ye searched the land, even forty days, each day for a
year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years, and ye
shall know my breach of promise.”</p>
<p class="pn">When I made the remark in a meeting once that a man
had to reap more than he sowed, a man in front of me dropped his
head and sobbed aloud. After the meeting, a friend stepped up to
him and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“What is your trouble?”</p>
<p class="pn">Pointing to me he said, “Every word that man has
been saying is true. Four years ago I was the confidential clerk
of a firm in this city. I have reason to believe that if I had
continued as I began, I should have been in the firm now. But one
night in a saloon under the influence of drink I committed a
crime, and I was sent to the penitentiary, where I repented in
sackcloth and ashes. To-day I came back for the first time, and
went to the old house, and they ordered me out. I went to other
business-houses I was acquainted with, and received the same
treatment. I met men on the street whom I once knew, who had held
inferior places to me, and I lifted my hat, but no one returned
the bow.”</p>
<p class="pn">The man wrung his hands in agony and said, “It is
all true, it takes a longer time to reap than to sow.”</p>
<p class="pn">Do you not believe it? Ask your neighbor who has
drank up his character and reputation and home, and has brought a
blight on his family. It takes a long time to build up a
character, but you can blast it in a single hour.</p>
<p class="pn">A man died in the Columbus penitentiary some years
ago who had spent over thirty years in his cell. He was one of
the millionaires of Ohio. Fifty years ago when they were trying
to get a trunk road from Chicago to New York, they wanted to lay
the line through his farm near Cleveland. He did not want his
farm divided by the railroad, so the case went into court, where
commissioners were appointed to pay the damages and to allow the
road to be built. One dark night after the tracks were laid, a
train was thrown off the track, and several were killed. This man
was suspected, was tried and found guilty, and was sent to the
penitentiary for life. The farm was soon cut up into city lots,
and the man became a millionaire, but he got no benefit from it.
Before he died, the chaplain told me that he became a child of
God. It may not have taken him more than an hour to lay the
obstruction on the railroad, but he was over thirty years reaping
the result of that one act!</p>
<p class="pn">In the history of France we read that a certain
king wanted some new instrument to torture his prisoners with.
One of his favorites suggested that he should build a cage, not
long enough to lie down in, and not high enough to stand up in.
The king accepted the suggestion; but the first one put into the
cage was the very man who suggested it, and he was kept in it for
fourteen years. It did not take him more than a few minutes,
perhaps, to suggest that cruel device; but he was fourteen long
years reaping the fruit of what he had sown.</p>
<p class="pn">If a man could do his reaping alone, it would not
be so hard; but it is terrible when he has to make that godly
father, and that mother who loves him, or that wife and family,
reap along with him. Does not the drunkard make his wife and
children reap a bitter harvest? Does not the gambler make his
relatives reap? Does not the harlot make her parents reap agony
and shame? What a bitter enemy is sin! May God help each one of
us to turn from it at once!</p>
<p class="pn">Whenever I hear a young man talking in a flippant
way about sowing his wild oats, I don’t laugh. I feel more like
crying, because I know he is going to make his gray-haired mother
reap in tears; he is going to make his wife reap in shame; he is
going to make his old father and his innocent children reap with
him. Only ten or fifteen or twenty years will pass before he will
have to reap his wild oats; no man has ever sowed them without
having to reap them. Sow the wind and you reap the whirlwind.</p>
<p class="pn">We cannot control our influence. If I plant
thistles in my field, the wind will take the thistle-down when it
is ready, and blow it away beyond the fence; and my neighbors
will have to reap with me. So my example may be copied by my
children or my neighbors, and my actions reproduced indefinitely
through them, whether for good or evil. How many have gone to
ruin because of the sins of such men as Jacob and David and
Lot!</p>
<h2>N<span class="sc">othing But Leaves</span>.</h2>
<div style="font-size:92%">
<p class="p2">Nothing but leaves! The Spirit grieves</p>
<p class="p4">O’er years of wasted life!</p>
<p class="p2">O’er sins indulged while conscience slept,</p>
<p class="p2">O’er vows and promises unkept,</p>
<p class="p4">And reap from years of strife—</p>
<p class="p2s">Nothing but leaves! Nothing but leaves!</p>
<p class="p2">Nothing but leaves! No gathered sheaves</p>
<p class="p4">Of life’s fair ripening grain;</p>
<p class="p2">We sow our seeds; lo! tares and weeds—</p>
<p class="p2">Words, <i>idle</i> words, for earnest deeds—</p>
<p class="p4">Then reap, with toil and pain,</p>
<p class="p2s">Nothing but leaves! Nothing but leaves!</p>
<p class="p2">Nothing but leaves! Sad memory weaves</p>
<p class="p4">No veil to hide the past;</p>
<p class="p2">And as we trace our weary way,</p>
<p class="p2">And count each lost and misspent day,</p>
<p class="p4">We sadly find at last—</p>
<p class="p2s">Nothing but leaves! Nothing but leaves!</p>
<p class="p2">Ah, who shall thus the Master meet,</p>
<p class="p4">And bring but withered leaves?</p>
<p class="p2">Ah, who shall, at the Saviour’s feet,</p>
<p class="p2">Before the awful judgment-seat,</p>
<p class="p4">Lay down, for golden sheaves,</p>
<p class="p2">Nothing but leaves! Nothing but leaves?</p>
<p class="p5">—L. E. A<span class="sc">ckerman</span>.</p>
</div>
<h1><SPAN name="Ignorance" id="Ignorance">IGNORANCE OF THE SEED<br/> MAKES NO DIFFERENCE.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming,
in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and
shall come forth, they that have done good; unto the resurrection
of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of
damnation</i>.”—John v: 28, 29.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER VI.</p>
<h2>I<span class="sc">gnorance of the Seed Makes no Difference</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">Now, notice again: Ignorance of the kind of seed
makes no difference. If I think I am sowing good seed and it
happens to be bad, I shall have a bad harvest; therefore, it
becomes me to see what kind of seed I am sowing.</p>
<p class="pn">Suppose I meet a man who is sowing seed, and say:
“Hello, stranger, what are you sowing?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Seed.”</p>
<p class="pn">“What kind of seed?”</p>
<p class="pn">“I don’t know.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Don’t you know whether it is good or bad?”</p>
<p class="pn">“No, I can’t tell; but it is seed, that is all I
want to know, and I am sowing it.”</p>
<p class="pn">You would say that he was a first-class lunatic,
wouldn’t you? But he wouldn’t be half so mad as the man who goes
on sowing for time and eternity, and never asks himself what he
is sowing or what the harvest will be.</p>
<p class="pn">Father, what seed are you sowing in your family?
