The Use Of Tracts
By R.A. Torrey
Taken
from “How to Work for Christ,” published 1901
Comparatively few Christians realize the importance of tract work. I had been a Christian a good many years, and a minister of the Gospel several years, before it ever entered my head that tracts were of much value in Christian work. 1 had somehow grown up with the notion that tracts were all rubbish, and therefore I did not take the trouble to read them, and far less did I take the trouble to circulate them, but I found out that I was entirety wrong. Tract work has some great advantages over other forms of Christian work.
A. Importance and advantages.
Any
	person can do it. 
We cannot all preach; we cannot all conduct
	meetings; but we can all select useful tracts and then hand them out
	to others. Of course some of us can do it better than others. Even a
	blind man or a dumb man can do tract work. It is a line of work in
	which every man, woman and child can engage.
A
	tract always sticks to the point. 
I wish every worker did that,
	but how often we get to talking to some one and he is smart enough
	to get us off on to a side track.
A
	tract never loses its temper. 
Perhaps you sometimes do. I have
	known Christian workers, even workers of experience, who would
	sometimes get all stirred up, but you cannot stir up a tract. It
	always remains as calm as a June morning.
Oftentimes
	people who are too proud to be talked with, will read a tract when
	no one is looking. 
There is many a man who would repulse you if
	you tried to speak to him about his soul, who will read a tract if
	you leave it on his table, or in some other place where he comes
	upon it accidentally, and that tract may be used for his salvation.
A
	tract stays by one. 
You talk to a man and then he goes away, but
	the tract stays with him. Some years ago a man came into a mission
	in New York. One of the workers tried to talk with him, but he would
	not listen. As he was leaving, a card tract was placed in his hands
	which read, "If I should die to-night I would go to _____.
	Please fill out and sign." He put it in his pocket, went to his
	steamer, for he was a sailor, and slipped it into the edge of his
	bunk. The steamer started for Liverpool. On his voyage he met with
	an accident, and was laid aside in his bunk. That card stared him in
	the face, day and night. Finally he said, "If I should die
	to-night I would go to hell but I will not go there, I will go to
	heaven, I will take Christ right here and now." He went to
	Liverpool, returned to New York, went to the mission, told his
	story, and had the card still in his pocket, filled out and signed
	with his name. The conversation he had had in the mission left him,
	but the card stayed by him.
Tracts
	lead many to accept Christ. 
The author of one tract ("What
	is it to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ?") received before
	his death upwards of sixteen hundred letters from people who had
	been led to Christ by reading it.
B. Purposes for which to use a tract.
For
	the conversion of the unsaved. 
A tract will often succeed in
	winning a man to Christ where a sermon or a personal conversation
	has failed. There are a great many people who, if you try to talk
	with them, will put you off; but if you put a tract in their hands
	and ask God to bless it, after they go away and are alone they will
	read the tract and God will carry it home to their hearts by the
	power of the Holy Ghost. One of our students wrote me in great joy,
	of how he had at last succeeded in winning a whole family for
	Christ. He had been working for that family for a long time but
	could not touch them. One day he left a tract with them, and God
	used that tract for the conversion of four or five members of the
	family. Another student held a cottage meeting at a home, and by
	mistake left his Bible there. There was a tract in the Bible. When
	he had gone, the woman of the house saw the Bible, picked it up,
	opened it, saw the tract and read it. The Spirit of God carried it
	home to her heart, and when he went back after the Bible she told
	him she wanted to find the Lord Jesus Christ. The tract had done
	what he could not do in personal work. I once received a letter from
	a man saying, "There is a man in this place whom I tried for a
	long time to reach but could not. 0ne day I handed him a tract, and
	I think it was to the salvation of his whole family."
To
	lead Christians into a deeper and more earnest Christian life. 
It
	is a great mistake to limit the use of tracts to winning the unsaved
	to Christ. A little tract on the Second Coming of Christ, once sent
	me in a letter, made a change in my whole life. I do not think the
	tract was altogether correct doctrinally, but it had in it an
	important truth, and it did for me just the work that needed to be
	done. 
     There is a special class of
	people with whom this form of ministry is particularly helpful,
	those who live where they do not enjoy spiritual advantages. You may
	know some one who is leading a very unsatisfactory life, and you
	long to have that person know what the Christian life really means.
	His pastor may not be a spiritual man, he may not know the deep
	things of God. It is the simplest thing in the world to slip into a
	letter a tract that will lead him into an entirely new Christian
	life.
To
	correct error. 
This is a very necessary form of work in the day
	in which we live. The air is full of error. In our personal work we
	have not always time to lead a man out of his error, but oftentimes
	we can give him a tract that can do the work better than we can. If
	you tried to lead him out of his error by personal work, you might
	get into a discussion, but the tract cannot. The one in error cannot
	talk back to the tract. For example, take people that are in error
	on the question of of seventh day observance. It might take some
	time to lead such a one out of the darkness into the light, but a
	tract on that subject can be secured that has been used of God to
	lead many out of the bondage of legalism into the glorious liberty
	of the Gospel of Christ.
To
	set Christians to work. 
Our churches are full of members who are
	doing nothing. A well-chosen tract may set such to work. I know of a
	young man who was working in a factory in Massachusetts. He was a
	plain, uneducated sort of fellow, but a little tract on peronal work
	was placed in his hands. He read it and re-read it, and said, "I
	am not doing what I should for Christ." He went to work among
	his companions in the factory, inviting, them to the church, and to
	hear his pastor preach. Not satisfied with this, he went to doing
	personal work. This was not sufficient, so he went to work holding
	meetings himself. Finally he brought a convention to his city. Just
	that one plain factory man was the means of getting a great
	convention and blessing to that place, and all from reading that
	little tract. He was also instrumental in organizing a society which
	was greatly blessed of God. It would be possible to fill this
	country with literature on Christian work that would stir up the
	dead and sleeping professors of religion throughout the land, and
	send them out to work for the Lord Jesus Christ.
C. Who should use tracts.
Ministers
	of the Gospel should use them. 
Many ministers do make constant
	use of them in their pastoral work, leaving well chosen tracts where
	they make their pastoral calls, handing out tracts along the line of
	the sermons that they preach. It is said of Rev. Edward Judson of
	New York, that he seldom makes a call without having in his pocket a
	selection of tracts adapted to almost every member of the family,
	and especially to the children. "At the close of the Sunday
	evening preaching service, he has often put some good brother in the
	chair, and while the meeting proceeds he goes down into the audience
	and gives to each person a choice leaflet, at the same time
	improving the opportunity to say a timely word. In this way he comes
	into personal touch with the whole audience, gives each stranger a
	cordial welcome, and leaves in his hand some message from God. At
	least once a year he selects some one tract that has in it the very
	core of the Gospel. On this he prints the notices of the services,
	and selecting his church as a center, he has this tract put in the
	hands of every person living within half a mile in each direction,
	regardless of creed or condition. He sometimes uses 10,000 tracts at
	one distribution, and finds it very fruitful in results."
Sunday
	School teachers.
Every Sunday School teacher should be on the
	lookout for tracts to give to his scholars. In this way he can do
	much to supplement his hour's work on the Lord's Day.
Traveling
	men. 
Traveling men have a rare opportunity for doing tract work.
	They are constantly coming in contact with different men, and
	finding out their needs. A Christian "drummer" with a
	well-assorted selection of tracts can accomplish immeasurable good.
Business
	men. 
Business men can use tracts to good advantage with the very
	men with whom they have business engagements. They can also do
	excellent work with their own employees. Many a business man slips
	well chosen tracts into many of the letters which he writes, and
	thus accomplishes an effective ministry for his Master.
School teachers. It is very difficult for school teachers in some cities and towns to talk very much with their pupils in school. Oftentimes the rules of the school board prevent it entirely, but a wise teacher can learn all about her scholars and their home surroundings, and can give them tracts just adapted to their needs.
Housekeepers.
	
