Chapter 3
A SHOUT, A CRY, OR A SONG
"And Moses turned, and went down from the mount, and the two tables
of the testimony
were in his hand: the tables were written on both their sides; on the one
side and on the other were
they written.
"And the tables were the work of God, and the writing was the writing
of God, graven
upon the tables.
"And when Joshua heard the noise of the people as they shouted, he
said unto Moses, There
is a noise of war in the camp.
"And he said, It is not the voice of them that shout for mastery, neither
is it the voice of
them that cry for being overcome: but the noise of them that sing do I hear.
"And it came to pass, as soon as he came nigh unto the camp, that he
saw the calf, and the
dancing: and Moses' anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his hands,
and brake them
beneath the mount." -- Exodus 32:15-19
Moses had a rendezvous with God on the rugged summit of Mount Sinai.
As the Children of
Israel watched their great leader as he made his way up the mountain, they
saw fire from heaven
fall to the summit of the mount. Then they saw great clouds of black smoke
swirling back towards
the heavens, and they felt the old mount itself tremble and shake under
the mighty impact and
terrific weight of Deity.
When Moses was delayed in his coming back to them, the children of
Israel grew restless
and they demanded that Aaron give them gods to worship. Aaron, in one of
the weakest moments of
his entire career, commanded them to bring their golden earrings to him;
and when they had done
so, he melted the gold and fashioned a golden calf. Before the calf he built
an altar, and the
children of Israel rose up and sang and danced and said one to another,
"These be thy gods, oh
Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt."
When the interview was over, Moses started down the mountain and was
met by Joshua.
As the two men continued their way down the mountain, Joshua suddenly said,
"Listen, Moses, it
sounds like the noise of war in the camp." Moses cupped his hand to an ear,
and a puzzled look
swept across his face as he said, "It is not the voice of them that shout
for mastery, neither is it the
voice of them that cry for being overcome." And then a look of utter disappointment
and disgust as
he said, "It's just the noise of them that sing that I hear."
Then Moses, in the full fury of anger, lifted the two tablets upon
which God himself had
written, and hurled them to broken bits on the jagged rocks below. What
had caused such wrath?
Was it simply anger? No. It was simply the last full measure of loathsome
disgust for a people that
had been so faithless and so trifling in the one great trust that God had
placed in their hands.
If Moses could stand at some vantage point and look upon the work of
the Church today --
could listen to the weak little platitudes that come from the pulpits of
the land, and the tepid little
praises that come up from the pews of the land, and could witness that tragic
shifting of emphasis
from personal soul winning to the multitudinous social activities of the
ordinary church of today --
real candor would compel him to say, "It is not the voice of them that shout
for mastery, neither is
it the voice of them that cry for being overcome ... it is just the noise
of them that sing that I hear."
There has been that shifting of emphasis from actual soul winning to
countless other
activities, until the Church in many areas has become little more than just
another social service
center. And when any church becomes nothing more than that, it might as
well close its doors and
forget about the high business of real religion. God has already written
"Ichabod" across the doors
of that church, for the glory has definitely departed.
The Church has one primary task, one primary duty, one primary responsibility,
and that is
to win souls to Christ! Soul winning and soul winning alone must ever have
first priority in the
program of the Church!
If we believe soul winning to be the first task and fundamental responsibility
of the Church,
then we will readily realize that, regardless of what else the Church is
doing and how well it is
doing it, regardless of how else the Church is succeeding, if it fails in
its first and central task then
it is failing at the job -- and it is neither shouting, nor crying, but
just singing.
I. THE CHURCH OF TODAY LACKS THE SHOUT OF MASTERY
One of the most obvious facts of our day -- and it is just as tragic
as it is obvious -- is that
the Church of today is failing to meet the tremendous impact and challenge
of this age.
Dr. Paul Hutchinson, editor of the Christian Century, after a world
tour said: "The most
casual survey of what is going on in the contemporary world will disclose
new stirrings of interest
in religion. To those who carefully examine this new stirring, however,
a paradox immediately
presents itself. At the very time when man has new respect for the claims
of spiritual interpretation
of life, the institutional forms of religion are plagued by spreading weakness.
