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Lifting Him Up Out Of History (58-1001)
| Lifting Him Up Out Of History (58-1001) |
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E-1 Thank you, Brother Neville. Good evening friends. It's indeed a... I deem this a great privilege to be here at the Tabernacle tonight, to start again, a five night series of meetings. It's been some time since I had a revival here at the Tabernacle. We never announced it in the papers or anything, just so we knew we wouldn't have enough room to seat the people, because it's small, and our seating's very poorly. But we'll do just all we can to accommodate. E-2 We were going to get the high school gym here, and we could've advertised it, but they're--it's in time of school now, and it's kinda hard to get a hold of. And I will be leaving pretty soon, I suppose, for my missions and so forth across the seas. And I just wanted to come together to have a little fellowship with all the folks, before we went over again. You know, we meet time after time, and one time we're going to meet for the last time. So we--we want to keep right up as close as we can with the Lord and with His Word. And as we see His Word unveiling Itself, day by day, day by day... I thought it would be nice if we had a little meeting here, and then we would pray for the sick.
E-3 And it's been told me, some time ago by a vision, that the Lord gave me, some year ago, I suppose, or maybe a little more... I have it wrote out in a book at home, of a changing of a ministry. And many of you people setting here, I wouldn't say many, but remember, when we first built this Tabernacle? You remember the vision that come the morning we laid the cornerstone there, when He said, "This is not your tabernacle. But He set me under the skies," and said... told me that different things would take place. E-4 And then some time ago I was in a vision, and I saw a--a large tent. Oh, it was a mammoth, big affair. And I'd just been speaking, and many souls were at the altar, and were just kindly weeping with their hands up, quietly, and softly. A nice gentle spoken man came out to the platform and said, "Now, they will form the prayer line, while Brother Branham's making ready." And I was standing that way... Of course the prayer line would been to my left. And I noticed a crowd of people, that seemed to cover a city block or more, that was standing in line.
E-5 There was a little building, wooden building, inside of this tent. And there was a woman, standing there or man one, taking names. And people were going in on crutches, and stretchers, and coming out the other side, walking. Well, I wondered what all had taken place in there. And then that Angel of the Lord, Who's picture you see here, It went from me, and went right over that little building, and stood there, and then went down. And a voice spoke and said, "I'll meet you in that place."
E-6 And now, and I'm hoping and trusting to God, that some time during this week, that I want to use this little room over here for a prayer room, and to take the sick and afflicted in, and see if He will meet me and start at the Tabernacle again on a new ministry. I would sure love to see it done. I do not know what it is, my friend. I do not have any idea what it will be, but He Who listens now, I trust that it'll be something more to help His poor, sick, suffering children of this day. I promised Him that I'll be faithful, and loyal, and try to be more loyal than I was with the other gifts that He has given. And if it shall come to pass, it'll be just as real as the others has been.
E-7 Now, I thought maybe tonight, we would speak and see how I felt. And another thing I wanted to do, I wanted to try to find out when we go in the first time, if I could send my wife in there, and let her be with me, when it comes down the first time to see if it'll be that way. If not, then in bringing women through, we'll bring them two at a time, two women at a time coming through. So I'm not saying that it'll work either way. It's so that you would know, because it's already been said that we were looking for something new to take place, and we are.
E-8 Now, we're going to try to let you out early--the song service, a half-hour, and the preaching service, then the altar service, and so forth, about one hour, which make an hour-and-a-half, so that the people standing won't be cramped up, and come back tomorrow night. E-9 Dear God, as we stand tonight in Thy presence, and realizing our frail frame, that we're just the dust of the earth, and Thou hast brought us forth as living beings to honor and glorify Thee, and we realize that our lives and our destination lays in Your blessed hands. And we have committed ourselves, by faith, into Your hands, hoping that our eternal destination will be given to us to live with Thee forever in a better world, where we will never have prayer for the sick and the needy. And there will never be a tear fall from a cheek. There'll never be a feeble, rank old person ever come up, but we'll be young there forever, and the glory of God will be upon us. And we'll need no healing, for we'll be eternally healed forever, when this creature that we now are, will be changed and made into a body like His own glorious body. Then we shall see Him as He is. Until that blessed hour arrives for each of us to come, we wish to put forth every effort that we know how, to glorify Thy great Name, with such faith as Thou hast given us.
