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        <title>Life of Lucius B. Compton, The Mountain Evangelist; or, From the      
           Depths of Sin to the Heights of Holiness: Electronic
Edition.</title>
        <author>Compton, Lucius Bunyan, 1875-1948</author>
        <funder>Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital
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        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, </pubPlace>
        <date>1997.</date>
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    <front>
      <div1 type="cover image">
        <p>
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            <p>[Cover Image]</p>
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      </div1>
      <div1 type="frontispiece image">
        <p>
          <figure id="frontis" entity="compfp">
            <p>[Frontispiece Image]<lb/>Your little borther seeking the lost.<lb/>LUCIUS B. COMPTON.<lb/>“Studying to show myself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”—2 Time. ii, 15.</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <div1 type="title page image">
        <p>
          <figure id="title" entity="comptp">
            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
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      </div1>
      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">LIFE OF  <emph rend="bold">LUCIUS B. COMPTON</emph><lb/>The Mountain Evangelist;</titlePart>
          <titlePart type="subtitle">OR,<lb/>From the Depths of Sin to the Heights of Holiness.</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <docAuthor>BY HIMSELF</docAuthor>
        <docImprint><publisher>OFFICE OF GOD'S REVIVALIST,</publisher>
<pubPlace>Mount of Blessings,              CINCINNATI, OHIO.</pubPlace></docImprint>
        <titlePart type="verso">COPYRIGHT, 1903,<lb/>
BY GOD'S REVIVALIST OFFICE</titlePart>
      </titlePage>
      <div1 type="illustration">
        <p>
          <figure id="ill1" entity="comp1">
            <p>SISTER COMPTON.</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <div1 type="dedication">
        <head>DEDICATORY.</head>
        <p>TO SARA ETTA COMPTON,</p>
        <p>the beloved wife, whose holy influence and godly example
has ever been the greatest earthly inspiration of my life;
and who, through poverty, distresses, and fiery trials, has
never shrunk from her duty, but has ever trustingly said,
“Thy will be done, O Lord;” and to the memory of</p>
        <p>MARIETTA COMPTON,</p>
        <p>our only daughter, the little rosebud that bloomed in our
home for a short season, then faded away from our
presence, to bloom with brighter luster in the gardens of
the skies,</p>
        <p> IS THIS BOOK LOVINGLY DEDICATED.</p>
      </div1>
      <pb id="compton5" n="5"/>
      <div1 type="toc">
        <head>CONTENTS.</head>
        <list type="simple">
          <item>CHAPTER I. BIRTH AND CHILDHOOD . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton11">11</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER II. BACKSLIDING . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton16">16</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER III. IN SATAN'S CLUTCHES . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton21">21</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER IV. THE PRODIGAL'S RETURN . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton28">28</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER V. STREET PREACHING AND OTHER 
  EXPERIENCES . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton36">36</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VI. FIRST EVANGELISTIC TOUR . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton43">43</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VII. SANCTIFICATION . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton49">49</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VIII. BACK TO WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton56">56</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER IX. EXPERIENCES CONTINUED . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton65">65</ref></item>
          <pb id="compton6" n="6"/>
          <item>CHAPTER X. DEATH OF LITTLE MARIETTA . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton72">72</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XI. LESSONS FOR THE SANCTIFIED AND OTHERS
  TO LEARN . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton75">75</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XII. SECRET SOCIETIES . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton85">85</ref></item>
          <item>A SERMON . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="compton90">90</ref></item>
        </list>
      </div1>
      <pb id="compton7" n="7"/>
      <div1 type="introduction">
        <head>INTRODUCTION.</head>
        <p>IT is with no small amount of pleasure that I comply
with the request of my precious friend, brother, and
co-laborer in the evangelistic field to write a few
introductory lines to this valuable biography of his life.</p>
        <p>Brother Compton has written this sketch of his life in
acquiescence to the earnest solicitation of his many
friends and spiritual children, who desire such a biography
<hi rend="italics">as this volume affords</hi> of the life of the one who led
them to God.</p>
        <p>I am aware, owing to the natural distaste for anything
eulogistic that characterizes our brother, that some things I
shall say will not seem palatable to him; but when I say
that my object is alone to state the plain facts, and thus
more largely glorify the blessed Christ who has made him
what he is, I know that he will allow his friend to speak
candidly.</p>
        <p>In the providence of God it became my good fortune,
when a young man just out of my teens, to win the love
and confidence of this man of God.  The call of the Lord
had been ringing through my soul until it had become
imperative that I should launch out into the evangelistic
field and spend all my energies for God and souls.  The
field looked so large, and the boy so small, that I needed
<pb id="compton8" n="8"/>
just such an offer as an experienced warrior like the
subject of this sketch gave me.  Consequently we
“harnessed double,” and bade farewell to my own
Northern clime, and plunged into the North Carolina
mountains.  Here God, through the example and
companionship of Brother Compton, taught me lessons of
endurance, boldness, humility, and contentment under all
circumstances, favorable or otherwise, and mostly the
latter, which have largely determined what present
usefulness I may possess.</p>
        <p>Evangelist Lucius B. Compton is pre-eminently the
leading exponent of red-hot Bible holiness in the
mountains of Western North Carolina, and is such a
rebuke to the dead ecclesiasticism so prevalent in that
country, that he is hated and dreaded by such more than
any other man.  On the other hand, he is loved and
reverenced by all who are willing to pay the price of
renouncing all worldliness and go all the way with God.</p>
        <p>Brother Compton is, in the fullest sense, a miracle of
Grace.  No one realizes this more fully than himself; hence
he always gives God all the glory for every victory.
During his youthful years he was a cripple, hobbling about
on crutches, so tongue-tied that he could scarcely be
understood, and so void of learning that at the age of
twenty he could scarcely spell out the simplest sentences;
to-day, but eight years later, he is one of the clearest, most
fluent of speakers, a deep Bible student, a leader of a
great work in his home State, and a soul-winner whom
God has honored with hundreds and hundreds of spiritual
children.</p>
        <pb id="compton9" n="9"/>
        <p>The old-time power of God attends his preaching.  By
old-time power I mean the demonstration of the Spirit
which made the preaching of early Methodism and
Quakerism peculiar and unusual, when men and women
would fall under the power of God and lie as dead for
hours, then come through with a glorious, soul-thrilling
shout of victory.  I have seen Brother Compton preach
with such glory of heaven upon his face, and with words
so freighted with the unction of the Spirit, that many of the
saints would leap to their feet and run about the house in
holy joy, until soon religious pandemonium would make
further preaching impossible or impracticable, and an altar
call would be the result before the sermon was over half
completed.</p>
        <p>I believe that thousands will rejoice with me over the
publication of this book.  Like the preaching of this man,
his book is written with no uncertain sound.  We have
read many books which were supposed to be clear,
comprehensive, and instructive epistles of the second
grace of entire sanctification, only to find that often they
were but a compromise from which one could get little, or
nothing, substantial and convincing.</p>
        <p>I humbly pray that a copy of this book may fall into the
hands of tens of thousands of those who are wandering
along through the brambles and briers of sin, and lead
them into the green pastures of the Lord; that it may
also fall into the hands of those who have spent many
years battling with their indwelling foe, the Old Man of
sin, and lead them across the Jordan of full consecration
into
<pb id="compton10" n="10"/>
the bright, fruitful Canaan land of entire sanctification.  Let the
holy people of all lands pray that the God of all grace, who has
made the subject of this book what he is, may keep him in the
dust of humility, and uncompromisingly on a stretch for more of
the simplicity, unction, and power with which he is now indued.</p>
        <closer><salute>Yours for Bible Holiness,</salute>
                                                            <signed><name>JOHN C. PATTY.</name></signed></closer>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <body>
      <pb id="compton11" n="11"/>
      <div1 type="body">
        <head>LUCIUS B. COMPTON<lb/>THE MOUNTAIN EVANGELIST.</head>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER I.</head>
          <head>BIRTH AND CHILDHOOD.</head>
          <p>I WAS born April 21, 1875, in a one-roomed log-cabin, in
Haywood County, in the mountains of Western North
Carolina.  My father was a mountain preacher, and very poor,
with a large family to provide for, so my earliest recollections
are of poverty and want.</p>
          <p>At the age of five years I became a sufferer with the white
swelling, which was located in my left knee.  The doctors said I
was destined to be a cripple the rest of my life.  Besides this
painful affliction, I had another in many respects equally
annoying.  This was such a stammering tongue that I had great
difficulty in speaking my own name.  On account of these
afflictions, and school facilities very poor, I was deprived of an
early education, which in many ways has been a deep regret of
later years.  Since I was the youngest of the family, and a cripple,
I was humored in everything, and had my own way  -  a fact
which made me a spoiled boy from the beginning.  Let me say to
parents, out of my own experience, that if you have a sickly or
invalid child, teach him that he must obey as well as the rest of
the children, and in later years, should health be restored, he will
thank you for your early discipline.</p>
          <pb id="compton12" n="12"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>CONVICTION.</head>
            <p>My parents enjoyed good, old-fashioned religion  -  the kind
which took the Bible at its word, and believed it without any
“ifs,” “ands,” or “buts.”  They were content to believe it without
any modern “fixing up.”  Consequently they taught us children
that there was a hell which was hot, everlasting, and
unquenchable.  They told us that people who did not repent of
their sins would spend eternity there.  How well I remember the
hellscare this intelligence put upon me when but a child.
Although many years have passed since then, I to-day have as
great horror of it as ever.  God grant it may never leave me till I
hear His “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”  One day,
while in the yard making mother a duck-coop, without any
apparent cause for it, I was suddenly seized with such an
intense conviction of sin that all my young life came before me
in a flash.  How dark it looked!  Sin, black and dismal, seemed to
blot every page of my memory.  I saw the shortness of time and
the length of eternity.  I quickly threw down the hammer I was
using, and hobbled into the house to mother's side, where in
fear I clung to her.  I wanted to tell her just how I felt; but the
devil closed my lips, and I could not.  Although I did not yield
to those convictions that morning by mother's duck-coop, still I
never could get rid of the impressions there received.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>SKEPTIC.</head>
            <p>I always loved preachers, but many of them nearly made a
skeptic of me.  It was in this way: I always attended the
preaching services with my parents.  Often have I heard sermons
that melted my heart, and it seemed to me that the preacher was
an angel dropped into the
<pb id="compton13" n="13"/>
pulpit from the skies.  My father sometimes entertained the
preachers, so they would go home with us for dinner, when they
would often begin to tell jokes at the table about the dinner
which some one set before them.  After dinner we children
would follow them out under a shade-tree, and, through puffs
of tobacco-smoke and squirts of the filthy quid, hear them tell
smutty tales.  In the forenoon in the pulpit I heard them tell of the
Spirit of Christ that dwelt in them; in the afternoon their own
deportment forced me to believe it was the spirit of the evil one
that dwelt there.  I have often been at the village stores and
heard ministers and deacons of the Church tell such smutty and
indecent stories that any moral man should blush to hear.  To
think that on service days such men would take the stand and
point sinners to Christ, the way of salvation, sickened me of the
whole thing.  I often complained of my knee paining me just for
excuse to stay away from preaching.  O, my brother ministers,
may God help us to know that “out of the abundance of the
heart the mouth speaketh.”</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>CONVERSION.</head>
            <p>At twelve years of age I attended a meeting in the Methodist
church of Clyde, North Carolina, conducted by a spiritual man.
My conviction for sin became such a burden, making life so
unbearably miserable, that I yielded to the Holy Ghost, and went
to the altar.  I tried to pray, but could not.  I was fearful of what
my young friends would think of me; so I left the altar, and my
condition grew worse and worse, and I felt forever doomed to
hell. When I got home my parents encouraged me to go on till I
received the evidence that I was accepted of Christ.  The next
night I went to the meeting, and the text of the sermon I have
never forgotten: “Because I
<pb id="compton14" n="14"/>
have called, and you refused; I have stretched out my
hand, and no man regarded; but ye have set at nought all
my counsel, and would none of my reproof: I also will
laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear
cometh....  Then shall they call upon me, but I will not
answer; they shall seek me early, but they shall not find
me.”  O how that message went to my heart!  I got to the
place where I cared to talk to no one.  I felt that, without
exception, I was the meanest boy in the country.  Many
times I resorted to the woods, and, hidden amid the
underbrush and leaves, poured out my heart to God.  One
morning I came to the place where I fully realized it must
be settled.  All had left the Church except mother and a
few friends.  Then it seemed that all hope was gone and I
was eternally lost, when, suddenly, the glorious sunlight of
heaven flooded my soul.  O the brightness and beauty of
everything!  Mother never did look so sweet to me as then,
and the friends whom I had known for years, seemed to
have changed.  Paul tells the secret of all this phenomenon
where he says: “Therefore if any man be in Christ Jesus,
he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold,
all things are become new.”  When I got home the little
chink and daubed log-cabin looked like a mansion.  Did I
fear to tell what God had done for me?  No; you could not
keep me from telling it.  After years of experience in God's
work of saving souls, there is a doubt in my mind about
people who claim to get saved and do not tell it at home
and everywhere and every time they have opportunity.
God gave me a passion for souls.  I would go out in the
congregation and exhort sinners to come to Jesus.  When I
met sinners on the road I would stop them and tell them
about the wonderful Savior I had found, and urge them to
seek Him.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="compton15" n="15"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>A BAPTIST.</head>
            <p>I joined the Baptist Church at Clyde, North Carolina,
and, with about twenty-five others, was baptized.  We
organized a young men's prayer-meeting, which was
largely attended, and the power of God was with us.  The
prayer-meeting was such an attraction to me that it often
took special grace for me to wait till time for it to begin.
How different from the condition of the vast majority of
professing Christians of these days, when it is almost
impossible to get them to prayer-meeting without the
special inducement of a program, or social hour, or some
other hilarious Church spree after it.  God have pity!  I was
sometimes selected to lead these meetings, and, although
but twelve years old, father would have me conduct the
prayer service at the family altar.  In all my efforts for
good, God signally blessed, and my heart abounded
continually in His love.  Precious days to my memory!</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>CALL TO THE MINISTRY.</head>
            <p>During these days, when I spent much time alone
meditating upon the things of God, I received decided
convictions of His calling me to His exclusive work.  I
realized how ignorant I was in school-learning, for,
although twelve years old, I had never spent over six
months in school.  I hungered to know God's Word, and I
could not learn it until I could learn to read it.  My father
would often read Scripture to me, and I would commit it to
memory, and, with a passion to tell others what I had
found, I would conduct cottage prayer-meetings, and thus
use these Scriptures I had stored away in my memory.
God's smile and seal rested upon all my young efforts for
His glory.  God did exceeding abundantly above all I asked
or even thought.  Glory to His name!</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton16" n="16"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER II.</head>
          <head>BACKSLIDING.</head>
          <p>SOME months after the preceding experiences my
father one day asked me to do an errand for him, and for
some reason I failed to do it.  He corrected me for my
disobedience, and, spontaneously and to my surprise, a
feeling of resentment came into my heart.  God knows I
did not want it there; but I could n't help it.  I hastened to
the woods, and went to prayer over that which I had done.
I struggled with an inward foe so long that my parents
grew uneasy about what had become of me.  However, I
gained the victory, and God gave me grace to confess my
wrong to father, and, with the confession, my joy was
restored.  This was the first I ever realized that there was
carnality in my heart.  I have since learned its name <hi rend="italics">to be
inbred sin</hi>.  O, had there been some one then to tell me
that there was power in Jesus' blood to take it out just as I
had learned there was power in His blood to pardon a lost
sinner!  But no one seemed to know about any such work
of grace.  They told me that my trouble was the flesh, and
as long as I lived I could expect fearful battles with it.
Thank God, I have since found it to be carnality, the
enemy of my soul, and that, through faith in Jesus, this foe
can be forever eliminated from the believer's heart,
resulting in constant victory over the world, the flesh, and
the devil!</p>
          <p>By this time, twelve months from the date of my
conversion, the whole community was spiritually dead, 
<pb id="compton17" n="17"/>
and the devil began his work on me.  Being but a lad, with
little spiritual help, and in constant battle with the carnal
mind, I became discouraged.  I resorted to the pine
thickets for hours, wondering what was to become of my
poor soul.  I could not endure the thought of going back to
the world, and to continue in this lukewarm condition I
would not.  My young companions who had been saved in
the meeting a year previous were all backslidden and
living in open sin.  Satan whispered in my ear, saying:
“You are but a boy of thirteen; what 's the use of your
separating yourself from the boys of your community?
You are more religious than the old folks.”  So the devil got
my eyes off of Christ and upon the old folks of the town.
