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Ancient Prophets
By Samuel Logan Brengle

Jesus Training Paul
Chapter 22

We learn from the Gospels how Jesus, in the days of His flesh, trained the twelve. We learn from the Acts and Paul's Epistles how the risen and glorified Jesus trained Paul.

This paper is a fragmentary study of that training and of some of Paul's struggles, inner conflicts, and fears out of and through which he was trained to triumph by obedient faith.

His experience was not one of ceaseless calm. Storms swept over him. It was not one of perpetual open vision. He was compelled to walk by faith and not by sight. He was sent forth to be a pathfinder; and no path-finder treads an easy way, whether it be across trackless wastes of sand and sea, through the tangled jungles of a tropic forest, or the denser, darker jungles of base, idolatrous superstitions and bloody and licentious rites, or the claims of a cold, self-satisfied, arrogant, petrified priesthood.

Paul was treading a way that no man had trod before him. He had turned his back on all his teachers, all the traditions of his people and was carrying the gospel to the heathen, and what he spoke and wrote he learned from no man. A strange, glorious, Divine experience had come to him on the road to Damascus and in the street called Straight. But it had to be interpreted, and he found no interpreter. For three years, out in the solitude of Arabia and in the silences of the night, he wrestled with his problems and the Lord illumined him, and he began to see new meanings in the ancient Scriptures. They ceased to be a binding, deadening letter, and became life and spirit. His mind was liberated as from chains.

God ceased to be simply the God of the Jews, a national God. He was the Heavenly Father to whom all men are dear, and the Lord Jesus Christ was not simply a Messiah for one people, a Military Conqueror, winning and building up His Kingdom by the power of His sword. He was 'the Desire of all Nations,' bringing spiritual deliverance to all men, not with sword and battle and ' garments rolled in blood,' but by the shame and power of the cross, winning His Kingdom not by the slaughter of His enemies, but by becoming 'the suffering Servant ' of all.

In Paul's Epistles, and especially in his Epistle to the Romans, we find many quotations from the Psalms and the old prophets, and these quotations are portions of the ancient scriptures into which the Holy Spirit was flashing new meanings to the mind of Paul, and they became the sheet anchor of his faith when storms swept over his soul and bitter enemies denounced his claims to be an Apostle.

One day his call came. The risen Jesus spoke to him and appointed him the Apostle to the Gentiles. He wanted to stay at home and preach to his own people, but the Lord said: 'They will not receive thy testimony concerning Me.' But Paul argued back: 'Lord, they know that I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them that believed on Thee: and when the blood of Thy martyr Stephen was shed, I also was standing by, and consenting unto his death, and kept the raiment of them that slew him.' Surely, thought Paul, they will, they must, receive my testimony.

Little did he yet know the willful stubbornness and fierce bigotry of unbelief. But the call was insistent 'Depart, for I will send thee far hence unto the Gentiles,' and Paul 'was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision.' 'I will show him how great things he must suffer for My name's sake,' said Jesus to Ananias, when he sent him to the blinded Saul that he might receive his sight 'and be filled with the Holy Ghost.' Little did Paul know what lay before him in the untrodden future. That was graciously hidden from him as from you and me.

There is a threefold ministry to which we are called: the ministry of service, the ministry of sacrifice, and the ministry of suffering. Some men seem called and fitted for one and some for another, but Paul was called and chosen to each and all of these ways of ministering the Gospel to his fellowmen. 'Great things' he suffered. Great sacrifices were demanded of him. Immeasurable toil and great and insistent cares pressed ceaselessly upon him. Body, mind, and soul were each taxed to the limit in his great task. It was not always by some open vision or cheering voice, but often by the things he suffered that his Master taught and fashioned him.

Once in Asia some great trouble befell him, and he writes: 'We were pressed out of measure, above strength, insomuch that we despaired of life: but we had the sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the dead; who delivered us from so great a death.' In such manner Jesus trained and developed the faith of Paul and taught him to trust only in God. Could he not in some easier way have taught Paul to trust? Possibly, but He chose this way, and it must have been the best way. Paul was strong and self-reliant, and like Jacob at Jabbok, whose thigh was disjointed, he had to be broken to become 'as a prince' and have 'power with God and with men.'

