You know, if a man could just keep his eyes on Jesus all the  time, 
he'd have it made.  But the trouble is, these eyes are made  to see 
things that are material, and they're not made to see  things that are 
spiritual.  Now, looking out across this building  today, I don't see 
anything spiritual.  I feel; I sense  something.  But I can't see it.  
I mean, there's the building; I  see that; that isn't spiritual.  I 
see the light bulbs; that  isn't spiritual.  There's the board; that 
isn't spiritual.  I see  your bodies; I see your clothes; that isn't 
spiritual.   Your eyes are made to see things that are physical.  And 
this  passage says, "Looking unto Jesus."  Well, where are you going 
to  look for Him?  I mean, if I look around there, He's not there.   
If I look behind me, He's not there.  I look inside, I can't see  
through my body.  The Bible says my body is the temple of the  Holy 
Ghost, but I couldn't see the Holy Ghost if I could see  through my 
body.  And so I've got a problem.  And if you ever  solve that 
problem, 95 percent of your problems are solved.

Looking unto Jesus.  Now, the first thing I want to say  about the 
text is, that He's yours to look at.  I mean, some  people don't have 
him.  But if you're saved, if you're God's  child, then, He's yours to 
look at.  He's mine to look at.  He's  mine to behold.  He's mine to 
dwell with.  He said the Holy  Spirit will dwell with you, and my 
Father and I shall come into  that man and abide with him.  He's mine 
to dwell with; He's mine  to behold.  He's mine to bear my burdens.  
He's mine to conquer  my enemies.  He's mine to share my load and 
carry it for me.

One time a man went to a hospital in London and got to  dealing with 
different people, and as he was dealing with  different people, he 
came up to one fellow there, and he said,  "Can I help you any?"  And 
the man didn't answer.  And every day  that young preacher went 
through that hospital he stopped by that  bed and he said, "Can I help 
you any?"  And the fellow never did  answer.  And about the fifth day 
he went through there and went  by the same bed and said to this young 
fellow who was dying, "Can  I help you any?"  And the young fellow 
said, "Well, I've been  very rude to you, preacher."  He said, "Maybe 
you can, I don't  know."  But he said, "Would you please me 
something?"  He said,  "Can you undo my sins?" He said, "They're a 
burden to me."  And,  of course, there isn't a preacher in the world 
who can undo your  sins.  But He can.  Looking unto Jesus.  He can, 
see?  He can  carry them.  He can tote the load.

He's yours for a burden bearer.  He's yours to dwell with.   He's 
yours to love.  He's yours to share things with.  He's yours  to 
prepare a place for you in heaven.  He's yours in life.  He's  yours 
in death.  He's yours in the grave.  He's yours at the  judgment.  
He's yours at the marriage of the Lamb.  He said,  "Unto him that is 
able to present you faultless before the  presence of His glory, with 
exceeding joy."  Uh, you can look  unto Him.  See?  He's yours.  He's 
gonna get you through.  He's  gonna get you through clean, spotless, 
perfect, sinless.  My,  what a job!  What a task!  But He's gonna do 
it!

One time a lady back east hung a bunch of clothes out on the  line on 
winter afternoon.  She was talking to a visitor, and they  were 
remarking how white and clean the clothes look.  And about  that time 
a snow flurry came up and turned into a mild blizzard,  and the snow 
began to fall, and she said, "Well, my clothes don't  look as white as 
they did."  And the visitor said, "Well, they're  just as white as 
they were.  They just don't look quite as white  alongside God's 
white."  See?  When God's white comes down, the  rest looks real 
dirty.

And when you look at Jesus, see, you see the real thing.   You see the 
real whiteness.  You won't see it looking in a  mirror.  You see it 
looking unto Jesus.  Keep looking unto Jesus.

All right, look unto Jesus.  Look unto Jesus--how?  Looking  unto 
Jesus crucified, buried, risen, coming again.  And LOOK to  Him.  As 
long as you can look to Him, look on Him, you're safe.   Simon Peter 
was out there walking on the water, and he goes along  that water, and 
pretty soon the winds begin to blow, and the  waves begin to come up, 
and he says, "I'm sinking."  He said,  "Lord, save me."  And Jesus 
hauls him out and says, "Wherefore  didst thou doubt, O ye of little 
faith?"  He was all right as  long as looked to Jesus, and when he 
quit looking at Jesus, then  he had problems.