They had let the prayer-meeting go down, and no longer
encouraged the young converts.  I have often gone to
prayer-meeting, and been the only person there.  I have
stood on the church platform waiting for some one to
open the door.  No one would come, and I would return
home crying.</p>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>CHURCH FROLICS.</head>
            <p>The officers of the Churches would have candy stews,
parties, and occasionally a dance at their homes, and the
preachers would allow their children to attend.  I
remember distinctly that about the first condemnation that
came upon me was when I attended one of the Church
fandangoes.  It was a candy stew for the young folks of
the community, given at the home of Brother W.  The
preacher's children called at our home to invite brother
Tim and me to go with them.  Father never favored having
his children go to such places; but those boys begged so
hard that mother consented, saying, “Brother W. is a
good man, and it is at his home.”  My first impression
was not to go, because I felt in my heart that it was not
<pb id="compton18" n="18"/>
the place for a true Christian.  Again the devil got the victory,
and I went.  I found the old folks in the kitchen stewing candy,
and the young people in another room having a “big” time to
the tune of a violin.  Immediately upon entering the room I felt
condemned.  Their conversation and actions were anything but
those of Christians.  I did not stay, but hastened home, and
spent a sleepless night.  I would n't go to Sunday-school the
next Sunday for fear I would be called on to pray.  Some would
tell me that candy-pullings were right, but I knew in my heart
that God's people should not participate in worldly frolics.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>CHRIST GRIEVED AWAY.</head>
            <p>O the loneliness of those days!  I wept and prayed, and
wandered over the hills and through the valleys, seeking
something to satisfy my poor broken heart.  I went to the pastor,
and asked him to remove my name from the Church roll.  Very
reluctantly he was persuaded to do so.  I was now about
fourteen years old; and completely backslidden.  No need to
preach to me the impossibility of backsliding and losing one's
soul after once being truly born of God.  I knew that I was lost,
that God had withdrawn His Spirit from me, and the Scripture
was fulfilled in my experience which says: “But the unclean
spirit, when he is gone out of the man, passeth through
waterless places, seeking rest and findeth it not.  Then he saith, I
will return into my house whence I came out; and when he is
come he findeth it empty, swept and garnished.  Then goeth he
and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than
himself, and they enter in and dwell there: and the last state of
that man becometh worse than the first.”  Yes, with the last
clause of this Scripture I could say that the last state of this boy
<pb id="compton19" n="19"/>
became worse than the first.  The devil again took up his abode
in my heart, and brought with him more wicked spirits than ever
influenced my life before.  “When the righteous turneth away
from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity and doeth
according to all the abominations that the wicked man doeth,
shall he live?  All his righteousness that he hath done shall not
be mentioned: in his trespass that he hath trespassed, and in his
sin that he hath sinned, in them shall he die.”  When one has
once tasted of the joys of salvation and turns away from the
Savior, seek as he may for something to satisfy, it can not be
found.  One of the most painful remembrances of those dreary
days to me now is, that they were so largely caused by the
worldly living of those who professed to be Christians  -  those
to whom we young people looked for guidance, comfort, and
example.  If in those months of endeavor to serve my Lord I had
had the sympathy, prayers, and godly example of the Church
that a true Church always gives, I do not believe I should ever
have wandered away from God.  O the dark, sinful, reckless
years I would have been saved from had I held fast to that early
profession of faith!  Thousands of preachers and professing
Christians, in hell, will hear the curses of those once converted,
taken into their Church, and allowed to starve to death for lack
of real gospel truth and living.  Awful will it be in the city of
endless night for them to look into the demoniac faces of scores
who are there because of their unfaithfulness.  Ministers who
preach art, science, nature, philosophy, literature, political
economy, etc., instead of Christ crucified, as is being almost
universally done to-day, and who substitute the learning of the
college for the power of the Holy Ghost, are greasing a plank
upon which millions are slipping into the bottomless pit yearly.
May God help us, brother
<pb id="compton20" n="20"/>
ministers, to obey the Divine injunction to “tarry in
Jerusalem until endued with power from on high!”  Then,
when the Holy Ghost falls upon you, as He did upon those
at Pentecost, sanctifying your hearts and filling you with
the Divine power and equipment for service, go forth as a
flame of fire for God and souls.  When you become a
flame of fire, you are a true exemplification of God's
definition of a preacher  -  “Who maketh his angels
spirits and his ministers a flame of fire.”</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton21" n="21"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER III.</head>
          <head>IN SATAN'S CLUTCHES.</head>
          <p>BY the time I had reached the age of fifteen my
crippled knee had become strong, and I was able to do as
heavy work as any boy of that age.  How swiftly I had
gone to the devil!  But fifteen and all love for father,
mother, brothers, sisters, home, God, Church, and all else
that was good, had evanesced!  I became so wild and
unruly that my parents could not control me.  I was a
notoriously bad boy of the town.  If there was any trouble
on hand, who did n't know that Luch Compton was in it?
Nothing suited me like a scrap with the neighbor boys.  Try
as they would, my parents could not control or check me
in my reckless career; so one day I ran away from home,
not knowing or caring whether I ever returned.</p>
          <p>At this time George Vanderbilt was employing
hundreds of men upon his beautiful mansion and estate
about five miles from Asheville, North Carolina.  So thither
I went, and procured a position, thus being thrown in
company with all classes of men.  I believe many of those
men were about as wicked as the devil could make them.
Although I was about the youngest employee on the
works I quickly acquired many of the evil habits of the
older men, and was soon noted for my wild and sinful
nature.  I became addicted to drink and other vices too vile
to mention.  I would not go to any kind of religious service,
and tried my best to make an infidel of myself.  I would
take sides against the Church, and sarcastically
<pb id="compton22" n="22"/>
tell all I knew against preachers and professing Christians.
I got good wages, and spent every dollar from one pay-
day to another.  At the age of seventeen I had every
indication of a hopeless case.  My parents were broken-
hearted over the ruin of their baby boy.  At one time my
mother was thought to be losing her mind over my
condition.  I would never write home because I had lost all
love for home.  I doubt not that it would have been a relief
to my parents to know I was dead, because they lived in
constant expectancy of hearing I had been killed or
murdered in some way.</p>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>HOME AGAIN.</head>
            <p>One Christmas-day I decided to go to my home, not to
see my people, but to have a spree with my crowd.  While
walking down one of the home streets I came face to
face with my dear old father.  I shall never forget the look
on his face, so sad and careworn, tears had filled his eyes,
and his emotions were so strong that he could not or did
not speak to me.  I knew father had done the best he could
to raise me right, and his presence filled me with a sense
of guilt  -  such an impression as I had not experienced for
many years.  This chance meeting with father made me
think seriously of my wayward life, and the sorrow I had
brought to the old folks at home.  A spark of the better
nature which still remained in my heart drew me to the old
home to see my mother.  As I write these lines I can, in
memory, see the expression of my mother's face.  She
threw her arms about my neck, and it seemed she would
never let me go.  Though vile and polluted with sin, I
realized that mother still loved her baby boy.  As long as I
remained, neither father nor mother could speak my name
without weeping.  The time came for me to return to
Asheville to my work, and
<pb id="compton23" n="23"/>
mother hurried about preparing dinner for me, as I was to
leave in the afternoon.  Neither father nor mother talked
much that morning; they both had heavy hearts.  I dreaded
a farewell scene, so I planned to slip away without saying
good-bye; but father kept his eyes on me, and when, after
dinner, with grip in hand, I started for the door, he placed
his hand upon me, and, with tears in his eyes, said: “My
son, you may never come back to see us old folks again,
so I want you to wait and let us have prayer with you.
You have broken our hearts by your wayward life, but we
will follow you with our prayers until you come back to
God or die in your condition.”  I have never forgotten those
moments of prayer mingled with sobs and tears.  Truly
God heard in behalf of His prodigal son, and answered
those petitions in His own time.  I left that humble log-
cabin home that afternoon with strange impressions upon
me; but once more back with the old crowd, I wore them
off, and continued in the path of sin.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>MY FUTURE WIFE.</head>
            <p>While in the employ of Vanderbilt I met with a young
lady who was attending school near by, and, after a
further acquaintance, she won my heart.  She was a truly
regenerated Christian and devoted to her Church.  Not
knowing anything of my past life, she accepted my
attentions, and on her account I began to attend Church
services and Sunday-school.  This young lady's piety made
a deep impression upon me for good.  I began to recall the
time when Jesus was so precious to my soul, and longed
for the same experience again.  The place where I worked
was controlled by wicked men, and my companions were
wicked; so, although my poor soul was hungry for God,
the devil made mountains of this fact to keep me away
from Jesus.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="compton24" n="24"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>A WANDERER.</head>
            <p>I became restless and dissatisfied with my situation,
and soon left it for parts unknown.  I wandered from one
State to another.  When I would stop at a place, I would
make resolutions to do better, and get into good company;
but in a short time I would be in the same kind of a crowd
I had left.  As water will find its level, so will a young
man find his when seeking a crowd of companions.  In spite
of all the good resolutions I made, the power of evil in
my heart broke them, and I could say with Paul, “Truly
his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto
death, or of obedience unto righteousness.”  All the
resolutions one can make, without the power of God in the
heart to carry them out, are of little avail.  Young man, if
you are trying to reform without Christ in your heart, let
me tell you that you are undertaking a job that the vast
majority of young men like you never finish.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>RAILROADING.</head>
            <p>I one day found myself in a Western town where railroad
work was being done, and I procured a position.  Like my
Vanderbilt fellow-workmen, these men were a very wicked
class.  I got into their deviltry, and found my heart
getting harder and harder, and less susceptible to the
truth of God each day.  I became so reckless I cared for
neither life nor death, and would scarcely have a thought
about eternal things, except when receiving a letter from
my parents or betrothed wife, and these epistles affected
me but little.  This condition continued for several
months, until the spring of 1893.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="compton25" n="25"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>STRANGE EXPERIENCE.</head>
            <p>At this time, about sundown one evening, I had a
remarkable experience.  Without any special inducement,
and unsought, a terrible load of conviction came upon me.
I tried to wear it off; but it became deeper and deeper,
until night had succeeded sundown, and I thought I would
surely be in hell before morning.  The visions of my mind
I can not describe.  I remembered the mercy of God, and
tried to pray, but I could not.  I retired to my bed, and
restlessly tossed about till daylight came, and with it
somewhat of an abatement of my intense fears.  Never
was the sunshine of the heavens more welcome to me than
that day.  I tried to appear as care-free as ever, but
no one knew the battle between heaven and hell that was
waging in my heart.  My position required my presence but
half the time, and I spent the remainder wandering across
the fields and through the woods.  I did not want to see
any one through the day, and I dreaded to see night coming.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>DREAMED OF JUDGMENT.</head>
            <p>I fell asleep one night, and dreamed that the trumpet
had sounded and the Judgment had come.  I saw all the
people of all nations standing before Christ.  But more
distinctly than all the others I could see my father, mother,
sister, and brothers standing on the right hand side with
Christ, their faces radiant with His glory.  My turn came
to be judged, and the name of Lucius Compton rang from
end to end of that vast judgment hall; but ere, with
trembling knees and pallid countenance, I could walk to
the judgment stand, my dear old mother, with face which,
in spite of its glory, bore evidence of untold grief and
<pb id="compton26" n="26"/>
agony, interposed herself between myself and the judgment
seat, and, weeping bitterly, cried, “O God, this is my
wayward baby boy; have mercy on him!”  In tones both stern
and kind the Judge replied, “I have been merciful for
years, but your boy trampled My mercy under his feet;”
and, turning to me, He said, “Lucius Compton, depart from
Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the
devil and his angels.”  With this I cast a last look at
the loved ones of my earthly days, and was being borne
swiftly to hell when the shrieks of the doomed and damned
awakened me suddenly from my dream to find myself crying
out to God for mercy.  I promised Him that night, if He
would keep me out of hell, I would live for Him.  I had
been very profane, so much so that I would use the most
fearful oaths and not be conscious of the fact until some,
even of my wicked companions, would tell me of it.  I don't
remember asking God to save my soul at this time, but to
take from me that awful habit of swearing; and, sure
enough, from that day to this I have never uttered an oath,
and have ever since had a horror of all blasphemy.  My
fellow-workmen noticed a change in me, and especially in
regard to cursing.  While I did not tell the boys my full
purpose of heart, I did tell them I was going to live
differently.  There were no Christians in the crew, and not
many who even had any respect for Christianity, so I had
no one in whom to confide.  God only knows what I carried
in my heart and mind those days.  I feared to go to sleep
at night without leaving a light burning in my room.  I
concluded to give up my position and return to my parents
in North Carolina, but my employer persuaded me to remain
longer.  I knew my only peace could be found in salvation,
and how I could get saved, and continue to cook for that
crew of men and keep saved, was more than
<pb id="compton27" n="27"/>
I could determine.  I one day asked a foreman if he
believed in religion, and he said he did, because his dear
old blind mother was a Christian.  This gave me boldness,
and I opened my heart to him.  He encouraged me, and said
he hoped some day to be a Christian himself.  Shortly after,
I gave up my position with a full determination to give my
heart to God.  I returned to North Carolina, and visited my
parents, and after a short time at home was married to
Miss Etta Butler, of Asheville, North Carolina, the young
lady before mentioned.  Although youthful marriages are
not always best, this one proved to be one of the most
fortunate events of my life.  My wife was a sincere
Christian girl, and the first night in our home she
erected the family altar, and, thank God, through her
unflinching devotion to duty it has never been done away.</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton28" n="28"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER IV.</head>
          <head>THE PRODIGAL'S RETURN.</head>
          <p>UP to the time just related I had not yielded myself
entirely to God, although I had greatly changed and had
given up my grosser sins.  I soon returned to my position
in Kentucky as a cook on the railroad.  I had no rest day
or night; the burden became so heavy I could not carry it
longer.  I again gave up my position, and told comrades and
all, “Good-bye to that kind of a life.”  Instead of returning
to my own home, I went to Cincinnati, Ohio.  I secured a
room, and set about in earnest to seek and find God.  During
the day I would roam over the city like one utterly forsaken,
and at night go up the stairs to my little room, and pray,
and sob, and cry.  I could hear the lonely strike of the
city clocks as they pealed out the hours of twelve, one,
two, and three.  Every hour seemed as long as a day.  An
occasional footstep on the street below only added to the
loneliness and distress of my poor broken heart.  I prayed
as best I could, but it seemed I could never find peace.
The black and gloomy six years of a wasted life came ever
before me, and as I now write of them I would give much
to forget them.</p>
          <p>I heard of a mission on Plum Street, and went down
one night to the service.  In that place I saw men and
women, and heard them tell how God had saved them from
drunkards, harlots, gamblers, wife deserters, and from
almost every kind of sinful life, and, although their
faces were physically marred by sin and debauchery, they
shone with the radiance of heaven.  I wanted such a 
<pb id="compton29" n="29"/>
salvation, and arose and told them so, and that I was a
poor mother's boy, far from home and far from God.
When I sat down one of the leaders sang   -  </p>
          <lg type="stanza">
            <l>“At home or abroad, in the alley or street,</l>
            <l>Wherever I chance in this wide world to meet</l>
            <l>A girl who is thoughtless, a boy that is wild,</l>
            <l>My heart echoes softly, ‘It is some mother's child.’</l>
            <l>And when I see those o'er whom long years have rolled,</l>
            <l>Whose hearts have been hardened, whose spirits are cold,</l>
            <l>Be it a woman all fallen, or man all defiled,</l>
            <l>A voice whispers sadly, ‘It is some mother's child.’</l>
            <l>No matter how deep he is sunken in sin;</l>
            <l>No matter how much he is shunned by his kin;</l>
            <l>No matter how foul is his fountain of joy;</l>
            <l>Tho' guilty and loathsome, he is some mother's boy.</l>
            <l>That head hath been pillowed on tenderest breast;</l>
            <l>That form hath been wept o'er, those lips have been pressed;</l>
            <l>That soul hath been prayed for in tones sweet and mild,</l>
            <l>For her sake deal gently with some mother's child.”</l>
          </lg>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>VICTORY.</head>
            <p>I was so touched by this precious song and the other
things bearing upon me that I, that night, settled it in
my heart that I was forever done with sin.  I was walking
down Main Street the next afternoon, talking to God, when
all at once heaven seemed to open, and part of it fell in my
soul.  What I did I do not know, for I was not responsible.
God had turned my spiritual darkness into day.  Though
dead in trespasses and sin, I had been quickened into life.
I found myself shouting praises to God on the busy
thoroughfare.  I rushed around to my place of business,
and wrote to my wife and parents telling what the dear
Lord had done for me.  I told my business partner that I
was saved.  I went to the mission
<pb id="compton30" n="30"/>
that night, and, although the devil tried to scare me by
telling me I was ignorant and tongue-tied, I arose, and,
with stammering tongue and trembling knees, told how
Jesus had saved my soul.  O how God blessed me when I
confessed His pardoning grace!  During the day I talked
Christ to all with whom I had opportunity, and at night I
could hardly wait till the mission service started, it was
such food to my soul that had been starving in the devil's
Egypt for six long years.</p>
            <p>At once God showed me that I could not continue to
keep my place of business open on Sunday.  My partner
was a worldly man, and God's plain word, “Be ye not
unequally yoked together with unbelievers,” rang in my
ears until I saw we must dissolve all business relations
as partners.  All my own and my wife's money was invested.
I should have been glad to sell my interest to my partner,
but I knew he had no ready money.  I could not remain in
partnership longer, so I just left money, business, and all,
and that is the last I ever had to do with it.  That morning
I stepped out with but seven dollars in my pocket, with
nothing in sight, and my wife away down in the mountains
of Western North Carolina, wanting to come to me.  I wrote
her a letter, saying I had lost all of our hard-earned
money, and she replied, “Let all go, but stay with Jesus,”
and those words were worth more to me than all the money I
had lost.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>HOUSEKEEPING.</head>
            <p>With the seven dollars I rented a room on the fifth
floor of a large tenement-house, bought for two dollars a
second-hand folding lounge to serve as a bed, a small
monkey stove for one dollar and a half, and a stewpan and
a chair.  I used a drygoods box for a table, and another
for a cupboard, and a tomato-can for a teapot.
<pb id="compton31" n="31"/>
My wife sent me a few dishes and some bed clothing, and
this constituted my household furnishings.  In a few days
the Lord opened the way for me to get work at just enough
wages to pay room-rent and procure a little food to eat.</p>
            <p>My parents let my wife have enough money to come to me,
and, I tell you, it was an awful test for me to take her
to that poorly-furnished little room after losing enough
of her own money to have had a nicely-furnished little
home.  When she came we knelt in prayer, and she thanked
God that we even had as good as it was, and said she
would rather have that little room with Jesus than a
nice home without Him.  It was a great blessing for me
to see that my wife was so well contented under such
unpleasant conditions.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>TRIALS OF FAITH.</head>
            <p>January and February of the winter of 1895 were very
severe months, characterized by heavy snows and hard
freezes, which made it a dreadful winter on the poor.
