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D.L.Moody

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Rippon, Mar 31, 2006.

  1. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    What I want to know here is, are you depending on the opinions of others for these statements, or have you researched Moody yourself? Do you have any primary sources for your views? If not, I discount them.

    If you look on page 80 of Dollar's book, you find the statement about Gipsy Smith: "Like Moody, he preached often on the love of Christ for the sinner, the need of repentance on the part of the sinner, and the special sweetness of the Lord Jesus, which should characterize the lives of true Christians."

    I have several books of sermons by Moody, and frankly, I believe his Gospel was complete. I've just been looking at his sermon, "What Is the Gospel?" pp. 37-51 in the old Moody Colportage book (c. 1904) of his sermons, The Way Home, and it is all there: reconciliation, substitutionary atonement through Christ's blood, man's sinful condition, etc.

    You doubt that Moody preached God's judgement? In the same book (pp. 80-93) is a very clear sermon on the reality of Hell using the story of the rich man and Lazarus entitled, "Son, Remember."
     
  2. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    Do you have any source for this statement, or is it just something you heard somewhere? No offense intended, I'm just curious. </font>[/QUOTE]Sorry I don't have time to research and source everything I say in the course of a conversation, but none of what I said is what I heard, but it is what I read on blogs and forums and books by JRR and the SOL and.... And I don't know which part of my statement you’re questioning.
     
  3. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    Do you have any source for this statement, or is it just something you heard somewhere? No offense intended, I'm just curious. </font>[/QUOTE]Sorry I don't have time to research and source everything I say in the course of a conversation, but none of what I said is what I heard, but it is what I read on blogs and forums and books by JRR and the SOL and.... And I don't know which part of my statement you’re questioning. </font>[/QUOTE]Hey, I like you! ;)

    Anyway, what I was questioning is the statement that Spurgeon thought that part of the "downgrade" was that Baptist churches were becomeing weak in their Calvinism. If you can't document it, fine.

    IMO he probably never said that about Anglican churches, since that was a different ball game altogether.
     
  4. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    JofJ, I can find that reference pretty quickly, I'll get back to you on it.
     
  5. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    JofJ: This from From the March 1887 Sword and Trowel. It is the opening salvo of the downgrade controversy. I copied over the whole article. It has so many references to calvinism, arminianism, and the various protestent churches including Anglican that I couldn't pick one without making it seem too short. It is available at www.spurgeon.org.

