Consider Your Ways
When we were boys, we have sometimes gathered around our father’s fire in the winter time, and almost sat on it, yet we could not get warm. We rubbed our chilled fingers, but they still kept blue. At length our father wisely turned us out of doors and told us to work, and after some healthy pastime we soon came in with limbs no longer numbed. The blood was circulated, and what fire could not do, exercise soon accomplished.
Ministers of Christ, if your people cry to you, “Comfort us! comfort us!”—comfort them and make the fire a good one. At the same time remember that all the fire you can ever kindle will not warm them as long as they are idle. If they are idle, they cannot be warm.
Theme: Consider your ways, and continue in His ways.
Charge of the People
Charge of the People
Theme: Consider your ways, and continue in His ways.
Change of the People
Change of the People
Theme: Consider your ways, and continue in His ways.
Consider Your Ways
If I am a Christian I have no right to be idle. I saw the other day men using picks in the road in laying down new gas pipes. They had been resting; and just as I passed the clock struck one, and the foreman gave a signal. I think he said, “Blow up,” and immediately each man took his pick or his shovel and they were all at it in earnest.
Close to them stood a fellow with a pipe in his mouth who did not join in the work but stood in a free and easy posture. It did not make any difference to him whether it was one o’clock or six. Why not? Because he was his own: The other men were the master’s for the time being. He, as an independent gentleman, might do as he liked, but those who were not their own fell to labor.
If any of you idle professing Christians can really prove that you belong to yourselves, I have nothing more to say to you. But if you profess to have a share in the redeeming sacrifice of Christ, I am ashamed of you if you do not go to work the very moment the signal is given. You have no right to waste what Jesus Christ has bought with a price.