Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Today I Smiled


Today I smiled, and all at once
Things didn't look so bad.
Today I shared with someone else,
A little bit of hope I had.

Today I worked with what I had,
And longed for nothing more,
And what had seemed like only weeds,
Were flowers at my door.

Today I loved a little more,
And complained a little less.
And in the giving of myself,
I forgot my weariness.
 

~ author unknown ~

Australian Newspaper Article

Courier-Mail - Brisbane - Saturday, August 29, 1936
 
At Rochedale, 12 miles or so out of Brisbane, and just out of sight of the
Pacific Highway, is the chief gathering place of a little band of preachers
and 'saints,' who strongly repudiate every name but that of Christian,
though their teachings have won for them the soubriquet of 'Go-preachers.'
 
They go out two by two to preach, leaving home and relatives, and giving all
their property to needy preachers and the poor. They discourage the reading
of all other books, than the Bible, and will not put their doctrines into
print. Theirs, they declare, is the only highroad to God.
 
They claim that the word of God comes to man only through their preachers
and, in support of their dogma, quote the text: “How shall they hear without
a preacher?"
 
Others call them the Cooneyites, but they indignantly deny the name, and
declare that an Irishman named Cooney, who was one of their foremost
preachers 30 odd years ago, now has nothing whatever to do with them. The
true “preachers'' hold no communication with him.
 
These people have no church buildings, but meet for worship in the homes of
the ‘saints,’ their lay members. Their wandering preachers, about 12 of whom
are at work in each of the Australian States and New Zealand, hold missions
in tents and hired halls. Usually two men or two women go out together, one
an experienced missioner and other a young trainee. Sometimes a man and his
wife go together. Because of the difficulties of a life of itinerant
preaching, however, the preachers rarely marry. The head of each house in
which the 'saints' meet for family worship, in which several surrounding
households join, is called a bishop, overseer, or elder.
 
Rochedale is the main centre of their work in Queensland. There they have
buildings which form the nucleus of a big annual camp convention. I went as
a stranger to the family worship in the home of a Rochedale bishop.
 
The old farm house, built on high stumps, hid its bare poles with crimson
skirts of bougainvillea. As I walked up the track from the gate, I heard in
the distance singing, and over the paddocks, a magpie fluted gloriously.
Bird song and hymn and still sunny morning called to worship. The hymn
stopped before I came near the house. I went in through a gate that made a
gap in the bank of crimson and heard a voice in the deep tones of prayer.
 
Creepers hid the battening around the house stumps. A battened door stood
open. A congregation of about 20 knelt on matting strips beside the long low
stools to be found in most old farm homes. I stood near the door, waiting
for the prayer to end. When the young man who was praying had finished, a
young woman near him followed, and then a boy and an old woman.
 
The prayers were glad thanks to God for His great goodness to men, for His
gifts of sunny mornings and hearts happy in His service, and before all
other gifts for Jesus Christ, who showed men God and the love of God. They
asked of Him grace, strength, and guidance, that they might follow Him
worthily. They sought His blessing on themselves and on their preachers,
that all men might learn of His simple way, and be won to walk in it. There
were prayers of consecration, prayers of devotion and adoration, and humble
petitions for mercy and forgiveness. Almost everyone in the little meeting
offered a prayer, some only a sentence or two.
 
While I stood outside, undecided whether to wait or to go away, the head of
the house, who was bishop or elder of the church meeting there, came out to
me. When I told him I was a stranger wishing to attend worship in his
church, he said I was welcome.
 
A Setting of Nature:
 
He was a hospitable, genial old farmer, with a friendly, smile and hand
shake. He took me in among the kneeling people, left me at a gap in the
family circle, and went back to his place beside a little table on which
were bread and unfermented wine.
 
When the prayers were ended, and we got up from our knees, I was able to
look around me. The stumps of the house were the pillars of this holy place;
the altar was a simple table with its plate of bread and glass of wine. The
door was open to the sunny farm outside, red soil, plots of pineapples, and
rows of symmetrical orange trees, a cultivation paddock with the heat haze
trembling over it, and the bush, behind, like mirage.
 
“Will someone suggest a hymn?” the bishop asked. A young woman gave a
number, and the congregation, sitting, sang:
 
I listen to the Master's word,
And all my waking heart is stirred.
'Midst sin and strife I hear Him say:
'I will return; keep watch and pray.'
 
Though most despise God's lowly way,
Reject His love, and go astray,
Within my heart, one purpose burns:
To stand approved when He returns.
 
His love can full satisfy,
And needed grace He will supply
To keep me in the heavenly race
Until I see Him face to face;
 
His Way is best; I follow on,
Just where His bleeding feet have gone,
My one desire to worthy be
And fill the place prepared for me.
 
Members of the circle one by one, now an old man, now a girl, now a youth,
gave short devotional talks, most of them only two or three minutes long,
some even less. In their own figure of speech, each placed on the family
table a loaf, a thought from the week's meditation and experience of the
Christian way, that all might share the spiritual food God had provided.
 
Most of the messages were of quiet devotion. There were gaps of silence, in
one of which a magpie came up to the door and peered in, his inquisitive
head on one side. House swallows came in and out, circling over the heads of
the worshippers as if they had not been there. Neither speaking nor singing
disturbed them.
 
Simple Communion:
 
When a longer silence showed that no one else wished to speak, the bishop
took a piece of bread, and reminded them of the family of One who in a house
in Jerusalem 2000 years ago took bread and brake it, and gave it to His
disciples, saying, “This is My body which is given to you; this do in
remembrance of Me.”
 
The bread was passed from hand to hand around the circle; and each ate a
fragment and bowed in prayer. So, too, the wine was passed around, and all
drank of it. I have not seen anywhere a simpler or more reverent Communion
than I saw in the family gathering beneath the farm house that sunny Sunday
morning. A hymn of consecration was sung at the end, and the bishop's
benediction sent the people out into the glorious day.
 
When later I took a photographer to get pictures of the 'family' church, I
had to content myself with pictures of the farm house in which the church
had met. The bishop and his flock were doubtful whether even these might be
used without the authority of the preachers, an authority the preachers
readily gave, though they refused to be photographed themselves.
 
Preacher at Work:
 
The kindly bishop of Rochedale made me curious to hear the preachers of his
faith, whom he and the flock esteemed so highly. Only through hearing them
expound the Word of God, he told me, could mankind attain salvation. When I
asked him what the distinctive teachings of his Church were, he referred me
to the preachers for fuller explanation.
 
So that night I went to a 'gospel meeting' in the preachers tent at
Wooloowin. Several cars were standing in the street outside. In the tent,
which was about 25 feet in diameter, was the beginning of the congregation,
a score or so of people, old and young, who increased to about 50,
comfortably filling nearly all the seats, before the service started. A
smoking kerosene heater near the centre pole took the chill out of the air.
A fizzing petrol lantern hanging on a rope across the tent lit the place
with white glare.
 
A venerable preacher with a close clipped pointed white beard, a Bible under
one arm, and a hymn book in one hand, came through the tent entrance and
went to a front seat facing the congregation. Despite 30 years of itinerant
preaching, he still looked, and when he spoke, sounded, the school master he
used to be.
 
“Well, I feel sure you will enjoy the meeting a lot better by helping it,”
he said, “The way you can help is by joining in the hymns heartily.” He
announced the first hymn in a voice that had a strong Irish flavour, despite
almost pedantically careful English enunciation.
 
Stones on the Roof:
 
A second hymn was sung, a young man, having announced, “We will just wait
upon God in a little time of prayer,” prayed for Divine blessing on “Thy
preachers, who have given up all.”
 
