Men of
the Bible
1898
BY
Abraham
- Moses - Naaman
Nehemiah
- Herod - John
the
Baptist - The Man Born
Blind
- Joseph of
Arimathea
-
Our
Featured Story: The
Penitent Thief
©2004 Scott Prentice
Discovered
BY
Scott
L. Prentice
HOW
TO USE THIS BOOK
A
FEW SUGGESTIONS
Peruse it
for personal pleasure and profit.
Cut out the
striking paragraphs, filing the same for future use.
Read aloud
an incident to the young folks or a chapter to the older ones.
Keep it and
others circulating as a library in the missionary circle.
Form a missionary
study class and read the lives of the heroes of the cross,
such as this book describes.
Offer it and
others as rewards to your Sunday school scholars for punctuality,
regularity, or for the memorizing of Scripture, etc.
Mail it to
a missionary, home or foreign.
Suggest to
someone the thought of doing “book missionary” work
with it.
Make
out a list of friends or acquaintances that should read the
book: send the book to the first named, ask him to pass it
on to the second, and so on.
Preface
While traveling
from eastern South Dakota to western South Dakota back in 1997
my new bride Jeanne and I stopped at this old deserted farmstead.
During our visit while posing for pictures around the old vehicles
and tractors we also came across in the upper level of the
home a stack of spewed papers on the floor. Weathered and soiled
by the past, we picked through the historic Farm Journals and
misc. other documents to discover a couple of old discolored
Christian booklets. Taking them as a keepsake of our visit
and memorial of our faith we went on our way.
Months later,
only after being convicted by the Holy Spirit to do so, I sat
down to read this little booklet. Thoughts from Mount Blessing
by: E.G. White (A must read!) Contact Pacific Press Publishing
1-800-447-7377. After reading Thoughts from Mount Blessing,
we have committed to using this book in our ministry. It has
the most dynamic and blessed writings about the Lord’s
Prayer that I could set my eyes upon, other than the Bible
itself, it has brought much new meaning to that little prayer.
Although this was just another step in Divine Providence in
our lives, the Lord prepared the way for us to stop again and
we almost ran to this little farm house. With glee, I opened
the door to the upstairs to see the papers skewed just as the
farmer and I had left them. With in moments and exhausting
our search we discovered another little booklet…. This
one we couldn’t wait…
We headed
down the road and Jeanne started to read:
The
Penitent Thief
I must add
a few comments at this time: I have contacted D.L Moody Bible
Institute about additional copies of this book. The archivist
noted we had a very special little book indeed. He wasn’t
sure, but thought we probably have the only other copy of this
book. He couldn’t remember for sure, but thought he remembered
seeing only one copy in there archives. Since the book was
copyrighted in 1898, it is now public domain. I will be writing
the Institute for permission to republish this whole book,
but until then I have to get it into your hands so you can
hear these fantastic and awesome biblical stories as told by
our brother Dwight. L. Moody. So for now, please enjoy the
first of seven stories.
In addition:
We have taken the liberty to change the wording nineteen hundred
years ago to two thousand years ago. Everything else is exactly
as previously published. And we pray that this book will for
an eternity live in the hearts of all who read it.
The
Penitent Thief
It should
give us all a great deal of hope and comfort that Jesus saved
such a man as the penitent thief just before He went back to
heaven. Every one who is not a Christian ought to be interested
in this case, to know how he was converted. Any one who does
not believe in sudden conversions ought to look in to it. If
conversions are gradual, if it takes six months, or six weeks,
or six days to convert a man, there was no chance for this
thief. If a man who has lived a good, consistent life cannot
be converted suddenly, how much less chance for him! Turn to
the 23 rd chapter of Luke, and see how the Lord dealt with
him. He was a thief, and the worst kind of a thief, or else
they would not have punished him by crucifixion. Yet Christ
not only saved him, but took him up with Himself into glory.
Let us look
at Christ hanging on the cross between the two thieves. The
Scribes and Pharisees wagged their heads, and jeered at Him.
His disciples had fled. Only His mother and one or two other
women remained in sight to cheer Him with their presence among
all the crowd of enemies. Hear those spiteful Pharisees mocking
among themselves: “He saved others; Himself He cannot
save.” The account also says that the two thieves “cast
the same in his teeth.”
