Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 February 1896 — THE STARTING POINT. [ARTICLE]

THE STARTING POINT.

HOW REV. OR. TALMAGE WOULD EVANGELIZE AMERICA. Want* an Outpouring of the Bolj Spirit at the National Capital—'Would Be of Incalculable Value to Christianity—A New Awakening. Sermon at the Capital. The andience of Dr. Talmage in Washington is thronged with the chief men of the nation and people from all parts, making this sermon most timely. An hour ami a half before the doors open the people gather in the street, and policemen keep th" way open for the pew holders. The text chosen for last Sunday’s discourse was Luke xxiv., 47, “Beginning at Jerusalem.” “There it is," said the driver, and wc nil instantly and excitedly rose in the carriage to catch the first glimpse of Jerusalem, so long the joy of the whole earth. That city, coroneted with temple and palace and radiant, whether looked up nt from the valley of Jehosaphat or gazed at from adjoining hills, was the capital of a great nation. Clouds of, incense had hovered over it. Chariots of kings had rolled through it. Battering rams of enemies had thundered against it. There Isaiah prophesied, and Jeremiah lamented, and David reigned, and Paul preached, and Christ was martyred. Most interesting city ever built since masonry rung its first trowel, or plumb line measured its first wall, or royalty swung its first scepter. What Jerusalem was to tile Jewish kingdom Washington is to our own country—the capital, the place to which all the tribes come up, the great national heart whose throb sends life or death through the body politic clear out to the geographical extremities. What the resurrected Christ said in my text to his disciples when he ordered them to start on the work of gospelization, “beginning at Jerusalem,” it seems to me God says now in his providence to tens of thousands of Christians in this city. Start for the evangelization of America, “beginning at Washington.” America is going to be taken for God. If you do. not believe it, take your hat now and leave and give room to some man or woman who does believe it. As surely as God lives, and he is able to do as he says he will, this country will be evangelized from the mouth of the Potomac to the mouth of the Oregon, from the Highlands of the Navesrnk to the Golden Horn, from Baffin's Bay to the gulf of Mexico, and Christ will walk 'every lake, whether bestormed or placid, and be transfigured on every mountain, and. the night skies, whether they hover over groves of magnolia or over Alaskan glacier, shall be filled with angelic overture of “glory to God and good will to men.” For God or for Apollyon. Again and again does the old book announce that all the earth shall see the salvation of God, and as the greater includes the lesser that takes America gloriously in. Can yon not see that if America is nSt taken for God by his consecrated people it will be taken for Apollyon? The forces engaged on both sides are so tremendous that it cannot be a drawn battle. It is coming, the Armageddon! Either the American Sabbath will perish and this nation be handed over to Herods and Hildebrands and Diocletians and Neros of baleful power, and Alcoholism will reign, seated upon piled up throne of beer barrels, his mouth foaming with domestic and national curse, and crime will lift its unhindered knife of assassination, and rattle keys of worst burglary, and wave torch of widest conflagration, and our cities be turned into Sodoms, waiting for Almighty tempests of fire and brimstone, and one tidal wave of abomination will surge across the continent, or our Sabbaths will take on more sanctity, and the newspapers will become apdealyptic wings of benediction, and penitentiaries will be abandoned for lack of occupants, and holiness and happiness, twin son and daughter of heaven, shall walk through the land, and Christ reign over this nation eith-j? in person or by agency so glorious thud the whole country will l>e one clear, resounding echo of heaven. It will be one or the other. By the throne of him who liveth forever and ever I declare it will be the latter. If the Lord will help me, as he always does—blessed be his glorious name —I will show you how a mighty work of grace begun at Washington would have a tendency to bring the whole continent to God this century closes. William the Gonqueror ordered the curfew. the custom of ringing the bell at midnight, at which all the fires on the hearths were to be banked, and all the lights extinguished, and all the people retire to their pillows. I pray God that the curfew of this century may not be sounded, and the fires be banked, and the lights extinguished as the clock strikes the midnight hour that divides the nineteenth century from the twentieth century, until this beloved land, which was to most of us a cradle, and which will be to most of us a grave, shall come into the full possession of him who is so glorious that William the Conqueror could not be compared to him, even the One who rideth forth “conquering and to conquer.” Akßattle for Souls. Why would it be especially advaniagepus if a mighty