All right, we're to look at Jesus, and we're to look at  nothing else.  
Looking unto Jesus--not Satan.  Looking unto  Jesus.  You shouldn't be 
ignorant of the devil's devices.  You  ought to know what he's up to, 
but don't look at him too long.   He'll hypnotize you.  Looking unto 
Jesus--not the devil.  Not  your obstacles.  Not your defeats.  Not 
the sorrows.  Not the  troubles.  Looking unto Jesus.  Don't look at 
the troubles.   You'll quit.  Don't look at the obstacles.  You'll 
give up.

Young people--especially young men--they--uh--something  about them, 
this generation, I guess I was a bigger puzzle to my  mother and 
father.  But they come along and they amaze me how  soon they quit a 
thing.  It's just amazing to me how they start a  thing and then just 
drop it, you know.  Just go along--QUIT.  You  turn around--where was 
it, man?  I don't know what in the world  happened to the thing--
just--PPPFFT!--and go on!!  I don't know  what in the world happens to 
folks like that.  Uh, yes I do.   They quit looking to Jesus.  They 
get looking at the wind, see?   They get looking at the waves.  They 
look at the troubles, and  they quit.

Why, a fellow said to a soldier over in Heartbreak Ridge in  Korea, he 
said, "Young fellow," he said, "wouldn't you like to be  a Christian?"  
And the fellow turned and said, "Who are you?"   And he said, "Well," 
he said, "I'm a newspaper man who came over  here, but," he said, "I'm 
a saved man."  He said, "I've been  talking to some of these boys up 
here on the front in these  holes."  And he said, "Well, what do you 
think the trouble with  this war is?  If you don't want to be a 
Christian, talk to me and  tell me something I can give the paper."

And the young kid said, "Well, I'll tell you what the  trouble with 
this world is.  And I'll tell you want the trouble  over here is."  He 
said, "Your God has let us down."  The fellow  wouldn't get saved, you 
know, he wouldn't trust God, but he told  the Christian, "You're God 
let us down."  He was looking at the  obstacles, see, looking at the 
troubles.

Why, I know a Christian family one time, they're godly  people, they 
love the Lord, just about as fine a couple people as  you ever saw, 
they fell in love with each other, they got  married, they didn't have 
any children for five years, and they  prayed all the time for God to 
give him a child, and they finally  got one.  And it was a baby with 
Down's syndrome, you know, what  they used to call Mongoloids.  You 
know what they had to do?   They had to look to Jesus, see?  You can't 
look at your troubles.   You can't look at your problems.  You'll 
quit.  You'll just give  up.  You'll give up.

Looking unto Jesus, not your problems.  Not your defeats.   Not your 
troubles.  None of those things.  You can't let them get  you down.  
Not looking at Satan.  Not looking at those problems.   You know, God 
doesn't always interfere and stop the wicked.  God  doesn't always 
interfere and stop the devil.  Sometimes it seems  like He just lets 
the devil just run away with the whole  cotton-picking thing.  And you 
can't look at it too close.

There was a godless ol' captain back along there about, oh,  1600, 
1700, called Hawkins.  An English captain, and was of  Bloody Mary's 
kin.  And he used to take a ship down around the  African coast, and 
he'd steal the Africans, you know, and sell  'em for slaves.  And he'd 
steal 'em and put 'em in chains on his  ship.  When he put them in 
chains on his ship, they all sat there  on the deck chained together, 
and they saw the name of the ship  on the bow, and written several 
places inside the ship.  And he  christened that ship "The Jesus."  
"The Jesus."  You know.  So  every black fellow who was sold into 
slavery would come over  there thinking about Jesus carrying him off 
as a captive and  carrying him off in chains to sell him.  Wasn't he a 
fine fellow?

And, you know, that fellow didn't die until he was about 85  years 
old, and God never sank that ship, and it never had a  wreck, and 
never got caught.  And, you know, if you just look at  the obstacles, 
you'll just quit.  The power of the devil is too  great.

You look to Jesus, not your troubles.  You look to Jesus.  A  fellow 
one time had one thirteen operations and thirty-nine blood  
transfusions.  And a preacher talked with him at the hospital,  and 
said, "What do you think about these things?  You're a saved  man, 
what do you think about them?"  And the fellow said, "Well,  preacher, 
I don't know what to think about them."  He said, "I  know the end of 
this thing is going to be death."  He said, "I  know in the end I'm 
gonna die."  But he said, "I just pray death  will come right along, 
but it doesn't seem to come."  And, you  know, when you get in a thing 
like that, you know what you have  to do?  You have to look to Jesus.