REVILING.
The first
thing we read, then, of this man is that he was a reviler of
Christ.
You would
think that he would be doing something else at such a time
as that; but hanging there in the midst of torture, and certain
to be dead in a few hours, instead of confessing his sins and
preparing to meet that God whose law he had broken all his
life, he is abusing God’s only Son. Surely, he cannot
sing any lower, until he sinks into hell!
UNDER
CONVICTION.
The
next time we hear of him, he appears to be under conviction:
“And
one of the malefactors which were hanged railed on Him, saying,
If thou be Christ, save Thyself and us. But the other answering
rebuked him, saying, Dost not thou fear God, seeing thou art
in the same condemnation? And we indeed justly; for we receive
the due reward of our deeds: but this Man hath don nothing
amiss.”
What
do you suppose made so great a change in this man in these
few hours? Christ had not preached a sermon, had given him
no exhortation. The darkness had not yet come on. The earth
had not opened her mouth. The business of death was going on
undisturbed. The crowd was still there, mocking and hissing
and wagging the head. Yet this man, who in the morning was
railing at Christ, is now confessing his sins and rebuking
the other thief. “We indeed justly.” No miracle
had been wrought before his eyes. No angel from heaven had
come to place a glittering crown upon his head in place of
the bloody crown of thorns.
What
was it wrought such change in him?
I
will tell you what I think it was. I think it was the Savior’s
prayer:
“Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
I
seem to hear the thief
TALKING
TO HIMSELF
in this way:
“What
a strange kind of man this must be! He claims to be king of
the Jews, and the superscription over His cross says the same.
But what sort of a throne is this! He says He is the Son of
God. Why does not God send down His angels and destroy all
these people who are torturing His Son to death? If He has
all power now, as He used to have when He worked those miracles
they talked about, why does He not bring out His vengeance,
and sweep all these wretches into destruction? I would do it
in a minute if I had the power. I wouldn’t spare any
of them. I would open the earth and swallow them up! But this
man prays to God to forgive them! Strange, strange! He must
be different from us. I am sorry I said on word against Him
when they first hung us up here.
“What
a difference there is between Him and me! Here we are, hanging
on two crosses, side by side; but all the rest of our lives
we have been far enough apart. I have been robbing and murdering
, and He has been feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and
raising the dead. Now these people are railing at us both!
I begin t believe H must be the Son of God; for surely no man
could forgive his enemies like that.”
Yes,
that prayer of Christ’s did what the scourge could not
do. This man had gone through his trial, he had been beaten,
he had been nailed to the cross; but his heart had not been
subdued, he had raised no cry to God, he was not sorry for
his sins. Yet, when he heard the Savior praying for His murderers,
that
BROKE
HIS HEART.
It
flashed into this thief’s soul that Jesus was the Son
of God, and that moment he rebuked his companion, saying:
“Dost
thou not fear God?”
The
fear of God fell upon him. There is not much hope of a man’s
being saved until the fear of God comes upon him. Solomon says, “The
fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.”
We
read in Acts that great fear fell upon the people; that was
the fear of the Lord. That was the first sign that conviction
had entered the soul of the thief. “Dost thou not fear
God?” That was the first sign we have of life springing
up.
CONFESSING.
Next he confessed
his sins: “We indeed justly.” He took his place
among sinners, not trying to justify himself.
A
man may be very sorry for his sins, but if he doesn’t
confess them, he has no promise of being forgiven. Cain felt
badly enough over his sins, but he did not confess. Saul was
greatly tormented in mind, but he went to the witch of Endor
instead of to the Lord. Judas felt so bad over the betrayal
of his Master that he went out and hanged himself; but he did
not confess to God. True, He went and confessed to the priests,
saying, “I have sinned in that I have betrayed innocent
blood”; but it was of no use to confess to them - they
could not forgive him.
How
different is the case of this penitent thief! He confessed
his sins, and Christ had mercy on him there and then.
The
Great trouble is, people are always trying to make out that
they are not sinners, that they have nothing to confess. Therefore,
there is no chance of a man who folds his arms and says: “I
don’t think God will punish sin; I am going to take the
risk.” There is no hope for a man until he sees that
he is under just condemnation for his sins and shortcomings.
God never forgives a sinner until he confesses.