Another hymn was sung to the tune of 'Juanita.' The old preacher then said,
“Young brother will speak to us, and after that a brother in the meeting who
wants to sing will sing.” The young brother preached on a passage from the
Book of Isaiah.
 
For punctuation, stones fell on the tent roof, and the preacher went out to
investigate. As he put his head out the door there was a scatter, and the
sound of boys' running feet. It was soon over, and the volunteer singer sang
in a pleasant tenor:
 
Your life is one short season here:
Be careful what you sow.
Sow wheat, and you will reap the same;
Sow tares, and they will grow.
 
God’s harvest time will surely come,
With sheaves for you and me.
O, ask yourself the question friend,
'What shall the reaping be?'
 
Your days, though blooming like the rose,
Will reach the yellow leaf,
And seeds you sow, you'll one day reap
In sheaves of joy or grief.
 
In his sermon, on spiritual influence, the preacher said those called to be
preachers of the way must not let any earthly ties hinder them, to the
destruction of their souls; nor should any one shrink from entering God's
way because of fear that someone near and dear might be called to leave home
on service as a preacher.
 
Scorn of Buildings:
 
In this way he preached the renunciation, which is the central feature of
the 'Go-preachers' way of life. 'Give God what He asks of you and He will
see that you have all that is necessary for you.' From among those who are
converted in their missions and from the families of the saints, the
preachers select promising young volunteers, men and women, to send out
preaching. They must leave their homes and families, and give up everything
they possess. They must apply literally Christ's words to the rich young
ruler: 'Sell all thou hast, and give to the poor,' and go out penniless and
homeless.
 
Although in principle the new preacher is free to distribute his goods to
the poor as he pleases, in practice he usually gives it to the poor preacher
who has been the means of his conversion. The preacher passes on to other
needy preachers what he himself does not need, and, with the balance, helps
needy lay members.
 
Voluntary contributions from the lay members are also left in the hands of
the preachers to carry on the work.
 
The preachers had to account to no one but God for the administration of
these funds, I was informed. They held the money in trust, and passed it on
to others in need, often sending money across the world to poor preachers in
other countries.
 
The rest of the world, including the other churches, was in such deadly
peril of damnation; the preacher declared in his sermon, that the preachers
sometimes were rough in their methods, like the two preachers who dragged
Lot and his family from doomed Sodom.
 
The early Quakers' contempt for 'steeple houses' was nothing to this
people's scorn of church buildings for the worship of God. They will preach
the Gospel anywhere, in tent or hall, or under gum trees; but, for their
private meetings for Communion, 'the breaking of bread,' nothing but the
home of a 'saint' of their way will serve. They interpret, literally 'The
Most High dwelleth not in temples made with hands,' from Stephen's defence
before the Sanhedrin.
 
The gospel meeting ended, almost two hours from its commencement, with a
hymn and a prayer by the old preacher. He prayed simply and fervently for
blessing on God's glorious family, and for grace and strength for the
preachers, that they might be a meditative, thoughtful, and consecrated
people to lead the family in His way.
 
Despite their exclusive dogma, I liked the zeal of these nameless people,
their simple family worship, and their unbounded confidence.

The Tale Of Two Pebbles

Many years ago in a small Indian village, a farmer had the misfortune of owing a large sum of money to a village moneylender. The moneylender, who was old and ugly, fancied the farmer’s beautiful daughter. So he proposed a bargain. He said he would forgo the farmer’s debt if he could marry his daughter.

Both the farmer and his daughter were horrified by the proposal. So the cunning money-lender suggested that they let providence decide the matter. He told them that he would put a black pebble and a white pebble into an empty money bag. Then the girl would have to pick one pebble from the bag.

If she picked the black pebble, she would become his wife and her father’s debt would be forgiven. If she picked the white pebble she need not marry him and her father’s debt would still be forgiven. If she refused to pick a pebble, her father would be thrown into jail.

They were standing on a pebble strewn path in the farmer’s field. As they talked, the moneylender bent over to pick up two pebbles. As he picked them up, the sharp-eyed girl noticed that he had picked up two black pebbles and put them into the bag. He then asked the girl to pick a pebble from the bag.

Now, imagine that you were standing in the field. What would you have done if you were the girl? If you had to advise her, what would you have told her?

Take a moment to ponder this. What would you recommend that the girl do?

The girl put her hand into the moneybag and drew out a pebble. Without looking at it, she fumbled and let it fall onto the pebble-strewn path where it immediately became lost among all the other pebbles.

“Oh, how clumsy of me!” she said. “But never mind, if you look into the bag for the one that is left, you will be able to tell which pebble I picked.”

The moneylender dared not admit his dishonesty. The girl changed what seemed an impossible situation into an extremely advantageous one.
By Edward de Bono

Most problems do have a solution, sometimes we just need to think in a different way.

Be Thankful


Be thankful that you don't already have
 everything you desire. If you did, what would 
there be to look forward to?

Be thankful when you don't know something,
for it gives you the opportunity to learn.

Be thankful for the difficult times.
 During those times you grow.

Be thankful for your limitations, because they
 give you opportunities for improvement.

Be thankful for each new challenge,
because it will build your strength and character.

Be thankful for your mistakes.
 They will teach you valuable lessons.

Be thankful when you're tired and weary,
because it means you've made a difference.

It's easy to be thankful for the good things.

A life of rich fulfillment comes to those who
are also thankful for the setbacks.

Gratitude can turn a negative into a positive.

Find a way to be thankful for your troubles,
and they can become your blessings.

~ author unknown ~

Touch My Life

Touch my life with tenderness
And fill my cup with love.
Share my dreams as I share yours
Beyond the stars above.

Take my hand as I grow old
And lead me when I'm blind.
Show me that you really care…
Good Friends are hard to find.

Touch my heart and I'll touch yours
A little more each day
And then we'll both find happiness
Somewhere along the way.

~  author unknown  ~

Thanksgiving Is....

Thanksgiving is
a time of gratitude to God, our Creator and Provider,
whose guidance and care go before us...
and whose love is with us forever.

Thanksgiving is
a time to reflect on the changes,
to remember that we, too, grow and change
from one season of life to another.

Thanksgiving is
a time of changing seasons, when leaves turn golden
in Autumn's wake and apples are crisp
in the first chill breezes of fall.

Let us remember the true meaning of Thanksgiving.
As we see the beauty of Autumn,
let us acknowledge the many blessings which are ours...
let us think of our families and friends..
and let us give thanks in our hearts.

~~Author Unknown.~~

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Straining At A Gnat And Swallowing A Camel

We talked earlier about straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. We talked about how we were to neither swallow a camel OR swallow a gnat.
Jesus talked about the same thing, worded different, recorded in Matthew 7. Jesus was talking about judging with unequal measures.
"How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye?"
Jesus wasn't happy with either large OR small things out of place in God's plan. He didn't say for people to keep quiet about the big things in our brother's eyes. He was saying that there is a specific order in which things should be done.
He said for us to get the planks out of our own eyes and THEN help our brothers with their planks.
"You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye."
He didn't say that we were to ignore or live with the specks of dust in our own eyes. He said to get them out. He didn't give any excuse for us to go through life with dust in our eyes.
Too often we focus on other people. Too often, the dust in our eyes causes a distorted view. Let's do all we can to get our own sight clear before we try to help others. Let's not be accusing but instead, to help.
Jesus was talking about judging when he was talking about the plank and speck in eyes.
If someone sees me stuck in the mud, they aren't judging me by saying I'm stuck in the mud. They're judging me if they say I am an idiot driver and that is why I'm always getting stuck in the mud.
We all need discernment. Discernment see me stuck in the mud. Judging assumes that it's because I'm an idiot driver that I'm stuck in the mud. Perhaps the steering wheel was stuck, someone else jerked the wheel, the mud is a different type than we normally drive through, or perhaps ... just perhaps ... I AM an idiot driver. The question of idiot driver or not is God's to say. But ANYONE could see that I was stuck in the mud!
I pray to be able to see the specks and planks in my eyes and for the ability to help anyone who needs my help. I can't do any of that myself.
It's only through God that any of us can truly help others on their spiritual journeys. When we truly see others through love, through God's eyes, can we help them.
E. E. L. Smith

