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Visitation Study
The Drummer Boy's Prayer
Two or three times in my life God in His mercy touched my heart, and twice before
my conversion I was under deep conviction.
During the American war I was surgeon in the United States army, and after the
battle of Gettysburg, there were many hundreds of wounded soldiers in the hospital,
twenty-eight of whom had been wounded so severely that they required my services
at once; some whose legs had to be amputated, some their arms, and others both
an arm and leg. One of the latter was a boy who had been but three months in
the service, and, being too young for a soldier, had enlisted as a drummer.
When my assistant surgeon, and one of my stewards, wished to administer chloroform,
previous to the amputation, he turned his head aside, and positively refused
to receive it. When the steward told him that it was the doctor's orders, he
said, "Send the doctor to me."
When I came to his bedside, I said, "Young man, why do you refuse chloroform?
When I found you on the battlefield you were so far gone that I thought it hardly
worthwhile to pick you up, but when you opened those large blue eyes I thought
you had a mother somewhere, who might at that moment be thinking of her boy.
I did not want you to die on the field, so ordered you to be brought here; but
you have lost so much blood that you are too weak to endure an operation without
chloroform, therefore you had better let me give you some."
He laid his hands on mine, and looking me in the face, said, "Doctor, one
Sunday afternoon, in the Sunday-school, when I was nine-and-a-half years old,
I gave my heart to Christ. I learned to trust Him then. I have been trusting
Him ever since, and I know I can trust Him now. He is my strength and my stimulant;
He will support me while you amputate my arm and leg." I then asked him
if he would allow me to give him a little brandy.
Again he looked me in the face, saying, "Doctor, when I was about five
years old my mother knelt by my side, with her arm around my neck, and said,
'Charlie, I am now praying to Jesus that you may never know the taste of strong
drink. Your papa died a drunkard, and went down to a drunkard's grave, and I
promised God, if it was His will that you should grow up, that you would warn
young men against the bitter cup.' I am now seventeen years old, but I have
never tasted anything stronger than tea and coffee; and as I am, in all probability,
about to go into the presence of my God, would you send me there with brandy
on my stomach?"
The look that boy gave me I shall never forget. At that time I hated Jesus,
but I respected that boy's loyalty to his Saviour, and, when I saw how he loved
and trusted Him to the last, there was something that touched my heart, and
I did for that boy what I have never done for any other soldier-I asked him
if he wished to see his chaplain.
"Oh, yes, sir!" was the answer.
When Chaplain R____ came, he at once knew the boy from having often met him
at the tent prayer meetings, and, taking him by the hand, said:
"Well, Charlie, I am sorry to see you in this sad condition."
"Oh, I am all right, sir," he answered. "The doctor offered me
chloroform, but I declined it; then he wished to give me brandy which I also
declined; and now if my Saviour calls me, I can go to Him in my right mind."
"You may not die, Charlie," said the chaplain; "but, if the Lord
should call you away, is there anything I can do for you after you are gone?"
"Chaplain, please put your hand under my pillow and take my little Bible,
in which you will find my mother's address. Please send it to her, and write
a letter, and tell her that, since the day I left home, I have never let a day
pass without reading a portion of God's Word, and daily praying that God would
bless my dear mother, no matter whether on the march, on the battlefield, or
in the hospital."
"Is there anything else I can do for you, my lad?" said the chaplain.
"Yes, please write a letter to the superintendent of the Sands Street Sunday
School, Brooklyn, N.Y., and tell him the kind words, many prayers, and good
advice he gave me I have never forgotten; they have followed me through all
the dangers of battle, and now, in my dying hour, I ask my dear Saviour to bless
my dear old superintendent; that is all."
Turning towards me, he said, "Now, doctor, I am ready, and I promise you
that I will not even groan while you take off my arm and leg, if you will not
offer me chloroform."
I promised, but I had not the courage to take the knife in my hand to perform
the operation without first going to the next room and taking a little stimulant
to nerve myself to perform my duty.
While cutting through the flesh, Charlie Coulson never groaned, but when I took
the saw to separate the bone, the lad took the corner of his pillow in his mouth,
and all that I could hear him utter was, "Oh, Jesus, blessed Jesus! stand
by me now." He kept his promise and never groaned.
That night I could not sleep, for whichever way I turned, I saw those soft blue
eyes, and when I closed mine, the words, "Blessed Jesus, stand by me now,"
kept ringing in my ears. Between twelve and one o'clock I left my bed and visited
the hospital-a thing I had never done before, unless especially called, but
such was my desire to see that boy. Upon my arrival there, I was informed by
the night steward that sixteen of the hopeless cases had died, and had been
carried down to the dead-house.