E-10 So on the eve of this little gathering together here in this little memorial place, in commemorations of the first revival we held here, and the great, mighty works that Thou did show us by Thy great powerful hand. From here has swept forth a revival to every nation, and around the world tonight, revival fires are burning on the hills, and men and women are being healed of their sickness and diseases, and are coming to be acquainted with the true and living God. Oh, Lord God, pour out Your Spirit upon us tonight, Lord, in great measures. E-11 We only ask humbly, that it shall be granted here, knowing that it will be somewhere, because we feel that it's in Your great providence to do so. Now, bless us, Lord, and as we turn back the pages of the Book, Your blessed Holy Word, may our spirits be open to receive it, Lord. And when the services is closed tonight, and we start to our different homes, may we say like those coming from Emmaus, "Did not our hearts burn within us, tonight, as He talked to us along the way," for we ask it in His Name and for His glory. Amen.
E-12 Tonight, I have chosen for just a Scripture reading, a few verses, if you wish to turn to it, to the book of Kings, I Kings and the 18th chapter of I Kings. And I want to start reading from the 17th verse. And I wish to take then for a text: "Lifting Him Up Out of History." Now, you that's putting it down, I might quote it again: "Lifting Him Up Out of History." Now, the 17th verse of the 18th chapter of I Kings.
And it came to pass when Ahab saw Elijah, that Ahab said unto him, Art thou he that troubleth Israel?
And he answered, I have not troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken the commandments of the Lord, and that thou hast followed Baalim.
Now therefore send, and gather to me all Israel unto mount Carmel, and the prophets of Baalim four hundred and fifty, and the prophets of the groves four hundred, which eat at Jezebel's table.
So Ahab sent unto all the children of Israel, and gathered the prophets together unto mount Carmel.
And Elijah came unto all the people, and said, How long halt ye between two opinions? If the Lord be God, follow him: but if Baal, then follow him. And the people answered him not a word.
E-13 We are standing, tonight, upon the brim and watching come to pass and unfold two great scenes. And those two great scenes are these: one of them is the ending of history, and the other one is the ending of time.
E-14 Traveling around over the world, it seems like, not only our nation, but there is no nation knows just what to do. Seems like there is a turmoil everywhere.
E-15 Now, you know our Lord predicted such a time to come, that there'd be unrest among the nations, perplexed of times, distress between the nations. And we have tried everything that's seemingly, humanly possible to make it last just a little longer. But I believe that we're just running out. I don't believe that there's anything else that we can do about it. We're just at the end of it.
E-16 Then also, we have a home life crisis. It seems like the home life is running out into shallow water. It used to be in a home, that father, the head of the house, would set down of a morning, and he would speak with his family, and they would all take out the old family Bible, and read just a little bit, and--and all gather around the table, and have prayer. You don't see that no more. And when the day was done and Ma had the dishes washed, they'd all gather in, and read some more of the Bible, and pray before going to bed.
E-17 They go to church on Sunday morning for their religion for about twenty minutes. Since the pastor takes about thirty minutes, he's called on the board. What is it? Home life is running out.
E-18 Papa has a key to the house, and mama has a key, and they're both out and gone half the night; and the children, they don't know where they are. And the little ones are with the babysitter. And that's the way life is lived.
E-19 Let's take church life. There is where it all begins. Church life is running out. The people just take the church today, almost for an idol, like a totem pole. Go set in church five minutes and "I've done my religion,"; pay in your little contribution, whatever it is to pay the pastor, and they don't make that up, they have a little supper, and make it up to the pastor. And if he ain't satisfied, he hauls off to somewhere that'll give him a better wage. Seems like the pastor is not divinely called anymore. Just seems like it's begin to be a meal ticket to the pastor, that the people, wherever offers him the most money, there he goes. It shouldn't be that way.
E-20 Now, I'm yet under fifty years old, and I can remember of going to the Baptist church, and the Methodist churches, and watching them in an old fashion revival when they would shout, and praise the Lord, and walk up-and-down the aisles, and persuade sinners to the altar. You never see that at nowhere no more. They used to have old fashion prayer meetings during the time of a revival. And a sinner in the neighborhood, a boy or girl, and them old mammies and daddies would pray so hard, till they'd pray conviction on those children. And they'd make their way down to the altar, and there come to Christ. But you don't see that no more. It seems like it's running in shallow waters. It just don't seem like it ought to be that way.
E-21 And it points two posts: one if them, the running out of time, and another one, the coming of the Lord Jesus. For the Holy Spirit definitely spoke and said in the last days the churches would be heady, high-minded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God, truce breakers, false accusers, incontinent, and despisers of those that were good. So if the Bible has predicted such things to be, how can we expect anything else but that to happen? "Having a form of godliness and denying the power thereof."