Monday, November 24, 2014

Acts 20:24 (Counting/Numbers 1 to 7

Harry Brownlee (Deceased) - Acts 20:24 (Counting/numbers 1 to 7)
"Neither count I my life dear unto myself..." Paul said. Counting is important. There is no hope of success till we can count properly. There's a cause that matters more than creature comfort. “Is there not a cause?” David asked. James said, "We count them happy that endure." (James 5:11) Those with grey heads are those who have endured. Kingdom has rested on stability, sticking power. Winners never quit and quitters never win. Peter said, "Add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge..." (1 Peter 1:5). “Let peace and grace be multiplied unto you.” (1 Peter 1:2). Multiplication is swifter than addition. To add is good, but to multiply is better. Romans 16:17 "Avoid those who cause divisions and offences." God divided right from wrong, all humanity - sheep from goats. Division should be left to the Lord. The Lord will put division between his people and Egypt. Jesus came to bring division, father from son, mother from daughter. (Luke 12:51)

NUMBER 1

Paul said, " There is one God and one mediator between God and man.” (1 Timothy 2:5) The only decision is to serve him or not. A 'mediator’ is go-between. So glad Jesus understands both God and us. This takes away all self-praise. Sing the song of Moses (deliverance) and the song of the Lamb (redemption). On Sunday morning the whole meeting is tuned to the one God and one mediator. Avoid self-praise, self-love, self-will. All praise be to the Lamb.
One way. God promised he'd give his people one heart and one way. Since there is one God, there is only one way. This is good for the children. They might be rebellious, but they'll never be confused. It's a walking way, not talking.
One great high priest: “He ever liveth to make intercession for you and me.'' He has never died. Man tried to put him to death, but failed.
“One faith…” Paul said. (Ephesians 4:5) We know who the author is. This faith didn't come from any place but the homeland of eternity. Jesus is the author and finisher of it.
One ark in Noah's day.

NUMBER 2

This number is plural, the number of confirmation.

a) Jesus sent his disciples 2 by 2. The 2 tell the same story – confirmation: the message is confirmed. The ministry is not a competing one, but a complimentary one. Age needs youth and vice versa. Paul said, "Timothy has served with me in the ministry." Peter and John met the lame man. Paul and Barnabas, Paul and Silas: always the 2. Picture of the cherubims In Exodus 27. At the west end of the temple were 2 cherubims above the mercy seat. The temple was a place of sacrifice, not of worship. Their wings were outstretched, like 2 messengers swift to go at heaven's bidding. They were looking to the one who sits on the mercy seat, not at one another. Messengers still point us to the one who sits on the mercy seat. The woman taken in adultery received mercy from the only one who could have condemned her. Mercy is always ahead, because all are facing the western horizon.

b) 2 books - Bible and the book of nature "The heavens declare the glory of God..." (Psalm 19:1) The most eloquent voice is the voice of nature. It's the same message as in the Bible. Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever. The way doesn't change, but we must change. Don't take a stand in ignorance and defend it in stubbornness. There's no growth without change in us. The silent message from the book of nature tells us Jesus is the same, and God will never change. Nature will never change. The awesome “power of God” is seen in nature - no noise. It's silent, the silent "power of the Spirit”. We can judge the Creator by the creation. There’s no building without an architect The Bible says, "It's appointed man once to die.” Time as an everlasting stream bears all of us away.

NUMBER 3.

Strength

"The threefold cord is not quickly broken." (Ecclesiastes 4:12) There's strength in unity. "One shall chase 1000, but 2 will chase 10,000.” (Deut 32:30). The devil wants God’s workers to be at odds.
a) The world, flesh and devil is great, but Father Son and Holy Ghost greater. Satan belongs to the angelic kingdom and we are no match for him, but we belong to the divine kingdom. With the Holy Spirit we are a match for world, flesh and devil. Over the cross was written, “This is Jesus, King of the Jews” in 3 languages - Latin, language of the Romans, Hebrew, language of the Jews and Greek, language of the intellectuals. There was power in that message.

b) Moses and Aaron told Pharaoh they wanted to take God's people 3 days journey into the wilderness. Awesome power of separation. Pharaoh of today wants separation between man and wife, parents and children but this is not true separation.

c) Gideon [Judges] Midianities had impoverished God's people. Gideon was a mighty man because he was hiding, threshing out bread for God's people. 32,000 men aligned themselves with Gideon. This was too many. God told the fearful to return home. 22,000 men went home. 10,000 men left - still too many. God tested them, brought them to water and only those who lapped water like a dog, 300 of them, were worthy - not those who knelt down to drink. They brought deliverance to God's people There is nothing wrong in young men being successful and raising a family, but thank God for those who don't stoop to satisfy their own flesh and base human appetites. In the Old Testament, when a man died, his younger brother usually married his wife to raise a family in his name, but who shall declare the generation of Jesus? Is it not the young men who go into the work and raise a family to bear the name of Christ, not their own name. This name will be written on their foreheads (Revelation 7:3)

NUMBER 4. 

Equality. God is equal. God is impartial.

a) The altar was 4 square. When our lives are placed on the altar, our identity is lost. Turtle doves and bulls, when burnt, their ashes are indistinguishable. This is a united effort. When the fire of God's love has done its glorious work, we can’t distinguish one sacrifice from another.

b) Exodus 20:26 "Neither shall thou go up by steps unto mine altar, that thy nakedness be not discovered thereon." The altar was not to be approached by steps - no different levels. We all serve on the same level. Otherwise, the naked jealousy or envying will be exposed.

c) Revelation 21:16 talks of a city that is 4 square, that is equal. God didn't promise that there won't be injustice in this world, but we are traveling towards justice. There we will have justice, tempered with mercy.

NUMBER 5 

Man's number

a) God without man is still God, but man without God is nothing. Feeding of the 5000. Man didn't have the answer - only 5 loaves, but man with God fed 5 thousand.

b) David and Goliath. That stripling just had 5 smooth stones out of the brook - no armour, sword or spear. There's a river that flows from the throne of God. When we face the day with smooth stones from that river we'll be able to bring the enemy down

c) I Corinthians 14:19 Paul said, "Better speak 5 words with understanding than 10,000 words in an unknown tongue.” Wonderful ideal. Talk less but say more. That's a wonderful thing,

d) Moses wrote 5 books in the Bible. How could he remember all those details? But man with God can do anything. It is wonderful how the Bible has been preserved through the centuries.

NUMBER 6. 

6666 Devil's number

Mark of the beast. When we give the right hand of fellowship to the world, there's a mark on our lives. This number is very close to 7777 - God’s number. The devil doesn't care about our religion, which may be very close to the truth, so long as it's a phony, the devil's counterfeit, which was what Jeroboam gave to the people (I Kings 12 27 – 33)

NUMBER 7. 