"Not for a hundred years," says Dr. Hutchinson, "has so much importance
been granted the
values championed by the churches or less authority conceded to the churches
themselves. The
paradox seems to be worldwide. A report adopted by the Church of England
declared that Britain
is a 'pagan nation.' When a survey was made in Tokyo concerning religious
importance, an
overwhelming majority of the capital's inhabitants answered that religion
is indispensable -- but an
equally overwhelming majority acknowledged that they never enter temples
or shrines or churches.
Similar answers would probably be obtained in almost any large city in the
world except in
Russia.
"Institutional religion," concludes Dr. Hutchinson, "has little influence
over the masses and
over contemporary social orders and agencies. Such is the universal paradox
-- man under such
terror of the future that he is turning with new openness of mind to a spiritual
interpretation of life,
while the churches are less and less able to command the active loyalty
of the masses."
In his usual penetrating analysis, Canon Bernard Iddings Bell arrives
at the same
conclusion, and gives a similar indictment when he says, "The Christian
church has today for the
most part ceased to have any influence worth mentioning over human affairs,
particularly on men
who think and lead."
The church world meets in Amsterdam and makes high pronouncements.
But the world
rolls on with much the same hard, cynical attitude as was expressed by Stalin:
"And how many
divisions does the Pope have?"
A defeated world needs a victorious Church. A fearful world needs a
courageous and
triumphant Church. But the Church today is neither victorious nor triumphant
-- it is just as
fear-ridden and frustrated and perplexed and worried as the world around
it.
Is there a shout of mastery coming from the churches in America? Some
say yes. And to
substantiate their claim they point to the fact that church membership in
America is at its highest
peak, both in numbers and in percentage of population. But as Dr. Trueblood
says: "Christianity
would have a much better chance in most communities if there were only twelve
real Christians
instead of the thousands of church members on the rolls."
Church membership in America has never been higher, and the influence
and effectiveness
of the Church have never been lower than at the present time. What real
difference would it make
if everyone in America belonged to some church -- if church membership didn't
mean any more to
the unchurched millions than it means to millions whose names are already
on the rolls?
While it is true that there are over seventy-nine million church members
in America, it is
also true that less than half that number ever attend church with any semblance
of regularity
whatsoever. It has become impossible for many churches to have prayer
meetings or Sunday night
services. There are thousands of churches in America that not only have
not had a revival in years,
but do not have enough spiritual fervor even to try to have one. Some churches
that do bestir
themselves for an evangelistic campaign find that in too many instances
their campaign for souls
degenerates into just another campaign for church members.
It is only when Zion "travails" that souls are born into the Kingdom.
But the majority of
churches today are not only unwilling to travail; they are not even vigorous
enough to conceive the
need for souls. Consequently their churches are never maternity wards --
they are just morgues.
While the churches in America are marking time, the devil is on the
march. According to
recent statistics there are over fifty million drinkers in America, and
6 per cent of them are
confirmed alcoholics. There are more young women selling beer and liquor
as bar maids in
saloons and taverns and cafes and night clubs than are enrolled in all the
colleges and universities
in the United States. Over $13,000,000,000 spent on liquor in the United
Sates during 1948 -- or
an average of ninety dollars for every man, woman, and child in America.
In the same year, the
American people smoked an average of seven cigarettes a day for every man,
woman, and child in
the United States. Add to all of this the infamous divorce rate and the
climbing crime costs and the
increasing godlessness and secularism of the American people, and then begin
to contemplate the
tragic failure of the churches in America.
Oh, in this day of confused sounds, clamoring voices, and shifting
convictions, men and
women desperately need to hear the note of certainty, the note of triumph,
the note of mastery! But
instead of hearing the blowing of the bugles and the beating of the drums
for victorious advance,
the men and women of this day, if they hear anything at all from the Church,
hear nothing more than
muted violins and clarinets. No shout of victory. No shout of mastery. No
shout of triumph. Just the
muffled, muted sounds of mournful singing!
II. THE CHURCH TODAY LACKS THE CRY OF BURDENED HEARTS
It would seem that the challenging conditions confronting the Church
today would literally
compel Christians to their knees in prayer. But even more sad than the lack
of the shout of mastery
is the lack of the cry of the children of God. If there could be heard across
America that cry of
soul-agony over the lost, there would be more basis for hope that the Church
would rise to meet
the challenge of this crucial age.
