登陆注册
4610300000006

第6章 EVANGELIST(3)

The burden has fallen off their backs at the cross, and they have had their rags removed and have received change of raiment. They have climbed the Hill Difficulty, and they have fought their way through the Valley of the Shadow of Death. More than the half of their adventures and sufferings are past; but they are not yet out of gunshot of the devil, and the bones of many a promising pilgrim lie whitening the way between this and the city. Many of our young communicants have made a fair and a promising start for salvation.

They have got over the initial difficulties that lay in their way to the Lord's table, and we have entered their names with honest pride in our communion roll. But a year or two passes over, and the critical season arrives when our young communicant 'comes out,'

as the word is. Up till now she has been a child, a little maid, a Bible-class student, a young communicant, a Sabbath-school teacher.

But she is now a young lady, and she comes out into the world. We soon see that she has so come out, as we begin to miss her from places and from employments her presence used to brighten; and, very unwillingly, we overhear men and women with her name on their lips in a way that makes us fear for her soul, till many, oh, in a single ministry, how many, who promised well at the gate and ran safely past many snares, at last sell all--body and soul and Saviour--in Vanity Fair.

Well, Evangelist remains Evangelist still. Only, without losing any of his sweetness and freeness and fulness of promise, he adds to that some solemn warnings and counsels suitable now, as never before, to these two pilgrims. If one may say so, he would add now such moral treatises as Butler's Sermons and Serious Call to such evangelical books as Grace Abounding and A Jerusalem Sinner Saved.

To-morrow the two pilgrims will come out of the wilderness and will be plunged into a city where they will be offered all kinds of merchandise,--houses, lands, places, honours, preferments, titles, pleasures, delights, wives, children, bodies, souls, and what not.

An altogether new world from anything they have yet come through, and a world where many who once began well have gone no further.

Such counsels as these, then, Evangelist gave Christian and Faithful as they left the lonely wilderness behind them and came out towards the gate of the seductive city--'Let the Kingdom of Heaven be always before your eyes, and believe steadfastly concerning things that are invisible.' Visible, tangible, sweet, and desirable things will immediately be offered to them, and unless they have a faith in their hearts that is the substance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen, it will soon be all over with them and their pilgrimage. 'Let no man take your crown,' he said also, as he foresaw at how many booths and counters, houses, lands, places, preferments, wives, husbands, and what not, would be offered them and pressed upon them in exchange for their heavenly crown. 'Above all, look well to your own hearts,' he said. Canon Venables laments over the teaching that Bunyan received from John Gifford. 'Its principle,' he says, 'was constant introspection and scrupulous weighing of every word and deed, and even of every thought, instead of leading the mind off from self to the Saviour.' The canon seems to think that it was specially unfortunate for Bunyan to be told to keep his heart and to weigh well every thought of it; but I must point out to you that Evangelist puts as above all other things the most important for the pilgrims the looking well to their own hearts; and our plain-

spoken author has used a very severe word about any minister who should whisper anything to any pilgrim that could be construed or misunderstood into putting Christ in the place of thought and word and deed, and the scrupulous weighing of every one of them. 'Let nothing that is on this side the other world get within you; and above all, look well to your own hearts, and to the lusts thereof.'

'Set your faces like a flint,' Evangelist proceeds. How little like all that you hear in the counsels of the pulpit to young women coming out and to young men entering into business life. I am convinced that if we ministers were more direct and plain-spoken to such persons at such times; if we, like Bunyan, told them plainly what kind of a world it is they are coming out to buy and sell in, and what its merchandise and its prices are; if our people would let us so preach to their sons and daughters, I feel sure far fewer young communicants would make shipwreck, and far fewer grey heads would go down with sorrow to the grave. 'Be not afraid,' said Robert Hall in his charge to a young minister, 'of devoting whole sermons to particular parts of moral conduct and religious duty.

It is impossible to give right views of them unless you dissect characters and describe particular virtues and vices. The works of the flesh and the fruits of the Spirit must be distinctly pointed out. To preach against sin in general without descending to particulars may lead many to complain of the evil of their hearts, while at the same time they are awfully inattentive to the evil of their conduct.' Take Evangelist's noble counsels at the gate of Vanity Fair, and then take John Bunyan's masterly description of the Fair itself, with all that is bought and sold in it, and you will have a lesson in evangelical preaching that the evangelical pulpit needed in Bunyan's day, in Robert Hall's day, and not less in our own.

