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What Must I Do To Be Saved?
Worthynews.com ^ | July 11th, 1875 | D. L. Moody

Posted on 01/21/2005 6:34:28 AM PST by P-Marlowe

Jesus Christ is calling you ...

What Must I Do To Be Saved?

Dwight Lyman Moody's Last Sermon in London. Preached in Camberwell Hall, Sunday Evening, July 11th, 1875.

Suppose you do not want to hear a sermon (on this last night) so much as you want to know how to be saved. I want, if I can, to answer that question, "What must I do to be saved?" There is no question that can come before us in this world that is so important; and I think that there is not a man in this audience to-night who does not feel interested in it.

I heard a man, when he was going out the other night, saying: "I do not believe in sudden conversion. I do not believe what the preacher said to-night, that a man could come in here a sinner, and go out a Christian." Now, I want to say that I do not believe in any other conversion. I do not believe that there ever has been a conversion in the world that was not instantaneous, and I want you to mark this: not but what many cannot tell the day nor the hour when they were converted. I will admit that: they may not know the time; but that does not change the great fact that there was a time when they passed from death unto life; that there was a time when they were born [ABCOG: begotten] into the kingdom of God. There must have been a minute when their name was written in the Book of Life. There must have been a time when they were ere lost, and a time when they were saved; but we may not be conscious when the change takes place. I believe the conversion of some is like the rising of the sun, and of others like the flashing of a meteor. But both are instantaneous, really, in the sight of God. There must be a time when life begins to rise; when the dead soul begins to live.

Now, this evening I want to take up some of the Bible illustrations. In the first place, there is the ark. There was a minute when Noah was outside of the ark, and another minute when he was inside. And, bear in mind, it was the ark that saved Noah: it was not his righteousness; it was not his feelings; it was not his tears; it was not his prayers. It was the ark that saved him. If he had tried to make an ark of his feelings, or of his prayers, or of his life, he would have been swept away: he would have been drowned with the rest. But, you see, it was the ark that saved him.

When I was in Manchester, I went into the gallery one Sunday night to have a talk with a few inquirers; and while I was talking, a business man came in, and took his seat on the outskirts of the audience. I think, at first, he had come merely to criticize, and that he was a little skeptical. At last I saw he was in tears. I turned to him, and said, " My friend, what is your difficulty?" "Well," he said, "Mr. Moody, the fact is, I cannot tell." I said, "Do you believe you are a sinner?" He said, "Yes; I know that." I said, "Christ is able to save you"; and I used one illustration after another, but he did not see it. At last I thought of the ark, and I said: "Was it Noah's feelings that saved him? Was it Noah's righteousness that saved him, or was it the ark?" "I see it, now," said he; "I see it." He got up and shook hands with me, and said: "Good-night: I must go. I have to go away by the train to-night; but I was determined to be saved before I went. I see it now."

A few days after, he came and touched me on the shoulder, and said, "Do you know me? " I said, "I know your face, but do not remember where I have seen you." He said, "Do you not remember the illustration of the ark? I said, " Yes." "It has been all light ever since," said he. "I understand it now. Christ is the Ark; He saves me; and I must get inside Him." When I went down to Manchester again, and talked to the young friends there, I found he was the brightest light among them.

Let me take another illustration. There was the blood in Goshen. God says, "When I see the blood I will pass over you." Now He does not say, "When I see Moses' feelings, or the feelings of the people, I will pass over you"; or, "When I see you praying and weeping, I will pass over you"; but, "When I see the blood I will pass over you." It was the blood that saved them, not their righteousness. And a little child by that blood in Goshen was just as safe as Moses or Aaron or Joshua or Caleb. It was the blood that saved them. Look! there is the Jew taking the hyssop. He dips it in the blood, and strikes it on the doorpost. One minute it is not there: the next it is there. The moment the blood is there they are saved. God says, "When I see the blood I will pass over you." Some people say, "If I were only as good as that minister I should feel so safe" or, "If I were only as good as that mother in Israel who has been praying fifty years for the poor and unfortunate, should I not feel very safe? " My friends, if you are behind the blood, you are as safe as any man or woman who has been praying for fifty years. It is not their righteousness and good works that are going to save them. They never saved any one. God says, "When I see the blood I will pass over you." [ABCOG: Moody understands "pass over" to mean "bypass". It can also mean "hover over to protect"] And when I am sheltered behind the blood, then I am saved; and if I am not sheltered behind the blood, I am not saved. That was instantaneous, was not it? God says, "When I see the blood, it shall be a token, and I will not enter." Death came down and passed over Egypt; and where the blood was on the doorpost he passed by; but where the blood could not be found, in he went and took the victim away. The great palaces could not keep out death; wealth and position could not keep out death. He went and took the Crown Prince of Egypt; he took the richest and the poorest, the highest and the lowest. Death makes no distinction, except a man is behind the blood.