    "THE Act of Uniformity, which came into effect in 1662, accomplished the purpose of its framers in expelling Puritanism from the Church established by law in England and Wales. Puritanism was obnoxious to King Charles II. and his court, and a large majority of the men high in office in both Church and State, chiefly for the godliness of living which it enjoined, and for the Calvinism of its teaching. With the ejectment of the two thousand ministers who preferred freedom and purity of conscience to the retention of their livings, Calvinism was banished from the Church of England, excepting so far as the Articles were concerned. Arminianism took its place. Then the State Church, which the great reformers had planted, and which some of them had watered with their blood, presented the spectacle which went far to justify the sarcasm of an eminent writer, that she possessed "A Popish Liturgy, a Calvinistic Creed, and an Arminian Clergy." The ejected were Calvinists almost to a man. Previous to this period, some few Free Churches had been founded, and were Independent or Baptist, the latter being mainly of the General section, and of Dutch origin.
    The ejected, who were in one sense alone the first Nonconformists, were mainly Presbyterians; some, however, were Independents, and a few Baptists. The Churches they established were all Calvinistic in their faith, and such they remained for at least that generation. It is a matter of veritable history, however, that such they did not all continue for any great length of time. Some of them, in the course of two or three generations, or even less, became either Arian or Socinian. This was eventually the case with nearly all the Presbyterians, and later on, with some of the Independents, and with many of the General Baptist Communities. By some means or other, first the ministers, and then the Churches, got on "the down grade," and in some cases, the descent was rapid, and in all, very disastrous. In proportion as the ministers seceded from the old Puritan godliness of life, and the old Calvinistic form of doctrine, they commonly became less earnest and less simple in their preaching, more speculative and less spiritual in the matter of their discourses, and dwelt more on the moral teachings of the New Testament, than on the great central truths of revelation. Natural theology frequently took the place which the great truths of the gospel ought to have held, and the sermons became more and more Christless. Corresponding results in the character and life, first of the preachers and then of the people, were only too plainly apparent.
    The race of preachers which followed the first Nonconformists, that is, the ejected ministers who became Nonconformists, retained the soundness of doctrine, and purity of life, for which they were everywhere remarkable. Their sermons were less lengthy, but still long, and less burdened with divisions and sub-divisions. The life, savor, and power of the gospel remained among them, and the churches, walking in the fear of God and the comfort of the Holy Ghost, were slowly increased.
    The Presbyterians were the first to get on the down line. They paid more attention to classical attainments and other branches of learning in their ministry than the Independents, while the Baptists had no academical institution of any kind. It would be an easy step in the wrong direction to pay increased attention to academical attainments in their ministers, and less to spiritual qualifications; and to set a higher value on scholarship and oratory, than on evangelical zeal and ability to rightly divide the word of truth.
    Some of the ministers retained their Calvinistic soundness and their purity of character and life, and these, as a rule, gave prominence to the doctrines of the gospel, and were zealous in their ministry. But some embraced Arminian sentiments, while others professed to take a middle path, and called themselves Baxterians. These displayed, not only less zeal for the salvation of sinners, and, in many cases, less purity or strictness of life, but they adopted a different strain in preaching, dwelt more on general principles of religion, and less on the vital truths of the gospel. Ruin by sin, regeneration by the Holy Spirit, and redemption by the blood of Christ— truths on the preaching of which God has always set the seal of his approbation—were conspicuous chiefly by their absence. In fact, the "wine on the lees well refined" was so mixed with the muddy water of human speculation, that it was no longer wine at all.
    There was another section among the Presbyterians who, like the former two, retained a nominal orthodoxy, and professed to believe, though they seldom preached, evangelical sentiments. Men of this stamp were chiefly remarkable for the extreme coldness of their sermons, and the extreme dullness of their delivery.
    Among those who called themselves Baxterians there was little likeness to Baxter; and his zeal and earnestness, and his close, penetrating preaching, and powerful appeals to the heart and conscience were wholly wanting, except in a very few. This remark will apply also to those who called themselves Arminians.
