01 -- WHERE ART THOU?
"He that committeth sin is of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that be might destroy the works of the devil. Whosoever
is born of God doth Dot commit sin." I JOHN iii. 8,9.
"But when the righteous turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and
doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live? All the
righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned: In his trespass that he hath trespassed, and
in his sin that he hath sinned, in them shall he die." EZEKIEL xviii. 24.
"And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the
breath of life; and man became a living soul. And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden;
and there be put the man whom he had formed. And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow
every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food. The tree of life also in the midst of the
garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil." GEN. ii. 7-10.
"And the Lord God commanded the man saying. Of every tree of the garden thou mayest eat
freely; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." GEN. ii. 16, 17.
"And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the
eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave
also unto her husband with her; and he did eat. And the eyes of them both were opened, and they
knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons. And
they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day: and Adam and
his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden. And the
Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? And he said, I heard thy voice in
the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself." GEN. iii. 6-10.
A casual reader of the Bible would be impressed with the fact that the God revealed in the
Bible is a God who hates sin and loves Holiness. That the devil revealed in the Bible is a devil
that hates Holiness, but loves sin; therefore, to be godly, or godlike, we must hate sin and love
Holiness, but if we hate Holiness and love sin we are devilish, or like the devil. There is no
getting away from these facts.
Again, a casual reader of the Bible would be impressed with the fact that God demands
absolute obedience to His commands, and that no one, in any state or condition, in this life can
knowingly commit sin and retain the smile and approval of God. No where in the Book are these
facts more plainly taught than in the Scriptures that I have read in your hearing. He that is born of
God doth not commit sin. He that committeth sin is of the devil, but when a righteous man turneth
away and doeth according to the wicked, in his sins that he hath sinned, in them shall he die. These
truths are very plainly set forth in the story of the fall of our first parents.
I am well aware of the fact that there is much skepticism abroad regarding the account of
the fall of our first parents; that it is only a Jewish myth or tale, and that it is not true. Also that the
story of Jonah and the whale is not true; but right here allow me to place on record that I believe
the whole Book from cover to cover. Of course, I understand that there are some errors in
translating a word here and there from the original language, but not enough to destroy or alter the
meaning so that it would lead one astray; but, then, I do not know what kind of a little two-by-four
god some of you have Why, sir, I have a great God.
I have stood on the rear platform of the overland limited and looked out over miles and
miles of the plains as we swept over them, and I have said, "The hand of our God mapped them
out." I have gone in behind, or under, the great falls of Niagara, and have stood in the great chasm
beneath and said, "My God cut this out and started the water flowing over there." I have climbed to
the summit of Pike's Peak and looked at that great pile of granite rearing its lofty head into the
heavens, and have said, "My God piled up these rocks in this fashion." I have stood on the deck of
the ocean steamer and looked out on the trackless, boundless expanse and said, "My God spread
out these waters." I have gazed for hours at the starry heavens above me, and read in my Bible that
they were placed there by my heavenly Father. I have looked at that great ball of brightness rising
in the east and disappearing below the western horizon, and said, "My God lighted that lamp, and
it has never ceased to light up this old world." It was our God that spake and a world moved into
existence, and I reckon, did He see the need, He could speak into existence a fish large enough to
swallow this whole crowd.
Oh, sir, I don't know about your god, but we have a great God, and this old Book is His
Word, and I believe it from cover to cover, and if you will throw away your doubts and unbelief
and follow its teachings, all your thorns and briars will disappear and joy and gladness will take
their place.
Now, there are a few things to which I want to call your attention concerning the fall of our
first parents.
Firstly: I want you to see what Adam lost in the fall, and the relation it bears to the human
family today. Adam and Eve were placed in the garden, told they might eat of the fruit of the trees
of the garden, save one, and that in the day they ate of that one, they would die; they ate, sinned,
and died. Now, what was there about them that died? Going back to the first chapter of Genesis we
read that God, speaking to the other members of the Trinity, said, "Let us make man in our image,
after our likeness, ... so God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him."
Now, sir, I have never been able to conceive the idea that God meant the body of man
when He said man. I don't understand that God has a body like I have: my Bible tells me that God
is a spirit. In the second chapter of Genesis we are told that God rolled some dust together and
breathed into that pile of clay, and man became a living soul; that is, that God breathed something
into the dust He had brought together, put something on the inside of it. You look up here to the
speaker and you see the house, or tabernacle, or body, the man dwells in, but you only see the man
as it crops out in his character.