My friends, be wise to-night, and get behind the blood. The blood has been shed. The blood is on the mercy-seat; and while it is there you can be saved. God is imputing to His Son your trespasses and sins. He says, "I will look at the blood on the mercy-seat." Press in, my friends; make haste and get in tonight; for the Master of the house will rise up by-and-by and shut to the door, and then there will be no hope.

Take another case. When Israel went over Jordan, God told Joshua to have six cities of refuge; three on each side of Jordan. They were to be built on a hill, where they could be seen at a great distance, and the gates were to be kept open day and night. All obstacles were to be kept out of the way, the highway was to be kept in repair, the bridges and everything in good condition, so that nothing should hinder a poor man flying to the city of refuge. If a man killed another in those days, it was considered a great disgrace if the nearest relative did not take vengeance. "An eye for an eye, and a booth for a tooth." If a man killed another, the next kinsman was bound to put him to death. But if he could escape to a city of refuge he was tried, and if it was found he had not intentionally killed the man, he might live.

Now for my illustration. Suppose I have killed a man. I am out away in the woods working, and my axe slips out of my hand, and kills the man working with me. I know that his kinsman, his brother, is not far away. The news will soon reach him that I have killed his brother. What shall I do? I start for the city of refuge, over there away on the hill, ten miles off. I run - and we are told that in those days there used to be signposts with the word " Refuge," written in great red letters, so that a man might read as he ran; he need not stop. I have been told that there was a finger pointing towards the city, and a man who could not read might see the hand. A man does not have to learn to read before he can be saved. I see that hand; it is pointing to the city of refuge. The gate is wide open, but it is ten miles away. I leap over the highway. I do not look behind, to the right hand or to the left. I do not listen to this man or to that man, but, like John Bunyan, I put my fingers in my ears. The avenger has drawn his sword, and is on my track. I leap over into the highway; and, pretty soon, I can hear him behind me, Away I go, over that bridge, across that stream, up that mountain, along that valley, - but I can hear him coming nearer and nearer. There is the watchman; I can see him on the wall of the city. He gives notice to the inhabitants that a refugee is coming. I see the citizens on the wall of the city watching, and when I get near I hear them calling, "Run, run! Escape, escape! He is very near you! Run! escape!" I press on; leap through the gate of the city; and at last I am safe. One minute I am outside, and the next I am inside. One minute I am exposed to that sword; it may come down upon me at any minute: the next minute I am safe. Do I feel any difference? I feel I am behind the walls: that is the difference. It is a fact. There I am. The avenger can come up to the gates of the city, but he cannot come in. He cannot lay his sword upon me. The law of the land shields me now. I am under the protection of that city; I have saved my life; but I had no time for lingering.

A great many of you are trying to get into the city of refuge, and there are enemies trying to stop you, But do not listen to them. Your friends tell you to escape. Make haste! Delay not for a single moment!

In our country, before the war, when we had slavery, the slaves used to keep their eye on the north star. If a slave escaped to the Northern States, his old master could come and take him back into slavery. But there was another flag on American soil, and if they could only get under that flag they were for ever free. It is called the Union Jack. If they could only get as far north as Canada they were free; therefore they kept looking towards the north star. But they knew if they only got into the Northern States, there might be some one ready to take them back. So it is with every poor sinner who wants to come to Christ. Many men do all they can to hinder him; others will cheer him on. Let us help every man towards the north star. A man has escaped: perhaps he swims across the Mississippi river, or crosses the Ohio river in a little canoe. The master hears of it, and he takes his hounds and sets them on his track, and begins to hunt him down. The slave hears the hounds; and he knows that his master is coming to take him back to slavery. The line is a mile or two away. He escapes as fast as he can. He runs with all his might for the frontier, over hedges and ditches and rivers; away he goes for Canada. By-and-by he comes in sight of Canada. He can see that flag floating in front of him; and he knows that if he can only cross the line before his master and the hounds overtake him, he will be free for ever.

