Morning & Evening
by C H Spurgeon
September 1
This morning's verse:
"Thou shalt guide me with Thy counsel, and afterward receive me to glory." Psalm 73:24
The Psalmist felt his need of divine guidance. He had just been discovering the foolishness of his own heart, and
lest he should be constantly led astray by it, he resolved that God's counsel should henceforth guide him. A sense
of our own folly is a great step towards being wise, when it leads us to rely on the wisdom of the Lord. The blind
man leans on his friend's arm and reaches home in safety, and so would we give ourselves up implicitly to divine
guidance, nothing doubting; assured that though we cannot see, it is always safe to trust the All-seeing God. "Thou
shalt," is a blessed expression of confidence. He was sure that the Lord would not decline the condescending
task. There is a word for thee, O believer; rest thou in it. Be assured that thy God will be thy counsellor and
friend; He shall guide thee; He will direct all thy ways. In His written Word thou hast this assurance in part
fulfilled, for holy Scripture is His counsel to thee. Happy are we to have God's Word always to guide us! What
were the mariner without his compass? And what were the Christian without the Bible? This is the unerring chart,
the map in which every shoal is described, and all the channels from the quicksands of destruction to the haven
of salvation mapped and marked by one who knows all the way. Blessed be Thou, O God, that we may trust Thee to
guide us now, and guide us even to the end! After this guidance through life, the Psalmist anticipates a divine
reception at last--"and afterward receive me to glory." What a thought for thee, believer! God Himself
will receive thee to glory--thee! Wandering, erring, straying, yet He will bring thee safe at last to glory! This
is thy portion; live on it this day, and if perplexities should surround thee, go in the strength of this text
straight to the throne.
This evening's verse:
"Trust in Him at all times." Psalm 62:8
Faith is as much the rule of temporal as of spiritual life; we ought to have faith in God for our earthly affairs
as well as for our heavenly business. It is only as we learn to trust in God for the supply of all our daily need
that we shall live above the world. We are not to be idle, that would show we did not trust in God, who worketh
hitherto, but in the devil, who is the father of idleness. We are not to be imprudent or rash; that were to trust
chance, and not the living God, who is a God of economy and order. Acting in all prudence and uprightness, we are
to rely simply and entirely upon the Lord at all times.
Let me commend to you a life of trust in God in temporal things. Trusting in God, you will not be compelled to
mourn because you have used sinful means to grow rich. Serve God with integrity, and if you achieve no success,
at least no sin will lie upon your conscience. Trusting God, you will not be guilty of self-contradiction. He who
trusts in craft, sails this way to-day, and that way the next, like a vessel tossed about by the fickle wind; but
he that trusteth in the Lord is like a vessel propelled by steam, she cuts through the waves, defies the wind,
and makes one bright silvery straightforward track to her destined haven. Be you a man with living principles within;
never bow to the varying customs of worldly wisdom. Walk in your path of integrity with steadfast steps, and show
that you are invincibly strong in the strength which confidence in God alone can confer. Thus you will be delivered
from carking care, you will not be troubled with evil tidings, your heart will be fixed, trusting in the Lord.
How pleasant to float along the stream of providence! There is no more blessed way of living than a life of dependence
upon a covenant-keeping God. We have no care, for He careth for us; we have no troubles, because we cast our burdens
upon the Lord.
September 2
This morning's verse:
"But Simon's wife's mother lay sick of a fever, and anon they tell Him of her." Mark 1:30
Very interesting is this little peep into the house of the Apostolic Fisherman. We see at once that household joys
and cares are no hindrance to the full exercise of ministry, nay, that since they furnish an opportunity for personally
witnessing the Lord's gracious work upon one's own flesh and blood, they may even instruct the teacher better than
any other earthly discipline. Papists and other sectaries may decry marriage, but true Christianity and household
life agree well together. Peter's house was probably a poor fisherman's hut, but the Lord of Glory entered it,
lodged in it, and wrought a miracle in it. Should our little book be read this morning in some very humble cottage,
let this fact encourage the inmates to seek the company of King Jesus. God is oftener in little huts than in rich
palaces. Jesus is looking round your room now, and is waiting to be gracious to you. Into Simon's house sickness
had entered, fever in a deadly form had prostrated his mother-in-law, and as soon as Jesus came they told Him of
the sad affliction, and He hastened to the patient's bed. Have you any sickness in the house this morning? You
will find Jesus by far the best physician, go to Him at once and tell Him all about the matter. Immediately lay
the case before Him. It concerns one of His people, and therefore will not be trivial to Him. Observe, that at
once the Saviour restored the sick woman; none can heal as He does. We may not make sure that the Lord will at
once remove all disease from those we love, but we may know that believing prayer for the sick is far more likely
to be followed by restoration than anything else in the world; and where this avails not, we must meekly bow to
His will by whom life and death are determined. The tender heart of Jesus waits to hear our griefs, let us pour
them into His patient ear.
This evening's verse:
"Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not believe." John 4:48
A craving after marvels was a symptom of the sickly state of men's minds in our Lord's day; they refused solid
nourishment, and pined after mere wonder. The gospel which they so greatly needed they would not have; the miracles
which Jesus did not always choose to give they eagerly demanded. Many nowadays must see signs and wonders, or they
will not believe. Some have said in their heart, "I must feel deep horror of soul, or I never will believe
in Jesus." But what if you never should feel it, as probably you never may? Will you go to hell out of spite
against God, because He will not treat you like another? One has said to himself, "If I had a dream, or if
I could feel a sudden shock of I know not what, then I would believe." Thus you undeserving mortals dream
that my Lord is to be dictated to by you! You are beggars at His gate, asking for mercy, and you must needs draw
up rules and regulations as to how He shall give that mercy. Think you that He will submit to this? My Master is
of a generous spirit, but He has a right royal heart, He spurns all dictation, and maintains His sovereignty of
action. Why, dear reader, if such be your case, do you crave for signs and wonders? Is not the gospel its own sign
and wonder? Is not this a miracle of miracles, that "God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whosoever believeth in Him might not perish"? Surely that precious word, "Whosoever will, let
him come and take the water of life freely" and that solemn promise, "Him that cometh unto Me, I will
in no wise cast out," are better than signs and wonders! A truthful Saviour ought to be believed. He is truth
itself. Why will you ask proof of the veracity of One who cannot lie? The devils themselves declared Him to be
the Son of God; will you mistrust Him?
September 3
This morning's verse:
"Thou whom my soul loveth." Song 1:7
It is well to be able, without any "if" or "but," to say of the Lord Jesus--"Thou whom
my soul loveth." Many can only say of Jesus that they hope they love Him; they trust they love Him; but only
a poor and shallow experience will be content to stay here. No one ought to give any rest to his spirit till he
feels quite sure about a matter of such vital importance. We ought not to be satisfied with a superficial hope
that Jesus loves us, and with a bare trust that we love Him. The old saints did not generally speak with "buts,"
and "ifs," and "hopes," and "trusts," but they spoke positively and plainly. "I
know whom I have believed," saith Paul. "I know that my Redeemer liveth," saith Job. Get positive
knowledge of your love of Jesus, and be not satisfied till you can speak of your interest in Him as a reality,
which you have made sure by having received the witness of the Holy Spirit, and His seal upon your soul by faith.
True love to Christ is in every case the Holy Spirit's work, and must be wrought in the heart by Him. He is the
efficient cause of it; but the logical reason why we love Jesus lies in Himself. Why do we love Jesus? Because
He first loved us. Why do we love Jesus? Because He "gave Himself for us." We have life through His death;
we have peace through His blood. Though He was rich, yet for our sakes He became poor. Why do we love Jesus? Because
of the excellency of His person. We are filled with a sense of His beauty! an admiration of His charms! a consciousness
of His infinite perfection! His greatness, goodness, and loveliness, in one resplendent ray, combine to enchant
the soul till it is so ravished that it exclaims, "Yea, He is altogether lovely." Blessed love this--a
love which binds the heart with chains more soft than silk, and yet more firm than adamant!
This evening's verse:
"The Lord trieth the righteous." Psalm 11:5
All events are under the control of Providence; consequently all the trials of our outward life are traceable at
once to the great First Cause. Out of the golden gate of God's ordinance the armies of trial march forth in array,
clad in their iron armour, and armed with weapons of war. All providences are doors to trial. Even our mercies,
like roses, have their thorns. Men may be drowned in seas of prosperity as well as in rivers of affliction. Our
mountains are not too high, and our valleys are not too low for temptations: trials lurk on all roads. Everywhere,
above and beneath, we are beset and surrounded with dangers. Yet no shower falls unpermitted from the threatening
cloud; every drop has its order ere it hastens to the earth. The trials which come from God are sent to prove and
strengthen our graces, and so at once to illustrate the power of divine grace, to test the genuineness of our virtues,
and to add to their energy. Our Lord in His infinite wisdom and superabundant love, sets so high a value upon His
people's faith that He will not screen them from those trials by which faith is strengthened. You would never have
possessed the precious faith which now supports you if the trial of your faith had not been like unto fire. You
are a tree that never would have rooted so well if the wind had not rocked you to and fro, and made you take firm
hold upon the precious truths of the covenant grace. Worldly ease is a great foe to faith; it loosens the joints
of holy valour, and snaps the sinews of sacred courage. The balloon never rises until the cords are cut; affliction
doth this sharp service for believing souls. While the wheat sleeps comfortably in the husk it is useless to man,
it must be threshed out of its resting place before its value can be known. Thus it is well that Jehovah trieth
the righteous, for it causeth them to grow rich towards God.
September 4
This morning's verse:
"I will; be thou clean." Mark 1:41
Primeval darkness heard the Almighty fiat, "light be," and straightway light was, and the word of the
Lord Jesus is equal in majesty to that ancient word of power. Redemption like Creation has its word of might. Jesus
speaks and it is done. Leprosy yielded to no human remedies, but it fled at once at the Lord's "I will."
The disease exhibited no hopeful signs or tokens of recovery, nature contributed nothing to its own healing, but
the unaided word effected the entire work on the spot and for ever. The sinner is in a plight more miserable than
the leper; let him imitate his example and go to Jesus, "beseeching Him and kneeling down to Him." Let
him exercise what little faith he has, even though it should go no further than "Lord, if thou wilt, thou
canst make me clean"; and there need be no doubt as to the result of the application. Jesus heals all who
come, and casts out none. In reading the narrative in which our morning's text occurs, it is worthy of devout notice
that Jesus touched the leper. This unclean person had broken through the regulations of the ceremonial law and
pressed into the house, but Jesus so far from chiding him broke through the law Himself in order to meet him. He
made an interchange with the leper, for while He cleansed him, He contracted by that touch a Levitical defilement.
Even so Jesus Christ was made sin for us, although in Himself He knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness
of God in Him. O that poor sinners would go to Jesus, believing in the power of His blessed substitutionary work,
and they would soon learn the power of His gracious touch. That hand which multiplied the loaves, which saved sinking
Peter, which upholds afflicted saints, which crowns believers, that same hand will touch every seeking sinner,
and in a moment make him clean. The love of Jesus is the source of salvation. He loves, He looks, He touches us,
WE LIVE.
This evening's verse:
"Just balances, just weights, a just ephah, and a just hin, shall ye have." Leviticus 19:36
Weights, and scales, and measures were to be all according to the standard of justice. Surely no Christian man
will need to be reminded of this in his business, for if righteousness were banished from all the world beside,
it should find a shelter in believing hearts. There are, however, other balances which weigh moral and spiritual
things, and these often need examining. We will call in the officer to-night.
