WITH the beginning of a new year, we would earnestly appeal to our Christian readers to bestir themselves afresh in the work of the gospel. We must be aggressive. Merely to defend what we have, is, in the end, to suffer loss. The enemy, moves forward. With restless zeal Rome works on, and with untiring energy infidelity pursues its course. Captives are being continually made, who become soldiers for their cause. The true Christian should not be outrun by the foes of “the faith once delivered to the saints,” nor allow his zeal to pale before their intensity.
Our day is essentially one of opportunity for spreading the gospel. The century is notable for open doors, both in heathen lands and Christendom. Let us avail ourselves of our privilege, ever remembering that the Lord, who walks in the midst of the candlesticks, while He opens and no man shuts, also shuts and no man opens, and that when He gives the word, the doors of opportunity, now wide open, will be closed.
What can we do? In former years, before the art of printing was known, during seasons of earnestness, the gospel was distributed by word of mouth. In rhymes, in sermons, by repetition of texts or passages of Scripture, the truth was spread over the land. In our day advantages are multiplied a thousand-fold. The printing press and the post are at our service.
Each of us, who is a servant of Christ, could do something with these means. What a great result might be affected by the use of the halfpenny post once a week with a halfpenny enclosure! Let us suppose five thousand of our readers so engaged, each one with a list of names of acquaintances or friends to whom the message is to be sent. Let the list be made out, shall we say, from the names of people met with last year, those of whom a little is known in different parts of the country; persons at whose houses a visit was made, or who were sick, or bereaved― persons whom we desire to introduce to the sinner’s Friend. Oh, how we should like to be of use to them in eternal things! Have we our list complete? Are there fifty names on it? If five thousand volunteers would send a little gospel book once a week to one person, one quarter of a million souls would be addressed by this means during the year.
The time, the prayer, the care, the cost of this little service you will not grudge, dear Christian reader; it means but a very little of your time, and but one penny of your money a week. Who will respond and join in this undertaking?
Our readers may know certain districts, in town and country, notorious for evil living. One of these messengers entering such a locality might win a soul for Christ, who might, in his turn, become a warrior for Him. There are other spots where Rome is taking root. Let us be up and doing; let good Christian papers that exalt Christ, be addressed to such places, where Rome debases Him. Again, there are towns famed for their infidelity. Be aggressive, dear fellow-Christian. We appeal for helpers; we would impress our friends with the consideration that many hands, by doing a little each, can do much together. There are a few generous and large-hearted Christians who give largely, and distribute the gospel widely; we appeal to the vast number who can do but little. It would be a cheer to many an invalid to have a list of names of persons for whom to pray and to labor.
A further consideration we bring before our Christian friends. In the labor of love be disinterested. Much work, nominally for Christ, is too often soiled by our serving ourselves. Let there be no name but Christ’s, no cause but Christ’s, no object but His glory. Work for eternity, and look at time in the light of eternity. Beware of the smoke and noise of so-called Christian work; seek for penetrating power from God. There are too often mountains of labor for little results―the mountains being for time; that which produces the result being for Christ and eternity. If we were nearer the Master, we should be better servants, more used, more useful.
Again, a great part of Christian England needs Christianizing. Where congregations assemble to be entertained there is a sore need for Christian truth. The Christian faith makes believers bright and glad, but it does not teach Christians to turn churches and chapels into concert halls, or schoolrooms into theaters. It does not teach men to serve God and mammon. No, fellow Christian, let the dead bury their dead, but let us proclaim Jesus Christ, and Him crucified.
We need to lift up the standard of divine truth; to speak out boldly of the immortality of man’s soul; of judgment being final, and the state of man, after the judgment, everlasting; of God’s righteousness, and the atoning blood of His Son; of Christ’s coming, and of heaven, and of hell. The door of opportunity is open; let us this year, with purpose of heart, enter afresh upon the glorious work of the gospel.