Part 12 (1/2)

There has been a good bit of teaching about ”G.o.d's sovereignty”. Behind that mysterious, indefinite phrase has crept much that badly needs the clear, searching sunlight of day. G.o.d's sovereignty is commonly thought of as a sort of dead-weight force by which He compels things to come His way.

If a man stand in the way of G.o.d's plan so much the worse for the man. It is thought of as a sort of mighty army, marching down the road, in close ranks, with fixed bayonets. If you happen to be on that road better look out very sharply, or you may get crushed under foot.

I do not mean that the theologians put it in that blunt fas.h.i.+on, nor that I have ever heard any preacher phrase it in that way. I mean that as I have talked with the plain common people, and listened to them, this is the distinct impression that comes continually of what it means to them.

Then, too, the phrase has often been used, it is to be feared, as a religious cloak to cover up the shortcomings and s.h.i.+rkings of those who aren't fitting into G.o.d's plan.

G.o.d is a sovereign. The truth of His sovereignty is one of the most gracious of all the truths in this blessed old Book of G.o.d. It means that the great gracious purpose and plan of G.o.d will finally be victorious. It means that in our personal lives He, with great patience and skill and power, works through the tangled network of circ.u.mstances and difficulties to answer our prayers, and to bring out the best results for us.

It means further that, with a diplomacy and patience only divine, He works with and through the intricate meshes of men's wills and contrary purposes to bring out good now--not good out of bad, that is impossible; but good in spite of the bad--and that finally all opposition will be overcome, or will have spent itself out in utter weakness, and so His purposes of love will be fully victorious.

But the practical thing to burn in deep just now is this, that we can hinder G.o.d's plan. His plans have been hindered, and delayed, and made to fail, because we wouldn't work with Him.

And G.o.d lets His plan fail. It is a bit of His greatness. He will let a plan fail before He will be untrue to man's utter freedom of action. He will let a man wreck his career, that so through the wreckage the man may see his own failure, and gladly turn to G.o.d. Many a hill is climbed only through a swamp road.

G.o.d cares more for a man than for a plan. The plan is only for the sake of the man. You say, of course. But, you know, many men think more of carrying through the plan on which they have set themselves, regardless of how it may hurt or crush some man in the way. G.o.d's plan is for man, and so it is allowed to fail, for the man's sake.

Yet, because the plan is always made for man's sake, it will be carried through, because by and by man will see it to be best Many a man's character has been made only through the wrecking of his career. If G.o.d had had His way He would have saved both life and soul, both the earthly career and the heavenly character.

Let us stop thoughtfully, and remember that G.o.d has carefully thought out a plan for every man, for each one of us. It is a plan for the life, these human years; not simply for getting us to what we may have thought of as a psalm-singing heaven, when we're worn out down here.

It is the best plan. For G.o.d is ambitious for us; more ambitious for you and me than we are for ourselves, though few of us really believe that.

But He will carry out His plan--aye, He can carry it out only with our hearty consent. He must work through our wills. He honors us in that With greatest reverence be it said that G.o.d waits reverently, hat in hand, outside the door of a man's will, until the man inside turns the k.n.o.b and throws open the door for Him to come in and carry out His plan. We can make G.o.d fail by not working with Him. The greatest of all achievements of action is to find and fit into G.o.d's plan.

The Church Mission.

Now, G.o.d had and has a plan for His Church. That plan is simply this: The Church was to be His messenger to the nations of the earth. There are other matters of vast importance committed to the Church, without doubt: the service of wors.h.i.+p and the training and developing of the life of its members. But these, be it said very thoughtfully, are distinctly secondary to the service of taking the Gospel to all men.

These two, the chief and the secondary, are interwoven, each contributing to and dependent upon the other. But there is always a main purpose. And that here, without question, is the carrying of the message of Jesus fully to all the earth. In each generation the chief plan, to which all else was meant to be contributory, was that all men should hear fully and winsomely the great thrilling story of Jesus.

Shall I say that that plan has failed? It hurts too much even to repeat such words. I will not say the Church has failed. But I will ask you to note G.o.d's plan for the Church, and then in your inner heart to make your own honest answer.

And in making it remember the practical point is this--the Church is you.

I am the Church. Its mission is mine. If I say it has failed I am talking about myself. I can keep it from failing so far as part of it is concerned, the part that I am. My concern is not to be asking abstractly, theoretically, about the Church, but about so much of it as I am.

In annual church reports, and triennial and quadrennial, much s.p.a.ce is given to telling of the wealth of the Church. Of course, I suppose its wealth is meant to be an index of all its work. It may seem a bit odd to use the world's index-finger to point out our faithfulness to our Master's will. It is used, of course, to impress the world in the way the world can most quickly and easily understand.

But the Church was not meant by the Master to be a rich inst.i.tution in money and property; though it has grown immensely so. The Master's thought was that its power and faithfulness should be revealed entirely in the extent to which all men of all nations know about Himself and have been won to Him.

If we think only a little bit into the past history of the Church, and then into present world conditions, we know the answer to that hurting question about the Church being a failure.

I know that many of you are thinking of the triumphs of the Church; of her imperishable and incalculable influence upon the life of the world. And I will join you heartily in that, some other time. Just now we are not talking of that, but of just one particular fact of its history. One truth at a time makes sharper outlines and brings the whole circle of truth out more plainly. I love to sing,

”I love Thy Kingdom, Lord, The house of Thine abode; The Church our blest Redeemer saved With His own precious blood.”

We shudder to attempt to think into what these centuries would have been without the influence of the Church.

But at present we are talking about something else. Let me ask you, softly, if G.o.d's plan for the Church was that it was to be His messenger to all men, as you think back through nineteen centuries and then think out into the moral world conditions to-day, would you say the plan had succeeded? Or had--?