The balances in which we weigh our own and other men's characters, are they quite accurate? Do we not turn our
own ounces of goodness into pounds, and other persons' bushels of excellence into pecks? See to weights and measures
here, Christian. The scales in which we measure our trials and troubles, are they according to standard? Paul,
who had more to suffer than we have, called his afflictions light, and yet we often consider ours to be heavy--surely
something must be amiss with the weights! We must see to this matter, lest we get reported to the court above for
unjust dealing. Those weights with which we measure our doctrinal belief, are they quite fair? The doctrines of
grace should have the same weight with us as the precepts of the word, no more and no less; but it is to be feared
that with many one scale or the other is unfairly weighted. It is a grand matter to give just measure in truth.
Christian, be careful here. Those measures in which we estimate our obligations and responsibilities look rather
small. When a rich man gives no more to the cause of God than the poor contribute, is that a just ephah and a just
hin? When ministers are half starved, is that honest dealing? When the poor are despised, while ungodly rich men
are held in admiration, is that a just balance? Reader, we might lengthen the list, but we prefer to leave it as
your evening's work to find out and destroy all unrighteous balances, weights, and measures.
September 5
This morning's verse:
"Woe is me, that I sojourn in Mesech, that I dwell in the tents of Kedar." Psalm 120:5
As a Christian you have to live in the midst of an ungodly world, and it is of little use for you to cry "Woe
is me." Jesus did not pray O that you should be taken out of the world, and what He did not pray for you need
not desire. Better far in the Lord's strength to meet the difficulty, and glorify Him in it. The enemy is ever
on the watch to detect inconsistency in your conduct; be therefore very holy. Remember that the eyes of all are
upon you, and that more is expected from you than from other men. Strive to give no occasion for blame. Let your
goodness be the only fault they can discover in you. Like Daniel, compel them to say of you, "We shall not
find any occasion against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of his God." Seek
to be useful as well as consistent. Perhaps you think, "If I were in a more favourable position I might serve
the Lord's cause, but I cannot do any good where I am"; but the worse the people are among whom you live,
the more need have they of your exertions; if they be crooked, the more necessity that you should set them straight;
and if they be perverse, the more need have you to turn their proud hearts to the truth. Where should the physician
be but where there are many sick? Where is honour to be won by the soldier but in the hottest fire of the battle?
And when weary of the strife and sin that meets you on every hand, consider that all the saints have endured the
same trial. They were not carried on beds of down to heaven, and you must not expect to travel more easily than
they. They had to hazard their lives unto the death in the high places of the field, and you will not be crowned
till you also have endured hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. Therefore, "stand fast in the faith,
quit you like men, be strong."
This evening's verse:
"Hast thou entered into the springs of the sea?" Job 38:16
Some things in nature must remain a mystery to the most intelligent and enterprising investigators. Human knowledge
has bounds beyond which it cannot pass. Universal knowledge is for God alone. If this be so in the things which
are seen and temporal, I may rest assured that it is even more so in matters spiritual and eternal. Why, then,
have I been torturing my brain with speculations as to destiny and will, fixed fate, and human responsibility?
These deep and dark truths I am no more able to comprehend than to find out the depth which coucheth beneath, from
which old ocean draws her watery stores. Why am I so curious to know the reason of my Lord's providences, the motive
of His actions, the design of His visitations? Shall I ever be able to clasp the sun in my fist, and hold the universe
in my palm? yet these are as a drop of a bucket compared with the Lord my God. Let me not strive to understand
the infinite, but spend my strength in love. What I cannot gain by intellect I can possess by affection, and let
that suffice me. I cannot penetrate the heart of the sea, but I can enjoy the healthful breezes which sweep over
its bosom, and I can sail over its blue waves with propitious winds. If I could enter the springs of the sea, the
feat would serve no useful purpose either to myself or to others, it would not save the sinking bark, or give back
the drowned mariner to his weeping wife and children; neither would my solving deep mysteries avail me a single
whit, for the least love to God, and the simplest act of obedience to Him, are better than the profoundest knowledge.
My Lord, I leave the infinite to Thee, and pray Thee to put far from me such a love for the tree of knowledge as
might keep me from the tree of life.
September 6
This morning's verse:
"In the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world." Philippians
2:15
We use lights to make manifest. A Christian man should so shine in his life, that a person could not live with
him a week without knowing the gospel. His conversation should be such that all who are about him should clearly
perceive whose he is, and whom he serves; and should see the image of Jesus reflected in his daily actions. Lights
are intended for guidance. We are to help those around us who are in the dark. We are to hold forth to them the
Word of life. We are to point sinners to the Saviour, and the weary to a divine resting-place. Men sometimes read
their Bibles, and fail to understand them; we should be ready, like Philip, to instruct the inquirer in the meaning
of God's Word, the way of salvation, and the life of godliness. Lights are also used for warning. On our rocks
and shoals a light-house is sure to be erected. Christian men should know that there are many false lights shown
everywhere in the world, and therefore the right light is needed. The wreckers of Satan are always abroad, tempting
the ungodly to sin under the name of pleasure; they hoist the wrong light, be it ours to put up the true light
upon every dangerous rock, to point out every sin, and tell what it leads to, that so we may be clear of the blood
of all men, shining as lights in the world. Lights also have a very cheering influence, and so have Christians.
A Christian ought to be a comforter, with kind words on his lips, and sympathy in his heart; he should carry sunshine
wherever he goes, and diffuse happiness around him.
Gracious Spirit dwell with me;
I myself would gracious be,
And with words that help and heal
Would thy life in mine reveal,
And with actions bold and meek
Would for Christ my Saviour speak.
This evening's verse:
"If ye be led of the Spirit, ye are not under the law." Galatians 5:18
We who looks at his own character and position from a legal point of view, will not only despair when he comes
to the end of his reckoning, but if he be a wise man he will despair at the beginning; for if we are to be judged
on the footing of the law, there shall no flesh living be justified. How blessed to know that we dwell in the domains
of grace and not of law! When thinking of my state before God the question is not, "Am I perfect in myself
before the law?" but, "Am I perfect in Christ Jesus?" That is a very different matter. We need not
enquire, "Am I without sin naturally?" but, "Have I been washed in the fountain opened for sin and
for uncleanness?" It is not "Am I in myself well pleasing to God?" but it is "Am I accepted
in the Beloved?" The Christian views his evidences from the top of Sinai, and grows alarmed concerning his
salvation; it were better far if he read his title by the light of Calvary. "Why," saith he, "my
faith has unbelief in it, it is not able to save me." Suppose he had considered the object of his faith instead
of his faith, then he would have said, "There is no failure in Him, and therefore I am safe." He sighs
over his hope: "Ah! my hope is marred and dimmed by an anxious carefulness about present things; how can I
be accepted?" Had he regarded the ground of his hope, he would have seen that the promise of God standeth
sure, and that whatever our doubts may be, the oath and promise never fail. Ah! believer, it is safer always for
you to be led of the Spirit into gospel liberty than to wear legal fetters. Judge yourself at what Christ is rather
than at what you are. Satan will try to mar your peace by reminding you of your sinfulness and imperfections: you
can only meet his accusations by faithfully adhering to the gospel and refusing to wear the yoke of bondage.
September 7
This morning's verse:
"And when they could not come nigh unto Him for the press, they uncovered the roof where he was: and when
they had broken it up, they let down the bed wherein the sick of the palsy lay." Mark 2:4
Faith is full of inventions. The house was full, a crowd blocked up the door, but faith found a way of getting
at the Lord and placing the palsied man before Him. If we cannot get sinners where Jesus is by ordinary methods
we must use extraordinary ones. It seems, according to Luke 5:19, that a tiling had to be removed, which would
make dust and cause a measure of danger to those below, but where the case is very urgent we must not mind running
some risks and shocking some proprieties. Jesus was there to heal, and therefore fall what might, faith ventured
all so that her poor paralyzed charge might have his sins forgiven. O that we had more daring faith among us! Cannot
we, dear reader, seek it this morning for ourselves and for our fellow-workers, and will we not try to-day to perform
some gallant act for the love of souls and the glory of the Lord.
The world is constantly inventing; genius serves all the purposes of human desire: cannot faith invent too, and
reach by some new means the outcasts who lie perishing around us? It was the presence of Jesus which excited victorious
courage in the four bearers of the palsied man: is not the Lord among us now? Have we seen His face for ourselves
this morning? Have we felt His healing power in our own souls? If so, then through door, through window, or through
roof, let us, breaking through all impediments, labour to bring poor souls to Jesus. All means are good and decorous
when faith and love are truly set on winning souls. If hunger for bread can break through stone walls, surely hunger
for souls is not to be hindered in its efforts. O Lord, make us quick to suggest methods of reaching Thy poor sin-sick
ones, and bold to carry them out at all hazards.
This evening's verse:
"There is sorrow on the sea; it cannot be quiet." Jeremiah 49:23
Little know we what sorrow may be upon the sea at this moment. We are safe in our quiet chamber, but far away on
the salt sea the hurricane may be cruelly seeking for the lives of men. Hear how the death fiends howl among the
cordage; how every timber starts as the waves beat like battering rams upon the vessel! God help you, poor drenched
and wearied ones! My prayer goes up to the great Lord of sea and land, that He will make the storm a calm, and
bring you to your desired haven! Nor ought I to offer prayer alone, I should try to benefit those hardy men who
risk their lives so constantly. Have I ever done anything for them? What can I do? How often does the boisterous
sea swallow up the mariner! Thousands of corpses lie where pearls lie deep. There is death-sorrow on the sea, which
is echoed in the long wail of widows and orphans. The salt of the sea is in many eyes of mothers and wives. Remorseless
billows, ye have devoured the love of women, and the stay of households. What a resurrection shall there be from
the caverns of the deep when the sea gives up her dead! Till then there will be sorrow on the sea. As if in sympathy
with the woes of earth, the sea is for ever fretting along a thousand shores, wailing with a sorrowful cry like
her own birds, booming with a hollow crash of unrest, raving with uproarious discontent, chafing with hoarse wrath,
or jangling with the voices of ten thousand murmuring pebbles. The roar of the sea may be joyous to a rejoicing
spirit, but to the son of sorrow the wide, wide ocean is even more forlorn than the wide, wide world. This is not
our rest, and the restless billows tell us so. There is a land where there is no more sea--our faces are steadfastly
set towards it; we are going to the place of which the Lord hath spoken. Till then, we cast our sorrows on the
Lord who trod the sea of old, and who maketh a way for His people through the depths thereof.
September 8
This morning's verse:
"From Me is thy fruit found." Hosea 14:8
Our fruit is found from our God as to union. The fruit of the branch is directly traceable to the root. Sever the
connection, the branch dies, and no fruit is produced. By virtue of our union with Christ we bring forth fruit.
Every bunch of grapes have been first in the root, it has passed through the stem, and flowed through the sap vessels,
and fashioned itself externally into fruit, but it was first in the stem; so also every good work was first in
Christ, and then is brought forth in us. O Christian, prize this precious union to Christ; for it must be the source
of all the fruitfulness which thou canst hope to know. If thou wert not joined to Jesus Christ, thou wouldst be
a barren bough indeed.
Our fruit comes from God as to spiritual providence. When the dew-drops fall from heaven, when the cloud looks
down from on high, and is about to distil its liquid treasure, when the bright sun swells the berries of the cluster,
each heavenly boon may whisper to the tree and say, "From me is thy fruit found." The fruit owes much
to the root--that is essential to fruitfulness--but it owes very much also to external influences. How much we
owe to God's grace-providence! in which He provides us constantly with quickening, teaching, consolation, strength,
or whatever else we want. To this we owe our all of usefulness or virtue.