    It would appear that the Arian and other heresies did not spread at first so quickly in London as in the country. The author of a manuscript written about 1730, professes to give the sentiments of all the Nonconformist ministers in London at that time. Among the Presbyterians there were, he says, nineteen Calvinists, thirteen Arminians, and twelve Baxterians. All the Independents, he avows, were Calvinists: "twenty-seven thoroughly, one somewhat dubious, three inclined to Antinomianism, and two who were disorderly." There were two Seventh-day Baptists—one a Calvinist, and the other an Arminian. There were sixteen Baptists, of the Particular order; of whom seven were Calvinists, and "nine inclined to the Antinomian strain."
    Antinomianism was the term applied to the teaching of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Crisp had been an Arminian, but became an ardent Calvinist, going, perhaps, a little beyond Calvin in some things. He died in 1642, and his sermons were published by his son forty-five years after his death. They were printed from short-hand notes compared with Dr. Crisp's own notes, and therefore were lacking in that correctness and finish which the author's own hand would have given them. This will account for the crudeness of some of his expressions. He was a man of strong faith, ardent zeal, holy life, and great devotion and faithfulness in his ministerial work. He was called an Antinomian, but the term was misapplied. Many of his statements, however, while they will readily admit of an orthodox sense, lie open to the charge of going beyond the truth.
    The publication of his sermons awoke a fierce controversy, which lasted some years, and did much mischief. Dr. Williams exposed what he considered the errors and erroneous tendency of some of his utterances; and even John Flavel was among those who denounced his teaching as erroneous and Antinomian. There need not have been such an outcry. The books written against Crisp, many of them good in their way, had the effect of frightening the timid, the doubtful, and the hesitating, who, to avoid Crispianism, as it was called, went as far as they could to the opposite extreme. They verged upon Arminianism, and some actually became Arminians. The Arminianism of that day was a cold, dry, heartless thing, and many who took that name proved that they were already on "the down grade" towards Socinianism.
    As is usual with people on an incline, some who got on "the down grade" went further than they intended, showing that it is easier to get on than to get off, and that where there is no brake it is very difficult to stop. These who turned from Calvinism may not have dreamed of denying the proper deity of the Son of God, renouncing faith in his atoning death and justifying righteousness, and denouncing the doctrine of human depravity, the need of Divine renewal, and the necessity for the Holy Spirit's gracious work, in order that men might become new creatures; but, dreaming or not dreaming, this result became a reality.
    It is exceedingly painful to have to state—and the conduct is no less censurable than pitiable—that among the two classes into which those who held Arian sentiments may be divided, the first were so mean and dishonest as to conceal their sentiments under ambiguous phrases. They so expressed themselves that their orthodox hearers might appropriate their statements in support of their own views, while their Arian adherents could turn them to support their scheme. It is stated on very good authority that "many wore this disguise all their days, and the most cautious carried the secret with them to the grave." This is terrible to think of; men going down to the grave with a whole life of the very worst kind of hypocrisy unconfessed, the basest deceit and dishonesty unacknowledged, the life-long practice of a lie unrepented of. Such a course is the very worst form of lying, for it is telling lies in the name of the Lord. Others were only a little less hardened in their career of falsehood; they prepared a sermon, or other composition, revealing their true sentiments, which was made public after their decease. Still more confided their real sentiments to a small circle of adherents, who told the tale of heresy to the world only when the grave had closed over the teacher.
    Such were the crafty devices of the men of "broad views," and "free thought," and "advanced sentiments," in those days of "rebuke and blasphemy." The almost blasphemous utterances of Mr. Voysey, daring and frightful as they are (see "Fortnightly Review" for Jan., 1887), have the one redeeming feature of honesty. He puts the mark of unbelief in large characters on his own brow, and does not seek in the least to hide it from any one, but rather to glory in it, that he has set himself to deny and denounce all that is sacred, and true, and holy in the gospel of our salvation. But these men deepened their own condemnation, and promoted the everlasting ruin of many of their followers by their hypocrisy and deceit; professing to be the ambassadors of Christ, and the heralds of his glorious gospel, their aim was to ignore his claims, deny him his rights, lower his character, rend the glorious vesture of his salvation, and trample his crown in the dust.
    The second, and less numerous, class of Arian preachers were more honest. They boldly avowed their sentiments to their congregations, who as readily received them. In most cases, in both preachers and hearers, it was only a short step down from the Arianism which makes the eternal Son of God a super-angelic being to the Socinianism (miscalled Unitarianism) which makes him a man only, denying alike original sin, human depravity, the mediation of Christ, the personality and work of the eternal Spirit, and that new birth without which divine truth has declared no one can see the kingdom of God.
