| Chapter 27 SHOUTING 
			 Nothing is more completely hidden from wise and prudent folk than 
			the blessed fact that there is a secret spring of power and victory 
			in shouting and praising God. 
 The devil often throws a spell over people which can be broken in no 
			other way. Many an honest, seeking soul, who might step forth into 
			perfect and perpetual liberty if he would only dare to look the 
			devil in the eye and shout "Glory to God!" goes mourning all his 
			days under this spell. Frequently whole congregations will be under 
			it. There will be a vacant or a listless or a restless look in their 
			eyes. There is no attention, no expectation. A stifling stillness 
			and the serenity of "death" settles upon them. But let a 
			Spirit-baptized man, with a weight of glory in his soul, bless the 
			Lord, and the spell will be broken. Every man there will come to his 
			senses, will wake up, will remember where he is, and will begin to 
			expect something to happen.
 
 Shouting and praising God is to salvation what flame is to fire. You 
			may have a very hot and useful fire without a blaze, but not till it 
			bursts forth into flame does it become irresistible and sweep 
			everything before it. So people may be very good and have a measure 
			of salvation, but it is not until they become so full of the Holy 
			Ghost that they are likely to burst forth in praises to their 
			glorious God at any hour of the day or night, both in private and 
			public, that their salvation becomes irresistibly catching.
 
 The shouting of some people is as terrible as the noise of an empty 
			wagon rolling over cobble stones; it is like the firing of blank 
			cartridges. It is all noise. Their religion consists in making a 
			racket. But there are others who wait on God in secret places, who 
			seek His face with their whole hearts, who groan in prayer with 
			unutterable longing to know God in all His fullness and to see His 
			kingdom come with power; who plead the promises, who search the word 
			of God and meditate on it day and night, until they are full of the 
			great though and truths of God, and faith is made perfect. Then the 
			Holy Ghost comes pressing down on them with an eternal weight of 
			glory that compels praise, and when they shout it takes effect. 
			Every cartridge is loaded, and at times their shouting will be like 
			the boom of a big gun, and will have the speed and power of a 
			cannon-ball.
 
 An old friend of mine in Vermont once remarked, that "when he went 
			into a store or railway station, he found the place full of devils, 
			and the atmosphere choked his soul till he shouted; then every devil 
			hied himself away, the atmosphere was purified, and he had 
			possession of the place, and could say and do what he pleased." The 
			Marechale once wrote: "Nothing fills all Hell with dismay like a 
			reckless, dare-devil shouting faith." Nothing can stand before a man 
			with a genuine shout in his soul. Earth and Hell flee before him, 
			and all Heaven throngs about him to help him fight his battles.
 
 When Joshua's armies shouted, the walls of Jericho "fell down flat" 
			before them. When Jehoshaphat's people "began to sing and praise, 
			the Lord set ambushments against Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir, and 
			they were smitten." When Paul and Silas, with bruised and bleeding 
			backs, in the inner dungeon of that horrible Philippian jail, at 
			midnight, "prayed and sang praises unto God," the Lord sent an 
			earthquake, shook the foundations of the prison, loosed the 
			prisoners, and converted the jailer and all his family. And there is 
			no conceivable difficulty that will not vanish before the man who 
			prays and praises God.
 
 When Billy Bray wanted bread, he prayed and shouted, to give the 
			devil to understand that he felt under no obligation to him, but had 
			perfect confidence in his Heavenly Father. When Dr. Cullis, of 
			Boston, had not a penny in his treasury, and heavy obligations 
			rested upon him, and he knew not how he could buy food for the 
			patients in his home for consumptives, he would go into his office 
			and read the Bible and pray and walk the floor, praising God and 
			telling Him he would trust, and money would roll in from the ends of 
			the earth. Victory always comes where a man, having poured Out his 
			heart in prayer, dares to trust God and express his faith in praise.
 
 Shouting is the final and highest expression of faith made perfect 
			in its various stages. When a sinner comes to God in hearty 
			repentance and surrender, and, throwing himself fully on the mercy 
			of God, looks to Jesus only for salvation, and by faith fully and 
			fearlessly grasps the blessing of justification, the first 
			expression of that faith will be one of confidence and praise. No 
			doubt, there are many who claim justification who never praise God; 
			but either they are deceived, or their faith is weak and mixed with 
			doubt and fear. When it is perfect, praise will be spontaneous.
 
 And when this justified man comes to see the holiness of God, and 
			the exceeding breadth of His commandment, and the absolute claim of 
			God upon every power of his being, and realizes the remaining 
			selfishness and earthiness of his heart; when he, after many 
			failures to purify himself, and inward questionings of soul, and 
			debatings of conscience, and haltings of faith, comes to God to be 
			made holy through the precious Blood and the baptism of the Holy 
			Ghost and of fire, the final expression of the faith that resolutely 
			and perfectly grasps the blessing will not be prayer, but praise and 
			hallelujahs.
 