Our fruit comes from God as to wise husbandry. The gardener's sharp-edged knife promotes the fruitfulness of the
tree, by thinning the clusters, and by cutting off superfluous shoots. So is it, Christian, with that pruning which
the Lord gives to thee. "My Father is the husbandman. Every branch in Me that beareth not fruit He taketh
away; and every branch that beareth fruit He purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit." Since our God
is the author of our spiritual graces, let us give to Him all the glory of our salvation.
This evening's verse:
"The exceeding greatness of His power to us-ward who believe according to the working of His mighty power,
which He wrought in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead." Ephesians 1:19, 20
In the resurrection of Christ, as in our salvation, there was put forth nothing short of a divine power. What shall
we say of those who think that conversion is wrought by the free will of man, and is due to his own betterness
of disposition? When we shall see the dead rise from the grave by their own power, then may we expect to see ungodly
sinners of their own free will turning to Christ. It is not the word preached, nor the word read in itself; all
quickening power proceeds from the Holy Ghost. This power was irresistible. All the soldiers and the high priests
could not keep the body of Christ in the tomb; Death himself could not hold Jesus in his bonds: even thus irresistible
is the power put forth in the believer when he is raised to newness of life. No sin, no corruption, no devils in
hell nor sinners upon earth, can stay the hand of God's grace when it intends to convert a man. If God omnipotently
says, "Thou shalt," man shall not say, "I will not." Observe that the power which raised Christ
from the dead was glorious. It reflected honour upon God and wrought dismay in the hosts of evil. So there is great
glory to God in the conversion of every sinner. It was everlasting power. "Christ being raised from the dead
dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over Him." So we, being raised from the dead, go not back to our
dead works nor to our old corruptions, but we live unto God. "Because He lives we live also." "For
we are dead, and our life is hid with Christ in God." "Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by
the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life." Lastly, in the text mark the union
of the new life to Jesus. The same power which raised the Head works life in the members. What a blessing to be
quickened together with Christ!
September 9
This morning's verse:
"I will answer thee, and shew thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not." Jeremiah 33:3
There are different translations of these words. One version renders it, "I will shew thee great and fortified
things." Another, "Great and reserved things." Now, there are reserved and special things in Christian
experience: all the developments of spiritual life are not alike easy of attainment. There are the common frames
and feelings of repentance, and faith, and joy, and hope, which are enjoyed by the entire family; but there is
an upper realm of rapture, of communion, and conscious union with Christ, which is far from being the common dwelling-place
of believers. We have not all the high privilege of John, to lean upon Jesus' bosom; nor of Paul, to be caught
up into the third heaven. There are heights in experimental knowledge of the things of God which the eagle's eye
of acumen and philosophic thought hath never seen: God alone can bear us there; but the chariot in which He takes
us up, and the fiery steeds with which that chariot is dragged, are prevailing prayers. Prevailing prayer is victorious
over the God of mercy, "By his strength he had power with God: yea, he had power over the angel, and prevailed:
he wept, and made supplication unto Him: he found Him in Beth-el, and there He spake with us." Prevailing
prayer takes the Christian to Carmel, and enables him to cover heaven with clouds of blessing, and earth with floods
of mercy. Prevailing prayer bears the Christian aloft to Pisgah, and shows him the inheritance reserved; it elevates
us to Tabor and transfigures us, till in the likeness of his Lord, as He is, so are we also in this world. If you
would reach to something higher than ordinary grovelling experience, look to the Rock that is higher than you,
and gaze with the eye of faith through the window of importunate prayer. When you open the window on your side,
it will not be bolted on the other.
This evening's verse:
"And round about the throne were four and twenty seats: and upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting,
clothed in white raiment." Revelation 4:4
These representatives of the saints in heaven are said to be around the throne. In the passage in Canticles, where
Solomon sings of the King sitting at his table, some render it "a round table." From this, some expositors,
I think, without straining the text, have said, "There is an equality among the saints." That idea is
conveyed by the equal nearness of the four and twenty elders. The condition of glorified spirits in heaven is that
of nearness to Christ, clear vision of His glory, constant access to His court, and familiar fellowship with His
person: nor is there any difference in this respect between one saint and another, but all the people of God, apostles,
martyrs, ministers, or private and obscure Christians, shall all be seated near the throne, where they shall for
ever gaze upon their exalted Lord, and be satisfied with His love. They shall all be near to Christ, all ravished
with His love, all eating and drinking at the same table with Him, all equally beloved as His favourites and friends
even if not all equally rewarded as servants.
Let believers on earth imitate the saints in heaven in their nearness to Christ. Let us on earth be as the elders
are in heaven, sitting around the throne. May Christ be the object of our thoughts, the centre of our lives. How
can we endure to live at such a distance from our Beloved? Lord Jesu, draw us nearer to Thyself. Say unto us, "Abide
in Me, and I in you"; and permit us to sing, "His left hand is under my head, and His right hand doth
embrace me."
O lift me higher, nearer Thee,
And as I rise more pure and meet,
O let my soul's humility
Make me lie lower at Thy feet;
Less trusting self, the more I prove
The blessed comfort of Thy love.
September 10
This morning's verse:
"And he goeth up into a mountain, and calleth unto him whom he would: and they came unto him." Mark 3:13
Here was sovereignty. Impatient spirits may fret and fume, because they are not called to the highest places in
the ministry; but reader be it thine to rejoice that Jesus calleth whom He wills. If He shall leave me to be a
doorkeeper in His house, I will cheerfully bless Him for His grace in permitting me to do anything in His service.
The call of Christ's servants comes from above. Jesus stands on the mountain, evermore above the world in holiness,
earnestness, love and power. Those whom He calls must go up the mountain to Him, they must seek to rise to His
level by living in constant communion with Him. They may not be able to mount to classic honours, or attain scholastic
eminence, but they must like Moses go up into the mount of God and have familiar intercourse with the unseen God,
or they will never be fitted to proclaim the gospel of peace. Jesus went apart to hold high fellowship with the
Father, and we must enter into the same divine companionship if we would bless our fellowmen. No wonder that the
apostles were clothed with power when they came down fresh from the mountain where Jesus was. This morning we must
endeavour to ascend the mount of communion, that there we may be ordained to the lifework for which we are set
apart. Let us not see the face of man to-day till we have seen Jesus. Time spent with Him is laid out at blessed
interest. We too shall cast out devils and work wonders if we go down into the world girded with that divine energy
which Christ alone can give. It is of no use going to the Lord's battle till we are armed with heavenly weapons.
We must see Jesus, this is essential. At the mercy-seat we will linger till He shall manifest Himself unto us as
He doth not unto the world, and until we can truthfully say, "We were with Him in the Holy Mount."
This evening's verse:
"Evening wolves." Habakkuk 1:8
While preparing the present volume, this particular expression recurred to me so frequently, that in order to be
rid of its constant importunity I determined to give a page to it. The evening wolf, infuriated by a day of hunger,
was fiercer and more ravenous than he would have been in the morning. May not the furious creature represent our
doubts and fears after a day of distraction of mind, losses in business, and perhaps ungenerous tauntings from
our fellow men? How our thoughts howl in our ears, "Where is now thy God?" How voracious and greedy they
are, swallowing up all suggestions of comfort, and remaining as hungry as before. Great Shepherd, slay these evening
wolves, and bid Thy sheep lie down in green pastures, undisturbed by insatiable unbelief. How like are the fiends
of hell to evening wolves, for when the flock of Christ are in a cloudy and dark day, and their sun seems going
down, they hasten to tear and to devour. They will scarcely attack the Christian in the daylight of faith, but
in the gloom of soul conflict they fall upon him. O Thou who hast laid down Thy life for the sheep, preserve them
from the fangs of the wolf.
False teachers who craftily and industriously hunt for the precious life, devouring men by their false-hoods, are
as dangerous and detestable as evening wolves. Darkness is their element, deceit is their character, destruction
is their end. We are most in danger from them when they wear the sheep's skin. Blessed is he who is kept from them,
for thousands are made the prey of grievous wolves that enter within the fold of the church.
What a wonder of grace it is when fierce persecutors are converted, for then the wolf dwells with the lamb, and
men of cruel ungovernable dispositions become gentle and teachable. O Lord, convert many such: for such we will
pray to-night.
September 11
This morning's verse:
"Be ye separate." 2Corinthians 6:17
The Christian, while in the world, is not to be of the world. He should be distinguished from it in the great object
of his life. To him, "to live," should be "Christ." Whether he eats, or drinks, or whatever
he does, he should do all to God's glory. You may lay up treasure; but lay it up in heaven, where neither moth
nor rust doth corrupt, where thieves break not through nor steal. You may strive to be rich; but be it your ambition
to be "rich in faith," and good works. You may have pleasure; but when you are merry, sing psalms and
make melody in your hearts to the Lord. In your spirit, as well as in your aim, you should differ from the world.
Waiting humbly before God, always conscious of His presence, delighting in communion with Him, and seeking to know
His will, you will prove that you are of heavenly race. And you should be separate from the world in your actions.
If a thing be right, though you lose by it, it must be done; if it be wrong, though you would gain by it, you must
scorn the sin for your Master's sake. You must have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather
reprove them. Walk worthy of your high calling and dignity. Remember, O Christian, that thou art a son of the King
of kings. Therefore, keep thyself unspotted from the world. Soil not the fingers which are soon to sweep celestial
strings; let not these eyes become the windows of lust which are soon to see the King in His beauty--let not those
feet be defiled in miry places, which are soon to walk the golden streets--let not those hearts be filled with
pride and bitterness which are ere long to be filled with heaven, and to overflow with ecstatic joy.
Then rise my soul! and soar away,
Above the thoughtless crowd;
Above the pleasures of the gay,
And splendours of the proud;
Up where eternal beauties bloom,
And pleasures all divine;
Where wealth, that never can consume,
And endless glories shine.
This evening's verse:
"Lead me, O Lord, in Thy righteousness because of mine enemies." Psalms 5:8
Very bitter is the enmity of the world against the people of Christ. Men will forgive a thousand faults in others,
but they will magnify the most trivial offence in the followers of Jesus. Instead of vainly regretting this, let
us turn it to account, and since so many are watching for our halting, let this be a special motive for walking
very carefully before God. If we live carelessly, the lynx-eyed world will soon see it, and with its hundred tongues,
it will spread the story, exaggerated and emblazoned by the zeal of slander. They will shout triumphantly. "Aha!
So would we have it! See how these Christians act! They are hypocrites to a man." Thus will much damage be
done to the cause of Christ, and much insult offered to His name. The cross of Christ is in itself an offence to
the world; let us take heed that we add no offence of our own. It is "to the Jews a stumblingblock":
let us mind that we put no stumblingblocks where there are enough already. "To the Greeks it is foolishness":
let us not add our folly to give point to the scorn with which the worldly-wise deride the gospel. How jealous
should we be of ourselves! How rigid with our consciences! In the presence of adversaries who will misrepresent
our best deeds, and impugn our motives where they cannot censure our actions, how circumspect should we be! Pilgrims
travel as suspected persons through Vanity Fair. Not only are we under surveillance, but there are more spies than
we reck of. The espionage is everywhere, at home and abroad. If we fall into the enemies' hands we may sooner expect
generosity from a wolf, or mercy from a fiend, than anything like patience with our infirmities from men who spice
their infidelity towards God with scandals against His people. O Lord, lead us ever, lest our enemies trip us up!