Looking unto Jesus...there's no other place to look!  See?  Your flat 
on your back.  You've got to look up.  And my text  says, "Looking 
unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith."   All right, you 
can't look at the world.  He says, "Looking unto  Jesus, not to the 
world."  Looking unto Jesus, not to your  brethren, not at other 
Christians.  Don't look at the world too  long.  I don't take any 
newspapers or magazines any more at the  house.  I'm getting to the 
place where if a newspaper or magazine  comes to the house, I have to 
smuggle it out of the place and  burn it.  If that stuff goes into the 
trash, any more there's  people in my neighborhood who come by and 
look through your  trash, pass the information on, sometimes throwing 
something away  isn't enough, because it could still do damage.  Maybe 
you should  burn it.  You can't look at the world too long.  I have a 
radio  in my car, but don't have one in my house.  I have a TV set, 
but  I'm finding less and less time or inclination to turn it on.  I  
don't take a great deal of time any more to try and find out  what's 
going on in the world.  KNX NewsRadio used to be my  favorite radio 
station.  Then, back around Christmas, my radio  went dead in my car, 
and I didn't bother to fix it.  I found out  I didn't miss it!  Things 
in the world are just too stinkin' bad!   You know, if you just get 
that ol' world in you and in your eye  all day long, you'll quit too!  
Cause it's a mess.

And looking unto Jesus, not at the brethren.  And that's  hard to do.  
That's hard to do.  You know, I see you all the  time.  And you see me 
all the time, and we see US all the time!   And those eyes just keep--
you know--looking and staring, and  folks just get looking at each 
other and criticize each other and  analyze each other, and figuring 
each other out.  Why, you know,  the dumbest person in the world is 
just like a psychologist, you  know that?  You know some people are 
proud of their education, of  their degrees.  Some men DIE by degrees!  
I've met ol' folks up  in the farm country, you know, never finished 
high school.  They  got a mind just like a razor, boy.  Eye just like 
a gimlet, just  figure you out in five seconds.  You know what people 
do?  They  just sit around and analyze folks and criticize folks and 
weigh  folks up and match folks out and compare folks to folks.  You  
know what they do while they're doing all that?  They're not  
witnessing, they're not passing out tracts, they're not winning  
souls, they're not praying, they're not bearing fruit, they're  not 
doing anything but looking at each other.  That Bible says,  "They 
measuring themselves among themselves, and comparing  themselves by 
themselves are not wise" (II Corinthians 10:12).  You know what they 
ought to do?  They ought to look unto Jesus.

Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.   That's it.  
You have to keep your eyes on Jesus.  Looking unto  Jesus, and, listen 
to me.  Not only looking unto Jesus, but  looking unto Jesus and not 
to the dearest loved one that you  have.  God's people, they say, 
"Well, it's wrong to look at  everybody and criticize them, but what's 
wrong with loving your  mother?  What's wrong with loving your wife?  
What's wrong with  loving your children?"  Well, I'll tell you what's 
wrong, if they  get your eyes off Jesus, the dearest person in this 
world can be  a stumbling block to you.

Looking unto Jesus--not the dearest and closest to you.  It  says, 
"Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith;  who for 
the joy that was set before him endured the cross,  despising the 
shame, and is set down at the right hand of the  throne of God."

The dearest person in this world, the dearest thing in this  world, if 
they get your eyes off Jesus, will cause you trouble.   They say many 
years ago, over in Germany--and this is just a  story they tell--they 
say there was a shepherd out on the  hillside.  And he found a 
beautiful white flower that he had  never seen before.  And he bent 
over and picked up that flower.   And when he picked up that flower, a 
hole opened on the side of  the cliff, and that shepherd kid looked in 
there, and there were  diamonds, and rubies, and jasper and gold and 
statues and vases  and jugs and pottery and tapestries and silver and 
gold and God  knows what.  And that shepherd boy RAN in there, just 
elated.   And he heard a voice say, "Take anything you want.  Help  
yourself.  But don't forget to take the best."  And, man, that  kid 
dropped that flower and began to pick up that stuff and  crammed his 
pockets full of that stuff, and he went through there  and got loaded 
down with so much junk he could hardly walk out of  there.  And, as he 
walked through the hole, the voice said,  "Don't forget to take the 
best."  And the kid went back and  looked around there to make sure he 
had the most valuable thing  in the place, and walked back out to the 
hillside.  And, as the  story goes, when he stepped out that old cave 
closed up behind  him, and everything in his pocket, his jacket, and 
his haversack  just turned to ashes.  And the voice said, "You forgot 
the best!"   And then he thought, well, "I'd better go back and get 
it."  And  when he went around but couldn't get back in the place.  
And then  he began to look for the flower.  And then he remembered he  
dropped the thing, you know, inside the cave, and it was back  there 
in the cave.  And he never did get in again.  You see, he  forgot the 
thing that opened the thing up.

