
"He That Winneth Souls is Wise"
(As preached at Richmond, Indiana, 1922)
"He that winneth souls is wise." -- Proverbs 11:30
There are vast multitudes in this enlightened land of ours who are in open
rebellion against God. "We will not have this man, Jesus Christ, to reign
over us," is the heartless cry that winds its flight from office, shop,
store, factory, home, college, and the busy mart of trade. Lots of people are
willing, my friends, to accept whatever they want from the Bible. They would
like to codify it; they would like to sit down and eliminate that which
isn't pleasant to them to receive and which they don't like to adjust their
lives to, and insert something they would like. You take it as it is given, and
if you don't, you will go to Hell. God almighty won't adjust His principles
to suit the opinions of anybody. The Lord has made His revelation known to
the world, and it is up to you and not to the Lord. He has done all He ever
will or can do to save this world. He has given sunshine and rain and ground; it
is up to you to plant the seed, to plow it or starve to death. God has done
His part; He will do no more.
Church and Business Fail Because They Have No Definite Aim
They say they will give us the Sermon on the Mount, or the Decalogue, minus
the things that they don't like. They say, "We have no king but self"; and
the only law that multitudes of people recognize is the law of their own
desires and ambitions. They do the thing because they personally want to do
it, and they do not give a rap what influence it has upon their character of
what influence their conduct has upon others who are looking to them for an
example. All the law they know is the law of their own desire. That's all!
"And so our Lord is now rejected; And by the world disowned. By the
many still neglected, But by
the few enthroned."
That is true of the denominations that are represented in these meetings,
too. Out in a western state four years ago a report was made that during
that year (there were 300 churches of that denomination in that state and
they spent $300,000 for current expenses) they held 46,000 meetings and
during the year there were just 87 men and women converted and joined those
churches on confession of faith. I suppose that is this safe and sane
evangelism that I hear so much about. It wouldn't take the world long to get
into Hell if that is all there is to it! In Chicago just a few years ago the
church made a report. There was an average of five who joined each church on
confession of faith -- some more, some less -- but it averaged five for a
year.And the last year 7,5000 churches of all denominations made reports and
not one accession that year on confession of faith. All right, look at it!
Just face the conditions and you will see why probably I talk in a way that
grates on your nerves, but you will realize that I am only telling you the
truth.
Now, what is lacking? Why these meager results? Why the expenditure of so
much energy and time and money? It is because there is not a definite effort
put forth to persuade a definite person to accept a definite Saviour at a
definite time -- and that time is NOW. That is the whole thing in a
nutshell, boiled down to one sentence. That is why we are not making
headway.
But wait! This element of failure is not simply confined to the church.
Ninety-nine per cent of the businessmen fail. A banker told me in Chicago
that forty years ago there were one hundred business houses, any one of
whose paper would have passed without protest, and today only four of those
houses were named. The rest of them have been ruined, gone into bankruptcy,
gone out of business. There were four of them after forty years and they all
passed without protest at any bank.
Only about three men out of a thousand succeed. Seventy five percent of the
lawyers who graduate from law school fail to make good. Sixty five percent
of the physicians fail to make good. The failure of these three classes is
due largely to the lack of definite, systematic work. No political battle is won
on the stump. It is not the spellbinders from the rear end of a special
train who turn the vote. Sometimes a bleary-eyed, bloated-faced,
bull-necked, whiskey-soaked, tinhorn politician will win more votes than the
most silver-tongued spellbinder who ever spouted the principles from the rear
end of a special train.
Now to give you an illustration. New York State used to be the pivot state in
the presidential election. It isn't anymore. They don't care how New York
goes anymore. But it used to be "As goes New York." Everybody knows that the
State of New York is Republican. Everybody knows that the city of New York
is Democratic. In the State the Republican party figures that it must have about
125,000 or 150,000 majority to overcome the Democratic majority in New York.
So when Ben Harrison and Grover Cleveland ran for President in 1888, they
went to work. They took the city, divided it, and subdivided it until they
got it down into blocks. They had a man over every section and every
subdivision, and they had the leading businessmen of the city in those places.
Those men used to meet every day. They used to pound this into them: "You are
not responsible for who is elected; you are not responsible for who goes to
Washington, Harrison or Cleveland. You are not responsible who carries this
state, this city; but you are responsible to know every man in your block
and to know how he votes, and if he votes." They kept pounding that one thing
into the men -- "Know the block! Know the block!"
They watched the town, and when the votes were counted, Ben Harrison went to
Washington instead of Grover Cleveland. That was the way they put it over.