Are you setting your children a good or a bad example? Do you
spend your time at the saloon or the club, until you have become
almost a stranger to them? or are you training them for God and
righteousness?</p>
<p class="pn">The story is told that a man once said he would not
talk to his son about religion; the boy should make his own
choice when he grew up, unprejudiced by him. The boy broke his
arm, and when the doctor was setting it, he cursed and swore the
whole time.</p>
<p class="pn">“Ah,” said the doctor, “you were afraid to
prejudice the boy in the right way, but the devil had no such
prejudice. He has led your son the other way.” The idea that a
father is to let his children run wild! Nature alone never brings
forth anything but weeds.</p>
<p class="pn">One of Coleridge’s friends once objected to
prejudicing the minds of the young by selecting the things they
should be taught. The philosopher-poet invited him to take a look
at his garden, and took him to where a luxuriant growth of ugly
and infragrant weeds spread themselves over beds and walks
alike.</p>
<p class="pn">“You don’t call that a garden!” said his
friend.</p>
<p class="pn">“What!” said Coleridge, “would you have me
prejudice the ground in favor of roses and lilies?”</p>
<p class="pn">Have you never noticed the same thing about the
mind and the heart? Let a child be idle, and Satan will soon lead
him into mischief. He must be looked after. Those things that
will help to develop character must be selected for him, and
hurtful things must be kept out, just as industriously as the
farmer cultivates the useful products of the soil, but wages
continual war on weeds and all unwholesome growths.</p>
<p class="pn">A murderer was to suffer the penalty of his crime.
Speaking of his reckless career, he said:</p>
<p class="pn">“How could it be otherwise, when I had such bad
training? I was taught these things from my youth. When only four
years old my mother poured whisky down my throat to see how I
would act.”</p>
<p class="pn">On the morning of his execution, the wretched
mother bade good-bye to the son whom her influence had helped to
that shameful end.</p>
<p class="pn">A father started for his office early one morning,
after a light fall of snow. Turning, he saw his two year-old boy
endeavoring to put his tiny feet in his own great footprints. The
little fellow shouted: “Go on, I’se comin’, papa, I’se comin’
right in ure tracks.”</p>
<p class="pn">He caught the boy in his arms and carried him to
his mother, and started again for his office.</p>
<p class="pn">His habit had been to stop on the way at a saloon
for a glass of liquor. As he stood upon the threshold that
morning he seemed to hear a sweet voice say: “Go on, I’se comin’,
papa, I’se comin’ right in ure tracks.”</p>
<p class="pn">He stopped, he hesitated, he looked the future
squarely in the face.</p>
<p class="pn">“I cannot afford to make any tracks I would be
ashamed or sorry to have my boy walk in,” he said decidedly, and
turned away.</p>
<p class="pn">Father, mother, neighbor, are your tracks true? Are
they straight? Can you turn to any walking behind you and say:
“Follow me as I follow Christ?” Are you leading the little ones
safe to the Great Shepherd?</p>
<p class="pn"><i>The best time to sow the good seed</i> is before
Satan has scattered the tares. God has given numerous warnings
and instructions to do it. “Seek ye <i>first</i> the Kingdom of
God and his righteousness.” “Train up a child in the way he
should go.” “Provoke not your children to wrath, but bring them
up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.” If a farmer
neglects to plant in the spring-time, he can never recover the
lost opportunity: no more can you, if you neglect yours. Youth is
a seed-time, and if it is allowed to pass without good seed being
sowed, weeds will spring up and choke the soil. It will take
bitter toil to uproot them.</p>
<p class="pn">An old divine said that when a good farmer sees a
weed in his field he has it pulled up. If it is taken early
enough, the blank is soon filled in, and the crop waves over the
whole field. But if allowed to run too late, the bald patch
remains. It would have been better if the weed had never been
allowed to get root.</p>
<p class="pn">Young man, are you letting some secret sin get the
mastery over you, binding you hand and foot? It is growing. Every
sin grows. When I was speaking to five thousand children in
Glasgow some years ago, I took a spool of thread and said to one
of the largest boys:</p>
<p class="pn">“Do you believe I can bind you with that
thread?”</p>
<p class="pn">He laughed at the idea. I wound the thread around
him a few times, and he broke it with a single jerk. Then I wound
the thread around and around, and by and by I said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Now get free if you can.”</p>
<p class="pn">He couldn’t move hand or foot. If you are slave to
some vile habit, you must either slay that habit or it will slay
you.</p>
<p class="pn">My friend, <i>what kind of seed are you sowing?</i>
Let your mind sweep over your record for the past year. Have you
been living a double life? Have you been making a profession
without possessing what you profess? If there is anything you
detest it is hypocrisy. Do you tell me God doesn’t detest it
also? If it is a right eye that offends, make up your mind that
you will pluck it out; or if it is a right hand or a right foot,
cut it off. Whatever the sin is, make up your mind that you will
gain the victory over it without further delay.</p>
<p class="pn">What kind of seed are you sowing, my friend, good
seed or bad seed? There will be a harvest, and you are bound to
reap, whether you want to or not. Tell me, how do you spend your
spare time? Telling vile stories, polluting the minds of others,
while your own mind is also polluted? Do you read any literature
that makes your thoughts impure? How do you spend the Sabbath?
Boating, fishing, hunting, or on excursions? Do you think
ministers are old fogies—that the Bible belongs to the dark ages?
Tell me bow you treat your parents, and I will tell you how your
children will treat you. A man was making preparations to send
his old father to the poorhouse, when his little child came up
and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Papa, when you are old shall I have to take you to
the poorhouse?”</p>
<p class="pns">Do you never write home to your parents? They
clothed you and educated you, and now do you spend your nights in
gambling? You say to your godless companions that your father
crammed religion down your throat when you were a boy. I have a
great contempt for a man who says that of his father or mother.
They may have made a mistake; but it was of the head, not of the
heart. If a telegram was sent to them that you were down with
smallpox, they would take the first train to come to you. They
would willingly take the disease into their own bodies and die
for you. If you scoff and sneer at your father and mother you
will have a hard harvest; you will reap in agony. It is only a
question of time. There is a saying—</p>
<p class="p3 f11">“The mills of God grind slowly,</p>
<p class="p3s f11">But they grind exceeding small.”</p>
<p class="pn">The Lord Jesus said, “With what measure ye mete, it
shall be measured to you again.”</p>
<p class="pn">A man told me when I was last in London that
England had the advantage of America in one respect. I asked how.
He said:</p>
<p class="pn">“We have more respect for our laws in England than
you do in America. You don’t hang half your murderers, but all
our murderers are hanged if they can be proved guilty.”</p>
<p class="pn">I said: “Neither country hangs its worst murderers.
If my son wants to murder me, I would rather have him kill me
outright than to take five years to do it. A young man who goes
home late night after night, and when his mother remonstrates,
curses her gray hairs, and kills her by inches, is the worst sort
of a murderer.”</p>
<p class="pn">That is being done all over the country. You may
not be guilty of a sin as black and as foul as this, but I tell
you, every sin grows, and if you have sin in your heart you
cannot tell where it will land you. Nothing separates a son from
his mother or a man from his wife like sin. The grace of God
binds men together, but sin tears them apart and separates
them.</p>
<p class="pn">Come, my friend, what kind of seed are you sowing?
What will the harvest be? Will it be a black harvest, or are you
going to have a joyful harvest? If you think that, when you have
sown tares, wheat will come up, you are greatly mistaken. If you
think you can give a loose rein to your passions and lusts, and
yet have eternal life, you are being deceived. For God says, “He
that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but
he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life
everlasting.”</p>
<h2>C<span class="sc">hoose Carefully</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">I beg of you to <i>choose carefully your path</i>.