In his letter to his Thessalonian converts he exhorts them to 'comfort the feeble-minded, support the weak, be patient toward all men.' How did Paul, with his trained and master mind, learn to be 'gentle' with the 'feeble-minded' 'as a nurse cherisheth her children'? How, with his passionate, aggressive nature, did he come to put his strength at the disposal of the 'weak'? How, with his impetuous and fiery spirit, did he ever become 'patient toward all'? Like his Master, who, in the days of His humanity, 'learned obedience by the things which He suffered,' so Paul was trained and so he learned from Jesus in the school of suffering.

We see how latent lightnings in his soul could flash and leap forth like a thunder-bolt in his retort to the High Priest who had commanded him to be smitten on the mouth: 'God shall smite thee, thou whited wall for sittest thou to judge me after the law, and commandest me to be smitten contrary to the law?' It is true that when rebuked for so speaking to the High Priest, he meekly replied: 'I wist not, brethren, that he was the High Priest for it is written, "Thou shalt not speak evil of the ruler of Thy people."

But would Jesus have retorted as did Paul? When He was smitten by an officer because of His perfectly reasonable answer to the High Priest, Jesus quietly said: 'If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil: but if well, why smitest thou Me?' Who am I that I should presume to judge Paul? I dare not judge him. I love him too tenderly; I have lived with him too intimately for over forty years; I am too greatly awed by his sacrificial life, his lofty character, his Christ-like spirit, to attempt to pass judgment upon him, but if in that retort he fell below the standard of the Master, how is his spirit to be made meek and lowly as the Master?

'I, Paul, myself beseech you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ,' he wrote the Corinthians. How did he learn this meekness and gentleness of Christ? There is but one way. 'Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me,' said Jesus,' 'for I am meek and lowly in heart.' Paul came to Jesus, took upon him the yoke of Jesus, received the spirit of Jesus, and submitted whole-heartedly without murmuring and complaint or self-pity to the discipline of Jesus, and so learned his lessons. >From that day Jesus met him, on the Damascus road, he was no longer 'kicking against the pricks.' He might stand stoutly up against a traducer, but he bowed instantly at the word of Jesus. 'The carnal mind which is enmity against God,' went out of him for ever, and he followed Jesus with the passionate ardor of the perfect lover and the docility of the slave of love. Inbred sin is that something within that leads a man to selfishly seek his own way instead of God's way, his own pleasure instead of God's pleasure; that exalts itself, that frets and repines or stubbornly resists in the presence of God's will. From all this Paul was set free.

That was 'the law -- the power -- of sin and death,' and with that he had painfully and hopelessly struggled, until he felt that he was like the ancient Etrurian murderer, who, for punishment, was chained face to face, chin to chin, limb to limb, to his dead, rotting, putrefying victim, and he cried out 'O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from this dead body?' But meeting Jesus, believing on Jesus, casting himself in self despair upon Jesus, yielding to Jesus, Paul exultingly cries out: 'There is therefore now no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the spirit, for the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.' His heart was pure of sin, but purity is not maturity. Purity comes instantly when the surrendered, pardoned soul intelligently and gladly, in simple faith, yields all its redeemed faculties and powers in an utter, unconditional, irreversible dedication to its Lord. But the ripe mellowness, the serene wisdom, the Christlike composure of maturity can only come through manifold experiences as we walk with Jesus in service, in sacrifice, and suffering, and learn of Him.

Paul's spirit had to be disciplined, and he had much to learn as well as much to suffer. When Jesus commissioned him, He said: 'I have appeared unto thee for this purpose, to make thee a minister and a witness both of these things which thou hast seen' -- the things he had already learned -- 'and of those things in the which I will appear unto thee.' So the teaching and training and maturing of Paul began and continued through the years until at last he could write: 'The time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith.'

His Lord did not spare him, but He never failed him. And so out of wide experience and intimate knowledge Paul could write letters that were the revelation of the plan, the purpose, the mind, the character of God in Christ; letters that have come down across two thousand years and are still as sweet and fresh and life-giving as clear waters from everlasting springs, bubbling up in deep, cool valleys, fed by eternal snows from great mountains.