September 12
This morning's verse:
"God is jealous." Nahum 1:2
Your Lord is very jealous of your love, O believer. Did He choose you? He cannot bear that you should choose another.
Did He buy you with His own blood? He cannot endure that you should think that you are your own, or that you belong
to this world. He loved you with such a love that He would not stop in heaven without you; He would sooner die
than you should perish, and He cannot endure that anything should stand between your heart's love and Himself.
He is very jealous of your trust. He will not permit you to trust in an arm of flesh. He cannot bear that you should
hew out broken cisterns, when the overflowing fountain is always free to you. When we lean upon Him, He is glad,
but when we transfer our dependence to another, when we rely upon our own wisdom, or the wisdom of a friend--worst
of all, when we trust in any works of our own, He is displeased, and will chasten us that He may bring us to Himself.
He is also very jealous of our company. There should be no one with whom we converse so much as with Jesus. To
abide in Him only, this is true love; but to commune with the world, to find sufficient solace in our carnal comforts,
to prefer even the society of our fellow Christians to secret intercourse with Him, this is grievous to our jealous
Lord. He would fain have us abide in Him, and enjoy constant fellowship with Himself; and many of the trials which
He sends us are for the purpose of weaning our hearts from the creature, and fixing them more closely upon Himself.
Let this jealousy which would keep us near to Christ be also a comfort to us, for if He loves us so much as to
care thus about our love we may be sure that He will suffer nothing to harm us, and will protect us from all our
enemies. Oh that we may have grace this day to keep our hearts in sacred chastity for our Beloved alone, with sacred
jealousy shutting our eyes to all the fascinations of the world!
This evening's verse:
"I will sing of mercy and judgment." Psalm 101:1
Faith triumphs in trial. When reason is thrust into the inner prison, with her feet made fast in the stocks, faith
makes the dungeon walls ring with her merry notes as she I cries, "I will sing of mercy and of judgment. Unto
thee, O Lord, will I sing." Faith pulls the black mask from the face of trouble, and discovers the angel beneath.
Faith looks up at the cloud, and sees that
'Tis big with mercy and shall break
In blessings on her head."
There is a subject for song even in the judgments of God towards us. For, first, the trial is not so heavy as it
might have been; next, the trouble is not so severe as we deserved to have borne; and our affliction is not so
crushing as the burden which others have to carry. Faith sees that in her worst sorrow there is nothing penal;
there is not a drop of God's wrath in it; it is all sent in love. Faith discerns love gleaming like a jewel on
the breast of an angry God. Faith says of her grief, "This is a badge of honour, for the child must feel the
rod"; and then she sings of the sweet result of her sorrows, because they work her spiritual good. Nay, more,
says Faith, "These light afflictions, which are but for a moment, work out for me a far more exceeding and
eternal weight of glory." So Faith rides forth on the black horse, conquering and to conquer, trampling down
carnal reason and fleshly sense, and chanting notes of victory amid the thickest of the fray.
"All I meet I find assists me
In my path to heavenly joy:
Where, though trials now attend me,
Trials never more annoy.
"Blest there with a weight of glory,
Still the path I'll ne'er forget,
But, exulting, cry, it led me
To my blessed Saviour's seat."
September 13
This morning's verse:
"Who passing through the valley of Baca make it a well, the rain also filleth the pools." Psalm 84:6
This teaches us that the comfort obtained by a one may often prove serviceable to another; just as wells would
be used by the company who came after. We read some book full of consolation, which is like Jonathan's rod, dropping
with honey. Ah! we think our brother has been here before us, and digged this well for us as well as for himself.
Many a "Night of Weeping," "Midnight Harmonies," an "Eternal Day," "A Crook
in the Lot," a "Comfort for Mourners," has been a well digged by a pilgrim for himself, but has
proved quite as useful to others. Specially we notice this in the Psalms, such as that beginning, "Why art
thou cast down, O my soul?" Travellers have been delighted to see the footprint of man on a barren shore,
and we love to see the waymarks of pilgrims while passing through the vale of tears.
The pilgrims dig the well, but, strange enough, it fills from the top instead of the bottom. We use the means,
but the blessing does not spring from the means. We dig a well, but heaven fills it with rain. The horse is prepared
against the day of battle, but safety is of the Lord. The means are connected with the end, but they do not of
themselves produce it. See here the rain fills the pools, so that the wells become useful as reservoirs for the
water; labour is not lost, but yet it does not supersede divine help.
Grace may well be compared to rain for its purity, for its refreshing and vivifying influence, for its coming alone
from above, and for the sovereignty with which it is given or withheld. May our readers have showers of blessing,
and may the wells they have digged be filled with water! Oh, what are means and ordinances without the smile of
heaven! They are as clouds without rain, and pools without water. O God of love, open the windows of heaven and
pour us out a blessing!
This evening's verse:
"This man receiveth sinners." Luke 15:2
Observe the condescension of this fact. This Man, who towers above all other men, holy, harmless, undefiled, and
separate from sinners--this Man receiveth sinners. This Man, who is no other than the eternal God, before whom
angels veil their faces--this Man receiveth sinners. It needs an angel's tongue to describe such a mighty stoop
of love. That any of us should be willing to seek after the lost is nothing wonderful-- they are of our own race;
but that He, the offended God, against whom the transgression has been committed, should take upon Himself the
form of a servant, and bear the sin of many, and should then be willing to receive the vilest of the vile, this
is marvellous.
"This Man receiveth sinners"; not, however, that they may remain sinners, but He receives them that He
may pardon their sins, justify their persons, cleanse their hearts by His purifying word, preserve their souls
by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, and enable them to serve Him, to show forth His praise, and to have communion
with Him. Into His heart's love He receives sinners, takes them from the dunghill, and wears them as jewels in
His crown; plucks them as brands from the burning, and preserves them as costly monuments of His mercy. None are
so precious in Jesus' sight as the sinners for whom He died. When Jesus receives sinners, He has not some out-of-doors
reception place, no casual ward where He charitably entertains them as men do passing beggars, but He opens the
golden gates of His royal heart, and receives the sinner right into Himself--yea, He admits the humble penitent
into personal union and makes Him a member of His body, of His flesh, and of His bones. There was never such a
reception as this! This fact is still most sure this evening, He is still receiving sinners: would to God sinners
would receive Him.
September 14
This morning's verse:
"There were also with Him other little ships." Mark 4:36
Jesus was the Lord High Admiral of the sea that night, and His presence preserved the whole convoy. It is well
to sail with Jesus, even though it be in a little ship. When we sail in Christ's company, we may not make sure
of fair weather, for great storms may toss the vessel which carries the Lord Himself, and we must not expect to
find the sea less boisterous around our little boat. If we go with Jesus we must be content to fare as He fares;
and when the waves are rough to Him, they will be rough to us. It is by tempest and tossing that we shall come
to land, as He did before us. When the storm swept over Galilee's dark lake all faces gathered blackness, and all
hearts dreaded shipwreck.
When all creature help was useless, the slumbering Saviour arose, and with a word, transformed the riot of the
tempest into the deep quiet of a calm; then were the little vessels at rest as well as that which carried the Lord.
Jesus is the star of the sea; and though there be sorrow upon the sea, when Jesus is on it there is joy too. May
our hearts make Jesus their anchor, their rudder, their lighthouse, their life-boat, and their harbour. His Church
is the Admiral's flagship, let us attend her movements, and cheer her officers with our presence. He Himself is
the great attraction; let us follow ever in His wake, mark His signals, steer by His chart, and never fear while
He is within hail. Not one ship in the convoy shall suffer wreck; the great Commodore will steer every barque in
safety to the desired haven. By faith we will slip our cable for another day's cruise, and sail forth with Jesus
into a sea of tribulation. Winds and waves will not spare us, but they all obey Him; and, therefore, whatever squalls
may occur without, faith shall feel a blessed calm within. He is ever in the centre of the weather-beaten company:
let us rejoice in Him. His vessel has reached the haven, and so shall ours.
This evening's verse:
"I acknowledged my sin unto Thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions
unto the Lord; and Thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin." Psalm 32:5
David's grief for sin was bitter. Its effects were visible upon his outward frame: "his bones waxed old";
"his moisture was turned into the drought of summer." No remedy could he find, until he made a full confession
before the throne of the heavenly grace. He tells us that for a time he kept silence, and his heart became more
and more filled with grief: like a mountain tarn whose outlet is blocked up, his soul was swollen with torrents
of sorrow. He fashioned excuses; he endeavoured to divert his thoughts, but it was all to no purpose; like a festering
sore his anguish gathered, and as he would not use the lancet of confession, his spirit was full of torment, and
knew no rest. At last it came to this, that he must return unto his God in humble penitence, or die outright; so
he hastened to the mercy-seat, and there unrolled the volume of his iniquities before the all-seeing One, acknowledging
all the evil of his ways in language such as you read in the fifty-first and other penitential Psalms. Having done
this, a work so simple and yet so difficult to pride, he received at once the token of divine forgiveness; the
bones which had been broken were made to rejoice, and he came forth from his closet to sing the blessedness of
the man whose transgression is forgiven. See the value of a grace-wrought confession of sin! It is to be prized
above all price, for in every case where there is a genuine, gracious confession, mercy is freely given, not because
the repentance and confession deserve mercy, but for Christ's sake. Blessed be God, there is always healing for
the broken heart; the fountain is ever flowing to cleanse us from our sins. Truly, O Lord, Thou art a God "ready
to pardon!" Therefore will we acknowledge our iniquities.
September 15
This morning's verse:
"He shall not be afraid of evil tidings." Psalm 112:7
Christian, you ought not to dread the arrival of evil tidings; because if you are distressed by them, what do you
more than other men? Other men have not your God to fly to; they have never proved His faithfulness as you have
done, and it is no wonder if they are bowed down with alarm and cowed with fear: but you profess to be of another
spirit; you have been begotten again unto a lively hope, and your heart lives in heaven and not on earthly things;
now, if you are seen to be distracted as other men, what is the value of that grace which you profess to have received?
Where is the dignity of that new nature which you claim to possess?
Again, if you should be filled with alarm, as others are, you would, doubtless, be led into the sins so common
to others under trying circumstances. The ungodly, when they are overtaken by evil tidings, rebel against God;
they murmur, and think that God deals hardly with them. Will you fall into that same sin? Will you provoke the
Lord as they do?
Moreover, unconverted men often run to wrong means in order to escape from difficulties, and you will be sure to
do the same if your mind yields to the present pressure. Trust in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him. Your wisest
course is to do as Moses did at the Red Sea, "Stand still and see the salvation of God." For if you give
way to fear when you hear of evil tidings, you will be unable to meet the trouble with that calm composure which
nerves for duty, and sustains under adversity. How can you glorify God if you play the coward? Saints have often
sung God's high praises in the fires, but will your doubting and desponding, as if you had none to help you, magnify
the Most High? Then take courage, and relying in sure confidence upon the faithfulness of your covenant God, "let
not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid."
