Dear Phyllis,
The first time I heard Joe Carroll
preach he said, “You believe the Bible
is the Word of God from cover to cover. You believe that Jesus died for your
sins. You have accepted Jesus as your savior and are trusting exclusively in
the merits of His shed Blood for your salvation; totally apart from any good
works on your part; and there has not been a major change in your character
or conduct; in all probability you are deceived an still on your way to
hell.” Whee! Man howdy, that one rocked me! That was the only message I
ever heard that made me search my own heart, and if I wasn’t saved I certainly
would have been saved that day. That is Finney preaching.
Finney held up the standard of God and
what I deserve. It wasn’t what I could get out of salvation, but the amazing
miracle of the grace of God in not sending me to hell. He made God the center
and the will of God the focal point. Today’s message makes man the center and
the advantage of man the focal point. Reading Finney is so shocking I wonder how we could get so
far off base.
Years ago I was building an elaborate
custom kitchen for some missionaries. The job was taking longer than they
expected and the missionary wife told her husband; “I am a gracious southern
woman. I am used to gracious southern living. God does not want me to suffer
like this. I am gong home until this job is done. Let me know when the kitchen
is finished and I will come back.” Unbelievable! but that actually happened!
Finney would absolutely place that dear missionary sister in the ranks of the deceived
regardless of how evangelical they were.
There are extremely few – if any –
that hold up a standard like Finney. But Finney had an impact on society that
no one would think of today. When Charles Finney came to town, theaters closed,
bars went out of business, vise disappeared, and jails were emptied.
In 1965 Harry Stamm came to Japan and told an amazing story.
In upstate New York there is a small town of Houghton , NY. There is a fine Christian college there. In the
foyer of the administration building of Houghton Collage there is a painting of
a man out in the field praying on his knees. Stamm said the story behind that
picture was the history of Houghton. In the early years of the colonies they
dug the Erie Canal to make a waterway from the Hudson River to Lake Erie . They used mules to pull the barges along the Erie Canal and Houghton was a rest stop for the night. For
entertainment, they started racing the mules at night. Racing brought in
gambling, and gambling brought in vise. In time Houghton became so debauched
that it was known as the Sodom and Gomorrah of New York State . There was a Christian farmer who lived in Houghton
who pleaded with God for that town. Harry Stamm said he didn’t know when the transformation
came. Presumably, it was due to the ministry of Finney. But in 1965 there were
five churches in Houghton – all of which preached the Gospel – and you could
not buy a can of beer or a cigarette in the city limits of Houghton. That is an
example of God taking a town that was a moral sewer and making it to be a model
Christian community – that lasted for 100 years.
Reading Finney has greatly challenged
me. Where is the transformation in today’s preaching? Scott has a book,
England, Before and After Wesley. I haven’t read it yet but I am sure it is a
good one. Wesley had an impact on England like few men in history have ever influenced a
nation. England was on the verge of chaos before his ministry. It has
been said Wesley saved England from a revelation. France was in the same condition and had a revelation. England was in bad shape but major masses were converted, and
that brought civil rest. Wesley probably made England to be the great nation
that she was for over 100years, with the marvelous Christian culture that she
enjoyed; sending out thousands of missionaries. To be honest, we can’t
attribute all of that to one man. Certainly, it was a sovereign act of God
making England to be the nation He could use; and He used many men
to bring it about. But Wesley’s preaching unquestionably transformed masses of
people.
Finney never gave an invitation for
salvation. If someone was concerned and wanted to get saved, he would offer an “anxious
seat”, but he never told anyone that they were saved. Invitations for salvation
began with Moody. Finney’s retention rate was something like 80%. Moody’s
retention was considerably less, and Billy Graham’s retention rate was 1%.
It is easy enough to throw stones at
others, but this has caused me to examine my own effectiveness. I have searched
my heart to think of the last time I heard a life-transforming message or
preached one myself. Thank God occasionally one soul here and there gets saved,
but I wonder if we aren’t holding out to them more a free pass into heaven than
expecting a radical change in the focal point of their life.
We don’t need to wonder what was the
focal point of Jesus’ life. He only had one purpose for living – to do the will
of the Father – and to give His life for our salvation If it is actually true
that Christ is our life now, perhaps that should be more evident in us also.
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