The farmer is careful in the choice of seed. He does not want bad
seed or inferior seed, because he knows that such will give a
poor crop. He looks for the best seed he can buy. If you choose
to sow to the flesh, you will have a corrupted harvest. If you
commit a sinful deed, it may land you into a dishonored
grave.</p>
<p class="pn">Choice is a solemn thing. You can make this moment
a turning-point in your life. Once during the conquest of Peru,
Pizzaro’s followers threatened to desert him. They gathered on
the shore to embark for home. Drawing his sword, he traced a line
with it in the sand from east to west. Then turning toward the
south he said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Friends and comrades, on that side are toil,
hunger, nakedness, the drenching storm, and death; on this side,
ease and pleasure. There lies Peru with all its riches; here
Panama and its poverty. Choose each man as becomes a brave
Castilian. For my part, I go south.”</p>
<p class="pn">So saying, he stepped across the line, and one
after another his comrades followed him, and the destiny of South
America was decided.</p>
<p class="pn">Napoleon was once offered a position as officer in
the Turkish artillery. He declined it; but had he chosen to
accept it, the history of Europe would have been different.</p>
<p class="pn">On your choice in spiritual things depends your
eternity. On the one side there is Christ; on the other, the
world. Between them you must choose. Do not wish to grow both
wheat and tares. Oh, choose Christ! Let there be no
half-heartedness. Give Him your whole heart. He died to redeem
you from the curse of sin, and He lives to save you from the
power of sin.</p>
<p class="pn">“No man can serve two masters.” You can not belong
to two kingdoms at once. Lord Brougham grew to be so fond of
Cannes that he sought to be naturalized as a Frenchman, but found
it was impossible to be both a peer of England and a citizen of a
French town; he must renounce the one to become the other.</p>
<p class="pn">Now this is where <i>the will</i> comes in It is
easy to follow other people’s lead, to swim with the tide; but it
requires character, moral back-bone, to stand against the current
of popular opinion and practice. During the late war a deserter
came into the Federal lines before Pittsburg. He was asked:</p>
<p class="pn">“What did you go into secession for?”</p>
<p class="pn">His answer was: “Because they all did.”</p>
<p class="pn">That reason will account for many a man’s action.
He will act according to the saying: “While you are in Rome, do
as the Romans do,” neglecting to investigate and determine
whether or not the Romans do right. If they do wrong, a man
should stand against a whole nation, if need be, like another
Daniel.</p>
<p class="pn">Almighty God set two sides before the children of
Israel, and I set them now before you. Remember, as you choose,
that your eternity is in the balance.</p>
<p class="pn">“See, I have set before thee this day life and
good, and death and evil; in that I command thee this day to love
the Lord thy God, to walk in His ways, and to keep His
commandments, and His statutes, and His judgments, that thou
mayest live and multiply; and the Lord thy God shall bless thee
in the land whither thou goest to possess it.</p>
<p class="pn">But if thine heart turn away, so that thou wilt not
hear, but shalt be drawn away, and worship other gods, and serve
them: I denounce unto you this day that ye shall surely perish,
and that ye shall not prolong your days upon the land whither
thou passest over Jordan to go to possess it.</p>
<p class="pn">I call heaven and earth to record this day against
you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and
cursing: therefore CHOOSE LIFE that both thou and thy seed may
live: that thou mayest love the Lord thy God, and that thou
mayest obey His voice, and that thou mayest cleave unto Him: for
He is thy life and the length of thy days.”</p>
<h1><SPAN name="Forgive" id="Forgive">FORGIVENESS AND<br/> RETRIBUTION.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Thou renderest to every man according to
his work</i>.”—Psalms lxii: 12.</p>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>For we must all appear before the judgment
seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his
body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or
bad</i>.”—II Cor. v: 10.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER VII.</p>
<h2>F<span class="sc">orgiveness and Retribution.</span></h2>
<p class="pn">I can imagine some one saying, “I attend church,
and have heard that if we confess our sin, God will forgive us;
now I hear that I must reap the same kind of seed that I have
sown. How can I harmonize the doctrine of forgiveness with the
doctrine of retribution? ‘All we like sheep have gone astray; we
have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on
him the iniquity of us all.’ And yet you say that I must reap
what I have sown.”</p>
<p class="pn">Suppose I send my hired man to sow wheat. When it
grows up, there are thistles mixed with the wheat. There wasn’t a
thistle a year ago. I say to my man:</p>
<p class="pn">“Do you know anything about the thistles in the
field?”</p>
<p class="pn">He says: “Yes, I do; you sent me to sow that wheat,
and I was angry and mixed some thistles with the wheat. But you
promised me that if I ever did wrong and confessed it, you would
forgive me; now I hold you to that promise, and expect you to
forgive me.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Yes,” I say, “you are quite right; I forgive you
for sowing the thistles; but I will tell you what you must do—you
must reap the thistles along with the wheat when harvest time
comes.”</p>
<p class="pn">Many a Christian man is reaping thistles with his
wheat. Twenty years ago you sowed thistles with the wheat and are
reaping them now. Perhaps it was an obscene story, the memory of
which keeps coming back to distress you, even at the most solemn
moments. Perhaps some hasty word or deed that you have never been
able to recall.</p>
<p class="pn">I heard John B. Gough say that he would rather cut
off his hand than have committed a certain sin. He didn’t say
what it was, but I have always supposed it was the way he treated
his mother. He was a wretched, drunken sot in the gutter when his
mother died; the poor woman couldn’t stand it, and died of a
broken heart. God had forgiven him, but he never forgave himself.
A great many have done things that they will never forgive
themselves for to their dying day. “At this moment,” said one,
“from many a harlot’s dishonored grave there arises a mute appeal
for righteous retribution. From many a drunkard’s miserable home,
from heartbroken wife, from starving children, there rings up a
terrible appeal into the ears of God.”</p>
<p class="pn">I believe that God forgives sin fully and freely
for Christ’s sake; but He allows certain penalties to remain. If
a man has wasted years in riotous living, he can never hope to
live them over again. If he has violated his conscience, the
scars will remain through life. If he has soiled his reputation,
the effect of it can never be washed away. If he shatters his
body through indulgence and vice, he must suffer until death. As
Talmage says, “The grace of God gives a new heart, but not a new
body.”</p>
<p class="pn">“John,” said a father to his son, “I wish you would
get me the hammer.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Now a nail and a piece of pine board.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Here they are, sir.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Will you drive the nail into the board?”</p>
<p class="pn">It was done.</p>
<p class="pn">“Please pull it out again.”</p>
<p class="pn">“That’s easy, sir.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Now, John,” and the father’s voice dropped to a
lower key, “pull out the nail hole.”</p>
<p class="pn">Every wrong act leaves a scar. Even if the board be
a living tree the scar remains.</p>
<p class="pn">For our worst sins there is plenteous redemption.