This evening's verse:
"A people near unto him." Psalm 148:14
The dispensation of the old covenant was that of distance. When God appeared even to His servant Moses, He said,
"Draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet"; and when He manifested Himself upon Mount
Sinai, to His own chosen and separated people, one of the first commands was, "Thou shalt set bounds about
the mount." Both in the sacred worship of the tabernacle and the temple, the thought of distance was always
prominent. The mass of the people did not even enter the outer court. Into the inner court none but the priests
might dare to intrude; while into the innermost place, or the holy of holies, the high priest entered but once
in the year. It was as if the Lord in those early ages would teach man that sin was so utterly loathsome to Him,
that He must treat men as lepers put without the camp; and when He came nearest to them, He yet made them feel
the width of the separation between a holy God and an impure sinner. When the gospel came, we were placed on quite
another footing. The word "Go" was exchanged for "Come"; distance was made to give place to
nearness, and we who aforetime were afar off, were made nigh by the blood of Jesus Christ. Incarnate Deity has
no wall of fire about it. "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,"
is the joyful proclamation of God as He appears in human flesh. Not now does He teach the leper his leprosy by
setting him at a distance, but by Himself suffering the penalty of His defilement. What a state of safety and privilege
is this nearness to God through Jesus! Do you know it by experience? If you know it, are you living in the power
of it? Marvellous is this nearness, yet it is to be followed by a dispensation of greater nearness still, when
it shall be said, "The tabernacle of God is with men, and He doth dwell among them." Hasten it, O Lord.
September 16
This morning's verse:
"Partakers of the divine nature." 2Peter 1:4
To be a partaker of the divine nature is not, of course, to become God. That cannot be. The essence of Deity is
not to be participated in by the creature. Between the creature and the Creator there must ever be a gulf fixed
in respect of essence; but as the first man Adam was made in the image of God, so we, by the renewal of the Holy
Spirit, are in a yet diviner sense made in the image of the Most High, and are partakers of the divine nature.
We are, by grace, made like God. "God is love"; we become love--"He that loveth is born of God."
God is truth; we become true, and we love that which is true: God is good, and He makes us good by His grace, so
that we become the pure in heart who shall see God. Moreover, we become partakers of the divine nature in even
a higher sense than this--in fact, in as lofty a sense as can be conceived, short of our being absolutely divine.
Do we not become members of the body of the divine person of Christ? Yes, the same blood which flows in the head
flows in the hand: and the same life which quickens Christ quickens His people, for "Ye are dead, and your
life is hid with Christ in God." Nay, as if this were not enough, we are married unto Christ. He hath betrothed
us unto Himself in righteousness and in faithfulness, and he who is joined unto the Lord is one spirit. Oh! marvellous
mystery! we look into it, but who shall understand it? One with Jesus--so one with Him that the branch is not more
one with the vine than we are a part of the Lord, our Saviour, and our Redeemer! While we rejoice in this, let
us remember that those who are made partakers of the divine nature will manifest their high and holy relationship
in their intercourse with others, and make it evident by their daily walk and conversation that they have escaped
the corruption that is in the world through lust. O for more divine holiness of life!
This evening's verse:
"Am I a sea, or a whale, that Thou settest a watch over me?" Job 7:12
This was a strange question for Job to ask of the Lord. He felt himself to be too insignificant to be so strictly
watched and chastened, and he hoped that he was not so unruly as to need to be so restrained. The enquiry was natural
from one surrounded with such insupportable miseries, but after all, it is capable of a very humbling answer. It
is true man is not the sea, but he is even more troublesome and unruly. The sea obediently respects its boundary,
and though it be but a belt of sand, it does not overleap the limit. Mighty as it is, it hears the divine hitherto,
and when most raging with tempest it respects the word; but self-willed man defies heaven and oppresses earth,
neither is there any end to this rebellious rage. The sea, obedient to the moon, ebbs and flows with ceaseless
regularity, and thus renders an active as well as a passive obedience; but man, restless beyond his sphere, sleeps
within the lines of duty, indolent where he should be active. He will neither come nor go at the divine command,
but sullenly prefers to do what he should not, and to leave undone that which is required of him. Every drop in
the ocean, every beaded bubble, and every yeasty foam-flake, every shell and pebble, feel the power of law, and
yield or move at once. O that our nature were but one thousandth part as much conformed to the will of God! We
call the sea fickle and false, but how constant it is! Since our fathers' days, and the old time before them, the
sea is where it was, beating on the same cliffs to the same tune; we know where to find it, it forsakes not its
bed, and changes not in its ceaseless boom; but where is man-vain, fickle man? Can the wise man guess by what folly
he will next be seduced from his obedience? We need more watching than the billowy sea, and are far more rebellious.
Lord, rule us for Thine own glory. Amen.
September 17
This morning's verse:
"Bring him unto me." Mark 9:19
Despairingly the poor disappointed father turned away from the disciples to their Master. His son was in the worst
possible condition, and all means had failed, but the miserable child was soon delivered from the evil one when
the parent in faith obeyed the Lord Jesus' word, "Bring him unto me." Children are a precious gift from
God, but much anxiety comes with them. They may be a great joy or a great bitterness to their parents; they may
be filled with the Spirit of God, or possessed with the spirit of evil. In all cases, the Word of God gives us
one receipt for the curing of all their ills, "Bring him unto me." O for more agonizing prayer on their
behalf while they are yet babes! Sin is there, let our prayers begin to attack it. Our cries for our offspring
should precede those cries which betoken their actual advent into a world of sin. In the days of their youth we
shall see sad tokens of that dumb and deaf spirit which will neither pray aright, nor hear the voice of God in
the soul, but Jesus still commands, "Bring them unto me." When they are grown up they may wallow in sin
and foam with enmity against God; then when our hearts are breaking we should remember the great Physician's words,
"Bring them unto me." Never must we cease to pray until they cease to breathe. No case is hopeless while
Jesus lives.
The Lord sometimes suffers His people to be driven into a corner that they may experimentally know how necessary
He is to them. Ungodly children, when they show us our own powerlessness against the depravity of their hearts,
drive us to flee to the strong for strength, and this is a great blessing to us. Whatever our morning's need may
be, let it like a strong current bear us to the ocean of divine love. Jesus can soon remove our sorrow, He delights
to comfort us. Let us hasten to Him while He waits to meet us.
This evening's verse:
"Encourage him." Deuteronomy 1:38
God employs His people to encourage one another. He did not say to an angel, "Gabriel, my servant Joshua is
about to lead my people into Canaan--go, encourage him." God never works needless miracles; if His purposes
can be accomplished by ordinary means, He will not use miraculous agency. Gabriel would not have been half so well
fitted for the work as Moses. A brother's sympathy is more precious than an angel's embassy. The angel, swift of
wing, had better known the Master's bidding than the people's temper. An angel had never experienced the hardness
of the road, nor seen the fiery serpents, nor had he led the stiff-necked multitude in the wilderness as Moses
had done. We should be glad that God usually works for man by man. It forms a bond of brotherhood, and being mutually
dependent on one another, we are fused more completely into one family. Brethren, take the text as God's message
to you. Labour to help others, and especially strive to encourage them. Talk cheerily to the young and anxious
enquirer, lovingly try to remove stumblingblocks out of his way. When you find a spark of grace in the heart, kneel
down and blow it into a flame. Leave the young believer to discover the roughness of the road by degrees, but tell
him of the strength which dwells in God, of the sureness of the promise, and of the charms of communion with Christ.
Aim to comfort the sorrowful, and to animate the desponding. Speak a word in season to him that is weary, and encourage
those who are fearful to go on their way with gladness. God encourages you by His promises; Christ encourages you
as He points to the heaven He has won for you, and the spirit encourages you as He works in you to will and to
do of His own will and pleasure. Imitate divine wisdom, and encourage others, according to the word of this evening.
September 18
This morning's verse:
"If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit." Galatians 5:25
The two most important things in our holy religion are the life of faith and the walk of faith. He who shall rightly
understand these is not far from being a master in experimental theology, for they are vital points to a Christian.
You will never find true faith unattended by true godliness; on the other hand, you will never discover a truly
holy life which has not for its root a living faith upon the righteousness of Christ. Woe unto those who seek after
the one without the other! There are some who cultivate faith and forget holiness; these may be very high in orthodoxy,
but they shall be very deep in condemnation, for they hold the truth in unrighteousness; and there are others who
have strained after holiness of life, but have denied the faith, like the Pharisees of old, of whom the Master
said, they were "whitewashed sepulchres." We must have faith, for this is the foundation; we must have
holiness of life, for this is the superstructure. Of what service is the mere foundation of a building to a man
in the day of tempest? Can he hide himself therein? He wants a house to cover him, as well as a foundation for
that house. Even so we need the superstructure of spiritual life if we would have comfort in the day of doubt.
But seek not a holy life without faith, for that would be to erect a house which can afford no permanent shelter,
because it has no foundation on a rock. Let faith and life be put together, and, like the two abutments of an arch,
they will make our piety enduring. Like light and heat streaming from the same sun, they are alike full of blessing.
Like the two pillars of the temple, they are for glory and for beauty. They are two streams from the fountain of
grace; two lamps lit with holy fire; two olive trees watered by heavenly care. O Lord, give us this day life within,
and it will reveal itself without to Thy glory.
This evening's verse:
"And they follow me." John 10:27
We should follow our Lord as unhesitatingly as sheep follow their shepherd, for He has a right to lead us wherever
He pleases. We are not our own, we are bought with a price--let us recognize the rights of the redeeming blood.
The soldier follows his captain, the servant obeys his master, much more must we follow our Redeemer, to whom we
are a purchased possession. We are not true to our profession of being Christians, if we question the bidding of
our Leader and Commander. Submission is our duty, cavilling is our folly. Often might our Lord say to us as to
Peter, "What is that to thee? Follow thou Me." Wherever Jesus may lead us, He goes before us. If we know
not where we go, we know with whom we go. With such a companion, who will dread the perils of the road? The journey
may be long, but His everlasting arms will carry us to the end. The presence of Jesus is the assurance of eternal
salvation, because He lives, we shall live also. We should follow Christ in simplicity and faith, because the paths
in which He leads us all end in glory and immortality. It is true they may not be smooth paths--they may be covered
with sharp flinty trials, but they lead to the "city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God."
"All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep His covenant." Let us put full trust
in our Leader, since we know that, come prosperity or adversity, sickness or health, popularity or contempt, His
purpose shall be worked out, and that purpose shall be pure, unmingled good to every heir of mercy. We shall find
it sweet to go up the bleak side of the hill with Christ; and when rain and snow blow into our faces, His dear
love will make us far more blest than those who sit at home and warm their hands at the world's fire. To the top
of Amana, to the dens of lions, or to the hills of leopards, we will follow our Beloved. Precious Jesus, draw us,
and we will run after Thee.
September 19
This morning's verse:
"The liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free." Galatians 5:1
This "liberty" makes us free to heaven's charter--the Bible. Here is a choice passage, believer, "When
thou passest through the rivers, I will be with thee." You are free to that. Here is another: "The mountains
shall depart, and the hills be removed, but my kindness shall not depart from thee"; you are free to that.
You are a welcome guest at the table of the promises. Scripture is a never-failing treasury filled with boundless
stores of grace. It is the bank of heaven; you may draw from it as much as you please, without let or hindrance.
Come in faith and you are welcome to all covenant blessings. There is not a promise in the Word which shall be
withheld. In the depths of tribulations let this freedom comfort you; amidst waves of distress let it cheer you;
when sorrows surround thee let it be thy solace. This is thy Father's love-token; thou art free to it at all times.
Thou art also free to the throne of grace. It is the believer's privilege to have access at all times to His heavenly
Father. Whatever our desires, our difficulties, our wants, we are at liberty to spread all before Him. It matters
not how much we may have sinned, we may ask and expect pardon. It signifies nothing how poor we are, we may plead
His promise that He will provide all things needful. We have permission to approach His throne at all times--in
midnight's darkest hour, or in noontide's most burning heat. Exercise thy right, O believer, and live up to thy
privilege. Thou art free to all that is treasured up in Christ--wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption.