If, in passing down the street, I should point across to a high steepled building and ask you
what it was, and you replied it was the Methodist or Baptist Church, I would contradict you. The
church is not composed of building material, such as is used in erecting buildings. "God that made
the world and all things therein, seeing he is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in temples
made with hands." Acts xvii. 24. The church is composed of souls who have been born from
above, redeemed by the blood. That building is only a place where the church may gather together
to worship. The church is on the inside. So with man, the body is only the temple, or house, that the
man dwells in, and, as he is made in the image of God, he is a spirit, but God prepared him a body
to dwell in. Made in the image of God was Adam; he came fresh from the hands of his Creator,
pure, free from sin, holy, and like God to that extent that he bore the image of God. In other words,
the very image of God was stamped upon man's nature; clothed with the Divine nature of his
Creator, he was like Him.
We have not time tonight to explain why or how sin was present, any more than we have
time to explain how or why the devil is here, but he is here just the same. There were not fifty
people present before the devil walked in. He is the best church-goer you have in town. unless it
be to some dead, dried-up affair, where they are in the cold storage business, with an icicle six
feet long in the pulpit. I don't think he pays much attention to those places, for he has them safe
enough already; but in a place where full salvation from sin is being proclaimed, you may be sure
he is always on hand. Well, the devil spoke to Mother Eve about the fruit that they had been
forbidden to eat. Listen to her reply, "God hath said ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it
lest ye die." She knew what God had said about it and about disobeying Him, and so do you; and
with such knowledge in the heart and such words on the lips, whose is the responsibility of doing
wrong? God hath said, Ye shall not, lest ye die, but she ate, gave to Adam, he ate and they died.
How? Well, it was not their bodies that died, though decay set in from that hour. Had it been their
bodies they would have become a corpse; neither was it their minds, or they would have become
idiots. Then what was it? They were clothed in the Divine image or nature of God, and the moment
they sinned they died. Webster says "dead" means void. The mom moment they sinned they lost
their Divine nature or image, which took its flight and went back to the hands of the Giver; it left
them dead, void of the Divine image or nature of God. When the devil tempted Eve, he said, "Thou
shalt not surely die," or, in plain English, sin and live: and right there he set up his abominable
religion, which, I am sorry to say, has become the popular religion of today, namely, a sinning
religion.
The devil said, sin and live, and he has many advocates today of his damnable lie, both in
pulpit and pew. Many deny that we can live without committing sin, and then wrest the Scriptures
in their teaching, and sneer at those who stand up for God's truth and His plain commands. I heard
of a preacher lately who said there was not a day but what he broke the ten commandments. I
wonder which of the ten he broke. If he broke the first one, he is not a child of God at all, but an
idolater. If he broke the second, he is a blasphemer. He could not be a child of God and not keep
the third, the fourth, nor the last. The breaking of the next three would put him in the penitentiary.
Poor deluded soul, like many, on his way to the pit, never having been born again.
God said, sin and die; and so it is declared all through His Word. "The soul that sinneth
shall die," "He that committeth sin is of the devil." Brother, those are not my words, but the words
of the Almighty God, in whose hands your breath is. Adam knowingly sinned, and then and there
lost his Divine nature! In other words, the devil succeeded in cheating him out of his pure, holy,
Divine nature, and left him his own fallen, sinful, sensual, rebellious, devilish nature. You will
please excuse me for telling you so, but every unregenerated individual in this congregation tonight
has nothing but that devilish, sensual nature. Every child born into this world from that sad day
until now has been born into existence with that sinful, sensual, rebellious, devilish nature, and that
nature only.
First Corinthians xv. 22 tells us that the whole human family died (became void of the
Divine image) through Adam's fall. The sinner is an unregenerated being, having but that one
nature, and it is sinful in the extreme. It is that sinful nature that makes you swear, brother, that
makes you get angry, fight, steal, lie, and cheat. It is that sensual nature that makes men and women
commit adultery and fornication, and gives rise to that sensual, unclean desire. It is that devilish
nature that causes men to hate and murder. It is that devilish nature that causes Women to desire to
kill their unborn offspring so that they may not be bothered with them, but continue on in society.
