(Judges 6 and 7.)
One hundred and twenty
thousand Midianites had come up to fight against Israel, and thirty-two
thousand Israelites rose up to fight for their wives, their children,
their homes, their liberty, their lives. But God saw that if one
Israelite whipped nearly four Midianites he would be so puffed up with
pride and conceit that he would forget God, and say, "My own hand has
saved me" (7:2).
The Lord also knew that there were a lot of
weak-kneed followers among them, with cowardly hearts, who would like an
excuse to run away, so He told Gideon to say: "whoever is fearful and
afraid, let him return and depart early from mount Gilead." The sooner
fearful folks leave us the better. "And there returned of the people
twenty and two thousand; and there remained ten thousand" (7:3). They
were afraid to show the enemy their faces, but they were not ashamed to
show them their backs.
But the Lord saw that if one Israelite
whipped twelve Midianites he would be all the more puffed up, so He
made a still further test. He said to Gideon: "The people are yet too
many; bring them down to the water, and I will try them for you there."
God often tries people at the table and the tea-pot. "And it shall be,
that of whom I say to you, This shall go with you, the same shall go
with you; and of whoever I say to you, This shall not go with you, the
same shall not go. So he brought down the people to the water: and the
Lord said to Gideon, Every one that laps of the water with his tongue,
as a dog laps, him shalt thou set by himself; likewise every one that
bows down on his knees to drink. And the number of those who lapped,
putting their hand to their mouth, were three hundred men; but all the
rest of the people bowed down on their knees to drink water. And the
Lord said to Gideon, By the three hundred men that lapped will I save
you, and deliver the Midianites into your hand: and let all the other
people go every man to his place. So the people took victuals in their
hand, and their trumpets: and he sent all the rest of Israel every man
to his tent, and retained those three hundred men" (Judges 7:4-8).
These
three hundred men meant business. They were not only unafraid, but they
were not self-indulgent. They knew how to fight, but they knew
something even more important - they knew how to deny themselves. They
knew how to deny themselves, not only when there was very little water,
but when a river rolled at their feet. They were, no doubt, quite as
thirsty as the others, but they did not propose to throw down their arms
and fall down on their faces to drink in the presence of the enemy.
They stood up, kept their eyes open, watched the enemy, kept one hand on
shield and bow, while with the other they brought water to their
thirsty lips. The other fellows were not afraid to fight, but they must
drink first, even if the enemy did steal a march on them while prostrate
on the ground satisfying their thirst. Number one must be cared for, if
the army were crushed. They were self-indulgent and never dreamed of
denying themselves for the common good; so God sent them home along with
the fellows that were afraid, and with the three hundred He routed the
Midianites. That was one to four hundred. No chance of self-conceit
there! They won the victory and became immortal, but God got the glory.
There
are fearful people who cannot face a laugh or a sneer, much less a
determined foe. If they cannot be led to lay hold of the strength and
boldness of the Lord, the sooner they quit the field the better; let
them go back to their wives and babies and sweethearts and mothers. But
there are many who are not afraid. They rather enjoy a fight. They would
as soon wear uniform, sell The War Cry, march the streets, face a mob,
sing and pray and testify in the presence of enemies, as stay at home,
perhaps rather. But they are self-indulgent! If they like a thing they
must have it, however much it may hurt them and so unfit them for the
fight.
I am acquainted with some people who know that tea and
cake and candy injure them, but they like these things, and so they
indulge themselves, at the risk of grieving the Spirit of God, and
destroying their health, which is the capital God has given them to do
His work with. I know some people who ought to know that a big supper
before a meeting taxes the digestive organs, draws the blood from the
head to the stomach, makes one drowsy and dull and heavy, and unfits the
soul to feel spiritual realities keenly and to stand between God and
the people, pleading with God, in mighty, believing, Elijah - like
prayer, and prevailing with the people in clear testimony and burning
exhortation.
But they are hungry, they like such and such
things, and so they tickle their palate with the things they like,
punish their stomachs, spoil their meetings, disappoint the starving,
hungry souls of the people, and grieve the Holy Ghost - all to gratify
their appetites.