    The descent of some few was less gradual, but more commonly, when once on "the down grade" their progress was slow, though unhappily sure. The central truth of Calvinism, as of the Gospel, is the person and work and offices of the Lord Jesus Christ. We love to use this Pauline and inspired description of our divine Savior and royal Master, and so to "give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name." When men begin to hesitate about, and hold back the truth in relation to him, it is a sign of an unhealthy state of soul; and when these truths are diluted, omitted, or otherwise tampered with, it is a sign which in plain words means "Beware."
    The remark of a writer of reliable ability in reference to these times is worthy of quotation:—
    "The deficiency of evangelical principles in some, and the coldness with which they came from the lips of others, seem to have prepared the way for the relinquishment of them, and for the introduction, first of Arminianism, and then of Arianism."
    Those who were really orthodox in their sentiments were too often lax and unfaithful as to the introduction of heretical ministers into their pulpits, either as assistants or occasional preachers. In this way the Arian and Socinian heresies were introduced into the Presbyterian congregations in the city of Exeter. The Rev. Stephen Towgood and Mr. Walrond, the ministers, were both reputed as orthodox, but the Rev. Micaiah Towgood, an avowed Arian, was chosen their assistant. The old ministers preached evangelical doctrine, but they complied all too readily with the wishes of their new colleague, and ceased to require a declaration of faith in the divinity of Christ in those who sought admission to the Lord's table. Sad to say, they continued to labor on in peace, the older men dealing out the "wine of the kingdom," and the "Living Bread," while the younger minister intermixed his rationalistic concoctions and his Socinian leaven. A similar case occurred in London. Dr. William Harris, an avowed Calvinist, and whose preaching was in accordance with Calvinistic doctrine, had for his assistant, during the last twenty years of his life, an avowed though not strongly pronounced Socinian, Dr. Lardner, who took the afternoon lectureship. When Dr. Harris died, Dr. Lardner was elected to be his successor. For some reason he declined, when Dr. Benson, another Socinian, succeeded to the pastorate. Thus, the old, old proverb was again proved true, "The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the children's teeth are set on edge."
    This down-grade course was, we have said, more rapid, more general, and more fatal among the Presbyterians than among the Independents and General Baptists. We say General Baptists, for the deadening doctrines of Socinianism had made little inroad upon the Particular Baptists. We could not point to a single case of perversion to Socinianism during more than two centuries, though other and less vital errors have dealt much mischief among the churches of that order. Will our children and grandchildren be able to say as much of this and the next generation in fifty years time? Who can tell? But we pray and hope that they will be.
    The principal cause of the quicker descent on "the down grade" among the Presbyterians than among other Nonconformists, may be traced, not so much to their more scholarly ministry, nor altogether to their renunciation of Puritan habits, but to their rule of admitting to the privileges of Church membership. Of course their children received the rite of baptism, according to their views of baptism, in infancy. They were thereby received—so the ministers taught, and so the people believed—into covenant with God, and had a right to the Lord's table, without any other qualification than a moral life. Many such children grew up unregenerate, and strangers to the work of renewing grace; yet they claimed to be Christians, and to be admitted to all the privileges of the church, and their claim was not disallowed. To such the earnest appeals of faithful ministers of Christ would be irksome and unpalatable. The broader road and easier way of the "men of reason and culture," which admitted of laxity of discipline and pliancy of sentiments and habits, was far more agreeable to their tastes and ideas, while the homage paid to reason and understanding, at the expense of revelation, gratified their pride, and left them free to walk after their own hearts in things pertaining to religion. Thus they chose them pastors after their own hearts, men who could, and would, and did, cry "Peace, peace," when the only way of peace was ignored or denied.
    These facts furnish a lesson for the present times, when, as in some cases, it is all too plainly apparent men are willing to forego the old for the sake of the new. But commonly it is found in theology that that which is true is not new, and that which is new is not true.
    In another paper we propose to trace "the down grade" course among other Protestants in this country—a sad piece of business, but one which must needs be done. Oh that it might act as a warning to the unsettled and unsettling spirits of our own day!
     