Now that is what Jesus Christ said. In other words, men will work harder to
win in business and politics than the church will in religion. I am
disgusted with them all! You think you can just open your church door and
ring a church bell and people will come. That has been going on long enough.
The church has got to wake up and do something.
You simply think that because the calendar announces that it is the Lord's
day that that is all you have to do, and that if you put on a little better
dress and look a little more pious that that is serving the Lord, and you go
to the Devil six days in the week.
I know of a varnish company in this country that pays a man ten thousand
dollars a year to look nice. He is a good dresser; he is a good mixer. He
has a smile that doesn't come off. He never tries to sell varnish, but he
paves the way for the fellow who comes from the firm to sell the varnish to the
big railroads and the big institutions that buy it. All he does is just sort
of win their friendship and make it easy for the guy who does sell the
varnish. They pay him ten thousand a year just for that.
That is the way people do in order to succeed in business. What is the church
doing to win people for Christ? I bet alot of you don't know whether or not
people right around in your neighborhood are Christians. We never do
anything; no wonder the world is going to the Devil.
Soul Winning, the Most Effective Work in the World
Another thing; it is the simplest and most effective work in the world.
Andrew wins Peter; Peter turns around and wins three thousand at Pentecost.
Years ago a man went into a shoe store in Boston and found a young fellow
selling shoes and boots. He talked to him about Jesus Christ and won him for
Christ. The name of that little boy was Dwight L. Moody. Do you know the
name of the man who won Moody for Christ? I don't suppose there are five
people in this audience who do. His name was Kimball. God used Kimball to win
Moody, but He used Moody to win the multitude.
Andrew didn't have sense enough to win the multitude, but Peter did. That is
the way God works! Oh, I get so sick of people being dead! You have sat
around so long you have mildewed.
The Earl of Shaftsbury, who gave sixty-five years of his life working among
the costermongers, the fallen, the submerged and mudsills of London, was won
to Jesus Christ by a servant girl in his home. He was wavering, going down
the line with the gang of young bloods when his father died. This servant
girl, a godly girl, said "You inherit all the honor and all the wealth that goes
along with the name of Shaftsbury, but are you going to a premature grave
because of the way you are going, the life you are living, and bring
disgrace upon your father's memory and your mother's?" The Earl of
Shaftsbury, when he was eighteen years old, fell on his knees and gave his
heart to Jesus Christ. When he died, his funeral was the greatest ever held
in England except when a king or queen had died.
See what she did? She won him to the Lord and then the Lord took him and used
him to win the multitudes. Charles G. Finney, after learning the name of a
man or a woman, invariably asked, "Are you a Christian?"
The Soul-Winning Work of John Vassar
John Vassar was one of the greatest personal workers of the nineteenth
century. He never preached a sermon but that he did personal work. He was a
wonder. One time he was going to help a preacher in a town. This preacher
met Vassar at the Depot. Walking down to the hotel they went past a
blacksmith shop. He said to Vassar, "There's a blacksmith in there. He's got a
great drag with his crowd but he never comes to church. If we could only win
him, then he would win scores in his class." Vassar asked, "Have you talked
to him?" "Oh, we are afraid. He will cuss any preacher who comes near him."
He said, "Wait a minute until I take my turn." Vassar went in. The man was
shoeing a mule -- that isn't a good time to talk religion to a man, take it
from me! But Vassar had good sense and waited until the fellow was through
and had disarmed his prejudice. In fifteen minutes he had him on his knees
weeping like a child. He went up to the hotel where he was to be entertained .
He registered, then strolled around, looking for somebody to speak to. He
went into a little reception room and there sat a finely dressed lady. He
walked up to her and said, "Lady, are you a Christian?" She said, "Yes, I
am." "I beg your pardon," he said, "I didn't mean that kind. I mean, have you
been born again?"
"Oh," she said, "we've gotten over that here in Boston." "Well," he said,
"lady, you've gotten over Jesus Christ in Boston, too. You've gotten over
God." He talked with her until her prejudice was disarmed and tears trickled
down her cheeks; then he said, "May I pray for you?" She said, "I wish you
would. God knows I need it, although I'm a member of the church."
He prayed. She wept and he slipped out. Her husband came in and noticed that
her eyes were red. He said, "Has anybody insulted you?" She said, "The
queerest little man was here a little while ago and he talked so nice to me
about Jesus." He said, "If I had been here I would have told him to go along
and mind his business." She said, "I wish you had been here. You would have
thought he was minding his business. His business was a mission for his
King, to bring people to Jesus Christ."