One reason for the lack of the cry of God's people is that too many
of God's people are
sound asleep -- resting, relaxing, and slumbering! In the most crucial moment
in the life of Jesus
before He went to the cross, the three most trusted disciples were not interested
or concerned
enough to stay awake, and finally Jesus had to say to them, "Sleep on and
take your rest."
In this most crucial hour in the life of the Church of Christ, Jesus
is depending on His
followers to be awake and busy at their first task. But instead of being
awake and working, too
many professed followers are sound asleep -- taking their rest, while the
world goes to hell. There
are some, of course, who attend church and go through the routines of their
profession. But there
are people in America who have been known to walk and talk in their sleep!
Slumbering Saints
God's people everywhere are too drowsy! There are too many slumbering
saints in every
church! A spirit of rest and relaxation has settled down over many professing
Christians like some
mist or pall or smoke screen, until vast thousands of "good" church members
are sound asleep.
One reason why so many of God's children are sleeping today is that
they feel they have
carried the burden long enough; they have supported the work long enough;
they have shouldered
the responsibility long enough; and now it is time for the burden to be
carried by younger
shoulders. They have retired from active service. Yes, their names are still
on the church roll.
They still profess. They still attend. But they have really retired from
active duty.
There is never a safe time in the Christian life to begin to take it
easy or to rest or to feel
that one has done enough. The only way anyone can coast for very long is
downhill. Jesus did not
say, "Occupy until you get tired," or, "Occupy until you think you have
done enough." Jesus did
say, "Occupy till I come."
Other Christians feel that, since night is upon us, we had better rest
until things settle down
to normalcy, and then we can begin to work and promote the Kingdom. But
God never commanded
His people to mark time. God did command His people to "go forward!" The
fact that our day is
dark and the blackness of night will soon be upon us should not cause us
to rest or to slumber or to
take it easy, but that very darkness should be the greatest impetus in the
world for us to get down
on our knees and begin to pay the price for the winning of souls to Christ.
Let us be done with singing, "O happy rest, sweet happy rest!" and
begin singing, "We'll
work till Jesus comes; we'll work till Jesus comes -- and then be gathered
home."
Contagion of Complacency
Another reason for the great number of slumbering saints is this: the
contagion of
complacency. It is only human to look at others and say: "Well, if he can
profess so much and do
so little for the church ... if she can stand and testify like that and
do no more for God and the
church than she does, I'm going to take it a little easier myself. I can't
do it all." And finally that
attitude catches on until there are today entire congregations slumbering
and sleeping and resting
and relaxing and taking it easy -- while the world, in their neighborhood,
goes to hell!
Of course one of the most tragic aspects of being asleep is that we
don't like to be
awakened. It is so much easier to go through the religious routines, it
is so much easier to keep
faith with techniques of private devotions, than it is to fall on our knees
and tarry until God pours
His Spirit out upon us so that our complacency is shattered and we are compelled
to go out and
witness and win for Christ.
One can attend Sunday school and be complacent. One can attend the
services of the church
and be complacent. One can teach a Sunday-school class or serve on the church
board and be
complacent. But no one can be complacent and win a soul to Christ. It
takes a burdened soul to do
that! But carrying burdens is hard work! It involves crying and agonizing
and fasting.
Marred by Mediocrity
Another reason for the lack of the cry of the children of God is that
too many of God's
children have at last become satisfied with mediocrity. They plan and pray
and promote for the
mediocre -- and they are not disappointed. If God should pour out His Spirit
in a really
supernatural way, they would be surprised -- and chagrined.
A district superintendent was asking one of his pastors about a recent
revival. The pastor
said that they had enjoyed a good revival. "How many prayed through?" asked
the superintendent.
"Oh," the pastor answered, "I think it was three or four." The superintendent
raised up in his chair
and said, "Man, you didn't have a revival at all -- you might have had a
meeting, but you didn't
have a revival!"
Oh, the tragedy of becoming satisfied with the ordinary -- when God
is anxious and willing
to pour out the extraordinary and the supernatural! We have a right to plan
for and pray for and
expect supernatural results. We're serving a supernatural God!
This world with its tensions and pressures and fears and sins desperately
needs a Church
that is moved and stirred and burdened. But the world will never hear the
"cry" of the Church so
long as the Church is sleeping or complacent or content.