Jesus meant, and Paul felt, that his experiences were not for himself alone. Through him Jesus was teaching the whole Church for all time -- teaching you and me. When in Paul's sore trials and tribulations his faithful Lord comforted him, he says that it was that he might comfort others with 'the comfort wherewith he was comforted of God.' ' For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. And whether we be afflicted, it is for your consolation and Salvation . . . or whether we be comforted, it is for your consolation and Salvation.'

We may be sure that when Paul writes he writes out of experience. When he wrote to those he loved at Ephesus, 'put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil,' we rest assured that he had first-hand knowledge of those wiles and the hopelessness of any defense unless panoplied in 'the whole armour of God.' When he writes, 'Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked,' there flashed into his memory some dark and lonely, painful and prolonged period when the arch-enemy of his soul, 'the accuser of the brethren,' plied him with questionings and doubts and fears and forebodings for the future and accusations for the past, until his harassed soul seemed to him like some soldier on the field of battle, who was the target of archers who had dipped their darts in pitch and flame, and against which darts his only defense was his shield, the shield of faith. These darts would quench their flame in his life blood, if he did not manfully use this shield; but against it they fell harmless.

In the first of his letters, the First Epistle to the Thessalonians, he reminded them that in spite of the painful and shameful and dangerous treatment he received at Philippi: 'We were bold in our God to speak unto you the Gospel of God with much contention.' Bold. But listen. In one of his letters, his Epistle to the Ephesians, written from Rome, where, he says, he is 'an ambassador in bonds,' he asks for the prayers of his brethren 'That I may speak boldly as I ought to speak.' Do we not get a hint from this of the temptation from which he suffered, and against which he girded himself and asked the sympathetic help of his brethren? He was old and worn, bruised and scarred, chained in prison and surrounded by relentless foes, and he was tempted to timidity and cowardice in preaching his gospel. Dear old Paul. Like his Master and ours, 'he was tempted in all points as we are.' But he fought on and triumphed. It is no sin to be tempted. It is sinful to yield. Paul did not yield, and so he remained in the school of Christ, and so Christ trained him.

It was out of such manifold experiences that he could write with an assurance that has reassured myriads of tempted, harassed souls: 'There hath no temptation overtaken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.'

Paul had mountain peak and paradisiacal experiences, but he also had hours of depression. How could it be otherwise, unless miracles had periodically been wrought for his deliverance?

Jesus would not turn stones into bread to satisfy His own hunger after forty days of fasting. And in training Paul, He did not pet and pamper and so spoil him. Heroes, martyrs, world-conquerors, saints, are not made that way. 'Who are these arrayed in white robes before the throne? And whence came they?' asked John in the Apocalypse. 'These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the Blood of the Lamb,' was the answer. Paul had great tribulation, and how could he escape the depression of reaction, when bruised from beatings and stonings, smarting and bleeding from cruel whippings, when hungry and thirsty, pinched with cold, and exhausted from shipwreck and long and painful journeys?

Add to these physical hardships his constant 'care of all the churches,' his anxiety for his poor, persecuted converts in far-off heathen cities; add further his constant danger from relentless enemies, who followed him from city to city; and, finally, add to all these the hellish darts of Satan, and we get some conception of the infirmities, reproaches, necessities, persecutions, and distresses in and through which Jesus trained, disciplined, beautified, enriched, perfected, and matured the spirit of Paul, until he gloried and took pleasure in his infirmities, for in these it was revealed to his faith, rather than in his own native strength, and powers, did the power of Christ rest upon him.

He says, 'I have learned' -- and learning is a process often prolonged and painful -- 'I have learned in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased ' -- old-time Salvationists, from force of circumstances, had to learn that lesson, but Paul adds: 'I know how to abound' a very difficult lesson, and one very dangerous not to learn -- 'everywhere and in all things I am instructed' -- still in the school of Christ -- 'both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ which strengthened me.' Hallelujah!

Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers, And he bears a ladened breast,

Full of sad experience moving Towards the stillness of his rest.