Vassar distributed tracts in the army. He worked with the American Bible
Society. When the chaplain died, they wanted Vassar to take the place of the
chaplain. He wasn't ordained and the government law does not allow anybody
to be a chaplain who hasn't been ordained. He came up to Poughkeepsie and
they were examining him. One fellow with cinders all over his back, said, "Mr.
Vassar, your duty now is to distribute tracts. Your salary is three hundred
dollars a year, and you wish to be ordained?"
"Yes, sir."
"Does that mean an increase of salary?"
"Yes, sir, fifteen hundred dollars a year."
Then he said, "The increase of salary has allured you and brought you here
for us to ordain."
Vassar said, "Stop where you are! I don't want it; I won't take it if you
give it to me", and he wouldn't. He went back to distributing tracts for
three hundred dollars a year, to do something for Jesus Christ. He was a
wonder. God did marvelous things through him.
"Are you lonesome?" a man asked a lighthouse keeper. "Are you lonesome out on
this lonesome spot?" He said, "I was before I saved four men from
drowning...Is that a boat out there?" He was always on the lookout for other
boats that he might save men from a watery grave.
Get somebody else for Jesus Christ and you will get a new vision of life, a
new vision of what it means. It is something besides going to church and
keeping warm a little spot seventeen inches square for a half hour and
listening to a sermonette. You had better squirm around in your seat and
stoop down! You had better duck!
"He that winneth souls is wise." Some people think it is beneath their
dignity. Then you live on a higher plane than your Master, for He went about
doing good wherever he was in the world.
A lady said to a friend of mine, "Do you think that my blindness will hinder
me?" My friend answered, "It is a misfortune, but I don't know. I have the
opinion it will be a help to you, because people will come up to you to
express their sympathy for your lack of sight and that will give you the
opportunity to speak of Jesus."
"Oh," she said, "I don't mean in an effort like that, but to stand on the
platform." She thought the only way to serve God was to get in the
spotlight, not to be doing something with the people whom she might shake
hands with day by day in her home.
A man was thinking of entering evangelistic work. He came to my friend, Dr.
Chapman, and said, "I am thinking of entering evangelistic work."
"That's good." Dr. Chapman said.
"I think I will begin out in Colorado -- Denver and Colorado Springs, and out
in Pasadena, California. My relatives are there."
My friend said, "Have you any brothers or sisters?"
"Yes, I have."
"Are they Christians?"
"Well," he said, "I don't know. When we set up the estate four years ago my
brother and I had a quarrel over it and we haven't spoken since."
"And your sister?"
"My sister took my brother's views of the proposition and she hasn't spoken
to me since. I haven't been in her home."
Dr. Chapman said, "What do you intend to do?"
He said, "Evangelistic work."
Dr. Chapman said, "The Bible says, 'First be reconciled to thy brother.' If
you start out the way you are, failure is written all over you. 'If I regard
iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me,' the Bible tells me, so
there is no use trying to bother your head about God for He won't listen to you.
That's as sure as you live."
Soul Winning is Difficult Work
Now, it is a difficult form of work. It is more difficult than preaching; it
is more difficult than attending conventions; more difficult than giving
goods to the poor. (When you do give goods to the poor, don't wait until the
moths have eaten holes in them. And when you give them away, don't cut off all
the buttons and braid. Poor folks like them as well as you do. It is no act
of charity when you have taken off all you want, then turned the rest over
to somebody else. No, no! Then angles never record an act like that.) You
will never see it when you get to Heaven if you have an easy time. Oh, you
can pin on a badge, usher people to their seats, pass the collection plate, be
an elder or a deacon or a steward; you can go to church, sing in the choir,
be a member of a Home or Foreign Missionary Society -- the Devil will even
let you attend Bible conferences -- but the minute you begin to do personal
work, to try to get somebody to take a stand for Christ, all the devils in Hell
will be on your back, for they know that is a challenge to the Devil and to
his forces. And I hope that the work of leading people to Christ by personal
effort will always be hard. I have no sympathy for folks who are looking for
something easy!
I preached out in Salida, Colorado, a few years ago. The city lies 8,5000
feet on one of the spurs of the Rocky Mountains. There was a woman there who
sang in the choir. I used to drive them out when they went to speak to
somebody about Jesus Christ. One day she came to me and said, "Mr. Sunday,
will you speak to my husband about being a Christian?"