E-22 I heard a minister here, not long ago, in the city, that made this remark; he said, "I told all my people on Easter morning, 'A merry Christmas,'" said, "I won't see them no more till Christmas or next Easter. 'A merry Christmas.'"
E-23 I think about John Wesley's mother, Susanna. She was a mother of seventeen children. And she had time to spend, I think it was either, two or three hours every day in prayer, and raise, and mother seventeen children--which brought forth one of the world's greatest preachers and one of the greatest song writers of the day, Charles and John--because she took time to serve God and not dally in the things of the world. E-24 So what a blessed privilege it is to all of us to reach over and get God's good old Bible, and turn the pages back, and know that we're reading directly Truth, and to see that these times happened in days gone by, for it speaks of a historical God. And the only way that we're ever going to be--to cope with these ways or to--to fall in line, is to call up out of history that historical God. For through all days in the antediluvian destruction, before the coming of Christ, and at different events, He never fails when He called on. He's always right.
E-25 I'm thinking of the time now, that when a nation was in captivity. It was Israel. And they were down in Egypt and was made hard and rigor to serve the Egyptians. It seemed like that everybody had just grown cold. Did you know Israel was in Egypt twice as long as the United States has been a nation? We're not over about a hundred and fifty or seventy years old, something like that. And they were four hundred and twenty years in bondage--or down in Egypt.
E-26 And as here, some time ago I was preaching, and gave a little illustration, of how that Amram would come home at night, and he'd say, "Jochebed, I am so tired." And the fresh lashes on his back from a--a task master's whip...
E-27 "Isn't there something that can be done?" And Amram, perhaps one of the only ones of the nation would climb up a little stair step, regardless of how tired he was, and there each night he'd call on the God of Abraham, One that he'd learned, that come to Abraham, and come to Job, and come to Isaac, and come to Jacob in hours of distress. And surely if He was God in their day, He'd be God in that day. And if He was God in Moses' day, He's God today. He just needs to be called up out of history, and called on the scene of action.
E-28 If they are sick, and the doctor has said they can't get well, yet something within them tells them they're going to be well, hold on no matter what takes place.
E-29 And as we can see Amram, on those wearying nights, back bleeding, climbing up the steps again, until two and three o'clock in the morning, praying, and seem like you just talking to the wind; but down in his Jewish heart there burned a faith, that no winds of doubt could ever blow out. That's the kind of men and women we need to rise on the scene today. If He doesn't answer tonight, He will tomorrow night. If He doesn't answer this year, He will next year, for He's a God--not "a" God--but "the" God.
E-30 If we'd believe the Bible to be a history, it's also a prophetic book that tells that that same God shall rise in the last days. And it's time for Him to come on scene. That's what Amram knowed, that Moses had prophesied, or--not Moses, pardon me--Abraham had been given a promise by this God of history Who hadn't answered a prayer in four hundred years, as far as we have record. But He made a promise that He would bring them out.
E-31 Moses, when he had led the children of Israel safely into the wilderness, and he came to the Red Sea, and the mountains on one side, and the desert's on the other, and Pharaoh's army, this a-way, and the Red Sea in ahead of them, and they were trapped in a little net. Seemed like that even nature would cry out. What's going to happen? They're finished; Pharaoh's army, by the tens of thousands to ride them down. But what did the people begin to murmur and complain. "Oh, it'd been better if we'd stayed back in our place where we were at." E-32 Oh, it was not long after that until Joshua had led the same group, or their children, to the Jordan. And it was in the month of April, when the whole streams were swelling, and the Jordan was five times it's size. Looked like any good military leader would've brought them there different from that. And it was at that very time, when there wasn't a possibility to cross it, but Joshua'd remember, there was a God of history, forty years before, that opened the Red Sea. And He called on that God, and that God came down in great power, and become a God in present crises, and opened the Jordan, and crossed them over.
E-33 Was many years later, when our text reading, tonight, or subject reading, when Elijah had seen the curse of that nation and was up on the mountain... And for hundreds of years there had been no prayer answered in Israel. Yet, Elijah knew that there was a God of history that could come on the scene. And he challenged the unbelieving world to stand in the presence of this God and see which one would answer by fire. And the God, Who could protect the Hebrew children from the fiery furnace, brought down fire and consumed the sacrifice.
E-34 It was in Jairus' house, where the doctors had failed, and turned a little girl back to the--to be--to die. And death had come in, and taken it's bitter toll, and had taken the only child of the home, the little girl of twelve, and stretched her out on a couch.