"How is Charlie Coulson? is he among the dead?" I asked.
"No, sir," answered the steward, "he is sleeping as sweetly as
a babe."
When I came up to the bed where he lay, one of the nurses informed me that about
nine o'clock two members of the Young Men's Christian Association came through
the hospital to read and to sing a hymn; they were accompanied by Chaplain R____,
who knelt by Charlie Coulson's bed and offered up a fervent and soul-stirring
prayer, after which they sang, while still upon their knees, the sweetest of
all hymns, "Jesus Lover of My Soul," in which Charlie joined. I could
not understand how that boy, who had undergone such excruciating pain, could
sing.
Five days after I had amputated that dear boy's arm and leg he sent for me,
and it was from him that day I heard the first gospel sermon.
"Doctor," he said, "my time has come. I do not expect to see
another sunrise, but thank God, I am ready to go; and before I die I desire
to thank you with all my heart for your kindness to me. Doctor, you are a Jew,
you do not believe in Jesus; will you please stand here and see me die trusting
my Saviour to the last moment of my life?"
I tried to stay, but I could not; for I had not the courage to stand by and
see a Christian boy die rejoicing in the love of that Jesus I had been taught
to hate, so I hurriedly left the room. About twenty minutes later a steward,
who found me sitting in my private office covering my face with my hands, said,"Doctor,
Charlie Coulson wishes to see you."
"I have just seen him," I answered, "and can not see him again."
"But, doctor, he says he must see you once more before he dies."
I now made up my mind to see him, say an endearing word and let him die, but
I was determined that no word of his should influence me in the least, so far
as his Jesus was concerned. When I entered the hospital I saw he was sinking
fast, so I sat down by his bed. Asking me to take his hand, he said:
"Doctor, I love you because you are a Jew; the best Friend I have found
in this world was a Jew."
I asked, "Who was that?"
He answered, "Jesus Christ, to whom I want to introduce you before I die;
and will you promise me, doctor, that what I am about to say to you, you will
never forget?"
I promised, and he said, "Five days ago when you amputated my arm and leg,
I prayed to the Lord Jesus Christ to convert your soul."
These words went deep into my heart. I could not understand how, when I was
causing him the most intense pain, he could forget all about himself, and think
of nothing but his Saviour and my unconverted soul. All I could say to him was,
"Well, my dear boy, you will soon be all right." With these words
I left him, and twelve minutes later he fell asleep, "Safe in the arms
of Jesus."
Hundreds of soldiers died in my hospital during the war, but I followed only
one to the grave, and that one was Charlie Coulson, the drummer boy, and I rode
three miles to see him buried. I had him dressed in a new uniform, and placed
in an officer's coffin, with a new United States flag over it.
That dear boy's dying words made a deep impression upon me. I was rich at that
time, so far as money is concerned, but I would have given every penny I possessed
if I could have felt towards Christ as Charlie did. But that feeling can not
be bought with money.
For several months after his death, I could not get rid of the words of that
dear boy. They kept ringing in my ears, but, being in the company of worldly
officers, I gradually forgot the sermon Charlie preached in his dying hour;
but I could never forget his wonderful patience under acute suffering, and his
simple trust in that Jesus whose name to me at that time was a byword and a
reproach.
For ten long years I fought against Christ with all the hatred of an orthodox
Jew, until God in His mercy brought me in contact with a Christian barber, who
proved himself a second instrument in my conversion to Christianity.
At the close of the American war I was detailed as inspecting surgeon, to take
charge of the military hospital in Galveston, Texas. Returning one day from
an inspecting tour, and on my way to Washington, I stopped to rest a few hours
at New York. After dinner I stepped down stairs to the barber's shop (which,
it may be remarked, is attached to every hotel of note in the United States).
On entering the room I was surprised to see hung around it beautifully framed
scripture texts, in different colors. Sitting down in one of the barber's chairs,
I saw directly opposite me, hanging up in a frame on the wall, this notice:
"Please do not swear in this room." No sooner had the barber put the
brush to my face than he began also to talk to me about Jesus. He spoke in such
an attractive and loving manner that my prejudices were disarmed, and I listened
with growing attention to what he said.
All the while he was talking, Charlie Coulson, the drummer boy, came welling
up in my mind, although he had been dead ten years. I was so well pleased with
the words and deportment of the barber that, no sooner had he done shaving me,
than I told him next to cut my hair, although when I entered the room I had
no such thought or intention. All the while he was cutting my hair, he kept
steadily on with this sermon, preaching Christ to me, and telling me that, although
not a Jew himself, he was at one time as far away from Christ as I was then.