'My sons, you have heard the truth of the gospel, that you must through many tribulations enter the Kingdom of God. When, therefore, you are come to the Fair and shall find fulfilled what I

have here related, then remember your friend; quit yourselves like men, and commit the keeping of your souls to your God in well-doing as unto a faithful Creator.'

同类推荐
  • 续高僧传

    续高僧传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 棋经十三篇

    棋经十三篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞真太上紫文丹章

    洞真太上紫文丹章

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Golden Asse

    The Golden Asse

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始天尊说药王救八十一难真经

    元始天尊说药王救八十一难真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 晚安列国

    晚安列国

    繁华的大都市,平凡的小青年。像许多人一样,他也在努力追求自己的面包和爱情,偶然间认识了几位志同道合的朋友,世界如水平静,生活融融惬意。而他并不知道,某种力量于无声处悄然苏醒,命运的洪流引他们相聚,翻涌间正酝酿起一场颠覆世界的阴谋...
  • 令人费解的谜团(奇妙的大千世界)

    令人费解的谜团(奇妙的大千世界)

    世界如此广博与深邃,无论今天的科学多么的发达,终会有许多未解的谜团让我们无能为力。就是在我们身边,一些司空见惯的事情,如果去探究,也隐藏着许许多多令人惊叹的奥秘。《奇妙的大千世界:令人费解的谜团》试图从多角度、多方面,结合现代科学的一些新的发现、新的成果进一步揭开背后层层的面纱。
  • 夺命密室

    夺命密室

    贺克士名声大噪。自成功地侦破侦探所成立以来最大的“遭遇战”式的“真假公主”案之后,各种媒体进行了铺天盖地的夸张和渲染,什么“中国福尔摩斯”,“当今华夏第一神探”,“超人智慧和杰出推理”,直至“一面罪犯无可遁形的神奇照妖镜”,他被捧上天了。方宏明呢,可不是一般的沾光,由于贺克士处处回避,面对镜头和麦克风的事儿主要由他负责,他自然是如鱼得水,出尽风头了。记者也就投其所好,往他头上套光环,“年轻有为的华生式人物”,“与贺大侦探相得益彰”,“一主一辅,不可或缺”,“也是神探”。
  • 轮回古神

    轮回古神

    当古老的修真体系与科技体系碰撞,谁有更胜一筹,万世轮回,只为你(第一章各位提点建议,看情况如何,好的话,我会继续写)
  • 阴阳手记

    阴阳手记

    我叫胡一成,我从来没有想到,自己会陷入进圈套之中,我要冲破艰难险阻,寻求其中的真像……
  • 五行修神

    五行修神

    一个先天血脉浓度为零,不可能走上修真之路的废物,却有着极为超常的智力!天生拥有水之印记却又没有水之血脉,却是神秘五行族之水之传人!身为世袭武修家族的二少爷,却又拥有来自其他星球的古老强悍血脉!在即将登上修真之巅的时候,却又发现原来五行的终极目标另有其意!
  • 全唐诗话

    全唐诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一睡十万年

    一睡十万年

    宇宙历,100013年,覆盖整个宇宙的超大型网游第三世界开始运行,各大星系无数种族同时进入游戏征战。阴险狡诈,侵略性强的巨坦星系恐龙族。贪婪、无耻,像强盗的巴卡星系短腿族。表面白莲花、内心大呲花的圣母星系圣母族怼天、怼地、怼空气的头铁星系杠精族。杀父、杀母、杀全家的幽暗星系暗影族。一场车祸,让张浪昏睡了十多万年,醒来之后发现被困在了游戏第三世界...PS:关于十万年后的设想纯粹是胡编乱造,没有一点科学逻辑。
  • 玲珑玲珑安红豆

    玲珑玲珑安红豆

    南禺之山梧桐之上为凤族的栖地,玲珑作为未来百鸟领主不知凤言。只晓得吃喝玩乐,游戏人间。时不时裹上青丘的大王去人间寻欢作乐,喝喝小酒、听听小曲儿。某日,把自己当狐狸,一身骚气的逗了逗某个路过的小少年、逗出了篓子......完了,这个篓子有点社会,摆脱不了了啊!
  • 权谋御心

    权谋御心

    情有可原的谋害,就是无罪?给一巴掌喂个糖,就是无害?前世渣男今世遇,就是猿粪?呸呸呸,谁一辈子就执着一人?叶秋白瞅了瞅备胎n号,考虑起了纳谁为宠“呔,今生你还想跑,今日君王不早朝!