I see Thy school is not an easy one, O Christ, and I would learn of Thee. Train me, teach me.

Dost Thou reply to me as to James and John: 'Ye know not what ye ask?' Still, O Lord, train me, discipline me, teach me.

Dost Thou ask, 'Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of? and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with? 'Thou knowest, O Lord, I trust Thy love and Thy wisdom, and into Thy hands I commit my spirit; so, teach me, train me, that I, with Paul, may 'know Thee and the power of Thy resurrection and the fellowship of Thy sufferings ' -- 'the fellowship of Thy sufferings.' That I may 'comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that I may be filled with all the fullness of God' and thereby 'show to this generation Thy strength, and Thy power to every one that is to come.'

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What About The Future Of The Salvation Army?
Chapter 23

There are some questions always being asked and never fully answered, for the simple reason that only Omniscience knows the answer, and Omniscience is not disposed to answer questions which can be solved in measure by diligent attention to the spirit and principles revealed in the Bible, and the final answer to which is largely contingent upon our good behavior, our humility, our loyalty to truth and love, our unswerving allegiance to Jesus, and our diligence in keeping His commandments and walking in His footsteps.

I have recently been asked what I think about the future of The Salvation Army. This is an old question, about as old as The Army itself. It was going the rounds when I joined The Army over forty years ago, and some one has been asking it ever since. Both friends and foes of The Army have asked it. Officers and Soldiers whose lives and whose families have been linked up and entwined with The Army have asked it; and I doubt not our leaders have pondered over it and given it their profoundest and most anxious thought.

It is a question which those who love God and the souls of men can hardly avoid. With some it is a purely academic question. They would like to solve the question for intellectual satisfaction. Others, mere busybodies, would pry into the future, like many who are curious to know all about the affairs of their neighbors, that they may have something about which to gossip. It is not a matter of vital interest to them. Indeed, they are of that large class of people who have no vital interest in anything. They are like the lying woman in Solomon's day who stole another woman's baby, but had so little real interest in the baby that she was willing to have it cut in two rather than to acknowledge her theft and lie.

With others it is a painfully practical question. Their hearts are in The Army. It is as dear to them as life. They are bound up in the bundle of its life. They have sacrificed every other interest for it. They are given over to it soul and body, and have dedicated not only themselves, but their children also to it. They can paraphrase the ancient Psalmist's declaration of his devotion to Jerusalem 'If I forget thee, O Salvation Army, let my right hand forget her cunning.

'If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I prefer not The Salvation Army above my chief joy.'

They feel that the highest interests of the Kingdom of God upon earth are bound up with The Army, an the coming and establishment of the Kingdom are in large measure dependent upon its spiritual life and prosperity.

There are some people who are cocksure that they know the answer. There are optimists who see nothing but the most rosy future for The Army. But there are pessimists who prophecy its imminent disruption and dissolution.

Many years ago, just after a tour that had taken me round the world, an old Officer asked me with a quizzical look: 'Are you going to leave The Army ship before she sinks?' I assured him that from a rather wide range of intimate observation I saw no signs that the ship was seriously leaking, or likely to sink, but that even if I did, as an Officer my business was to stick to the ship and do all in my power to save it, or go down with it and its precious freightage of the souls of men and women and little children. 'The hireling fleeth when he seeth the wolf coming. The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.' And the true Officer gives his life for The Army and the souls who are in its keeping.

Doubters and timid souls have been prophesying the end of The Army from its very beginning, but still it lives and prospers. But what will be its future? Will it continue to live and prosper? Or has it fulfilled its mission?

Like a great bridge hung upon two buttresses, so The Army is buttressed upon God and man.

Is it God's Army? Did He inspire and gird and guide William Booth when, with heart aching for sinful men and spirit aflame for the glory of God and the honour of Christ, he stepped out on Mile End Waste and began the work that has developed into The Salvation Army? Is God for us, or against us, or indifferent to us? I can sing for myself;

His love in time past forbids me to think, He'll leave me at last in trouble to sink;

Each sweet Ebenezer I have in review Confirms His good pleasure to see me quite through.

