THE LEAKAGE OF SPIRITUAL POWER
That man of God and lover of souls, James Caughey, tells in one
of his books how he was invited out to tea one evening; and though
there was nothing harmful in the talk of the hour, yet when he went
into the meeting at night his soul was like a loosely strung bow. He
couldn't shoot the King's arrows into the hearts of the King's
enemies, for he had no power. It had been lost at the tea-table.
I knew an officer once who let all his spiritual power leak out,
until he was as dry as an old bone when he got into the meeting. It
was in this way. We had to ride three miles in a street car to get
to the hall, and all the way there he was talking about things that
had no bearing upon the coming meeting. There was nothing wrong or
trifling said, but it was not to the point; it turned his mind from
God and the souls he was so soon to face and plead with to be
reconciled to Him; and the result was that, instead of going before
the people clothed with power, he went stripped of power. I remember
the meeting well. His prayer was good, but there was no power in it.
It was words, words, words! The Bible reading and talk were good. He
said many true and excellent things, but there was no power in them.
The soldiers looked indifferent, the sinners looked careless and
sleepy, and altogether the meeting was a dull affair.
Now, the officer was not a backslider; he had a good experience. Nor
was he a dull stupid officer; on the contrary, he was one of the
brightest, keenest officers I know. The trouble was that, instead of
keeping quiet and communing with God in his own heart on that car,
until his soul was ablaze with faith and hope and love and holy
expectation, he had wasted his power in useless talk.
God says: "If thou take forth the precious from the vile, thou shalt
be as My mouth" (Jer. xv. 59). Think of it! That officer might have
gone into that meeting filled with power, and his mouth should have
been to those people as the mouth of God, and his words should have
been "quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the
joints and marrow," and proving to be "a discerner of the thoughts
and intents of the heart" (Heb. iv. 12). But instead of that, he was
like Samson after his locks were shorn by Delilah -- he was
powerless as other men.
There are many ways of letting power leak away. I knew a soldier who
came to the hall very early every evening, and instead of getting
his soul keyed up to a high pitch of faith and love, spent the time
playing soft, dreamy music on his violin, and though faithfully,
lovingly warned, continued that practice till he openly backslid.
I have known men whose power leaked out through a joke. They
believed in having things go with a swing, and so they told funny
stories and played the clown to make things lively. And things were
lively, but it was not with Divine life. It was the liveliness of
mere animal spirits, and not of the Holy Spirit. I do not mean by
this that a man who is filled with the power of the Spirit will
never make men laugh. He will. He may say tremendously funny things.
But he will not be doing it just to have a good time. It will come
naturally. It will not be dragged in "on all fours," and it will be
done in the fear of God, and not in a spirit of lightness and
jesting.
He who wants a meeting of life and power should remember that there
is no substitute for the Holy Ghost. He is life. He is power. And if
He is sought in earnest, faithful prayer, He will come, and when He
comes the little meeting will be mighty in its results.
The Holy Spirit should be earnestly sought, in earnest, secret
prayer. Jesus said, "When thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and
when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret;
and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly"
(Matt. vi. 6). He will do it; bless His holy name!
I know of a man who, if possible, gets alone with God for an hour
before every meeting, and when he speaks it is with the power and
demonstration of the Spirit.
The man who wants power, just when it is most needed, must walk with
God. He must be a friend of God. He must keep the way always open
between his heart and God. God will be the friend of such a man, and
will bless him and honor him. God will tell him His secrets; He will
show him how to get at the hearts of men. God will make dark things
light and crooked places straight and rough places smooth for that
man. God will be on his side and help him.
Such a man must keep a constant watch over his mouth and his heart.
David prayed: "Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep the door
of my lips" (Ps. cxli. 3); and Solomon said: "Keep thy heart with
all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life" (Prov. iv. 23).
He must walk in unbroken communion with God. He must cultivate a
spirit of joyful recollection by which he will be always conscious
that he is in the presence of God.
"Delight thyself also in the Lord" (Ps. xxxvii. 4), said the
Psalmist. Oh, how happy is that man who finds God to be his delight;
who is never lonely, because He knows God, talks with God, delights
in God; who feels how lovable God is, and gives himself up to
loving, serving, trusting God with all his heart!
Comrade, "Quench not the Spirit" (I Thess. v.59), and He will lead
you thus to know and love God, and God will make you the instrument
of His own power.
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