My sin may become white as snow, and pass away altogether, in so
far as it has power to disturb or sadden my relation to God. Yet
our least sins leave in our lives, in our characters, in our
memories, in our consciences, sometimes in our weakness, often in
our worldly position, in our reputation, in our success, in our
health, in a thousand ways leave their traces and consequences.
God will not put out His little finger to remove these, but lets
them stop.</p>
<p class="pn">Let no man fancy that the Gospel which proclaims
forgiveness can be vulgarized into a mere proclamation of
impunity. Not so. It was to <i>Christian men</i> that Paul said,
‘Be not deceived, God is not mocked: whatsoever a man soweth,
that shall he also reap.’ God loves us too well not to punish His
children when they sin, and He loves us too well to annihilate
(were it possible) the <i>secondary</i> consequences of our
transgressions. The two sides of the truth must be
recognized—that the deeper and (as we call them) the
<i>primary</i> penalties of our evil, which are separation from
God and the painful consciousness of guilt, are swept away; and
also that other results are allowed to remain, which, being
allowed, may be blessed and salutary for the transgressors.</p>
<p class="pn">MacLaren says, “If you waste your youth, no
repentance will send the shadow back upon the dial, or recover
the ground lost by idleness, or restore the constitution
shattered by dissipation, or give back the resources wasted upon
vice, or bring back the fleeting opportunities. The wounds can
all be healed, for the Good Physician, blessed be His name! has
lancets and bandages, and balm and anodynes for the deadliest;
but scars remain even when the gash is closed.”</p>
<p class="pn">God forgave Moses and Aaron for their sins, but
both suffered the penalty. Neither one was permitted to enter the
promised land. Jacob became a “prince of God” at the ford of
Jabbok, but to the end of his days he carried in his body the
mark of the struggle. Paul’s thorn in the flesh was not removed,
even after most earnest and repeated prayer. It lost its sting,
however, and became a means of grace.</p>
<p class="pn">Perhaps that is one reason why God does not remove
these penalties of sin. He may intend them to be used as tokens
of His chastening. “Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth.” And if
the temporal consequences were completely removed we would be
liable to fall back again into sin. The penalty is a continual
reminder of our weakness, and of the need of caution and
dependence upon God.</p>
<p class="pn">One night in Chicago at the close of a meeting in
the Y. M. C. A. rooms, a young man sprang to his feet and said:
“Mr. Moody, would you let me speak a few words?”</p>
<p class="pn">I said, “Certainly.”</p>
<p class="pn">Then for about five minutes he pleaded with those
men to break from sin. He said:</p>
<p class="pn">“If you have anyone who takes any interest in your
spiritual welfare, treat them kindly, for they are the best
friends you have. I was an only child, and my mother and father
took great interest in me. Every morning at the family altar
father used to pray for me, and every night he would commend me
to God. I was wild and reckless and didn’t like the restraint of
home. When my father died my mother took up the family worship.
Many a time she came to me and said, Oh, my boy, if you would
stay to family worship I should be the happiest mother on earth;
but when I pray, you don’t even stay in the house. Sometimes I
would go in at midnight from a night of dissipation and hear my
mother praying for me. Sometimes in the small hours of morning I
heard her voice pleading for me. At last I felt that I must
either become a Christian or leave home, and one day I gathered a
few things together and stole away from home without letting my
mother know.</p>
<p class="pn">“Some time after I heard indirectly that my mother
was ill. Ah, I thought, it is my conduct that is making her ill!
My first impulse was to go home and cheer her last days; but the
thought came that if I did I should have to become a Christian.
My proud heart revolted and I said: ‘No, I will not become a
Christian.’”</p>
<p class="pn">Months rolled by, and at last he heard again that
his mother was worse. Then he thought:</p>
<p class="pn">“If my mother should not live I would never forgive
myself.”</p>
<p class="pn">That thought took him home. He reached the old
village about dark, and started on foot for the home, which was
about a mile and a half distant. On the way he passed the
graveyard, and thought he would go to his father’s grave to see
if there was a newly-made grave beside it. As he drew near the
spot, his heart began to beat faster, and when he came near
enough, the light of the moon shone on a newly-made grave. With a
great deal of emotion he said:</p>
<p class="pns">“Young men, for the first time in my life this
question came over me—who is going to pray for my lost soul now?
Father is gone, and mother is gone, and they are the only two who
ever cared for me. If I could have called my mother back that
night and heard her breathe my name in prayer, I would have given
the world if it had been mine to give. I spent all that night by
her grave, and God for Christ’s sake heard my mother’s prayers,
and I became a child ot God. But I never forgave myself for the
way I treated my mother, and never will.”</p>
<div style="font-size:92%">
<p class="p2">Where is my wandering boy to-night-—</p>
<p class="p3">The boy of my tenderest care,</p>
<p class="p2">The boy that was once my joy and light.</p>
<p class="p3s">The child of my love and prayer?</p>
<p class="p2">Once he was pure as morning dew,</p>
<p class="p3">As he knelt at his mother’s knee;</p>
<p class="p2">No face was so bright, no heart more true,</p>
<p class="p3s">And none was so sweet as he.</p>
<p class="p2">O, could I see you now, my boy,</p>
<p class="p3">As fair as in olden time,</p>
<p class="p2">When prattle and smile made home a joy,</p>
<p class="p3s">And life was a merry chime.</p>
<p class="p2">Go for my wandering boy to-night,</p>
<p class="p3">Go, search for him where you will;</p>
<p class="p2">But bring him to me with all his blight,</p>
<p class="p3s">And tell him I love him still.</p>
</div>
<p class="pn">My dear friends, God may forgive you, but the
consequences of your sin are going to be bitter even if you are
forgiven.</p>
<p class="pn">A few years ago I was preaching in Chicago on that
text, “Arise, go up to Bethel and dwell there.” After the meeting
a man asked to see me alone. I went into a private room. The
perspiration stood in beads on his forehead. I said:</p>
<p class="pn">“What is it?”</p>
<p class="pn">He replied: “I am a fugitive from justice. I am in
exile, in disguise. The government of my state has offered a
reward for me. I have been hidden here for months. They tell me
there is no hell, but it seems as though I have been in hell for
months.”</p>
<p class="pn">He had been a business man, and having, as he
thought, plenty of money, he forged some bonds, thinking that he
could give his check any time and call them in, but he got beyond
his depth and fell.</p>
<p class="pn">He said, “I have been here for six months. I have a
wife and three children, but I cannot write to them or hear from
them.” The poor man was in terrible mental agony.</p>
<p class="pn">I said, “Why don’t you go back and give yourself up
and face the law, and ask God to forgive you?”</p>
<p class="pn">He said, “I would take the first train to-morrow
and give myself up, except for one thing. I have a wife and three
children; how can I bring the disgrace upon them?”</p>
<p class="pn">I, too, have a wife and three children, and when he
said that, the thing looked very different.</p>
<p class="pn">Ah! if we could do our own reaping, it would not be