I said, "Have you spoken to him?"
She said, "No."
I said, "No madam, I will not."
She said, "Why?"
I said, "God wants you to go and you are trying to sidestep and get me to do
it."
I said, "You go speak to him and if you can't win him for Christ, come and
tell me, then I will go."
"Well," she said, "you would have a greater influence with him than I have."
"How long have you been married?" I asked."Five years." I said, "I have been
in this town three weeks and it is a compliment for you to say that to me.
You have cooked for him and sewed on buttons for him for five years."
Finally one night, she said, "Isn't it hot?" I said to her, "You like to sing
in the choir, don't you?" She said, "I love to do that." "You don't like to
do personal work?" I asked. "Then your idea of serving God is to pick out
the things you would like to do, and the things that you don't like to do you
let somebody else do; then you let it go at that." I said, "Then you will
forget every blessing that ever came to you."
One night I drove her off the platform; later I saw her coming down the
aisle. Her husband sat on the front seat. She slipped her arm around his
neck and whispered something in his ear. He nodded his head and down the
aisle he came. He turned to her and said, "Bess, I've been waiting for weeks for
you to ask me that."
I was out in Colorado Springs not very long ago and she came up to Denver. I
said, "How do you do, Mrs. C." "How do you do?" I said, "Where's Charlie?"
"He went to heaven two years ago, but he prayed and lived consistently until
the hour that God called him."
Get out and do something! "He isn't my boy." That same spirit of letting
people go to the Devil because they don't eat at your table and because you
are not married to them -- there is too much of that today in the world."He
that winneth souls is wise."
God Blesses Personal Effort
A mother in a home had a magnificent character. To my knowledge there had
never been a stranger enter that home for years that she hadn't talked to
him about Jesus Christ. She was bemoaning the fact that she couldn't do
anything or wasn't doing anything for the Lord, yet she was doing more
practical Christian work, consistently every day, than the entire membership
of that church of five hundred people. She was doing more!
So it the personal effort that God will honor and that God will bless. And
listen! There are fifteen million young men in this country between the ages
of sixteen and thirty five. Fourteen million of them are not members of any
church, Catholic or Protestant. Seven million of them attend church
regularly. Nine million of them never darken a church door from one year's
end to another.
After the Iroquois Theater fire in Chicago where six hundred people burned to
death, a girl about seventeen years of age fought her way through the great
torrents of blood and crushed and charred and baked flesh. Her hair was
singed, her eyebrows were burned off, her face and hands were blistered, her
clothing was hanging in charred rags. As she got on the street car to go home
she was moaning and sighing. She would wring her hands and say "O, God! O,
God!" A lady next to her said, "Well, you ought to be thankful that you got
out alive." She said, "I am, but I didn't help anybody else out! It was all
I could do to get out." What she was moaning about was the fact that others
had to die because she didn't help them. Yet she was sitting by people who had
not thought of others -- letting them go to Hell.
Oh, he that winneth souls is wise! Is wise! You would feel different,
perhaps, if it were some of your own, but remember, if it is not your flesh
and blood it is somebody else's.
Out in Pennsylvania they had a mine cave-in. The alarm was sounded and men
came and volunteered. With pick and shovel they worked, trying to dig
quickly to the men lest they die. Up tottered an old man seventy-five years
old. He threw off his cap, coat and vest, spit on his hands, and picking up
the pick, he picked and picked. Then he got the shovel and he shoveled until the
sweat rolled down his cheeks. He stood tottering, about ready to fall. Some
of the younger men said to him, "Grandpa, get away and let us young fellows
do this."
He said, "Great God, boys! I've got three sons down in there! I must do
something!" And if it isn't your boy, it is somebody else's. If it isn't
your girl, it is somebody else's.
That is the trouble with the world today. We don't care a rap what becomes of
others so long as we go through the world. Now you may soon go; you may die
and they may die; and you may live and they may die, but no matter whether
you go first or last, you have to meet at the judgment. That is settled! You
have to do that.
A casket containing the body of a beautiful seventeen year old girl with the
dew of youth on her brow, was being borne from the church to the graveyard.
The girl's friends stood around the grave. As they lowered the coffin, a
Sunday school teacher who stood there shrieked and screamed and wrung her
hands in grief. After the carriage was driven away and after things had been
cleared up, the minister went to see this girl. He said, "I noticed your
hysteric grief at the grave. Was she a Christian?" The Sunday school teacher
said, "I noticed her growing careless with her companions and going into
questionable places." Then the girl said to the minister, "I was sure you'd
speak to her, for you know more about those things." He said, "No, I didn't
speak to her. I intended to but," he said, "I didn't. I was sure you would.