And Christian people, I'll tell you, there was a time when  some of 
you were poor, but you're not poor any more.  Some of you  were in bad 
health, and you're in good health today.  And there  was a time when 
some of you were nothing but tramps and bums on  the face of this 
earth, and now you're somebody.  And, listen,  there was a time when 
you had no treasure in heaven, your heart  was down here, and God has 
saved you, and you've got a lot of  good things, see, but DON'T FORGET 
THE BEST!  I mean don't forget  the One who gave it to you, that's 
Jesus.  If you hadn't run into  Him you wouldn't have anything.

So, He says, "Look unto Jesus," see?  That's the best.  Looking unto 
Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.  Don't  look at your 
beloved.  Don't look at the brethren.  Don't look at  some cause.  I 
don't care if it's the greatest, most precious  cause in this world--
it isn't the best.  You know, you and I live  in a day and age when 
work is a substitute for loving Jesus  Christ--you know that?  You get 
to going doing something for him,  and all the accent is on what 
you're doing for him instead of you  and Him.  And the best is Him.  
The best is Jesus.

The text says, "Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher  of our 
faith."  Don't look to some cause.  Don't look to  yourself.  If you 
want the blessing, we shouldn't look to  ourselves, people.  Don't 
look at yourself.  You're weak, you're  stumbling.  Don't look at your 
successes.  Don't look at your  failures.  Don't look at your 
weaknesses.  Looking unto Jesus.   Don't look at your doubts.  Don't 
look at your personality.   Don't look at your gifts.  Why, you can't 
get the victory that  way.  I know some Christians spend all the time 
looking at the  gifts God gave them.  Why, you look at the gifts God 
gave you,  and what if you lose them?  You'd think God took them away 
from  you.  But then you say, "Well, the gifts and calling of God are  
without repentance," so I still got 'em.  Then you get proud of  them.  
You say, well, "So and so can't speak in tongues.  But I  did!"  You 
get your eye on the gift.

Looking unto Jesus.  You don't look at your doubts.  You  don't look 
at your faith.  Why, I don't even try to analyze my  faith in Jesus 
Christ.  I've known people in the last five years  that got so busy 
analyzing how they felt about Christ, and  whether or not they 
exercised the right kind of faith, and  whether or not they did the 
right thing, they just about went  stark raving mad thinking about it.  
You don't look unto your  mind, you don't look unto your feelings, you 
don't look unto your  heart, it's looking unto Jesus.

Don't look at your victories.  Don't look at your defeats.   You know, 
a person who looks at their victories all the time,  they're going to 
get a false view of things.  Nobody wins every  time.  I think some 
young people think you've got to win every  time, you know, or you're 
a failure.  Well, man, you're not  anything till you've flopped three 
or four times in a good faith  way.  I'm not recommending that you 
drop out or anything, you  know, but I mean you'll learn some things 
by messing up you can't  learn any other way.  And you'll never learn 
to outdo anything  unless you make some mistakes.  Uh, you take ol' 
Adolph Hitler.   You know what one of his main problems was?  He never 
looked at  his defeats.  He just looked at his victories.  And, pretty 
soon,  he got to thinking that EVERYTHING was a victory, when it was a  
DISASTER!  Did you know the Union armies had that trouble in the  
Civil War?  All they looked at was their defeats.  They were just  the 
reverse.  Every time they got whipped, they'd go home and  think, 
"Well, good night, we're outnumbered, we don't dare  attack, we don't 
dare counterattack."  And when ol' Robert E. Lee  hit them in 
Gettysburg, after that battle was over, General Meade  could have 
wound up the war in about three hours, if he would  have attacked.  
But he was scared to death!  You know why he was  scared to death?  
He'd been whipped so many times before, all he  could do was get his 
mind on the defeats.  Same thing at  Antietam; they could've cleaned 
them up them.  You can't look at  your defeats.  You can't look at 
your victories.  You gotta look  unto Jesus.  You gotta look unto 
Jesus.

