 
 "But God hath  chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God  hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are  mighty; and base things of the world, and things which are despised,  hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to naught  things that are" Cor. I 27, 28).          
  Corinth was a city  famous for wealth, culture, science, and arts, and infamous for vice. It  abounded with philosophers and rhetoricians. It was a great center of  learning; and yet in this first chapter of the epistle which the Holy  Ghost had sent to the church at Corinth, He gives expression to these  important truths set forth in our text, viz., that God, the great God,  has chosen the foolish things to confound the wise. We have in the text a  list of persons and things which God chooses for the battles of faith  and triumphs of grace.         
   It may be that you  will be surprised tonight to find yourself left out of God's first  choice, and yet you have an excellent opportunity to come in if you  will. You have your choice -- you can be among the foolish things, or  among the despised things, or among the weak things, or among the base  things, or among the things that are not at all; for these five things  cover all that is expressed here as God's choice of persons and things  for the accomplishment of His greatest achievements.          
  The first in the  list is "the foolish things." God has chosen foolish things with which  to confound the wise. The Corinthians must have been terribly chagrined  and humiliated to find that if they were to serve God and be used of Him  they must ignore their culture. Corinth was a sort of modern Boston,  and Paul tells them that God holds their culture in derision, and if  they serve God they must give it up or at least ignore it and be among  the foolish things. This was an awfully hard saying for the Corinthians,  but God's Word is settled forever in heaven; when He makes a choice the  best thing we can do is to say, "Amen." If God counts us in, it is not  wise for us to count ourselves out.          
  God chooses the  foolish things. It must have seemed very foolish to the people of  Jericho or the army of God, 600,000 men, to march around Jericho with no  weapons but ram's horns! Think of it. What artillery! What cannonading  can they do? To the military wiseacres this was worse than nonsense; but  still the 600,000 men marched and did nothing but blow ram's horns  until the time came to shout, and when they shouted the echo of their  shout was answered by the roar and crash of the falling walls of the  doomed city. The thing that seemed foolish proved the greatest triumph  possible on that occasion.          "Foolish things" hath God chosen. It  must have seemed very foolish to smart men for Christ to tell twelve  disciples to feed five thousand men and possibly fifteen thousand women  and children with nothing in sight but five loaves and two fishes. They  would have said at Harvard, or Brown, or Yale, or Oxford, that that was  all nonsense, but it proved the victory that He intended.       
  It seemed very  foolish for Jesus in choosing disciples to ignore Jerusalem with the  Sanhedrin and all its culture. How strange that He ignored Rome; Rome  ruled the world, and was in the height of her splendor. The Son of God  goes down to the shores of Galilee and gets twelve men, unlearned, hard  of heart, with broad, brawny hands accustomed to handling the oar and  tugging at nets. Not one of them were educated. What a foolish thing to  put them at the head of a movement that was expected to evangelize the  world! But, sir, when He had chosen them and fitted them with fire out  of the skies, the wisdom of this world was not able to resist the power  with which they spake.       
  If you accomplish  the things that God wants you to accomplish, you may have to ignore what  little you may have above the collar button, and turn in with the  foolish folks, for they are the people who thresh the mountains and beat  them small as dust. They are the people that God uses to confound  heady, high-minded, lofty folks. I see clearly some of you do not care  to muster here. Well, you have another chance.       
  The next choice  that God makes is the choice of "the weak things." How easy it is for  God to do things when He undertakes to do them. Pharaoh thought that his  oppression of the people of God would result in the extermination of  the nation, but the very edict he sent forth opened the door for the  little Moses to slip into his own house and be treated as his own son,  finally overthrowing his throne and scattering the Egyptian tyrant and  his people upon the shores of the Red Sea. Thus was the wisdom of Egypt  confounded.       The time has come when we ought to stop long enough to  remember that in the whole of history culture has often been associated  with the darkest ages. Egypt was the center of learning when Moses  lived, and he had received an education that was at the top of  everything; he had been "through the schools," for we are told that he  was "learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians." Yet God would not let  him use his culture. Egypt knew the art of embalming and the science of  medicine as they are not known today. There is no undertaker now who can  embalm as old Pharaoh was embalmed. Look at him today in the British  Museum. The Egyptians had culture and wisdom; they had the arts and  sciences that seem to have been lost, and some people wonder if the lost  arts are more numerous than the living arts; but their culture did not  save them; their learning did not redeem them.       