How the poor black man runs! leaping and bounding along; and at last, with one bound, he goes over the line. He is free! One minute he is a slave; the next minute he is a free man, under the flag of Queen Victoria, the British flag! (cheers [ABCOG: by British crowd]) - don't cheer, my friends, but come to Christ - and your laws say that no man under that flag shall be a slave. One minute he is a slave; the next minute he is a free man. One minute it is possible for his old master to drag him back; the next minute he shouts, "Free!"

If Christ tells us that we are free, we are free. My friends, Christ is calling to-night. Get out of the devil's territory as quick as you can. No slave in the Southern States had so hard a master as yours, nor so mean a master as Satan. Take my advice tonight, and escape for the liberty of your soul.

I can imagine some of you saying "I do not see how a man is really going to be converted all at once." Let me give you another illustration. Look down there. There are two soldiers. Now, if you bring those soldiers up to this platform, and ask them how they became soldiers, they will tell you this - that one moment they were citizens, and the next minute soldiers. What was it that made them soldiers? It was when they took the Queen's shilling. The moment they received that shilling they ceased to be citizens, and they became soldiers. Before they received that shilling they could go where they pleased; the next minute they came under the government and under the regulations of the army, and they must go where Queen Victoria sends them. They did not have to wait for the uniform. The minute they received the shilling they became soldiers. What made them soldiers? Receiving the shilling. What makes a man a Christian? Receiving Christ. "He came unto His own, and His own received Him not: but as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God."

Now, the gift of God is eternal life. Who will have the gift to-night? When I was down in Manchester I asked that question, and a man shouted in the meeting, "I will! " Who will have it now? Is not there some man here in London, as there was in Manchester, who will say that he will have the gift? Is it not a wonder to have to plead with so many to take the gift? "The wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life." Who will have the gift now? (Many responses of "I will"; "I will.")

I can imagine one man down there who says "How about repentance? How about getting into the ark or the city of refuge before repentance?" My friend, let me ask you what is repentance? It is right-about-face! I think these soldiers understand that expression. Some one has said that every one is born with his back to God, and that conversion turns him right round. If you want to be converted, and want to repent, I will tell you what you should do. Just get out of Satan's service, and get into the Lord's. Leave your old friends, and unite yourself with God's people.

In a few days, if nothing happens, I expect to go to Liverpool. If, when I am in the train, my friend Mr. Shipton says, "Moody, you are going in the wrong train, - that train is going to Edinburgh" - I should say, "Mr. Shipton, you have made a great mistake; somebody told me the train was going to Liverpool. You are wrong, Mr. Shipton; I am sure you are wrong." Then Mr. Shipton would say, "Moody, I have lived here forty years, and I know all about the trains. He must have been very ignorant or very vicious who told you that train goes to Liverpool." Mr. Shipton at last convinces me, and I get out of that train and get into the one going to Liverpool.

Repentance is getting out of one train and getting into the other. You are in the wrong train; you are in the broad path that takes you down to the pit of hell. Get out of it to-night. Right-about-face! Who will turn his feet towards God? "Turn ye, for why will ye die?" In the Old Testament the word is "turn." In the New Testament the word is "repent." "Turn ye, for why will ye die, O house of Israel?" God does not want any man in this audience to perish, but He wants all to be saved. You can be saved now if you will.

There is another illustration I wish I had time to dwell upon and that is about looking. There is that serpent in the wilderness. "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man also be lifted up, that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." Look here! Just give me your attention for a few minutes. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ." How long does it take a man to believe? Or, if you will, how long does it take a man to look? Some people say they believe in educating people to be Christians. How long do you educate children to look? You hear the mother say, "Look," and the little child looks. It does not take a child three months to learn to look. Look and live! You need not go to college to learn how to look. There is not a child here but knows how to look. Christ says, "Look unto me; for I am [ABCOG: the way to] God, and there is none else."

There is the brazen serpent on the pole. God says to the children of Israel, who are dying of the bite of the fiery serpents - "Look, and live!"

Now, there is nothing in looking at a piece of brass which can cure the bite of a serpent. It is God who cures it, and the looking is the condition. It is obedience; and that is what God will have.

One moment the poor sufferer is dying; the next there comes a thrill of life through his veins, and he lives: he is well. My friends, look to Christ, and not to yourselves. That is what is the matter with a great many sinners; instead of looking to Christ, they are looking at the bite.