JUSTIFYING
CHRIST.
The
next thing, he justifies Christ: “This Man hath done
nothing amiss.”
When
men are talking against Christ, they are a great way from becoming
Christians. Now he says, “He hath done nothing amiss.” There
was the world mocking him; but in the midst of it all, you
can hear that thief crying out:
“This
Man hath done nothing amiss.”
FAITH.
The
next step is faith.
Talk
about faith! I think this is about the most extraordinary case
of faith in the Bible. Abraham was the father of the faithful;
but God had him in training for twenty-five years. Moses was
a man of faith; but he saw the burning bush, and had other
evidences of God. Elijah had faith; but see what good reason
he had for it. God took care of him, and fed him in time of
famine. But here was a man who perhaps had never seen a miracle;
who had spent his life among criminals; whose friends were
thieves and outlaws; who was now in his dying agonies in the
presence of a crowd who where rejecting and reviling the Son
of God. His disciples, who had heard His wonderful words, and
witnessed His mighty works, had forsaken Him; and perhaps the
thief knew this. Peter had denied Him with oaths and cursing;
and perhaps this had been told the thief. Judas had betrayed
Him. He say no glittering crown upon His brow: only the crown
of thorns. He could see no sign of His kingdom. Where were
His subjects? And yet, nailed to the cross, racked with pain
in every nerve, overwhelmed with horror, his wicked soul in
a tempest of passion, this poor wretch managed to lay hold
on Christ and trust Him for swift salvation. The faith of this
thief,, how it flashes out amid the darkness of Calvary! It
is one of the most astounding instances of faith in the Bible!
When
I was a boy I was a poor speller. One day there came a word
to the boy at the head of the class which he could not spell,
and none of the class could spell it. I spelled it, by good
luck; and I went to from the foot of the class to the head.
So the thief on the cross passed by Abraham, Moses and Elijah,
and went to the head of the class. He said unto Jesus:
“Lord,
remember me when thou comest into Thy kingdom.”
Thank God
for such a faith! How refreshing it must have been to Christ
to have one own Him as Lord, and believe in His kingdom, at
that dark hour! How this thief’s heart goes out to the
Son of God! How glad he would be to fall on his knees at the
foot of the cross, pour out his prayer! But this he cannot
do. His hands and feet are nailed fast to the wood, but they
have not nailed his eyes and his tongue and his heart. He can
at least turn his head and look upon the Son of God, and his
breaking heart can go out in love to that One who was dying
for him and dying for you and me, and he can say:
“Lord,
remember me when Thou comest into Thy kingdom.”
WHAT
A CONFESSION
of Christ
that was! He called him “Lord.” A queer Lord! Nails
through His hands and feet, fastened to the cross. A strange
throne! Blood trickling down His face from the scars made by
the crown of thorns, but He was all the more “Lord” because
of this.
Sinner,
call Him “Lord” now. Take your place as a poor
condemned rebel, and cry out:
“Lord,
remember me!”
That
isn’t a very long prayer, but it will prevail. You don’t
have to add - “when Thou comest into Thy kingdom,” because
Christ is now at His Father’s right hand. Three words;
a chain of three golden links that will bind the sinner to
his Lord.
Some
people think they must have a form of prayer, a prayer-book,
perhaps, if they are going to address the Throne of Grace properly;
but what could that poor fellow do with a prayer-book up there,
hanging on the cross, with both hands nailed fast? Suppose
it had been necessary for some priest or minister to pray for
him, what could he do? Nobody is there to pray for him, and
yet he is going to die in a few hours. He is out of reach of
help from man, but God has laid help upon One who is mighty,
and that One is close at hand. He prayed out of the heart.
His prayer was short, but it bought the blessing. It came to
the point: “Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy
kingdom.” He asked the Lord to give him right there and
then, what he wanted.
THE
ANSWERED PRAYER
Now
consider the answer to his prayer. He got more than he asked,
just as every one does who asks in faith. He only asked Christ
to “remember” him but Christ answered:
“To-day
shalt thou be with me in Paradise!”
Immediate
blessing—promise of fellowship—eternal rest; this
is the way Christ answered his prayer.
DARKNESS.
