DAVID
DARE:

WHAT
CHRISTIANITY HAS TO OFFER
CONVERSION
OF THE EMERSONS
THE CROWN GATHERED early for the last meeting of the series.
The buzz of conversation indicated the intense interest.
Small groups in different parts of the hall were engaged in lively
discussion.
Lucile’s eyes were bright with excitement.
“I wonder if anything is going to happen,” she remarked to her
father.
“A great deal is going to happen, my dear, but not what you seem to
expect. There will be no
controversy tonight.”
“Why not, and what will happen?”
“There will be no controversy, because all important points of
controversy have been covered, and the subject tonight is too vital to all
of us for thoughtless interruptions.”
“But what will happen?” she persisted.
“I cannot be sure,” Mr. Emerson smiled as he observed her
earnestness, “but I expect decisions to be made that will affect the whole
life of many present.”
Lucile turned to face her father squarely, while George and Mrs.
Emerson watched in breathless interest.
A new seriousness was in Lucile’s voice as she asked:
“Have you made your decision, Dad?”
“Not yet, but I expect to do so.
I want to hear first what Christianity has to offer.
Have you decided?”
“Yes, I have, Dad. I
hope you don’t object.”
“You know I don’t. And
you George?” George merely
nodded his head solemnly in the affirmative.
“And you, wife?” Mrs.
Emerson, with an appealing look in her soft brown eyes, answered quietly,
firmly:
“Yes; I have always felt a yearning to be a Christian.”
Suddenly the hall was quiet, for the speaker and the chairman were
going to the platform. David
Dare, as he arose to speak, was received by a subdued but apparently
unanimous applause.
“What has Christianity to offer you?” he began,
“You have heard the very frank admissions of leading sceptics that
scepticism has literally nothing whatever except blank despair and
soul-terrifying loneliness for the unbeliever.
You have listened to the wistful yearnings uttered by these sceptics.
“You have seen how the Bible foretells, even down to the end of
time, the history of all the leading nations of the ancient world.
Not one of you present, nor anyone else for that matter, has been
able to deny that these prophecies were made centuries before their
fulfilment; and no one can account for them on natural grounds. It is admitted by all of you that no other book in the world
contains real prophecies. The
prophecies of the Bible present an unexplainable mystery to the unbeliever.
“Christianity has Christ to offer you.
This, according to the testimony of nearly a score of leading
infidels, whose words were read here, is the greatest fact in the history of
the world. They waxed more
enthusiastic over Him than over anyone else in the world.
And finally some leading unbelievers publicly renounced their
unbelief and admitted joyously their belief in Christ.
“Let us consider what Christ means to the human race, and
therefore, to you personally. As
the direct result of Jesus’ story of the good Samaritan, and His other
teachings of mercy, and His own personal tender care for the sick, the
horrible practice of exposure and neglect of the sick and maimed is now, and
has long been, a thing of the past. Care
of the sick or injured in hospitals and sanitariums — humane treatment of
disease — is now the rule wherever the Bible has gone.
“Are you a social reformer and interested in the poor?
Then consider how the poor have been uplifted by Him.
Slavery has been abolished by the teaching of Jesus that all men are
of one blood, and brothers in the sight of God.
Jesus offers comfort to the oppressed and boldly arraigns the selfish
rich. He calls not for the
palliatives of charity, but for fundamental social justice for
all.
“Do you believe that education is a fundamental in the progress of
humanity? Then observe that
knowledge has been promoted by Him. Jesus
sought to make men whole in mind as well as in body.
When Jesus said, ‘Go ye therefore, and teach all nations,’ He
released, He impelled, the greatest forces directed into the world.
There are almost infinite implications in that command.
It directs all Christians to scan the history of nations, so as to
apply the gospel to every phase or relationship of life.
“To this end, methods of navigation had to be studied and perfected
in order to reach all nations, as commanded.
This command has unloosed untold energies of men in every age,
sending them into the depths of the earth and upon wings above the clouds;
to the burning sands of the Sahara, to the chill and solitudes of the
arctic, and to the great unknown fastnesses of Tibet.
Why? — that the great commission may be carried out.
“The command to teach all nations meant that the teacher must know
more than the learner. So under
the missionary urge of Jesus’ words, more than nine hundred languages have
been reduced to writing, and all kinds of practical as well as religious
books have been translated into them by the missionary.
In fact, the geographical knowledge of our globe has come largely
from the missionaries who have ventured where the foot of the trader dared
not tread.
“The race from which Jesus came was the most hated and the most
persecuted in the world, and the most bigoted and provincial.
Yet He became the one universal Man, uniting Orient and Occident,
appealing equally to the East and to the West.