E-35 When this God, dwelling in a body called Jesus, the Son of God, when He was called on the scene, called up out of history, the God Who could raise the dead in the Old Testament, bring life back to a dead baby through a prophet, that God cannot die. He's God for eternity.
E-36 Let me more say today, my brother or sister, in this present day, when crises, and when cancer is eating the world up, and diseases of all kind, the same historical God that cleansed the leper, healed the sick, and raised the dead, is the same God today. He's waiting anxiously for His people to call Him on the scene of action.
E-37 There was a man had a boy with epilepsy, one day, and he took him to the church. And the disciples danced, and hollered around him for awhile, and could do no good, but there was still a God of history that lived. He was determined to find Him. Seeing them coming off the mountain, he run to Him and said, "Lord, have mercy on me. A devil's took my child, and he pines away and falls into the fire."
E-38 He's a historical God. And He's a present-time God. And in the last days He said, "I'll pour out of My Spirit upon all flesh. And signs and wonders shall follow them that believe. For in My Name they shall cast out devils. They shall speak with new tongues. If they take up serpents or drink deadly things, it would not harm them. And if they lay their hands on the sick, they shall recover."
E-39 "Let's not look at Him. What good does a historical God do us if He's only a historical God?" What good would a historical God done Amram and Jochebed? What good would a historical God done to Moses? What good would a historical God done to Lazarus? What good would a historical done--God done to blind Bartimaeus at the gate? And what good would a historical God do you tonight, if He isn't the same today?
E-40 You can't call Him with your lips. He doesn't come by lip service. He comes by faith. When your faith, not your long prayer, your burning out, but He comes with that little dim faith that's way down in your soul, that can take a hold and say, "That little pain that's been... that brought me to this Tabernacle tonight, can light my soul afresh, can send me away from here a-burning and singing just like the birds in the air. Why? He's a historical God and a present day God. He's waiting to be called on. Call upon the Lord. He will hear you.
E-41 When I preached my sermon, before leaving, eleven years ago, across this pulpit, Miss Gurdy setting there, sang that, "Only Believe," and the great giants stood yonder, like... I preached on David and Goliath. There was science, and the great known world to condemn Divine healing, and put it to shame, and everyone tell me, "Boy, you'll crack up out there. They'll throw you in jail. They'll do this, that, or the other..." But the God of history had come on the scene, yonder, and told me to do it. And I did it, by His grace and His mercy.
E-42 And in your case, tonight, sinner friend, that little tickling feeling around your heart, that tells you that He is the same, that tells you that He can free you from every burden, and every crime, and every sin that you've committed against Him... What can you put your hopes in? Not even in your own home, not in your wife, not in you family, mother or father. "My hopes is built on nothing less than Jesus blood with Righteousness. When all around my soul gives way, then He's all my hope and stay. On Christ that solid rock we stand. All other grounds is sinking sand."
E-43 What would you give in exchange? What could you give? What if God called you tonight to answer at the judgment? What would you do about it? You put your hopes in the nation; it's breaking, like all others. Put your hopes in a certain election that's coming on--them man, I have nothing against them, but they're immorally, and going to leave. You can't put your hopes in nothing at all that's going to hold, but the God of history Who promised He'd rise.
E-44 Like Mr. Vaught, here the other night, our notable ex-mayor here of the city, went to hear Mr. Nixon speak--died, right on the scene. Good, healthy man, as far as I know.
E-45 If there is those in here tonight, I know not. If there are those in here tonight, who knows for the salvation of your soul, that if that God Who promised that He'd come in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, when you think not, if you're without Him, you just imagine you have Him... Remember, "there is a way that seemeth right, but the end thereof is the ways of death." If you're not positive that--that you are saved tonight, and He should come you'd go with Him, would you just do so much as to raise your hand to Him and by doing, say--say, "Be merciful to me, God."? Thank you. God bless you. Many hands went up.
E-46 I met Him. He come to me. He told me not to drink, not to smoke and--and defile myself, and He had something for me to do when I got a little older. I just a little boy. He--He proved that. He did it. Here's His picture hanging right here now, where science has took it. See? The world knows it. He's proved it among you. He knows every thought in your heart. He's proved Hisself; He's the same God today. He's not a God of history. Don't be just... let the world smuggle you down with the smut and stuff of the world. Believe Him right now.