work of grace started here, “beginning at Washington?” First, because this eky is on the border between the north and the south. It is neither northora nor southern. It commingles the two climates. It brings together the two styles of population. It is not only right, but beautiful, that people should have especial love for the latitude where they were born and brought up. With what loving accentuation the Alabamian speaks of his orange groves! And the man from Massachusetts is sure to let you know that he comes from the land of the Adamses—Samuel and John and John Quincy. Did you ever know a Virginian or Ohioan whose face did not brighten when he announced himself from the southern or northern State of presidents? If a man does not like his native clime, it is because while he lived there he did not behave well. This capital stands where, by its locality, and its political influence’ it stretches forth one hand toward the north and the other toward the south, and a mighty work of grace starting here would probably be a national awakening. Georgia won 111 clasp the hand of New Hampshire, and Maine the hand of Louisiana, and California the hand of New York, and say, “Come, let us go up and worshlpfUie God of nations, 1 the Christ of Golgotha, the Holy Ghost of the' Pentecostal' three thousands.” It has often been said that the only way the north and the south will be brought into complete accord is to have a war with some foreign nation, in which both sections, marching side by side, would forget everything but the foe to be overcome. Well, if you wait for such a foreign conflict, you will wait until all dlls generation is dead, and perhaps wait forever. The war that will make the sections forget past controversies is a war against unrighteousness, such ae. a universal religious awakening * would declare. What we want is a battle for saute, in which about 40,000,000 northerners and southerners shall be on the same, side and shoulder to shoulder. In no o&er city on the continent can such a war be declared SB appropriately, for all the other great cities are either northern or southern. 'This is neither, or rather it is both. Again, it would be especially advantage-

ous if a mighty work of grace started here because more representative men are in Washington than in any other city between the oceans. Of course there areaceidents in politics, and occasionally there are men who get into the Senate and House of Representatives and other important places who are fitted for the positions in neither head nor heart, but this is exceptional and more exceptional now than in other days. There is not a drunkard in the national legislature, although there were times when Kentucky, Virginia, Delaware, Illinois, New York and Massachusetts had men in Senate or House of Representatives who went maudlin or staggering drunk across those high places. Never nobler group of men sat in Senate or House of Representatives than sat there yesterday and will sit there to-morrow, while the highest judiciary, without exception, has now upon its bench men beyond criticism for good morals and mental endowment. So in nil departments of official position, with here and there an exception, are to-day the brainiest men and most honorable men of America. Now, suppose the Holy Ghost power should fall upon this city, aud these men from all parts of America should suddenly become pronounced for Christ? Do you say the effect would be electrical? More than that. It would be omnipotent! Do you say that such learned and potent men are not wrought upon by religious influence? That shows that you have not observed what has been going on, Commodore Foote, representing tie navy: Gen. Grant and Robert E. Lee, representing the northern and southern armies; Chief Justice Chase, representing the Supreme Court; the Frelihghuysens, Theodore and Frederick, representing the United States Senate; William Pennington and scores of others, representing the House of Representatives, have surrendered to that gospel which, before this winter is out, will in this capital of the American nation, if we are faithful in our prayers and exertions, turn into the kingdom of God men of national and international power, their tongues of eloquence becoming the tongues of fire in another Pentecost. There are on yonder hill those who, by the grace of God, will become John Knoxes and Chrysostoms and Fenelons and Bourdeleaus when once regenerated. There is an illusion I have heard in prayer meetings and heard in pulpits that a soul is a soul —one soul worth as much as another. I deny it. The soul of a man who can bring 1,000 or 10,000 other souls into the kingdom of God is worth 1,000 or 10,000 times more than the soul of a man who can bring no one into the kingdom. A great outpouring of the Holy Spirit in this capital; reaching the chief men of America, would be of more value to earth and heaven than in any other part of the nation, because it would reach all the States, cities, towns nnd neighborhoods of the continent. Oh, for the outstretched right arm of God Almighty in the salvation of this capital! A Cali to Repentance.