  Babylon was once  the center of culture, but what did Babylon come to? The king said, "Is  this not Babylon that I have builded?" and that very night God's word  came, and the king went out under a strange form of insanity and ate  grass like an ox, and the sight of Nebuchadnezzar's grandeur can not be  identified with certainty today.       
  Greece was the  center of learning at one time. Some think that the highest form of  culture that this world has ever known was in Greece about the time that  Paul stood at Athens when his soul was stirred within him and he  denounced the whole thing, and preached to them just as he preached at  Corinth, and just as I am preaching to you tonight. All our culture and  refinement aside from salvation do not and can not help us. We are in  bondage in these days, making a god of culture, making a god of the  things of this world. God help us to keep things in their right  order.        
  No one will  understand that I have any war with education or with learning. For  these sixteen years I have been a student, and I am applying myself more  closely than ever, but we do not want to let our heads get in the way  of our hearts; we do not want anything to prevent us from sitting at the  table of the Lord and eating a good square meal. We want to be so  humble and childlike that God can use us as He wishes.        
  "The weak things."  What was weaker than Moses' rod? God sent Moses against the mightiest  empire of the world. Egypt then ruled the world. When Moses was wanted  for God's service he was found on the back side of a mountain feeding  sheep. God found him with just a shepherd's stick, and said, "What is  that thou hast in thy hand?" and he answered, "A rod," and God said,  "Throw it on the ground," and when he had done so it became a serpent,  and Moses was afraid of it, but God said, "Take it by the tail," and he  trusted God and took it by the tail, and it became a rod again. He  stretched that rod over Egypt ten times, and ten times the heavens  parted and God sent judgment on that people. With that rod he smote the  waters of the Red Sea and they parted. With that rod he struck the rock  at Horeb, and a vast Mississippi River sprang forth, enough for three  and a half million famished souls, with all the flocks and herds. God  chose "the weak thing."        What was weaker than David's sling? It  was just such a sling as any boy could make. David slipped down to the  brook and picked up five stones, and gained a victory for God that all  the army of Israel had failed to gain. Many a time God takes a single  man or boy or girl to win a victory that a whole army of folks can not  win. God knows how to use weak things. He knew how to tumble a cake of  barley meal down into the camp of the Midianites, and have it confuse  them so that they fell to slaying themselves, and the victory was the  Lord's.        
  What could be  weaker than "Gideon's three hundred," and what were their weapons?  Nothing but lamps and pitchers, and the lamps would not shine until the  pitchers were broken. The earthen pitcher represents the majority of  Christians today who have never been smashed to pieces by the power of  the Holy Ghost. But when the pitchers were broken the light shone out,  and three hundred men with nothing but light were enough to scatter the  enemy and give victory. If General Grant had been going to fight a  battle he would have wanted more men than that. The American forces  called for something more than that in our recent struggle. But when God  wants to fight a battle He delights in getting hold of the smallest  thing He can find.       
  I have a special  friend who was saved from an awful life. He used to be a drunkard, and  would lie on the streets night after night, and wake up in the morning  with his long hair all frozen to the sidewalk; but God saved him, and he  has had ten thousand converts for God. When he was saved and sanctified  he could not spell a-b-c, but he trusted the Holy Ghost, and the Holy  Ghost taught him to read, and he read the fourteenth chapter of John  without ever learning to read. I can furnish you good men with reliable  Christian characters who will testify to the truth of what I am saying.  He read the fourteenth chapter of John in a miraculous way. He is a  wonderful success in soul saving. I wish we had more like him. He can  jump the highest and shout the loudest and get more souls for God than  any one I know. God knows how to use the weak things, and I say,  "Amen."        It is very seldom God chooses a man with a "plug hat." He  hardly knows what to do with folks that undertake to add a cubit to  their stature, but He does know how to work with weak things. He knows  what to do with a worm. Why? Because a worm has no backbone. He says He  can thresh the mountains with a worm; but He can not with you, because  you have swallowed a yardstick, and you go about erect and stiff and  haughty with a will of your own, not having submitted yourself to the  righteousness of God. God can not get a chance at you, but if you were  willing to be weak, He could use you and would.        
