| Chapter 28 SOME OF GOD'S WORDS TO ME 
			
			 
				
					"God doth talk with man, and he liveth" (Deut. v.24). 
				 God did not cease speaking to men when the canon of Scripture was 
			complete. Though the manner of communication may have changed 
			somewhat yet the communication itself is something to which every 
			Spirit-born soul can joyfully testify. Every one sorry for sin, and 
			sighing and crying for deliverance, and hungering and thirsting for 
			righteousness, will soon find Out, as did the Israelites, that "God 
			doth talk with man." 
 God has most commonly and most powerfully spoken to me through the 
			words of Scripture. Some of them stand out to my mental and 
			spiritual vision like mighty mountain-peaks, rising from a vast, 
			extended plain. The Spirit that moved "holy men of old" to write the 
			words of the Bible has moved me to understand them, by leading me 
			along the lines of spiritual experience first trodden by these men, 
			and has "taken the things of Christ and revealed them" unto me, 
			until I have been filled with a Divine certainty as altogether 
			satisfactory and absolute as that wrought in my intellect by a 
			mathematical demonstration.
 
 The first words which I now remember coming to me with this 
			irresistible Divine force, came when I was seeking the blessing of a 
			clean heart. Although I was hungering and thirsting for the 
			blessing, yet at times a feeling of utter indifference -- a kind of 
			spiritual stupor -- would come over me and threaten to devour all my 
			holy longings, as Pharaoh's lean kine devoured the fat ones. I was 
			in great distress, and did not know what to do. To stop seeking I 
			saw meant infinite, eternal loss; yet to continue seeking seemed 
			quite out of the question with such a paralysis of desire and 
			feeling. But one day I read: "There is none that calleth upon Thy 
			name, that stirreth up himself to take hold of Thee" (Isa. lxiv. 7).
 
 God spoke to me in these words as unmistakably as He spoke to Moses 
			from the burning bush, or the children of Israel from the cloudy 
			mount. It was an altogether new experience to me. The word came as a 
			rebuke to my unbelief and lazy indifference, and yet it put hope 
			into me, and I said to myself:
 
 "By the grace of God, if nobody else does I will stir myself up to 
			seek Him, feeling or no feelings."
 
 That was ten years ago, but from then till now, regardless of my 
			feeling, I have sought God. I have not waited to be stirred up, but 
			when necessary I have fasted and prayed and stirred myself up. I 
			have often prayed, as did the royal Psalmist, "quicken me, O Lord, 
			according to Thy lovingkindness"; but, whether I have felt any 
			immediate quickening or not, I have laid hold of Him, I have sought 
			Him, and, bless Him! I have found Him. "Seek, and ye shall find."
 
 So that before finding God in the fullness of His love and favor, 
			hindrances must be removed, "weights" and "easily-besetting sins" 
			must be laid aside, and self smitten in the citadel of its ambitions 
			and hopes.
 
 The young man of today is ambitious. He wants to be Prime Minister 
			if he goes into politics. He must be a multi-millionaire if he goes 
			into business, and he aims to be a bishop if he enters the Church.
 
 The ruling passion of my soul, and that which for years I longed 
			after more than for holiness or Heaven, was to do something and be 
			somebody who should win the esteem and compel the applause of 
			thoughtful, educated men; and just as the Angel smote Jacob's thigh 
			and put it out of joint, causing him for ever after to limp on it, 
			the strongest part of his body, so God, in order to sanctify me 
			wholly, and "bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of 
			Christ," smote and humbled me in this ruling propensity and 
			strongest passion of my nature.
 
 For several years before God sanctified me wholly, I knew there was 
			such an experience, and I prayed by fits and starts for it, and all 
			the time I hungered and thirsted for -- I hardly knew what! Holiness 
			in itself seemed desirable, but I saw as clearly then as I have 
			since I obtained the blessing, that with it came the cross and an 
			irrepressible conflict with the carnal mind in each human being I 
			met, whether he professed to be a Christian or avowed himself a 
			sinner; whether cultured and thoughtful, or a raw, ignorant pagan; 
			and this I knew instinctively would as surely bar my way to the 
			esteem and applause of the people, whose goodwill and admiration I 
			valued, as it did that of Jesus and Paul. And yet, so subtle is the 
			deceitfulness of the unsanctified heart, that I would not then have 
			acknowledged it to myself, although I am now persuaded that 
			unwillingness to take up this cross was for years the lurking foe 
			that barred the gates against the willing, waiting Sanctifier. At 
			last I heard a distinguished evangelist and soul-winner preach a 
			sermon on the baptism of the Holy Ghost, and I said to myself, "That 
			is what I need and want; I must have it!" And I began to seek and 
			pray for this, all the time with a secret thought in my heart that 
			I, too, should become a great soul-winner and live in the eye of the 
			world. I sought with considerable earnestness; but God was very 
			merciful and hid Himself away from me, in this way arousing the 
			wholesome fear of the Lord in my heart, and, at the same time, 
			intensifying my spiritual hunger. I wept and prayed and besought the 
			Lord to baptize me with the Spirit, and wondered why He did not, 
			until one day I read those words of Paul, "That no flesh should 
			glory in His presence" (I Cor. i. 29).
 