Perfect number. It is complete.

a) 7 days of the week. God created the world in 7 days. He rested on the 7th because creation was accomplished. Jesus said on the cross, “It is finished.” Works are the result of salvation, not the means of salvation. If we believe, works will follow. If we believe, we won't be Methodists, Baptists, etc. There is no other way to walk in. There's nothing can make us more saved. Salvation is a gift of God. The work of redemption is an accomplished, finished fact. Works make people self-righteous. The Pharisee was quite pleased with himself, not the publican. But the publican was justified, not the Pharisee with all his good works. If we are saved, works will follow.

b) 7 notes on the scale, 7 colours that make up the rainbow. All of music is made up of these notes blended together. There's harmony, and we are the symphony of God. It only takes one note to bring discord.

c) 7 priests and 7 trumpets to bring down Jericho. It's complete. We don't need more than the Bible. There was a space between the priests and the people. People shouldn't move in on the servants of God and vice versa. On the 7th day they were to march round 7 times ...Complete obedience will bring the walls down, and there was complete victory through complete obedience.

d) Naaman was told to dip in the Jordan 7 times. Complete obedience brought complete healing. Medical science couldn't do it, but God did it.

e) Genesis 7 The door of the ark stood open for 7 days. Complete mercy. When the people left the ark, they left through a different exit, through the covering of the ark in the roof. When we leave these meetings, we should leave our old life behind.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

There Are No Common Days For A Child Of God


It is not common to kneel and pray and have those prayers reach Heaven.

It is not common to read His word and receive bread for the soul.

It is not common to seek the presence of God and find forgiveness.

It is not common to have friends who care more for our soul than our friendship or anything else about us.


It is not common to have in this life God as our guide and to go through each day with a revelation of Truth.


It is not common to go through this world of unrest and trouble with peace, rest and satisfaction in our heart.


It is not common to consider death as a friend, an open door to be with Christ. Amen...


Everett Swanson

105-Year-Old Adrian Woman Reflects On Life, And Ministry

Adrain resident Lillian Tenniswood, 105, said her faith in God and family genes may be the key to her longevity. Most of her siblings lived into their 90s.
Adrain resident Lillian Tenniswood, 105, said her faith in God and family genes may be the key to her longevity. Most of her siblings lived into their 90's.

  • By Dan Cherry
    Daily Telegram Staff Writer

    Posted Nov. 10, 2014 @ 5:00 pm 
    On Oct. 20,  1909, Sanilac County, Michigan, native and now-Adrian resident Lillian Tenniswood was born. William Howard Taft was president, Titanic was in its early stages of construction, and Shipton, Kansas — a dying town in the north-central part of the state — was sold at auction for $2,620.
    Aside from her steadfast faithfulness to God and sharing the gospel, Tenniswood, 105, said she has no great secret to longevity.
    Her niece, Charlene Linderman, lightheartedly suggested to her that perhaps she picked the right parents.
    “Oh, I have no idea,” Tenniswood said with a laugh. “I hadn’t a thing to do with it.”
    Longevity is a common factor with Tenniswood and her siblings. She had four brothers and two sisters, and though one brother died as a small child, the rest of her siblings all lived into their 90s.
    Growing up in the Detroit area, Tenniswood was part of home-based church services, or gospel meetings, as she called them, on Sundays. Wednesdays were reserved for mid-week Bible studies.
    “They were open to anybody,” she said of the nondenominational gatherings. If more than 30 people expressed interest in the meetings, another home host would be found to split the attendees into smaller groups.
    Tenniswood’s faith background determined the course of her life. She joined the ministry in her mid-20s, traveling across the United States and around the world to share her faith with others.
    She never married, and traveled simply, with a Bible and a suitcase.
    “I remembered the importance of serving God,” she said. “I had no other books than the Bible. I just had what I needed to live.”
    Tenniswood’s travels took her to  Brazil, Korea, Taiwan and, in what would be her last major trip overseas in the 1980s, the Philippines. She was active in doing ministry work into her 90s, and she said she will share the gospel with anyone who asks her. She still writes letters to those she has met over the years and receives many letters and cards from well-wishers.
    Tenniswood has seen two world wars in her lifetime and 18 U.S. presidents come and go from the White House. She has witnessed inventions like the television, the landing of astronauts on the moon, and the digital age. But she has kept it all in perspective and said nothing stands out to her as being all that extraordinary.
    “We didn’t get too excited over anything,” she said about new devices and conveniences. “If others had them, that was all right.”
    Tenniswood recalled one instance in her younger years when she attempted to crank-start a vehicle and the crank snapped backwards. “It broke my arm,” she said.
    Car engines through the 1920's were started by turning a crank on the front bottom area of the radiator. If the person did not keep a firm grip while turning the crank, the building tension could release and the crank spin would backwards, causing injury.
    Tenniswood’s parents once owned a farm in Hudson, and she herself moved to Adrian approximately 10 years ago to live with her niece. Tenniswood is now a resident at the Lenawee Medical Care Facility.
    And it is there she fondly reflected Wednesday on her years on the earth.
    “It’s been a full life, I’ve met a lot of people who spoke different languages,” she said. “We all had a close fellowship. It wasn’t like stranger to stranger. I felt at home wherever I went.” 

    Source: lenconnect.com
  •  
     

    What Joy To Know

    To every life must come a touch of sorrow,
    At times the sun be hidden from our view
    There is no promise of a sure tomorrow ,
    Tho' for today the sun comes shining through

    Chorus:

    What joy to know the Savior walks beside me!
    He knows the way and gently leads me there
    I trust in Him for all that lies before me,
    I rest content beneath His Love and care.

    He leads to pastures green so fresh and tender,
    By Quiet waters bids me to be still
    And there He gives me strength to face the future,
    To be resigned to all within His will.

    And tho I'm faced with varied situations,
    I need not fear, if Jesus leads the way
    For when in need of quiet restoration,
    He beckons me to bow my head and pray.

    Lord help me yield with all that is with in me.
    To say Thy will and not mine own be done
    And unto Thee be faithful, true and steady,
    Until at last the crown of Life is won

    S Eicher

    Tuesday, November 11, 2014

    All I Really Need To Know I Learned From Noah's Ark


    1. Don't miss the boat.
    2. Don't forget that we're all in the same boat.
    3. Plan ahead. It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark.
    4. Stay fit. When you're 600 years old, someone might ask you to do something REALLY big.
    5. Don't listen to critics. Just get on with what has to be done.
    6. Build your future on high ground.
    7. For safety's sake, travel in pairs.
    8. Two heads are better than one.
    9. Speed isn't always an advantage. The snails were on board with the cheetahs.
    10. When you're stressed, float awhile.
    11. Remember that the ark was built by amateurs. The Titanic was built by professionals.
    12. Remember that woodpeckers inside are a larger threat than the storm outside.
    13. No matter the storm, when God is with you, there's a rainbow waiting.