She was a girl and you were a girl and you better understood one another.
Let's go and see her mother."
The minister and the Sunday school teacher went and talked with the girl's
mother. She said, "Yes, I noticed it. I used to plead with her, but she
would get mad at me, thinking I was interfering with her company. I hope you
spoke to her." Neither of them had, and she had gone to wait at the judgment
bar, to witness against the three -- her mother, the preacher, and the
Sunday school teacher, for they said nothing. "He that winneth souls is
wise!" He is wise!
So there must be a confession of sin. The sin of neglect --confess that; and
the sin of unforgiveness, the sin of indifference. David said, "If I regard
iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me." Oh, you get the light of
Jesus in your heart! Jesus Christ is able, my friend, to reveal Himself to the
agnostic, materialist, like He did to Balaam until he knew Jesus Christ. Oh,
He can flash the deity of Jesus Christ into the brain of the son of an
orthodox Unitarian of New England, as He did the son of Edward Everett Hale.
He is able to knock the scales from the credulous worshipers of Mary Baker
Glover Eddy until you will find that matter is existent and not an illusion
of the mortal mind.
What God
Did Through the Testimony of an Fourteen Year Old Boy
He that winneth souls is wise! My friend, Dr. Broughton, used to be pastor of
a big Baptist church in Atlanta, Georgia. When he was a young minister he
went out to help a pastor in revival meetings. He said he would ask God to
forgive him a good many times. He said he went and preached and he never in
all his days saw such a dead, lifeless, indifferent, apathetic crowd. He didn't
believe there was such a crowd this side of the cemetery. He said he
preached. Nobody smiled. They all looked like epitaphs on a tombstone. He
said he asked for a show of hands; nobody would lift them. He would ask for
a request for prayer; nobody would appeal. To every appeal they were as deaf as
Hades. He was discouraged about it. One time he made an appeal and said, "If
there is a man here who wants us to pray, a father who wants us to pray for
his children, lift your hand."
A boy, fourteen years of age, who sat on the end of the seat, raised his
hand. He said, "If there is a mother here who wants us to pray for her
child, or children, lift your hand." The boy lifted his hand. He said, "If
there is a businessman here who has interests that concern his partner, lift
your hand." Up went the boy's hand. He made the appeal governing both sexes.
He said to himself, "This child's a monstrosity." He said, "I have made an
appeal covering both sexes and all ages. To every appeal he has lifted his
hand." He went back to the hotel. Sitting in his chair he heard a rap at the
door. "Come in!" In walked one of the deacons, stroking his long bird-tail
whiskers.
"How do you do, Deacon?"
He said, "We ain't having much of a meeting."
"Never saw anything worse."
"I thought I'd come up and tell you about that little boy who's down to the
church," the deacon said. "What do you mean?" Dr. Broughton asked. "Well,
everytime you make an appeal, he lifts his hand. He's just making a fool of
you."
"Forget it. He's making a fool of you and all the rest of the fools who
profess to be Christians." The deacon said, "Well, I thought I'd come and
tell you so you could tell him to stay away." Dr. Broughton said, "I'll give
that boy ten dollars a day to come. He's the only evidence of life I've seen
in the city. If you think I'm going to turn the hose on him, you've got
another guess coming."
"Well," the deacon said, "I thought I'd tell you." Stroking his whiskers, he
went out. Dr. Broughton went on to preach and make similar appeals. The only
one who would respond was that boy. Up would go his hand. Another day he
heard a knock. "Come in!" In came this old deacon. He said,"Do you know that
boy?"
"Certainly I know him; he's the only one I do know." He said, "You ain't
having much of a revival." He said, "No, you need an undertaker in this town
instead of an evangelist. You are the deadest crowd that I have ever seen.
And if God or anybody else had told me that there was such a dead,
indifferent membership on earth, I wouldn't have believed it."
"Well," the deacon said, "do you know that boy ain't overly bright?" "He's
got you backed off the boards. He's got sense enough to make a response,"
replied Dr. Broughton. "Well," he said, "I thought I'd tell you." The
preacher said, "You don't need to tell me." The pastor came to Dr. Broughton
and said, "Doctor, before I was sure that you were coming to preach on Sunday
morning for a brother minister in another city who is away and I'd like to
have you preach for me on Sunday morning." He said, "Very well." On Saturday
night he heard a rap at the door. "Come in!" In came this old deacon,
stroking his whiskers. "Howdy, Doc." "How do you do, Deacon?" He said, "The
domine asked (they always call the preacher the domine) -- the domine asked
you to preach on Sunday morning, didn't he?" "Yes." He said, "Now, don't you
ask for converts because there ain't any."
