J. Wilbur
Chapman: THE MASTER IS COME
My text is in John 11:28 - "The Master is come and calleth
for thee." This passage takes us to the home in Bethany where
Jesus loved to be. It has to do with the sickness and death of
Lazarus, and his resurrection from the dead. Some years ago I
heard a distinguished man of God preach from this text. The light
of heaven was on his face and the fire of heaven was in his
message. The outline of his sermon remains with me still, and I am
going to use his outline as I preach to you from this text.
It must have been a very remarkable family that lived in the
Bethany home. Martha and Mary and Lazarus. It may not have been
the largest house in Bethany, nevertheless Jesus loved to tarry
there. If you tell me that you have the finest home in this city
and Jesus is not there, then it is not the finest. If you tell me
that yours is a home of poverty and Jesus abides with you, then I
know that you do not mind your poverty.
No one can think of the Bethany home without being deeply
touched. Martha and Mary and Lazarus and - Jesus! One day there
came a cloud, the size of a man's hand, over that home in Bethany.
Lazarus was sick. The cloud increased from day to day until it
covered all the sky. When the sisters knew that their brother was
sick unto death, they called a messenger and sent a message to
Jesus. They did not say, "Go to the Master and tell Him that
Lazarus is ill," but they said this, "Lord, behold, he
whom Thou lovest is sick." They knew that Jesus would know.
How they watched for the return of the messenger, but the
messenger delayed and Lazarus died. In those countries the
preparations for death must be made very quickly. So they laid
Lazarus at once in the tomb. When they went back to the home
everything spoke of him. The old couch on which he rested, the
manuscripts he read, the sandals he wore, the robe that was
wrapped around him, - everything spoke of Lazarus, and Lazarus was
gone. Just when their hearts were aching to the breaking, a
messenger came saying that Jesus was coming to Bethany. Mary sat
still in the house, but Martha went out to meet him, and when she
met him she began in a tone of complaint, "Lord, if thou
hadst been here, my brother had not died." It was then that
Jesus spoke his wonderful words: "I am the resurrection and
the life. He that believeth in me, thoughj he were dead, yet shall
he live." Something in what he said and in the way he said it
touched Martha's heart, and she rushed back to her sister and
cried out in the words of the text, "The Master is come and
calleth for thee." Then the sisters went out together to meet
Jesus. Presently they were standing at the tomb and weeping. Jesus
was weeping too. Then He stooped down to look into the tomb from
which the stone had been rolled away, and cried out the dead man,
"Come forth." I scarcely need to rehearse the story to
you because it is so familiar. And now I follow the outline that I
have mentioned, and in so doing we shall find suggested in this
story the steps that are essential to a revival.
First, when Mary and Martha wanted Jesus they did not go
themselves to Jesus, but they sent a messenger. I have always had
an idea that if they had gone themselves, saying, "Master,
Lazarus is sick, and if he dies our hearts will be broken and our
home desolate," perhaps Jesus might have come back to Bethany
with them at once and stayed the disease. They did not go
themselves. They sent a messenger. And do you know that this is
the way people expect revivals nowadays? They are anxious to have
them come, but they do not put themselves into the work. They send
someone else. In earlier days when people desired a revival, they
waited upon God in fasting and prayer. They even spent nights in
prayer. They forgot to eat and sleep. Fathers and mothers became
concerned for their children. Wives were in agony about their
husbands. Ministers stood up to preach and they looked like dead
men. Often they preached to the accompaniment of sobs. When men
and women sought God for themselves in this spirit the foundations
were shaken, the heavens were opened, churches were quickened, and
souls were converted.
I believe in the work of the evangelist with all my heart. I
keep before me two or three ideals. My greatest inspiration is
Dwight L. Moody. Almost all that I know of evangelistic work I
learned at his feet. I continue to use his methods. I have prayed
God through all the years that I might have his spirit in
preaching. I came in touch with him first when I was a university
student. Later I sat at his feet as a young minister. I entered
evangelistic work under his direction. I used to take his after
meetings when he was unable to take them after preaching. Yet much
as I believe in evangelists, there is not an evangelist in the
world who has the power to bring a revival to your soul. You can
have it only by seeking after God for yourself. We have praying
ministers here and splendid committees at work, yet the revival
tarries and men are not saved. People are not asking with sobs:
"What must I do to be saved?" Thus far I have received
just two letters from people who were concerned for their
children. Let us not make the mistake of the sisters in Bethany,
who did not go themselves to seek after Christ, but sent a
messenger instead.
