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Martin Knapp

Martin Wells Knapp (1853–1901) was an American preacher and Methodist minister whose fervent ministry played a pivotal role in the radical wing of the Holiness movement. Born on March 27, 1853, in Albion, Michigan, he was the son of Jared Knapp, a Methodist class-leader who relocated from New York to Michigan in 1836, and Octavia Wells, both committed Christians living in a modest log cabin. Despite his shy nature and limited family resources, Knapp began studies at a Methodist college in Albion at age 17, funded by $50 from the sale of a calf. He worked on the family farm in summers while studying Greek and Latin at night. Converted at 19 through the prayers of his fiancée, Lucy J. Glenn, and his mother’s example, he soon felt called to preach. In 1877, at age 23, he married Lucy and was assigned a circuit by the Methodist Michigan Conference. Knapp’s preaching career was marked by an intense commitment to holiness and revival. He founded God’s Revivalist magazine in 1888, the International Holiness Union and Prayer League in 1897 (later becoming the Pilgrim Holiness Church), and God’s Bible School in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1900. His ministry flourished in Cincinnati after moving there in 1892 with his second wife, Minnie C. Ferle, following Lucy’s death in 1890 after a long illness, leaving him with two young children. Knapp’s prolific output included books like Christ Crowned Within (1886) and Revival Tornadoes (1890), alongside establishing a publishing house and the Salvation Park Camp Meeting. He died of typhoid fever in 1901, leaving a legacy as a preacher who ignited spiritual fervor and institutional growth within the Holiness movement.
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Martin Knapp delivers a powerful sermon on the sin of covetousness, emphasizing how it is an inordinate desire to possess what belongs to others, leading to various destructive behaviors and consequences. Through a conversation with a young boy named Willie, the sermon explores biblical examples of coveting, such as Achan, Judas, Ananias, and Sapphira, highlighting the severe punishments they faced. The sermon warns against the dangers of covetousness, describing it as a popular sin that robs God of His rights and leads to idolatry and selfishness. It stresses the importance of shunning covetousness and embracing God's salvation and liberality instead.
Tenth River -- Covetousness
"'Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife, nor hismanservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is thy neighbor's." -- Ex.xx, 17. Covetousness is an inordinate desire to possess. Let us imagine that we are talking to alittle boy by the name of Willie, and that he tells us what he knows about Covetousness. "Willie, what do you think it means to Covet?" "It means to want things that belong to other people, which you know you should not have." "Please illustrate what you mean." "If papa should give me and each of my brothers and sisters an apple, and I should want,not only my apple, but also to take the ones my brothers and sisters have', that would be Coveting.Or, if I became dissatisfied with my father or mother, and would want the father or mother of aplaymate, that would be Coveting them." "Would it not be Coveting if you should wish to dispossess any of your neighbors of theirhouses or lands, or anything else they have?" "It certainly would." "Can you tell me of any instance in the Bible of people that have Coveted?" "Yes; the story of Achan, in Joshua vii, 21. He Coveted the golden wedge and Babylonishgarment, and was the cause of Israel's defeat at Ai, and was stoned to death for this sin. "Can you think of any instance in the New Testament?" "Judas, who betrayed our Savior for thirty pieces of silver, and Ananias and Sapphira, whoCoveted the property which they had promised to God. It seems to me the punishment of these threepersons is an awful warning to all who would follow in their footsteps." "Can you think of anything God has said about it?" "Yes; in Ecclesiastes v, 10, He says, 'He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied withsilver; nor he that loveth abundance with increase.' He says it leads to 'many foolish and hurtfullusts,' which drown men in perdition (I Tim. vi, 9). It leads to lying (see 2 Kings V, 22-25). Prov.I, i8, 19, shows it leads to murder and deception; Josh. vii, 21, to stealing; Prov. xxviii, 22, topoverty; I Tim. vi, 10, to misery; Psalm x, 3, declares that 'the covetous renounceth God;' and Eph.v, 5, and Col. iii, 5, declare that it is idolatry." "Very well answered; and, in view of these answers, I trust that you and all who read thisbook may shun it as you would a rattlesnake." As we have seen, in God's sight it is just as wicked as any other sin, and more to be feared,as it is more popular and less warned against. It is one of the nicest-painted and most inviting Sin-boats in the mighty Fleet which isfighting King Immanuel and robbing Him of His rights, and peopling damnation by hundreds. It is patronized by the rich and the learned, by lords and kings, as well as by multitudes inhumbler walks of life. One of the greatest perils of its passengers is that they are satisfied with it, and hencedisdain the Life-boat which the King of Heaven sends to their relief. Like all other sins, it is rooted in selfishness. It is the worship of self, which is idolatry. It is a gilded, popular sin, little feared, and seldom shunned. It is a River whose surface sparkles, but which