“Socrates taught for forty years, Plato for fifty, Aristotle for
forty, and Jesus for only three; yet those three years infinitely transcend
in influence the combined one hundred and thirty years that Socrates, Plato,
and Aristotle, the three greatest men of all antiquity, taught.
“Jesus was not a writer, yet He is quoted more than any writer in
history, and His words have winged their way to earth’s remotest bounds,
and have been translated into all languages and nearly all dialects.
“So far as we know, the Carpenter of Nazareth drew no architectural
plans, yet the world’s masterpieces of architecture have been reared in
His praise.
“He painted no pictures, yet the paintings of Raphael,
Michelangelo, and Leonardo da Vinci received their inspiration from Him.
“He wrote no poetry, but Dante, Milton, and scores of the world’s
greatest poets were inspired by Him.
“He composed no music, still Haydn, Handel, Beethoven, Bach, and
Mendelssohn reached their highest perfection of melody in the hymns,
symphonies, and oratorios written in His praise.
“Jesus was highly social, yet He possessed a reserve that
discouraged all familiarity. His
temperance never led to bigotry or austerity.
He was not conformed to the world, yet He was attentive to the needs
and sufferings of all men.
“Sceptics praise the clearness of His judgments, the depth of His
ethics, the justness of His decisions, the weight of His words, the
faultless beauty of His glorious life — its balance, its pure nobility,
and its serene power.
“You never exhaust Christ’s words.
They pass into proverbs, they are enacted into laws, they are
consolidated into doctrines, they become consolation for the poor and weary,
they grow into the life and transform the character; but they never pass
away, and after all the use made of them, they are still as fresh as when
first spoken.
“Christ’s words have the charm of antiquity with the freshness of
today, the simplicity of a child with the wisdom of God, the softness of
kisses from the lips of love, and the force of lightning rending mountains.
“The most determined criticism has not been able to dethrone Christ
as the incarnation of perfect holiness.
The waves of a tossing and restless sea of unbelief break at His
feet, but still He stands the supreme model, the inspiration of great deeds,
the rest for the weary, the fragrance of all the world, the one divine
flower in the garden of the world.
“Sceptics quite freely admit these things and attempt to account
for Christ on natural grounds. They
are very willing to admit Him to be the greatest man that ever lived, but at
any hint of actual deity in combination with His humanity, they arise in
determined protest and violent rejection of such a suggestion.
“However, by calling Christ a superman they have by no means solved
the difficulty. On the
contrary, they have created more difficulties than they had before.
For if Christ is not in a real sense God as well as man, He must be
the world’s greatest deceiver, for He claimed that worship was due Him,
that He was the light of the world, that He pre-existed, that He descended
from heaven, that He was equal with God (John 5:17, 18), ‘that all men
should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father.’
John 5:23; see also John 10:30, 38.
Jesus accepted the title of ‘the Lord thy God.’
Matthew 4:7; John 10:33.
When Thomas, the sceptic, after Jesus’ resurrection, called Him
‘my Lord and my God,’ Jesus did not rebuke him but on the contrary said
unto him, ‘Because thou hast seen Me, thou hast believed: blessed are they
that have not seen, and yet have believed.’ John 20:28, 29.
There is much more written, all to the same effect, in all four
Gospels.
“To have made the claims He made, if none of them were true, would
necessarily brand Him as the most unprincipled deceiver in all history.
Yet there is not a sceptic who will admit He was anything of the
kind. You all, equally with me,
believe that Christ was honest and earnest, for you know that a bad man
could not have taught such great truths as He taught, and that a good man
could not have deceived the people for whom He gave His life.
“Thus at once the greatest difficulty in the Bible and the
weightiest proof of its inspiration is Christ.
He stands out commandingly among all the sons of men, unapproached
and unapproachable. He walks
down the ages with the tread of a conqueror, while around Him shines a moral
splendour that has compelled even the most hostile criticism to bow the head
in hushed reverence. Upon the
impregnable Rock of Ages all criticisms are baffled and shattered.
Christ is, as He prophesied He would be, the spiritual magnet that
draws all men everywhere to Himself.
“From heaven, with the accumulated love of eternity in His heart,
came this King of kings, to be one with humanity, to suffer the vilest
mockery to endure the strongest temptations, to experience the lowest of
deaths, that you and I might know what love is, and might be restored to
Edenic innocence and happiness. Around
Him all truth clusters and revolves, as do the planets about the sun.
“And now will you pardon me a personal testimony?
“I was reared an infidel. My
parents and other immediate relatives were proud of their unbelief.
I was nourished on the vaunting sceptics of the ages.
“But I observed the futile amazement with which every sceptic from
Celsus to Wells stood around the cradle of the Christ.
I wondered why this helpless Babe was thrust into the world at a time
when Roman greed, Jewish hate, and Greek subtlety would combine to crush
Him. And yet this most powerful, devastating combination ever
known in history served only to advance the cause of the Infant who was born
in a stable — the purest human being born in the filthiest place in the
world.