  6. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    Here's a shorter and more direct reference From the April 1887 Sword and Trowel:


    "Veneration for the sacred Scriptures may certainly be considered as a test of the general purity of religious sentiments. Whether any will be found to equal Calvinists in this respect, shall be left to the judgment; of those readers who have made extensive observations on the subject. Perhaps it cannot be contradicted that, in proportion as any sect recedes from Calvinism, their veneration for the Scriptures is diminished The Bible is the Calvinist's creed. Whatever God has spoken, he feels himself bound to receive and believe, however mysterious the doctrine may be. Arminians, in general, will not be found to be equal to them in this respect,
     
  7. Timtoolman

    Timtoolman New Member

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    I have read Dl's biography. I know how he won souls. How did Spurgeon? I don't recall too many stories of Spurgeon sitting next to someone and sharing the gospel. Or much one on one for that. Yeah he preached and grew great growds. But we know many such people today who do the same.
    Just wondering, is there a book that tell more personal life of Spurgeon?
     
  8. Calvibaptist

    Calvibaptist New Member

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    Tim, not to be antagonistic, but are you suggesting that it is more profitable to sit down next to someone and personally share your faith than it is to preach the gospel to thousands? God uses both ways, and I don't think we ought to take one over the other.
     
  9. Timtoolman

    Timtoolman New Member

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    I would say it is easier to get a crowd to follow then one by one. A person who is not a personal wittness can still be used by God. Just that God has used many people from the pulpit, who I dare say because of the times, have reach more for Christ then Spurgeon. I think one cannot be ignored over the other. It seems today a lot of pastors are saying that it is not their responsiblity to wittness to others. Only too prepare other or equipe others for the Lord. I find no such passage in the Bible that excuses pastors from being wittinesses and winning others to Christ.
     
  10. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    JofJ: here is an example of arminian/"biblicists" misusing Spurgeon's words:

    from PastorKevin, a fine man but confused:

    Why do people want to misrepresent Spurgeon's theology?

    You would never see me quoting Wesley to prove Calvinsim. Sometimes I quote Wesley to show Pelagians how far from orthodox arminianism they are, but how could I ever be dishonest and take something Wesley wrote out of context and make him a "moderate" arminian?

    In Kevin's case, it's confusion as he has said. But some I know, especailly the SOL, is dishonest in trying to represent Spurgeon in their favor. Your GF did it too, like it or not. And I like you too. If I didn't like you, I would ignore you. I look forward to your reply.

    BTW in case anyone doesn't know, the reason Spurgeon said that God does not save anyone against their will is because that's what CALVIN taught. God supernaturally CHANGES their will, so that when the gospel is preached, they are not only willing, but desperately eager to receive Christ.
     
  11. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    Since JOJ has said I mangled the paragraph from Dollar's book on page 78 I will supply the missing sentences which he thought were so critical , minus the two sentences he gave . A single asterisk will indicate where Dollar cited Weisenberger .

    Moody was unlike his predecessors in his lack of education and his brusqueness of speech with his many " Dan'ls " and " Sam'ls ." He once told a group , " I wunt leave myself in the hands of no committee . " ... He was most happy to receive the support of the well-to-do , even millionaires such as John Wanamaker and John Keene in Philadelphia and Morris J. Jessup in New York . Some have even charged that " revivalism has rested squarely , at least , on the support of the new class of postwar millionaires . "* In eight years he effected a " rejuvenation of evangelism . " Moody reached millions that the new science and knowledge had not reached . One reason was that the middle-class man was still a village boy in his heart , and Moody spoke to his deepest feelings and desires ... By the 1920's a galaxy of men were trying to perpetuate two aspects of the Moody revivalism , namely , the use of new methods to increase results and an area-wide revivalistic spirit in small towns and churches .
     
  12. Calvibaptist

    Calvibaptist New Member

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    I agree with the problem you have here. I see no biblical support for a pastor, calvinist or not, saying that he is not to be a personal witness. I vehemently disagree with my Presbyterian brothers who believe that the Great Commission was given only to the church and should only take place when the church is gathered. The disciples were told that they were to make disciples as they went. Part of that process was to teach them everything the Lord commanded them, included the command He had just given them.

    Paul told Timothy to do the work of an evangelist. It sounds more like a cop-out for a pastor to claim that he is to equip and not to also "do the work of the ministry" alongside the other believers in his care. This is not biblical leadership.
     
  13. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    Back in the States I own William Moody's bio of his dad . It was a gift . It was autographed by William . Did you know that Torrey broke with Will R. Moody ? It seems that the W.R. favored higher critical views .

    It is my opinion that Moody was too anecdotal in his messages and not expository enough . If there are exceptions to this I will be happy . He was also too sentimental , as was Gipsy Smith ( who took sentimentality to extremes ) , Billy Sunday and others . BTW , I have Gipsy Smith's autobiography and Sunday's autobiography .