  The next in the  roll of honor are the despised things. God has chosen the despised  things .And, by the way, men do not live very close to God very long  without meeting a great deal of opposition and a great deal of  persecution. A man who walks with God will feel many a time the hot  breath of persecution upon his inner spirit as it comes from the regions  of the damned. He will frequently feel the persecution if he is in this  holy war for God. He will be persecuted by whole regiments of devils,  and, as all the devils have once been angels, they know how to play the  angel and deceive people. Many a preacher is deceived and is leading his  people down to hell, because he is duped and blinded by Satan in  angel's clothes. What we want is a salvation that is real, lets us know  what we are, and gives us a persecution which will make us despised.  When you get the genuine thing you will not have to seek  persecution.        
  Sometimes people  seek persecution. I know a man in Boston who, I think, rather enjoyed  going to jail. He was put in jail because he preached on the street.  They offered to give him a license, but he would not take it, but  continued preaching and going to jail. It is possible for a little bit  of self to get in here, and seek persecution, but if you have the  genuine thing you will not have to seek it; it will come without any  attention on your part. Some people read that fourth chapter of Acts  where it says, "They took knowledge of them that they had been with  Jesus," and think that when they get the genuine thing every one will  like them, but they ought to read on further in that chapter and see  what they were going to do with the disciples when they knew they had  been with Jesus. You will find they wanted to kill them. This experience  will make this world want to kill you. God save us from our nonsense,  from our fallacy. God hath chosen the despised things. He uses things  that are cast out.        
  When Jesus heard  that the man was cast out of the synagogue he took him in, and when we  are rejected and despised and driven and scattered, then God comes and  gives us the victory. It was when the church was persecuted, when she  was despised, that she had the greatest power.        
  When the Methodists  had no tall steeples, when they had no grand, groaning pipe organs,  when they did not have a D. D.. LL. D., Ph. D. in the pulpit, when they  did not have schools and libraries, and popularity and a name in the  earth as they have now; it was then they had ten converts where they now  have one. They were "despised," and the name "Methodists" was given  them in derision, because they did not have any method. You can not say  that about them now.        
  Take the early  Quakers. The people used to hang us and burn us; they hung people for  preaching the very gospel I am preaching to you now, and it was in those  early days that the power of God spread all over the country. When all  the Quakers were in jail and children ten and twelve years old held  services while their fathers were in prison there was more power evident  than in this "the day of Christian liberty." Those preachers sometimes  preached to acres and acres of faces in the open air, and hundreds of  men fell in the grass under the old fashioned slaying power of  God.        
  Some are coming  back to primitive piety and power, and I have sometimes seen in our own  Church whole congregations fell under the power of God. Some one said  today: "Did you ever see anything such as we had last night?" I have  seen four or five times that much in the most staid and proper meetings  you ever saw, where the fire swept from the altar back to the door and  spread allover. We are despised for it. We belong to the Sheep Skin and  Goat Skin Brigade of whom this world is not worthy. We are not in this  world to reform it. We do not believe this world is going to be saved as  a whole, but our duty is to get people to take for the lifeboats and be  rescued. We are not here to organize great institutions. We are here to  do a little service for God until He gets through with us, and then we  are going to heaven.        
  It was when the  Salvation Army had six hundred captains and officers in jail in nineteen  countries that they had four times as much power with God and souls as  they have tonight. It was when they sang and prayed and shouted in the  streets when snow and slush and stones were thrown at them, and they  were dragged off to jail; it was then that they had their power.        
  I pray God He will  raise up some folks nowadays who will arouse the animosity of the devil  until there will be persecution worth talking about. God takes the  "despised things," and when the devil is through with a man the Lord  takes him up.        
  There are people  here who would like to be ''somebody.'' Well, you never will. You had  better give that up now, for you are bad mud to begin with, and the only  way you can be any good is to be saved and sanctified and filled with  the Holy Ghost.        The angel of God met Joshua, when Joshua thought  he was captain, and he said, "Who is this?" and the angel said, "I am  captain of the Lord's host," and Joshua said, "I thought I was captain,"  but he resigned and recognized the angel as captain. It is time we  understood that the angel of the Lord is captain of the Lord's host, and  that it is our place to resign, but we sort of hesitate about throwing  in our lot with these "second rate" folks. God always takes the second  rate folks. He does not know what to do with the "first rate"  folks.        