And
now darkness falls upon the earth. The sun hides itself. Worse
than all, the Father hides His face from His Son. What else
is the meaning of that bitter cry:
“My
God! My God! Why hast Thou forsaken me?”
Ah!
It had been written, “Cursed is every one that hangeth
on a tree.” Jesus was made a curse for us. God cannot
look upon sin: and so when even His own Son was bearing our
sins His body, God could not look upon Him.
I
think this is what bore heaviest upon the Savior’s heart
in the garden when He prayed:
“If
it be possible, let this cup pass from me.”
He
could bear the unfaithfulness of His friends, the spite of
his enemies, the pain of His crucifixion, and the shadow of
death; He could bear all these; but when it came to the hiding
of his Father’s face, that seemed almost too much for
even the Son of God to bear. But even this He endured for our
sins; and now the face of God is turned back to us whose sins
had turned it away, and looking upon Jesus, the sinless One,
He sees us in Him.
In
the midst of all His agony, how sweet it must have been to
Christ to hear that poor thief confessing Him!
He
likes to have men confess Him. Don’t you remember His
asking Peter, “Whom do men say that I am?” and
Peter answered, “Some people say you are Moses, some
people say you are Elias, and some people say you are one of
the old Prophets, “He asked again, “But, Peter,
whom do you say I am?”
When Peter
said, “Thou art the Son of God.” Jesus blessed
him for that confession. And now the thief confesses Him—confesses
Him in the darkness. Perhaps it is so dark he cannot see Him
any longer; but he feels that He is there beside him. Christ
wants us to confess Him in the dark as well as in the light;
when it is hard as well as when it is easy. For He was not
ashamed of us, but bore our sins and carried our sorrows, even
unto death.
When
a prominent man dies, we are anxious to get his last words
and acts.
THE
LAST ACT OF THE SON OF GOD
was to save
a sinner. That was a part of the glory of His death. He commenced
his ministry by saving sinners, and ended it by saving this
poor thief. “Shall the prey be taken from the mighty,
or the lawful captive delivered? But thus saith the Lord: Even
the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and the
prey of the
terrible shall be delivered.” He took this captive from
the jaws of death. He was on the borders of hell, and Christ
snatched him away.
No
doubt Satan was saying to himself: “I shall have the
soul of that thief pretty soon. He belongs to me. He has been
mine all these years.”
But
in his last hours the poor wretch cried out to the Lord, and
He snapped the fetters that bound his soul, and set him a liberty.
He threw him a passport into heaven. I can imagine, as the
soldier drove his spear into our Savior’s Side, there
came flashing into the mind of the thief the words of the prophet
Zechariah:
“In
that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David,
and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and uncleanness.”
You
see, in the conversion of this thief, that
SALVATION
IS DISTINCT AND SEPARATE FROM WORKS.
Some people
tell us we have to work to be saved. What has the man who believes
that to say about the salvation of this thief? How could he
work, when he was nailed to the cross?
He
took the Lord at His word, and believed. It is with the heart
men believe, not with their hands or feet. All that is necessary
for a man to be saved is to believe with his heart. This thief
made a good confession. If he had been a Christian fifty years,
he could not have done Christ more service there than he did.
He confessed Him before the world; and two thousand years that
confession has been told. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John all
recorded it. They felt it so important that they thought we
should have it.
See
how
SALVATION
IS SEPARATE AND DISTINCT FROM ALL ORINANCES
--not but
that ordinances are right in their place.
Many
people think it is impossible for any one to get into the kingdom
of God if he is not baptized into it. I know people who where
greatly exercised because little children died unbaptized.
I have seen them carry the children through the streets because
some pastor could not come. I don’t want you to think
I am talking against ordinances. Baptism is right in its place;
but when you put it in the place of salvation, you put a snare
in the way. You cannot baptize men into the kingdom of God.
The last conversion before Christ perished on the Cross ought
to forever settle that question. If you tell me a man cannot
get into Paradise without being baptized, I answer, This thief
was not baptized. If he had wanted to be baptized, I don’t
believe he could have found a man to baptize him.
I
have known people who had sick relatives, and because they
could not get a minister to come to their house and administer
the sacrament, they were distressed and troubled. Now, I am
not saying anything against the ordinance by which we commemorate
the death of our Lord, and remember his return. God Forbid!