 Here I saw the enemy of the Lord -- self. There stood the idol of my 
			soul -- the passionate, consuming desire for glory -- no longer 
			hidden and nourished in the secret chambers of my heart, but 
			discovered before the Lord as Agag was before Samuel; and those 
			words, "No flesh shall glory in His presence," constituted "the 
			sword of the Spirit," which pierced self through and through, and 
			showed me I never could be holy and receive the baptism of the 
			Spirit while I secretly cherished a desire for the honor that comes 
			from man, and sought not "the honour that cometh from God only." 
			That word was with power, and from then till now I have not sought 
			the glory of this world. But while I no longer sought the glory of 
			the world, yet this same powerful principle in me had to be yet 
			further uncovered and smitten, in order to make me willing to lose 
			what little glory I already had, or imagined I had, and be content 
			to be accounted a fool for Christ.
 
 The ruling propensity of the carnal nature seeks for gratification. 
			If it can secure this lawfully, well; but gratification it will 
			have, if it has to gain it unlawfully. Every way is unlawful for me 
			which would be unlawful for Jesus. The Christian who is not entirely 
			sanctified does not deliberately plan to do that which he knows to 
			be wrong, but is rather betrayed by the deceitful heart within. He 
			is overcome, if he is overcome (which, thank God, he need not be), 
			secretly or suddenly, in a way which makes him abhor himself, but 
			which, it seems, is the only way by which God can convince him of 
			his depravity and need of a clean heart.
 
 Now, twice I was so betrayed -- once to cheat in an examination, and 
			once to use the outline of another man's sermon. The first deed I 
			bitterly repented of and confessed but the second was not so clearly 
			wrong, since I had used materials of my own to fill in an outline, 
			and especially since the outline was probably much better than any I 
			could prepare. It was one of Finney's. In fact, if I had used the 
			outline in the right spirit, I do not know that it would have been 
			wrong at all. But God's word, which is a "discerner of the thoughts 
			and intents of the heart," searched me out, and revealed to my 
			astonished, humbled soul, not merely the bearing and character of my 
			act, but also of my spirit. He smote and humbled me again with these 
			words: "If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God; if 
			any man minister, let him do it as of the ability which God giveth" 
			(1 Pet. iv. 11).
 
 When I read those words I felt as mean and guilty as though I had 
			stolen ten thousand dollars. I began to see then the true character 
			and mission of a preacher and a prophet: that he is a man sent from 
			God and must, if he would please God and seek the glory He alone 
			gives, wait upon God in prayer and diligent searching of His Word 
			till he gets his message direct from the Throne. Then only can he 
			speak "as the oracles of God," and "minister as of the ability which 
			God giveth." I was not led to despise human teachers and human 
			learning where God is in them, but I was led to exalt direct 
			inspiration, and to see the absolute necessity of it for every one 
			who sets himself to turn men to righteousness, and tell them how to 
			find God and get to Heaven. I saw that instead of everlastingly 
			sitting at the feet of human teachers, poring over commentaries, 
			studying another man's sermons and diving into other men's volumes 
			of anecdotes, and then tickling the ears of people with pretty 
			speeches and winning their one-day, empty applause by elaborately 
			finished sermons, logically and rhetorically,
 
 Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null,
 
 God meant the man He sent to speak His words, to sit at the feet of 
			Jesus and learn of Him, to get alone in some secret place on his 
			knees and study the word of God under the direct illumination of the 
			Holy Ghost, to study the holiness and righteous judgments of God 
			until he got some red-hot thunderbolts that would burn the itching 
			ears of the people, arouse their slumbering consciences, prick their 
			hard hearts, and make them cry, "What shall we do?" I saw that he 
			must study and meditate on the tender, boundless compassion and love 
			of God in Christ, the perfect atonement for sin in its root and 
			trunk and branch, and the simple way to appropriate it in penitence 
			and self-surrender by faith, until he was fully possessed of it 
			himself, and knew how to lead every broken heart directly to Jesus 
			for perfect healing, to comfort mourners, to loose prisoners, to set 
			captives free, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord, and the 
			day of vengeance of our God.
 