The Lord permitted us to go through some very severe
testings; but He blessedly sustained us through them all.</p>
            <p>As I have said, my wages were a mere pittance compared
to the amount requisite for comfortable living.  Often
the weather became so extremely rough that I could
scarcely work at all.  Many times, when the morning had
come, we could not see how we would get through the day,
and often we got through on but ten or fifteen cents.
Several of the families living in adjacent apartments
were sustained at the city's expense.  Wife and I agreed
that we would trust God, and tell our needs to none other,
and when it seemed that we could not possibly get through
the day, God would open the way for me to earn twenty-
five or fifty cents, and thus
<pb id="compton32" n="32"/>
our every need was supplied.  This winter, as students in
God's college of adversity, we were taught many beautiful
lessons on simple faith, which, in plentiful circumstances,
we would not have learned; so we rejoice to have had this
experience, which helped us into the deeper things of
God.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>FIRST GOSPEL LABORS.</head>
            <p>There were about fifty families living in the same
building with us, and the Lord laid it upon our hearts
to do missionary work among them.  I would go from room
to room, holding services with them, and God abundantly
blessed in this work.  Many of these families never
attended any kind of public worship, so the Word of God
touched their hearts, and souls were saved.  The devil
would often tempt me to give up trying to do any public
work for God by showing me my awkwardness and ignorance.
I truly was ignorant, so much so that often, when I
would get up to read the Scripture lesson, some one who
had a Bible would have to pronounce a great many words
for me, while the little children would sit about
laughing at the many mistakes I made, because most of
them could have done better themselves.</p>
            <p>The devil next got a false report out on me.  It was told
all through the house where I lived and had been laboring
for the Lord, that I was not married to my wife.  Some
would come to our room and ask my wife if we were really
married.  God overruled this, and defeated the devil,
and, very soon after, some one went to the janitor and
asked him to put us out of the house.  Their complaint was
that I sang and shouted so much they could not rest.  We
were compelled to quit holding prayer-meetings in the
other rooms, but we continued them in our own, and God
honored them.  Bless His name!</p>
            <pb id="compton33" n="33"/>
            <p>While living here, our little daughter Marietta was born.
Before my wife had recovered so as to help herself any, I
had spent the last cent, and there was no place in sight
to earn more.  Besides, there was no one to stay with wife
and baby while I searched for something to do.  With
anxious heart I stepped over to the lounge upon which my
dear ones lay, and asked wife what I should do.  She
cheerfully replied, “Let us pray.”  I shall never forget that
morning as I knelt there, and, with tears in my eyes, told
God that the last cent was gone, and no place to get more.
I told Him that I could n't leave wife and baby alone, and
the house-rent was due next day, so, divested of all human
aid, I simply trusted Him who said: “Be not anxious for your
life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet
for your body, what ye shall put on.  Is not the life more
than the food, and the body than the raiment?  Behold the
birds of the heaven, that they sow not, neither do they
reap, nor gather into barns; and your Heavenly Father
feedeth them.  Are not ye of much more value than they?
....But seek ye first his kingdom, and his righteousness;
and all these things shall be added unto you.”</p>
            <p>The next morning came, and wife was very weak and I
could not leave her.  My faith in God to help us some
way grew strong.  The devil tempted me hard; but I
walked the floor with Testament in hand, pleading the
promises.  While thus engaged, there was a knock at the
door, and the postman handed me a letter which read
about as follows:</p>
            <div4 type="letter">
              <p>“MR. COMPTON, -- <hi rend="italics">Dear Friend</hi>: I am impressed that you
are in need of some money.  If so, use these five
dollars; and if not, you can kindly return them.</p>
              <closer>
                <salute>“Yours, etc.”</salute>
              </closer>
            </div4>
            <pb id="compton34" n="34"/>
            <div4>
              <p>O, we had a glorious shout in our little room, praising
God for His direct answer to prayer!  I fell on my knees,
and restated my consecration to God, and gave our little
baby to Him and His service.  The Lord raised wife up
very quickly, and I got to work again.</p>
              <p>I procured work in an agency which took me from
house to house.  I would talk little business, but much
religion.  Sometimes I would take out my Testament and
talk an hour about my wonderful Savior.  Some days I
would not work two hours, but spend the day talking to
hungry hearts.  Although I knew almost nothing about book
learning, and had to spell my way through the New
Testament, I knew that in His own time God would let me
leave all and go into His work.  In the spring I was offered
a position on the railroad, working for the Pullman Palace
Car Company.  The wages were good, and I could have
my Sundays to work in the mission.  I asked the Lord to
help me do the work right, and told Him if I could not be
true to Him and hold the position I would give it up.  The
man beside whom I worked asked me if I ever swore.  I
told him, “No; I had been saved from awful profanity, and
now I prayed and gave thanks.”  He did not seem to think I
could keep true in such bad company.  I realized that the
men were watching me closely, and I prayed very
earnestly for God to give me power to be true to Him.  At
noon, while the others were playing cards and throwing
dice, I would spend the hour reading my Testament.  They
would try to get me to play with them, but I would invite
them to listen to what Jesus said in His Word.  They asked
me if I believed what that Book said.  I told them that I did
not only believe it, but expected to obey every word of it.
In a few weeks, instead of playing cards, the men would
gather around me and listen to the Word of God.  They learned
<pb id="compton35" n="35"/>
to respect me as a child of God, and I induced some of
them to go to prayer-meeting with me, where I would
testify how victoriously God was keeping me each day.
The sermons I preached each day among those men in
my Christian living resulted in much good.  God needs
preachers in the workshop, on the railroad, and on the
farm as truly as in the pulpit; and in many instances
those who are preaching Christ by their daily lives are
accomplishing more real, vital good than those behind
the pulpit, garbed in high collars, white neckties, and
long coats.</p>
            </div4>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton36" n="36"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER V.</head>
          <head>STREET PREACHING AND OTHER EXPERIENCES.</head>
          <p>I ONE day made the acquaintance of a man whom God
had saved from the very depths of sin.  He had served
time in the State prison and city workhouse.  When the
Lord saved him he returned to the wife whom he had
deserted eleven years before.  God miraculously taught
him to read the Bible, and made him a powerful street
preacher.  He invited me to attend a meeting he was to
hold on Sunday afternoon under the Court Street
Markethouse.  When I arrived Sunday afternoon, a large
crowd had gathered, and the brother opened the service
with songs and prayer; then, to my surprise, he announced
that there was present a young man from the mountains of
North Carolina who would address them.  I was greatly
embarrassed, but tremblingly stood before the people,
and in my humble way told them how Christ had saved me
from sin.  The Lord wonderfully blessed me in giving my
testimony, and people's hearts were touched.  A number
came forward, kneeled before God, and were blessedly
saved.</p>
          <p>This experience greatly encouraged me, and gave me
a love and burden for street-preaching which has never
left me.  The devil greatly tried me in this work.  On one
occasion I had an appointment to speak at this same place
on Sunday afternoon.  The day before, I had burst one of
my shoes across the toe so that the side of my foot was
exposed to view.  I had been telling the people how
<pb id="compton37" n="37"/>
wonderfully God was supplying all of my needs, and the
devil told me if I went out and preached with that shoe on
my foot, the people would laugh at me and say, “O yes;
look at his foot outside his shoe; that 's the way his Lord
takes care of him!”  I searched in vain for some excuse
to stay at home, but could find none.  I got some blacking
and daubed it over the shoe and sock; thinking that this
would look all right, and hurried to the street meeting.  Just
before I reached the place where I was to speak, I looked
down at my shoe, and, behold, in walking, the sock had
slipped from its former position, and part of the white
showed and also part of that daubed with blacking. I
turned to go back home, but decided that would never do.
I slipped into a large building and wept before God, and
told Him I would go and tell of His wonderful salvation if
I had to go barefoot.  With Christ's sweet presence in my
soul I went on, and God blessed me in helping me to
preach with greater liberty and power than ever before.
Precious souls knelt upon the street, and prayed through
to victory.  The Lord tested me Sunday, and because I
obeyed He gave me a new pair of shoes Monday.  All praise
to Him!</p>
          <p>Another severe testing came.  The weather turned extremely
cold, and the snow fell heavily.  Hundreds of the city's
poor were suffering, and there seemed to be five men for
every job of work.  I searched far and near for work, but
could find none.  The morning came when wife and little
Marietta ate the last bite, and I had none.  This was
indeed a time of last things.  The last cent was gone,
the last piece of bread was gone, and the last lump of coal
was upon the grate.  We had started to live a life of faith,
and we expected God to come to our help.  We read some
of His promises, and went to prayer.  The Lord gave us faith
for our present need, and we leaned
<pb id="compton38" n="38"/>
hard upon Him.  I soon after started uptown, and as I
walked I prayed, and wept, and trusted.  Suddenly I heard
a call from some one on the street; but having so few
acquaintances in the city, I did not suppose I was meant,
so I hurried on, when presently the call was repeated, and
turning about I saw a stranger across the street motioning
for me to stop.  I went over to him, and he said: “The Lord
bless you; I have heard you preach on the streets, and the
Lord told me to give you this money;” and with that he
handed me the money and left.  I lifted my heart in
thankfulness to God, and hurried homeward that I might
make wife's heart glad with the good news.  When I
arrived home, I noticed that there was a nice pile of coal
under our steps.  This I could not understand, and I looked
at the number to see if this was really the right place.  I
hurried up the stairs, and asked wife where the coal came
from, and she replied that all she knew was that some one
had sent it to Compton's.  What a blessed time we had
praising the Lord!  An hour before, no money, no bread, no
coal, and now plenty of each for present necessities.
Praise His name!  I have over and over thanked God for
these testings.  How they have enriched my soul!</p>
          <p>At another time a very courteous, nicely-dressed man
introduced himself to me, at one of my street meetings,
as a Christian worker.  He could hold the crowds nearly
spellbound with his oratory, and completely won my
confidence.  He seemed to take much interest in me, and
wanted me to leave my position and go into the work with
him.  He offered to take my wife and baby into his home.
Before I consented to this, I went home with the man to
spend the night with him, that we might talk over our plans
together more fully.  Before morning I found that I was
deceived by a smooth-talking villain masquerading
<pb id="compton39" n="39"/>
under the name of a Christian worker.  I exposed him
and his sin, and praised God for delivering me from one
more snare of the devil.  I relate these incidents for
but one purpose, and that is to magnify the keeping power
of the Lord.  There I was, an ignorant, stammering
mountain boy, with the allurements of a large city all
around me, yet my Jesus kept me sweetly through it all,
and I daily grew in grace and the knowledge of my
Savior.</p>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>LOVED THE BIBLE.</head>
            <p>Before the Lord saved me the Bible was, of all books,
most uninteresting; but then it became my only study.
How I loved to pore over it for hours, and meditate upon it
until duty led me where I had to leave it for a time!  I
thirsted to know all God's revealed will concerning me.
Many times my wife would prepare the meals and call me
to the table, but I was so absorbed in my study that I
would forget that she had spoken, and long after the rest
had eaten, and the table was cleared away, I would
arouse myself from my Bible and find that I had lost a
meal.  Somehow God made the precious Word food for
both soul and body.  Often, while on my knees with the
Word open before me, I would read a line and ask myself
if I lived up to that.  Many times, when reading such
Scripture as the thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians, the
fifth chapter of First Thessalonians, or the last eight verses
of the third chapter of Ephesians in particular, and many
other Scriptures in general, I would feel that I came far
short of the privileges of the Gospel, and would weep over
this clearly evident fact.  I was living up to all the light I
then had, but at a later period, which will be considered in
its order, God led me out into a larger place in Him, where
my tears were turned to shouts of
<pb id="compton40" n="40"/>
praise when contemplating the Scriptures mentioned
above.  Thank God, “if we walk in the light as He is in the
light, . . . the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us
from all sin.”  No one ever backslides while walking in the
light of God.  Any light that God gives a soul, whether
through the Word or otherwise, is just as sacred as the
Scriptures, and consequently must be obeyed, or else the
sin of disobedience will cause God to remove His Spirit,
and spiritual darkness will intervene.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>LAST SECULAR EMPLOYMENT.</head>
            <p>I was engaged to do Christian work in a home that was
conducted as a hotel.  Here the proprietor, a blessed
Christian man, had public prayers conducted morning,
noon, and night.  In a short time a cook was needed, and,
as I had served as railroad cook, I was prevailed upon to
take the position.  This deprived me of all opportunity to
do religious work, except as beggars would come to the
kitchen door for something to eat, when I would preach
Jesus to them.  One day a young boy came to the door for
something to eat.  I took him in, and talked salvation to
him, and from my own experience showed him the danger in
running away from home.  God touched his heart, and he
repented, and returned to his country home.  He later
wrote me expressing his thanks for the good advice I had
given, and for the interest I had taken in his soul.</p>
            <p>Another time I was standing in the door, watching the
passers on the street, when presently I heard some
children howling and mocking some one upon the street.  I
looked carefully to see the cause of the uproar, when a
girl, well dressed, staggering from one side to the other,
came into view.  I saw she would soon fall into the
<pb id="compton41" n="41"/>
street and the police would get her, so I hastily got Mrs.
Compton, and going out we found her prostrate at our
corner.  We took her up, and carried her in, and placed her
upon our bed.  She did not have the appearance of a girl
who had spent her young life in sin, and we could not
detect the smell of intoxicating liquor upon her breath, so
we concluded that she must be the victim of some devilish
conspiracy.  She lay there in this unconscious state for
about ten hours, when she regained consciousness and
told her story, which was the same old one of a human
devil, called a man, pretending to make love to her, and
drugging her in order to take sinful advantage of her
helpless condition.  She suspected his intentions, and was
making her escape when we picked her up from the street.
We found a temporary home for her, and later she
returned to her own home.</p>
            <p>When a boy or girl leaves the old country home to take
chances in the city, they can have no idea what awful
temptations and snares the devil has set to damn their
souls and take them to hell.  How many thousands of
virtuous country and village girls have kissed their good
old fathers and mothers farewell to enter the city, and,
before many months, have been wrecked and disgraced
by men and women of superior cunning!  There are
many proprietors of city brothels who have smooth,
courteous men hired on commission to lure simple,
virtuous girls into these cesspools of vice and shame.</p>
            <p>In spite of the fact that I was receiving good wages
and my family was very comfortable, I felt that I must
give up all and go out upon the Master's work, or else
completely backslide.  My hotel duties so completely took
my time from four o'clock in the morning until ten o'clock
at night that I had no time to study my Bible and be
alone with God.  Consequently, I found that evil tempers
would
<pb id="compton42" n="42"/>
arise, and I would many times do such things as would
bring sorrow to my heart.  Often I would speak shortly
or impatiently to my wife, and then weep and ask her to
forgive me for doing so.  The Lord showed me that I was
out of Divine order.  He had called me to feed men's souls
and here I was spending my time feeding their stomachs.
These convictions deepened upon me until I cried out to
God that I would leave all and follow Him.  I told Him He
had called me to His work, and I would trust Him to pay
all the expenses.</p>
            <p>One day, while in earnest prayer, God gave me a view
of the world going at lightning velocity hellward, and an
apostate ministry prophesying “smooth things” and saying,
“Peace, peace,” when there was no peace.  When a
schoolteacher heard that part of the School Board believed
that the world was flat and the rest believed it was round,
in order to get the position she told them she was prepared
to teach it either way, just as the majority should decide.
I could see a hireling ministry, prepared by a skeptical
college and theological training, preaching to suit the carnal
and worldly majorities of their congregations.  I saw so
little of the real, humble, unselfish Christlike living among
His professed followers that my soul was pressed beyond
measure.  A still, small, sweet, and tender voice whispered
in my ear and said, “Will you preach my Word regardless
of all opposition and persecution?”  I seemed to look God
right in the face, and replied, “Yes, Lord, by thy grace I
will.”</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton43" n="43"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER VI.</head>
          <head>FIRST EVANGELISTIC TOUR.</head>
          <p>I IMMEDIATELY moved my family into a suburban place,
and arranged to start out upon the battle for souls in
earnest.  My wife wanted to know where I was going.  I
told her I had no idea, but to pack me a change of clothes,
some tracts, my hymn-book and Bible, and I would trust
in God to lead me where He wanted me.  I kissed wife
and baby good-bye, having no idea when I should see them
again.  I can never forget the emotions that filled my
heart that morning as I tearfully took leave of my loved
ones.  My wife, with little Marietta in her arms, standing
in the doorway, with trembling voice, said: “God bless you,
papa.  Do n't be uneasy about baby and me.  God will take
care of us.”  I had not gone very far when I turned to take
a last look at those dear ones, and, as I saw them still in
the doorway, it seemed that I could go no farther; the
thought of leaving them was too much; but I prayed God
for strength, which He gave, and I hurried on.</p>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>MET DISCOURAGING DEVILS.</head>
            <p>I soon met one of my old friends who wanted to know
what I was about to do.  I related to him the course I
expected to take, and forthwith he endeavored to show
me what a great mistake I was making.  He suggested that
my wife and child might die, and I far away, or else
something might happen to me, and then to be out among
strangers would be a great calamity.  Well, I had no
<pb id="compton44" n="44"/>
sooner gotten victory over these arguments when I met
my pastor, who started on me harder than my first
assailant.  He wanted to know who was going to support
my family.  I replied that the Lord would do that.  He said
that was all presumption, and the Bible said that a man
who would not provide for his family was worse than an
infidel.  He wanted to know where I was going.  I said: “I
shall take the steamboat to-night and go as far as one
dollar and thirty-five cents will carry me, and then get off,
and ask the first man I meet if he is prepared to meet
God.”  The poor man thought I had surely gone wild over
religion, and seemed to feel really sorry for me.  Again
admonishing me to go home to my family, he left me.  I
knew that I was in God's order, and all things would work
together for good.</p>
            <p>I had walked about one block from the bridge leading
over to Newport, Kentucky, when some one called to
me.  Turning, I met a stranger, who was introduced as a
clergyman from Berlin, Kentucky, looking for some one to
assist him in a grove meeting he was conducting on his
charge.  He said he had failed to find a helper, and I had
been recommended.  After prayer I felt this was God's
providential opening, and consented to go with him.  After a
long journey, twelve miles of which was in a carriage, we
reached his home.  The pastor's wife, probably thinking I
was some farmer boy that her husband had given a ride,
wanted to know why he could n't find a helper.  The pastor
said, “This is Brother Compton, who is to help us.”  She
looked as if all hope for a meeting had gone, and treated
me as if I were a passing stranger who had begged for a
place to spend the night.</p>
            <p>After supper the pastor and I walked down to the
place where the services were being held, and we went
up on the platform.  Shortly after, he was called aside and
<pb id="compton45" n="45"/>
interviewed in regard to his help, and he replied it was the
best he could do.  God blessed me in telling my experience,
and many wept under their convictions.  We had a
gracious service the next morning, and at night the crowd
greatly increased, as also did the interest.  The people
grew to appreciate my humble efforts for souls, and they
made up enough money for me to go to Cincinnati and get
Mrs. Compton.  I have received many offerings in these
later years, but never one more appreciated than that.  God
gave us a most glorious revival.  The last Sunday they
wanted to charge a gate fee, but I protested.  I had never
seen evidence that Jesus or the apostles had done such a
thing, and I said I would stand on the fence and talk to the
crowd in the road before I would agree to it.</p>
            <p>At this meeting I received two calls, and accepted one
to Harrison County, Kentucky.  Preacher and people
admitted I had struck the hardest place in the country.