    B. Simonton

    Prayer

    Lyle Waldo: “Prayer”
    Ripon Special Meeting - 2014
    (not verbatim)
    Matt 26:36-44 “Then cometh Jesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane, and saith unto the disciples, Sit ye here, while I go and pray yonder. And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee and began to be sorrowful and very heavy. Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death: tarry ye here, and watch with me. And he went a little farther, and fell on his face, and prayed saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt. And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth them asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour? Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done. And he came and found them asleep again, for their eyes were heavy. And he left them, and went away again, and prayed the third time, saying the same words.”
    I’ve been thinking about this matter of prayer. It was important to Jesus, He taught this by example. He was faithful in prayer. Jesus knew that he would be taken, then he would be put upon the cross and would bear the sin of all the world. He would pay the price of sin. He gave himself fully and completely. He understood that he didn’t have the strength within himself, but that there would provision made through God. Jesus was faithful throughout his life. He knew the power of prayer. He loved to be with his Father; he prayed for help. He prayed that if were possible to be done any other way – but he was willing. Those with him slept. He prayed, Help me to do Thy will. What is the will of God, He will show us that. We can pray, Help me to do Your will. These are the two parts of prayer: 1) learning what is the will of God; and 2) getting help to do it.
    The disciples loved Jesus; they didn’t want to fail. Peter didn’t want to deny Jesus. Spiritual life comes through Jesus, and new appetites. But we still have the flesh. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak (but we need this flesh: it’s how we live in this world!). By nature we will go down, because the flesh only thinks of the temporary. In the place of prayer, we can strengthen the spirit and put the flesh in subjection, to be doing what pleases God. The lesson we need to learn is that we don’t have the power or ability to serve God -- but we can get it from God.
    We only have little glimpses of Jesus’ life, of when He prayed.
    · All night. Before He chose his disciples, the apostles -- and Judas, a devil – he spent all night in prayer. He wanted to make the right choice. He gave Judas every opportunity. Jesus found help and strength in prayer.
    · Early in the morning. Another time, after he healed the sick and lame, and they praised him, he arose early, a great while before it was yet day, and he prayed.
    · With every step. In Luke it tells of when Jesus was baptized, that he was praying and the heaven was opened. Jesus took every step with prayer.
    What attitude of the heart do we need to have, so that God hears our prayer?
    · Is it a prayer of need? Or is it a prayer of self? God doesn’t hear selfish prayer. (like the Pharisee)
    · With repentance. The result of sin can be hard. But does it move me to pray? What is my motive in prayer? Am I truly sorry I’ve sinned against the One who loves me, or do I just want God to remove the result of sin? Esau lost the blessing and the birthright; it was given to Jacob. But Esau felt it was his brother’s fault, and he didn’t repent. He only sought the blessing. (Heb. 12:17 “For ye know how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was rejected; for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it” -- the blessing -- “carefully with tears.”)
    · With humility. Manasseh, in II Chronicles 33, was king over God’s people. But he was wicked; his sin was worse than those in the land, than the worst heathen. So he was taken into captivity (v. 11), “and when he was in affliction, he besought the Lord his God, and humbled himself greatly before the God of his fathers, and prayed unto Him. And God was intreated of him.” (v. 12, 13) When he humbled himself, and prayed, God forgave him. We understand that with a repentant heart God is merciful and will restore us again. Such mercy! God sent His Son, to take on Himself what would be death to us.
    Jesus taught about prayer in Matthew 6 and Luke 11. The disciples said, “Teach us to pray.” Jesus started that sample prayer with “our Father.” That’s who we are praying to, the God of heaven. But even greater than the fact that He is the God of heaven, He is our Father. The outcome of prayer is that God would be lifted up, and that His will be put first: “Hallowed be Thy name;” “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth as it is in Heaven.” The first desire in our heart is to do the will of God, and then we mention our need:
    Bread. Our soul needs to be fed. Prayer helps us to be quiet, “enter into your closet” -- get quiet, away from the cares and focus of the world. Focus on eternity, soften our heart, still our mind.
    Forgiveness. We need it. But if we don’t forgive, we won’t be forgiven. (Matt. 6:15)
    Forgive others. We put ourselves in bondage when we don’t forgive. Forgiveness frees us. There is that account in Matthew 18 of the servant with a great debt, which his lord forgave. But that same servant took a fellow servant by the throat and said, Pay me all you owe me. There was no heart of forgiveness. God can help us have a heart that is not bitter. We need that.
    “Lead us not into temptation.” We don’t want to walk in this world with our own thoughts! We have the privilege of asking God to guide us and lead us. God promised His Spirit to guide us.
    “Deliver us from evil.” In Genesis 32 it tells about Jacob and Esau. God used their lives to teach a spiritual lesson. They were twins; Esau was born first, Jacob second. There was a struggle within the mother, and when she asked God, “Why am I thus?”, He said to her, “Two nations are in thy womb, and two manner of people; and the elder” -- the flesh --“shall serve the younger” – the divine nature through Jesus. (Gen. 25:23) Jacob was seeking to be led of God, but he was afraid of Esau, who was coming against him with a great army. He prayed (v. 9-11), “I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies, and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant. Deliver me, I pray thee, from the hand of my brother.” In Proverbs it says, “A soft answer turns away wrath.” Jacob wanted to be right with his brother, Esau, so he gave of his own self, his own wealth. Jacob’s servants were directed to tell Esau, when he asked, Whose are these, that “they be thy servant Jacob’s; it is a present sent unto my lord Esau.” Jacob humbled himself; he prayed for God’s help, he knew he needed the strength of God. He prayed all night, wrestling with a man, it says. Up to that point, he was still relying on himself, on his own two legs. After that, the hollow of Jacob’s thigh was out of joint; he halted upon his thigh. So Jacob went before his brother in a weakened state. He knew he could only rely on God now.
    Pray with importunity (even when it is not convenient). Oh, to have the faith to continue to pray, like that widow woman in Luke 18, who asked over and over.

    51 Instrumental Hymns (Relaxing Piano Music) Long Playlist


    Peaceful Music for Meditation, Relaxation, Soft Background Music for Rest or Study. Praise & Worship Instrumentals Song list:
    1. Come Thou Fount Of Every Blessing (Robert Robinson, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    2. Crown Him With Many Crowns (Matthwe Bridges, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    3. Face To Face With Christ My Savior (Carrie E. Breck, circa 1904 pdinfo.com
    4. All To Christ I Owe (Elvina M. Hall, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    5. On Jordan's Stormy Banks I Stand (Samuel Stennett, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    6. Whispering Hope (Popular Song, circa 1868 pdinfo.com)
    7. Ivory Palaces (Henry Barraclough, circa 1908 pdinfo.com)
    8. Redeemed How I Love To Proclaim It (Fanny Crosby, circa 1890)
    9. Nearer Still Nearer (Lelia Morris, circa 1900)
    10. When They Ring Those Golden Bells (Daniel de Marbelle, circa 1921 pdinfo.com)
    11. Amazing Grace (John Newton, circa 1876 pdinfo.com)
    12. His Eye Is On The Sparrow (Civilla D. Martin, circa 1908 pdinfo.com)
    13. The Old Rugged Cross (George Bennard, circa 1915 pdinfo.com)
    14. When I Survey The Wondrous Cross (Isaac Watts, circa 1881 pdinfo.com)
    15. All The Way My Savior Leads Me (Fanny Crosby, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    16. Blessed Assurance (Fanny Crosby, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    17. He Keeps Me Singing (Luther Burgess Bridgers, circa 1922 pdinfo.com)
    18. It Is Well With My Soul (Horatio Gates Spafford, circa 1876 pdinfo.com)
    19. In The Garden (Charles Austin Miles, circa 1919 pdinfo.com)
    20. The Church's One Foundation (Samuel J. Stone, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    21. Praise Him Praise Him Jesus Our Blessed Redeemer (Fanny J. Crosby, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    22. Sweet By and By (Sanford F. Bennett, circa 1876 pdinfo.com)
    23. When The Roll Is Called Up Yonder (James M. Black, circa 1894 pdinfo.com)
    24. Near The Cross Jesus Keep Me (Frances Jane Crosby, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    25. Savior Like A Shepherd Lead Us (Dorothy A. Thrupp, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    26. To God Be The Glory Great Things He Hath Done (Fanny Crosby, circa 1922 pdinfo.com)
    27. My Faith Looks Up To Thee (Ray Palmer, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    28. What A Friend We Have In Jesus (Joseph Scriven, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    29. Beneath The Cross Of Jesus (Elizabeth C. Clephane, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    30. A Child Of The King (Harriet Eugenia Peck Buell, circa 1891 pdinfo.com)
    31. Take My Life And Let It Be (Frances Ridley Havergal, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    32. Fairest Lord Jesus (Münster Gesangbuch, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    33. He Is So Precious To Me (Charles H. Gabriel, circa 1907 pdinfo.com)
    34. Joyful Joyful We Adore Thee (Henry J. van Dyke, circa 1915 pdinfo.com)
    35. Only Trust Him (J. H. Stockton, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    36. Holy Holy Holy (Reginald Heber, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    37. Abide With Me (William Monk, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    38. A Mighty Fortress Is Our God (Martin Luther, circa 1894 pdinfo.com)
    39. A Shelter In The Time Of Storm (Vernon J. Charlesworth, circa 1894 pdinfo.com)
    40. Remember Me (Isaac Watts, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    41. There Is Power In The Blood (Lewis E. Jones, circa 1904 pdinfo.com)
    42. All For Jesus (Mary D. James, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    43. All Hail The Power Of Jesus Name (Edward Perronet, circa 1875 pdinfo.com)
    44. I Would Be Like Jesus (James Rowe, circa 1908 pdinfo.com)
    45. At Calvary (William R. Newell, circa 1908 pdinfo.com)
    46. Break Thou The Bread Of Life (Mary Ann Lathbury, circa 1908 pdinfo.com)
    47. Have You Longed For Sweet Peace (Elisha A. Hoffman, circa 1907 pdinfo.com)
    48. Christ The Lord Is Risen Today (Charles Wesley, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    49. The Cleansing Wave (Phoebe Palmer, circa 1890 pdinfo.com)
    50. Jesus Is All The World To Me (William L. Thompson, circa 1911 pdinfo.com)
    51. Leaning On The Everlasting Arms (Elisha A. Hoffman, circa 1894 pdinfo.com)