E-47 Well, you say, "Well, brother, I'm a Baptist, I'm Presbyterian, I'm Methodist..." That's all right. But I'm asking you one thing: have you ever met this God of history. Has He stood in the burning bush before you, and you know that He spoke back to your soul, and you know your sins are gone? If that isn't so, don't you take no chance, just on joining church, or went up there and felt a little good about it. You got to know Him. Not to hear of Him, not to have His blessings is Life, but to know Him is Life-- to know Him, personally know Him, Him, personal pronoun, know Him. Not know His Book, not be a good student, not be a good member, or a good men, or a good woman, that don't do it. The law did that, but to know Him--have you met Him? Is that God Who spoke to Moses in the burning bush, come before you? Have you heard Him speak to you, till you know it was Him? If He hasn't, just raise your hand, say, "God, speak to me now. Is that You humming around my heart? I--I want to know You."
E-48 Now, real quietly, with your heads bowed, softly humming;
Some golden daybreak Jesus will come
Some golden daybreak, battles all won.
We'll shout the victory, break through the blue
Some golden daybreak for me, for you.
[Brother Branham hums the tune--Ed.] Now, you that raised your hands, if you so desire my prayers for you, and believe that God would hear me, you want to walk up here to the altar... Let me stand here and pray with you a little. Altar's open. God bless you, brother. God bless you. And God bless you, sister. Stand right up and come, if you believe God will help and hear prayer for me to help you come through to Him, to know Him. Walk right up now, won't you?
Some golden daybreak Jesus will come; (How do we know it won't be in the morning?)Battles...
That battle you're fighting, right now, won't you let it be won right now, buddy... Let it won right now, so you can shout the...
Some golden daybreak, for me, for you.
Some golden daybreak Jesus will come;
Just get right up, that's right. Make your way right up around...
Battles are won;
We'll shout the victory, break through the blue;
Some...
Won't you come now, while we're waiting. We'll help you here in prayer, the prayer of faith. Does a lot for us. Won't you come. I'm persuading you to come accept the God of present time, not just a--a God that--that you go to a church and say, "Well, I joined the church." That God won't work. A Methodist God, a Baptist God, a Presbyterian God, a Pentecostal God, they won't work. Get the God of this Bible. A Pentecostal God will go right out in the world. A Methodist God, or a Baptist God, or any other denominational God... But the God of this Bible will make you like Jesus. He sure will. His Spirit will dwell in you, and all your life will be changed. That temper, that malice, that unforgiving spirit, that thing, it'll canker your soul in a lost eternity. I'm just swinging forth a net now. It's up to you. Follow it in, won't you. Move right out around the altar here. Many of you raised your hands back there. The people will let you up around their seats. Lord bless you, young man.
E-49 Now, while she's softly playing the music, here stands several around the altar--seven souls, that's come forward to stand around the altar. Do you know seven is the perfect number to God? Perfection. Holy Spirit's just come down on a person standing here, just now. That's what I call the Holy Spirit, brother.
E-50 Dear God, I bring before Thee, just now, these seven. The first night produced seven wandering stars. You said in Your precious Word, "No man can come to me except My Father draws him first. And he that comes to Me I will in no wise cast out, but will give eternal Life, and will raise him up at the last day." Lord, that's Your promise. And by an emotion, an action of conviction, these seven, precious, wandering souls has stepped forward tonight, because they believe that the God that was--spoke to the prophets, the God that spoke to the blind man, He lives yet today. And they step forward to meet Him. E-51 We thank You for them, Father. And we pray that they will remain faithful in Your hands, until death shall set them free, when they shall enter into the joys of the Lord on that great day, when the wedding supper is being set across the skies, that when the King comes out and says, "You remember that first day of October 1958, at that little concrete tabernacle, you walked up and took Me as your Saviour. I spoke to you. You were a sinner then, but now I saved you. And now you're mine, and you have eternal Life. Now, enter into the joys that I've prepared for you from the foundation of the world." Grant it, Lord. They are Yours now. We commit them to Thee, in Jesus Christ's Name, amen.
E-52 Now, with your heads bowed, the audience, I'm going to ask each of you here at the altar, do you feel down in your heart now, from the very depths of your soul, that the little flame of faith that told you to come forward to the altar here, to do this act, that you have now done, after raising your hand and walking forward, do you feel that that little flame has begin to burn towards a real living faith in your heart, and you now believe that Jesus has forgive your sins and you're going to be His from now on? If you do, would you raise your right hand to Him, the ones around the altar, raise up your right hand, if you feel like that Jesus has forgive all your sins. One around... |
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