It matters not what thy need is, for there is fulness of supply in Christ, and it is there for thee. O what a "freedom"
is thine! freedom from condemnation, freedom to the promises, freedom to the throne of grace, and at last freedom
to enter heaven!
This evening's verse:
"For this child I prayed." 1Samuel 1:27
Devout souls delight to look upon those mercies which they have obtained in answer to supplication, for they can
see God's especial love in them. When we can name our blessings Samuel, that is, "asked of God," they
will be as dear to us as her child was to Hannah. Peninnah had many children, but they came as common blessings
unsought in prayer: Hannah's one heaven-given child was dearer far, because he was the fruit of earnest pleadings.
How sweet was that water to Samson which he found at "the well of him that prayed!" Quassia cups turn
all waters bitter, but the cup of prayer puts a sweetness into the draughts it brings. Did we pray for the conversion
of our children? How doubly sweet, when they are saved, to see in them our own petitions fulfilled! Better to rejoice
over them as the fruit of our pleadings than as the fruit of our bodies. Have we sought of the Lord some choice
spiritual gift? When it comes to us it will be wrapped up in the gold cloth of God's faithfulness and truth, and
so be doubly precious. Have we petitioned for success in the Lord's work? How joyful is the prosperity which comes
flying upon the wings of prayer! It is always best to get blessings into our house in the legitimate way, by the
door of prayer; then they are blessings indeed, and not temptations. Even when prayer speeds not, the blessings
grow all the richer for the delay; the child Jesus was all the more lovely in the eyes of Mary when she found Him
after having sought Him sorrowing. That which we win by prayer we should dedicate to God, as Hannah dedicated Samuel.
The gift came from heaven, let it go to heaven. Prayer brought it, gratitude sang over it, let devotion consecrate
it. Here will be a special occasion for saying, "Of Thine own have I given unto Thee." Reader, is prayer
your element or your weariness? Which?
September 20
This morning's verse:
"The sword of the Lord, and of Gideon." Judges 7:20
Gideon ordered his men to do two things: covering up a torch in an earthen pitcher, he bade them, at an appointed
signal, break the pitcher and let the light shine, and then sound with the trumpet, crying, "The sword of
the Lord, and of Gideon! the sword of the Lord, and of Gideon!" This is precisely what all Christians must
do. First, you must shine; break the pitcher which conceals your light; throw aside the bushel which has been hiding
your candle, and shine. Let your light shine before men; let your good works be such, that when men look upon you,
they shall know that you have been with Jesus. Then there must be the sound, the blowing of the trumpet. There
must be active exertions for the ingathering of sinners by proclaiming Christ crucified. Take the gospel to them;
carry it to their door; put it in their way; do not suffer them to escape it; blow the trumpet right against their
ears. Remember that the true war-cry of the Church is Gideon's watchword, "The sword of the Lord, and of Gideon!"
God must do it, it is His own work. But we are not to be idle; instrumentality is to be used--"The sword of
the Lord, and of Gideon!" If we only cry, "The sword of the Lord!" we shall be guilty of an idle
presumption; and if we shout, "The sword of Gideon!" alone, we shall manifest idolatrous reliance on
an arm of flesh: we must blend the two in practical harmony, "The sword of the Lord, and of Gideon!"
We can do nothing of ourselves, but we can do everything by the help of our God; let us, therefore, in His name
determine to go out personally and serve with our flaming torch of holy example, and with our trumpet tones of
earnest declaration and testimony, and God shall be with us, and Midian shall be put to confusion, and the Lord
of hosts shall reign for ever and ever.
This evening's verse:
"In the evening withhold not thy hand." Ecclesiastes 11:6
In the evening of the day opportunities are plentiful: men return from their labour, and the zealous soul-winner
finds time to tell abroad the love of Jesus. Have I no evening work for Jesus? If I have not, let me no longer
withhold my hand from a service which requires abundant labour. Sinners are perishing for lack of knowledge; he
who loiters may find his skirts crimson with the blood of souls. Jesus gave both His hands to the nails, how can
I keep back one of mine from His blessed work? Night and day He toiled and prayed for me, how can I give a single
hour to the pampering of my flesh with luxurious ease? Up, idle heart; stretch out thy hand to work, or uplift
it to pray; heaven and hell are in earnest, let me be so, and this evening sow good seed for the Lord my God.
The evening of life has also its calls. Life is so short that a morning of manhood's vigour, and an evening of
decay, make the whole of it. To some it seems long, but a four-pence is a great sum of money to a poor man. Life
is so brief that no man can afford to lose a day. It has been well said that if a great king should bring us a
great heap of gold, and bid us take as much as we could count in a day, we should make a long day of it; we should
begin early in the morning, and in the evening we should not withhold our hand; but to win souls is far nobler
work, how is it that we so soon withdraw from it? Some are spared to a long evening of green old age; if such be
my case, let me use such talents as I still retain, and to the last hour serve my blessed and faithful Lord. By
His grace I will die in harness, and lay down my charge only when I lay down my body. Age may instruct the young,
cheer the faint, and encourage the desponding; if eventide has less of vigorous heat, it should have more of calm
wisdom, therefore in the evening I will not withhold my hand.
September 21
This morning's verse:
"I will rejoice over them to do them good." Jeremiah 32:41
How heart-cheering to the believer is the delight which God has in His saints! We cannot see any reason in ourselves
why the Lord should take pleasure in us; we cannot take delight in ourselves, for we often have to groan, being
burdened; conscious of our sinfulness, and deploring our unfaithfulness; and we fear that God's people cannot take
much delight in us, for they must perceive so much of our imperfections and our follies, that they may rather lament
our infirmities than admire our graces. But we love to dwell upon this transcendent truth, this glorious mystery:
that as the bridegroom rejoiceth over the bride, so does the Lord rejoice over us. We do not read anywhere that
God delighteth in the cloud-capped mountains, or the sparkling stars, but we do read that He delighteth in the
habitable parts of the earth, and that His delights are with the sons of men. We do not find it written that even
angels give His soul delight; nor doth He say, concerning cherubim and seraphim, "Thou shalt be called Hephzibah,
for the Lord delighteth in thee"; but He does say all that to poor fallen creatures like ourselves, debased
and depraved by sin, but saved, exalted, and glorified by His grace. In what strong language He expresses His delight
in His people! Who could have conceived of the eternal One as bursting forth into a song? Yet it is written, "He
will rejoice over thee with joy, He will rest in His love, He will joy over thee with singing." As He looked
upon the world He had made, He said, "It is very good"; but when He beheld those who are the purchase
of Jesus' blood, His own chosen ones, it seemed as if the great heart of the Infinite could restrain itself no
longer, but overflowed in divine exclamations of joy. Should not we utter our grateful response to such a marvellous
declaration of His love, and sing, "I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation?"
This evening's verse:
"Gather not my soul with sinners." Psalm 26:9
Fear made David pray thus, for something whispered, "Perhaps, after all, thou mayst be gathered with the wicked."
That fear, although marred by unbelief, springs, in the main, from holy anxiety, arising from the recollection
of past sin. Even the pardoned man will enquire, "What if at the end my sins should be remembered, and I should
be left out of the catalogue of the saved?" He recollects his present unfruitfulness--so little grace, so
little love, so little holiness, and looking forward to the future, he considers his weakness and the many temptations
which beset him, and he fears that he may fall, and become a prey to the enemy. A sense of sin and present evil,
and his prevailing corruptions, compel him to pray, in fear and trembling, "Gather not my soul with sinners."
Reader, if you have prayed this prayer, and if your character be rightly described in the Psalm from which it is
taken, you need not be afraid that you shall be gathered with sinners. Have you the two virtues which David had--the
outward walking in integrity, and the inward trusting in the Lord? Are you resting upon Christ's sacrifice, and
can you compass the altar of God with humble hope? If so, rest assured, with the wicked you never shall be gathered,
for that calamity is impossible. The gathering at the judgment is like to like. "Gather ye together first
the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn them: but gather the wheat into my barn." If, then, thou art like
God's people, thou shalt be with God's people. You cannot be gathered with the wicked, for you are too dearly bought.
Redeemed by the blood of Christ, you are His for ever, and where He is, there must His people be. You are loved
too much to be cast away with reprobates. Shall one dear to Christ perish? Impossible! Hell cannot hold thee! Heaven
claims thee! Trust in thy Surety and fear not!
September 22
This morning's verse:
"Let Israel rejoice in him." Psalm 149:2
Be glad of heart, O believer, but take care that thy gladness has its spring in the Lord. Thou hast much cause
for gladness in thy God, for thou canst sing with David, "God, my exceeding joy." Be glad that the Lord
reigneth, that Jehovah is King! Rejoice that He sits upon the throne, and ruleth all things! Every attribute of
God should become a fresh ray in the sunlight of our gladness. That He is wise should make us glad, knowing as
we do our own foolishness. That He is mighty, should cause us to rejoice who tremble at our weakness. That he is
everlasting, should always be a theme of joy when we know that we wither as the grass. That He is unchanging, should
perpetually yield us a song, since we change every hour. That He is full of grace, that He is overflowing with
it, and that this grace in covenant He has given to us; that it is ours to cleanse us, ours to keep us, ours to
sanctify us, ours to perfect us, ours to bring us to glory--all this should tend to make us glad in Him. This gladness
in God is as a deep river; we have only as yet touched its brink, we know a little of its clear sweet, heavenly
streams, but onward the depth is greater, and the current more impetuous in its joy. The Christian feels that he
may delight himself not only in what God is, but also in all that God has done in the past. The Psalms show us
that God's people in olden times were wont to think much of God's actions, and to have a song concerning each of
them. So let God's people now rehearse the deeds of the Lord! Let them tell of His mighty acts, and "sing
unto the Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously." Nor let them ever cease to sing, for as new mercies flow
to them day by day, so should their gladness in the Lord's loving acts in providence and in grace show itself in
continued thanksgiving. Be glad ye children of Zion and rejoice in the Lord your God.
This evening's verse:
"When my heart is overwhelmed: lead me to the Rock that is higher than I." Psalm 61:2
Most of us know what it is to be overwhelmed in heart; emptied as when a man wipeth a dish and turneth it upside
down; submerged and thrown on our beam ends like a vessel mastered by the storm. Discoveries of inward corruption
will do this, if the Lord permits the great deep of our depravity to become troubled and cast up mire and dirt.
Disappointments and heart-breaks will do this when billow after billow rolls over us, and we are like a broken
shell hurled to and fro by the surf. Blessed be God, at such seasons we are not without an all-sufficient solace,
our God is the harbour of weather-beaten sails, the hospice of forlorn pilgrims. Higher than we are is He, His
mercy higher than our sins, His love higher than our thoughts. It is pitiful to see men putting their trust in
something lower than themselves; but our confidence is fixed upon an exceeding high and glorious Lord. A Rock He
is since He changes not, and a high Rock, because the tempests which overwhelm us roll far beneath at His feet;
He is not disturbed by them, but rules them at His will. If we get under the shelter of this lofty Rock we may
defy the hurricane; all is calm under the lee of that towering cliff. Alas! such is the confusion in which the
troubled mind is often cast, that we need piloting to this divine shelter. Hence the prayer of the text. O Lord,
our God, by Thy Holy Spirit, teach us the way of faith, lead us into Thy rest. The wind blows us out to sea, the
helm answers not to our puny hand; Thou, Thou alone canst steer us over the bar between yon sunken rocks, safe
into the fair haven. How dependent we are upon Thee--we need Thee to bring us to Thee. To be wisely directed and
steered into safety and peace is Thy gift, and Thine alone. This night be pleased to deal well with Thy servants.
