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"It is not great talents that God blesses
so much as great likeness to Christ.
A holy minister is an awful weapon in
the hand of God."
(from the following sermon)
THE REAL POWER OF THE PASTOR
IS IN HIS EARNEST GODLINESS
(Thomas Murphy)
This is his power with God; it is also his
power with men. Though other branches of
preparation are absolutely necessary, yet this it
is which above every thing else will make him an
able workman. His calling is such that his
heart is
needed in it at every point. It is the
heart alone,
and the heart
glowing with love to God, that can give him
strength and energy and perseverance and success.
With it he will be irresistible, without it his
ministerial life will be a failure. Where there
is such an unction of the Holy Spirit it will, as
a matter of course, impart a high and holy
character; and a character without a spot and
beyond suspicion Must ever be the right arm of a
minister's efficiency. It is in fact
indispensable to his real efficiency. In this the
calling of the pastor is different from most
other callings among men. Worldly wisdom or
professional skill or artistic proficiency may
give a high degree of success in these callings
without any aid whatever from moral or religious
character. But not so with the minister.
Christian integrity
is that which must penetrate and give tone to all
that be does.
What skill is to the artist, what logical acumen
is to the lawyer, what far-seeing wisdom is to
the statesman, that is consistent integrity to
him. It is the tower of his strength among men.
It is his most attractive ornament. Rob him of
that, and he becomes the most despised of
mankind; give it to him in its richness, and no
man is more honored and beloved. And the
heart is the
true source of such exalted character.
Where there is devoted
godliness in the heart it will be seen in the
life. It cannot be hid. It is not
ostentatious, but it must necessarily work itself
out into the light of day, Moreover, it cannot be
counterfeited. If the genuine work is not within,
no efforts to imitate it will be successful. But
where it really is, life, lips, acts will all
reveal it, even when it is not so intended.
The heart which is
elevated by communion with Christ will show
itself on the countenance and in the daily
communion with men. Hence,
whatever character we would bear with our fellow
men, we must attain to in the depths of our own
hearts. Whatever standing we would maintain
before the world, we must first reach in our
secret communion with God. Then
devoted piety
will almost inevitably disarm opposition, and
even envy itself. There is in it such
a charm of humility
that enmity cannot stand in its presence. It has
a gentleness of love
that could not be hated. As a matter of fact, it
may be generally seen that the men who live
nearest to God are the ones who have the least
annoyance from opposition. The good man will have
but few adversaries, excepting among such as were
adversaries to Him who was goodness incarnate.
Because piety disarms opposition it must give
power as well as peace to him who is most deeply
imbued with its spirit. Moreover, to have the
heart true to God and true to men through the
effectual working of the Holy Spirit is the only
way to obtain that abiding confidence from men
which is so essential to the gospel minister.
That confidence cannot be retained unless it has
its source in a deep fountain of truth within.
But that will secure it. Who can doubt the
reliability of him who evidently lives under the
power of heavenly motives? And such confidence is
an armory of power for the minister. Much as it
is needed in most earthly callings, in none of
them is it so important as in his. When men have
reason to rely upon him fully, his motives will
be rightly construed, even when they cannot all
be seen, and all his efforts in the gospel cause
will have double weight. He will then have an
influence among his fellow men that will itself
be a very great power. There are men whose
reputation for high integrity makes them giants-
moral giants- for good in the world. For this
reason, even if for none better, should that
highest of integrity,
the integrity of true
godliness, be assiduously sought
after. It will give such weight to the minister's
words that none of them will be lost. Coming, as
they manifestly do, from an honest and earnest
heart, they will be received, and weighed, and
remembered. It will be seen that he holds
communion with God, and so men will be induced to
listen to him, as otherwise they would not. The
respect which his manifest godliness inspires
will compel them to honor his message. And then
his preaching will inevitably be clothed with
double power. That true sanctity which becomes
the gospel minister will keep him near to God,
the source of all real strength and success. He
cannot retain any measure of spirituality unless
be walks with God. But from
that holy presence
he will go out among his fellow men
clothed in a might that no human training or
talents could give him. Then may his soul beam
with a glory like that which irradiated the face
of Moses as he came down from Sinai. He would
carry with him an
indescribable atmosphere of sacredness
that would tell effectively on all his
ministry. With almost the authority of the Master
could be speak. From the source from which he
received communications of grace would he also
receive communications of power, and as he
ministered in the name of the Lord, would the
strength of that name go with him, and bring
forth results that would be the crown of his
rejoicing.
An eminently pious
minister will almost inevitably be
successful in his blessed work.
The pity which he has
learned to feel for souls, his unquenchable love
for Jesus and his all absorbing zeal for the
glory of God will impart to his working an
earnestness that can scarcely fail of success.
Clothed with the power of the Holy Spirit, which
comes down to him in answer to his effectual
fervent prayer, he will be sure of seeing the
cause of Christ prospering in his hands. If he be
a profound theologian, a ripe scholar or an
eloquent speaker, his communion with God will
hallow each gift and make it still more
effective. If his attainments be of the most
ordinary character, still
the holy unction
that accompanies his efforts will make them tell.
This will make up wonderfully for other defects.
Yes, it will often accomplish for the minister
what no mere earthly advantages could. McCheyne
well said: "A heated
iron, though blunt, will pierce its way even
where a much sharper instrument, if it be cold,
cannot penetrate. So if our ministers only be
filled with the Spirit, who is like fire, they
will pierce into the hardest hearts where the
sharpest wits cannot find their way."
It was also a saying of his,
"A loving man will always
accomplish more than a merely learned one."
Another of his
rich aphorisms were,
"It is not great talents that God blesses so
much as great likeness to Christ. A holy minister
is an awful weapon in the hand of God."
The names of multitudes of pastors could be given
which would prove that those who are the most
godly are the most highly blest in saving souls
and spreading that righteousness of which the are
themselves bright examples. Their work is not
that which merely dazzles for a moment and then
leaves deeper darkness behind it. It is abiding,
and sends out great streams of influence for good
that will cease neither in time nor in eternity.
It is hoped that these emphatic reiterations of
the fact that the
pastor's deep piety is his real power
will not be looked upon as platitudes. They may
possibly be regarded by some who have not had
much experience as commonplace truisms not
needing mention. They have been repeated so
often, and by so many, that here perhaps they may
arrest scarcely any attention. But they cannot be
thought of too profoundly. They are the words of
truth and soberness. No true pastor but will
understand their great importance more and more
as his experience increases. It cannot be
repeated too often, nor made too emphatic, that
the pastor's great
power is in his vital godliness.
Nothing in this wide world will make up for the
lack of it. Let experience be heard. This is the
testimony of all those who have been the most
highly blest in their ministerial work. One such
testimony may be given; it is that of one of the
princes of Welsh preachers, Christmas Evans: "The
pulpit orator falls infinitely too short of
answering the desired effect unless the fire
within him is kindled by the influence of the
Holy Spirit of God, for which he must pray in the
name of Jesus, firmly believing in God's promise
that be will give the Holy Spirit to those that
ask him. This is the mystery of the are of
eloquence of the man of God. He must be clothed
with the power from on high. Here is the great
inward secret." In this
work of the ministry, as in everything else
pertaining to the gospel, God's great rule is,
"Those who honor me I will honor, and those who
despise me shall be lightly esteemed."
Let no one pass this point by until it has
arrested his attention, sunken into his heart and
fixed his life purpose.
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