Every Christian housekeeper should have a collection of well
	assorted tracts. She can hand these out to the servant girls, the
	grocery men, the market men, the butcher, to the tramps that come to
	the door. They can be left upon the table in the parlor and in
	bedrooms. Only eternity will disclose the good that is accomplished
	in these ways.
D. How to use tracts.
To
	begin a conversation. 
One of the difficulties in Christian work
	is to begin. You see a person with whom you wish to talk about the
	Lord Jesus Christ. The great difficulty is in starting. It is easy
	enough to talk after you have started, but how are you going to
	start a conversation naturally and easily? One of the simplest and
	easiest ways is by slipping a tract into the person's hand. After
	the tract has been read, a conversation naturally follows. I was
	once riding in a crowded car. I asked God for an opportunity to lead
	some one to Christ. I was watching for the opportunity for which I
	had asked, when two young ladies entered. I thought I knew one of
	them as the daughter of a minister. She went through the car looking
	for a seat, and then came back. As she came back and sat down in the
	seat in front of me, she bowed, and of course I knew I was right as
	to who she was. I took out a little bundle of tracts, and selecting
	one that seemed best adapted to her case, I handed it to her, having
	first asked God to bless it. She at once began to read and I began
	to pray. When she had read the tract, I asked her what she thought
	about it. She almost burst into tears right there in the car, and in
	a very few moments that minister's daughter was rejoicing in the
	Lord Jesus Christ as her personal Saviour. As she afterwards passed
	out of the car, she said, "I want to thank you for what you
	have done for me in leading me to Christ.
Use
	a tract to close a conversation. 
As a rule when you have
	finished talking with some one, you should not leave him without
	something definite to take home to read. If the person has accepted
	Christ, put some tract in his hands that will show him how to
	succeed in the Christian life. If the person has not accepted
	Christ, some other tract that is especially adapted to his need
	should be left with him.
Use
	tracts where a conversation is impossible. 
For example, one
	night at the close of a tent meeting in Chicago, as I went down one
	of the aisles a man beckoned to me, and intimated that his wife was
	interested. She was in tears, and I tried to talk with her, but she
	stammered out in a broken way, "We don't talk English."
	She had not understood a word of the sermon, I suppose, but God had
	carried something home to her heart. They were Norwegians, and I
	could not find a Norwegian in the whole tent to act as interpreter,
	but I could put a Norwegian tract in her hand, and that could do the
	work. Time and time again I have met with men deeply interested
	about their soul's salvation, but with whom I could not deal because
	I did not talk the language that they understood. 
	