Something else is to be noted. Only one of them went after all.
Martha went, but Mary stayed in the house. This is the way
revivals begin. No man has ever known of a whole community being
roused at once. No minister can tell of a whole church being on
fire at one time. One will be interested and will go forth to meet
Christ like Martha. This city will never be moved by masses of
people who are interested in revival. No, it will begin with
individuals. Some minister will have a deep concern. He cannot eat
or sleep. He feels as if he would die. He sits at his desk with
tears running down his cheeks. Or some old saint of God will cry
out, saying: "Oh, Lord, revive Thy work! Revive Thy
work!" When the revival of '57 swept through New York, it was
traced to one man who spent days on his knees alone with nobody to
pray with him. Then another came and another, and another, until
there was a whole company of praying people. New York was stirred.
Philadelphia was shaken. Chicago was moved. The whole American
continent was stirred. The revival swept across the sea to Great
Britain. It started with one man on his knees. There may be some
man in this audience now who feels that his life has never counted
much for God. To-night he feels that he will lay hold of God and
never let go. This is the way revival begins, with one soul that
is truly seeking God.
When I began my ministry in Philadelphia, I succeeded Dr.
Arthur T. Pierson. It was a perilous thing for a young man to do.
Mr. Moody told me that if we could have a revival, everything
would go well. I stood up before the people and said: "All
the people who are willing to help me, come and tell me what you
will do." A famous merchant was my chief elder, and he said
that I could have his carriage to make pastoral calls. Another
said that he would pay the
expenses of the advertising. Others came and said that they
would do this and that. Finally, down the central aisle of the
church came an old Scotch woman, Mrs. Thompson. She took my hand,
and, looking at me, said: "Djo you mind the little room at
the head of the stairway in my house?" I said, "Yes,
Mrs. Thompson." "Very well, minister," she said,
"every day at twelve o'clock I will be in that little room. I
will be on my knees, and I will never let go of God for you."
In a short time I stood in my pulpit there and received four
hundred and forty-four people. Of these, sixteen came as a direct
result of the personal influence of this old Scotch woman. If
there is one thing that we need more than anything else just now,
it is an overmastering concern for people who are out of Christ.
Martha was not fit to talk to Mary until she had seen Jesus. At
least, she had no influence. Mary said: "You might as well go
and meet Him and talk to Him." Mary herself sat still in the
house. You know what that means. Teeth set together, lips closed.
Martha talks and talks, but Mary will not move. Finally Martha
went out to meet Jesus. the moment she caught the look on His face
and heard the ring of His voice, she rushed back with a new light
in her eyes, a new sound in her voice, a new power in her
testimony, saying, "The Master is come." When she saw
Jesus, she could talk to Mary as she had not done before. You want
a revival, you will have to see Jesus first. Many of us want to
see this city moved for God. We must be alone with him first. Oh,
my God, send a revival! We beseech thee, send a revival.
I was preaching in Lincoln, Nebraska, when I heard a woman say
to her pastor: "I want you to pray for my husband and two
boys." I was shocked when he said, "I shall not do
it." When I asked him about it he said: "She is the most
worldly woman in this city. She has led her husband and two boys
into the world after her. It would be absolutely useless for me to
pray so long as she professes to be a Christian and is not."
This woman went to her home and said to her husband: "I want
you to forgive me. I have been a church member, but a false one. I
have been a professed follower of Christ, but I have denied Him. I
want you to forgive me." I saw her husband converted, and the
two boys came with their father. That man is to-day an elder of a
church in his city.
A woman came to her minister in Springfield, Ohio and said:
"Pray for my boy." The minister said: "Absolutely
useless." He told her to go back and get her boy. I had a
letter from her in which whe told me the circumstances. "My
boy came from the Central Methodist Church, where Bishop Bashford
was preaching. He said to me: 'I am about persuaded to be a
Christian. If you will go with me to-morrow I will settle it.'
" His mother said to him: "I cannot go, I have an
engagement." Writing to me, she said: "To my shame, I
confess that my engagement was at a card party. I kept the
engagement and my boy never went back to the Church. I wrote to
him like this: 'Dear Son, - Your mother's heart is broken. When
you were a little boy, and your father insisted that I should have
you sleep alone, I put you in the cradle and you cried yourself to
sleep. When I woke I saw your arms stretched out towards me. Now,
my boy, it is your mother, with her face tearstained, who is
stretching out her arms for you. Please come.' " I saw the
minister ten years afterwards and asked him about it, and he said
that the boy had never come to Christ. He was absolutelu unmoved.