But can I be so confident for The Army? His guidance, His overruling Providence, His gracious and mighty deliverances in the past are unmistakable, are on record, known and read of all men who care to read. He has overshadowed The Army with a pillar of cloud and fire as surely as He did ancient Israel; He has gone before and opened the 'two leaved gates of brass,' as He did for Cyrus, and empowered Army Officers and Soldiers and made them more than conquerors, as He did the Apostles and saints of the Early Church; but do all these wonders of His favor and grace give assurance for the future? Is The Army sacrosanct? Are we favorites and pets of the Almighty? This leads us to the second point of dependence.

If God is for us, and I fully believe He is, does not that insure our future?

The future of The Army depends not only upon God -- I say it reverently and in His fear -- but also upon man, upon men, upon you and me and all who have to do with The Army. 'Hear ye me,' cried the prophet Azariah, 'Hear ye me, Asa, and all Judah and Benjamin; The Lord is with you, while ye be with Him; and if ye seek Him, He will be found of you: but,' and here is warning for us to heed, for here lurks danger, 'but if ye forsake Him, He will forsake you.' And this is a timeless prophecy, eternally true, and not of private interpretation, as true today as it was three millenniums ago; as true of The Army, of you and of me, as it was of ancient Judah and Benjamin and their king Asa; and it is 'written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the world have come.' Let us search our hearts, order our lives, and be admonished.

In so far in the past as we have sought God with our whole heart, walked in His ways, and lived and wrought in the spirit of our Lord and Master He has been with us, preserved us, prospered the work of our hands, fulfilled the desires of our hearts, and blessed us in the presence of our enemies. Can we still confidently expect His favor for the future? Yes, and only, if we continue to abide in Him and fulfill the conditions that have permitted Him to pour benedictions upon us in the past.

And what are these conditions? I think we shall find them expressed in the closing ministry of Jesus and of Paul. Of our Lord in those closing days of His ministry when preparing His disciples for His departure, and the days when they must stand alone without His incarnate presence, and lay the foundations and build the church and give it the living example and word that would guide it through storm and stress of agonizing pagan persecutions, of worldly allurements and seductions, of subtle philosophizings, of pain and poverty, of indifference and scorn, and the dangers of wealth and power and wide acclaim. Of Paul in his later ministry; his farewell address to the elders of Ephesus at Miletus, and his prison letters to the churches and his young friends and lieutenants, Timothy and Titus.

The warnings, the exhortations, the example, the close and intimate instructions of our Lord given to His disciples in the last few closing months and days and last night of His ministry, and His High Priestly prayer recorded in the seventeenth chapter of John, show us the plain path in which we must walk, if the future of The Salvation Army is to be happy and prosperous and its great promise come to ample fulfillment.

And what were the example and teachings of the Master in these fleet, closing days?

As He drew near the cross His disciples thought He was drawing near to a throne and crown, and they were each ambitious and contentious for first place and highest honors. But He told them plainly that He should be rejected of men and crucified. Then Peter rebuked Him: 'Pity Thyself -- be it far from Thee, Lord: this shall not be unto Thee.'

But He rebuked Peter and replied : ' If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.'

It was not an unusual sight in the Roman Empire to see a line of men following a leader, each bearing a cross on his way to crucifixion. This was the picture He would have them visualize. They were to follow Him, their Leader, each bearing his own cross, not seeking to save his life, but ready to lose it for His sake and for the sake of the brethren. 'For whosoever will save his life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it.'

So mightily at last did this teaching grip the early disciples and fire their spirits, that they actually coveted martyrdom and ran upon death with joy. In this they may have swung to an extreme, but if The Salvation Army of the future is to prosper and win spiritual triumphs, we must follow the Master, not seeking first place or power, but glorying in the cross.

This was the secret of Paul. He was the pattern disciple. He had sat at the feet of Jesus and learned of Him until he could write: 'What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ; neither count I my life dear unto myself; that I may finish my course with joy, and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus. . . . God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ; by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.'

1. If the future of The Salvation Army is to be spiritually radiant and all conquering, we must not simply endure the cross, but glory in it. This will arrest the world, disarm Hell, and gladden the heart of our Lord.