 This view greatly humbled me, and what to do I did not know. At last 
			it was suggested to my mind that, as I had confessed the false 
			examination, so now I ought to stand before the people and confess 
			the stolen sermon outline. This fairly peeled my conscience, and it 
			quivered with an indescribable agony. For about three weeks I 
			struggled with this problem. I argued the matter with myself. I 
			pleaded with God to show me if it were His will, and over and over 
			again I promised Him I would do it, only to draw back in my heart. 
			At last I told an intimate friend. He assured me it was not of God, 
			and said he was going to preach in a revival meeting that night, and 
			use materials he had gathered from another man's sermon. I coveted 
			his freedom, but this brought no relief to me. I could not get away 
			from my sin. Like David's, it was "ever before me."
 
 One morning, while in this frame of mind, I picked up a little book 
			on experimental religion, hoping to get light, when, on opening it, 
			the very first subject that my eyes fell on was "Confession." I was 
			cornered. My soul was brought to a full halt. I could seek no 
			further light. I wanted to die, and that moment my heart broke 
			within me. "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and 
			a contrite heart ..."; and from the depths of my broken heart, my 
			conquered spirit said to God, "I will." I had said it before with my 
			lips, but now I said it with my heart. Then God spoke directly to my 
			soul, not by printed words through my eyes, but by His Spirit in my 
			heart. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us 
			our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (I John i. 9). 
			The first part about forgiveness I knew, but the last clause about 
			cleansing was a revelation to me. I did not remember ever to have 
			seen or to have heard it before. The word was with power, and I 
			bowed my head in my hands and said, "Father, I believe that." Then a 
			great rest came into my soul, and I knew I was clean. In that 
			instant, "The Blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit 
			offered Himself without spot to God," purged my "conscience from 
			dead works to serve the living God" (Heb. ix. 14).
 
 God did not require Abraham to slay Isaac. All He wanted was a 
			willing heart. So He did not require me to confess to the people. 
			When my heart was willing, He swept the whole subject out of my mind 
			and freed me utterly from slavish fear. My idol -- self was gone. 
			God knew I withheld nothing from Him, so He filled my soul with 
			peace and showed me that "Christ is the end of the law for 
			righteousness to every one that believeth," and that the whole will 
			of God was summed up in five words: "Faith which worketh by love."
 
 Shortly after this, I ran into my friend's room with a borrowed 
			book. The moment his eyes fell upon me, he said, "What is the 
			matter; something has happened to you?" My face was witnessing to a 
			pure heart before my lips did. But my lips soon followed, and have 
			continued to this day.
 
 The Psalmist said: "I have preached righteousness in the great 
			congregation: lo, I have not refrained my lips, O Lord, Thou 
			knowest. I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart; I have 
			declared Thy faithfulness and Thy salvation: I have not concealed 
			Thy lovingkindness and Thy truth from the great congregation" (Ps. 
			xl. 9, 10). Satan hates holy testimony, and he nearly entrapped me 
			at this point. I felt I ought to preach it, but I shrank from the 
			odium and conflict I saw it would surely bring, and I hesitated to 
			declare publicly that I was sanctified, lest I might do more harm 
			than good. I saw only reproach. The glory that was to follow was 
			hidden from my eyes. Beautiful, flowery sermons which appealed to 
			the imagination and aroused the emotions, with just enough thought 
			to properly balance them, were my ideal. I shrank from coming down 
			to plain, heart-searching talks that laid hold of the consciences of 
			men and made saints of them, or turned them into foes as implacable 
			as the Pharisees were to Jesus, or the Jews to Paul. But before I 
			got the blessing, God held me to it, and I had promised Him I would 
			preach it if He would give me the experience. It was Friday that He 
			cleansed me, and I determined to preach about it on the following 
			Sunday. But I felt weak and faint. On Saturday morning, however, I 
			met a noisy, shouting coachman on the street, who had the blessing, 
			and I told him what God had done for me. He shouted and praised God, 
			and said:
 
 "Now, Brother Brengle, you preach it. The Church is dying for this."
 