Prior to my coming, there had been a general Church row,
in which the preacher had been struck in the face.  I began
to preach, and the crowds increased right along, but the
spiritual interest was in the bud.  O such coldness I have
scarcely ever encountered!  How I wrestled and groaned
before God for the salvation of that people!  I saw that the
Achan in the camp was a woman who was taking a
prominent part in the service.  She invited me home to
dinner one day, when she freely told all the faults of the
whole neighborhood.  She said she had no freedom in
prayer when she met with them in service.  When I got an
opening I told her that, from what I could see and learn in
regard to the community, she was the worst one in it, and
needed to confess her sins and repent.  This made her
mad, and she refused to attend any more services.  The
morning of the second Sunday
<pb id="compton46" n="46"/>
I found a place of secret prayer where I prevailed for the
day's services.  I told God I would never go down to the
service until He gave me a message.  The bell rang for
service, but I would not go without a special message.  I
kept on pleading, when God gave me Rev. iii, I, 2.  I had
never before preached a textual sermon, always giving my
experience and exhorting others to seek Him who had
done so much for me.  The house was packed, and many
opposers were there, including the woman I had left mad
in her home a few days before.  I read my text, and as I
did so it seemed that a legion of angels came down to help
me preach from it.  From the first hearts were broken and
began to cry out to God.  The husband of the woman I had
rebuked arose to his feet, and interrupted me by crying in
a loud voice that they were all condemned and had no
time for preaching, but for all to pray.  The altar was
packed; people began confessing their sins, and a revival
from the skies came upon us that spread for miles.  All
through the power of prevailing prayer!</p>
            <p>Some time later I went to a place to conduct services,
and met with fearful opposition.  A man of great influence
did all he could to break up the meeting.  He lived close to
the church, but refused to let any of his family attend.  He
even went so far as to have dances at his home to entice
the young people from the services.  The saints prayed
earnestly, but could get no faith for his salvation.  The
meeting closed, and in less than a week later that man was
in eternity.  When on his deathbed he called for me to pray
for him.  I lifted up my voice to God, but my words would
seem to fall back upon my heart with a thud, and the last
words he was heard to utter were, “I am lost, I am lost!”
I was asked
<pb id="compton47" n="47"/>
to take the funeral service, and as I went to the mansion
the oldest son met me at the door, and asked me to pray
that he might never live the life his father had lived.  I have
seen many sad homes, but the bereavement of this was
greater than can be described.  The house was filled with
ungodly friends, who were trying to comfort the family.  I
asked God to give me a judgment-day message, and I
preached damnation and eternal hellfire just as I thought
the rich man in hell wanted Lazarus to preach to his five
brethren.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>A SINLESS RELIGION.</head>
            <p>As I intended staying in this part of Kentucky to make
a very thorough evangelistic convass, I sent for my
Church letter, which was held by the Baptist Church of
Clyde, North Carolina.  It was granted, and I presented it
to the Baptists of Kentucky, but they refused it on the
ground that I placed the standard of Christianity too high.
They said that I preached a sinless religion.  I did not deny
it, because I always taught that a man must be saved from
all sin or be lost in hell, according to 1 John i, 7, and scores
of other Scriptures.  From this time opposition greatly
increased, and most of the Baptist Churches were closed
against me.  My preaching was generally done in groves,
schoolhouses, private homes, and on street-corners with a
goods-box for a pulpit.  I often walked twenty and thirty
miles to an appointment, until one day the Lord laid it upon
the heart of a man to give me a pony, cart, and harness,
and another man gave me a load of corn.  The dear Lord
so bountifully supplied all our needs that we were able to
help poor families out of our abundance.  In all
<pb id="compton48" n="48"/>
of my experience as a traveling evangelist from State to
State I have never taken up a collection for my support,
nor asked another person to take up one for me.  I could
always trust the God who called me into His service to
supply all my needs.  One of the most puzzling things to me
is, how evangelists can write to a people who are hungry
to hear the truth that they will come for expenses and so
much.  It seems to me that an evangelist who has no faith
for his expenses couldn't have much for souls.</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton49" n="49"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER VII.</head>
          <head>SANCTIFICATION.</head>
          <lg>
            <l>Walk in the light the Lord hath given</l>
            <l>To guide thy steps aright;</l>
            <l>His Holy Spirit sent from heaven,</l>
            <l>Can cheer the darkest night.</l>
            <l>Walk in the light of gospel truth,</l>
            <l>That shines from God's own Word;</l>
            <l>A light to guide in early youth,</l>
            <l>The faithful of the Lord.</l>
            <l>Walk in the light, tho' shadows dark,</l>
            <l>Like specters cross thy way;</l>
            <l>Darkness will flee before the light</l>
            <l>Of God's eternal day.</l>
            <l>Walk in the light, and thou shalt know</l>
            <l>The love of God to thee;</l>
            <l>The fellowship, so sweet below,</l>
            <l>In heaven will sweeter be.</l>
          </lg>
          <p>FROM the happy day that Jesus had so clearly
reclaimed me from those dark years of backsliding I had
endeavored to walk in the light the Lord had shed across
my pathway.  I had lived a consecrated life before God
and the world.  That I was a child of God I could not
doubt, because the witness of God's Spirit shone clear and
bright in my soul; but I found there was a principle in my
life that often caused me to do the thing I did not want to
do, and leave undone the thing I wanted to do.  In one of
my meetings, where God came down in great power and
gave a glorious revival, I preached myself under
conviction.  I found
<pb id="compton50" n="50"/>
within me tendencies which were not Christlike; for example,
impatience, fretting, pride which at times caused a desire that
folks should brag on me a little, light talk, and a tendency to
easily get the blues.  Then, too, although God was blessing my
efforts and giving me souls, I felt a great lack of the real spiritual
power which I read that the disciples received at Pentecost and
Peter declared was for us all.  I had been taught by my Baptist
Church that the heart was made pure in regeneration, and that
sin still dwelt in the flesh; but God gave me wisdom to know
better.  I learned that sin did not emanate from or exist in flesh
and bone, and that flesh and bone could have no power-to
commit sin without the consent of the man himself; and I
reasoned that if the man himself got rid of sin, then the flesh and
bone would be holy and pure as well as the heart.  Paul prayed
that our “whole <hi rend="italics">body</hi>, soul, and spirit be preserved blameless,”
and again commanded us to “present our <hi rend="italics">bodies</hi> a living
sacrifice, <hi rend="italics">holy</hi> and acceptable;” and still again, that “our
<hi rend="italics">bodies</hi> were the temples of the Holy Ghost, which should not
be defiled, but must be holy.”  Then Jesus Himself clinched the
argument in Mark vii, 21-23 by saying, “For from within, out of
the heart of man [not out of his flesh] proceed evil thoughts,
adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness,
wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy,
pride, foolishness: all these evil things come from within and
defile the man.”  I was taught that the best God could or would
do for His children was to give them a seventh-of-Romans
experience where the “body of sin” lived, and generally had its
way.  I found that Paul testified in the next chapter that “the law
of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus had made him free from this
law of sin and death” that had given him so much trouble in his
<pb id="compton51" n="51"/>
regenerated experience, as recorded in the seventh of Romans.</p>
          <p>I began to see now that there was a “balm in Gilead” for all
of my troubles.  The Word declared that Christ's mission was to
destroy the works of the devil.  All sin is alone the devil's work,
and so, until a person is freed from every iota of sin, Christ's
uttermost salvation has not been realized in the life.  I was not
satisfied with a head full of theory, even though it was logical
and Biblical.  To know gave me a burning desire to experience.
The world is full of head religion, but real heartfelt experience is
a rare jewel.  Thousands of people come to my meetings, and
nod their assent to my preaching, and say “Brother Compton, I
agree with you,” yet they go on with apparent unconcern as to
seeking and experiencing what they see is their privilege.  God
help them to see that, after having a knowledge of the truth, the
neglecting or refusing to receive it as their personal experience
will make for them the greater damnation!  Beloved, as you read
this book, I beseech you, be not only hearers of the truth, but
doers of it.</p>
          <p>I became acquainted with Evangelist C. W. Clark, a man of
power, whom God was greatly using, and we labored together
for some time.  Brother Clark urged all believers to seek the
baptism of the Holy Ghost.  While with this brother the precious
little book called the “Double Cure,” by M. W. Knapp, who has
since been translated to glory, was placed in my hands.  I read it
with great interest.  I had been taught that the baptism of the
Holy Ghost suppressed the Old Man of inbred sin, while the
“Double Cure” clearly revealed that the baptism of the Holy
Ghost expressed the Old Man of sin, purifying the heart and
empowering for service.  I also found that the baptism of the
Holy Ghost, and
<pb id="compton52" n="52"/>
the experience of entire sanctification, and a life of
holiness were synonymous terms in the sense that, when a
person had one of them, he had all of them.  The Holy
Ghost comes and purifies our hearts, giving us the
experience of sanctification, which causes us to live a life
of holiness.  This intelligence took away any prejudice I
might have had against the words, so much hated,
“holiness” and “sanctification.”  Most persons will listen to
a sermon on the “Baptism of the Holy Ghost,” who would
run from any consideration of “holiness” or “sanctification.”</p>
          <p>I became as deeply convicted for a pure heart as I had
for the pardon of my sins.  As I studied and contemplated
the meekness, humility, and longsuffering of Christ, and
read how Peter said He was our example and we should
follow in His steps, and then compared my life to His, the
more deeply conscious I was of the impurity and
imperfection of my own heart.  The reason why so many
people do not see the sin-principle of their own hearts is
because they never draw close enough to the Lord to let
Him reveal it.  When Isaiah got so close to God that he
could see the seraphim, and hear them cry, “Holy, holy,
holy!” then it was he saw his uncleanness, and God sent a
seraph with a live coal from off the altar and purged or
sanctified (each word means the same) him from his
uncleanness.</p>
          <p>In the she summer of 1899 I most providentially found
myself in Cincinnati, Ohio, on the opening day of the
Salvation Park Camp-meeting, which was then held at
Carthage.  I had no thought of being able to attend the
entire meeting, because I was not financially able, but
concluded to go to the grounds and hear the first services.
The camp-ground seemed to me to be a spot where all
heaven had come down to spend a few days,
<pb id="compton53" n="53"/>
and, as I walked about, the tears would course down my
face and fall to the ground.  I felt it would be an honor to
hold any position, however humble, about that sacred
place.  I would gladly have blacked the preachers' boots
for the privilege of spending a week under their
preaching.  Rev. Seth C. Rees preached that morning, and
with wide-open mouth I sat and swallowed the old corn
and grapes and honey that he was dealing out to the
crowd, fresh from the rich fields of Canaan land.</p>
          <p>As I started for home that night I began earnestly to
pray God to open up the way for wife and myself to attend
the entire camp-meeting.  When I got home, Mrs. Compton
told me the Lord had sent in four dollars, so we concluded
to go out to Carthage and stay as long as our money
lasted.  By living on dry bread and raw canned tomatoes,
we were able to stay several days.  God here turned on
such clear light that I saw my need of entire sanctification
as a definite experience, and, deeply convicted of my
need, I began earnestly to seek.  The time came when we
could no longer stay at the camp, so I sent Mrs. Compton
home in a private conveyance, and started to walk the
eighteen miles to our home.  I determined to get the
experience before I got home, or know the reason why.
About seven miles from home I found a spot where I
could be alone with God, and there, in the silence, broken
only by the chirping of insects or the rustling of the leaves
overhead, I looked heavenward, and told God to show me
my worst condition as He alone knew it.  I pleaded in
intense earnestness; I was not simply trying to see if there
was anything in it after all, but I believed in it, and wanted
it more than anything else on earth or in heaven.  I knew I
was seeking for something without which I could never
see God.  I needed no altar-worker to coax me to hold
<pb id="compton54" n="54"/>
up my hands and head and pray.  Like a drowning man, I
grasped at every suggestion that had the slightest hope in
it.  Without hesitancy, as God revealed to me what I might
expect and much of what it meant, I would put it upon the
altar.  I could see myself, with my earthly possessions tied
together in a red handkerchief, walking about the country,
the target for sneers and reproach.  I imagined I could hear
the people say, “There he goes; that 's the sanctified
fellow.”  But I kept on saying, “Yes, Lord, anything,
everything; only give me this blessed experience.”  I
somehow had the witness in myself that I was fully
consecrated to God for any world or any work, to be
something or be nothing.  I felt that God was crowded into
a corner, and could not and would not get out without
verifying His promises in me.  I said, “Lord, I believe Thou
doest sanctify me just now! just now!! just now!!!”
Then the glory of heaven flooded my soul, and it seemed
that Holy Ghost fire was purging my heart from every root
and stain of sin, and I was made clean and pure in heart.
The Lord Himself did it all! Glory! Hallelujah to His
precious name!  He did exceeding abundantly above
anything I could ever think or expect, and it was so little
for the Lord that heaven never missed what fell into my
soul.  Beloved reader, have you a little hope-so, think-so,
maybe-so experience that you are somehow, in some
miraculous way, thinking will just squeeze you through at
the judgment?  Let me recommend to you an uttermost
salvation that will exterminate all sin, and make you as
sure of heaven, if you do not backslide, as though you
had already been within the pearly gates and spent a
week with the angels in the New Jerusalem.  Never
limit the power of our omnipotent Savior; never eat,
drink, or sleep until Christ has done for you what He
died to do; <hi rend="italics">i.e.</hi>, destroyed all
<pb id="compton55" n="55"/>
sin, actual and inbred, which is the work of the devil.  “If
we confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive us
our sins,” and not only that, which means salvation, but to
come the second time and “cleanse you from all
unrighteousness;” <hi rend="italics">i. e., all</hi> unrighteousness is sin, and He
will sanctify you from all sin, remaining in your heart
subsequent to your forgiveness.</p>
          <p>The more I praised God, the brighter He revealed
Himself in me, and the remainder of those eighteen miles
I had three companions,  -  God the Father, God the Son,
and God the Holy Ghost.  That was the most glorious night
in all my life up to that time; but from that day the way
has grown brighter and brighter, and I can say, in the
language of Micah the prophet, “But truly I am full of
power by the Spirit of the Lord.”</p>
          <lg>
            <l>“Golden sunbeams round me play,</l>
            <l>Jesus turns my night to day;</l>
            <l>Heaven seems not far away,</l>
            <l>Since I found my Savior.”</l>
          </lg>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton56" n="56"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER VIII.</head>
          <head>BACK TO WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA.</head>
          <p>SHORTLY after God gave me the precious experience
of entire sanctification, as related in the preceding chapter,
He laid upon my heart a heavy burden for my own native
people in the mountain country of North Carolina, where
I was born and where I spent my early youth.  I knew that
very few, if any, had ever heard of holiness as a definite,
obtainable experience, although many were saved and
enjoying a justified experience.  I felt that the Lord wanted
me to go to them as Paul did to the Ephesians, saying,
“Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?”</p>
          <p>Although God's call to North Carolina was clear, I did
not immediately go, but labored for many months in
Kentucky and Ohio, where God gave me scores of
conversions and sanctifications.  The annual Salvation Park
Camp-meeting found me near Cincinnati, thus making it
very convenient for me to attend.  The camp, one year
before, had proven such a blessing to me that I wanted
everybody I knew to attend this one.  Accordingly, I
engaged four tents, and, driving about with my horse and
wagon, gathered up a load of eleven grown folks and
some children, and filled the tents.  In many ways I was
well repaid for all the sacrifice I had made in getting to
this camp, but especially because my only child, little
Marietta, but five years old, was clearly converted to God.
She had been in a children's meeting conducted by Mrs.
M. W. Knapp, where the simple message of
<pb id="compton57" n="57"/>
the Savior's love touched her heart.  She knelt at the altar,
and, in a childlike way, asked Jesus to save her.  She
quickly jumped up from the altar, and ran to her mamma
and me, shouting happily that Jesus had saved her!  Truly
Jesus had come into her young heart, because her face
shone with heaven's own light.  When we got back home,
she let her light shine by telling her playmates what Jesus
had done for her.  One time she came into the house, and
told her mamma that she could n't play with the children
because they used bad words.  How many parents make
the mistake of thinking that their children are too young to
get saved at five or six years of age, and thus let the devil
get their young hearts and minds poisoned by sin, and
estranged from Christ!  Many of the brightest Christian
men and women of all ages have been those converted in
early childhood.</p>
          <p>After the camp-meeting we bade farewell to the
North, with all that it held dear to us, and, with horse and
buggy, which God had sent in answer to prayer, Mrs.
