The Warriors by Anna Robertson Brown Lindsay
page 86 of 165 (52%)
page 86 of 165 (52%)
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Or again, he may have had a worried and troubled week, full of personal
anxiety and sorrow. He has not had full time to study--he feels quite unprepared, and enters the pulpit with a halting step, and a choking fear of failure at his heart. In a moment, the world changes. Something imperceptible, but sweet and comforting, steals over him,--an uplifting atmosphere of attention, sympathy, affection. He begins to speak, very quietly at first, with quite an effort. But the congregation leads him on, to deeper thoughts, to nobler words, to modulations of voice that carry him quite beyond himself. His voice rises, and every syllable is firm and musical. His language springs from some far centre of inspiration. He is conscious of superb power, and as sentence after sentence falls from his lips----sentences that amaze himself more than any other----he enters into the supreme height of joy, that of being a spiritual messenger to the hearts of longing men and women. He and they together talk of God. This sympathetic atmosphere makes great preachers and great men. In return, there flows from a pastor toward his people a love that few can know or understand. 2. His rule is also over spiritual enthusiasm. What is a revival? We confound it with a local excitement, a community-sensation of an hysterical and passing type--with sensational disturbances, falling exercises, shouts, weeping, and the like. A revival is something far different. A revival is an awakening of the community heart and mind. It is a quickening of dead, backsliding, or inattentive souls. Man as an individual is quite a different person from the same man in a crowd. One is himself alone; the other is himself, plus the influence of |
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