Some of us in this city might speak and have no power. Might
preach and plead and fail. We must get right with God. To your
knees! To your knees!
When they reached the tomb, Mary and Martha and Jesus, the
sisters were weeping., Almost the sweetest words I know are these:
"Jesus wept." Tell me this. Did you ever know a revival
that did not begin with a baptism of tears? Tell me, did you ever
have a revival by just appointing committees, organizing a choir,
and putting money into the treasury? No! I will tell you when
revivals come. They come when men begin to say to their ministers:
Pastor, will you pray for my family? When mothers come to the
evangelist and say: Pray for my boy. When wives are so deeply
interested that they say: If my husband does not come, I shall
die. When signs like these appear, then make ready. I remember an
experience in the village church in New York, where I was a pastor
in my early ministry. I had been preaching for a long time, but
there was no yielding of hearts. I called my officers together and
asked them to tell me what was wrong. They could not answer me.
There was an old farmer in the congregation whose name was Herman
Kramer. He could not pray in public, nor could he sing or speak.
On the next morning after I had talked to the officers, he hitched
up his horse to the cutter. A snow-storm had come in the night,
and the fences were covered. This man of seventy years of age got
into his sleigh and drove four miles across the fields and fences
until he came to a blacksmith shop. Hitching his horse on the
outside, he went in to where the young blacksmith was hammering
away on this anvil. The blacksmith looked up and said: "Mr.
Kramer, what in the world brought hyou here?" All he could do
was to catch hold of the blacksmith's bench with one hand to
steady himself from falling. Reaching out his other hand, he said:
"Your father and I were friends from boyhood. When he died I
promised him that I would look after you and try to lead you to
Chjrist. I have never spoken to you about your soul. Oh,
Tom!" That was all he said, and he turned back home. It was
not long before the blacksmith came to the meetings, driving
through a blinding snowstorm. When he have his testimony, he said:
"I have never been moved by a sermon in my life, but when
Herman Kramer stood there sobbing in my shop, I said to myself, it
is about time Tom Funston was in earnest himself." Revivals
come with tears.
When Jesus stood by the grave, I can hear Him saying:
"Take ye away the stone." He could have done it Himself,
but the Master will not do what you must do yourself. His word to
us tonight is: "Take away the stone." I am speaking to
you all in a kindly spirit, but I testify to you that there will
never be a revival until many of us take away the stones that are
in the way. Some man has not spoken to his boy about Christ.
Someone who calls himself a Christian has never said a word to any
of his employees. Talk about the difficulties between capital and
labor - I believe there would be no such thing if the spirit of
Jesus controlled both sides.
Take away the stone. When they took away the stone at the grave
of Lazarus, can you not see Him? Hallelujah! What a Saviour! I can
shut my eyes and see Him as He stooped down and Looked into the
tomb. I can hear Him say: "Lazarus, come forth." Mr.
Moody once said that He called him by name because if He had said,
"Come forth," everybody who was dead would have heard
Him and gotten up ahead of time., So He said: "Lazarus, come
forth." Your boy might be saved tonight. Your girl, your
husband, if you would take away the stone. Oh, if we would begin
to do this there would not be an indifferent Christian left in
this city. The floodgates would be opened and God's power would
pour forth. Now, my friends, I have preached my sermon. I have
nothing else to say, except that my heart aches and my soul longs
to see the power of God manifested here. Frequently, in Australia,
when Mr. Alexander led the choir in a song called "Someone's
Denying the Master To-night." it was hardly necessary for me
to preach. I saw eight hundred men one night pressing their way
into the inquiry room and dropping on their knees to say: "I
yield." I saw them rising up and singing: "He breaks the
power of cancelled sin, He sets the prisoner free."
Let me say the text over again: "The Master is come, and
calleth for thee." There can be no doubt about it. Maybe you
are a Christian, and maybe you are not. Let us get right with God
now. Let us open our hearts to His Spirit.
Blessed God, our Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, our
Saviour, we pray that the Spirit may search us to-night. We pray
that everything that is wrong may be taken away from us. Let the
Holy Ghost come like a fire upon us. Oh, our God, if there is
anything in our lives that stands in the way, take it from us. Oh,
God, do not let us drift from Thee. Do not let us be a barrier in
the way of others. In Jesus' precious Name. Amen!