 And when this saved and sanctified man, seeing the woes of a lost 
			world and feeling the holy passion of Jesus working mightily in Him, 
			goes forth to war with "principalities, and powers, and the rulers 
			of the darkness of this world, and wicked spirits in heavenly 
			places," in order to rescue the slaves of sin and Hell, after 
			weeping and agonizing in prayer to God for an outpouring of the 
			Spirit, and after preaching to, and teaching men, and pleading with 
			them to yield utterly to God, and after many fastings and trials and 
			conflicts, in which faith and patience for other men are made 
			perfect and victorious, prayer will be transformed into praise, and 
			weeping into shouting, and apparent defeat into overwhelming 
			victory!
 
 Where there is victory, there is shouting, and where there is no 
			shouting, faith and patience are either in retreat, or are engaged 
			in conflict, the issue of which for the time being seems uncertain. 
			But:
 
 Oh, for a faith that will not shrink Though pressed by every foe,
 
 That will not tremble on the brink Of any earthly woe.
 
 Faith, mighty faith, the promise sees, And looks to that alone,
 
 Laughs at impossibilities, And cries, "It shall be done!"
 
 And what is true in individual experience is revealed to be true of 
			the Church in its final triumph. For after the long ages of stress 
			and conflict and patient waiting and fiery trial; after the 
			ceaseless intercessions of Jesus, and the unutterable groaning of 
			the Spirit in the hearts of believers, the Church shall finally come 
			to perfect faith and patience and unity of love, according to the 
			prayer of Jesus in John xvli., and then "The Lord Himself shall 
			descend from Heaven with a shout, with the voice of the Archangel, 
			and with the trump of God" (I Thess. iv. 16), and seeming defeat 
			shall be turned into eternal victory.
 
 But let no one hastily conclude that he should not shout and praise 
			God unless he feels a mighty wave of triumph rushing through his 
			soul. Paul says, "We know not what we should pray for as we ought, 
			but the Spirit maketh intercession for us with groanings which 
			cannot be uttered" (Rom. viii. 26). But if a man refused to pray 
			till he felt this tremendous pleading of the Spirit in his heart, 
			which John Fletcher said is "like a God wrestling with a God," he 
			would never pray at all. We must stir up the gift of prayer that is 
			within us, we must exercise ourselves in prayer until our souls 
			sweat, and then we shall realize the mighty energy of the Holy Ghost 
			interceding within us. We must never forget that "the spirit of the 
			prophets is subject unto the prophets." Just so we must stir up and 
			exercise the gift of praise within us.
 
 We must put our will into it. When Habakkuk the prophet had lost 
			everything, and was surrounded with utter desolation, he shouted: 
			"Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, and joy in the God of my 
			salvation!" We are workers together with God, and if we will praise 
			Him, He will see to it that we have something for which to praise 
			Him. We often hear of Daniel praying three times a day, but we pass 
			over the fact that at the same time "he gave thanks," which is a 
			kind of praise. David says: "Seven times a day do I praise Thee." 
			Over and over, again and again, we are exhorted and commanded to 
			praise God and shout aloud and rejoice evermore. But if, through 
			fear or shame, men will not rejoice, they need not be surprised that 
			they have no joy and no sweeping victories.
 
 But if they will get alone with God in their own hearts-note, alone 
			with God, alone with God in their own hearts; there is the place to 
			get alone with God, and a shout is nothing more or less than an 
			expression of joy at finding God in our hearts -- and will praise 
			Him for His wonderful works, praise Him because He is worthy of 
			praise, praise Him whether they feel like it or not, praise Him in 
			the darkness as well as the light, praise Him in seasons of fierce 
			conflict as well as in moments of victory; they will soon be able to 
			shout aloud for joy. And their joy no man will be able to take from 
			them, but God will make them to drink of the river of His pleasures, 
			and He Himself will be their "exceeding joy."
 
 Many a soul, in fierce temptation and hellish darkness, has poured 
			out his heart in prayer and then sunk back in despair, who, if he 
			had only closed his prayer with thanks, and dared in the name of God 
			to shout, would have filled Hell with confusion, and won a victory 
			that would have struck all the harps of Heaven and made the angels 
			shout with glee. Many a prayer meeting has failed at the shouting 
			point. Songs were sung, testimonies had been given, the Bible had 
			been read and explained, sinners had been warned and entreated, 
			prayers had been poured forth to God, but no one wrestled through to 
			the point where he could and would intelligently praise God for 
			victory, and, so far as could be seen, the battle was lost for want 
			of a shout.
 
 From the moment we are born of God, straight through our pilgrim 
			journey, up to the moment of open vision, where we are for ever 
			glorified and see Jesus as He is, we have a right to rejoice, and we 
			ought to do it. It is our highest privilege and our most solemn 
			duty. And if we do it not, I think it must fill the angels with 
			confusion, and the fiends of the bottomless pit with a kind of 
			hideous joy. We ought to do it, for this is almost the only thing we 
			do on earth that we shall not cease to do in Heaven. Weeping and 
			fasting and watching and praying and self-denying and cross-bearing 
			and conflict with Hell will cease; but praise to God, and 
			hallelujahs "unto Him that loved us and washed us from our sins in 
			His own Blood, and made us kings and priests unto God and His 
			Father," shall ring through Heaven eternally. Blessed be God and the 
			Lamb for evermore! Amen.
 
 
 
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