 Then we walked across Boston Common and Garden, and talked about the 
			matter, and my heart burned within me as did the hearts of the two 
			disciples with whom Jesus talked on the road to Emmaus; and in my 
			inmost soul I recounted the cost, threw in my lot with Jesus 
			crucified, and determined I would teach holiness, if it banished me 
			for ever from the pulpit, and made me a hiss and a byword to all my 
			acquaintances. Then I felt strong. The way to get strength is to 
			throw yourself away for Jesus.
 
 The next day I went to my church and preached as best I could out of 
			a two-days-old experience, from "Let us go on unto perfection" (Heb. 
			vi. 1). I closed with my experience, and the people broke down and 
			wept, and some of them came to me afterward and said they wanted 
			that same experience, and, bless God! some of them got it! I did not 
			know what I was doing that morning, but I knew afterward. I was 
			burning up my ships and casting down my bridges behind me. I was now 
			in the enemy's land, fully committed to a warfare of utter 
			extermination to all sin. I was on record now before Heaven, earth 
			and Hell. Angels, men and devils had heard my testimony, and I must 
			go forward, or openly and ignominiously retreat in the face of a 
			jeering foe. I see now that there is a Divine philosophy in 
			requiring us not only to believe with our hearts unto righteousness, 
			but to confess with the mouth unto salvation (Rom. x. 10). God led 
			me along these lines. No man taught me.
 
 Well, after I had put myself on record, I walked softly with God, 
			desiring nothing but His will, and looking to Him to keep me every 
			instant. I did not know there was anything more for me, but I meant, 
			by God's grace, to hold what I had by doing His will as He had made 
			it known to me and by trusting Him with all my heart.
 
 But God meant greater things for me. On the following Tuesday 
			morning, just after rising, with a heart full of eager desire for 
			God, I read these words of Jesus at the grave of Lazarus: "I am the 
			resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in Me, though he were 
			dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever liveth and believeth in Me 
			shall never die. Believest thou this?" The Holy Ghost, the other 
			"Comforter," was in those words, and in an instant my soul melted 
			before the Lord like wax before fire, and I knew Jesus. He was 
			revealed in me as He had promised, and I loved Him with an 
			unutterable love. I wept, and adored, and loved, and loved, and 
			loved. I walked out over Boston Common before breakfast, and still 
			wept, and adored, and loved. Talk about the occupation of Heaven! I 
			do not know what it will be -- though, of course, it will be suited 
			to, and commensurate with, our redeemed capacities and powers; but 
			this I then knew, that if I could lie prostrate at the feet of Jesus 
			to all eternity and love and adore Him, I should be satisfied. My 
			soul was satisfied -- satisfied -- satisfied!
 
 That experience fixed my theology. From then till now, men and 
			devils might as well try to get me to question the presence of the 
			sun in the heavens as to question the existence of God, the divinity 
			of Jesus Christ, and the sanctifying power of an ever-present, 
			Almighty Holy Spirit. I am as sure the Bible is the word of God as I 
			am of my own existence, while Heaven and Hell are as much realities 
			to me as day and night, or winter and summer, or good and evil. I 
			feel the powers of the world to come and the pull of Heaven in my 
			own soul. Glory to God!
 
 It is some years now since the Comforter came, and He abides in me 
			still. He has not stopped speaking to me yet. He has set my soul on 
			fire, but, like the burning bush Moses saw in the Mount, it is not 
			consumed.
 
 To all who want such an experience I would say, "Ask, and it shall 
			be given you." If it does not come for the asking, "Seek, and ye 
			shall find." If it is still delayed, "Knock, and it shall be opened 
			unto you" (Luke xi. 9). In other words, seek until you have sought 
			with your whole heart, and there and then you will find Him. "Be not 
			faithless, but believing." "If ye will not believe, surely ye shall 
			not be established."
 
 I do not consider myself beyond the possibility of falling. I know I 
			stand by faith, and must watch and pray lest I enter into 
			temptation, and take heed lest I fall. Yet, in view of all God's 
			marvelous lovingkindnesses and tender mercies to me, I constantly 
			sing, with the Apostle Jude:
 
 "Now unto Him that is able to keep you from falling, and to present 
			you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy, 
			To the only wise God our Saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion and 
			power. both now and ever. Amen."
 
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