“I marvelled that this poverty-stricken and uneducated plebeian,
who exercised no authority, commanded no army, held no office, received no
honours, wrote no books, and who died in early manhood the most contemptible
of deaths, a malefactor on a cross between two criminals — I marvelled
that His name is yet the most esteemed name on earth, even among the
sceptics themselves.
“No unbeliever could tell me why His words are as charged with
power today as they were nineteen hundred years ago.
Not could scoffers explain how those pierced hands pulled human
monsters with gnarled souls out of a hell of iniquity and overnight
transformed them into steadfast, glorious heroes who died in torturing
flames, that others might know the love and mighty power of the Christ who
had given peace to their souls.
“No agnostic could make clear why seemingly immortal empires pass
into oblivion, while the glory and power of the murdered Galilean are
gathering beauty and momentum with every attack and every age.
“Nor could any scoffer explain, as Jesus Himself so daringly
foretold, why by telephone, aeroplane, and radio, by rail, horse, and foot,
His words are piercing the densest forest, scaling the highest mountains,
crossing the deepest seas and the wildest deserts. making converts in every
nation, kindred, tongue, and people on earth.
“No doubter could tell me how this isolated Jew could utter words
at once so simple that a child can understand them and so deep that the
greatest thinkers cannot plumb their shining depths.
The life, the words, the character of this strange Man are the enigma
of history. Any naturalistic
explanation makes Him a more puzzling paradox, a fathomless mystery.
“But I learned that the paradox was plain and the mystery solved
when I accepted Him for what He claimed to be — the Son of God, come from
heaven a Saviour of men, but above all, my own Saviour.
I learned to thrill at the angel’s words: ‘Behold,
. . .unto you is born this day . . . a Saviour, which is
Christ the Lord.’ Now I have
learned a great truth that
“ ‘Though Christ a thousand times in Bethlehem be born,
If He’s not born in thee, thy soul is still forlorn.’
“This, then, is what Christianity has to offer:
A perfect Model, forgiveness of sins, rest to the soul, a Comforter,
a Companion, a Saviour, and then eternal life in communion with myriads of
perfect beings. Contrast this
with the bewailing despair, the glum hopelessness, the wearing heartache,
that is ever the lot of the unbeliever.
Which will you choose? The
choice is yours, the opportunity now. You
have had weeks to weigh the evidence, to feel the thrill of joy in
contemplating the Christ. He
asks to enter your heart and bring His peace that follows His forgiveness of
sins.”
Then pausing a moment, his earnest eyes searching the faces of that
solemn audience, he said:
“Those who desire to abandon their unbelief and publicly proclaim
their acceptance of Jesus as the divine Son of God, their Saviour from sin;
those who were formerly sceptics and who desire to be known henceforth as
Christians, followers of the Christ, please stand.”
More than a hundred rose instantly to their feet.
David Dare’s eyes turned instinctively to the section where the
Emerson family usually sat. His
eyes lighted with pleasure when he saw all four of the Emersons standing.
“Mr. Emerson,” he
said, “I am happy to see you and your family give this testimony.
Will it embarrass you to tell the audience briefly why you have taken
this stand?”
“I shall be only too glad to do so.”
Mr. Emerson’s voice was clear, and thrilled with joy as he spoke.
“While you have been carrying on these lectures, I have been
reading the Bible through. Many
things I thought the Bible said, I found it did not teach at all, and many
cavils I thought objections, I found vanished before a candid study. Then when I read the New Testament, I found in Jesus peace
and contentment for the first time in my life.
The terrifying feeling that I was alone in a vast universe, left to
grope my way in an infinitude, gave way to one of perfect trust when I
grasped the hand of Jesus, the One who created all these things.
“The knowledge that my wrongs, my mistakes, my sins, no matter what
they are, have been forgiven, is the most wonderful thrill in all the world.
The dread with which I looked forward to my remaining years has
turned to a fountain of joy and praise to the Jesus for whom I have always
had a high regard, but whom I now trust as my own Friend and Saviour.”
David Dare then asked all who were standing to come forward to meet
him and make arrangements for uniting with the church, so that they might
have a part in the organized work of giving to all the world “this gospel
of the kingdom.” Among the
first to reach him were Mr. Emerson; Mrs. Emerson, in quiet content;
George, in whose soul had been born a new ambition to serve; and
Lucile, the once pert, thoughtless girl, now chastened with a new beauty of
soul.

This
Book is Published
with
the hope that it will turn the heart of the
reader
to full belief in the Sacred Scripture.
It
has
received more unsolicited commendation than
any
other book the publishers have ever issued.
If
it has been an inspiration to you, we hope that
you
will join in its circulation.

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