September 23
This morning's verse:
"Accepted in the beloved." Ephesians 1:6
What a state of privilege! It includes our justification before God, but the term acceptance" in the Greek
means more than that. It signifies that we are the objects of divine complacence, nay, even of divine delight.
How marvellous that we, worms, mortals, sinners, should be the objects of divine love! But it is only "in
the beloved." Some Christians seem to be accepted in their own experience, at least, that is their apprehension.
When their spirit is lively, and their hopes bright, they think God accepts them, for they feel so high, so heavenly-minded,
so drawn above the earth! But when their souls cleave to the dust, they are the victims of the fear that they are
no longer accepted. If they could but see that all their high joys do not exalt them, and all their low despondencies
do not really depress them in their Father's sight, but that they stand accepted in One who never alters, in One
who is always the beloved of God, always perfect, always without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, how much happier
they would be, and how much more they would honour the Saviour! Rejoice then, believer, in this: thou art accepted
"in the beloved." Thou lookest within, and thou sayest, "There is nothing acceptable here!"
But look at Christ, and see if there is not everything acceptable there. Thy sins trouble thee; but God has cast
thy sins behind His back, and thou art accepted in the Righteous One. Thou hast to fight with corruption, and to
wrestle with temptation, but thou art already accepted in Him who has overcome the powers of evil. The devil tempts
thee; be of good cheer, he cannot destroy thee, for thou art accepted in Him who has broken Satan's head. Know
by full assurance thy glorious standing. Even glorified souls are not more accepted than thou art. They are only
accepted in heaven "in the beloved," and thou art even now accepted in Christ after the same manner.
This evening's verse:
"Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe." Mark 9:23
A certain man had a demoniac son, who was afflicted with a dumb spirit. The father, having seen the futility of
the endeavours of the disciples to heal his child, had little or no faith in Christ, and therefore, when he was
bidden to bring his son to Him, he said to Jesus, "If Thou cast do anything, have compassion on us, and help
us." Now there was an "if" in the question, but the poor trembling father had put the "if"
in the wrong place: Jesus Christ, therefore, without commanding him to retract the "if," kindly puts
it in its legitimate position. "Nay, verily," He seemed to say, "there should be no 'if' about My
power, nor concerning My willingness, the 'if' lies somewhere else." "If thou canst believe, all things
are possible to him that believeth." The man's trust was strengthened, he offered a humble prayer for an increase
of faith, and instantly Jesus spoke the word, and the devil was cast out, with an injunction never to return. There
is a lesson here which we need to learn. We, like this man, often see that there is an "if" somewhere,
but we are perpetually blundering by putting it in the wrong place. "If" Jesus can help me--"if"
He can give me grace to overcome temptation--"if" He can give me pardon--"if" He can make me
successful? Nay, "if" you can believe, He both can and will. You have misplaced your "if."
If you can confidently trust, even as all things are possible to Christ, so shall all things be possible to you.
Faith standeth in God's power, and is robed in God's majesty; it weareth the royal apparel, and rideth on the King's
horse, for it is the grace which the King delighteth to honour. Girding itself with the glorious might of the all-working
Spirit, it becomes, in the omnipotence of God, mighty to do, to dare, and to suffer. All things, without limit,
are possible to him that believeth. My soul, canst thou believe thy Lord to-night?
September 24
This morning's verse:
"For I was ashamed to require of the king a band of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy in
the way: because we had spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek Him;
but His power and His wrath is against all them that forsake Him." Ezra 8:22
A convoy on many accounts would have been desirable for the pilgrim band, but a holy shame-facedness would not
allow Ezra to seek one. He feared lest the heathen king should think his professions of faith in God to be mere
hypocrisy, or imagine that the God of Israel was not able to preserve His own worshippers. He could not bring his
mind to lean on an arm of flesh in a matter so evidently of the Lord, and therefore the caravan set out with no
visible protection, guarded by Him who is the sword and shield of His people. It is to be feared that few believers
feel this holy jealousy for God; even those who in a measure walk by faith, occasionally mar the lustre of their
life by craving aid from man. It is a most blessed thing to have no props and no buttresses, but to stand upright
on the Rock of Ages, upheld by the Lord alone. Would any believers seek state endowments for their Church, if they
remembered that the Lord is dishonoured by their asking Caesar's aid? as if the Lord could not supply the needs
of His own cause! Should we run so hastily to friends and relations for assistance, if we remembered that the Lord
is magnified by our implicit reliance upon His solitary arm? My soul, wait thou only upon God. "But,"
says one, "are not means to be used?" Assuredly they are; but our fault seldom lies in their neglect:
far more frequently it springs out of foolishly believing in them instead of believing in God. Few run too far
in neglecting the creature's arm; but very many sin greatly in making too much of it. Learn, dear reader, to glorify
the Lord by leaving means untried, if by using them thou wouldst dishonour the name of the Lord.
This evening's verse:
"I sleep, but my heart waketh." Song 5:2
Paradoxes abound in Christian experience, and here is one--the spouse was asleep, and yet she was awake. He only
can read the believer's riddle who has ploughed with the heifer of his experience. The two points in this evening's
text are--a mournful sleepiness and a hopeful wakefulness. I sleep. Through sin that dwelleth in us we may become
lax in holy duties, slothful in religious exercises, dull in spiritual joys, and altogether supine and careless.
This is a shameful state for one in whom the quickening Spirit dwells; and it is dangerous to the highest degree.
Even wise virgins sometimes slumber, but it is high time for all to shake off the bands of sloth. It is to be feared
that many believers lose their strength as Samson lost his locks, while sleeping on the lap of carnal security.
With a perishing world around us, to sleep is cruel; with eternity so near at hand, it is madness. Yet we are none
of us so much awake as we should be; a few thunder-claps would do us all good, and it may be, unless we soon bestir
ourselves, we shall have them in the form of war, or pestilence, or personal bereavements and losses. O that we
may leave for ever the couch of fleshly ease, and go forth with flaming torches to meet the coming Bridegroom!
My heart waketh. This is a happy sign. Life is not extinct, though sadly smothered. When our renewed heart struggles
against our natural heaviness, we should be grateful to sovereign grace for keeping a little vitality within the
body of this death. Jesus will hear our hearts, will help our hearts, will visit our hearts; for the voice of the
wakeful heart is really the voice of our Beloved, saying, "Open to me." Holy zeal will surely unbar the
door.
"Oh lovely attitude! He stands
With melting heart and laden hands;
My soul forsakes her every sin;
And lets the heavenly stranger in."
September 25
This morning's verse:
"Just, and the justifier of him which believeth." Romans 3:26
Being justified by faith, we have peace with God. Conscience accuses no longer. Judgment now decides for the sinner
instead of against him. Memory looks back upon past sins, with deep sorrow for the sin, but yet with no dread of
any penalty to come; for Christ has paid the debt of His people to the last jot and tittle, and received the divine
receipt; and unless God can be so unjust as to demand double payment for one debt, no soul for whom Jesus died
as a substitute can ever be cast into hell. It seems to be one of the very principles of our enlightened nature
to believe that God is just; we feel that it must be so, and this gives us our terror at first; but is it not marvellous
that this very same belief that God is just, becomes afterwards the pillar of our confidence and peace! If God
be just, I, a sinner, alone and without a substitute, must be punished; but Jesus stands in my stead and is punished
for me; and now, if God be just, I, a sinner, standing in Christ, can never be punished. God must change His nature
before one soul, for whom Jesus was a substitute, can ever by any possibility suffer the lash of the law. Therefore,
Jesus having taken the place of the believer-- having rendered a full equivalent to divine wrath for all that His
people ought to have suffered as the result of sin, the believer can shout with glorious triumph, "Who shall
lay anything to the charge of God's elect?" Not God, for He hath justified; not Christ, for He hath died,
"yea rather hath risen again." My hope lives not because I am not a sinner, but because I am a sinner
for whom Christ died; my trust is not that I am holy, but that being unholy, He is my righteousness. My faith rests
not upon what I am, or shall be, or feel, or know, but in what Christ is, in what He has done, and in what He is
now doing for me. On the lion of justice the fair maid of hope rides like a queen.
This evening's verse:
"Who of God is made unto us wisdom." 1Corinthians 1:30
Man's intellect seeks after rest, and by nature seeks it apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. Men of education are
apt, even when converted, to look upon the simplicities of the cross of Christ with an eye too little reverent
and loving. They are snared in the old net in which the Grecians were taken, and have a hankering to mix philosophy
with revelation. The temptation with a man of refined thought and high education is to depart from the simple truth
of Christ crucified, and to invent, as the term is, a more intellectual doctrine. This led the early Christian
churches into Gnosticism, and bewitched them with all sorts of heresies. This is the root of Neology, and the other
fine things which in days gone by were so fashionable in Germany, and are now so ensnaring to certain classes of
divines. Whoever you are, good reader, and whatever your education may be, if you be the Lord's, be assured you
will find no rest in philosophizing divinity. You may receive this dogma of one great thinker, or that dream of
another profound reasoner, but what the chaff is to the wheat, that will these be to the pure word of God. All
that reason, when best guided, can find out is but the A B C of truth, and even that lacks certainty, while in
Christ Jesus there is treasured up all the fulness of wisdom and knowledge. All attempts on the part of Christians
to be content with systems such as Unitarian and Broad-church thinkers would approve of, must fail; true heirs
of heaven must come back to the grandly simple reality which makes the ploughboy's eye flash with joy, and glads
the pious pauper's heart--"Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners." Jesus satisfies the most
elevated intellect when He is believingly received, but apart from Him the mind of the regenerate discovers no
rest. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge." "A good understanding have all they
that do His commandments."
September 26
This morning's verse:
"The myrtle trees that were in the bottom." Zechariah 1:8
The vision in this chapter describes the condition of Israel in Zechariah's day; but being interpreted in its aspect
towards us, it describes the Church of God as we find it now in the world. The Church is compared to a myrtle grove
flourishing in a valley. It is hidden, unobserved, secreted; courting no honour and attracting no observation from
the careless gazer. The Church, like her head, has a glory, but it is concealed from carnal eyes, for the time
of her breaking forth in all her splendour is not yet come. The idea of tranquil security is also suggested to
us: for the myrtle grove in the valley is still and calm, while the storm sweeps over the mountain summits. Tempests
spend their force upon the craggy peaks of the Alps, but down yonder where flows the stream which maketh glad the
city of our God, the myrtles flourish by the still waters, all unshaken by the impetuous wind. How great is the
inward tranquility of God's Church! Even when opposed and persecuted, she has a peace which the world gives not,
and which, therefore, it cannot take away: the peace of God which passeth all understanding keeps the hearts and
minds of God's people. Does not the metaphor forcibly picture the peaceful, perpetual growth of the saints? The
myrtle sheds not her leaves, she is always green; and the Church in her worst time still hath a blessed verdure
of grace about her; nay, she has sometimes exhibited most verdure when her winter has been sharpest. She has prospered
most when her adversities have been most severe. Hence the text hints at victory. The myrtle is the emblem of peace,
and a significant token of triumph. The brows of conquerors were bound with myrtle and with laurel; and is not
the Church ever victorious? Is not every Christian more than a conqueror through Him that loved him? Living in
peace, do not the saints fall asleep in the arms of victory?