I listened attentively, my interest increasing with every word he said, to such
an extent that, when he had finished cutting my hair, I said: "Barber,
you may now give me a shampoo;" in fact, I allowed him to do all that one
in his profession could do for a gentleman at one sitting. There is, however,
an end to all things, and, my time being short, I prepared to leave. I paid
my bill, thanked the barber for his remarks, and said, "I must catch the
next train." He, however, was not yet satisfied.
It was a bitter cold February day, and the ice on the ground made it somewhat
dangerous to walk on the streets. It was only two minutes' walk to the station
from the hotel, and the kind barber at once offered to walk to the station with
me. I accepted his offer gladly, and no sooner had we reached the street than
he put his arm in mine to keep me from falling. He said but little as we were
walking along the street until we arrived at our destination; when we got to
the station, however, he broke the silence by saying-
"Stranger, perhaps you do not understand why I chose to talk to you upon
a subject so dear to me. When you entered my shop, I saw by your face that you
were a Jew."
He still continued to talk to me about his "dear Saviour," and said
he felt it his duty, whenever he came in contact with a Jew, to try and introduce
him to One whom he felt was his best Friend, both for this world and the world
to come. On looking a second time into his face, I saw tears trickling down
his cheeks, and he was evidently under deep emotion. I could not understand
how it was that this man, a total stranger to me, should take such a deep interest
in my welfare, and also shed tears while talking to me.
I reached out my hand to bid him good-bye. He took it in both of his and gently
pressed it, the tears still continuing to run down his face, and said, "Stranger,
if it is any satisfaction for you to know it, if you will give me your card
or name, I promise you on my honor as a Christian man that during the next three
months I will not retire to rest at night without making mention of you by name
in my prayers. And now, may my Christ follow you, trouble you, give you no rest,
until you find Him what I have found him to be-a precious Saviour and the Messiah
you are looking for."
I thanked him for his attention and his consideration, and after handing him
my card, I said, rather sneeringly, I fear, "There is not much danger of
my ever becoming a Christian."
He then handed me his card, saying, as he did so, "Will you please drop
me a note or letter if God should answer my prayer on your behalf?"
I smiled incredulously, and said, "Certainly I will," never dreaming
that within the next forty-eight hours God in His mercy would answer that barber's
prayer. I shook his hand heartily and said good-bye, but in spite of outward
appearance of unconcern, I felt he had made a deep impression upon my mind,
as the sequel will show.
As is well known, the American railway carriage is much longer than the ordinary
English railway carriage. It has only one compartment which will seat from sixty
to eighty persons. As the weather was bitterly cold, the passengers were not
numerous on this train, the carriage I had entered not being more than half
filled, and, without being conscious of the fact, in less than ten or fifteen
minutes I had occupied every empty seat in the compartment.
The passengers began to look upon me with some suspicion as they saw me change
my seat so frequently in so short a time without any apparent object. For my
part I did not think at that time the wrong was in my heart, although I could
not account for my erratic movement. Finally I went to an empty seat in the
corner of the carriage with the firm intention of going to sleep. The moment
I closed my eyes, however, I felt myself between two fires. On the one side
there was the Christian barber of New York, and on the other side there was
the drummer boy of Gettysburg-both talking to me about that Jesus whose very
name I hated. I felt it impossible either to go to sleep or to shake off the
impression made upon my mind by these two faithful young Christians-one of whom
had bid me good-bye only an hour previously, whilst the other had been dead
nearly ten years-and so continued troubled and perplexed all the while I was
on the train.
On my arrival in Washington, I purchased a morning newspaper, and one of the
first things which caught my attention was the announcement of a revival service
in Dr. Rankin's Congregational Church, the largest church in Washington. No
sooner had I seen that announcement, than an inward monitor seemed to say to
me "Go to that church." I had never been inside a Christian church
during divine service, and at any other time I should have scouted such a thought
as from the devil. It was my father's intention, when I was a boy, that I should
become a rabbi, and so I promised him that I would never enter a place where
"Jesus, the Impostor," was worshipped as God, and that I would never
attempt to read a book containing that name; and I had faithfully kept my word
up to that moment.