so bitter, but when we make our little children or the wife of
our bosom, or our old gray-haired mother, or our old father reap
with us, isn’t the reaping pretty bitter? I don’t fear any
pestilence or any disease as much as I fear sin. If God will only
keep sin out of thy family, I will praise Him in time and in
eternity. The worst enemy that ever crossed a man’s path is
sin.</p>
<p class="pn">If a man comes to me for advice I always try to put
myself in the place of the one to whom I am talking, and then to
give the best advice I can. I said to this man,</p>
<p class="pn">“I don’t know what to say, but it is safe to
pray.”</p>
<p class="pn">After I had prayed, I urged him to pray; but he
said:</p>
<p class="pn">“If I do, it means the penitentiary.”</p>
<p class="pn">I asked him to come the next day at twelve. He met
me at the appointed hour, and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“It is all settled; if I ever meet the God of
Bethel I must go through the prison to meet Him, and God helping
me, I will give myself up. I am going back, and I should like to
have you keep quiet until I give myself over into the hands of
the law; then you may hold me up as a warning. Little did I think
when I started out in life that I was coming to this! Little did
I think when I married a girl from one of the first families in
the state that I should bring such disgrace on her.”</p>
<p class="pn">At four o’clock that afternoon he went back to
Missouri. He reached home a little past midnight, and spent a
week with his family. In a letter he said that he didn’t dare let
his children know he was there, lest they should tell the
neighbor’s children. At night he would creep out and look at his
children, but he couldn’t take them in his arms or kiss them. Oh,
there is the result of sin! Would to God we could every one of us
just turn from sin to-day!</p>
<p class="pn">One day, when this man was in hiding, he heard his
little boy say:</p>
<p class="pn">“Mamma, doesn’t papa love us any more?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Yes,” his mother replied. “Why do you ask?” “Why,”
the little fellow said, “he has been gone so long and he never
writes us any letters and never comes to see us.”</p>
<p class="pn">The last night he came out from hiding and took a
long look at those innocent, sleeping children; then he took his
wife and kissed her again and again, and leaving that once happy
home he gave himself up to the sheriff. The next morning he
pleaded guilty, and was sent to the penitentiary for nineteen
years. I believe that God had forgiven him, but he couldn’t
forgive himself, and he had to reap what he sowed. I pleaded with
the governor for mercy, and the man was pardoned.</p>
<p class="pn">Some time ago I was telling this story, and some
one doubted it, but the governor who pardoned him happened to be
in the meeting, and rose and said, “I pardoned that man myself.”
The governor pardoned him, and he lived a few years, but from the
time he committed that sin he had to reap. Oh, reader, I plead
with you, overcome your besetting sin, whatever it is.</p>
<h2>F<span class="sc">uture Punishment</span>.</h2>
<p class="pn">I can imagine some one saying, “I am glad Mr. Moody
hasn’t tried to scare us about the future state. I agree with him
that we shall receive all our reward and punishment in this
life.”</p>
<p class="pn">If you think I believe that, you are greatly
mistaken. One sentence from the lips of the Son of God in regard
to the future state has forever settled it in my mind. “<i>If ye
die in your sins, where I am, there ye cannot go</i>.” If a man
has not given up his drunkenness, his profanity, his
licentiousness, his covetousness, heaven would be hell to him.
Heaven is a prepared place for prepared people. What would a man
do in heaven who cannot bear to be in the society of the pure and
holy down here?</p>
<p class="pn">It is not true that all reward and punishment is
reaped in this life. Look how many crimes are committed, and the
perpetrators are never caught. It often happens that the worst
criminal uses his experience to escape detection, while a more
innocent hand is captured. A man ruins a girl. Does he always
reap punishment here? No. He holds his head as high as ever in
society, while the unfortunate victim of his lust, who, perhaps,
was innocently beguiled into sin by him, becomes an outcast. His
punishment, however is, at the latest, only adjourned to another
world.</p>
<h2>E<span class="sc">ternity</span>!</h2>
<div style="font-size:92%">
<p class="p1">Oh, the clanging bells of Time!</p>
<p class="p2">Night and day they never cease;</p>
<p class="p1">We are wearied with their chime,</p>
<p class="p2">For they do not bring us peace.</p>
<p class="p1">And we hush our breath to hear,</p>
<p class="p2">And we strain our eyes to see</p>
<p class="p1">If thy shores are drawing near—</p>
<p class="p4s">Eternity! Eternity!</p>
<p class="p1">Oh, the clanging bells of Time!</p>
<p class="p2">How their changes rise and fall,</p>
<p class="p1">But in undertone sublime,</p>
<p class="p2">Sounding clearly through them all,</p>
<p class="p1">Is a voice that must be heard,</p>
<p class="p2">As our moments onward flee,</p>
<p class="p1">And it speaketh aye one word—</p>
<p class="p4s">Eternity! Eternity!</p>
<p class="p1">Oh, the clanging bells of Time!</p>
<p class="p2">To their voices loud and low,</p>
<p class="p1">In a long, unresting line</p>
<p class="p2">We are marching to and fro;</p>
<p class="p1">And we yearn for sight or sound,</p>
<p class="p2">Of the life that is to be,</p>
<p class="p1">For thy breath doth wrap us round—</p>
<p class="p4s">Eternity! Eternity!</p>
<p class="p1">Oh, the clanging bells of Time!</p>
<p class="p2">Soon their notes will all be dumb,</p>
<p class="p1">And in joy and peace sublime</p>
<p class="p2">We shall feel the silence come;</p>
<p class="p1">And our souls their thirst will slake,</p>
<p class="p2">And our eyes the King will see,</p>
<p class="p1">When thy glorious morn shall break—</p>
<p class="p4">Eternity! Eternity!</p>
<p class="p6">—E<span class="sc">llen</span> M. H. G<span class="sc">ates</span></p>
</div>
<h1><SPAN name="Warning" id="Warning">WARNING.</SPAN></h1>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Take heed that no man deceive
you</i>.”—Matt. xxiv: 4.</p>
<p class="pn f11">“<i>Christ in you, the hope of glory, whom we
preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom;
that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus</i>.”—Col.
i: 27, 28.</p>
<p class="pch">CHAPTER VIII.</p>
<h2>WARNING.</h2>
<p class="pn">To give a warning is a sign of love. Who warns like
a mother, and who loves like a mother? Your mother, perhaps, is
gone, and your father is gone. Let me take the place of those who
have departed, and lift up a warning voice. With Paul I would
say: “I write not these things to shame you, but as my beloved
sons I warn you.”</p>
<p class="pn">A pilot guiding a steamer down the Cumberland saw a
light, apparently from a small craft, in the middle of the narrow
channel. His impulse was to disregard the signal and run down the
boat. As he came near, a voice shouted: “Keep off, keep off.”</p>
<p class="pn">In great anger he cursed what he supposed to be a
boatman in his way. On arriving at his next landing he learned
that a huge rock had fallen from the mountain into the bed of the
stream, and that a signal was placed there to warn the coming
boats of the unknown danger. Alas! many regard God’s warnings in
the same way, and are angry with any who tell them of the rocks
in their course. They will understand better at the end.</p>
<p class="pn">The children of Israel had no truer friend than
Moses. They never went astray but he warned them; and trouble
never came upon them except when his warnings were unheeded.