You take ol' Elijah. He was out under a juniper tree,  remember, and 
he got there under that juniper tree, and lay down,  and wished that 
he'd die.  And he said, "I'm no better than my  fathers."  Of course, 
that was true.  But the Lord knew that all  along.  And he said, "I'm 
no better than my fathers.  Take my  life," you know, and all that 
business.  You know what his  trouble was?  He had a tremendous 
victory.  And when he had that  tremendous victory, he got his eye on 
that victory, and then  right after that victory, he had a defeat.  
And then he got his  eye on the defeat, and he just was up, and down, 
and flopped, and  ready to quit.  You can't look at your victories.  
You can't look  at your defeats.

The verse says, "Looking unto Jesus."  Paul said,  "Forgetting those 
things that are behind, and reaching forth unto  those things which 
are before, I press forth for the mark of the  high calling of God in 
Christ Jesus."  The Christian should keep  his eyes on Jesus.  I wish 
I could keep my eyes on Jesus like  some unsaved man keep their eye on 
a goal.  You know, I've known  some unsaved men, and God knows they're 
lost and going to hell,  and that was that.  But, I'll tell you one 
thing.  They sure had  an eye, and they could sure keep their eye on 
the goal too,  brother.

I think of a fellow whose name was Adolphe Topervine.  In  1906 he was 
the world's best rifle shot.  He put Annie Oakley in  the shade. And 
Adolphe Topervine, you know what he said?  He was  a Vaudeville trick 
shooter, and he told a bunch of folks out in  Texas one time, he said, 
"I'm gonna do something nobody's ever  seen, and the world's never 
seen before."  And bets were wagered  on it, and here's what he said.  
He said, "I'm gonna have a man  throw up little clay squares, and they 
were manufactured two and  a half inches square."  And he said, "I'm 
gonna have them thrown  up eight hours a day for twelve days."  And, 
he said, "I'm going  to try to hit every one of them."  And he went 
out there in front  of a big crowd, and for twelve days, that old boy 
fired that  rifle, not a shotgun.  A rifle--EIGHT hours a day in 
December  1906--out there in Texas.  He fired those shots EIGHT hours 
a day  for twelve days, and he missed NINE pellets--NINE of them--out 
of  72,000.  They threw one up every five seconds.  And threw that  
things up, and out of 72,000, that bird missed nine of them.  You  
know that's some shooting?  And about the ninth day that fellow  came 
out to shoot, and that arm was almost paralyzed from  bursitis.  Just 
about tore to pieces the ninth day.  He fired for  twelve days.  Now, 
that fellow had an eye, you know that?   Just--bam, and bam, and bam, 
and bam, and bam--eight hours.  I  mean, eight in the morning to four 
in the afternoon for twelve  days.  That fellow had his eye on it.

You know, if I could just get my eyes on the Lord like that,  you 
know.  And, I imagine his arm was hurting him, but he had his  eye on 
the pellet, see.  And, I imagine his body was hurting him,  and his 
eyes were going bloodshot, and his mouth getting dry, and  his arm 
muscles twitching.  But he had his eye on it, you see?   And the verse 
says, "Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher  of our faith."  
And I don't care how bad it gets, and it's going  to get pretty bad, 
folks, if the Lord tarries--there's ONE thing  you should do.  Like 
the Lord said in one place, "One thing is  needful."  And, I'll tell 
you, if there's anything in this world  that's needful for the 
Christian, it's to keep his eyes on Jesus  Christ.  Looking unto 
Jesus, the author and finisher of our  faith.

We shouldn't have our eyes on our sorrows.  We shouldn't  have our 
eyes on our disillusionments.  We shouldn't have our  eyes on our 
ideas.  We shouldn't have our eyes on trials and  tribulations.  They 
ought to be on Jesus.

A fellow one time, an old Dutchman, was up in the rigging of  a ship 
many years ago, when they had the old sailing vessels.   And he fell 
down.  And when he fell down and hit that deck, they  thought he was 
dead.  And he came to about thirty minutes later,  and asked how 
manage had been done.  And they said, "Well," they  said, "You're just 
bruised up pretty bad, but you did break a  leg."  And he said, "Well, 
thank God it wasn't my neck!"  You  know, that's the way to face it, 
see?  Don't get your eye on the  leg that was broken, get your eye on 
the one that isn't broken.