"Deacon, look me in the face, if you can, and answer me this: You knew that
if I did, there would be one or some and you don't want that one, or some,
to join the church." He squirmed uncomfortably. "Well", he said, "you can do
as you please." He said, "I'd do that without your consent. I'll preach if I
feel God and the Spirit; if I don't, I won't. I won't do it because you told
me to do it, or not to do it. Neither would I do it if you asked me to or if
you asked me not to." Sunday morning he walked out and preached. When he got
through he said, "If there is anybody here who wants to be a Christian,
wants to join the church, come down and take me by the hand." Pretty soon
there was a shuffling and down the aisle came that boy. Dr. Broughton took
him by the hand and said, "Sit down, sonny." He asked the usual questions.
The child gave answers and Dr. Broughton repeated the answers. He said to
the audience, "You have all heard the questions I have asked and the answers
given, for I have repeated both. All who are in favor of giving this boy the
right hand of fellowship and receiving him in full membership, say 'aye'".
Two farmers voted aye and the rest of them kept quiet. Dr. Broughton said,
"The ayes have it." He got the kid up on the platform and baptized him.
The boy went bounding home. He lived with his grandfather since his mother
was dead. His grandfather was an invalid, and the richest man in that
section of Georgia. For nearly sixty years he had never been known to darken
a church door. He was a leader of the infidels; he denounced religion
because of unbelief, and blatantly spewed out the theories and doctrines of
infidelity. The boy bounded in, put his arms around the old man's neck and
said, "Grandpa, they took me into the church, and Dr. Broughton baptized me,
and if you will come up there, they will take you in, too." He said, "Go
away, son, don't bother me. Grandpa don't care about it." He pushed the boy off,
but back in again he came. He kept begging his grandpa to go, but he said,
"Don't bother your grandpa; go on away." He said, "Grandpa, I'll tell you
what they will ask you, and I'll tell you what to say. Come on and go." My
friend preached to men only on Sunday afternoon. They saw this boy come into
the church leading his old grandfather, who was hobbling on the crutches of
decrepitude as he came down the aisle. He sat down and listened.
When my friend got through the grandfather arose and said, "Dr. Broughton,
may I speak a few words?" He stood trembling on his cane. "I have cussed and
damned God all my life. This is the first time I have crossed a church
threshold for over sixty years. My little grandson -- and you know he ain't
overly bright; his ma's gone and he lives with me and his grandma -- he came
home and said you took him into the church and told me if I'd come you'd
take me in. Dr. Broughton, if you think God will reach down and take an old
reprobate like me, who has cussed Him all my days, and I've never, never
prayed -- if you think the Lord will take me in the sunset of life and kiss away
the stains of guilt, I'd like to come."
Dr. Broughton said, "Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out."
The old man came hobbling down and said, "I have wandered far away from God,
but now I'm coming home."
He was baptized and received into the church. Listen! They went home. The
next day, the little boy went bounding downtown into a saloon kept by his
father. He said, "O papa, grandpa and me have joined the church and if
you'll come up, they will take you in. I will tell you what they will ask you
and I'll tell you what to say." He said, "Go out of here, my son; this is no
place for you." Say, if a dirty, stinking saloon is no place for my boy,
it's no place for me. If it's good for me, it's good for him, and if it's
bad for him, it's bad for me. To Hell with the saloon!
He said to him, "Go on out of here, son. Go on out of here. This is no place
for a boy." "Pa, come on. They will take you in."
Listen! The next Sunday that man walked down the aisle, told the story of
what his little boy had done, and he said "If you think that God can save a
saloon-keeper, I'd like to be a Christian."
He joined the church, then he said, "Come down tomorrow morning and we will
break the bottles of whiskey and champagne and beer." They brought them into
the street and they did. They turned it into the sewer as the people stood
singing. He said, "I feel that my mission is to the saloon-keepers of that
part of the country."
He started out and by personal effort, with drunkards and saloon-keepers,
started a tidal wave of religion. And the first county that went dry in
Georgia was that county. The state was put dry by the legislative enactment,
and they never had a saloon in that county from that day till this. It all
started with that little boy.
You've got as much sense as the boy, haven't you? Go do likewise; that is my
message.