    All 51 Titles Listed in pdinfo.com Public Domain Works Database (All 51 Songs, original publishing dates of 1922 or earlier)

    Monday, November 10, 2014

    The New Testament Ministry

    Jack Carroll – The New Testament Ministry – Bakersfield Convention 1934

    Many of you have been asked questions during the past year about your preachers and a number have found it difficult to give satisfactory answers to these questions. Some have conveyed the impression that there are things about the ministry that they are not prepared to tell others, and possibly have left the impression in the minds of their friends that this is some kind of a secret or semi-secret fellowship that they have been brought into. I would like to dispel, once and for all, any such impressions, so that you will feel absolutely free to answer any questions your friends may ask about God’s people or about God’s servants, for we hold nothing in secret that we are not prepared to preach openly. We hold nothing that we are not prepared to tell you from this platform, and are quite indifferent as to whether or not what we say is listened to by those who are not yet numbered among us, for everything that we teach is to be found within the pages of God‘s own Book which is open to all men. I want to talk to you very frankly and freely, to make you feel we are anxious to take you into our fullest confidence and tell you all that is in our hearts, for as I grow older, I recognize more clearly and fully that our fellowship with, and confidence in, each other depends to a very large extent upon us being absolutely frank and open so that there is no room for any misunderstanding. I purpose to answer four questions that have been asked at different times during the year. They may not have occurred to you, or they may have, so I am going to anticipate this possibility and endeavor to answer these four questions this afternoon. They are perhaps more practical than spiritual, but it is important that we be clear in our minds with regard to each and all of them:
    1. What is the fundamental difference between the New Testament ministry and all other kinds of ministry?
    2. Why do New Testament ministers travel so much?
    3. Why is it necessary for these New Testament ministers who have gone to foreign countries to return again on furlough to their home countries?
    4. Where does the money come from which enables workers to live, to travel and to go to foreign countries, and return again on furlough to their home countries?
    You can see that these four questions are very practical, and I will try to answer all of them just as simply and clearly as I can.
    First: What is the fundamental difference between the New Testament ministry and all other kinds of ministry with which we are familiar?
    During the year some of you received the questionnaire dealing with the New Testament ministry. A number sent in answers, many of which indicated that there were a good many things in connection with the ministry that you are not exactly clear about, so that when questioned by your friends, you were embarrassed and instead of clearing their minds and satisfying them, your answers tended rather toward irritating them and caused them to feel, "I don’t want to have anything to do with your ministers or with the fellowship into which you have been brought." The impressions given, to a very large extent, were that there are certain little secrets connected with the ministry that we wanted to keep to ourselves. There is nothing quite so irritating to the average man or woman as to feel that they are being deliberately left out of the matter, and if they feel that there are things in connection with your religion that you are afraid to talk about, they don’t want to have anything to do with it at all. What I wish to say is intended to encourage you to be absolutely open and frank in speaking to your friends and to answer their questions, and to encourage you to do so more helpfully and spiritually than in the past.
    The physical needs of the true ministry and false are exactly the same. The true ministers need food, clothing, shelter, and as a means of exchange, they need money. False ministers need food, clothing, shelter, and money. When the question is asked, "What is the difference between your ministers and ours?" the reply that is usually given is, "Well, their needs are the same, we admit, but the difference lies in how their needs are supplied. Your preachers preach for a salary; ours don’t. Your preachers appeal for money; ours don’t. Your preachers have homes of their own; ours don’t!" While these differences are true and help to distinguish the false from the true ministry, yet none of them nor all of them together, give us the actual fundamental difference between the true ministry and the false.
    When some of you are asked the question by your friends, "How do your preachers live?" the answer you give is, "Our preachers live by faith." While this answer is true, it needs a lot of explaining to some people. Or some of you may say, "The Lord takes care of our ministers." Both answers are in a sense true, but they do not give any light to those who question you. You leave them just as much in the dark as they were before. Some have answered the question with, "I don’t know." I heard of one of our brothers having a discussion with the preacher with whom he had previously been in fellowship. He was telling him of the wrongness of taking up collections and of having a salary and a home of his own. The preacher turned to this brother and said, "How then do your preachers live?" The brother answered, "I really don’t know." That wasn’t really true. He did know, but he didn’t know exactly how to answer that question. I was discussing this subject last year before quite a company of people and asking questions dealing with the New Testament ministry, such as: "How do New Testament ministers live, etc." A brother sitting in the front seat said, "I have been in the Way for seven years, and I haven’t found that out yet." I was back East a few weeks ago and was told there of a man who approached one of the workers and asked him this question: "I would like to know just how the workers get their clothes and money to travel with?" The man has been professing for fifteen years. I have been glad to hear of people asking these questions, because it proves that workers everywhere are very slow to discuss this subject. They would rather leave people absolutely in the dark than to convey the impression that they are selfish in their motives or in their ministry or that by discussing those things they wanted anything for themselves.
    The Old Testament is very clear with regard as to how in Old Testament days the priests and Levites were cared for, and the New Testament is equally clear with regard to how God’s servants are taken care of today. I want to emphasize, in answering this first question, what to me is the actual and fundamental difference between the New Testament ministry and every other ministry. Jesus taught that the laborer is worthy of his hire. That is often quoted to us, and Paul in 1 Corinthians 9:14 said, "The Lord has ordained that they which preach the gospel should live by the gospel." We make no secret of the fact, that as God’s bondservants and handmaidens, we live by the gospel, and the reason we "live by the gospel" and are justified in so doing, is because we have fulfilled the conditions which Jesus laid down in the Gospels. No man is justified in living 'by the gospel' apart from fulfilling these conditions.
    When your friends ask you the question, "How do your preachers live?" the proper answer to give is: "Our preachers live by the gospel." But they say, "Our preachers do that also." And then very gently and with grace you should go on to explain to them that the reason why our preachers "live by the gospel" (and we love to make it possible for them to do so) is because they have fulfilled the conditions that Jesus laid down in the gospels for the New Testament ministry, and it is a pleasure to minister to them food, clothing, shelter, and as a means of exchange, money, in His name. When you answer the questions with regard to the New Testament ministry, simply, frankly, and without unnecessarily reflecting upon those whom your friends support, in nine cases out of ten, instead of irritating them, you will have enlightened them and awakened in them a desire to hear a little of this for themselves.
    Jesus labored as a carpenter and lived by the work of His hands as a carpenter for eighteen years, but for three and a half years he lived "by the gospel" and got his bread as a preacher of the gospel just as honorably as he did as a carpenter. Jesus did not live on charity. Those that live on charity, give nothing in return. Jesus always gave more than he received. If he accepted hospitality from Matthew the publican, from Simon the Pharisee, or from Lazarus the brother of Mary and Martha, he always gave more than he received, and in this, he left for us an example that we should follow in his steps. We do not live on charity. If any of God’s professed people came to us and offered us food, clothing or shelter as an act of charity, we would refuse it, for we are not living on charity. But if they came to us in his name and as an expression of their love and interest in the furtherance of the gospel, recognizing that we have fulfilled the conditions that justified us in living by the hospel, it is our duty to accept, knowing that a cup of cold water given to one of the least of God’s servants will in no wise lose its reward on that day. Only those who have fulfilled the conditions laid down by Jesus for the New Testament ministry, are justified in living by the gospel. This is the fundamental difference between the ministers that God uses, to bring you into the family and kingdom of God and all other kinds of ministers that we know of in the world.