Compton, Marietta, and I started on our long trip.  Many
predicted the impossibility of our getting to North Carolina
thus equipped, but we knew God was able.  The weather
was delightful, and little difficulty was encountered until
we arrived at the foot of Hatton Creek Mountain in
Kentucky.  As we gazed towards its lofty summit and up
its rugged sides, it looked as if we had met our Waterloo
at last.  To get around that mountain without going over it
meant twenty miles of travel, while scaling it meant but
about two miles.  We looked to God in prayer.  I applied
carriage-oil to the wheels, while God applied the oil of the
Holy Ghost to our souls.  The carriage-oil enabled the
horse and buggy to scale the bowlders with greater
ease, while the Holy Ghost oil
<pb id="compton58" n="58"/>
enabled us to keep sweet in our souls during the journey.
With the aid of Mrs. Compton blocking the wheels at
short intervals, and all of us exercising much patience and
longsuffering, in three hours the lofty mountain was left in
our rear.</p>
          <p>During our journey, which took about fifteen days, we
had many opportunities of doing something for the Lord.
Sometimes I would preach in churches or courthouses.
God made the trip profitable to us, and made us a blessing
to others.  We at last arrived in North Carolina, feeling as
well and refreshed in body, soul, and spirit as when we
started.</p>
          <p>Nearly ten years before, I had left Clyde, North
Carolina, a very wicked boy.  Now that the Lord had
saved and sanctified my soul, I had a great desire to
return to the home of my early youth.  I wanted once
more to enter the little, humble log-cabin, and, bowing
upon the rough slab floor, thank God for delivering me
from the devil's clutches which had held me so firmly
when last I sat beneath the paternal roof.</p>
          <p>When Mrs. Compton and I testified, in Clyde, to God's
sanctifying power, it very soon became the subject of
town talk.  The Methodists were having a meeting in the
town, and one day one of the brethren invited me to
preach.  Out of curiosity to hear the reformed “bad boy of
the town” preach, many were in attendance.  The Lord
helping, I did the best I could in giving a simple gospel
message.  I preached that Jesus not only died to justify us
freely, but also to sanctify us wholly.  This stirred up a
great opposition, and many would call on me at my
father's cabin and endeavor to reason me out of the so-
called delusion that any one could be sanctified and live
without sin in this world.  They often tried
<pb id="compton59" n="59"/>
to quote Scripture to me in defense of their position; for
example, they would get 1 John i, 8, mixed up this way: “If
we say we live and do not commit sin, we lie and the truth
is not in us.”  When I asked them to find me such
Scripture, they searched in great assurance, but soon
found that the Bible said no such thing.  My preaching
from the first was misconstructed and misrepresented.
Many good, well-meaning people have been so prejudiced
against me that they would not even come to hear me
preach, and at the same time they would contend that the
work and doctrine was that of the devil.  May God bless
them by leading them into this light as He has me!  I love
them, and would be glad to go into their churches, and
pray, and weep, and labor for their salvation.  Nearly all
their churches have closed against me, and my preaching
is done in schoolhouses, tents, and arbors.  The opposition
I have encountered, however, has proved the greatest
possible blessing to me, and the Lord's work of full
salvation.  The people, hearing so much talk against my
work, would be impelled, through curiosity, to attend and
learn for themselves, and the arrow of conviction would
be driven into their hearts, and they would seek and obtain
the blessing.  Glory!</p>
          <p>One preacher has evidently felt that, if he could poison
the people against sanctification and its humble exponent,
he would be doing God and humanity a great service.  To
show how God will use the devil to be a blessing to His
children, I wish to submit a couple of letters which he has
published against me in an official organ of his Church.  I
want to say that I truly believe that nothing has proved
such a blessing to me and the work as this man and his
letters, although they do seem to be a diabolical scheme
of Satan to frustrate God's work.
<pb id="compton60" n="60"/>
Many having read the articles, and knowing how false
much of them were, dropped the paper in which they
were published and have since been my stanch friends.</p>
          <div3 type="letter">
            <p>“EDITORS SOUTHERN BAPTIST, - I guess it is about
time for me to write again.  Somebody might think I was
going to Cincinnati with that great evangelist, Compton,
who thought himself all the apostolic preacher of this
country, and that there was not a Church in this country
that was fit to take members into its fellowship, especially
the Church at Clyde,  -  this preacher, who ran most of the
people of Newfound crazy, or a great many of them, after
his doctrine and heresy, and stood people on top of their
heads when he baptized them, and turned them loose to
root pig or die.  I hope the good Lord will keep him in
Cincinnati, or in some other region, for we do n't need him
in this country.  I am just like Brother L. P. ----.  I 've not
got any use for him; he is a deceiver.  Sanctification and
holiness of life is a mighty nice thing, but I have lived fifty
years, and have never seen a sanctified person yet.  Of
course, we must bring the flesh into subjection to the spirit,
and yet the warfare goes on.  Paul, it seemed, was more
sanctified before his conversion than after; for, before, he
verily thought he was doing God's service in persecuting
the saints.  I think we ought to be mighty careful whom we
take after; we might take up with an E----, who was so
slick he got off with a good horse and a watch, saddle, and
overcoat; or an S----, who will seduce some man's wife or
daughter, or, as Paul says, ‘Lead captive silly folks who
know not the truth.’ I think some of the Newfound folks
got their eyes open before Compton left, especially some
of the Methodist folks, when he began
<pb id="compton61" n="61"/>
to lead off their children and others, who said, when their
children wanted to be baptized, hunt a secluded place.</p>
            <closer><salute>Yours in love,</salute> <signed><name>J. M. H.”</name></signed></closer>
          </div3>
          <div3>
            <p>A copy of the second letter to the same paper, from
beautiful Haywood:</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="letter">
            <p>“DEAR SOUTHERN BAPTIST, - We have had plenty of
winter in Haywood, so that the pastors have not been able
to fill their regular appointments, except the Evangelist
Compton.  He goes, rain or shine, like a dog without a home
or master, imposing himself upon people, and going into
churches that have before locked him out, even going into
churches without the knowledge or consent of the pastors,
and is ordered out on account of his unchristianizing other
Christians, and his heresy.  Years ago, when L. B.
Compton was fifteen years old, he professed faith in Christ
at Clyde, but became unwilling to be governed by his
parents, and ran away from home, and went on to public
works, and from one mean thing to another; and the
Church, to protect herself, was compelled to withdraw
fellowship from him.  He landed in Ohio or Kentucky, and
in a meeting claimed to be reclaimed, and wrote back to his
father, asking to be restored to membership in the Church,
and the Pleasant Hill Church at Clyde restored him, and
granted him a letter in good standing; which was all right,
but they did not know it all, but when he presented himself
for membership in a Baptist Church in Ohio, they, knowing
more about him than we, rejected him and his heresy.  He
no doubt passed himself for a Baptist preacher until last
January, when, in Church Conference, the writer
preferred a charge against him, and he was excluded,
<pb id="compton62" n="62"/>
for <hi rend="italics">heresy</hi>, and asked for the return of the letter.  Now
he goes about like the heretics, putting up a plea of
persecution.  I warn all the Churches of him, for he will
cause division and trouble.  This will do. </p>
            <closer><signed><name>J. M. H.</name></signed>
“Clyde, N. C.”</closer>
          </div3>
          <div3>
            <p>Any one can see, from the spirit in which these letters
are written, the object of them.  But they were used to
move on the work of God.  I want to say here, as I will
meet this at the judgment, that I love the dear man who
wrote these epistles.  He is but one out of the thousands
of preachers who are against the whole truth of the
Bible.  The heresy referred to is the Bible doctrine of
sanctification.  I was turned out of the Baptist Church for
teaching that the blood of Jesus cleanseth from all sin,
according to 1 John i, 8, and scores of other Scriptures.
Those who turned me out are strong exponents of a
sinning religion, and they are well known to practice what
they preach.  I speak with authority, because I have lived
among them.  This man has lived fifty years, and has never
seen a sanctified person, according to his statement.  This
might be true,  -  there is such a thing as looking at the sun
so long that whenever one looks he will see nothing but
suns.  How many have gazed upon things carnal and
sectarian so long that their vision has become impaired,
and they can see nothing better!  The Jewish Church was
so backslidden that they could see nothing in Jesus but a
devil.</p>
            <p>Such opposition as this so stirred my father that he
began diligently to search the Scriptures, and soon finding
that the experiences his baby boy was preaching was the
gospel truth, he fell down at the altar of his own Church at
Laurens, South Carolina, and sought the blessing.  He
stood before his congregation and confessed
<pb id="compton63" n="63"/>
that the prejudice he had in his heart for his Church had
blinded his eyes against seeing God's will.  How many
preachers, if honest, could and would confess the same
thing!</p>
            <p>My Baptist brethren who brand my teaching as heresy
fail to see that, by so doing, they brand many of the
greatest lights of their Church as heretics.  For example, I
desire to quote a few from the many statements of Dr. A.
J. Gordon, the great commentator of their Church.</p>
            <p>He says: “The Scriptures seem to teach that there is a
second stage in spiritual development distinct and separate
from conversion; a stage to which we rise by a special
renewal of the Holy Ghost, and not by the process of a
gradual growth.”  Again he says: “There is a transaction
described in the New Testament by the terms ‘the gift of
the Holy Ghost,’ ‘the sealing of the Spirit,’ ‘the anointing of
the Holy Ghost,’ and the like.  The allusion to it in the Acts
and the Epistles mark it unmistakably as something
different from conversion.  I came to this theory after a
fresh study of the Acts of the Apostles, and from the
conviction begotten by much study that there is more light
in that book than we have yet imprisoned in our creeds.
The Spirit is to fall upon believers and give them this
power.”  Again: “To say that, in receiving Christ, we
necessarily receive in the same act the gift of the Spirit,
seems to confound what the Scriptures make distinct; for it
is as sinners that we accept Christ for our justification, but
it is as sons that we accept the Spirit for our sanctification.
It is a fact that the Holy Ghost has been given in
consecration; faith appropriated this fact for our
sanctification.”</p>
            <p>Under existing circumstances, if Dr. A. J. Gordon should
return to this earth and desire to conduct a meeting along
the line of the foregoing statements in the
<pb id="compton64" n="64"/>
Baptist Church at Clyde, or almost any other place, he
would be locked out on the charge of heresy.  I never
have preached the second work stronger than Gordon
does.</p>
            <p>It is truly amazing how many are ignorant of the real
Bible way of salvation.  When I ask people, who have
been Church members from childhood, if they know that
they are saved, the best they can invariably say is, “I am a
Church member;” or, “I trust to be saved ;” or, “I hope
so.”</p>
            <p>A prominent minister told me he knew he was saved,
but that he committed sin in word, thought, and deed every
day.  I said, “Brother, is it possible that you commit sin
each day in word, thought, and deed?  Let me tell you, sir,
that the devil himself couldn't beat that.”  If we are saved,
we do not commit sin; if we commit sin, we belong to the
devil.  We can not be Christians and sinners at the same
time.  Please look up these references and believe God's
precious truth: Matt. i, 21; John viii, 34; 1 John iii, 6-9; v,
18; 2 John ix; 1 John i, 9; Titus ii, II, 12; 2 Thess. iii, 3;
and Rom. vi, 16.  The whole Bible condemns sin in every
form.  Nine out of ten preachers in this country preach a
sinning religion; that is, that no one can be saved from sin
in this life.  Why call sinners to repentance if you can not
offer them something different from that which they
already have?  Very few are in a condition to receive the
truth of entire sanctification; most professing Christians
need to learn what a Scriptural regeneration will do for
them.  When we consider the existing condition of the
Churches, it is no wonder that those who are led into
the deeper truths of God are called heretics.</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton65" n="65"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER IX.</head>
          <head>EXPERIENCES CONTINUED.</head>
          <p>THE Savior said that “the foxes have holes and the
birds have nests, but the Son of man has no place to lay
His head.”  Again the Scripture says, “For hereunto were
ye called: because Christ also suffered for you, leaving
you an example, that ye should follow His steps.”  In my
experience as an evangelist in Western North Carolina I
have many times been able to follow in the Savior's steps,
inasmuch as, like Him, I had no place to lay my head.  I
have truly learned that to be red-hot for God and Bible
holiness means to go through with the despised, unpopular
crowd; it means to be a pilgrim and a stranger in this
world.  In the eyes of the world it is to be as its
offscourings, but in the eyes of God it is to be a member
of the sheepskin and goatskin brigade who wander in
mountains and in dens and in caves of the earth, of whom
the world is not worthy.</p>
          <p>My friends used to come to me and say, “Lucius, if
you will give up this doctrine that you preach, and be one
of us again, we will board your wife, and send you off to
college, and make a great preacher of you, and it won't be
long until you will be filling the-best pulpits in the Church.”
But these friends did not hear the <hi rend="italics">other</hi> Voice, whispering
in my ear, saying, “My child, if you are willing to be
despised and rejected of men, unnoticed and unknown,
unpopular and obscure for My sake and the gospel's, I will
give you a hundred-fold in this life, and eternal life in the
world to come.”  O, Hallelujah!
<pb id="compton66" n="66"/>
My soul is inundated with heaven's glory as I write.
Sometimes friends come to me and say, “Brother
Compton, I feel sorry for you; you must be having a hard
time; no one seems to appreciate your labors.”  I always
reply, “God bless you, brother, do n't waste your
sympathies on me; it's the other folks, without Jesus, who
need your tears and your sympathy.”  O, glory! glory!
glory! for the privilege of being sons of God: therefore the
world knoweth us not, because it knew Him not.</p>
          <p>Because church and schoolhouse doors have been
closed against me I have many times had to preach in little
rooms in mountain cabins, where no ventilation could be
obtained, and my garments would become saturated with
perspiration.  Then I would have to step out into the cold
night air, and walk over the mountains two or three miles
to spend the night.  The next morning I would find my
clothes frozen until coated with ice, and, putting them on,
allow them to melt and dry upon my body.  And often have
I spent the night in cabins where the rain and snow would
fall through the roof, and I was forced to sleep with the
covers over my head to keep it dry.  And, glory to God!
through it all He kept me in perfect health, and people
would come for miles, fall in at the altar, and seek God for
His pardoning and sanctifying grace.</p>
          <p>At a certain place the opposition was very great.  The
preacher sent me a letter forbidding me to preach in any
of the churches on his charge.  Some of the rowdy boys
from the place where this preacher lived asked me if I
wanted to hold a meeting at L----.  I told them I did, but
that I did not know of a place that could be procured in
which to have it, as L----. was the center of opposition in
that country.  They told me that they
<pb id="compton67" n="67"/>
would fix up an old schoolhouse on the edge of the town
with stove, lights, and seats, if I would come.  I left an
appointment for a certain night, and when the time came I
found that the preacher was so bitter against me that he
had gone personally to his people, warning them against
the meeting.  That night, upon arrival at the schoolhouse, I
found that my congregation consisted of the four boys
who had invited me to the place.  I preached to the boys,
and announced the services to continue.  The next day, as
I went to the post-office to get my mail, I was greeted
with such yells as, “Ha! Ha! Yonder goes the holy man!
Look, there he goes!  That 's him.”</p>
          <p>There was a little patch of woods below the old
schoolhouse, and thither I repaired.  Scraping away the
snow, I buried my face in the leaves, and told God He
must shake that country by Divine power, and there, in
prevailing prayer, I received the witness that God was
going to do it.  Inside of a week the house would not hold
the people, and souls were being saved at every service.
And, bless God, some of the rowdy boys who invited and
opened the way for me to hold the meeting, fell at the
altar and were blessedly converted.  The preacher who
had fought me so bitterly came one night, and sat back by
the door, and while I was talking he came and threw his
arms about my neck, asking me to forgive him.  He invited
me home to spend the night with him, and, while in his
home, he told me that it was my stand against secret
societies that had poisoned him against me.  I moved the
meeting from the schoolhouse to his church, and from his
church, later, to a larger one, and still we could not
accommodate the people.  The dear people kept me busy
going from house to house receiving their apologies
for the way they had
<pb id="compton68" n="68"/>
treated me.  The preacher got sanctified, gave up his
lodge, and to-day is a power for God and Bible holiness.
Hallelujah!  It pays to learn the secret of prevailing prayer.</p>
          <p>Some time after this I went to B--- to conduct a meeting.
Here, also, I found much opposition; but the God who has
never known defeat, came down in great power, and men
and women would fall like dead folks while I was
preaching, and lay thus for many hours.  Some services
would last all night long, and people would come for
miles to see the slain of the Lord.</p>
          <p>Hiram Rich, a Baptist preacher, who was very bitter
against me and the work, had never heard me, but, like
nine-tenths of the opposers, had only heard of me.  This
brother came to one of these services to see for himself.