I know people who cannot watch with Jesus
through a half-night of prayer without buns and coffee. Imagine
wrestling Jacob (Gen. 32) stopping, in that desperate all-night of
prayer with the angel for the blessing before meeting his injured
brother Esau in the morning, to have buns and coffee! If his soul had
been no more desperate than that, he could have had his buns, but on his
return to wrestle he would have found the angel gone; and next morning,
instead of learning that the angel who had disjointed his thigh, but
left his blessing, had also melted Esau's hard heart, he would have
found an angry brother, who would have been ready to carry out his
threat of twenty years before and take his life. But Jacob was
desperate. He wanted God's blessing so much that he forgot all about his
body. In fact, he prayed so earnestly that his thigh was put out of
joint, and he did not complain. He had gained the blessing. Glory to
God!
When Jesus prayed and agonized and sweat, as it were,
great drops of blood in the Garden, His disciples slept, and He was
grieved that they could not watch with Him one hour. And He must be
grieved today that so many cannot, or will not, watch with Him; will not
deny their inmost self to win victory over the powers of Hell and
snatch souls from the bottomless pit. We read of Daniel (Dan. 10:3) that
for three long weeks he ate no pleasant food, but gave himself to
prayer during all the time he possibly could, so eager was he to know
the will of God and get the blessing. And he got it. One day God sent an
angel to him who said "O man greatly beloved!" and then told him all he
wanted to know.
In Acts 14:23 we read that Paul and Barnabas
prayed and fasted - not feasted - that the people might be blessed
before they left a certain corps. They were greatly interested in the
soldiers they left behind them.
We know that Moses, and
Elijah, and Jesus fasted and prayed for forty days, and immediately
after mighty works were done. And so, all mighty men of God have learned
to deny themselves and keep their bodies under, and God has set their
souls on fire, helped them to win victory against all odds, and bless
the whole world. A man should not deny himself food and drink to the
injury of his body. But one night of watching and fasting and praying
can starve no one; and the man who is willing to forget his body
occasionally for a short time, in the interest of his soul and the souls
of others, will reap blessings which will amaze himself and all who
know him. But this self-restraint must be constant. It will not do to
fast all night and feast all next day. The Apostle writes of being
"temperate in all things" (I Cor. 11:25); and he might have added, "at
all times." Again, Gideon's band did some night work, or early morning
work. They got ahead of their enemies by getting up early.
People
who indulge their bodies in food and drink also usually indulge them in
sleep. They eat late at night, and sleep heavily and lazily next
morning, and usually need a cup of strong tea to clear their heads.
Getting up late, the work of the day crowds on them, and they have
almost no time to praise the Lord, pray and read the Bible. Then the
cares of the day press on them, and their hearts get full of things
other than the joy of the Lord. Jesus must wait till they have done
everything else before He can catch their ear; and so their day is
spoiled.
Oh, that they knew the advantage, the luxury, the
hilarious joy of early rising to fight the Midianites! It seems that
Gideon, the captain, was up and about all night, and he roused his
people early, and they had the Midianites all whipped and scattered
before day-dawn.
Four hundred devils cannot stand before the
man who makes it the rule of his life to get up early to praise the Lord
and plead for God's blessing on his own soul and on the world. They
will flee away. John Fletcher used to mourn if he knew of a laborer
getting out to his daily toil before he himself was up praising God and
fighting the devil. He said: "What! does that man's earthly master
deserve more ready service than my Heavenly Master?" Another old saint
lamented greatly if he heard the birds singing before he got up to
praise God.
We read that Jesus arose early and went out alone
to pray. Joshua got up early in the morning to set battle in array
against Jericho and Ai. John Wesley went to bed sharp at ten - unless he
had an all-night of prayer - and got up promptly at four. Six hours of
sleep was all he wanted. And when eighty-two years old, he said he was a
wonder to himself, for during the twelve years previous he had not been
sick a day, nor felt weary, nor lost an hour's sleep, although he
travelled thousands of miles each year, in winter and summer, on
horseback and in carriages, and preached hundreds of sermons, and did
work that not one man out of a thousand could do - all of which he
attributed to the blessing of God on his simple, plain way of living and
to a clear conscience. He was a very wise and useful man, and he
considered the matter of such grave importance that he wrote and
published a sermon on Redeeming the Time from sleep.
A Captain
wrote me the other day that he had begun to do his praying in the
morning when his mind was fresh and before the cares of the day had got
the start of him.
It means more to belong to Gideon's band
than most people ever dreamed of; but I have joined it, glory to God!
and my soul is on fire. It is a joy to live and belong to such a
company.
by Samuel Logan Brengle
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