Men look upon sin as an act only, but let me tell you that it is a million leagues beyond any act that
you could commit: it is a warp in your very being, a crooked, devilish twist in your very existence.
It is the devil's own nature implanted in your very being, and it takes something far deeper than the
brightest pardon God could give you to reach it. If you doubt my statement concerning it, go there
and pick up that little six months' old infant and undertake to do something with it that it don't want
done, and you will get your proof of it quickly; you will have a kicking, squalling, struggling,
fighting youngster on your hands, kicking, struggling and screaming in his rebellion against you,
until you can see a picture of a demon in his actions and on his face.
Yes, sir, it is there, down deep in your very nature. Had it not been for that devilish nature
in you, the first time you heard of Jesus' love for your poor lost soul it would have broken your
heart and you would have yielded then and there to God; but that thing in you made you stubborn
and defiant, and you put up your will against the will of the Almighty God, and began your fight
against His blessed Spirit, who has been trying to woo you from a path of sin and save you from a
devil's Hell.
Secondly: I want you to take note of Adam's sense of his loss, or, the reason why men are
afraid to meet God. The Book says that after they had sinned they heard the Lord God in the garden
and they hid themselves, and the Lord called unto them, "Where art thou?" and Adam replied, "I
was afraid." Why was he afraid? For just exactly the same reason men are afraid to meet God
today, namely: they know they are wrong, are not obeying Him, have been disobedient. Adam
knew the moment he had done wrong; he had a conscience. While conscience was no doubt greatly
impaired in the fall, yet it was there, and the moment Adam heard the Lord, after he had done
wrong, he was smitten with fear; he knew it, felt it. He had had other visits and conversations with
the Lord, prior to this one. In the preceding chapter we read of God bringing the animals and birds
He had formed to Adam to see what he would call them. He had had many talks and walks with the
Lord no doubt, but now he had knowingly disobeyed, and how changed is everything! Before, it
was a delight to talk with his Creator, but now the sound of His voice smites him with fear and he
hides. I repeat, he had done wrong, knew it, and the knowledge of his wrong doing brought fear to
his heart. That is the very reason why many in this large audience would be afraid to go this minute
into the presence of God; they are wrong and they know it; and if Jesus should come walking up the
center aisle and proclaim that He had come to take us to the judgment bar, the majority of this
congregation would fall on their knees and beg for mercy, or try to hide from His presence, for the
simple fact that they know they are wrong in the sight of God.
Some one says. "Why, Mr. Williams, is not everybody afraid to meet God ?" No, sir, ten
thousand times, no! Every soul here tonight who is right with God knows it, and they would not be
afraid to step into His presence in the next ten seconds. They are prayed up, and paid up, and
living right in His sight; and if He came now, they would welcome Him with a shout. And, in fact,
so far as their personal experiences are concerned, they are praying like John the beloved closed
his last prayer, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus." Hallelujah! Perfect love casteth out fear. Glory be to
Jesus, who hath loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood. There is no fear in the
hearts of those who are right in God's sight, because they know they are right with Him, and are
living to please Him, and not living to please the world or their friends.
Let me explain: There is your little brown-eyed son at home. You say to him, "Now,
Tommy, be a good boy, and when I return home tonight I will bring you something nice." Just
watch that boy. He goes on his best behavior; no doubt he keeps mamma busy looking at the clock
to see if it is train time; at last the whistle is heard, and there you come up the street; out he goes,
with the front door in danger of losing its hinges and the gate flying open with a bang, and down the
street he comes with curls and apron-strings flying in the air. As he nears you he calls out, "Papa,
did you get it? What did you bring me?" He fairly leaps into your arms, while his little eyes
sparkle with anticipation of your promised word. Is he afraid of his father? No, sir! But why?
Because he has obeyed father's orders and wishes, and now with the utmost confidence expects
father to keep his word. Not a ray of fear, because he knows he has kept his father's commands.
Exactly thus is it with the children of God; they keep His commandments in perfect confidence,
expect Him to keep His promise, and God never breaks His promise. Heaven and earth might pass
away, but the word of God is sure. Glory to God! They know they are right with Him, consequently
there is absolutely no fear.
