Saturday, 14 February 2009

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    The Person & Work of the Holy Spirit
    By R.A. Torrey
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    "A Deep Spiritual Concern" (from R. A. Torrey)

    I've been thinking about love lately, and I've been reading a lot of R. A. Torrey lately, and (based on my last couple of articles) pondering what could be the most effective way to genuinely share my faith with people who happen to disbelieve it.  Here's a confluence.

    This comes from R. A. Torrey's splendid little book Anecdotes and Illustrations, which I'm going to get up on the archive just as soon as I can finish editing the text file (which, being scanned from a book from 1903, needs a bit of my professional expertise). [EDIT: The book is now online, and here is the link.] The story, if it's like most of the others in the book, is quite likely to be true.

    A Deep Spiritual Concern for Your Soul

    In a small country town there was an infidel blacksmith. He was a hard-headed, well-read man, strong in argument. An old deacon in the town became deeply interested in this infidel blacksmith and determined to lead him to Christ. He studied up as best he could all the infidel arguments and the answers to them. When he thought he had all the infidel arguments and answers at his fingers' ends, he called on the blacksmith and engaged him in conversation, but the blacksmith was far more than a match for him in argument and in a few moments had, fought the old deacon to a standstill. The old deacon knew that he was right, but he could not prove it to the blacksmith. He burst into tears and said, "Well, I cannot argue with you, but I simply want to say, I have a deep spiritual concern for your soul," and then left the shop.

        The deacon made his way home and went in to his wife and said, "I am only a botch on God's work. God knows I am sincere and that I really do desire the salvation of the blacksmith but I could not meet him in argument. He laid me out cold in five minutes." Then the deacon went into his own room by himself and knelt down. "Oh, God," he cried, "I am only a botch on Thy work. Thou knowest that I sincerely desired to lead the blacksmith to Thee, but I could not talk with him. Oh, God, I am only a botch on Thy work."

    But soon after the deacon had left the blacksmith shop, the blacksmith went into the house and said to his wife, "Deacon brought up an argument to-day that I never heard before. He said he had a deep spiritual concern for my soul. What did he mean?" His wife was a canny woman and said, "You had better go and ask him." The blacksmith hung up his apron and went cross lots to the deacon's home. Just as he stepped on the front porch, through the open window he heard the deacon's prayer, "Oh, God, I am only a botch on Thy work. Thou knowest that I sincerely desired to lead the blacksmith to Thee but I could not talk with him. Oh, God, I am only a botch on Thy work." He pushed the door open and went into the room where the deacon was kneeling and said, "Deacon, you are no botch on God's work. I thought I knew all the arguments for Christianity and could answer them but you brought up an argument I never heard before. You said you had a deep spiritual concern for my soul. Won't you pray for me?" and the blacksmith broke down and accepted Christ.

    Real earnestness and love succeed where all argument fails.

    ~~~~~~~~~~

    Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God,
    and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. 
    Anyone who does not love does not know God,
    because God is love.
    In this the love of God was made manifest among us,
    that God sent his only Son into the world,
    so that we might live through him. 
    In this is love,
    not that we have loved God
    but that he loved us
    and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.
    Beloved, if God so loved us,
    we also ought to love one another.

    --1 John 4:7-11 ESV

    ~~~~~~~~~~

    (By the way, I've been making a lot of cool updates at the R. A. Torrey Archive, which is getting a bit of attention these days. You should check it out.)

Comments (4)

  • It's all deep thoughts today eh!!!


    Rather than read through the passage as a brief I'm copying it out. I think I would more enjoy sitting down with it later when I could enjoy it.


    Thanks for sharing it.

  • I might just have to read the whole book when I'm done, LOL!!!

  • Wonderful! Impossible with man, possible with God. Oh, how we need His Spirit working in and through us! Thanks for sharing this.

  • Doesn't love cover a multitude of sins?   Didn't Paul say, "I decided to know nothing but Christ and Him Crucified?" (my paraphrase)   Jesus has done the work, but He cannot reach in love except through us.   We all feel and understand the weight of hatred and condemnation, but who can bear the weight of mercy, undeserved forgiveness, and unconditional love?   God knows what He's doing through His Son.


    If you have time would you mind reading my latest post.  You raised concerns in your last message about how I go about 'teaching' my fellow Christians.  I am trying to change my approach to "show" the way rather than beat them toward it.   I greatly appreciate your thoughts on the last two TOOLBOX installments.  


    Blessings,


    BP   

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