III. THE CHURCH TODAY IS FILLED WITH THE NOISE OF "SINGING"
With nothing to shout about, and not enough spiritual urgency to cry,
it is only natural that
the Church has fashioned beautiful golden calves -- to sing about! Golden
calves can be so
glittering -- and so blinding! Success in other tasks, regardless of how
brilliant or how glorious,
can never compensate for the failure in the first task -- that of winning
men and women to Jesus
Christ.
The Golden Calf of Financial Security
One golden calf that has been erected in the effort to hide the failure
in winning souls is that
golden calf of financial security. There are churches across America that
made a real impact for
God in their community when they were small and struggling. But now that
God has blessed them
in a far grander way than they ever thought possible, with more moneys flowing
through the church
treasuries than they ever imagined possible, they have folded their arms
and taken the attitude, "We
have now arrived." But when any individual or any church takes that attitude,
it is absolutely
impossible for God to use that individual or that church in carrying out
His redemptive will.
God himself has a word to individuals and churches that have "arrived."
He says, "Thou
sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and
knowest not that thou art
wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
Great numbers of churches today are giving obeisance to the collection
plate. Even in their
reports, they smooth over their failure in winning men and women to Christ
by reciting figures of
the tremendous increase in finances flowing through the church treasuries.
The guide showing a
visitor to the Vatican the great wealth of the church smilingly said, "The
church today doesn't have
to say with Peter, 'Silver and gold have we none.'" "No," said the visitor,
"and neither can the
church today say to poor, crippled souls, 'Rise up and walk'!"
The Church is not an institution competing with other businesses on
the basis of finance.
The Church is a soul-saving institution! And when it becomes something else,
it is no longer the
Church that has Christ's blessings, and it is no longer the Church that
can carry out His Great
Commission!
Golden calves have even been known to emerge from burnt mortgages.
Some churches
when they had the tension and challenge of paying off their church debt
had to pray and believe
God, and thus there was power in all the phases of the church work. But
now that the debt is paid
off and the challenge is lifted, the church no longer prays as much, or
believes as much -- or
accomplishes as much!
Why do we pay and overpay budgets? Because of external pressure? Because
of the
competitive angle? No. We pay and overpay the budgets because of the vision
of world need -- the
cries of the countless millions who are still in heathen darkness pleading,
"Come over and help
us."
Why do we want churches and want them paid for? To provide a comfortable
place for us
to come and worship? To add to the church's prestige in the community? No.
The reason we want
them and want them for our own is that we might have a place, in our community,
where broken
and sin-weary souls might come and hear the gospel and where they can kneel
and find Christ and
go out with new hearts to live transformed, radiant Christian lives.
It doesn't matter how much money is passing through the church treasuries,
or how much we
pay or overpay our budgets, or how nice or how big our church building is
-- if we fail to win men
to Christ, we're failing at the job! We're failing Christ, and we're failing
humanity! And we're not
shouting, nor crying -- we're just "singing"!
The Golden Calf of Sunday-School Statistics
Another golden calf that has been erected in an effort to hide the
failure in actually winning
men is that golden calf of Sunday-school statistics. The first question
usually asked concerning the
church is this: "How many are you averaging in Sunday school?" A legitimate
question, certainly.
And, in a way, an indication of the promotional abilities of the church.
How many thousands today are giving obeisance to that glittering calf
of Sunday-school
statistics! Bowing down at the golden calf of numbers. Prostrating themselves
before the shrine of
the Sunday-school register. Worshipping statistics! How glittering that
calf can be! How blinding
it can be! How deceiving it can be!
Certainly we strive for great numbers in the Sunday school. But wait!
Why do we want
them? Why do we seek great numbers in our Sunday-school classes? To increase
the prestige of
the teacher or officer? To place higher up on the list in the district paper?
To have something to
talk about? The reason we want them is to win them! It does not take a burden
to get people to
come to Sunday school. Many outside pressures can do it. Awards, or competition,
or prestige can
get them there. But it does take a burden and a passion for souls to win
them after they get there!