In connection with the revival meetings just referred to, it was stated that
there would be a united choir from the various churches in the city, who would
sing at each of the services. Being a passionate lover of music, this attracted
my attention, and I made it my excuse for seeking to visit the church during
the revival service that night. When I entered the church, which was filled
with worshippers, one of the ushers, attracted, doubtless by my gold epaulets
(for I had not changed my uniform), led me to the front seat of the church,
right in front of the preacher-an evangelist well known both in England and
America. I was charmed with the beautiful singing; but the speaker had not been
talking more than five minutes before I came to the conclusion that some one
must have been informing him who I was, for I thought he pointed his finger
at me. He kept watching me, and every now and then appeared to be shaking his
fist at me. In spite of all this, however, I felt deeply interested in what
he said. But this was not all, for still ringing in my ears were the words of
the two former preachers-the Christian barber of New York, and the drummer boy
of Gettysburg-emphasizing the utterances of the evangelist, and in my mind I
could plainly see those two dear friends also repeating their sermons. Growing
more and more interested in the words of the preacher, I felt tears trickling
down my face. This startled me, and I began to feel ashamed that I, an orthodox
Jew, should be childish enough to shed tears in a Christian church, the first
I had ever shed in such a place.
I omitted to say that, during the service, and whilst the preacher was watching
me, the thought occurred to me that possibly he might be pointing his finger
at some person behind me, and I turned round in my seat to discover who the
individual was, when, to my astonishment, a congregation of more than two thousand
persons, of all grades of society, seemed to be looking at me. I at once came
to the conclusion that I was the only Jew in the place, and heartily wished
myself out of the building, for I felt I had got into bad company. Being well
known in Washington, both by Jews and Gentiles, the thought flashed across my
mind, how will it read in a Washington paper that, "Dr. Rossvally, a Jew,
was present at the revival services, not five minutes' walk from the synagogue
he usually attends, and was seen to shed tears during the sermon." Not
wishing to make myself conspicuous (for there were faces there I recognized)
I made up my mind not to take out my handkerchief to wipe off the tears; they
must dry up of themselves; but, blessed be God, I could not keep them back,
for they came flowing faster and faster.
After a while the preacher finished his sermon, and I was surprised to hear
him announce an after-meeting, and invite all who could do so to remain. I did
not accept the invitation, being only too glad of the opportunity to leave the
church. With that intention, I got up from my seat, and had reached the door
when I felt that someone held me by the skirt of my coat. Turning round I saw
an elderly-looking lady, who proved to be Mrs. Young, of Washington, a well-known
Christian worker.
Addressing me, she said, "Pardon me, stranger, I see you are an officer
in the army. I have been watching you all this evening, and I beg of you not
to leave this house, for I think you are under conviction of sin. I believe
you came here to seek the Saviour, and you have not found Him yet. Do come back;
I would like to talk to you, and, if you will permit me, I will pray for you."
"Madam, " I answered, "I am a Jew."
She replied, "I do not care if you are a Jew; Christ Jesus died for Jews
as well as Gentiles."
The persuasive manner in which she said these words was not without effect.
I followed her back to the very spot which I had just left so abruptly, and
when we came up to the front she said:
"If you will kneel I will pray for you."
"Madam, that is something I have never done and never will do."
Mrs. Young looked me calmly in the face and said, "Dear stranger, I have
found such a dear, loving, and forgiving Saviour in my Jesus that I firmly believe
in my heart He can convert a Jew standing on his feet, and I will go on my knees
and pray for that."
She suited the action to the word, and fell on her knees, and began to pray,
talking to her Saviour in a simple, child-like manner that completely unnerved
me. I felt so ashamed of myself, to see that dear old lady kneeling near me
while I was standing, and praying so fervently on my behalf. My whole past life
floated so vividly before my mind that I heartily wished the floor would open,
and that I might sink out of sight. When she arose from her knees, she extended
her hand, and, with a motherly sympathy, said: "Will you pray to Jesus
before you sleep tonight?"
"Madam," I replied, "I will pray to my God, the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, but not to Jesus."
"Bless your soul!" she said, "your God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, is my Christ and your Messiah."
"Good-night, madam, and thank you for your kindness," I said, as I
slowly left the church.
On my way home, reflecting on my recent strange experiences, I began to reason
with myself: "Why is it that these Christians take such an interest in
Jew or Gentile, perfect strangers to them. Is it possible that all these millions
of men and women, who, during the last eighteen hundred years, have lived and
died, trusting in Christ, are mistaken, and a little handful of Jews, scattered
all over the world, are right? Why should that dying drummer-boy think only
of what he was pleased to call my unconverted soul? And why, also, should that
Christian barber of New York manifest such a deep interest in me? Why should
the preacher tonight single me out and point his finger at me, or that dear
woman follow me to the door, and hold me back? It must be all for the love they
bear for their Jesus, whom I despise so much." The more I thought of this,
the worse I felt. On the other hand, I argued:
"Is it possible that my father and mother, who loved me so dearly, should
teach me anything that is wrong? In my childhood they taught me to hate Jesus:
that there was but one God, and that He had no Son." I now felt a desire
springing up in my heart to become acquainted with that Jesus whom the Christians
so much loved. I started to walk faster, fully determined that if there was
a reality in the religion of Jesus Christ, I would know something before I slept.