Elijah was the best friend Ahab had.</p>
<p class="pn">I wish I could warn as Jesus Christ did. As he went
up Mount Olivet, His heart seemed to be greatly moved and He
cried, “Oh, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets,
and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have
gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her
chickens under her wings, and ye would not!” Did He not warn?</p>
<p class="pn">If a friend of mine were about to invest in a
worthless silver-mine, do you think I would be true to him if I
did not caution him against it? And do I show less love for him
because I warn him against actions that will bring a harvest of
misery and despair?</p>
<p class="pn">“Whosoever heareth the sound of the trumpet, and
taketh not warning; if the sword come, and take him away, his
blood shall be upon his own head; he heard the sound of the
trumpet, and took not warning; his blood shall be upon him. But
he that taketh warning shall deliver his soul.”</p>
<p class="pn">Be sure that the seed you are sowing is good seed.
Sow to the flesh, and a good harvest will be impossible. Good
seed and bad seed cannot both succeed if allowed to grow
together. One prospers at the expense of the other; and the
likelihood is that the bad will get the upper hand. Weeds always
seem to grow and spread more rapidly than good seed.</p>
<p class="pn">The longer they live, the firmer hold the weeds are
gaining. Delay is dangerous. In the year 1691, a proclamation was
sent through the Highlands of Scotland, that every one who had
been guilty of rebellion against the constituted government would
be pardoned, if, before the last day of the year, he laid down
his arms and promised to cease his rebellion. Many did so; but
one chief named Maclan put off submission from week to week,
always intending to submit before it was too late. But when, at
last, he started to accept pardon, he was hindered by a great
storm and did not arrive until the time had expired. The day of
pardon had passed and the day of vengeance had come; Maclan and
his men were put to death.</p>
<p class="pn">Hence, it is wise to exterminate the weeds at once.
And beware of remaining longer in sin. The deeper you sink, the
more bitter will be your restoration. Why continue to sear you
conscience, and sow the seeds of keener remorse? No matter how
painful it may be, break with sin at once. Severe operations are
often necessary, for the skilful surgeon knows that the disease
cannot be cured by surface applications. The farmer takes his hoe
and his spade and his axe, and he cuts away the obnoxious
growths, and burns the roots out of the ground with fire.</p>
<p class="pn">If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and
cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy
members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast
into hell. And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and
cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy
members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast
into hell.</p>
<p class="pn">Remember that the tares and the wheat will be
separated at the judgment day, if not before. Sowing to the flesh
and sowing to the spirit inevitably lead in diverging paths. The
axe will be laid at the root of the trees, and every tree that
bringeth not forth good fruit will be hewn down and cast into the
fire. The threshing-floor will be thoroughly purged, and the
wheat will be gathered into the garner, while the chaff will be
burned with unquenchable fire.</p>
<p class="pn">Beware of your habits. A recent writer has said:
“Could the young but realize how soon they will become mere
walking bundles of habits, they would give more heed to their
conduct while in the plastic state. We are spinning our own
fates, good or evil, and never to be undone. Every smallest
stroke of virtue or of vice leaves its never so little scar. The
drunken Rip Van Winkle, in Jefferson’s play, excuses himself for
every fresh dereliction by saying, ‘<i>I won’t count this
time</i>.’ Well, he may not count it, and a kind heaven may not
count it, but it is being counted none the less. Down among his
nerve cells and fibres the molecules are counting it, registering
and storing it up, to be used against him when the next
temptation comes. Nothing we ever do is, in strict scientific
literalness, wiped out. Of course, this has its good side as well
as its bad one. As we become permanent drunkards by so many
separate drinks, so we become saints in the moral sphere, and
authorities and experts in the practical and scientific spheres,
by so many separate acts and hours of work.”</p>
<p class="pn">Beware of temptations. “Lead us not into
temptation,” our Lord taught us to pray: and again he said,
“Watch and pray, lest ye enter into temptation.” We are weak and
sinful by nature, and it is a good deal better for us to pray for
deliverance rather than for strength to resist when temptation
has overtaken us. Prevention is better than cure. Hidden under
the soil may be seeds of passion and wickedness that only wait
for a favorable opportunity to shoot up.</p>
<p class="pn">Young men pretend that it is necessary to see both
sides of life. What foolishness! I am not called upon to put my
hand in the fire to see if it will burn.</p>
<p class="pn">A steamboat was stranded on the Mississippi river,
and the captain could not get her off. Eventually a hard-looking
fellow came on board and said:</p>
<p class="pn">“Captain, I understand you want a pilot to take you
out of this difficulty?”</p>
<p class="pn">The captain said, “Are you a pilot?”</p>
<p class="pn">“Well, they call me one.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Do you know where the snags and sand-bars
are?”</p>
<p class="pn">“No sir,”</p>
<p class="pn">“Well, how do you expect to take me out of here if
you don’t know where the snags and sand-bars are?”</p>
<p class="pn">“I know where they ain’t!” was the reply.</p>
<p class="pn">Begin to sow the good seed while the children are
young, and thus prevent the weeds getting a start. Satan does not
wait till they grow up, and no more should we.</p>
<p class="pn">There are many fishing nets so constructed as to
allow none but full grown fish to be caught, the immature
escaping. Satan has none such. He catches the weakest and
youngest.</p>
<p class="pn">“We must care for our boys or the devil will,” said
a young Sabbath School teacher.</p>
<p class="pn">“The devil will care for them anyway,” answered the
old superintendent: “The devil will not neglect them even though
we do.”</p>
<p class="pn">It is a master-piece of the devil to make us
believe that children can not understand religion. Would Christ
have made a child the standard of faith if He had known that it
was not capable of understanding His words? It is far easier for
children to love and trust than for grown-up persons, and so we
should set Christ before them as the supreme object of their
choice.</p>
<p class="pn">Do not neglect opportunities. Napoleon used to say:
“There is a crisis in every battle—ten or fifteen minutes—on
which the issue of the battle depends. To gain this is victory;
to lose it is defeat.”</p>
<p class="pn">Beware of sin. Its wages are D<span class="sc">eath</span>, and (as has been said) the wages have never
been reduced. It deceives men as to the satisfaction to be found
in it, the excuses to be made for it, and the certainty of the
punishment that must follow. If it was not deceitful, it would
never be delightful. It comes in innocent guise, and saps the
life blood, depriving one of the moral capacity to do good. Canon
Wilberforce walking in the Isle of Skye, saw a magnificent eagle
soaring upward. He halted and watched its flight. Soon he
observed something was wrong. It began to fall, and presently lay
dead at his feet. Eager to know the reason of its death, he
examined it and found no trace of gunshot wound; but he saw in
its talons a small weazel, which, in its flight, drawn near its
body, had sucked the life blood from the eagle’s-breast. Such is
the end of every one who persistently clings to sin.</p>
<p class="pn">Do not be deceived by the attractiveness of this
world. It will cheat you and destroy you. “The Redoubtable” was
the name of a French ship that Lord Nelson spared twice from
destruction; and it was from the rigging of that very ship that
the fatal ball that killed him was fired. The devil administers
many a sin in honey; but there is poison mixed with it. The
truest pleasures spring from the good seed of righteousness—none
else are profitable.</p>
<p class="pn">Beware of ignorance and indifference. You cannot
afford to neglect your soul. There is too much at stake. I never
knew an idle man to be converted. Until he wakes up and realizes
his lost and hopeless condition, God Almighty will not reach down
and take him by the hand. A ship was once in great danger at sea,
and all but one man were on their knees. They called to him to
come and join them in prayer, but he replied:</p>
<p class="pn">“Not I; it’s your business to look after the ship.