    In a sermon on "Hell" D.L.Moody basically acknowledged that preaching on the Judgment to come was not what some considered his strong suit. But he defended himself . " A man came up to me the other day and said : ' I like your preaching . You don't preach hell , and I suppose you don't believe in one .' Now I don't want any one to rise up in the Judgment and say that I was not a faithful preacher of the Word of God . It is my duty to preach God's Word just as He gives it to me ; I have no right to pick out a text here and there , and say , ' I don't believe that . ' If I throw out one text I must throw out all , for in the same Bible I read of rewards and punishments , Heaven and hell . "

    In another sermon " Christ All in All " I find the same kind of preaching . He devotes way to much time to stories . I have no doubt that he felt they illustrated his points , but his message was not as biblical as it could have been . Here is an interesting thing at the beginning of his sermon . : " I have no sympathy with those men who try to limit God's salvation to a cwertain few . I believe that Christ died for all wo will come . I have received many letters finding fault with me , and saying I surely don't believe the doctrine of election . I do believe in election ; but I have no business to preach that doctrine to the world at large . The world has nothing to do with election ; it has only to do with the invitation , ' Whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely . ' That is the message for the sinner . I am sent to preach the gospel to all .
    After you have received salvation , we can talk about election . It's a doctrine for the Church , not for the unconverted world . Our message is 'good tidings , which shall be to all people ; for unto you is born this day a Savior , which is Christ the Lord . ' All people , this Savior is proffered to you . Accept Him , and God will accept you ; reject Him , and God will reject you . Your eternal destiny depends on your refusal or otherwise to accept the proferred Savior . The case is simply one of giving and taking . God gives ; I receive . We must , then , first of all know Christ as our Savior . "

    [ April 04, 2006, 01:51 AM: Message edited by: Rippon ]
     
  14. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    John Kennedy was a good friend of Charles Spurgeon . Kennedy of Dingwall ( 1819-1884 ), was a fine preacher himself . But he had to take a stand against the Moody/Sankey campaigns . He wrote of " The Evils Of 'Mass Evangelism ' ".

    Hyperevangelism , Another Gospel

    In modern , popular evangelism the supreme end of the gospel is ignored -- that is , the manifesting of God's glory . It misrepresents the gospel as merely unfolding a scheme of salvation adapted to man's convenience . I would present four reasons why the present evangelical campaign movement is weighed in the balances and found lacking .
    1. No effort is made to present the character and claims of God as lawgiver and judge , and no desire at all to allow sinners to come into self-condemnation , that is , to accept their full guilt and condemnation before God . The law of God has its place in the preaching of the gospel and its use in the work of God . " By the law is the knowledge of sin " ( Rom.3:20 ). The Holy Spirit , who convinces men of their sin , uses the law in the work of conviction . A due regard for the glory of God demands that it be so . Sinners cannot be saved if they do not understand what they are , and what they deserve . They must own their sinnership . As sinners , they must be made acutely acquainted with their iniquity and guilt ...
     
  15. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    2. Modern , hyper-evangelism ignores the sovereignty and power of God in freely bestowing saving grace . If men are told that salvation is at the disposal of God's sovereign will , that they are so utterly lost and helpless that only the working of God's almighty power can save them , then the result will be that some will be offended , and some will sink down in despair . Am I therefore to cease from proclaiming Jehovah and His Son as absolute King ? Am I to be silenced from telling sinners that it is His right and authority alone that determines who and when men will be saved ? Are we not especially called to announce His sovereignty in saving sinners by the gospel ? Did not the Lord Jesus make God's sovereignty in salvation the theme of His first sermon , and as a result enraged the congregation till their hearts became murderous ( Luke 4:16-30 ) ? Preaching that God sovereignly saves , not according to the will of the flesh or the will of man , will always arouse the rebellion of the natural man , who wants his own will to be sovereign . Did not our Lord Jesus Christ , in all His preaching , ascribe salvation to the sovereign will of the Father who sent Him ?
     