2. We must 'by love serve one another.' We are following Him who 'came not to be ministered unto, but to minister and to give His life a ransom for many.' We, too, must give our lives for others, shrinking from no service, holding ourselves ever ready to wash the feet of the lowliest disciple.

3. We must still prove our discipleship by our love one for the other. It is not enough to wear the uniform, to profess loyalty to Army leaders and principles, to give our goods to feed the poor and our bodies to be burned. We must love one another. We must make this the badge of our discipleship. We must wrestle and pray and hold fast that we do not lose this.

The Army is so thoroughly organized and disciplined, so wrought into the life of nations, so fortified with valuable properties, and on such a sound financial basis, that it is not likely to perish as an organization, but it will become a spiritually dead thing if love leaks out. Love is the life of The Army. 'If we love one another, God dwelleth in us, and His love is perfected in us.' But if love leaks out we shall lose our crown, we shall have a name to live and yet be dead. We may still house the homeless, dole out food to the hungry, punctiliously perform our routine work, but the mighty ministry of the Spirit will no longer be our glory. Our musicians will play meticulously, our Songsters will revel in the artistry of song that tickles the ear, but leaves the heart cold and hard. Our Officers will make broad their phylacteries and hob-nob with mayors and councilmen and be greeted in the market-place, but God will not be among us. We shall still recruit our ranks and supply our Training Garrisons with Cadets from among our own Young People, but we shall cease to be saviors of the lost sheep that have no shepherd.

If the future of The Salvation Army is to still be glorious, we must heed the exhortation: 'Let brotherly love continue.' We must remember that all we are brethren and beware lest through leakage of love we become like the wicked of whom the Psalmist wrote: 'Thou sittest and speakest against thy brother; thou slanderest thine own mother's son (Psalm l. 20), and find our hearts full of strife and bitter envying where the love that suffereth long and is kind should reign supreme.

This is that for which Jesus pleaded on that last night before His crucifixion: 'This is My commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you. Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends. Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. These things I command you, that ye love one another.'

This is that for which Paul pleaded and labored: And the Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another and toward all men . . to the end He may establish your hearts unblameable in Holiness before God . . . at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ ' (1 Thessalonians iii. 12, 13).

This is that to which Peter exhorted the universal church: 'Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently; . . . And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins ' (1 Peter i. 22; iv. 8).

4. How else but by fullness of love for one another can we fulfill those supernatural requirements expressed by Paul and Peter? For more than forty years I have pondered and prayed over those two brief and searching words of Paul: 'Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love: in honour preferring one another,' 'Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves.' These are lofty spiritual heights scaled only by those in whose pure hearts burns selfless love.

In so far as this spirit rules in our hearts God can work with us and bless us, and the spiritual triumphs and glory of The Army for the future are assured. But in so far as these graces of the Spirit in us fail, so far will The Army as a spiritual power in the earth fail.

Akin to these words of Paul are those of Peter: 'The elders which are among you I exhort. . . Feed the flock of God, . . . not by constraint, but willingly; not for filthy lucre (or rank or power), but of a ready mind; neither as being lords over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock. Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder. Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility.' Nothing will so certainly insure the prosperous and happy future of The Army as this spirit, and I am persuaded that nothing other than this can insure it. This is the life, the pulsing, eager, satisfying, and yet ever unsatisfied, outreaching, world embracing life of The Army. Organization and Government are important, vastly important, for the direction and conservation of the activities of the life; but without the life the Organization is a bit of mere mechanism and the government is a pantomime.

Finally, in closing, let me recommend to my comrades the world over, for prayerful study and meditation, Paul's farewell address to the elders of Ephesus at Miletus, recorded in Acts xx. 17-35.

Over and over again and again, through more than four decades, I have read and pondered that address, and prayed that the spirit that was in Paul might be in me and in all my comrades, for this is the spirit of Jesus. This is that for which He prayed on that last night of His agony as recorded in the seventeenth chapter of John. And this is that, and that alone, which can and will insure the victorious and happy future of our world-wide Army.

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THE END

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© 1999 The Old Time Gospel Ministry
"When to seek God has become life and to glorify God has become self, then you have truly found God."