When I arrived at home, my wife (who was a very strict orthodox Jewess) thought
I looked rather excited, and asked me where I had been. The truth I dared not
tell her, and a falsehood I would not, so I said:
"Wife, please do not ask me any questions. I have some very important business
to attend to. I will go to my private study where I can be alone."
I went at once to my study, locked the door, and began to pray, standing with
my face towards the east, as I always had done. The more I prayed the worse
I felt. I could not account for the feeling that had come over me. I was in
great perplexity as to the meaning of many prophecies in the Old Testament which
deeply interested me. My prayer gave me no satisfaction, and then it occurred
to me that Christians kneel when they pray. Was there anything in that? Having
been brought up a strict orthodox Jew, and taught never to kneel in prayer,
a fear came over me that if I should kneel I might be deceived in thus bowing
my knee to that Jesus whom I had been taught to believe in childhood to be an
impostor.
Although the night was bitterly cold, and there was no fire in my study (it
was not thought that I should use the room that night), yet I never perspired
so much in my life as I did that night. My phylacteries were hanging in my study,
on the wall, and I caught sight of them. Never since I was thirteen years of
age had I missed a day wearing them, except on Jewish Sabbaths and feasts. I
loved them dearly. I took them in my hand, and, while looking at them, Genesis
49:10, came flashing across my mind: "The sceptre shall not depart from
Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come: and unto Him
shall the gathering of the people be." Two other passages also, which I
had often read and pondered over, presented themselves vividly to my mind; the
first of them being from Micah 5:2: "But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though
thou be little among the thousands of Judah, " etc. The other passage is
the well-known prediction in Isaiah 7:14: "Therefore, the Lord himself
shall give you a sign: Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and
shall call his name Immanuel."
These three passages impressed themselves so forcibly on my mind, that I cried
out: "O, Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Thou knowest I am sincere
in this thing. If Jesus Christ is the Son of God, reveal Him to me tonight,
and I will accept Him as my Messiah."
No sooner had I said this than almost unconsciously I flung my phylacteries
into a corner of the room, and in less time than I can tell it, I was on my
knees, praying in the same corner, where my phylacteries were lying on the floor
by my side. To throw the phylacteries on the floor as I had done was, for a
Jew, an act of blasphemy. I was now on my knees praying for the first time in
my life, and my mind was much agitated and in doubt as to the wisdom of my proceedings.
My first prayer to Jesus I shall never forget. It was as follows: "O Lord
Jesus Christ, if Thou art the Son of God; if Thou art the Saviour of the world;
if Thou art the Jew's Messiah, for whom we Jews are still looking; and if Thou
canst convert sinners as Christians say Thou canst, convert me, for I am a sinner,
and I will promise to serve Thee all the days of my life."
This prayer of mine, however, went no higher than my head. The reason was not
far to seek. I had tried to make a bargain with Jesus, that if He would do what
I of Him asked, I, on my part, would do what I then promised Him. I remained
on my knees for about half an hour, and, whilst so engaged, drops of sweat came
running down my face. My head also felt hot, and I put it against the wall of
my study to cool it. I was in agony, but I was not converted. I arose, and paced
to and fro in my room, and then the thought came to me that I had gone too far
already, and I vowed I would never go on my knees again. I began to reason with
myself: "Why should I go on my knees? Can not the God of Abraham, whom
I have loved, served, and worshipped all the days of my life, do for me what
Christ is said to do for the Gentiles?" I looked at it of course, from
a Jewish standpoint, and went on reasoning: "Why should I go to the Son?
Is not the Father above the Son?"
The more I reasoned, the worse I felt, and became increasingly perplexed. In
one corner of the room lay my phylacteries, which still possessed a magnetic
influence over me; I instinctively turned towards them, and I involuntarily
fell on my knees again, but could not utter any words. My heart ached, for I
had a sincere desire to become acquainted with Christ if He was the Messiah.
I changed my posture time after time, alternately kneeling and then walking
about the room, from a quarter to ten until five minutes to two in the morning.
At that time light began to dawn on my mind, and I began to feel and believe
in my soul that Jesus Christ was really the true Messiah. No sooner had I realized
this, than, for the last time that night, I fell on my knees; but this time
my doubts were gone, and I began to praise God, for a joy and happiness had
penetrated my soul such as I had never known before. I knew I was converted,
and that God, for Christ's sake, had pardoned my sin. I now felt that neither
circumcision availed anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature.