The first night God got hold of him and convinced him that
he had been opposing God Almighty's truth, and after a
few services he fell at the altar, and cried for deliverance
from the carnal mind.  After going through a real death for
a few days, the Pentecostal fire flashed from heaven and
sanctified him wholly.  He immediately began to preach
sanctification like a flaming messenger of fire, and to-day
is a powerful, fire-baptized exponent of the fourfold
gospel.</p>
          <p>We have heard Brother Rich tell how the preachers of
the Baptist Church, when they ordained him, prayed God
to make “Hiram a man, like Barnabas, full of faith and of
the Holy Ghost.”  No sooner had God answered their
prayer, and given him the blessing that Barnabas enjoyed,
than they Churched him as a heretic.  “Consistency, thou
art a jewel!”  While Brother Rich was a quiet, carnal, little-
used-of-God Baptist preacher, preaching the doctrine of
the Church more zealously than that of the Bible, he had
an unbroken fellowship with the
<pb id="compton69" n="69"/>
Holy Ghost, and converted him into a flaming messenger
of gospel truth, and made a great soul-winner of him, than
his Church raised the cry of “heresy” and “fanaticism,”
and excluded him from their membership.  We have seen
so many precious saints turned out of the Churches of
their choice in these late years because they were “too
religious,” but how few members of these Churches are
ever turned out on account of their meanness!  How
really are we living in the last days, when “men shall have
a <hi rend="italics">form</hi> of godliness, but shall deny the <hi rend="italics">power</hi> (Holy Ghost)
thereof.”</p>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>BEGINNING OF HOLINESS IN ASHEVILLE.</head>
            <p>The day before a certain election in Asheville, North
Carolina, while I was passing along the principal street, I
noticed that the city seemed greatly stirred over the
coming election, and groups of men could be seen in all
directions electioneering for their favorite candidates.
The thought occurred to me, “I wonder if any one ever
electioneers upon these streets for Jesus.”  Immediately I
stepped over to a policeman, who was standing near by,
and said, “Sir, does anybody ever electioneer for Jesus on
these streets?” “No one,” he replied, “except old B---, and
nobody pays any attention to him.”  I hurried over to the
public square, and took my position in front of the
Buncombe County Courthouse, and, with a prayer for
God's help, began to sing:</p>
            <lg>
              <l> “I dreamed that the great judgment morning</l>
              <l>Had dawned, and the trumpet had blown;</l>
              <l> I dreamed that the nations had gathered</l>
              <l>In judgment before the white throne;</l>
              <l>From the throne came a bright shining angel,</l>
              <l>Who stood on the land and the sea,</l>
              <l>And swore with his hand raised to heaven,</l>
              <l>That time was no longer to be.</l>
              <pb id="compton70" n="70"/>
              <l>Then O, what a weeping and wailing,</l>
              <l>As the lost were told of their fate;</l>
              <l>They cried for the rocks and the mountains,</l>
              <l>And prayed; but their prayers were too late.”</l>
            </lg>
            <p>By the time I had completed the song, I had a
congregation of from two to three hundred people
gathered around me, with questioning looks upon their
faces, and I began the Lord's message by saying: “I see
that there is great excitement about this place in regard to
the coming election, as to who is to be the man, and I
feel it my duty to my country and to Almighty God to
electioneer upon these streets this afternoon.  Before I
commence I want to bow upon my knees and invoke the
blessings of God upon what I shall say; for I realize that
every word I speak I will have to meet at the judgment-bar
of God.  Let every man who realizes this fact bow your
head while I pray.”</p>
            <p>After a short prayer, during which many of those men
reverently bowed their heads, I arose to my feet and
began to preach Jesus to them.  I said: “I am here this
afternoon to represent One who is sure to be elected
whether you vote for him or not.  I learn that over eighteen
hundred years ago there was an election held in a
prominent Eastern city, and the names of the candidates
were Jesus Christ and Barabbas.  The majority of the
voters cast their ballot for Barabbas and against Jesus;
nevertheless Jesus Christ was elected, and to-day, while I
am electioneering for Him, He is sitting at the right hand
of God the Father, and every person who will accept Him
now will have the privilege of reigning with Him in His
glorious kingdom.”</p>
            <p>For about forty-five minutes God poured into my soul a
burning message, and sent the truth home to the hearts of
that congregation.  As I closed my message, the
<pb id="compton71" n="71"/>
deputy sheriff of the county rushed up to me with tears in
his eyes, saying, “Will you preach in the courthouse for us
next Sunday?”  I said, “Yes, sir, I will.”  He called the
attention of the people, and announced the meeting for
Sunday.  I was on hand, and preached according to
promise, and continued the meeting many days, preaching
afternoons from an old band-stand as the crowds passed
out of court, and evenings in the courthouse.</p>
            <p>God only knows the results of those meetings.  I know
of a number who were convicted in the street meeting
that afternoon who sought and found God.  One young
man, who had been fleeing from justice on account of
blockading liquor, received an arrow of conviction in his
heart which never left until Jesus saved him.  Later he was
sanctified wholly, and called to preach, and to-day he is
traveling the mountains, preaching a full gospel and being
used of God in saving souls.</p>
            <p>This was the beginning of holiness preaching at
Asheville.  From this humble start the work has grown
until, at present writing, there are scores of people
professing the experience.  The holiness people have a
large church of their own on Buxton Street, and a regular
pastor.  The services are often so largely attended that the
large audience-room will in no wise accommodate the
people.  My gospel tent has been pitched at various times
in various parts of the city, and God, through these
meeting, has often stirred the people in a mighty way, and
scores have been saved and sanctified.  Opposition has
become greater and greater as the work has progressed;
but God is with us, and gives us the victory all along
the way.</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton72" n="72"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER X.</head>
          <head>DEATH OF LITTLE MARIETTA.</head>
          <p>LITTLE Marietta, the only child that God has ever
given us, was the bright little sunshine of our lives and
the joy of our home.  Often, when I had been kept from
home for weeks, on my return she would throw her little
arms around my neck and cry for joy.</p>
          <p>At one time I was in the midst of a meeting in the
mountains, several miles from Asheville, when a
messenger brought me word that my little child was dying,
and if I wanted to see her alive I must hasten to her side.
I saddled my horse, and rode home as quickly as possible.
Arriving a little after midnight, I found my faithful wife,
with little Marietta in her arms gasping for breath.  No one
knows the anguish of my heart as I looked at my sweet
little darling, and realized that I would so soon have to give
her up.  My great consolation, however, was in the fact
that He to whom I must give her was the same gentle,
loving Savior who had said, “Suffer the little children to
come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the
kingdom of heaven.”  I quietly withdrew from the presence
of all earthly friends, and, where none but the ear of God
could hear, I poured out my bleeding heart.  I cried to Him
to spare my darling's life, when a voice seemed to whisper
to me, “Can you say, God's will be done?”  I said: “Surely it
can not be God's will to take our only child.  O, Lord, do
spare her!”  Again the voice: “Can you say, God's will be
done?”  I remembered the day that little
<figure id="ill2" entity="comp72"><p>MARIETTA COMPTON.</p></figure>
<pb id="compton73" n="73"/>
Marietta was born in that little scantily-furnished room on
the fifth floor in Cincinnati.  How I knelt down beside the
bed upon which she and her young mother lay, and there
solemnly consecrated her life to God for time and eternity.
Then I looked up towards the heavens and quietly said,
“Yes, Lord, take her home, if it be Thy will.”  O, what a
sweet peace flooded my soul!  I arose from my knees,
satisfied for God to take the child or heal her.</p>
          <p>I returned to the sickroom, and found that wife could
get no faith for her healing either.  Convinced that this was
my last opportunity to be with my child this side of heaven,
I took her in my arms and nursed her through the night.
She talked with me much, and was so happy to know that
I had come home; she would often want me to hold her up
so that she could place her arms about my neck and
tenderly embrace me.</p>
          <p>In the morning, about nine o'clock, we could see that the
end was near.  Her mother kneeled on one side of the
bed, and I on the other, and there we prayed God to
make her journey from earth to heaven as easy as
possible.  In a few moments she closed her eyes and
quietly fell asleep, and her little soul had gone to be with
Jesus.</p>
          <p>No more would we hear the patter of those little feet,
nor the prattle of that childish voice, which was sweetest
music to our ears.  Never again would that precious form
hasten to meet me upon my return, throw those arms
about my neck, and press sweet kisses to my lips; for,
although she seemed to be lying there as ever, yet she
was not there, but had taken a long journey, and would
not come back until the resurrection-day, when I knew I
should see her in her glorified body with Jesus and His
holy angels.  I arose from my knees a better
<pb id="compton74" n="74"/>
man, realizing that for me earth was poorer and heaven
richer.</p>
          <p>Now the important question to consider was the burial.
I had no money, and knew no one from whom I could get
any.  The enemy of my soul seemed to marshal all his
demons about me that day.  Fingers from all directions
pointed to me as the heretic.  I had one Friend who had
never failed nor forsaken me, and I went to Him and laid it
all at His feet, and He took the burden away.  Praise His
precious name!  I restated my consecration to God, and
told Him I would walk with Him and obey His word
forever.  I had such victory that I could have parted with
all my loved ones, because I felt the everlasting arm of
God beneath and sustaining me.</p>
          <p>The Lord sent me every dollar that was needed to give
my child a good burial.  Thank God, the experience that I
preach I have tested in every phase of life, and I find that
it sustains through all things.</p>
          <p>The taking from us of our little girl proved a great
blessing to me.  It caused me to sink away into a place in
Divine things where I had never been before.  More souls
were saved, more sanctified, had greater faith in God,
more were divinely healed through the prayer of faith, and
deeper, more lasting work was done altogether.  Because
of the demonstration of the Spirit manifested in the
meetings, the opposing element, including the backslidden
preachers, have tried to make the people believe it was
hypnotism; but they are having a hard time, while we are
happy in the Lord, having victory an along the way.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton75" n="75"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER XI.</head>
          <head>LESSONS FOR THE SANCTIFIED AND OTHERS
                           TO LEARN.</head>
          <p>GOD, through the prophet Hosea, said that His people
were destroyed or cut off for lack of knowledge.  Although
He said this almost three thousand years ago, it clearly
applies to-day.  The kind of knowledge that God refers to is
not the wisdom of this world, attained through years of
college and university learning.  Paul says in Corinthians
that the wisdom of this world is foolishness in the eyes of
God, and that He hath chosen the foolish, the base, and the
weak things of this world to bring to naught the things that
this world calls wisdom.  The kind of knowledge that God
calls wisdom is the knowledge that we may have of Him
as a personal Savior and of His Word as God's revealed
will.  So, you see, if a person were born, and always lived,
in the jungles of Africa, and did not know “A” from “Z,”
but in some way had received more of God s holiness in
his heart than anybody else in the world possessed, he
would be the wisest person in the world in the eyes of
God.  Education is a fine thing, and when sanctified to God,
one could never receive too much of it.  I have so often felt
my great need of more learning; but the Lord deliver us
from this modern plan of substituting the curriculum of the
schools for the power of the Holy Ghost and the wisdom
of God!</p>
          <p>After God sanctified me wholly, I learned a great many
lessons, both through the study of the Word, for
<pb id="compton76" n="76"/>
which my appetite had greatly increased, and through
personal experience.  I learned   -  </p>
          <p>1.   <hi rend="italics">That the devil was not dead.</hi></p>
          <p>When the blessing came, and for some days afterward,
God's glory flooded my soul until I felt that the
devil, as far as bothering me any more was concerned,
was surely dead; but, alas! to my surprise one day, I
realized that the powers of darkness had settled upon
me like the night.  All the demonstration, all the joy,
and all the peace seemed to have utterly left me, and I
was alone in the wilderness with the devil.  After Jesus
received the Holy Ghost at Jordan, He was immediately
led into the wilderness to be tempted of Satan.  During
the whole of three days this darkness continued, and
Satan did his utmost to defeat me by inducing me to cast
away my confidence in God and in His work wrought
in my heart.</p>
          <p>I had often been riding along the Southern Railroad
at a swift speed, greatly enjoying the beautiful mountain
scenery and the bright sunlight as it fell upon the sparkling,
rushing waters of the river which ran close by, when,
suddenly, the train would dash into one of the many
tunnels and utter darkness would ensue.  The engine-
smoke would fill the car with smut, gas, and smoke, until
breathing became difficult.  Under these circumstances,
I never leaped from the car to save my life because I
knew that would be folly; I never fretted about the
unpleasant atmosphere or the density of the darkness;
what I did was to sit quietly back in my seat, contented
and happy.  I knew that it would soon be over, and I
trusted the engineer to pull me through in safety.</p>
          <p>I believed these three days of darkness through which
I was passing to be a spiritual tunnel that God was taking
<pb id="compton77" n="77"/>
me through, which would result in my good and His
glory.  I trusted the Engineer, and held on to the gospel
train by faith, and, glory to God! soon the bright
sunlight, the towering mountains, and the sparkling
river of God's love came again into view, and the victory
was gained.  O, beloved, when darkness comes, hold
on to the God of our salvation, and He'll carry you
through.</p>
          <p>2.   <hi rend="italics">That the sanctified are strongly tempted.</hi></p>
          <p>One of the devil's big guns to hinder the spread and
acceptance of the doctrine of holiness is to circulate the
erroneous report that the sanctified people say that they
can not be tempted.  In all the years that I have been
sanctified and mingling with sanctified folks, I have
never seen a person, nor heard tell of a person, who
had seen any one that made any such claim.  Any claim
of this kind would be heresy.  If Jesus Himself were
tempted severely by Satan, it would be folly for any
one, born in sin and living in the midst of it, as God's
people are forced to do in this world, ever to claim to
be exempt from temptation.  The real truth of the matter
is, that there is no people on earth as persistently
tempted by the powers of darkness as the sanctified are.</p>
          <p>In the regenerate heart the devil knows that his
greatest work (inbred sin) still remains.  He also knows
that, as long as it does remain, and that person fails
to get rid of it in sanctification, the chances are ten to
one that he will backslide anyway; so he does not waste
many of his cannon-balls on him.  The sanctified heart
and life is free from all the sin that the devil ever put
there; consequently, he must put in his most desperate
efforts to regain his former follower; which thousands
can testify he does.</p>
          <p>In order to receive the experience of entire sanctification
<pb id="compton78" n="78"/>
the seeker must put his all upon God's sanctifying altar.
This means all bodily appetites as well as everything
else; such as time, talent, friends, reputation, riches, etc.
When all is surrendered, the blessing comes as definitely,
and many times more definitely than pardon.  Now, one of
the first temptations of Satan will be to tell you that you
never did put everything on the altar, and in this way he
will get you to tinkering with your consecration.  If you
listen to Satan in this, you will very soon get in the
“dumps.”  You tell the devil that it is none of his business;
that is a matter settled between you and Jesus, and shout
the victory.  The devil is the accuser of the brethren.</p>
          <p>When you were consecrated, you put all you knew,
and all you did not know, on the altar; so probably, for a
long time, new things will present themselves, and all you
are to do is to happily shout, “Yes, Lord; here it is; take
it!”  One of the surest ways of getting rid of the devil at
such times is to shout him out of countenance.  O, glory!
He can not stand Holy Ghost demonstration, but he is a
great lover of demonstration out of the Holy Ghost.</p>
          <p>Another method of the devil to cause you to backslide
is to induce you to practice something again that you told
God you would give up.  For example, you tell God that
you will quit the use of tobacco; the devil knows that to be
your weakest point, and he attacks you there.  He will
have some tobacco-chewing friend call upon you, and for
an hour spit the filthy stuff all about you.  The fumes of
the tobacco creates in you the old desire, and if you yield,
the Lord will leave you as suddenly as He came in.</p>
          <p>One more plan of the devil I desire to mention in this
connection, is to get you to quench the Spirit.
<pb id="compton79" n="79"/>
Where the Holy Ghost is allowed to have His way, there
will always be Holy Ghost demonstration.  I do not say that
every one will jump the same or jump at all; neither will
every one shout and clap their hands the same, or do it at
all.  But there will be some manifestation of the kind
mentioned, or of the many kinds not mentioned.  This you
must always be sure to do  -  if the Spirit moves you to
shout, jump, clap your hands, run around the building, or
anything else, quench it not, but obey, and by so doing
your soul will ever be on the victory side.  I see more of a
tendency to formalism among the sanctified folks than
fanaticism.  The Lord keep us so red-hot that the devil will
never know what we are going to do next.</p>
          <p>3.  <hi rend="italics">That we never get so far in this life that we can not
commit sin.</hi></p>
          <p>Another trick of the devil to hinder the spread of Bible
holiness is to warn the people against us by saying “we
teach that we can not commit sin after we are sanctified.”
We make no such claim.  What we do claim is, that we
can not commit sin and be sanctified; neither can one
commit sin and be justified.  A good case of old-time Bible
conviction will make any man so sick of sin, and hate it so
thoroughly, that he would as soon lose his right arm as to
have anything to do with it.  Sanctified folks could commit
sin if they wanted to, but they do not want to.  The “want
to,” or tendency to sin, is eliminated with the eradication of
the Old Man.</p>
          <p>This present life is a probationary life, and as long as
we are on probation, or trial, we are liable to fall.  The
devil and his demons were at one time the brightest of
angels in glory.  If they fell from their first estate, with all
their heavenly surroundings, what folly to suppose that it
would be impossible for a Christian to
<pb id="compton80" n="80"/>
fall, with sin abounding on every side!  I thank God that the
day is soon coming, however, when the devil will be cast
into the lake of fire, where he can no longer tempt nor
lure God's people from their Savior.  Hallelujah!</p>
          <p>4.  <hi rend="italics">That we are never free from mistakes in this
present life.</hi></p>
          <p>God created Adam and Eve in His own image.  They
were perfect in body, in mind, and in heart.  When they
transgressed they fell from this perfect state, not only
spiritually, but mentally and physically as well.  Jesus Christ
came into the world to save men from their sins, or, in
other words, to restore them spiritually to the same purity
and perfection of heart that our first parents enjoyed
before the fall.  Entire sanctification does this for the heart.
But you see that the redemptive plan for us in this present
state does not provide for the perfection of our bodies and
minds; hence we are all defective in judgment, and
however pure and holy our hearts may be, we are ever
liable to mistakes.  But, mark you, although sin is always a
mistake, a mistake is not always a sin.  The holiest people
often make mistakes that grieve them to the heart, yet
they realize that they have committed no sin against God.</p>
          <p>Man is a trinity consisting of mind, heart or soul, and
body; the heart, or soul, is the real man himself, consisting
of the conscience, the will, and the affections.  These three
constituent parts survived the fall of man.  The conscience
of man teaches him right from wrong; the will enables him
to choose or reject; and the affections cause him to love or
hate.  The will is the king of man, and hence God always
appeals to man's will, and says, “Whosoever will, may
come.”  On the other hand, whosoever will, may reject.