Now suppose Tommy had been good nearly all day, even up to a short time before you
returned, and then disobeyed. Would he have come rushing to you? I think not. You might come in
and talk with mamma, but you would have to inquire for the boy, and then go to the backyard, the
barn, or upstairs to find him hiding away somewhere. What is the reason he does not come for his
present? The child has a conscience, and he absolutely knows that he has done wrong, and not only
forfeited his present, but incurred your displeasure by his disobedience, and is liable to receive
punishment. He has done wrong and knows it, and so does every individual in this room tonight.
You know where you stand; whether you are right or wrong in the sight of God. You have a
conscience, unless you have trampled on it so many times that it refuses to perform its functions. If
this is your case, you are indeed in a pitiful condition; but there are many in such a condition. Once
conscience was alive, alert, and tender, quick to reprove you of your misdeeds; but it is not so
now. Conscience reproved you many times about certain sins you were committing, but you
throttled and stifled those convictions and reprovals so often that conscience no longer bothers
you; there are. many things very wrong in your life, but you scarcely note them, or think of your
wickedness and coming judgment.
Let me explain. There is a little boy taught to pray at mother's knee. One day out among his
playmates he hears them use a bad word, and soon he gets to swinging that word off his lips as
easily as they. Night comes on, playmates return home, and the little fellow turns towards the
house. Conscience begins to tell him about that awful word he said out there. Bedtime comes.
"Hurry, Johnnie, come say your prayers at mother's knee." But no shoe-strings ever got into so
many knots as his that night. Mother's time is all gone, and now she will listen to his prayer in bed.
He begins, "Now I lay me ---," but there is a lump gets up in his throat, and he starts over again,
skips some and stumbles along. What is the matter? Why can't the child pray? Why, conscience is
thumping him, urging him to confess his wrong-doing to mother; but mother turns away. No wonder
that child has an awful dream in the night and awakes screaming. Mother has to go in and turn on
the light to make him understand that no wild beast was after him, but that it was only a dream. Oh,
when morning comes he'll tell mother! But with the light comes boldness, and men are not so afraid
in the daytime. The next night conscience does not warn him so hard. By and by he uses that word
again, and while conscience condemns him, yet not so hard, and again he fights it off, until -- well,
perhaps he sits here listening to me preach; he has grown to be a man, but he cannot get in a crowd
of men and talk five minutes concerning the questions of the day without using that same awful
word over and over, and he scarcely notices it now. Why? Because conscience does not bother
him any more concerning it. Once it did, but he throttled it and stifled it down, and now on the least
provocation he will call on God to damn this, that, or the other, with no qualms of conscience
whatever, sinning on his way to a devil's Hell, and hardly stopping to realize it.
Do you remember the first lie you told? How conscience bothered you! It might have been
on something about your home or your business; do you remember it now? Well, did you stop then?
Did conscience bother you as much on the last lie you told? That young girl lying to her mother,
that young boy lying to his father, husband to wife, and neighbor to neighbor, are on their way
straight to a devil's Hell and they do not realize it. We think it awful when we read of that heathen
woman over there in dark heathenism, who takes her nursing babe from her breast and throws it to
the open-mouthed crocodiles in the river, believing in her heathen condition that she is appeasing
the wrath of her god by so doing. It seems terrible to us in this country. But I wonder how it will
appear at the bar of Almighty God, alongside of the thousands of women in this enlightened land of
ours who kill their offspring some months before they would be born. How will that poor heathen
mother stand, or appear alongside of the women in this land who, instead of becoming mothers,
calmly set themselves to destroy the young lives or even that which brings life, and cheat God and
God-given nature from accomplishing that which God arranged for it to accomplish. The first time
conscience may have thundered against the act, but it has been repeated until there are no
convictions on the subject any more, the wholesale murdering is kept up steadily, and that by folks
who even profess to be God's children. Conscience is now dead, but what a resurrection there will
be at the judgment of Almighty God! Hear Him speak: "For God will bring every work unto
judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good or evil." Eccl. xii. 14. What will the
conscience have to say then?
Adam had a conscience, and it pricked him to the quick, and the knowledge of his act
brought fear; he tried to hide from God, and that brings us to the third part of our text.
Thirdly: "Adam hiding, or the miserable subterfuge men give today for not serving God.