With unspeakable joy I arose from my knees, and in my new-found happiness thought
that my dear wife would at once share my joy when I told her of the great change
which had come over me. With that thought uppermost in my mind, I rushed out
of my study into the bedroom (for my wife had already retired to rest, although
the gas had not been turned off); I threw my arms around her neck, and began
to kiss her eagerly, saying:
"Wife, I have found the Messiah."
She looked annoyed, and pushing me from her, coldly asked, "Found who?"
"Jesus Christ, my Messiah and Saviour," was my ready reply.
She spoke not another word, but in less than five minutes was dressed, and had
left the house, although it was then two in the morning and bitterly cold, and
went across the street to the house of her parents, who lived immediately opposite.
I did not follow her, but dropped on my knees, imploring my newly-found Saviour
that my wife might also have her eyes opened as I had, and afterwards went to
sleep.
On the following morning my poor wife was told by her parents that, if she ever
called me husband again, she would be disinherited, excommunicated from the
synagogue, and accursed. At the same time my two children were sent for by their
grandparents, and told that they must never call me father again; that I, in
praying to Jesus, the "Impostor," was fully as bad and as mean as
He was.
Five days after my conversion I received orders from the Surgeon-General at
Washington, to proceed west on Government business. I tried all the means in
my power to communicate personally with my wife and to bid her good-bye, but
she would neither see me nor write to me. She, however, sent me a message by
a neighbor to the effect that so long as I called Jesus Christ my Saviour, I
should not call her my wife, for she would not live with me. I did not expect
to receive such a message from my wife, for I loved her and my children dearly,
and it was with a sad heart, therefore, that I left home that morning to travel
thirteen hundred miles to my sphere of duty, without being able to see my wife
and children.
For fifty-four days my wife would not answer any of my letters, although I wrote
her one daily; and with every letter sent I prayed that God would incline her
heart to read at least one of them. I felt that if she would but read one of
my letters (for Christ was preached in every one of them), she would consider
what she had said and done before I had left home. Never in my experience were
Cooper's words more signally fulfilled, "God moves in a mysterious way
His wonders to perform," for it was through the disobedience of my daughter
that my wife was converted. My daughter was the younger of my two children,
and generally considered her father's pet, and, after my conversion to Christ,
a duty to her mother on one hand, and her love for her father on the other,
kept her mind in continual agitation.
On the fifty-third night she dreamt she saw her father die, and a fear came
over her, and she made up her mind that come what would, she would not destroy
the next letter in her father's handwriting. The following morning the postman
brought a letter in the familiar handwriting (and by the way, she had waited
for him at the door). As the postman handed the letters to her, she took her
father's letter and quickly slipped it into her bosom, and ran upstairs into
her room, locked the door, and opened the letter. She began to read it, and
then read it three times before she laid it quickly down. That letter made her
sad at heart to such an extent, that when she went downstairs, her mother saw
that she had been crying, and asked her the cause of her grief.
"Mother, if I tell you, you will be offended, but if you promise me not
to be grieved, I will tell you all about it."
"What is it, my child," said her mother.
Taking out my letter from under her dress, she told her mother of her dream
of the night previous, and added: "I have opened my papa's letter this
morning, and now I can not and will not believe what my grandpa and grandma
or anybody else says about my papa being a bad man, for a bad man could not
write such a letter to his wife and children. I beg of you to read this, mother,"
she added, as she handed to her the letter.
My wife took the letter and carried it into the next room and locked it in her
desk. That afternoon she locked herself in the room, and, opening the desk,
took my letter and began to read it. The more she read the worse she felt. She
afterward told me she read it through five times before she finally laid it
down.
After the last reading of the letter, my wife returned it to the desk, and went
back to the room she had just left. Her eyes were full of tears, and now it
was my daughter's turn to ask, "Mother, why are you crying?"
"Child, my heart aches," was the reply; "I wish to lie down on
the lounge." She did so. The servant made her a cup of tea, thinking that
was all that was needed to take away the heartache of which she complained.
But the cup of tea brought no relief to my poor wife.
After a while my wife's mother came across the street to our house. Thinking
my wife to be very ill, she administered some simple house remedies, as mothers
frequently do. These also failed to give relief. At half-past seven in the evening
my mother-in-law sent for Dr. R____. He came at once and prescribed for her,
but his medicine likewise failed to remove the heartache of which my wife complained.