One time a railroad man lost an arm in an accident, a  railroad 
accident, and had to have it amputated, you know.  And  he said, 
"Well, thank God, it was the one that had arthritis!"   That took care 
of that, brother!  And, you see, there's a way to  look at that thing, 
you see?

Now, many of you folks you know me.  I'm about as negative  as I can 
be when it comes to a lot of things.  But like I told  someone 
recently, there's one place you can ALWAYS be positive,  and that's in 
the Lord's dealings with you.  See?  I mean, Romans  8:28.  There's 
one place you can be positive, if the Lord's  dealing with YOU now, 
it's gonna work out.  Looking unto Jesus.

Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.   Don't put 
your eyes on your sorrows, your joys.  Look unto Jesus.   Look unto 
Jesus NOW, brother.  NOW!  Look unto Jesus ALWAYS.   Look unto Jesus, 
and look unto Jesus ONLY.  Don't look anywhere  else.  Don't look at 
the Law.  By the law is the knowledge of  sin.  Don't look at your 
feelings.  Your feelings change.  Don't  look at your neighbor; he's 
probably just like you.  Don't look  at yourself--you're no good, 
never have been, never will be.   These folks--I mean, until the Lord 
comes, you'll get by, the  Lord'll feed you.  But you're never gonna 
be perfect until Christ  comes.  There's no use looking at yourself.  
I'll just let you in  on a little secret--I think about 80 percent of 
all the  psychologists in the world are half crazy.  I really do.  You  
know why I do?  I've lived with myself and tried to counsel  people 
over these years enough to know that if a man just sits  around, 
analyzing his own mind and other people's minds all the  time, he'll 
go BUGS, man!  You can't keep looking at yourself  forever, you'll 
crack!

They gave a South Pacific woman a mirror, you know, one of  those 
missionaries.  She took one look at that mirror and she  slapped that 
thing down and broke it all to pieces, and they  heard her say in her 
own dialect, "Well, now I won't look like  THAT any more!"  You know, 
she got rid of the mirror, thought she  got rid of herself!  They say, 
these love birds die of a broken  heart.  I don't know what kind of 
birds they are, but they're two  little birds, you know, you buy them 
in pairs and put them in a  cage, and if one of them dies, the other 
one dies, you know.  You  take one out, the other one dies.  And they 
said one fellow found  a way to beat that thing.  He bought one bird 
and put a mirror in  there.  Every time that bird would hop around and 
see itself in  the mirror, you know, and think it was another bird.  
And one day  somebody broke the mirror.  And that little bird, instead 
of  dying of a broken heart, he died of a broken mirror.

But, you know, the moral of that thing is, folks, you just  can't 
spend all your time looking at yourself.  I think of a  couple of 
folks I know, that I've watched over a period of years,  watched those 
people, and instead of those folks growing in grace  and growing in 
the knowledge of the Lord, and instead of them  appreciating their 
blessings more and feeling sorry for other  people, and getting out 
ministering and doing something for God,  I've watched those people 
through the years, and those people  have withdrawn into themselves, 
and withdrawn into themselves,  and withdrawn into themselves, till I 
honestly believe if they  don't quit it they're going to wind up in a 
sanitarium.  You just  can't go that way!  You got to get out with 
them.  You got to  deal with folks.  You got to minister to folks.  
But most of all,  most of all, you got to keep your eyes on Jesus.

Now Paul said this.  He said, "Forgetting those things which  are 
behind," he said, "I press toward the mark for the prize of  the high 
calling of God in Christ Jesus."  In plainer words,  upward, brother, 
and onward.

Years ago a daddy was doing some carpenter work at a certain  house, 
and his own house was right next door.  He was helping out  a 
neighbor.  And he got up there about a third story, and was  doing 
some work up there.  And he was horrified.  He looked down  the 
shingles where he was working, and coming up that ladder,  which was 
over 15 feet high, was his four-year-old boy.  And that  four-year-old 
boy had seen the daddy climbing up the ladder.  And  the little boy 
was just following Daddy, you know, took him on  up.  And so the boy 
climbed up the ladder after his daddy, the  daddy looked at that boy 
and hardly dared breathe to see what  that boy was gonna do.  And 
then, what he feared would happen  happened.  That boy suddenly looked 
down.  And when he looked  down at the bottom of that ladder, he got 
dizzy and giddy.  You  know, the ground began to swim up there, he was 
up about 13 feet  high in the air.  And the old man thought he was 
going to fall  off for sure.  And the old man said, "Boy," he said, 
"look up!"   And that boy was hanging on that ladder, and suddenly 
looked up  and saw his daddy and smiled, and came on up the ladder and  
forgot about how the ground was going, you know.