What a fool Adam was to undertake to hide from God! He ought to have known that He who could
speak a world into existence, settle each star in its place, and call all wherein was the breath of
life into being, could look through a piece of shrubbery; and yet we find men as foolish today. "I
would be a Christian, but there are so many hypocrites." True, there are; but there can be no
counterfeit until we have the reality; and because there are counterfeit Christians, thank God there
are some who are real. But who is worse, the hypocrite, or the one making such excuses and hiding
behind them? They are both bound for the same pit, on the same road. The only difference is that
the real out-and-out hypocrite is a little ahead of the one behind him.
In a meeting in Vermont some time ago, we noticed a large man seated to our left, whose
head dropped lower and lower under the searchlight of God's truth. He put his hands on the back of
the pew in front of him and buried his face in his hands. We went and asked him to give himself to
God, and he replied, "I would were it in any other church than this one." Some one connected with
that church had done him an injury and he would not come; knew he ought to, but that man was in
his way. "Is that your only excuse for not going to the altar tonight and giving yourself to God?" we
asked. "Yes," he replied, "that is my only excuse; I would, only for that hypocrite." We urged him
not to mind, but he finally said, "Excuse me, Mr. Williams, I cannot go with that man in here." I
said, "All right, I'll excuse you. If you want to go to Hell with that hypocrite, you may go. I'll
excuse you. Now bow your head and tell God what you have told me; that you are unsaved, that
you know it, that you know He is calling you, that you realize it, but because there is a man in the
house living a hypocritical life and he has wronged you, because of that you turn your back on the
Christ who died for you, you'll go to Hell with the hypocrite; then ask God to excuse you." In a few
moments he dropped like a bag of sand at the altar and begged God to forgive and save. The
rottenness of his flimsy excuse had dawned upon him. And just so rotten are all the excuses men
make for not giving up sin. They know they are wrong, but grasp at anything to get away from God;
but He sees them just the same.
Fourthly: I want you to hear God calling, "Where art thou?" There are several classes I
would like to mention as quickly as I can. First, I would like to ask the sinner here tonight, in the
light of this plain truth, "Where art thou?" Out on the great stormy sea, masts broken, sails in
shreds, compass lost and steering apparatus disarranged, tossed here and there it the dark night of
sin, lost on the sea of time and without hope, "Where art thou?" The sinner absolutely has no hope.
His only hope is Christ, and Christ he has rejected; consequently he has no hope. I do not believe
there are many in this Bible land of ours but who know they are wrong, and have heard that Jesus
came to save from sin. But if they have heard and not accepted it, they have deliberately rejected
the only hope and are going straight down to a devil's Hell, swept on by the awful bent to sin that
lies in their very nature. They have cursed, lied, and stolen, gotten angry and given vent to that
inbred damnable thing in them, taken the name of God in vain, sinned and sinned, and are sweeping
on to an awful doom. Many a boy is wading knee-deep through a mother's tears: many a girl
strumming on her father's heart-strings; unsaved husbands crushing out the lives of pleading wives;
while groans from thousands upon thousands of the blighted and blasted ones are coming up before
God, who sends me here with this message, "Sinner, Where art thou?"
A second class I would mention is the professor; he who professes to be God's child, but
who has never quit his sins, consequently has never been "born again." In our lesson tonight we
read, "He that is born of God doth not commit sin." "Where art thou?" You profess to be God's
child, but you know you never have been "born again." You cannot point back to the place nor time
when you threw up your hands and abandoned sin of all kinds, and stopped all your worldliness.
This you never have done, and yet you have been passing yourself off to be a child of God. You go
in worldly society, play cards, or go to the dance, the theater, or perhaps to Sunday baseball,
smoke or chew, and still try to palm yourself off on this poor old world as a Christian; but since
you never gave up your sin, your life has been a living falsehood before God and holy men and
women. Poor lost humanity has looked upon your life and known of your profession and could see
no difference between your life and other people's. Sir, I want to ask you, What will you say at the
judgment, when you are called before the bar of God for basely misrepresenting Christ on earth.
No doubt, honest souls have been turned away from seeking God; when sick of sin they have turned
to find peace, and, knowing of your profession, have looked at you, and seeing no difference
between your life and theirs, they turned away from religion in disgust, and tonight they may be in
Hell awaiting your coming. Long ere this they know the truth concerning your profession. You have
dared to mingle with God's people and put your name with theirs, and make your empty profession.
What will you say to God at the judgment for so basely misrepresenting the cause for which His
Son gave His heart's blood? I call to you before it is too late, "Where art thou?"