Some of us remember 1857, when, at the close of the worst monetary distress this country has ever felt, compared with which the hard times of the last three years were a boom of prosperity, right on the heels of that complete prostration came an awakening in which 500,000 people were converted in different States of the Union. Do you know where one of its cnief powers was demonstrated? In Washington. Do you know on what street? This street. Do you know in what church? This church. I picked up an old book a few days ago and was startled aud thrilled and enchanted to read some words, written at that time by the Washington correspondent of a Now York paper. He wrote: “The First Presbyterian Church can scarce contain the people. Requests are daily preferred for an interest in the prayers offered, and the reading of these forms one of the tenderest and most effective features of the meetings. Particular pains are taken to disclaim and exclude everything like sectarian feeling. General astonishment is felt at the unexpected rapidity with which the work has thus far proceeded, and we are beginning to anticipate the necessity of opening another church.” Why, my hearers, not have that again, and' more than that? There are many thousands more of inhabitants now than then. Besides that, since then are the telephone, with its semiominpresence, and the swift cable car, for assembling the people. I believe that the mightiest revival of religion that this city has ever seen is yet to come, aud the earth will tremble from Capitoliue hill to the boundaries on all sides with the footsteps of God as he comes to awaken and pardon and save these great populations. People of Washington, meet us next Thursday night at half past 7 o’clock to pray for this coming of the Holy Ghost—not for a Pentecostal 3,000, that I have referred to, but 30,000. Such a fire as that would kindle a light that would be seen from the sledges crunching through the snows of Labrador to the Caribbean sea, where the whirlwinds are born. Let our cry be that of Habakkuk, the blank verse poet of the Bible: “O Lord, revive thy work in the midst of the years; in the midst of the years make known; in wrath remember mercy.” Let the battle cry be Washington for God, the United States for God, America for God, the world for God! Wo are all tired of skirmishing. Let us bring on a general engagement. W e are tired of fishing with hook and line. With, one sweep of the gospel net let us take in many thousands. This vast work must begin somewhere. Why not here? Some one must give the rallying cry. Why may not I, one of the Lord’s servants? By providential arrangement I am every week in sermonie eoinmunicajiioji with every city, town and neighborhood of this country, and I now give the watchword to north and south and east and west. Hear and see it, all people—this call to a forward movement, this call to repentance and faith, this call to a continental awakening!

Work for the Nation's Salvation. This generation will soon be out of sight. Where are the mighty men of the past who trod your Pennsylvania avenue and spake in yonder national legislature and decided the stupendous questions of the supreme judicatory ? Ask the sleepers in the Congressional cemetery. Ask the mausoleums all over the land. Their tongues ate speechless, their eyes closed, their arms folded, their opportunities gone, their destiny fixed. How soon time prorogues parliaments, and adjourns senates, and disbands cabinets, and empties pulpits, and dismisses generations! What we would do we must do quickly or not do at all. I call upon people who cannot come forth from their sickbeds to implore the heavens in our behalf from their midnight pillows, and I call upon the aged who cannot, even by the help of their staff, enter the churches to spend their last days on earth in supplicating the salvation of this nation, and I call upon all men and women who have been in furnaces of trouble, as was Shadracb, and among lions, as was Daniel, and in dungeons of trouble, as was Jeremiah, to join in the prayer, and let the church of God everywhere lay hold of the Almighty arm that moves nations. Then Senators of the United States will announce to the State legislatures that sent them here, and members of the House of Representatives will report to th,e congressional districts that elected them, and the many thousands of men and women now and here engaged in the many departments of national service will write home, telling all sections of the country that the Lord is here, and that he is on the march for the redemption of America.