No amount of grace takes
<pb id="compton81" n="81"/>
from us our will-power or free moral agency; so if the
sanctified will to commit sin and backslide, they may do
so; or if they will to obey God and retain the blessing,
thank God. there are not enough devils on earth or in
hell to make them backslide.  O, hallelujah!  Don't you feel
like laying down the book and taking a good shout?  O,
glory! glory! glory!</p>
          <p>5.  <hi rend="italics">That we must redeem the time, because the days
are evil.</hi></p>
          <p>In walking in the light as the Lord reveals it, another
thing He has taught me is the necessity of redeeming the
time.  I realize that each day is a new one  -  one that I
never experienced before, and never will again; hence the
importance of making each moment count for God and
souls.</p>
          <p>The apostles, in Acts vi, 4, said that they “must continue
steadfastly in prayer, and in the ministry of the Word.”
This is the only duty of the minister of to-day, and yet
how very few thus perform it!</p>
          <p>He who would know the real secret of soul-winning
must first learn to spend the most of his time alone with
God and His Word.  In the evangelistic work in these
mountains it is often very inconvenient to get alone with
the Lord, because the people are not often prepared to
give one a separate room.  Often the whole family live in
a one-roomed log-cabin.  Many times, under these
circumstances, I put on my overcoat and hunt the barn,
where, nearly buried in the hay, I wait on God in
meditation and prayer.  Family prayer and other forms of
united prayer are good, but a little while in the secret
chamber with God is often worth a much longer period
spent some other way.</p>
          <p>Many times, when engaged in a fireside conversation,
the Spirit of the Lord would impress me to arise and
<pb id="compton82" n="82"/>
leave the family, in order to get alone with God.  Of
course, they can not understand such strange actions, but
if we obey God we will always be doing things that will
seem strange and incomprehensible to folks about us.
“They know us not, because they knew Him not.”</p>
          <p>If you want to know why the average minister has no
power in winning souls, just spend a little time with him
and listen to his conversations, and you will learn the
secret.  I have never heard of a lazy man or a loafer that
was known very far for his spirituality.  So, when I see a
preacher or professor of religion hanging around stores
and post-offices, whiling away his time, I conclude that if
he has any salvation at all, it is away down in the bulb.
Any so-called Christian who can go visiting and spend
several hours talking about everything else, and not
mention salvation, is a good candidate for the mourners'
bench.  Of course, if you talk religion most of the time, the
folks will call you a fanatic and religious crank; but when
time is ended and the judgment is come, no one will regret
that he spent so much time in prayer, in the study of God's
Word, or in conversations about salvation from sin and
Bible holiness.  Again:</p>
          <p>6.   <hi rend="italics">That going in debt is a hindrance to spiritual growth
and happiness.</hi></p>
          <p>The Scripture tells us to “owe no man anything, save
to love one another.”  It is always much easier to get into
debt than to get out.  Many of God's people are so
weighted down with debts that they never get very far
along in spiritual things.  They pray, but their debts seem to
come between them and God; they arise to testify, but
the sight of a person in the congregation whom they owe
hinders their liberty; they feel that they ought to speak
to that man on the back seat about his soul, but,
<pb id="compton83" n="83"/>
behold, they have owed him sixty cents for over three
years, and he has no confidence in them.</p>
          <p>At one time I got into debt, and thought it unavoidable,
but soon found it such a hindrance to my faith that I quit
preaching for a while, and, taking a mattock, went to
grubbing new ground at sixty cents a day.  I had not done
hard physical work for a long time, and my hands
blistered so that I had to keep them soaked with oil and
well bandaged in order to stand it at all.  The Lord helped
me to pay my debt in this way, and, thank God, I could
once more take my Bible, and sing, preach, and pray,
realizing that I was a free man.</p>
          <p>The kind of conviction that results in Bible salvation
will make a man put his nose on his back track, and either
pay or promise to pay, with the first opportunity, every
cent he owes any man.  If the man is dead, you will gladly
pay his heirs.  If the debt is called “outlawed” by the
courts, you will realize that no debt is ever outlawed in the
courts of the Eternal Judge, and you will pay the debt with
regular interest up to date.  No wonder that so few people
are getting saved these days!  In conclusion, I have
learned   -  </p>
          <p>7.   <hi rend="italics">That sanctification is purity and not maturity.</hi></p>
          <p>The devil uses his co-workers, in both the ministry and
laity, to prejudice the minds of the people against holiness
by saying that we claim absolute perfection, or that we
can never get any farther out in Divine things in this life
after we are sanctified.</p>
          <p>Absolute perfection is alone the attribute of God, and
that we can never possess.  The perfection that the
sanctified enjoy is the Christian perfection of which
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, was the great
exponent, along with Paul of Tarsus and most of the
other
<pb id="compton84" n="84"/>
Bible writers.  Christian perfection is perfection, or purity
of the heart.  The sinner receives pardon in regeneration,
and the believer purity in entire sanctification.  <hi rend="italics">Purity</hi> is
one thing, and <hi rend="italics">maturity</hi> is a vastly different thing.</p>
          <p>Sin is the only element in the heart that is not pure.
When sin is all out of the heart, there being nothing impure
left, of course, the heart is perfectly pure and holy.  But
there are great things in store for every perfect or
sanctified Christian.  Sanctification just gives one a good
start in the Christian race by eliminating from the runner
the greatest barrier to his progress; i. e., the old man of
inbred sin.  One can not grow into entire sanctification; but,
thank God, there are illimitable heights to which he can
attain after receiving the experience.</p>
          <p>Reader, I beg you, in Christ's name, to lay aside all
prejudice, that you “may be strong to comprehend with all
the saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and
height; and to know the love of Christ which passeth
knowledge, that ye may be filled with all the fullness of
God.”</p>
          <p>“Now unto Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly
above all that we ask or think, according to the power
that worketh in us, unto Him be the glory in the Church
and in Christ Jesus unto all generations for ever and
ever.”  (American Bible.)</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton85" n="85"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER XII.</head>
          <head>SECRET SOCIETIES.</head>
          <p>I HAVE been asked many times my opinion upon the
secret society question.  Many honest folks desire to know
the evil of them, who, when given the light, will be glad to
obey God and drop them forever.  For the benefit of such
persons I devote this short chapter to the subject, with my
earnest prayers that those who read it may forever
withdraw from any affiliation with these “marks of the
beast.”</p>
          <p>My stand against secret societies, and especially
Masonry, has caused many to withdraw from them, and,
on the other hand, has brought me much persecution and
opposition.  I have long been clearly convinced that no one
could be a Bible Christian, a true follower of Jesus Christ,
and at the same time be a true Mason.</p>
          <p>At one time I was in a few days' meeting at Clyde,
North Carolina, where I noticed that there were at least
seven preachers in that town wearing Masonic pins, and
wondering why they could not have a meeting of power in
that place.  At that time I was very free to tell them they
could never expect God to pour out His Spirit as long as
all the preachers were yoked up with ungodly fraternities.
A long time has passed since then; I have learned a great
many things I did not know at that time, both in and out of
God's Word, and to-day I am more convinced of the truth
of my position than I was then.</p>
          <p>I am against secret societies because God and His
Word are against them, as any one who desires can
clearly
<pb id="compton86" n="86"/>
see.  The trouble with so many is, that the “hoodwink” that
was placed over their eyes when they joined is still there,
blindfolding their eyes from seeing the plain, positive
teaching of God's Word, by which all must be judged.</p>
          <p>Brother, will you please lay aside your biased mind for
a few moments, and look with me into the Scriptures?
Remember God's Word is forever settled in heaven,
whether we believe it or not.  In the fifth chapter and
third and fourth verses of Leviticus are these words:</p>
          <p>“Or if a soul swear, pronouncing with his lips to do evil
or to do good, whatsoever it be that a man shall pronounce
with an oath, and it shall be hid from him; when he knoweth
of it, then he shall be guilty, and it shall be, when he shall be
guilty in one of these things, <hi rend="italics">that he shall confess that he
hath sinned</hi> in that thing.”</p>
          <p>Brother, do n't you have to pronounce with an oath
never to reveal certain things when you are taken into a
secret society, when those things are hid from you?  Yes,
certainly, you answer.  Then God says you have sinned.</p>
          <p>Now for a moment let us read 2 Cor. vi, 14-18, giving
special attention to the following:</p>
          <p>“Be not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for
what fellowship have righteousness and iniquity?
. . .  What portion hath a believer with an unbeliever?
. . .  Wherefore come ye out from among them, and be
ye separate.”</p>
          <p>Brother, is there a secret society on earth that you can
join without yoking yourself with unbelievers?  The man
that becomes a Mason yokes himself with thousands of
infidels, skeptics, agnostics, and atheists.  He yokes
himself with men who call Jesus Christ a bastard; he
yokes himself with an organization that will not allow
Jesus Christ to be mentioned in any of the ceremonies,
<pb id="compton87" n="87"/>
prayers, etc., because it is objectionable to some; he
yokes himself with thieves, murderers, drunkards, and
fornicators.  O the thought of the leading clergyman and
Church folks of to-day belonging to such a devil's helltrap
as this is almost beyond all credence!  The preacher of
to-day gets in his pulpit, and prays for power, and at the
same time has his neck in the yoke of secret orders.
Many are convicted at heart of the wrong, but for their
Oath's sake, like Herod, they will keep it, and stay among
them for worldly honor.  Brother, listen to Jesus again:</p>
          <p>“How can ye believe which seek honor one of another,
and seek not the honor [alone] that cometh from God
only.” (John v, 44.)</p>
          <p>Is it any wonder that the nominal Church is so worldly,
when the majority of her ministers and members are more
interested in their oath-bound societies than in the secret
chamber of prayer, prevailing for a lost and hell-going
world?</p>
          <p>“And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of
darkness, but rather even reprove them; for the things
which are done by them in secret it is a shame even to
speak of.” (Eph. v, II, 12.)</p>
          <p>Secret orders do works of darkness (works of secret),
by whose power our courts are bribed and crime is never
revealed.  Very prominent Masons have told me, in
friendly conversation, that all they want when they have a
case in the courts is to have one or two Masons in the jury-
box, or a Masonic judge or opposing lawyer, and, whether
right or wrong, they have little fear of the result.</p>
          <p>“No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the
one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and
despise the other.  Ye can not serve God and mammon.”
(Matt. vi, 24.)</p>
          <p>Lodge officers are called by such names as, “Worshipful
<pb id="compton88" n="88"/>
Master,” “Grand Master,” and “Noble Grand.”  Come
pare this with:</p>
          <p>“Neither be ye called masters: for one is your Master,
even the Christ.  But he that is greatest among you shall
be your servant.”  (Matt. xxiii, 10, 11.)</p>
          <p>Why do you belong to a secret society?  “Because
when I die they will give me a good burial, and give my
wife and children a good sum to maintain them.”  Brother,
how does this harmonize with the Bible?</p>
          <p>“Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh
flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord.” 
(Jer. xvii, 5.)</p>
          <p>“Be not therefore anxious, saying, What shall we eat?
Or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be
clothed? . . .  Your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have
need of all these things.  But seek ye first His kingdom,
and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added
unto you.”  (Matt. vi, 31-33.)</p>
          <p>“I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not
seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging their
bread.”  (Psa. xxxvii, 25.)</p>
          <p>As has been mentioned, the Masonic lodge will not
recognize Jesus Christ.  Let us compare this with God's
Word:</p>
          <p>“There is none other name under heaven given among
men, whereby we must be saved.”  (Acts iv, 12.)</p>
          <p>“I am the way, the truth and the life; no man cometh
unto the Father but by Me.”  (John xiv, 6.)</p>
          <p>“Whosoever therefore will be ashamed of Me and of
My Word in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him
also shall the Son of man be ashamed when He cometh in
the glory of the Father with the holy angels.”  (Mark viii,
38.)</p>
          <p>I do not hesitate to condemn anything that God 
<pb id="compton89" n="89"/>
condemns.  When God gave Ezekiel a vision of secret
society work, He boldly denounced it.</p>
          <p>God told Ezekiel to go into the “<hi rend="italics">hole in the wall</hi>, and
see the wicked abominations that they do in the dark [in
secret], every person in his chambers of imagery.
. . .  And He brought me into the inner court of the
Lord's house, and, behold, at the door of the temple of the
Lord, between the porch and the altar, were about five
and twenty men, with their backs toward the temple of
the Lord, and their faces toward the east; and they
worshiped the sun toward the east.  Hast thou seen this, O
son of man?”  (Ezek. viii.)  To be sure every one who has
gone into one of these “holes in the wall” (that is, into the
lodge), has seen it.</p>
          <p>Much more could easily be said; for example, that the
third degree of Masonry is worked on a lie, saying that
Hiram did not finish his work, when God's Word says
Hiram did finish it.  But I forbear, and turn it all over to the
God who says He will bring to light the hidden things of
darkness and dishonesty.</p>
          <p>Many tell me that I have lost my influence with a great
many people by taking this stand against secret societies
and for Bible holiness; but that does not surprise me, for
Jesus Christ did not have influence enough to keep Him
off the cross; Stephen did not have influence enough to
keep the shower of stones from crushing out his life; Paul
did not have influence enough to save his neck; but he had
power with God, and that is what my heart is after, and if
God needs a martyr in Western North Carolina, I am a
candidate for the honor.  Praise the Lord!</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="compton90" n="90"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head><emph rend="bold">SERMON</emph><lb/>
ON THE<lb/>
<emph rend="bold">State of the Soul after Death.</emph></head>
          <docAuthor>BY L. B. COMPTON.</docAuthor>
          <epigraph>
            <cit>
              <q direct="unspecified">“But man dieth and is laid low; yea, man giveth up the ghost,
and where is he?”</q>
              <bibl>-- Job  xiv, 10.</bibl>
            </cit>
          </epigraph>
          <p>THIS is a text that should interest every hearer, and may God
draw your mind to it this morning!  I want especially to call
your attention to this part: “YEA, MAN GIVETH UP THE
GHOST, AND WHERE IS HE?”</p>
          <p>My friends, do you ever give this a thought: I must give up
my spirit, and where will it be?  Beloved, some things may be
neglected without very much loss; but I want to say, you can
not afford to neglect this all-important question,   -  </p>
          <p>“WHERE WILL I BE?”</p>
          <p>When death receives my body, where will <hi rend="italics">I be</hi>?  That is, my
spirit; where will it be?  O the solemn question!  May God fix it on
hearts this morning!  Beloved, there are many of our modern soul-
sleepers who would tell us that we go into the grave with our
cold, icy bodies, and there remain until the trumpet sounds; but,
thank God!  I see something better now.  At one time in my early
experience this doctrine of soul-sleeping drifted me on the island
of Doubt and Fears; but after a fresh study of the Word and
some help from the true saints, I swam
<pb id="compton91" n="91"/>
from the island of Doubt to the living Rock of Christ, who is life
from Alpha to Omega, and there I settled with a living faith
forever.  Hallelujah to God!  And I see that no such teaching
has any place in the Word of God, although one can see very
plainly how such teaching can be produced by the way the
Authorized Version has rendered the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi>.</p>
          <p>The word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi> is translated <hi rend="italics">grave</hi> thirty-one times in the
Authorized Version of the Old Testament; but the Revised
Version corrects this, and I am thankful that I got to studying
the Revised Version, for it has made some things plain to me
that I never saw in the Authorized; so I use the Revised, and all
the Scripture I shall give to-day will be quoted from the Revised,
and you can distinguish the difference.  So may the dear Lord
teach us this morning His Word, and back it with power!</p>
          <p>Beloved, the thought I want to call your attention to this
morning is to the question asked in my text: “WHERE: IS
HE?” or, when I learn, where will I be?  God's Word plainly
teaches two places: one is a place of conscious happiness, and
the other a place of conscious torment and misery.  According
to the Word, when man departs this life he goes straight to one
or the other of these places.</p>
          <p>I want to call your attention to the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi> in the Revised
Version.  Scholars tell us that the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi> in the Old
Testament is the same as <hi rend="italics">Hades</hi> in the New Testament, and
they never mean <hi rend="italics">grave</hi>; and here are some of the reasons why
the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi> never means <hi rend="italics">grave</hi>.  You never find the word
Sheol in the plural in any of the places it is mentioned.  You
never read of the body going to Sheol.  You never read of Sheol
being located on the earth.  Man never digs or makes a Sheol,
but all of these points are found in connection with the word
<hi rend="italics">grave</hi> and <hi rend="italics">sepulcher</hi>, Sheol means the place of
<pb id="compton92" n="92"/>
departed spirits, and not grave, as it is rendered so many
times in the Old Version.  No doubt the reason why the old
translators translated the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol grave</hi>, is that they
did not understand that Sheol was a place of two
compartments, which the Scriptures plainly teach was
before Christ, which we will notice as we go further in
this subject.  The thought I want to impress on your minds
at present is:</p>
          <p>THAT SHEOL MEANS THE PLACE OF DEPARTED SPIRITS.</p>
          <p>If you will follow me in the Scriptures, and notice the
revised rendering you can see it plainly.  Psalms XVI, 10:
“For thou wilt not leave my <hi rend="italics">soul</hi> to <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi>, neither wilt
thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, this is a prophecy of our Lord: while His body
lay in Joseph's new tomb, His soul was in Sheol or Hades.