My mother-in-law stayed in our house that night, attending to my wife until
a quarter-past eleven o'clock. I heard my wife say afterwards, that the desire
of her heart was that her mother should leave the room, for she had fully made
up her mind to go on her knees as I had previously done, as soon as her mother
had gone. No sooner therefore had she left the house, than my wife locked the
door and fell on her knees by the side of her bed, and in less than two minutes
Christ, the Great Physician, met her, healed her, and converted her.
On the following morning I received a telegram worded as follows:
"Dear Husband: Come home at once; I thought you were in the wrong and I
was in the right, but I have found that you were in the right and I was in the
wrong. Your Christ is my Messiah, your Jesus my Saviour. Last night at nineteen
minutes past eleven, while on my knees for the first time in my life, the Lord
Jesus converted my soul."
After reading that telegram, I felt for a moment as if I did not care a cent
for the government under which I served. I left my business unfinished, took
the first express train and started for Washington. My house at that time being
well known there, especially amongst the Jews (for I frequently sang in the
synagogue), I did not wish to create a sensation, and so I telegraphed to my
wife not to meet me at the station, for I would take a carriage on my arrival
at Washington and drive quietly home.
When I got to the front of my home, I saw my wife standing in the open door
expecting me. Her face beamed with joy. She ran to meet me as I stepped out
of my carriage, threw her arms round my neck, and kissed me. Her father and
mother were also standing at their open door across the street, and when they
saw us in each other's arms, they began to curse both me and my wife.
Ten days after my wife had given her heart to Christ my daughter was converted.
She is now the wife of a Christian minister, co-worker with her husband in Christ's
vineyard.
My son (would to God I could say the same of him as of his sister), was promised
by his grandparents on his mother's side, that if he would never call me "father"
again, or my wife "mother," they would leave all their property to
him, and thus far he has kept his promise.
A year and nine months after her conversion, my wife died. The desire of her
heart previous to her death, was to see her son who resided about seven minutes'
walk from our house. I sent again and again to him, begging of him to come and
see his dying mother. One of the ministers of the city, along with his wife,
personally saw my son, and tried to persuade him to grant his dying mother's
request, but his only reply was: "Curse her! let her die; she is no mother
of mine."
On Thursday morning (the day of her death), my wife asked me to send for as
many members of the congregation where she had worshipped as could come, to
be with her in her dying hour. At half-past ten she asked Mrs. Ryle, the minister's
wife, who was a very dear friend of hers, to take her left hand, and let all
the ladies in the room join hands with her. I stood at the other side of the
bed and took hold of her right hand, and the gentlemen joined hands with me,
and at my wife's request we formed a circle, about thirty-eight of us, and then
we sang:
"Jesus lover of my soul,
Let me to Thy bosom fly,"
very softly. As we began to sing,
"Thou, O Christ, art all I want,"
my wife in a feeble, though clear voice, said: "Yes, it is all I want,
it is all I have; come, blessed Jesus, take me home," and she fell asleep.
My son would not come to the funeral, nor so far as I have known, has he ever
visited his mother's grave; neither has he called me "father," nor
answered any letter of mine since my conversion, although I have three times
crossed the Atlantic, from America to Germany, trying to see him and be reconciled,
but have failed in every instance, for he would not see me. This, however, has
called forth more fervent prayer on his behalf, that he also may be emancipated
from the thraldom of Jewish prejudice, and in Jesus, "Behold the Lamb of
God which taketh away the sin of the world." A fourth visit to Germany
in July, 1887, has strengthened and confirmed my faith, for my son not only
consented to see me, but shed bitter tears on the remembrance of the past, and
at once declared his determination to see his dear sister in America.
I wrote to my mother, who resided in Germany, immediately after my conversion,
recounting to her how I had found the true Messiah. I could not keep the good
news from her, and in my heart thought that she would believe the eldest of
her fourteen children. Indeed, I may say that the first desire of my heart after
my conversion was that all my friends, Jews as well as Gentiles, might share
with me in my new-found joy. I felt like the Psalmist when he wrote, "Come
and hear, all ye that fear God, and I will declare what he hath done for my
soul." This hope, so far as my mother was concerned, was destined to be
bitterly disappointed, for she wrote me but one letter (if a curse can be called
a letter), prolonged silence awakening within me a suspicion that if she did
write at all, it would be to send me that curse which every Jew must expect
from his nearest relations when he embraces Christianity. This suspicion was
only too fully confirmed after a lapse of five months and a half, during which
time I was in suspense-for previous to my conversion, my mother had written
to me once in a month.
One morning, when the postman brought me my letters, I saw amongst them one
bearing the German postmark, and in the old familiar handwriting of my dear
mother. As soon as I saw it I said to my wife, who was in the room, "Wife,
it has come at last."