  The next in the  roll of honor are the base things. God has chosen some of the vilest  persons that ever walked this earth. There was St. Augustine. He was not  only licentious, but his body was literally falling to pieces as a  result of excesses, and God took him and saved him, and healed his body;  and you read about him as the sainted Augustine. God gave him a half  century of unparalleled usefulness, and then took him home, although he  had been one of the vilest men whoever walked this earth.        
  God chose Jerry  MacAuley from Water Street to accomplish more for Him than all the white  cravated preachers in the city. God went down to Water Street and  picked him up. There were lots of people up town who were awaiting an  appointment, but God never makes use of a person who is out of a job. If  he wants some one to do something he always chooses the one who is hard  at work. Jerry MacAuley had a job. There was nothing they wanted in  hell that that man would not do, and God saw there was good stuff in  him, and He took out the devils and put in angels.           
  One of the basest  souls who walked the streets in the Bowery district was that frail  little Jessy DeVie, thirteen years in street life, at the age of  twenty-six. Think of it. Yet God chose her and called her, and planted  that wonderful shelter for fallen women in Mulberry Bend, that has been  such a monument of divine grace in the last few years. God chooses "the  base things."           
  We have learned to  sort of side in with everything that God chooses, for we want Him to  choose us every time there is anything to be chosen. So we side in with  people who are next to God. If we can not be with them in any other way  we can pray for them, and it will pay us to do it.           
  You have only one  more chance, and some of you are not in yet. If you do not get in pretty  soon you will not get to muster in with God's folks. He has chosen "the  foolish things," and "the weak things," and "the despised things," and  "the base things," and then his last choice is "the things that are  not." Oh, you had better have come in sooner.           God takes the  things that are not to bring to naught the things that are. It is  wonderful to be willing to be counted foolish and weak, and willing that  folks say you are weak minded; it is wonderful to be willing to be  despised, and rejected, and scattered, and kicked out of town; that is  wonderful, it is blessed. It is a wonderful thing to be willing to be  counted with the base folks, but it is more wonderful still to be  willing to be seen among those who are "not at all." Paul was that kind.  He says "I, no not I, I made a mistake; it is not I, but Jesus Christ."  He declared he was crucified with Christ, and that Christ was all and  in all.           
  We can have an  experience where we have "sunk down" out of sight and the Son of God is  come to the front; where we are nobody, with no reputation, nothing to  pay, nothing to gain, nothing to lose. have lost everything in the fire,  and we have gained everything. So we are not running any risk. We have  no reputation except what the devil gives us, and we do not have to take  care of that. Some folks run around taking care of their reputation. I  remember a blacksmith whom the people advised to look up some things  that had been said against him. They said his reputation would be  ruined. He was hammering on the anvil at the time, and he said, "Well, I  could soon hammer out another one." And so I am so full of preaching  that if they take away my reputation I will preach out a new one, and if  they take that away I will preach out another one, and I think each one  will bean improvement on the old one.           
  When the New York  Herald took me up and just spread me out among nearly a million people,  folks said, "You ought to answer." I said "I have no time, I am  preaching. What time have Ito fool with a little thing like the New York  Herald?" When the Philadelphia papers blew me up so high, they said to  me, "You ought to just make them smoke." I said, "The most of them smoke  now; and that is not all. The smoke of their torment is going to ascend  up forever and ever. They are going to have enough to suffer. I would  not add anything to it. They are giving me a free advertisement; that is  what they are doing."           I believe I may say, without egotism,  that in the last thirty days I have refused four calls to where I have  accepted one. Yet, I see preachers sitting around looking for a job, and  they even advertise in the holiness papers. God have mercy on us. I  would not do that. Oh, beloved, do you know when you get to be nobody  you never feel disturbed. I can say to you I never slept sweeter when a  child than I did when pulpits and papers were against me. I held a ten  days' camp meeting in my soul.          
  Well, you will have  to be willing to be nobody, to be nothing, or stay out. You hung around  the edges when we were talking about "the foolish" and "the weak" and  "the base" and "the despised." You did not like them, but this is your  last chance. To be nobody means to get sanctified wholly, and let people  kick you and roll you and tumble you and you not complain.          
  Oh, for something  that will awake folks and bring out the best there is in them for God.  If you will come just now and let God send the sin killing baptism on  your soul and put out all the pride and vanity and just melt you down at  His feet, He will know just what to do with you and make use of you,  and you will have a blessed time being one of "the things that are not."
  Preached at Cincinnati, O., December 7, 1898.
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
This is an awesome article!!!
ReplyDelete