Harielnjah, the Lord is coming! I he* the rambling of his chariot wheels. 1 feel on my cheeks the breath of the white horses that draw the Victor! I see the hash of his lanterns through the long night of the world’s sin and sorrow! A New Awakening. We want in this country, only on a larger scale, that which other centuries have seen of God’s workings, as in the reformation of the sixteenth century, when Martin Luther and Philip Melauchthon led on; as in the awakening of the Severn teeiith century, when Banyan and Flavel and Baxter led on; as in the awakening of the eighteenth century, when Teunanl and Edwards and the Wesleys led on: as in the awakening of 1857, led on by Matthew Simpson, the seraphic Methodist, and Bishop Maellvaine, the Ajmslolic Episcopalian, and Albert Barnes, the consecrated Presbyterian, and others, just as good, in all denominations. Oh, will not some of those glorious souls of thfc past come down and help us? Gome down off your thrones, Nettleton and Finney and Daniel Baker and Edward Payson and Truman Osborne and Earle aud Knapp and Inskip and Archibald Alexander —that Alexander the Great of the Christian churches. Come down! How can you rest up there when the world is dying for lack of the gospel? Come-down and agonize with us in prayer. Come down and help us preach in our pulpits. Come down and inspire our courage and faith. Heaven can got along without you better than we can. But more than all—and overwhelmed with reverent emotion we ask it—eong\ thou of the deeply dyed garments of Bozrah, traveling in the greatness of thy strength, mighty to save! Lord God of Joshua! Let the suu of this century stand still above Gibeon and the moon above the valley of Ajalon until we can whip out the five kings of hell, tumbling them down the precipices as the other live kings went over the rocks of Bctlihorom. Ha, ha! It will so surely be done that I cannot restrain the laugh of triumph. Washiugton Needs a Revival. From where the seaweed is tossed on the beach by the stormy Atlantic to the sands laved by the quiet Pacific, this country will be Emanuel’s land, the work beginning at Washiugton, if we have the faith and holy push and the consecration requisite. First of all, we ministers must get right. That was a startling utterance of Mr. Swinnock when he said, “It is a doleful thing to fall into hell from under the pulpit; but, oh, how dreadful a thing to drop thither out of the pulpit.” That was an all suggestive thing that Paul wrote to the Corinthians, “Lest that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should bo a castaway.” That was an inspiring motto with which Whitefield sealed all his letters, “We seek the stars.” Lord God! Wake up all our pulpits, and then it will be as when Venn preached, and it was said that men fell before the word like slacked lime. Lot us all, laymen and clergymen, to the work. What Washington wants most of nil is an old-fashioned revival of religion, but on a vaster scale, so that the world will be compelled to say, as of old, “We never saw it on this fashion.” But remember there is a hjirnan side as well as a divine side to a revival. Those of us brought up in the, country know what is called “a raising”* —the neighbors gathered together to lift the heavy frame for a new house after the timbers are ready to be put into their places. It is dangerous work, and there are many accidents. The neighbors had gathered for such a raising, and the beams had all been fitted to their places except one, and that very heavy. That one, on the long pikes of the men, had almost reached its place, when something went wrong, and the men could hoist it no higher. But if it did not go in its place it would fall back upon the men who were lifting it. It had already begun to settle back. The boss carpenter shouted: “Lift, men, or die! All together! Yo—heave!’’’ With mightier push they tried to send the beam to its place, but failed. Still they held on. all the time their strength lessening. The wives and mothers and daughters stood in horror looking on. Then the boss carpenter shouted to the women “Come aud help!” They came, and womanly arras became the arms of giants, for they were lifting to save the lives of husbands aud fathers and sons as well as their own. Then the boss carpenter mounted one of the beams and shouted: “Now! Altogether! Lift or die! Yo, heave!” And with a united effort that almost burst the blood vessels the great beam went to its place, and a wild huzza was heard. That is the way it sometimes seems in the churches. Temples of righteousness are to be reared, but there is a halt, a stop, a catch somewhere. A few are lifting all they can, but we want more hands at this raising and more hearts, more Christian men to help—aye, more Christian women to re-enforce. If the work fail, it means the death of many souls. All together! Men and women of God! Lift or die! The top stone must come to its place “with shoutings of grace, grace unto it.” God is ready to do his part. Are we ready to do our part? There is work not only for the knee of prayer, but for the shoulder of upheaval.