Needless to say I opened that letter first. There was no heading to it, no date,
no "My dear son," as all her former letters to me began, but it read
as follows:
"Max: You are no longer my son; we have buried you in effigy; we mourn
you as one dead. And now may the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob strike you
blind, deaf, and dumb, and damn your soul forever. You have left your father's
religion and the synagogue for that of Jesus the 'Impostor,' and now take your
mother's curse. Clara."
Although I had by this time fully counted what it would cost me in embracing
the religion of Jesus Christ, and knew what I had to expect from my relatives
because I had turned my back on the synagogue, I confess I was hardly prepared
for such a letter from my mother. My dear wife and I could now, however, more
fully sympathize with each other in our new religious life; for, as stated before,
her parents had already cursed her to her face for believing in Christ. It was
not all sadness, however, for never before did the Psalmist's words seem so
full of meaning and encouragement both to my wife and myself: "When my
father and mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up."
Let not anyone think that it is an easy thing for a Jew to become a Christian.
He must be prepared to forsake father, mother, and wife for the kingdom of God's
sake; for the considerations which appeal alike to his affections and to his
self-interest are brought to bear upon every Jew who is suspected of looking
with favor towards Christianity.
I answered my mother's letter, a few days later, in the following words:
"ANSWER TO MY MOTHER'S CURSE."
"Far away from home, my mother,
Daily will I pray for thee;
Why should I be cursed, my mother?
Why such message sent to me?
Once convinced of sin, my mother,
I cried, 'Jesus, set me free!'
I am happy now, my mother;
Christ, the Jew, has died for me.
"Him you taught me to hate, my mother,
Him you still 'Impostor' call,
Died for me on Calvary, mother,
Died to save me from the fall.
Let me lead you to Him, mother,
While I pray on bended knee:
'Jesus, now accept my mother;
Loving Jesus, set her free.'
"Be persuaded, dearest mother,
Do not now so hardened be;
Jesus Christ, the Jew's Messiah,
Surely died for you and me.
Can you spurn such mercy, mother?
Can you turn away your face?
Come to Jesus, come, dear mother,
Fly, oh, fly to His embrace!"
Although she never wrote to me afterwards, I was told the last word she uttered,
when life was ebbing away, was my own name, "Max." The sequel to "Charlie
Coulson" remains to be told.
About eighteen months after my conversion, I attended a prayer-meeting in the
city of Brooklyn. It was one of those meetings where Christians testify to the
loving-kindness of their Saviour. After several of them had spoken, an elderly
lady arose, and said, "Dear friends, this may be the last time it is my
privilege to testify for Christ. My family physician told me yesterday that
my right lung is very nearly gone, and my left lung is very much affected, so
at the best I have but a short time to be with you, but what is left of me belongs
to Jesus. Oh! it is a great joy to know that I shall meet my boy with Jesus
in heaven. My son was not only a soldier for his country, but a soldier for
Christ. He was wounded at the battle of Gettysburg, and fell into the hands
of a Jewish doctor, who amputated his arm and leg, but he died five days after
the operation. The chaplain of the regiment wrote me a letter, and sent my boy's
Bible. In that letter I was informed that my Charlie, in his dying hour, sent
for that Jewish doctor and said to him, 'Doctor, before I die, I wish to tell
you, that five days ago, while you amputated my arm and leg, I prayed to the
Lord Jesus Christ to convert your soul.'"
When I heard this lady's testimony, I could sit still no longer. I left my seat,
crossed the room, and taking her by the hand, said, "God bless you, my
dear sister. Your boy's prayer has been answered. I am the Jewish doctor for
whom your Charlie prayed, and his Saviour is now my Saviour."
It is with great joy and thankfulness of heart that I record the conversion
of my dear son.
I firmly believe that the dear Saviour had been troubling his heart some time
prior to our meeting in July, 1887. For the first time in fourteen years he
called me "father;" he wept bitterly at our meeting, and, it seemed,
his soul's desire was to see his sister again. My heart leaped with joy to hear
this, for I knew with his sister (a devoted Christian in America), he would
be in good hands. He left for America, where he met his sister, on Monday afternoon,
August 15. On the following Friday, my son begged his sister to take him to
his mother's grave.
On Friday, August 29th, he again visited his mother's grave (but this time alone),
and while there, God in His mercy, for Christ's sake, pardoned his sins and
converted his soul.
He went home and told his sister the good news, and then wrote to me that same
night.
And now, in conclusion, I earnestly pray that God may spare my life, that I
may be permitted to hear my son preach the gospel of that dear Saviour whom
he had so long rejected.
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