O teacher, the contests and the socials and the parties and the wiener
roasts and the
showers and the rallies are not ends in themselves. The objective, the purpose,
and the reason for
it all is that those pupils might be won to Christ. Only a great, overwhelming,
all-consuming love
for the souls of those pupils can give sustained romance to the Sunday-school
task.
Regardless of how many hundreds we are averaging a Sunday in Sunday
school, if we are
not winning a consistent percentage of those scholars to Jesus Christ, we
are failing God and we
are cheating the pupils, and we are not shouting, nor crying -- we are just
"singing"!
The Golden Calf of Numbers in the Altar
Another golden calf erected in the effort to hide the failure in actually
winning men is the
golden calf of great numbers in the altar. We can never have too many "seekers"
in the altar. But
we can easily have too many sentimentalists. One comes to the altar because
of heart hunger; the
other comes because of habit. One comes because he is convicted; the other
comes because he is
coaxed. One comes because he is burdened; the other comes because he is
begged. One comes
because he wants salvation; the other comes because he wants sympathy. God
give us more
seekers!
Why do we really want great numbers in the altar? Why do we want the
altar "lined"?
Because of the pressure of personal failure? Because we know that a revival
should have seekers?
The reason we want them is to win them -- to Christ! They are not won
when they kneel at
the altar. They have just been reached. And there is a vast difference between
reaching men and
winning men. To be sure, souls must be reached to be won. But the motive
and goal are not merely
to reach them, but to win them. We should never be satisfied until our "contacts"
become
"conversions."
It does not take real burden or strong crying to reach men, but it
does take real burden to
pray and believe until the heart is melted and the soul begins to meet conditions
and to look up
with real faith, believing God for salvation. That is the reason why many
will come down to the
altar to pray with seekers, but few will tarry in real intercessory prayer
until victory comes. They
are concerned with the reaching, yes; but the winning is far too hard and
demanding a work.
Regardless of how many we "reach," regardless of how many we have in
our altars, if we
are failing actually to "win" them to Christ in real experience, we are
failing in our first task, and
we are not shouting, nor crying -- we're just "singing."
The Golden Calf of the Nonessential
Still another golden calf erected to hide the failure in the first
task of winning men is that
golden calf of the nonessential. It is the devil's business to get the energies
of the Church diverted
from its first task. The devil is unconcerned about the Church's success
in the secondaries. He is
eternally and ruthlessly opposed to the Church's success in its first task
-- that of winning men and
women to Christ!
The devil is pleased when he can successfully divert the attention
of Christians from the
great task of winning men -- regardless of what their attention is focused
upon. If he can sidetrack
Christians on some tangent, get them out on some spur line, he is successfully
defeating God's first
purpose for His Church and God's great plan for redeeming men.
And yet many good, sincere Christians are today worshipping the golden
calf of the
nonessential. Their energies are not going out in fighting sin and the devil;
their energies are being
dissipated in the marginal skirmishes with "appearances." The golden calf
of nonessential is not so
glittering as the others, because it is fully clothed! -- but it is just
as deadly to the cause of winning
men and women to Christ.
Oh, if all real Christians would quit wasting their energies on the
side issues and the
marginal and the external and the nonessential, what an advance could be
made against the devil
and sin in the actual winning of men and women to Christ!
A young couple knelt at the altar and were gloriously converted. The
mother of the young
lady was a worshiper at the shrine of the nonessential. She discouraged
the young couple and said
if they really had prayed through they would do this and that, and she was
so naggingly persistent
that finally the young lady and her husband gave up and are now lost to
God and the church. The
mother has never been able to win her husband or any of her children to
Christ -- she has been too
busy worshipping the golden calf of the nonessential.
Regardless of what we put on, or what we put off -- if we're failing
actually to win souls to
Christ, then we're failing God and we're failing souls, and we're not shouting,
nor crying -- we're
just "singing"!
Smash the Golden Calves
Oh, that today we might take these golden calves that are so glittering
and so blinding and
so deceiving and do with them exactly as Moses did with the golden calf
of his day -- literally
smash them! Destroy them! Obliterate them! Then quit our singing and fall
on our knees and begin
crying! If we will do that, it won't be long until we can really begin shouting!
All genuine shouting
must be preceded by genuine crying. Could that be one reason why there is
so little real shouting
today -- because there is so little real crying? One must earn one's right
to shout!
