<SPAN name="chapter18"></SPAN>
<h1>XVIII.</h1>
<h2>The Holy Spirit’s Call to the Work</h2>
<p align="center">“Ye shall receive power after that the Holy
Ghost is come upon you.”</p>
<p>“THE Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me; because
the Lord hath anointed Me to preach good tidings unto
the meek; He hath sent Me” (Isaiah lxi. 1),
is the testimony of the workman God sends.</p>
<p>God chooses His own workmen, and it is the office
of the Holy Spirit to call whom He will to preach
the Gospel. I doubt not He calls men to other employments
for His glory, and would still more often do so, if
men would but listen and wait upon Him to know His
will.</p>
<p>He called Bezaleel and Aholiab to build the tabernacle.
He called and commissioned the Gentile king, Cyrus,
to rebuild Jerusalem and restore His chastised and
humbled people to their own land. And did He not call
Joan of Arc to her strange and wonderful mission?
And Washington and Lincoln?</p>
<p>And, no doubt, He <i>leads</i> most men by His providence
to their life-work; but the call to preach the Gospel
is more than a providential leading; it is a distinct
and imperative conviction. Bishop Simpson, in his
“Lectures on Preaching,” says:—­</p>
<p>“Even in its faintest form there is this distinction
between a call to the ministry and a choice of other
professions: a young man may <i>wish</i> to be a physician;
he may <i>desire</i> to enter the navy; he would <i>like</i>
to be a farmer; but he feels he <i>ought</i> to be
a minister. It is this feeling of <i>ought</i>, or
obligation, which in its feeblest form indicates the
Divine call. It is not in the aptitude, taste, or
desire, but in the conscience, that its root is found.
It is the voice of God to the human conscience, saying,
‘You ought to preach.’”</p>
<p>Sometimes the call comes as distinctly as though a
voice had spoken from the skies into the depths of
the heart.</p>
<p>A young man who was studying law was converted. After
a while he was convicted for sanctification, and while
seeking he heard, as it were, a voice, saying, “Will
you devote all your time to the Lord?” He replied:
“I am to be a lawyer, not a preacher, Lord.”
But not until he had said, “Yes, Lord,”
could he find the blessing.</p>
<p>A thoughtless, godless young fellow was working in
the corn-field when a telegram was handed him announcing
the death of his brother, a brilliant and devoted
Salvation Army Field Officer; and there and then,
unsaved as he was, God called him, showed him a vast
Army with ranks broken, where his brother had fallen,
and made him to feel that he should fill the breach
in the ranks. Fourteen months later he took up the
sword, and entered the Fight from the same platform
from which his brother fell, and is to-day one of
our most successful and promising Field Officers.</p>
<p>Again, the call may come as a quiet suggestion, a
gentle conviction, as though a gossamer bridle were
placed upon the heart and conscience to guide the
man into the work of the Lord. The suggestion gradually
becomes clearer, the conviction strengthens until
it masters the man, and if he seeks to escape it,
he finds the silken bridle to be one of stoutest thongs
and firmest steel.</p>
<p>It was so with me. When but a boy of eleven, I heard
a man preaching, and I said to myself, “Oh,
how beautiful to preach!” Two years later I
was converted, and soon the conviction came upon me
that I should preach. Later, I decided to follow another
profession; but the conviction increased in strength,
while I struggled against it, and turned away my ears
and went on with my studies. Yet in every crisis,
or hour of stillness, when my soul faced God, the
conviction that I must preach burned itself deeper
into my conscience. I rebelled against it. I felt I
would almost rather (but not quite) go to Hell than
to submit. Then at last a great “Woe is me,
if I preach not the Gospel,” took possession
of me, and I yielded, and God won. Hallelujah!</p>
<p>The first year He gave me three revivals, with many
souls; and now I would rather preach Jesus to poor
sinners and feed His lambs than to be an archangel
before the Throne. Some day, some day, He will call
me into His blessed presence, and I shall stand before
His face, and praise Him for ever for counting me worthy,
and calling me to preach His glad Gospel, and share
in His joy of saving the lost. The “woe”
is lost in love and delight through the baptism of
the Spirit and the sweet assurance that Jesus is pleased.</p>
<p>Occasionally, the call comes to a man who is ready
and responds promptly and gladly. When Isaiah received
the fiery touch that purged his life and purified
his heart, he “heard the voice of the Lord,
saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for Us?”
And in the joy and power of his new experience, he
cried out, “Here am I; send me!” (Isaiah
vi. 5-8).</p>
<p>When Paul received his call, he says, “Immediately
I conferred not with flesh and blood” (Gal.
