The Personal Touch | Page 5

J. Wilbur Chapman
they learned might taunt Moody and ask if I was trying to make a
good boy out of him. While I was pondering over it all, I passed the
store without noticing it. Then when I found I had gone by the door, I
determined to make a dash for it and have it over at once. I found

Moody in the back part of the store wrapping up shoes in paper and
putting them on shelves. I went up to him and put my hand on his
shoulder, and as I leaned over I placed my foot upon a shoe box. Then I
made my plea, and I feel that it was really a very weak one. I don't
know just what words I used, nor could Mr Moody tell. I simply told
him of Christ's love for him and the love Christ wanted in return. That
was all there was of it. I think Mr Moody said afterwards that there
were tears in my eyes. It seemed that the young man was just ready for
the light that then broke upon him, for there at once in the back of that
shoe store in Boston the future great evangelist gave himself and his
life to Christ."
Many years afterward Mr Moody himself told the story of that day.
"When I was in Boston," he said, "I used to attend a Sunday School
class, and one day, I recollect, my teacher came around behind the
counter of the shop I was at work in, and put his hand upon my
shoulder, and talked to me about Christ and my soul. I had not felt that
I had a soul till then. I said to myself. This is a very strange thing. Here
is a man who never saw me till lately, and he is weeping over my sins,
and I never shed a tear about them. But, I understand it now, and know
what it is to have a passion for men's souls and weep over their sins. I
don't remember what he said, but I can feel the power of that man's
hand on my shoulder to-night. It was not long after that I was brought
into the Kingdom of God."
The personal touch is necessary. It is not so much what we say, as the
way we say it, and indeed, it is not so much what we say and the way
we say it, as what we are, that counts in personal work. We cannot
delegate this work to others. God has called the evangelist to a certain
mission in soul winning. He has given ministers the privilege of
winning many to Christ. Mission workers, generally, are charged with
the responsibility for this special work. But this fact cannot relieve the
parents, the children, the husband, the wife, the friends, the business
man, the toiler in the shop, from personal responsibility in the matter of
attempting to win others to the Saviour.
CHAPTER III

A Polished Shaft
"He hath made me a polished shaft; in his quiver hath he hid me,"
Isaiah xlix. 2.[1] Personal preparation is essential to the best success in
personal work. No familiarity with the methods of other workers; no
distinction among men because of past favours of either God or men;
no past success in the line of special effort; no amount of intellectual
equipment and no reputation for cleverness in the estimation of your
fellowmen will take the place of individual soul culture, if you are to be
used of God.
[Footnote 1: Suggested by Dr Charles Cuthbert Hall.]
Thou must be true thyself, If thou the truth would teach; It takes the
overflow of heart To give the lips full speech.
The words of Isaiah the Prophet literally refer to Him who was the
servant of Jehovah. He was God's prepared blessing to a waiting and
needy people. He came from the bosom of the Father that He might lift
a lost and ruined race to God. And swifter than an arrow speeds from
the hand of the archer when the string of the bow is drawn back, He
came to do the will of God. In the Epistle to the Hebrews we find Him
saying, "Lo I come, in the volume of the Book it is written of me I
delight to do thy will." This was the spirit of all His earthly life. When
He was hungry and sent His disciples to buy meat, He found it
unnecessary to partake of the food they brought to Him, saying, "My
meat is to do the will of him that sent me." And when He came to the
garden of Gethsemane, well on to the climax of His sacrificial life, we
hear Him saying again, "Not my will, but Thine be
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