I’m only a passenger.”</p>
<p class="pn">Remember that mere knowledge is not enough. Many a
man knows the gospel precepts and promises by heart who is not
touched by saving grace. Knowledge is often useless or positively
harmful, and what we want is to know God’s will and observe it.
Even good resolutions are not enough. No doubt they are helpful
in their way, but the Bible does not lead us to believe that they
can save a man. It does not say: “As many as <i>resolved to
receive</i> Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God,
even to them that <i>resolve to believe</i> on His name”; it
says: “As many as <i>received</i> Him * * * <i>believe</i> on His
name.”</p>
<p class="pn">Be watchful! There is constant need to be on guard
lest we fall into sin. “Set a double guard upon that point
to-night,” was the command of a prudent officer when an attack
was expected. At the best there will be some tares among the
wheat. We, all of us, carry around with us material that Satan
can work on. Paul said:</p>
<p class="pn">“For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh)
dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how
to perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I
would, I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I do. Now
if I do that I would not, it is no more I that do it, but sin
that dwelleth in me. I find then a law, that, when I would do
good, evil is present with me. For I delight in the law of God
after the inward man: but I see another law in my members,
warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into
captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched
man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?”</p>
<p class="pn">Blessed be God, he could add: “I thank God through
Jesus Christ our Lord.”</p>
<p class="pn">The issue that God has placed before us is
clear-cut: “He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life;
and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the
wrath of God abideth on him.” There is no middle course—“he that
believeth”—“he that believeth not.” He leaves us to choose, and
the responsibility rests upon ourselves.</p>
<p class="pn">It may cost you many a sacrifice, and wrench many a
heart-string to choose aright, but I plead with you to take the
decisive step now. The salvation of your soul outweighs all other
considerations. Will you imperil your eternity for the sake of
some present gain or pleasure? Bow your head and say: “Heavenly
Father, I now choose to come unto Thee as a poor, suppliant
sinner. I believe on Thy Son, whom Thou didst send to be my
Savior; and trusting in the merits of His blood, which was shed
as a propitiation for my sins, I rest in the assurance of sins
forgiven.”</p>
<p class="pn">There is hope for the vilest sinner. Wherever weeds
grow, there is the possibility of good seed growing. The greater
your need, the more welcome will you be to Jesus. The proud and
the self-confident He knoweth afar off, but the faintest whisper
of the contrite sinner commands His attention.</p>
<p class="pn">Our Lord gave us a simple test to help us in our
choice. He said, “Every tree is known by its fruit. A good tree
bringeth not forth corrupt fruit, neither doth a corrupt tree
bring forth good fruit.” Many of us have not the time or ability
to unravel intricate arguments, or grasp profound doctrines.
Certain phases of truth are often inaccessible to the ordinary
mind. But the test Christ gave is short and practical, and within
the reach of any one of us.</p>
<p class="pn">“Have you ever heard the gospel?” asked a
missionary of a Chinaman, whom he had not seen in his mission
before.</p>
<p class="pn">“No,” he replied, “but I have seen it. I know a man
who used to be the terror of his neighborhood. He was a bad opium
smoker and dangerous as a wild beast; but he became wholly
changed. He is now gentle and good and has left off opium.”</p>
<p class="pn">Apply this test to infidelity. What are its fruits?
Crime follows in its track. Society becomes disorganized.
Chastity, honesty and the other virtues are underminined. The
whole life is blighted.</p>
<p class="pn">The following brief extract from a letter written
in an english prison, is a tremendous arraignment of that system
of belief which does not acknowledge God:</p>
<p class="pn">“I am one of thirteen infidels. Where are my
friends? Four have been hanged. One became a Christian. Six have
been sentenced to various terms of imprisonment, and one is now
confined in a cell just over my head, sentenced to imprisonment
for life.”</p>
<p class="pn">With all reverence we may apply this text to our
Lord Himself. We have His own authority for it. On one occasion
when the jews cavilled at His actions, He said: “The works which
the Father hath given me to finish, the same works that I do,
bear witness of me, that the Father hath sent me.” On another
occasion they gathered round Him and asked, “How long dost thou
hold us in suspense? If thou be the Christ, tell us plainly.”
Jesus answered: “I told you, and ye believed not. The works that
I do in my Father’s name, they bear witness of me. * * * If I do
not the works of my Father, believe me not. But if I do, though
you believe not me, believe the works: that ye may know and
believe that the Father is in me, and I in Him.” Well might the
ruler Nicodemus say, “Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come
from God: for no man can do these miracles that thou doest,
except God be with him.” And Peter: “Ye men of Israel, hear these
words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you by
miracles and wonders and signs, which God did by Him in the midst
of you, as ye yourselves know.”</p>
<p class="pn">What are the fruits of extravagance, of pride, of
covetousness? And on the other hand, of prayer, of fearing God
and doing His commandments? What are the fruits of heathenism?
Look at Africa and China and India and the islands of the seas
with their gods of wood and stone. What must be the intelligence
and moral sense of people who will worship such things?</p>
<p class="pn">Even the best of non-Christian religions must
always prove a failure. It cannot be denied that many of the
highest virtues are enjoined in the writings of heathen
philosophers. How could it be otherwise? Morality is universal as
humanity, and it is only to be expected that here and there some
thinker should pierce beyond the average and read deeper into the
foundation-truths of ethics. This fact only proves, in my mind,
the intimate connection between the human and the divine.
Christianity never claimed to introduce a brand-new system of
morality.</p>
<p class="pn">Referring to another matter, Christ said: “Think
not that I am come to destroy the law and the prophets: I am not
come to destroy, but to fulfill.” And so the fulness and
perfection of His own system could not fail to embrace many
principles that had already appeared in heathen morality. But in
the hands of our Savior they became broader and brighter and
fuller of power and meaning.</p>
<p class="pn">Will these non-Christian religions bear the test?
Stoicism was perhaps the noblest of the Greek philosophies, but
it rapidly developed into utter cynicism, and culminated in the
asserted impossibility of attaining to virtue. Epicureanism
started out fairly well, but its founder was not dead before it
earned for itself the opprobrious epithet that it was a doctrine
worthy only of swine. Look at Buddhism, with its filthy
ceremonies and cruel tortures. All these systems exhibit a
conflict between theory and practice. They failed in their
object, because they approached the difficulty on the wrong side.