     One
	day as I came from dinner, I found a Swede waiting for me, and he
	said he had a man outside with whom he wished me to talk. I went
	outside and found an uncouth looking specimen, a Norwegian. The
	Swede had found him drunk in an alley and dragged him down to the
	Institute to talk with me. He was still full of whisky, and spit
	tobacco juice over me as I tried to talk with him. I found he could
	not talk English, and I talked English to the Swede, and the Swede
	talked Swedish to the Norwegian, and the Norwegian got a little bit
	of it. I made it as clear as I could to our Swede interpreter, and
	he in his turn made it as clear as he could to the Norwegian. Then I
	put a Norwegian tract in his hands, and that could talk to him so
	that he understood perfectly. 
	
     Oftentimes
	a conversation is impossible because of the place where you meet
	people. For example, you may be on the street cars and wish to speak
	to a man, but in many instances it would not be wise if it were
	possible, but you can take the man's measure and then give him a
	tract that will fit him. You may be able to say just a few words to
	him and then put the tract in his hands and ask God to bless it.
Use tracts to send to people at a distance.
It does not cost a tract much to travel. You can send them to the ends of the earth for a few cents. Especially use them to send to people who live in out of the way places where there is no preaching. There are thousands of people living in different sections of this country where they do not hear preaching from one year's end to another. It would be impossible to send an evangelical preacher to them, but you can send a tract and it will do the preaching for you.
E.. Suggestions as to the use of tracts.
Always
	read the tracts yourself before giving them others. 
This is very
	necessary. Bad tracts abound to-day, tracts that contain absolutely
	pernicious doctrine. They are being circulated free by the million,
	and one needs to be on his guard, lest he be doing harm rather than
	good in distributing tracts. Of course we cannot read all the tracts
	in foreign languages, but we can have them interpreted to us, and it
	is wise to do so. Besides positively bad tracts, there are many
	tracts that are worthless.
Suit
	your tract to the person to whom you give it. 
What is good for
	one person may not be good for another.
Carry
	a selection of tracts with you. 
I do not say a collection, but a
	selection. Tracts are countless in number, and a large share of them
	are worthless. Select the best, and arrange them for the different
	classes of people with whom you come in contact.
Seek
	the guidance of God. 
This is of the very highest importance. If
	there is any place where we need wisdom from above, it is in the
	selection of tracts, and in their distribution after their
	selection.
Seek
	God's blessing upon the tract after you have given it out. 
Do
	not merely give out the tract and there let the matter rest, but
	whenever you give out a tract ask God to bless it.
0ftentimes
	give a man a tract with words and sentences underscored. 
Men are
	curious, and they will take particular notice of the underscoring.
	It is oftentimes a good thing to have a tract put up in your office.
	Men who come in will read it. I know a man who had a few words put
	upon his paper weight. A great many who came into his office saw it,
	and it made a deep impression upon them.
Never
	be ashamed of distributing tracts. 
Many people hand out tracts
	to others as if they were ashamed of what they were doing. People
	are not likely to read tracts if you hand them to them as if you
	were ashamed to do it; but if you act as though you were conferring
	a favor upon them, and giving them something worth reading, they
	will read your tract. It is often well to say to a person, "Here
	is a little leaflet out of which I have gotten a good deal of good,
	I would like to have you read it."
	
Email: saved2serve@gmail.com
	
Bless the LORD, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless HIS holy name. Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all HIS benefits (Ps. 103:1, 2).
	
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------