It is not looking to the wound; it is looking to the remedy. Christ is the remedy of sin. What you want is to look from the wound to the remedy - to Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith. Who will look tonight, and live? Turn your eye to Calvary; believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and be saved.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: 230; dwightlmoody; moody; salvation; transcript
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To: fortheDeclaration; Frumanchu
It wasn't your statements, or even Fru's, that I was drawing attention to. I was noting a pattern.

From a lurker's perspective, it is obvious.

421 posted on 01/24/2005 6:08:25 AM PST by jboot (Faith is not a work)
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To: beckysueb; Dr. Eckleburg
I think you've might have misread Dr. E's statement in post #17:

It's like asking "what must I do to grow old?"

422 posted on 01/24/2005 6:13:12 AM PST by HarleyD
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To: jboot

***From a lurker's perspective, it is obvious.***

Thank you.
Christian.


423 posted on 01/24/2005 6:44:39 AM PST by thePilgrim
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To: HarleyD
Yes, and he rejected just about everything Calvin wrote. A wolf in sheep's clothing.

Harley, Harley, Harley. You should know better than that. Heck even Calvin ended up disagreeing with his own institutes on the finer points of soteriology, but soteriology is only one point of Calvin's teachings. Arminius only disagreed with Calvin inasmuch as Calvin was a supralapsarian. I think that position by Calvin took up only the last chapter of the institutes and I don't think Calvin reiterated it as strongly in his commentaries.

To say that Arminius, who I'm sure read a lot more Calvin than you, disagreed with just about everything Calvin wrote is just not true. And Calvin was just a man like Arminius. Even old Calvin disagreed with young Calvin on some points. It was not Calvin that was the problem, but the rigid interpretation of Calvin's teachings on the mysteries of soteriology as enunciated in some of the confessions that was Arminius' problem.

And Rightly so. These should not be matters in which a man's fealty to the bible should be tested.

424 posted on 01/24/2005 6:55:48 AM PST by P-Marlowe
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To: jboot; fortheDeclaration
Fru's a Calvinist, FTD's not. 'Nuff said.

So the Calvinist religion moderator is prejudiced against Calvinists? Is that the implication?

I doubt some Arminians are saved. Big Deal. There are tares on both sides of this issue.

Now if FTD wants to throw a fit complaining that because I doubted that all arminians are saved, that I am accusing him of being unsaved, and if he harps on it for the next 100 posts and ignores a warning by the Moderator to knock it off, then I would expect that he would be taking some time off Free Republic as well.

Somehow I don't think FTD would take that comment personally.

425 posted on 01/24/2005 7:13:44 AM PST by P-Marlowe
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To: Dr. Eckleburg

Truly, it is ~not~ shocking that our confused and disturbed neener FRiends would try to dress up in Biblical confessions of faith. It's the old "wolf in sheeps clothing" thing.

The delicious irony is that on a supposed conservative forum what is displayed is exactly the zeitgeist of contemporary liberalism. All things are tolerable except for dogmatic priniciple. The best way to defeat principle is to dilute it's meaning through a synergistic reformulation. As you so correctly pointed out it is confiscating language and sppropriating what has historically been an agreed upon meaning and using those same words to connote differing concepts. What is especially seditious about this methodology is that the sheep will mimic the confessions believing that the concepts taught are the same concepts held historically. Not understanding that the sheep they are following is actually a wolf they follow to their own destruction.


426 posted on 01/24/2005 7:24:02 AM PST by GLENNS
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To: P-Marlowe
"Arminius only disagreed with Calvin inasmuch as Calvin was a supralapsarian."

Ohhhhhhh pleazzzzzzzzzzzzze. Arminius died in October of 1609 and the very next year Arminius' followers published the Remonstrance of 1610. The 5 points of the Remonstrance was deemed heresy by the Synod of Dordt in 1618-19 which lead to the TULIP. Arminius' followers didn't get the Remonstrance 5 pointers from Joe Bazooka bubble gum wrappers.

427 posted on 01/24/2005 7:29:09 AM PST by HarleyD
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To: fortheDeclaration

LOL.


428 posted on 01/24/2005 7:47:20 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: fortheDeclaration

Or . . .

All those who call on the Name of The Lord shall be saved?


429 posted on 01/24/2005 7:49:00 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: beckysueb

Paragraphs are friends.

Paragraphs of 5-7 lines or so are better friends.