They trimmed away at the branch, not recognizing that the tree
was rotten at heart.</p>
<p class="pn">Christianity alone will stand the test of raising
man out of the pit. And how does it propose to do it? Not by
minimizing the danger and need. It says: “The whole head is sick,
and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto
the head there is no soundness in it; but wounds and bruises and
putrefying sores.” It demands as <i>the first necessity</i> a new
birth, regeneration by the Holy Spirit. “Ye <span class="sc">must</span> be born again.” It does not place sanctification
before justification, but having first imparted life from above,
it throws around the redeemed sinner the love of Christ and the
fellowship and guidance of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p class="pn">A converted Chinaman once said: “I was down in a
deep pit, half sunk in the mire, crying for some one to help me
out. As I looked up I saw a venerable, grayhaired man looking
down at me.</p>
<p class="pn">“‘My son,’ he said, ‘this is a dreadful place.’</p>
<p class="pn">‘Yes,’ I answered, ‘I fell into it; can’t you help
me out?’</p>
<p class="pn">‘My son,’ was his reply, ‘I am Confucius. If you
had read my books and followed what they taught, you would never
have been here.’</p>
<p class="pn">‘Yes, father,’ I said, ‘but can’t you help me
out?’</p>
<p class="pn">As I looked he was gone. Soon I saw another form
approaching, and another man bent over me, this time with closed
eyes and folded arms. He seemed to be looking to some far-off
place.</p>
<p class="pn">‘My son,’ Buddha said, ‘just close your eyes and
fold your arms, and forget all about yourself. Get into a state
of rest. Don’t think about anything that can disturb. Get so
still that nothing can move you. Then, my child, you will be in
such delicious rest as I am.’</p>
<p class="pn">‘Yes, father,’ I answered, ‘I will when I am above
ground. Can’t you help me out?’ But Buddha, too, was gone.</p>
<p class="pn">I was just beginning to sink into despair when I
saw another figure above me, different from the others. There
were marks of suffering on His face. I cried out to Him:</p>
<p class="pn">‘O, Father! can you help me?’</p>
<p class="pn">‘My child,’ He said, ‘what is the matter?’</p>
<p class="pn">Before I could answer Him, He was down in the mire
by my side. He folded His arms about me and lifted me up; then He
fed me and rested me. When I was well He did not say: Now, don’t
do that again, but He said: ‘We will walk on together now’; and
we have been walking together until this day.”</p>
<p class="pn">This was a poor Chinaman’s way of telling of the
compassionate love and help of the Lord Jesus.</p>
<p class="pn">I was reading, some time ago, of a young man who
had just come out of a saloon, and had mounted his horse. As a
certain deacon passed on his way to church, he followed and
said,</p>
<p class="pn">“Deacon, can you tell me how far it is to
hell?”</p>
<p class="pn">The deacon’s heart was pained to think that a young
man like that should talk so lightly; he passed on and said
nothing. When he came round the corner to the church, he found
that the horse had thrown that young man, and he was dead. So you
may be nearer the Judgment than you think.</p>
<p class="pn">When I was in Switzerland many years ago, I learned
some solemn lessons about the suddenness with which death may
overtake us. I saw several places where land-slides had occurred,
completely destroying whole villages; or where avalanches had
swept down the mountain sides, leaving destruction in their wake.
A terrible calamity happened in the year 1806 to a village,
called Goldau, situated in a fertile valley at the foot of the
Rossberg mountain. The season had been unusually wet, and this
had made the crops all the more abundant.</p>
<p class="pn">Early one morning a young peasant, passing the
cottage of an old man whom he knew, saw him sitting at the door
in the full rays of the sun.</p>
<p class="pn">“Good morning, neighbor,” said he; “we are likely
to have a fine day.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Time we should have a fine day,” growled the old
man; “it has been wet enough lately.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Have you heard the report?” said the other. “Those
who were up the earliest this morning declare they saw the top of
old Rossberg move.”</p>
<p class="pn">“Indeed! like enough,” said the old man. “Mark my
words, and I have often said it before; I shan’t live to see it,
but those who are now young will not live to be as old as I am
before the top of yonder mountain lies at its foot.”</p>
<p class="pn">“I hope it will not be in my day,” said the young
man; and he passed on, little thinking how near the prediction
was to a fulfilment, and that the ripening fields of corn and the
abundant clusters of luscious grapes would never be gathered; but
so it was.</p>
<p class="pn">The springs of water in the mountain had been
overcharged by the excessive rains, and these, in forcing their
way to the surface and toward the valley below, had loosened the
masses of rounded rock which had been cemented together by a kind
of clay, of which material the upper part of the mountain was
formed. These huge masses at length gave way and fell headlong
into the valley, burying the entire village and about eight
hundred of its inhabitants beneath their weight.</p>
<p class="pn">But what became of the old man? Alas! he did not
escape. He believed the mountain would fall, but he did not think
the fall was so near. He was sitting in his cottage, composedly
smoking his pipe, when the young man came hastily back, and
crying out:</p>
<p class="pn">“<i>The mountain is falling!</i>”</p>
<p class="pn">The old man composedly rose from his seat, looked
out at his door, and saying:</p>
<p class="pn">“I shall have time to fill my pipe again,” went
back into his house.</p>
<p class="pn">The young man was saved. The old man perished
before he had left his cottage, it and its owner were crushed,
and swept to the bottom of the valley.</p>
<p class="pn">I was in the north of England, in 1881, when a
fearful storm swept over that part of the country. A friend of
mine, who was a minister at Eyemouth, had a great many of the
fishermen of the place in his congregation. It had been very
stormy weather, and the fishermen had been detained in the harbor
for a week. One day, however, the sun shone out in a clear blue
sky; it seemed as if the storm had passed away, and the boats
started out for the fishing-ground. Forty-one boats left the
harbor that day. Before they started, the harbor-master hoisted
the storm signal, and warned them of the coming tempest. He
begged of them not to go; but they disregarded his warning, and
away they went. They saw no sign of the coming storm. In a few
hours, however, it swept down on that coast, and very few of
those fishermen returned. There were five or six men in each
boat, and nearly all were lost in that dreadful gale. In the
church of which my friend was pastor, I believe there were three
male members left.</p>
<p class="pn">Those men were ushered into eternity because they
did not give heed to the warning. I lift up the storm-signal now,
and warn you to escape from the coming judgment!</p>
<p class="pn">There was a man living near one of the great trunk
roads a number of years ago, who one night saw that a landside
had obstructed the track. He saw by the clock that he hadn’t time
to reach the telegraph office to stop the night express, so he
caught up a lantern and started up the track, thinking he might
be in time to stop the train. As he ran he fell and put out his
light. He hadn’t another match, and he could hear the train
coming in the distance. He didn’t know what to do. As a last
resort he stood on the bank, and the moment the train come
abreast of him he hurled the lantern with all his might at the
engineer. The engineer saw that something must be wrong, took the
warning, whistled down the brakes, and stopped the train within a
few yards of the obstruction.</p>
<p class="pn">I throw the broken lantern at your feet now! I beg
you to take warning, make a clear work of sin, cost what it may.
Take warning! You must either give up sin, or give up the hope of
heaven. Put yourself in the way of being blessed. Make up your
mind now that by the grace of God you will obtain the
mastery.</p>
<p class="pn">“Let the wicked forsake his way, and the
unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord,
and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will
abundantly pardon.”</p>
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