  16. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    Preachers and soul winners , anxious to secure decisions and results , do not like to think of the controlling will of a free , sovereign God , whose almighty power cannot be controlled , yet whose power must be active if a sinner truly comes to christ . Modern evangelical Christians think clearly only in terms of cause and effect : certain methods and actions must produce certain results . This carnal earnestness , this zeal not according to wisdom , this proud determination to make a controlled business of soul-winning is intolerant of God's free sovereignty .
    There is , of course , verbal references to God's grace , the work of the Holy Spirit , and the need of Christ , but there is in the end no waiting upon God in dependence . Busy soul-winners and evangelists bustle around , acting as if somehow God's power is under their control .
    In the present movement , at any rate , there seems to be little that is actually a work of the sovereign Spirit of God . Of course , there is much ' strange fire ' produced by clever song-leaders and religious cheerleaders . But where is ' the Holy Ghost being sent down from heaven; producing a sense of man's depravity and the genuine helplessness of a soul who is dead in trespasses and sins ? To face this reality in the light of God's Word , would be to discover the necessity of the almighty agency of the Holy Spirit . Let us be clear about this forever , man cannot control , manipulate or produce the moving of the Spirit of God . God must work or all is vain . But leaders in the modern movement hide the true state of things so that success and ' results ' can be obtained . There is little faith in the Holy Spirit as God . Men cannot bear the fact that there is a great work which God alone can do . It is the man who can cry , in faith , for life with a valley of dry bones before him who is the man with true faith in God .
    Often a sermon is heard in which the necessity of being born again is heard , but that is sure to be followed by statements that blunt the edge of all that was said before . In answer to the question of how one is to be born again , the answer is , ' You believe in Christ , and then you are regenerated '. Think of that , man's faith regenerates ! If it does so , it is the act of a living soul , and that soul could not have been dead in sins . If that regenerating faith was the act of a dead soul , then a dead man , by his own act , brings himself alive ! Men often say , ' God would not call men to believe , unless they had the power to do so ? Let them answer this question : Can the natural man love God with all their heart , soul , mind , and strength ? Yet they are commanded to do so . The power of God is necessary for the response and obedience of any sinner .
     
  17. mnw

    mnw New Member

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    [​IMG] Spurgeon, one of the greatest preachers, soul winners and teachers. Moody, a great preacher and soul winner. Maybe he told too many stories, but he made them focus on Christ! Moody maybe was not the most intellectual preacher, but he saw its value and that is why he started several schools.

    If Moody's greatest error was making God's gift of salvation too broad and he didn't quote the original Greek and Hebrew enough, then God give us more preachers with those errors!

    In the early church there were masses of people saved. In the past few hundred years we have seen masses turn to the Lord.

    But now it seems some say that was wrong. Calvinism dictates that only ones and twos may be won, so these preachers of the past must be wrong. They didn't preach enough hell fire and brimestone so they must have been wrong.

    All I know is going back to the times of Moody, Bob Jones, JRR and others salvation was preached, souls were saved, churches were started, missionaries were sent out and communities were changed.

    Now we are getting away from the principles these men stood on, fewer and fewer are getting saved, churches are closing, men entering the ministry are fewer than ever and communities are become more and more depraved.

    Maybe the problem is that calvninists and armenianists spend so much time fighting each other. While this grand debate goes on souls are dying.

    Well, hopefully we'll not be so caught up in this controversy that we'll miss the trumpet call when the Lord returns...
     
  18. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    mnw, would you consider re-thinking what you said here?
     
  19. npetreley

    npetreley New Member

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    </font>[/QUOTE]This is why I have (elsewhere) made negative references to the expression "winning souls". Thanks for the quote. I think he expressed the problem very well. Unfortunately the majority of churches I have visited are still stuck in this mode.
     
  20. mnw

    mnw New Member

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    mnw, would you consider re-thinking what you said here? </font>[/QUOTE]I am always ready to re-think matters. [​IMG] Until I reach Heaven I will be prone to mistakes, so I must remain teachable. [​IMG]
     
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