i. 16), and he got up and went as the Lord led him.</p>
<p>But more often it seems the Lord finds men preoccupied
with other plans and ambitions, or encompassed with
obstacles and difficulties, or oppressed with a deep
sense of unworthiness or unfitness. Moses argued that
he could not talk. “O Lord!” he said, “I
am not eloquent, neither heretofore nor since Thou
hast spoken unto Thy servant; but I am slow of speech,
and of a slow tongue.”</p>
<p>And then the Lord condescended, as He always does,
to reason with the backward man. “Who hath made
man’s mouth?” He asks, “or who maketh
the dumb, or deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have
not I the Lord? Now, therefore, go, and I will be
with thy mouth, and teach thee what thou shalt say”
(Exodus iv. 10-12).</p>
<p>When the call of God came to Jeremiah, he shrank back,
and said, “Ah, Lord God! behold, I cannot speak:
for I am a child.” But the Lord replied, “Say
not, I am a child: for thou shalt go to all that I
shall send thee, and whatsoever I command thee thou
shalt speak. Be not afraid of their faces, for I am
with thee to deliver thee” (Jeremiah i. 6-8).</p>
<p>And so the call of God comes to-day to those who shrink
and feel that they are the most unfit, or most hedged
in by insuperable difficulties.</p>
<p>I know a man, who, when converted, could not tell
A from B. He knew nothing whatever about the Bible,
and stammered so badly that, when asked his own name,
it would usually take him a minute or so to tell it;
added to this, he lisped badly, and was subject to
a nervous affliction which seemed likely to unfit him
for any kind of work whatever. But God poured light
and love into his heart, called him to preach, and
to-day he is one of the mightiest soul-winners in
the whole round of my acquaintance. When he speaks
the house is always packed to the doors, and the people
hang on his words with wonder and joy.</p>
<p>He was converted at a Camp meeting, and sanctified
wholly in a cornfield. He learned to read; but, being
too poor to afford a light in the evening, he studied
a large-print Bible by the light of the full moon.
To-day, he has the Bible almost committed to memory,
and when he speaks he does not open the Book, but reads
his lesson from memory, and quotes proof texts from
Genesis to Revelation without mistake, and gives chapter
and verse for every quotation. When he talks his face
shines, and his speech is like honey for sweetness,
and like bullets fired from a gun for power. He is
one of the weak and foolish ones God has chosen to
confound the wise and mighty (1 Cor. i. 27).</p>
<p>If God calls a man, He will so corroborate the call
in some way, that men may know that there is a prophet
among them. It will be with him as it was with Samuel.
“And Samuel grew, and the Lord was with him,
and did let none of His words fall to the ground.
And all Israel, from Dan even to Beersheba, knew that
Samuel was established to be a prophet of the Lord”
(1 Samuel iii. 19, 20).</p>
<p>If the man himself is uncertain about the call, God
will deal patiently with him, as He did with Gideon,
to make him certain. His fleece will be wet with dew
when the earth is dry, or dry when the earth is wet;
or he will hear of some tumbling barley cake smiting
the tents of Midian, that will strengthen his faith,
and make him to know that God is with him (Judges vi.
36-40; vii. 9-15).</p>
<p>If the door is shut and difficulties hedge the way,
God will go before the man He calls, and open the
door and sweep away the difficulties (Isaiah xlv.
2, 3).</p>
<p>If others think the man so ignorant and unfit that
they doubt his call, God will give him such grace
or such power to win souls that they shall have to
acknowledge that God has chosen him. It was in this
way that God made a whole National Headquarters, from
the Commissioner downwards, to know that He had chosen
the elevator boy for His work. The boy got scores
of his passengers on the elevator saved, and then
he was commissioned and sent into the Field to devote
all his time to saving men.</p>
<p>The Lord will surely let the man’s comrades
and brethren know, as surely as He did the Church
at Antioch, when “the Holy Ghost said, Separate
Me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have
called them” (Acts xiii. 2).</p>
<p>Sometimes the one who is called will try to hide it
in his heart, and then God stirs up some Officer or
minister, some Soldier or mother in Israel, to lay
a hand on his shoulders, and ask, “Are you not
called to the work?” and he finds he cannot hide
himself nor escape from the call, any more than could
Adam hide himself from God behind the trees of the
garden, or Jonah escape God’s call by taking
ship for Tarshish.</p>
<p>Happy is the man who does not try to escape, but,
though trembling at the mighty responsibility, assumes
it, and, with all humility and faithfulness, sets
to work by prayer and patient, continuous study of
God’s word, to fit himself for God’s work.
He will need to prepare himself, for the call to the
work is also a call to preparation, continuous preparation
of the fullest possible kind.</p>
<p>The man whom God calls cannot safely neglect or despise
the call. He will find his mission on earth, his happiness
and peace, his power and prosperity, his reward in
Heaven, and probably Heaven itself, bound up with
that call and dependent upon it. He may run away from
it, as did Jonah, and find a waiting ship to favour
his flight; but he will also find fierce storms and
bellowing seas overtaking him, and big-mouthed fishes
of trouble and disaster ready to swallow him.</p>
<p>But if he heeds the call, and cheerfully goes where
God appoints, God will go with him; he shall nevermore
be left alone. The Holy Spirit will surely accompany
him, and he may be one of the happiest men on earth,
one of the gladdest creatures in God’s universe.</p>
<p>“Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end
of the world,” said Jesus, as He commissioned
His disciples to go to all nations and preach the
Gospel. “My presence shall go with thee,”
said Jehovah to Moses, when sending him to face Pharaoh
and free Israel, and lead them to the Promised Land.</p>
<p>And to the boy Jeremiah, He said, “Be not afraid
of their faces: for I am with thee to deliver thee....
And they shall fight against thee; but they shall
not prevail against thee; for I am with thee”
(Jeremiah i. 8, 19).</p>
<p>I used to read these words with a great and rapturous
joy, as I realised by faith that they were also meant
for me, and for every man sent of God, and that His
blessed presence was with me every time I spoke to
the people or dealt with an individual soul, or knelt
in prayer with a penitent seeker after God; and I still
read them so.</p>
<p>Has He called you into the work, my brother? And are
you conscious of His helpful, sympathising, loving
presence with you? If so, let no petty offence, no
hardship, nor danger, nor dread of the future, cause
you to turn aside or draw back. Stick to the work
till He calls you out, and when He so calls you can
go with open face and a heart abounding with love,
joy, and peace, and He will still go with you.</p>
<p class="smallcaps">“Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?”</p>
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