But let me say that it is not necessary for salvation. I might
die and be lost before I could get to Thank God, salvation
is within my reach always, and I have to wait for no minister.
This poor thief certainly never partook of the sacrament. Was
there a man on that hill that would have had faith to believe
he was saved? Would any church to-day have received him into
membership? He had not to wait for this. The moment he asked
life, our Savior gave it.
Baptism
is one thing; the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper is another
thing; and salvation through Christ is quite another thing.
If we have been saved through Christ, let us confess Him by
baptism, let us go to His table, and do whatever else He bids.
But let us not make stumbling-blocks out of these things.
That
is what I call sudden conversion---men calling on God for salvation
and getting it. You certainly won’t get it unless you
call for it, and unless you take it when He offers it to you.
If you want Christ to remember you—to save you—call
upon Him.
TWO
SIDES.
The
cross of Christ divides all mankind. There are only two sides,
those for Christ, and those against Him. Think of the two thieves;
from the side of Christ on went down to death cursing God,
and the other went to glory.
What
a contrast! In the morning he is led out, a condemned criminal;
in the evening he is saved form his sins. In the morning he
is cursing; in the evening he is singing hallelujah with a
choir of angels. In the morning he is condemned by men as not
fit to live on earth; in the evening hi is reckoned good enough
for heaven. In the morning nailed to the cross; in the evening
in the Paradise of God, crowned with a crown he should wear
through all the ages. In the morning not an eye to pity; in
the evening washed and made clean in the blood of the Lamb.
In the morning in the society of thieves and outcasts; in the
evening Christ is not ashamed to walk arm-in arm with him down
the golden pavements of the eternal city.
The
thief was
THE
FIRST MAN TO ENTER PARADISE
after the
veil of the Temple was rent. If we could look up yonder, and
catch a glimpse of the throne, we would see the Father there,
and Jesus Christ at His right hand; and hard by we would see
that thief. He is there to-day. Two thousand years he has been
there, just because he cried in faith;
“Lord,
remember me when Thou comest into Thy kingdom.”
You
know Christ died a little while before the thief. I can imagine
that He wanted to hurry home to get a place ready for His new
friend, the first soul brought from the world He was dying
to redeem. The Lord loved him because he confessed Him in that
dark hour. It was a dark hour for many who reviled the Savior.
You have heard of the child who did not want to die and go
to heaven because he didn’t know anybody there. But the
thief would have one acquaintance. I can imagine how his soul
leaped within him when he saw the spear thrust into our Savior’s
side, and heard the cry:
“It
is finished!”
He
wanted to follow Christ. He was in a hurry to be gone, when
they came to break his legs. I can hear the Lord calling:
“Gabriel,
prepare a chariot. Make haste. There is a friend of mine hanging
on that cross. They are breaking his legs. He will soon be
ready to come. Make haste, and bring him to me?”
The
angel in the chariot swept down from heaven took the soul of
that penitent thief, and hastened back to glory. The gates
of the city swung wide open, and the angels shouted welcome
to this poor sinner who had been washed white in the blood
of the Lamb.
And
that, my friends, is just what Christ wants to do for you.
That is the business on which He came down from heaven. That
is why He died. And if He gave such a swift salvation to this
poor thief on the cross, surely He will give you the same if,
like the penitent thief, you repent, and confess, and trust
in the Savior.
Somebody says
that this man “was saved at the eleventh hour.” I
don’t know about that. It might have been the first hour
with him. Perhaps he never knew of Christ until he was led
out to die beside Him. This may have been the very first time
he ever had a chance to know the Son of God.
How many of
you gave your hearts to Christ the very first time He asked
them of you? Are you not farther along in the day than even
that poor thief?
Some years
ago, in one of the mining districts of England, a young man
attended one of our meetings and refused to go from the place
till he had found peace in the Savior. The next day he went
down into the pit, and the coal fell in upon him. When they
took him out he was broken and mangled, and had only two or
three minutes of life left in him. His friends gathered down
to catch his words, heard him say:
“It
was a good thing I settled it last night.”
Settle it
now, my friends, once for all. Begin now to confess your sins,
and pray the Lord to remember you. He will make you an heir
of His kingdom, if you will accept the gift of salvation. He
is just the same Savior the thief had. Will you not cry to
Him for mercy?