Cancer sticks are not friends.

We can all rationalize almost anything.

We'd be much better off to spend our time talking ourselves into the best heart-felt Obedience to

LOVING GOD WHOLLY,

OUR NEIGHBORS AS OURSELVES

AND DOING UNTO OTHERS . . .

than to spend our time in futile, deceptive arguments justifying a filthy, destructive, annoying, addictive coping defense to the stresses of life.


430 posted on 01/24/2005 7:53:38 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: GLENNS

Oh wheee.

Such Christ-like language, attitude, stances . . .

/sar.


431 posted on 01/24/2005 7:57:41 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: HarleyD

from Joe Bazooka bubble gum wrappers.

And are you an expert on getting theology from such sources?


432 posted on 01/24/2005 7:58:55 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: Quix

I'll ping you to #431.


433 posted on 01/24/2005 8:30:23 AM PST by HarleyD
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To: Quix
Such Christ-like language

I hesitate to reply because of the pearl/swine thing but that little morpheme I quoted you on in the above has a special ironic quality to it. Whatever perceptions you may have on what constitutes "Christ-like language", would not truthfulness be the overriding quality? If that is so then do you question the veracity of the histiograph I proposed, or the metaphor as an explanatory tool, or the overall analysis? More than likely, however, I perceive that you too are infected with the current zeitgeist of subjectivity. Thus the reason you took particular offense and capitulated to sarcasm was because of the negative emotions you felt by my statements and using those negative emotions as a barometer for the truthfulness of those statements you concluded that a proper analysis was unnecessary and succumb to trite sarcasm.

434 posted on 01/24/2005 8:32:16 AM PST by GLENNS
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To: GLENNS

No.

I do note, however, that you give ample evidence of doing a great imitation of being overly full of yourself.


435 posted on 01/24/2005 8:42:27 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: HarleyD

Such an everlasting sweetie, you are!


436 posted on 01/24/2005 8:43:12 AM PST by Quix (HAVING A FORM of GODLINESS but DENYING IT'S POWER. 2 TIM 3:5)
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To: GLENNS
Not understanding that the sheep they are following is actually a wolf they follow to their own destruction.

Unless, of course, it's an elect confused and disturbed sheep, in which case it cannot be led into destruction.

437 posted on 01/24/2005 10:34:23 AM PST by opus86
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To: opus86
An elect sheep will have a true knowledge of the one faith and her election will be proved by perseverance to that one faith and she will not waver to another faith. This is spelled out and warned about repeatedly throughout the epistles. Some sheep never come to a true knowledge because of the wolves and despite appearances and labels they are lead astray all day long.
438 posted on 01/24/2005 11:00:11 AM PST by GLENNS
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To: GLENNS
Some sheep never come to a true knowledge because of the wolves

Actually the non-elect sheep don't come to true knowledge because they're, well, not elect, correct? Do you think that the wolves (see "Finney, Chuck") truly have a hand in their destruction? The non-elect sheep weren't/aren't led astray, they were born astray and always meant to be astray, correct?

439 posted on 01/24/2005 11:20:54 AM PST by opus86
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To: xzins; HarleyD; thePilgrim; GLENNS; nobdysfool; Frumanchu; jboot
Why don't you post his article and we can see for ourselves that Jacob Arminius was an agent of the Counter-Reformation, struggling by word and deceit to return the church to faith by men's good actions and by not God's predestinating, sovereign will alone.

Monergism/synergism.

In 1608, Arminius was locked in debate with the Calvinist, Franciscus Gomarus before the supreme court of Holland. The two were asked to bear with one another. The following year, Arminius and Gomarus were summoned before the states of Holland for negotiations. In October of 1609, negotiations between Jacobus Arminius and Franciscus Gomarus came to an end when Arminius died in Leyden.

Months later, the Remonstrants, followers of Jacobus Arminius, presented their position in a document entitled, "The Remonstrance" (Articuli Armininiani sire remonstrantia).

In 1618, the Synod of Dort was called to deal with the controversy surrounding the Remonstrants (followers of Arminius) where their teachings were condemned as heresy.

The Reformation was still an on-going event at this time, xzins. There was a lot thrown into the mix, some by believers, some by heretics, some by honest inquirers and some by paid provocateurs.

you seem to want to continue the ruse.

440 posted on 01/24/2005 11:39:45 AM PST by Dr. Eckleburg (There are very few shades of gray.)
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