CHARACTER
What is "Character?" According to Butler, Character is "that temper
from whence you act in one way rather than another. It involves those
principles or scruples from which a man acts when they become fixed and
habitual with him. Consequently, there is a far greater variety in men’s
characters than in the features of their faces."
But, I think I like better the definition of Dr. Bob Jones, Sr., who
said, "Your Reputation is what men think you are; your Character is what
God knows you to be."
Butler dissected Character and says he found it to comprise three
parts: Benevolence--which is the habit of always doing good;
Justice--which is the habit of always doing right; and Veracity--which
is the habit of always telling the truth.
But where does it come from?
Character is not hereditary. Though men and women with character most
always come from families where their parents before them had it, yet
character is not acquired by birth.
Neither does character lodge with intelligence. The more learning a
person acquires does not necessarily mean the more character is being
acquired.
Neither is character acquired by salvation. A man, who is listless
and lazy before conversion, will undoubtedly make a listless and lazy
Christian. All the men God has mightily used have been men who were
industrious prior to their call to service. David tended sheep, as did
Moses. Elisha was plowing with twelve yolks of oxen. Paul was zealously
persecuting the saints. And, Isaiah wrote, "I being in the way, the Lord
led me."
Then from where does Character come?
Character is built little by little. Every act you do either helps to
further your character or to deform what character you have. Individual
acts give birth to habits that either make your character comelier or
uglier. It is no accident you are the way you are; rather, you are what
you have formed your life to be.
It was Alexander Whyte who said, "If you ponder good character, you
are a moral philosopher; but if you practice good character, you are a
moral man."
Every act you do tends to strengthen or to weaken your character.
Every act of yielding makes it more vulnerable to further surrenders.
Soon it becomes easy to yield and habit is formed. And soft at last, so
your character is formed.
Good character is tested and strengthened in tragedies of life and by
the temptations of a sinful and adulterous generation. All things in
this world work together to purify, to refine, and to test your
character. These are the predetermined plan of God to develop your
character. But the trials God uses to shape your character would not
meet my needs. Each man’s needs are different. This is why some people
go through such trying affliction while others are spared them.
"The test of a man’s character is what it takes to stop him," said
Dr. Bob Jones, Sr. Therefore good character is rare. Alexander Whyte
points out; "There are many good minds, but few good hearts. There are
more clever people than good people." Again, he points out, "Most men
worship talent, strength, and beauty, but character is infinitely more
valuable, and also infinitely rarer."
Character rests upon three pillars: FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Your
character will never be stronger than your Faith, nor will it ever be
stronger than your Hope, nor your Love.
"Your REPUTATION is what men think you are; your CHARACTER IS WHAT
GOD KNOWS YOU TO BE." And "The TEST of a man’s CHARACTER is what it
takes to stop him."--Dr. Bob Jones, Sr.
OCTOBER
6, 1536--William Tyndale, chained to a wooden stake, is first
strangled, then burned. His notoriety lies in his having
translated the Word of God into the English language.
9, 1747--David Brainerd will die today in the home of
Jonathan Edwards, his father-in law. He is 29 years of age. The
Diary he leaves behind will inspire William Carey to go to the
mission field as well as other notable men. Brainerd has spent
his life teaching the Indians of New England, the Word of God.
The last words he is heard to utter are, "I am almost in
eternity. I long to be there...oh, to be in Heaven to praise and
rejoice with God and with His angels!"
12, 1524--Jacques Lefevre has finished translating into
French the Word of God.
12, 1531--Ulrich Zwingli receives a fatal wound while acting
as a chaplain to his Swiss countrymen. He has been speared on
the battlefield. We can hear him utter, "What matters it? They
may kill the body, but they cannot kill the soul. Zwingli was
God’s tool to bring reformation to the land of Switzerland as
did Luther to Germany.
14, 1771--John Gill dies having written ten million words
which involved Gospel treatises and a set of commentaries which
unlike any others comment on each of the 775,000 verses in the
Bible. The English songwriter, Augustus Toplady wrote of him,
"It would perhaps try the constitution of half the literati in
England only to read with care and attention the whole of what
Gill wrote!"
15, 1845--After 32 years on the mission field, Adoniram
Judson is again on American soil.
15, 1906--The renowned Methodist Evangelist Sam Jones dies
aboard a train bound for Little Rock, Arkansas. He has just
finished meetings in Oklahoma City. His wife and daughter are
with him. He will be buried in Cartersville, Georgia. He has had
a stroke.
16, 1555--At Oxford, England, Hugh Latimer and Bishop Ridley
are led to a wooden stake to be burned to death. They embrace
each other, kneel in prayer, and kiss the stake. The sight of
the stake makes Ridley tremble. "Be of good cheer, brother
Ridley, and play the man. We shall light such a candle in
England today as will never go out!" Witnesses declared Latimer
seemingly embraced the flames.
16, 1847--Sam Jones, the Methodist evangelist is born in Oak
Bowery, Alabama. He will be known for his pugilistic fight
against the traffic in liquor.