    What then are the conditions that Jesus laid down in the New Testament which He expects those to fulfill who want to have a part in this ministry? I would like to think that we are very clear on what it costs our brothers and sisters to go forth into God’s great harvest field. There are no people on the earth that demand more sacrifice on the part of those who minister to them than the people of God, and this is scriptural and in line with God’s plan. An article appeared last year in one issue of "Good Housekeeping" written by a professor of Harvard University, entitled, "The Cruel Promises of Jesus." It rather surprised me to find this man of the world recognizing that a large portion of the teaching was applicable only to the ministry and that it was very difficult to face, and because of this difficulty, it had been more or less explained away and watered down until it became absolutely meaningless. We do not wish to hide from anyone what Jesus taught with regard to the initial steps into the ministry. Not all are called to enter the ministry. Not all are called to become bondservants and handmaidens of the Lord, but none can have a part in the ministry without fulfilling the conditions laid down by Jesus in the gospel that would justify them afterwards, and which alone could justify them in living "by the gospel," for any man who claims to be living by the gospel without fulfilling the conditions laid down by Jesus in the gospel is receiving money under false pretense and will, one day, come under the just condemnation of God. What are these conditions? I will present them in the form of questions.
    The first is: Are you prepared to sell all? Are you prepared to make yourself poor? Are you willing, as the very first condition, to have fellowship with Jesus in his poverty? In connection with the New Testament ministry there is a real equality. No one of us makes a greater sacrifice than the other. We each make equally the same sacrifice. We each sacrifice all, and it would be very dishonorable for any of us in after years, to suggest that our sacrifice was greater than the sacrifice of the brother or sister laboring by our side. In this matter of fulfilling the very first condition there is an absolute equality among us, so that we are all placed on the same level. In order to illustrate this point, a few years ago three young men who had volunteered for the work came in to see us. All three of them were young and I well remember the scene--the three boys sitting in a row and we questioning them with regard to their purpose. We asked them if they were willing to fulfill the very first condition, to sell everything, making themselves poor and to have fellowship with Jesus in His poverty, and of course they said, "Yes." The first boy said that he did not have much to sell. We asked what he had to sell and he told us it was an old Model T Ford. We asked what it was worth and he said only about $35.00. We asked the next boy how he stood, and he said he had about $150.00 in the bank. We told him that it had to be so scattered that it could never be gathered again. The third boy said, "All I have is one hog." He was the youngest of the three and had put everything he had earned into helping his mother at home. Now she felt that she was able to get along without him and was delighted that her boy was going forth to preach the gospel. We told him to give the hog to his mother and go and preach the gospel. It didn’t matter whether the first boy had a Pierce-Arrow or a model T Ford, whether the second had $150,000.00 or $150.00 in the bank. It all had to be scattered so that they would have nothing to go back to. The first condition laid down by Jesus had to be faced and fulfilled by all.
    The second condition has to do with being homeless. Are you willing to be homeless for life? That is a very serious proposition. Some of us have been preaching for a good many years and are still homeless. On one occasion a man came to Jesus and said, "I will follow Thee." He volunteered for the work and Jesus looking at him, just applied this second condition. He said, "Foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay His head." We never hear of that young man going out into the work. To be homeless for Jesus sake is a very real thing. It is just as well for those who are thinking about filling a place in the ministry to recognize this, for six months after you have left home you may suffer from a very common disease--homesickness. There are those who have been homesick during the past year, but Jesus insisted that those who were to have a part with him in the ministry must be prepared to be homeless as he was and to be able to say as a minister of the gospel, "The foxes have holes and the birds of the air have their nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay His head."
    The third condition is: Are you willing to put the preaching of the gospel before the claim of flesh and blood, living or dead? Sometimes when I think upon this, it seems to me to be the most stern of all the conditions that Jesus put before candidates for the ministry. When one man said to Jesus, "Suffer me first to go and bury my father," Jesus said, "Let the dead bury their dead." What He meant by this was, that no man is fit to preach the gospel if the claims of his own flesh and blood, living or dead, were more important to him than bringing the message of Christ to those who are dead in trespasses and sin. Another man said, "Lord, I’ll go but suffer me first to go home and say good-bye to my friends." And Jesus turned to him and said, "No man having put his hand to the plow and turns back, is fit for the kingdom of heaven."
    Instead of Jesus bribing men to enter the ministry, it would almost seem as though he were trying to prevent them. Instead of promising them a nice living, good prospects and lots of time for reading and fellowship with others, or encouraging them to believe that in the ministry they would climb up the social scale, he did the exact opposite. Instead of making it easy for them, he made it hard. Instead of making it a pleasant thing, he made it the very opposite, for he wanted to test the depth and sincerity of the purpose of those who expressed a wish to have a part in the ministry. Do you appreciate that?
    The fourth question is, "Are you willing to go forth without having any individual or group of individuals pledge to take care of you, and preach the gospel without money and without price, wherever you have the opportunity?" If we knew that any one of us ever lifted a collection, or asked for money, we would immediately see to it that that one would be excluded from our fellowship as a preacher of the gospel. We are glad to know that throughout the world, God’s servants have been able to go forth in his name and are preaching the gospel in many different lands and making that gospel as it was in New Testament days, without money and without price. The men and women who are preaching the gospel would scorn the very thought, would rather die in their tracks, than to leave it to anyone to suggest that they are selfish or mercenary in their motives or in their ministry.
    The fifth question that we would like to ask is in connection with that verse dealing with a corn of wheat. "Are you willing to be as a corn of wheat which falls into the ground and dies? Are you willing to let death work so that life may be brought in others? Are you willing to be dead to what is honorable and legitimate for others?"
    The sixth question we ask is, "How far are you willing to go in preaching the gospel?" It would be nice if we could remain in California forever, where the sun is always shining, but when Jesus called men into his harvest field, he would accept none who would set any limits to their ministry. Whenever we become settled or rooted in any field, sooner or later death begins to work. There was no such hint as a fixed or settled ministry in New Testament days. None of us are in any one state for life. There must be a willingness to accept and obey the commission that Jesus gave to his disciples, "Go ye forth into all the world, teaching all nations and baptizing them in the name of the Father, of the Son and of the Holy Ghost."
    There is another question which we sometimes ask those who are desirous of going forth, "Are you willing to go with any one of your brethren?" Those who have the responsibility for arranging this matter look upon it very seriously and do not lightly undertake the arranging year after year of those who are to labor together. When the Lord sent out the first twelve, he did not do it lightly, and when he sent the seventy out later He did not do that lightly. When others later went out in his name, this was not looked upon as a light matter, and we would like to say that it is a custom of those who have this responsibility to seek for the wisdom of God and His guidance, so that during the year the labors of God’s servants may "turn out unto the furtherance of the gospel."