A third class of whom I desire to ask this question is the backslider. Not every one so
called is a backslider. In the language of Amanda Smith many of them never front-slid. They never
gave up their sins, consequently they were never converted, or "born again." But there are those
who have been really and genuinely converted, who have backslidden and gone back to the world.
I indeed feel sorry for the real backslider, for unless he gets back to God he can never have
another day's happiness, nor a moment's peace. He has been completely spoiled for this world.
Better for himself, even in this world, had he never started for the kingdom. He is a sad-hearted,
discontented, never-to-be-satisfied being. Of all conditions in this life, his is the worst and most
wretched. Added to all this, he is a stumbling-block to all about him, and a stench in the nostrils of
God. I want to say to that father sitting there, who is a backslider, if your children ever knew of
your profession, or heard you pray, you are now being used by the devil to damn your own
offspring. I can say the same thing to that backslidden mother. However you may hate me for telling
you the truth, yet I must be faithful to you, and to the Christ who has sent me to proclaim His truth.
The backslider is a curse to the community he dwells in.
Allow me to explain. There are two friends, Jones and Brown. Jones gets saved and starts
to live a clean life; gives up all his wrong doing, quits his dirty, vile habits, tobacco, cards,
lodges, and everything vile and unclean he throws away. God plants the kiss of pardon on his
cheek and the sunlight breaks in upon his soul; he is happy, shouts and sings, "Hallelujah, 'tis
done," and goes on his way rejoicing in his new-found joy. His life puts Brown under conviction;
he finally begins to leave off his bad habits, and becomes a secret seeker after a better life. He
watches Jones, and says, "I want the same kind of religion Jones has." One day he sees something a
little shady about Jones, and after awhile finds out that he has gone back to his tobacco, and some
other things; and finally Jones comes out with many of his old habits -- backslidden. Brown loses
confidence in Jones, in his religion, and finally in the Christ that Jones professes to serve, gives up
all confidence in the question, loses all conviction, and may be tonight dead and in Hell, and all on
account of Jones' backsliding. I call out to any backslider in the congregation tonight, "Where art
thou?"
Just one more that class is made up of those who have been born again, converted people,
Christians, God's children. I want to call your attention to two verses of Scripture, the first of
which you will find to be the last verse of the first chapter of James, and which reads, "Pure
religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, to visit the fatherless and the widows in
their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." Do you do this? Are you separate
and distinct from the world, or are you mixed up with it? Do you seek worldly people for your
associates? Are you mixed up with some worldly secret society, largely composed of godless and
unsaved men? Do you look to the world for your enjoyment? Do you go where worldly people go?
Or, are you separate and distinct from the world? The Book says, that whosoever will be a friend
of the world is an enemy of God. and the Revised Version gives it thus, "Whosoever therefore
would be a friend of the world, maketh himself an enemy of God." "Where art thou" in the light of
this truth? Are you friendly with the world; do you wish to be so? "Where art thou?" The other
verse I want you to notice is the 23rd verse of the 5th chapter of First Thessalonians, Paul's prayer,
"The very God of peace sanctify you wholly: and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body
be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." I only want one word out of that
verse tonight, and that is the word blameless. I say, are you doing your best for God? If your
neighbor, who may be unsaved, dies and goes to Hell while you are at this meeting, could God
hold you blameless at the judgment bar? Have you done your best to save that neighbor? Does your
life so speak that he can see God in it? Are you unspotted from the world? "Where art thou?"
Let me ask that Sunday school superintendent sitting there, or that Sunday school teacher,
what about your pupils, what are you teaching them; a bit of history; a few biblical, historical
facts, or The spiritual meaning of God's book? Suppose one of those scholars dies and goes to the
home of lost souls while you are here in this meeting, could God hold you blameless at the
judgment? Have you done your best to lead them to God? Come, answer this question, "Where art
thou?"' Let me ask this question of the preachers present, and press the question, for what
tremendous responsibility rests upon the preacher of the Gospel! Do you preach the full truth
regarding the awful consequences of their deeds to those who commit sin? Do you tell one and all
that God can save them from it? Do you faithfully deal with the backslidden in heart? I ask you this
question in the light of the approaching judgment, "Where art thou.'' Suppose some member of your
congregation drops dead and sinks into a devil's hell while you are attending this meeting, could
God hold you blameless? Have you done your best to faithfully warn him? Could he face you at the
judgment and charge you with a neglect of duty? I press this question, "Where art thou?"