This is also made plain by the quotation in the second
chapter of Acts, verse 31.  This also proves that Sheol and
Hades mean the same place.  We will notice this again
before we get through.  Another proof that Sheol is the
place for the soul is found in Psalms xxx, 3: “O Jehovah,
thou hast brought up my <hi rend="italics">soul</hi> from <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi>: thou hast kept
me alive that I should not go down to the pit.”  And we
read again in Psalms xlix, 15: “But God will redeem my
soul from the power of Sheol.”  And another place is
Proverbs xxiii, 14: “Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and
shall deliver his <hi rend="italics">soul</hi> from <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi>.”  And another place is
Luke xvi, 23: “And in <hi rend="italics">Hades,</hi> or <hi rend="italics">Sheol,</hi> he lifted up his
eyes, being in torments.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, you see that Sheol is a place for the spirit and
not for the body, and any one who studies the Scriptures
on this subject will see the truth.  I believe the soul-sleeping
heresy has largely sprung from the way the Authorized
Version has rendered the word Sheol grave.</p>
          <pb id="compton93" n="93"/>
          <p>Beloved, I want to give you a stronger proof yet that
Sheol never means grave.  We read of “Conversations in
Sheol,” and this is never thought of by any one in
connection with the grave, and this alone should be proof
that Sheol is not the grave, and should stop the mouth of
every soul-sleeper.  I see something higher than the sun
and deeper than a grave.  Hallelujah!</p>
          <p>In three different passages in God's Word we read of
“Conversations in Sheol.”</p>
          <p>First, Isaiah xiv, 10: Here we have a remarkable
conversation.  “All they shall answer and say unto thee,
Art thou also become weak as we?  Art thou become like
unto us?  Thy pomp is brought down to Sheol, and the
noise of viols; the worm is spread under thee, and worms
cover them.”  “How art thou fallen from heaven, O day
star, son of the morning!  How art thou cut down to the
ground, that didst lay low the nations, and thou said in
thine heart, I will ascend into the heavens: I will exalt my
throne above the stars of God.”  And in the fifteenth verse:
“Yet thou shalt be brought down to <hi rend="italics">Sheol,</hi> to the
uttermost parts of the pit.  They that see thee shall
narrowly look upon thee, saying, Is this the man that made
the earth to tremble; that did shake kingdoms; that made
the world as a wilderness, and overthrew the cities
thereof?”</p>
          <p>Here is a conversation where they are stirred up in
Sheol talking about their leader becoming as weak as
they, and their leader is the devil, and he is going to lose
his hold on this world, and will soon be cast down and shut
up just as weak and powerless as any creature there.</p>
          <p>Beloved, lift up your hearts to Jesus, and let your faith
be set on Him as a conqueror of every foe.  Bless His
name forever!  He has prevailed to open the seals and put
to naught the devil according to His Word.  (Hebrews
<pb id="compton94" n="94"/>
ii, 14.)  But, precious unsaved souls, think of your doom shut
up in the <hi rend="italics">lowest Sheol</hi> in conscious torment and misery
because you neglected the great salvation, which was
purchased for you through Jesus!  God help you to see it before
mercy's door is forever closed!</p>
          <p>We find, in Ezekiel xxxii, 21, another remarkable conversation
in Sheol: “The strong among the mighty shall speak to Him out
of the midst of Sheol with them that help Him: they are gone
down, they lie still, even the uncircumcised, slain by the sword.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, what can be said of this?  Here we read language
that was uttered in Sheol.  None of you believe that this was
uttered in the grave.  I have never found any one yet who
believes it; but it was spoken by those who were in Sheol, the
place of departed spirits.</p>
          <p>The next passage I want to call your attention to is in the
Lord's Gospel of Luke, chapter xvi, commencing with the
nineteenth verse and continuing to the end of the chapter.  I do
not see who can read this and not see that Sheol or Hades is the
place of departed spirits, and that before Christ it was a place of
two compartments.  I know many call this a parable; but Jesus
never said it was a parable, and there is no proof in the Word
that will support the idea that it is a parable.  But, bless God! it is
a matter of fact related by Jesus Himself, and the Word will
stand forever whether you accept it or not.</p>
          <p>All through the Old Testament we read of the saints going
down to Sheol, and, as I have before stated, I believe that is
the reason why the word <hi rend="italics">Sheol</hi> in the Authorized Version is
rendered <hi rend="italics">grave</hi> so many times.  It has given some chance for
the doctrine of soul-sleeping; but, thank God! by a careful study
of the truth, we can see something better than a hole in the
ground. (Amen!)</p>
          <p>It is positively proven in the plain Word of God that
<pb id="compton95" n="95"/>
both saint and sinner went down to Sheol before Christ, and no
doubt the old translators could not understand how the saints
went to Sheol, so they rendered it <hi rend="italics">grave</hi>, and it has been
misleading to many; but the plain truth of God reveals that the
spirits of all who die go to Sheol, or Hades.  The sinner goes
down to the <hi rend="italics">lowest Sheol</hi>, as is revealed in Deuteronomy xxxii,
22: “For a fire is kindled in mine anger, and burneth into the
<hi rend="italics">lowest Sheol</hi>.”</p>
          <p>And, again, we find where it mentions the <hi rend="italics">lowest Sheol</hi> in
Psalms lxxxvi, 13: “For great is thy loving kindness toward me;
and thou hast delivered my soul from the <hi rend="italics">lowest Sheol</hi>.”</p>
          <p>The one who realizes that he has been delivered from the
lowest Sheol certainly realizes it is through the great mercy of
God.  You see, the sinner goes down to the lowest Sheol, and he
is tormented in the flames of fire.  As it is clearly revealed in Luke
xvi, 23, “But the saints in their compartment are in happiness
and perfect rest,” so is it revealed in many places which we will
notice before we get through.</p>
          <p>As we search the truth, let us pray for God to give us Divine
wisdom to see His Word clearly.</p>
          <p>Now I want to give you some more Bible proof about the
wicked going down to Sheol.  We find in Job xxiv, 19, “Drought
and heat consume the snow-waters: so doth Sheol those who
have sinned;” and also in Psalms ix, 17, “The wicked shall be
turned backward into Sheol, even all the nations that forget
God;” and again we find in Psalms lv, 15, “Let death come
suddenly upon them; let them go down alive into Sheol, for
wickedness is in their dwelling in the midst of them.”</p>
          <p>Now you see that all of these passages are “Sheol,” and the
wicked who die go there in conscious torments.  Beloved, there
is no place for soul-sleeping here.</p>
          <pb id="compton96" n="96"/>
          <p>I want to show you now, to prove the assertion that I
have made, that the righteous saints, who died in the Old
Testament days, went down to Sheol, not in torment, but
in a department of conscious happiness and bliss.</p>
          <p>First read Genesis xxxvii, 34, 35: “And all his sons and
all his daughters rose up to comfort him; but he refused to
be comforted; and he said, for I will go down to Sheol to
my son mourning; and his father wept for him.”  The
Authorized Version says <hi rend="italics">grave</hi>; but if you read the thirty-
third verse it will prove to you that Jacob never meant
<hi rend="italics">grave</hi>, for Jacob never believed his son Joseph was in a
grave.  He believed that a wild beast had devoured his
body; so you see that Jacob could not go down to the
grave to his son; but he said, “For I will go down to Sheol
to my son;” and Jacob knew if the beast had the body,
that Sheol had the soul, or spirit.</p>
          <p>Another Bible proof that the saints go down to Sheol is
found in Job xiv, 13: “O that thou wouldest keep me
secret, until thy wrath be past!”  Job did not want to go in
the grave and there be hid until the wrath be passed, but
he said, “Hide me in Sheol.”  The grave is not a desirable
place to be hid, nor is the thought of dying and then, in an
unconscious state, lying in the grave until the trumpet
blows, comforting.</p>
          <p>Bless God!  I see something better than all of that.  (Amen!)
While death may take the body in the grave, yet the spirit
will fly away to sweet rest, and conscious happiness.
Hallelujah!</p>
          <p>Another remarkable Scripture on this subject is found in
Isaiah xxxviii, 10.  Here we read of Hezekiah, the man
who called God's attention to how he had lived and
walked before Him with a <hi rend="italics">perfect heart</hi>.  And God heard
his prayer, and saved him from death, and added to his
days fifteen years.  Now I want you to hear what this
<pb id="compton97" n="97"/>
man said when he thought he was going to die.  He said,
“I said, in the noontide of my days I shall go into the gates
of Sheol.”</p>
          <p>Another remarkable passage, stating that both saved
and unsaved go down to Sheol, is found in the twenty-
eighth chapter of First Samuel.  If you will read that
chapter you will find where King Saul got into trouble and
backslid from God, and could not get any message from
heaven.  He was like all backsliders.  When he disobeyed
God, he failed to get his prayers through.  Saul sought
comfort the wrong way.  He went to the witch of Endor
and deceived her, and had her call up Samuel, so he could
tell him what to do.  And when the witch saw Samuel she
was afraid, and she knew that it was Saul who had called
him.</p>
          <p>I tell you, beloved, that the powers of hell tremble
when a holy prophet of God arises. (Amen!)</p>
          <p>And now I want to read to you a few passages from
this chapter, so you may see the truth that I want to
impress upon you in the thirteenth verse: “And the
woman said unto Saul, I see a God coming up out of the
earth.”  You see here that God permitted this witch to call
Samuel up from Sheol to deliver the final message to King
Saul.  And Samuel said to Saul, “Why hast thou disquieted
me to bring me up?”  Now the thought I wanted to call
your attention to is that Samuel said to Saul in the
nineteenth verse: “Moreover, Jehovah will deliver Israel
also with thee into the hand of the Philistines, and
to-morrow shalt thou and thy sons be with me.”  The
thought is “Be with me to-morrow.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, if you will study this carefully, you will see it
does not mean the grave, because Saul the next day
killed himself, and his sons were killed, and their bodies
were not buried for many days; so you see, beloved,
that
<pb id="compton98" n="98"/>
Samuel did not mean their bodies would be in the grave
with his, but he meant that to-morrow their souls or spirits
would be with his in Sheol.  And, no doubt, while Samuel
was in perfect happiness in Sheol, Saul the king was in
conscious torments; for he was a sinner.  While both went
to the same place, yet there was a “<hi rend="italics">great gulf fixed,</hi>” as
our Lord said in Luke's Gospel, xvi, 26.  Let us turn to that
chapter, and read from the twenty-second verse: “And it
came to pass that the beggar died, and that he was carried
away by the angels into Abraham's bosom: and the rich
man also died and was buried, and in <hi rend="italics">Hades</hi> he lifted up
his eyes being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off,
and Lazarus in his bosom.  And he cried and said, Father
Abraham, have mercy on me and send Lazarus that he
may dip the top of his finger in water and cool my tongue;
for I am in anguish in this flame.  But Abraham said, Son,
remember that thou in thy lifetime received thy good
things, and Lazarus in like manner evil things: but now
here he is comforted, and thou art in anguish.  <hi rend="italics">And
besides all this, between us and you there is a great
gulf fixed.”</hi>  I wanted to read this so you might get it clear
in your minds, that both the rich man and Lazarus were in
Sheol or Hades, and there could be conversation between
them, yet one could be in <hi rend="italics">happiness</hi> and the other in
<hi rend="italics">anguish.</hi></p>
          <p>Beloved, I am not trying to give you something that
God's own Word does not teach, but I am trying to show
you that the doctrine of soul-sleeping is not Scriptural.  I
was bothered with this heresy for many months by a book
that was put in my hand when I was a young spiritual
calf, just beginning to pick the grass of the truth; and very
often I would get a poison weed in my mouth and chew it
up, thinking it was good food, and afterwards find I was
poisoned; and this is one of the poisoned weeds
<pb id="compton99" n="99"/>
the devil tried to stuff me with.  But, thank God! I have
gotten over it.  Hallelujah!</p>
          <p>Beloved, remember the text: “Yea, man giveth up the
ghost, and where is he?”</p>
          <p>If Jesus tarries, you will have to give up the ghost, and
where will you be?  Do you think of it?  Are you sure that
God bears witness to you that you belong to those who
are saved?  Or are you in doubt?  You can not be unsettled
in this; you must depart to be with those in conscious bliss,
or with those in conscious torment.</p>
          <p>Now, I want to show you that our blessed Lord, when
He gave up His body in death, went down to Sheol or
Hades, as it is related in Acts ii, 31, “That neither was He
left in <hi rend="italics">Hades or Sheol,</hi> nor did His flesh see corruption.”
And again we find that He was in Hades while His body
was in Joseph's new tomb, in Matthew xii, 40: “For as
Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the
whale, <hi rend="italics">so shall the Son of man be three days and three
nights in the heart of the earth.”</hi></p>
          <p>Now compare this with what Jesus said to the dying
thief on the cross in Luke xxiii, 43, while they both were
hanging on the cross in the very jaws of death.  The thief
said, “Jesus, remember me when thou comest in thy
kingdom; and Jesus said, Verily I say unto thee, Today
shalt thou be with Me in paradise.”</p>
          <p>And now turn with me and read Romans x, 7, <hi rend="italics">“Who
shall descend into the abyss?”</hi> that is, to bring Christ up
from the dead.</p>
          <p>Beloved, who can read this and not see that at one
time a compartment of Sheol or Hades was paradise for
the departed spirits of God's saints?  No wonder the
prophet Isaiah, with his prophetic eye, could say as in
Isaiah xliv, 23, <hi rend="italics">“Shout, ye lower parts of the earth.”</hi>  All
the Old Testament saints had been shut up in Abraham's
<pb id="compton100" n="100"/>
bosom, or in Sheol, waiting for the coming of our blessed
Lord, who was to come and spill His precious blood on
the cruel cross to make redemption complete; and when
<hi rend="italics">He cried, “It is finished!”</hi> He gave His body in death to be
laid in the tomb, but His Spirit descended into Hades, and
there He proclaimed to the spirits in prison the complete
redemption He had purchased, and there He met with the
dying thief according to promise, and there they had a
wonderful shout of victory, and every little demon in the
pit had to bow and confess with his mouth that Christ was
the conqueror of heaven, earth, and hell.  O hallelujah!</p>
          <p>I am glad I bow to Him here in probation, and confess
Him here, and love Him here, and I have the assurance I
shall see Him in peace.  O glory! it is wonderful to know!
Glory!!</p>
          <p>Beloved, before closing this subject, I want to call your
attention to another Scripture showing that the Old
Testament saints were called <hi rend="italics">Prisoners of Hope,</hi> shut up in
waiting for the complete redemption through Christ's
blood.</p>
          <p>Turn with me to Zechariah, ninth chapter, commencing
with the eleventh verse: “As for thee also, <hi rend="italics">because of the
blood of thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of
the pit wherein is no water.</hi>  Turn you to the stronghold, ye
Prisoners of Hope: even to-day do I declare that I will
render double unto thee.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, can not you imagine there was a wonderful
shout among the Prisoners of Hope when Christ spilt the
last drop of blood and then descended to lead captivity
captive?  No wonder the prophet said, “Shout, ye lower
parts of the earth!”  It makes me shout just to read it and
know it is real (Amen!), and to know that Jesus has never
made a promise that he has not or will not fulfill;
<pb id="compton101" n="101"/>
so, beloved, believe Him, trust Him.  Shout the victory
in the face of every enemy, for Jesus is faithful.  Bless His
name forever!</p>
          <p>Now, in conclusion, I want to call your attention to
another Scripture in John xx, 17, where He arose from the
dead and said unto Mary, “Touch Me not, for I am not yet
ascended unto the Father; but go unto My brethren, and
say to them, I ascend unto My Father, and your Father;
and My God, and your God.”  What an honor to that
precious woman to carry the news of her risen Lord!
And no doubt while she was gone to bear the message,
the Lord ascended to the Father and made His report.
And, as Paul taught in Ephesians iv, 8, “When He [Christ]
ascended up on high, He led captivity captive,” or, as the
margin says, “a multitude of captives.”  So you see by this,
beloved, that when the Lord ascended He led the Old
Testament saints from Sheol to the third heaven, where
Paul was caught up when he was stoned to death, as
related in Acts xiv, 19, 20.  His body was under the
shower of stones while his spirit was caught up to the
third heaven, and heard words not lawful to utter; but
whether in or out of the body, he could not tell.  This is
certainly a denial of soul-sleeping.</p>
          <p>Another passage that proves the spirit that departs
from the body is present with the Lord, is found in Second
Corinthians v, 6-8.  Another that proves that, when we die,
we are with the Lord, is in Philippians i, 23.  Friend, listen
how this reads: “But I am in a strait betwixt the two,
having the desire to depart and be <hi rend="italics">with Christ;</hi> for it is
very far better.”</p>
          <p>Beloved, Paul did not believe in soul-sleeping, but he
knew that when his spirit left the body it would be with
the Lord; and, beloved, we never read of any saint going
down to Sheol or Hades now: for when Christ rose He
<pb id="compton102" n="102"/>
was the first-fruits of them that slept; and when He
ascended He took all the saints with Him; and when He
comes He will bring the saints with Him, and they will at
that time receive their glorified bodies, and shall “be kings
and priests unto God.”  O glory to God, I am looking for
my King!  I am looking for something much brighter than
the grave, although if death should get my body, I would
fly away to be with Christ.  Glory to God forever!</p>
          <p>Now, can you see anything in this that will give the
poor lost soul any chance of repentance after death?
There is not a passage in the Word that gives any hope of
a second probation.</p>
          <p>I want to say, as you leave this world so will you be
through all eternity.  So, my precious, unsaved soul, seek
the Lord while He may be found; call upon Him while He
is near.  The loving Savior is calling to you.  Hear Him
while mercy's door is open.</p>
          <p>O the thought of rejecting God!  No soul-sleeping  -  no
second chance  -  but forever banished from the presence
of God, if you fail to repent here!  But to you who are
saved, rest in God and let Him sanctify you wholly, and
then, whether you wake or sleep, you are all His.  Bless
His dear name!</p>
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