    Only those who have fulfilled the conditions which I have enumerated are justified in living by the gospel, but those who have fulfilled these conditions and are preaching the gospel earn their bread just as honorably as when they worked with their hands at their different trades, for no servant of God lives on charity. They are worthy of their hire, and it comes to them in God’s appointed way. We are not ashamed of the fact that Jesus lived by the gospel and we are not ashamed to teach others to live by the gospel, and we are not ashamed to proclaim to the whole world that we live by the gospel. The reason we are justified in living by the gospel is that we have fulfilled the conditions laid down in the gospel. Some of us were having a little discussion some months ago and the question was raised by one of the workers, "How much should we tell in gospel meetings about how we live as ministers of the gospel?" Someone answered, "We shouldn’t tell anything." I took the opposite view and said, "I am prepared to tell them everything." If a man asks me any questions regarding the ministry and desires an answer, I am prepared to give him that answer and to prove from the scripture that my answer is according to the teaching and example of Jesus.
    The second question I would like to answer is, "Why do those New Testament ministers travel so much? They seem to be always going somewhere." When Jesus was preaching in a certain city in Galilee, the people of that city wanted him to settle down and remain in their midst, but he said, "I must preach the kingdom of God to other cities also, for therefore am I sent." The reason the workers travel so much is because they could not be New Testament ministers if they did not, for Jesus did not say, "Stay and preach" but "Go and preach". His commission was, "Go ye into all the world, and teach all nations." The New Testament ministry is essentially a traveling ministry and it could not be a New Testament ministry if it weren’t. There are those in the church who assume a little responsibility, whom we speak of as elders, men who live in their own homes and are settled there, but the ministry I am speaking of is a moving ministry and it could not be a New Testament ministry apart from this.
    The third question I would like to answer is, "Why is it necessary for workers who have gone to foreign fields to return home again after a period abroad?" I heard a man some years ago who, after a meeting, went to a friend and said, "I am very glad that Jack explained that to us this afternoon, for I used to think upon it as an unnecessary expense for workers to go abroad and spend several years there and then come back again." He was looking upon it from purely a viewpoint of dollars and cents. It is just as necessary for workers to return to us, as it was for them to go forth from us. No workers now in the regions beyond were sent there by any other worker or by any group of workers. There is no group of workers that I know of that would assume that responsibility. Those who are in different fields in China, Japan, India, all over Europe and all over Africa are not there because any of us sent them. They are there because God moved upon their own hearts and caused them to lift up their eyes to behold the fields white unto harvest. He awakened an interest in their hearts in people in other lands, and so moved upon them that they expressed the desire of their hearts to launch out a little farther into the deep, and if we had any part in their going it was in deciding their qualifications. Many have volunteered to go whose health would not justify them in going. Many have expressed a wish to go whom we would never think of encouraging to go, and those who have gone, are there by their own choice. They can have the glad assurance that God sent them there and when the devil discourages them they can fall back on this thought, "I am here not because any individual sent me, but I am here because God moved upon my heart, and by my own choice I am seeking to carry out His work in this land." We would not like any servant of God to lay hands upon any brother or presume to say, "You go here," or "You go there." It would indicate that we were out of God’s plan if we presume to do so.
    Why is it just as necessary for workers to come back to us as it is for them to go from us? First, for the sake of their health. That in itself ought to be sufficient. Some live under conditions which are not conducive toward health and longevity, and it would be a cruel thing if we were satisfied to leave them there to live or die. So, for the sake of their health it is necessary for them to come back for a change. The second reason is that most of them have fathers and mothers whom they love, and who like to see them and whom they would like to see. That is human fellowship. It is a spiritual fellowship, but it has a human side as well as its spiritual side. There are fathers and mothers who have boys and girls in foreign lands, laying down their lives for Christ’s sake and these children are interested in their parents and look forward, after spending a reasonable time in these foreign lands, to returning home again to tell the story of their labors to those whom they love. The third reason is that all of them were tried and tested before they left. They have friends in the gospel for whom they are still responsible, whom they would like to see and who would like to see them. The fourth reason and the most important is that it is necessary for the unity of the people of God. This fellowship that is ours is more wonderful to me the older I get. Here we are a body of people absolutely unorganized, and a puzzle and mystery to the world. They are prepared to leave us alone, and we are prepared to be left alone. We are satisfied to be as the mustard tree, a shrub in a man’s back yard to which no one will give much attention.
    God’s method of uniting and holding His people together in one is by the coming and going of His bondservants and handmaidens. The constant coming and going, their traveling from one state to another, from country to country, and from continent to continent, contributes to the fulfillment of the purpose of God in uniting His people into the family, one fold, one fellowship, one kingdom, so that we can truly say that we are one in Christ. Our brethren in South America have asked me to come down to visit them. I don’t think that it is going to be a pleasure trip by any means, and I don’t intend to make it a pleasure trip. My purpose in going is to help to link our brethren in South America to their brethren in North America, to endeavor to add a little to the foundation that has been laid down by others, and to build upon that foundation not with wood, hay and stubble, but gold, silver, and precious stones.
    Those who have read the book of Acts will have noticed how little groups of God’s servants were continually on the move, going from one country to another--from Europe to Asia. It seems to me that this was God’s simple and wonderfully nice way of uniting His people, so that regardless of their race or nationally, color or language, they would be one people, and that in a measure at least there would be answering the prayer of Jesus on that last night of his life, that "they might all be one in him.” So, when we welcome some of our brothers from China, Japan and other countries, their coming will awaken in us a new interest in those countries. Those who have gone to other countries and have returned to us will bring Sweden, Norway, Germany, Denmark, etc. a little nearer to us and make us feel that we are indeed one family, one fellowship, striving together for the extension of the same kingdom.
    The fourth question I would like to answer is, "Where does the money come from that enables the preachers to live, to travel to foreign countries, and to return?" When you talk about the workers coming and going, your friends will tell you that all of this takes money, and it does. When they ask you where the money comes from, you say, "Oh, the Lord provides it." But why not tell them plainly just where it comes from? It comes from you. Money, as a means of exchange, is used to enable workers to live, to travel to foreign lands, and it comes as a spontaneous, unsolicited, freewill offering of God’s children. You don’t minister in this way because you have to or are solicited to. If you don’t love to do it, the Lord doesn’t accept it and we wouldn’t if we knew. When workers go forth they get rid of everything they possess. Money thus surrendered is scattered so that it can never be theirs again. It is gone for good, and it is used to minister to our brethren abroad or to bring them from the foreign field, or to send others there. Occasionally God’s children who set their affairs in order and whom the Lord takes home remember an individual worker with gifts of money, or sometimes they leave them a piece of property, but that money is scattered in the furtherance of the gospel and that property is sold and the money it brings is scattered in the same way, so that no gift can ever enrich any individual worker. When you are asked then by your friends, "What is the fundamental difference between our ministry and every other ministry? Why do workers travel so much? Why is it necessary for those who go from us to return again? Where does the money come from?", I hope you will feel free to be frank and candid with them, so that you won’t convey the impression that this is some kind of a great secret society you are in. We teach nothing in private that we are not prepared to proclaim from the house tops to all men, for everything we teach can be read by all men in the pages of God’s own Book.

    B. Simonton