is wide and deep; its currents rapid anddeceptive, its whirlpools swift and sure. More people are probably borne down on its treacheroustides than of any other Stream which flows into the River of Death. It is as natural to the unrenewed heart as breathing, and finds expression in the followingways: By an intense desire to be rich. By love of earthly gain. By slowness to give. By stinginess and penuriousness. By unlawful desire for that which belongs to another. It often leads to Sabbath-breaking. Also to stealing, murder, cheating, and overreaching in business for purposes of gain. Saloons and brothels are kept at its command. To accomplish its selfish ends it defies God and tramples on the rights of man. It is like the consumption, in that its victims often think they are well when they are uponthe very brink of death. It makes a man like a sponge, always absorbing, but never giving, or like a person who isalways eating, but never satisfied, and who dies in the midst of plenty. I knew a rich man, aChurch member, who gave but one dollar per year for missions, and feared that he would die in thepoorhouse. All of its victims belong to the family of Achan, Judas, and Ananias, and it loses none of itshideousness when, as in their cases, it is screened by a cloak of profession of piety. The Holy Spirit convicts of its danger. Jesus provides a way of escape, and God waits towelcome and save from it all who will accept of His great salvation. It is a heart-sin, and nothing but the Blood of Jesus can wash it away. At conversion it isrenounced and suppressed, but, like a caged tiger, will often growl and struggle to escape. Whenthe soul is baptized with the Holy Spirit, and moves up on Holiness Heights (see Chart), thenCovetousness, by God's power, is all removed, and Heaven-born Liberality and Perfect Lovereign in its stead. BEWARE OF COVETOUSNESS Selected A man once told me how much money he had cleared the year before, and how much hewas clearing that present year, and it was in advance. Some time afterwards -- he had likelyforgotten that circumstance-he said to me, "I can not give as much this year to the Church as lastyear." The more he got, the less he had for the Lord. The following spring, in a bad deal, he lostone hundred dollars or more. No one can "rob God in tithes and offerings," and not pay the penaltysooner or later. Beware of Covetousness!" "They that desire to be rich fall into a temptation and a snare, and many foolish and hurtfullusts, such as drown men in destruction and perdition." -- 1 Tim. vi, 9. WHAT IT COST. Biblical Illustrator. "How much is that estate worth?" said one friend to another as they passed a beautifulmansion and extensive and highly-cultivated grounds. "I do not know how much it is worth," wasthe reply; "but I know what it cost its owner." "How much?" "His soul," was the startling reply;and then he' proceeded to narrate how exclusively the owner had lived for one object -- to buildhimself a home on earth, utterly careless of the home on high, and had died impenitent andsuddenly. STOLEN TREASURE Christian Alliance It is said that an eagle, in search of prey, snatched a lamb from a sacrificial altar. She hadscarcely borne it to the nest before it was in flames, and her young were burned to ashes. A coal,unseen, had been taken with the stolen flesh, and God punished the sacrilege with its own fruits.So many a home, many a business, many a family, has been cursed by God's stolen treasures, andmight hear Him saying, if they had ears to hear: "Ye are cursed with the curse; for ye rob Me, even this whole nation. Bring ye the wholetithe into the storehouse, that there may be meat in Mine house, and prove Me now herewith, saiththe Lord of hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, thatthere shall not be room enough to receive it." -- Mal. iii, 9, 10.
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Martin Wells Knapp (1853–1901) was an American preacher and Methodist minister whose fervent ministry played a pivotal role in the radical wing of the Holiness movement. Born on March 27, 1853, in Albion, Michigan, he was the son of Jared Knapp, a Methodist class-leader who relocated from New York to Michigan in 1836, and Octavia Wells, both committed Christians living in a modest log cabin. Despite his shy nature and limited family resources, Knapp began studies at a Methodist college in Albion at age 17, funded by $50 from the sale of a calf. He worked on the family farm in summers while studying Greek and Latin at night. Converted at 19 through the prayers of his fiancée, Lucy J. Glenn, and his mother’s example, he soon felt called to preach. In 1877, at age 23, he married Lucy and was assigned a circuit by the Methodist Michigan Conference. Knapp’s preaching career was marked by an intense commitment to holiness and revival. He founded God’s Revivalist magazine in 1888, the International Holiness Union and Prayer League in 1897 (later becoming the Pilgrim Holiness Church), and God’s Bible School in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1900. His ministry flourished in Cincinnati after moving there in 1892 with his second wife, Minnie C. Ferle, following Lucy’s death in 1890 after a long illness, leaving him with two young children. Knapp’s prolific output included books like Christ Crowned Within (1886) and Revival Tornadoes (1890), alongside establishing a publishing house and the Salvation Park Camp Meeting. He died of typhoid fever in 1901, leaving a legacy as a preacher who ignited spiritual fervor and institutional growth within the Holiness movement.