Finally, I would ask that father there about his boy. What about your life before him, if he
dies while you are in this meeting and comes up before God, can God hold you blameless? Have
you done your duty to that boy? If he followed in your footsteps would they lead him to Holiness
and to Heaven?
And that mother there, what about your experience? That daughter of yours, if she died
before you ever saw her face again, could you meet her unflinchingly before the throne? If her
name was not found written in the book of life, could God hold you blameless? Come on, answer
this call, "Where art thou?"
One illustration and I am done. Some years ago I was assisting a pastor in one of the
largest churches in northern New York. I was upstairs in the pastor's study, lying on a sofa, when
the pastor came in and tossed me a paper and went out again. I began reading and read the
following from the pen of a noted minister. He said, "In a small mountain village of some four or
five hundred inhabitants there lived a young girl of some eighteen years of age; her given name was
May. She was a bright, cheerful girl, whom everybody loved. One day she was taken quite ill and
in four or five days died. The funeral was such a sad one. At the cottage home a number of her
friends tried to sing, but broke down in tears; the minister of the church of which she was a
member, could scarcely read a lesson from the Scripture. At the close a number of young
gentlemen friends bore the casket across the road to the village cemetery and the services were
there concluded. Everything seemed so sad. As the sexton had about finished his duty, and the
grave was being rounded up, a lady stepped out and knelt down by the newly made mound and
began weeping bitterly. The pastor knelt down by her side and said, 'Now, Sister, come away, and
do not weep. Four years she was a member of your Sunday school class and you did your best to
lead her to God, but the woman only wept the more bitterly, and finally between her sobs said,
'Oh! if I could only feel that I had done my duty, but I have not. For some months past I feared May
was backsliding. She did not care for her lessons and seemed so light and trifling that I feared for
her; and as her Sunday school teacher I felt it was my duty to deal with her; but I kept putting it off
until now she is gone, and I fear she is in a backslider's grave, and because I have not done my
duty.' The pastor, too, began to sob and when able to control his emotions said, 'I have a
confession to make. For over a year I have noticed May and realized that she was losing out
spiritually, and as her pastor I felt it to be my duty to deal with her about her soul; but she always
seemed so light and gay that I kept putting it off, until, oh, God! it is too late.' And he bowed his
head and sobbed bitterly, but finally said, 'Let us ask God to forgive us, and go from this grave
determined to do our full duty hereafter.'
A few days later, thinking he might receive some balm for his aching heart, he went down
to her home, but on his entrance the mother had to leave the room to weep. He finally asked the
father what was the spiritual condition of May when taken ill, and the father replied: 'For nearly
two years May has been a backslider; mother and I thought we would deal with her on her last
birthday, but she had the house full of company, and we put the matter off again and again, until we
said, 'If she does not change, we will deal with her on her next birthday, but oh, God! we buried
her on her birthday, and she is now fill a backslider's grave!'"
Friends, when I read that article, I rolled off from that sofa to my knees and began pleading
with God to help me always to do my duty, and while in that position, on my knees, I seemed to be
at the judgment; there were multitudes of people, and in the center and above was the great white
Throne. The name of May was called; a young lady stepped out before the Throne, and the angelic
recorder opened a book and began searching its pages. Just then there were four people who
seemed compelled by some unseen power, to be forced out from the great throng and to stand at
one side near the girl; they did not want to come out, and seemed to struggle against doing so; but
some unseen power forced them out. Finally the recorder looked up and said, "Her name is not
found in the Book of Life." He that sat upon the Throne said, "He that is filthy, let him be filthy
still," and then with a scream the young girl turned and, facing the four, charged a preacher, a
Sunday school teacher, and a father and a mother with her damnation. I can never forget that hour,
there on my knees in that pastor's study. I pledged God I would speak the full truth as I understood
it, at any cost. I have endeavored to do that tonight. May God help you tonight if you are not right,
or have not been doing right, no matter who you are, either on or off this platform, to fall at the
altar and ask God to put you right with himself, and to promise him that at any loss, at any cross,
and at any cost, you will give up sin of all kinds, either of omission or commission, and walk in
every ray of light He gives you. Brother, friend, this is the only way to Heaven. I pray God you
will settle this matter and settle it now.