And when it gets rough, you know, and that thing begins to  swim under 
your feet, and you begin to lose your balance--look  up!  Look up. 
Looking unto Jesus, see?  Looking unto Jesus.   Looking unto Jesus.  
Not yourself, not your neighbor, not the  devil, not the world, not 
your feelings, not your victories, not  your defeats, not your 
successes, not your faith, not your doubt,  not your sincerity, not 
your resolutions.  Jesus!  Jesus!   Looking unto Jesus.  The author 
and finisher of your faith.

Napolean at the battle of Marengo had a drummer boy.  And  that 
drummer boy was supposed to know all the beats a drummer boy  was 
supposed to know.  And at a certain place in the battle  things really 
got bad.  And Napoleon thought his troups were  going to have to 
retreat, and saw it was going to be a disaster  if they didn't 
retreat, and he called that drummer boy and he  said, "Beat a 
retreat."  And that drummer boy said, "Sire, I  don't want to seem 
insolent."  And he said, "I can't disobey an  order."  But he said, "I 
was never taught how to beat a retreat."   And Napoleon said, "Well, 
WHAT do you know how to beat?"  And the  kid said, "I know how to beat 
a CHARGE!"  And he demonstrated,  BRRRRRRRR he rolled that thing on!  
And those troups were all  heading one way, they heard it and started 
heading the other, and  they got to the main point and got passed the 
plank, and the  battle turned, and the thing was over, and it was won!

And I'll tell you folks, when it gets bad, real bad, there's  only one 
solution in the world for the Christian, and what I'm  going to say, I 
say for every man, woman, and child in this  building, you gotta look 
unto Jesus.  And, listen, if you're an  unsaved person here, the 
solution is exactly the same for you.   You unsaved people, you get 
your eyes off the preacher, you get  'em off your wife, you get 'em 
off your husband, you get 'em off  your kids, you get 'em off the 
church, you get 'em off the  government, you get 'em off the 
newspaper, you get 'em off  yourself, you get 'em away from the 
mirror, and you get your eyes  on Jesus, you'll be saved before I 
finish this message.  That's  the trouble with folks.  Looking.  
Looking.  What you lookin'  for?  Look unto Jesus.  Look unto Jesus, 
brother.  Don't look at  the person sitting next to you.  They may 
never lead you to  Christ.  Don't look at the person sitting next to 
you.  You're  going to stand at the judgment alone.  There may be 20 
million  between you, when you get judged, and the person sitting next 
to  you right now.  That Bible says "Every one of us shall give  
account of himself to God."  Maybe God will judge you, and after  He 
finishes judging 300,000 other people, the person sitting next  to 
you, it'll be their turn.  Looking unto Jesus.  Looking unto  Jesus.  
You know, I've drawn you kind of a wild picture here.   And I guess 
you know that song about stairway to the stars is not  exactly a 
scriptural thing, and yet you know Jacob went to sleep  one night, and 
when Jacob dreamed he dreamed about a ladder, and  he saw a ladder 
whose bottom was on the earth, and the top went  to heaven, and he saw 
the angels of God ascending and descending  on that ladder, and Christ 
said to a man in the New Testament,  "You're going to see the angels 
of God ascending and descending  on the Son of man."  So, you know 
what a Christian is like?  A  Christian is like a man who's got the 
ladder, he's got the One  who said, "I am the way, the truth, and the 
life," and he's just  trying to keep his eyes on the right place.  
See?  You don't look  behind you.  Paul said, "I press forward."  You 
don't look down  to the earth.  The things that are seen are temporal.  
The things  that are not seen are eternal.  Keep looking up.

And my text says, "Looking unto Jesus, the author and  finisher of our 
faith; who for the joy that was set before him  endured the cross, 
despising the shame, and is set down at the  right hand of the throne 
of God."



Let's bow our heads for prayer.

            ../