In one of our campaigns in Portland, Oregon, there was a small, elderly
woman who was
heavily burdened for several of her loved ones -- one man in particular
who was a backslider. The
first Saturday of the meeting she felt that God wanted her to fast for this
man's salvation. No one
asked her to do it. She didn't pledge to do it. God told her to fast, so
she started fasting.
She was past seventy years of age and very frail in body, and her family
and friends urged
her to stop fasting; but she went right on -- Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
I felt myself
that she should break her fast because she was so frail, but I said nothing.
Thursday and Friday and
Saturday she fasted, and the man had not knelt at the altar even one time.
But that little Christian
woman held on -- fasting and praying.
Finally, on Sunday morning, that man was in the service and when the
altar call was given
he was the first one to kneel. It wasn't long until he gloriously prayed
through. Need I say that that
little Christian woman shouted that Sunday morning? No one will ever forget
the sight of her as she
walked up and down in front of the altar with her handkerchief waving, her
face aglow, and her
heart pouring itself out in praise and gratitude to God for answered prayer.
Yes, she shouted. But
she had earned her right to shout.
We look back nineteen hundred years and defame Nero because he stood
on his palace
balconies -- fiddling while Rome burned. And yet we professing Christians
of this twentieth
century are standing on the balconies of our time -- merely singing -- while
our world is on fire! O
God! Drive us to our knees. May our eyes be wet with strong crying over
the lost souls
everywhere about us!
God Still Lives
Throughout history, when God's people have humbled themselves and have
begun to cry
out to God from the weakness of their hearts, God has heard their cries
and has answered by giving
mighty deliverance and mastery and triumph.
When the children of Israel were a slave nation under the tyranny of
Pharaoh, they began to
cry unto God out of the weakness of their hearts; and God, in His great
strength and power, heard
their cries and gave them a mighty deliverance and the shout of victory.
When the children of Israel stood with the Red Sea in front of them
and Pharaoh's armies in
back of them, they fell down and cried to God; and God, in His vast power,
brought them through
the Red Sea victoriously -- so triumphantly that the shouts of victory could
be heard even above
the cries and cursings of Pharaoh's drowning armies.
When Gideon and his three hundred found themselves confronted with
vast numbers of
well-equipped and well-trained soldiers, they cried unto God for direction
and help; and God, in
His mighty power, heard their cries of weakness and gave them a military
victory that still amazes
and mystifies. The shouts of victory from Gideon's three hundred could be
heard above the
agonized cries of the hundred and twenty thousand dying barbarians. Gideon's
God still lives
today!
When the hundred and twenty in the Upper Room prayed out of the weakness
of their hearts
-- confronted as they were by their pagan world and obstacles that seemed
insurmountable -- God
heard their cries of weakness and surrender and gave to them a power so
real and so tremendous
that they became "fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an
army with banners." And the
shouts of their victory were heard even above the clatter and crash
of their frenzied world. The
God of Pentecost still lives today!
When Wesley and his small band were faced with ecclesiastical ridicule
and howling
mobs, and when defeat seemed inevitable, they cried out of the weakness
of their hearts to God;
and God, in His great power, heard their cries and gave to them such marvelous
victory that they
were able to stem the tide of ungodliness in their generation and become
a mighty movement that
for scores of years preached full salvation around the world.
When Dr. P. F. Bresee and those early pioneers who burned their way
across this nation --
when they were gradually squeezed out of the larger fellowships and were
forced to go out under
the stars to preach their mighty truth -- they prayed out of the weakness
of their hearts until God, in
His might and power and strength, heard their cries and gave to them the
shout of victory that is
now reverberating in churches across the face of America and in twenty-three
lands beyond the
sea. Glory! Bresee's God still lives today!
And if God can find a few people today who will tear down their golden
calves and quit
their singing and fall upon their knees and cry out of their burdened souls,
He will give glorious
victory today! And the pagan, secular, materialistic, worldly people everywhere
will again hear
the shouts of victory from the children of God!
Let each one of us then be so fired with that sense of holy mission
that we cry and pray and
trust and witness and win so that in the days beyond, if Jesus tarries,
men can say that our day of
challenge and opportunity was not wasted in singing, but that we cried and
prayed and tarried until
the shout of mastery was again heard in the land.