This evening's verse:
"Howl, fir tree, for the cedar is fallen." Zechariah 11:2
When in the forest there is heard the crash of a falling oak, it is a sign that the woodman is abroad, and every
tree in the whole company may tremble lest to-morrow the sharp edge of the axe should find it out. We are all like
trees marked for the axe, and the fall of one should remind us that for every one, whether great as the cedar,
or humble as the fir, the appointed hour is stealing on apace. I trust we do not, by often hearing of death, become
callous to it. May we never be like the birds in the steeple, which build their nests when the bells are tolling,
and sleep quietly when the solemn funeral peals are startling the air. May we regard death as the most weighty
of all events, and be sobered by its approach. It ill behoves us to sport while our eternal destiny hangs on a
thread. The sword is out of its scabbard--let us not trifle; it is furbished, and the edge is sharp--let us not
play with it. He who does not prepare for death is more than an ordinary fool, he is a madman. When the voice of
God is heard among the trees of the garden, let fig tree and sycamore, and elm and cedar, alike hear the sound
thereof.
Be ready, servant of Christ, for thy Master comes on a sudden, when an ungodly world least expects Him. See to
it that thou be faithful in His work, for the grave shall soon be digged for thee. Be ready, parents, see that
your children are brought up in the fear of God, for they must soon be orphans; be ready, men of business, take
care that your affairs are correct, and that you serve God with all your hearts, for the days of your terrestrial
service will soon be ended, and you will be called to give account for the deeds done in the body, whether they
be good or whether they be evil. May we all prepare for the tribunal of the great King with a care which shall
be rewarded with the gracious commendation, "Well done, good and faithful servant"
September 27
This morning's verse:
"Happy art thou, O Israel; who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord!" Deuteronomy 33:29
He who affirms that Christianity makes men miserable, is himself an utter stranger to it. It were strange indeed,
if it made us wretched, for see to what a position it exalts us! It makes us sons of God. Suppose you that God
will give all the happiness to His enemies, and reserve all the mourning for His own family? Shall His foes have
mirth and joy, and shall His home-born children inherit sorrow and wretchedness? Shall the sinner, who has no part
in Christ, call himself rich in happiness, and shall we go mourning as if we were penniless beggars? No, we will
rejoice in the Lord always, and glory in our inheritance, for we "have not received the spirit of bondage
again to fear; but we have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father." The rod of chastisement
must rest upon us in our measure, but it worketh for us the comfortable fruits of righteousness; and therefore
by the aid of the divine Comforter, we, the "people saved of the Lord," will joy in the God of our salvation.
We are married unto Christ; and shall our great Bridegroom permit His spouse to linger in constant grief? Our hearts
are knit unto Him: we are His members, and though for awhile we may suffer as our Head once suffered, yet we are
even now blessed with heavenly blessings in Him. We have the earnest of our inheritance in the comforts of the
Spirit, which are neither few nor small. Heritors of joy for ever, we have foretastes of our portion. There are
streaks of the light of joy to herald our eternal sunrising. Our riches are beyond the sea; our city with firm
foundations lies on the other side the river; gleams of glory from the spirit-world cheer our hearts, and urge
us onward. Truly is it said of us, "Happy art thou, O Israel; who is like unto thee, O people saved by the
Lord?"
This evening's verse:
"My Beloved put in His hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for Him." Song 5:4
Knocking was not enough, for my heart was too full of sleep, too cold and ungrateful to arise and open the door,
but the touch of His effectual grace has made my soul bestir itself. Oh, the longsuffering of my Beloved, to tarry
when He found Himself shut out, and me asleep upon the bed of sloth! Oh, the greatness of His patience, to knock
and knock again, and to add His voice to His knockings, beseeching me to open to Him! How could I have refused
Him! Base heart, blush and be confounded! But what greatest kindness of all is this, that He becomes His own porter
and unbars the door Himself. Thrice blessed is the hand which condescends to lift the latch and turn the key. Now
I see that nothing but my Lord's own power can save such a naughty mass of wickedness as I am; ordinances fail,
even the gospel has no effect upon me, till His hand is stretched out. Now, also, I perceive that His hand is good
where all else is unsuccessful, He can open when nothing else will. Blessed be His name, I feel His gracious presence
even now. Well may my bowels move for Him, when I think of all that He has suffered for me, and of my ungenerous
return. I have allowed my affections to wander. I have set up rivals. I have grieved Him. Sweetest and dearest
of all beloveds, I have treated Thee as an unfaithful wife treats her husband. Oh, my cruel sins, my cruel self.
What can I do? Tears are a poor show of my repentance, my whole heart boils with indignation at myself. Wretch
that I am, to treat my Lord, my All in All, my exceeding great joy, as though He were a stranger. Jesus, thou forgivest
freely, but this is not enough, prevent my unfaithfulness in the future. Kiss away these tears, and then purge
my heart and bind it with sevenfold cords to Thyself, never to wander more.
September 28
This morning's verse:
"The Lord looketh from heaven; He beholdeth all the sons of men." Psalm 33:13
Perhaps no figure of speech represents God in a more gracious light than when He is spoken of as stooping from
His throne, and coming down from heaven to attend to the wants and to behold the woes of mankind. We love Him,
who, when Sodom and Gomorrah were full of iniquity, would not destroy those cities until He had made a personal
visitation of them. We cannot help pouring out our heart in affection for our Lord who inclines His ear from the
highest glory, and puts it to the lip of the dying sinner, whose failing heart longs after reconciliation. How
can we but love Him when we know that He numbers the very hairs of our heads, marks our path, and orders our ways?
Specially is this great truth brought near to our heart, when we recollect how attentive He is, not merely to the
temporal interests of His creatures, but to their spiritual concerns. Though leagues of distance lie between the
finite creature and the infinite Creator, yet there are links uniting both. When a tear is wept by thee, think
not that God doth not behold; for, "Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear
Him." Thy sigh is able to move the heart of Jehovah; thy whisper can incline His ear unto thee; thy prayer
can stay His hand; thy faith can move His arm. Think not that God sits on high taking no account of thee. Remember
that however poor and needy thou art, yet the Lord thinketh upon thee. For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro
throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards Him.
Oh! then repeat the truth that never tires;
No God is like the God my soul desires;
He at whose voice heaven trembles, even He,
Great as He is, knows how to stoop to me.
This evening's verse:
"Go again seven times." 1Kings 18:43
Success is certain when the Lord has promised it. Although you may have pleaded month after month without evidence
of answer, it is not possible that the Lord should be deaf when His people are earnest in a matter which concerns
His glory. The prophet on the top of Carmel continued to wrestle with God, and never for a moment gave way to a
fear that he should be non-suited in Jehovah's courts. Six times the servant returned, but on each occasion no
word was spoken but "Go again." We must not dream of unbelief, but hold to our faith even to seventy
times seven. Faith sends expectant hope to look from Carmel's brow, and if nothing is beheld, she sends again and
again. So far from being crushed by repeated disappointment, faith is animated to plead more fervently with her
God. She is humbled, but not abashed: her groans are deeper, and her sighings more vehement, but she never relaxes
her hold or stays her hand. It would be more agreeable to flesh and blood to have a speedy answer, but believing
souls have learned to be submissive, and to find it good to wait for as well as upon the Lord. Delayed answers
often set the heart searching itself, and so lead to contrition and spiritual reformation: deadly blows are thus
struck at our corruption, and the chambers of imagery are cleansed. The great danger is lest men should faint,
and miss the blessing. Reader, do not fall into that sin, but continue in prayer and watching. At last the little
cloud was seen, the sure forerunner of torrents of rain, and even so with you, the token for good shall surely
be given, and you shall rise as a prevailing prince to enjoy the mercy you have sought. Elijah was a man of like
passions with us: his power with God did not lie in his own merits. If his believing prayer availed so much, why
not yours? Plead the precious blood with unceasing importunity, and it shall be with you according to your desire.
September 29
This morning's verse:
"Behold, if the leprosy have covered all his flesh, he shall pronounce him clean that hath the plague."
Leviticus 13:13
Strange enough this regulation appears, yet there was wisdom in it, for the throwing out of the disease proved
that the constitution was sound. This morning it may be well for us to see the typical teaching of so singular
a rule. We, too, are lepers, and may read the law of leper as applicable to ourselves. When a man sees himself
to be altogether lost and ruined, covered all over with the defilement of sin, and no part free from pollution;
when he disclaims all righteousness of his own, and pleads guilty before the Lord, then is he clean through the
blood of Jesus, and the grace of God. Hidden, unfelt, unconfessed iniquity is the true leprosy, but when sin is
seen and felt it has received its death blow, and the Lord looks with eyes of mercy upon the soul afflicted with
it. Nothing is more deadly than self-righteousness, or more hopeful than contrition. We must confess that we are
"nothing else but sin," for no confession short of this will be the whole truth, and if the Holy Spirit
be at work with us, convincing us of sin, there will be no difficulty about making such an acknowledgment--it will
spring spontaneously from our lips. What comfort does the text afford to those under a deep sense of sin! Sin mourned
and confessed, however black and foul, shall never shut a man out from the Lord Jesus. Whosoever cometh unto Him,
He will in no wise cast out. Though dishonest as the thief, though unchaste as the woman who was a sinner, though
fierce as Saul of Tarsus, though cruel as Manasseh, though rebellious as the prodigal, the great heart of love
will look upon the man who feels himself to have no soundness in him, and will pronounce him clean, when he trusts
in Jesus crucified. Come to Him, then, poor heavy-laden sinner,
Come needy, come guilty, come loathsome and bare;
You can't come too filthy--come just as you are.
This evening's verse:
"I found Him whom my soul loveth: I held Him, and would not let Him go." Song 3:4
Does Christ receive us when we come to Him, notwithstanding all our past sinfulness? Does He never chide us for
having tried all other refuges first? And is there none on earth like Him? Is He the best of all the good, the
fairest of all the fair? Oh, then let us praise Him! Daughters of Jerusalem, extol Him with timbrel and harp! Down
with your idols, up with the Lord Jesus. Now let the standards of pomp and pride be trampled under foot, but let
the cross of Jesus, which the world frowns and scoffs at, be lifted on high. O for a throne of ivory for our King
Solomon! let Him be set on high for ever, and let my soul sit at His footstool, and kiss His feet, and wash them
with my tears. Oh, how precious is Christ! How can it be that I have thought so little of Him? How is it I can
go abroad for joy or comfort when He is so full, so rich, so satisfying. Fellow believer, make a covenant with
thine heart that thou wilt never depart from Him, and ask thy Lord to ratify it. Bid Him set thee as a signet upon
His finger, and as a bracelet upon His arm. Ask Him to bind thee about Him, as the bride decketh herself with ornaments,
and as the bridegroom putteth on his jewels. I would live in Christ's heart; in the clefts of that rock my soul
would eternally abide. The sparrow hath made a house, and the swallow a nest for herself where she may lay her
young, even thine altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God; and so too would I make my nest, my home, in Thee,
and never from Thee may the soul of Thy turtle dove go forth again, but may I nestle close to Thee, O Jesus, my
true and only rest.
"When my precious Lord I find,
All my ardent passions glow;
Him with cords of love I bind,
Hold and will not let Him go."
September 30
This morning's verse:
"Sing forth the honour of His name, make His praise glorious." Psalm 66:2
It is not left to our own option whether we shall praise God or not. Praise is God's most righteous due, and every
Christian, as the recipient of His grace, is bound to praise God from day to day. It is true we have no authoritative
rubric for daily praise; we have no commandment prescribing certain hours of song and thanksgiving: but the law
written upon the heart teaches us that it is right to praise God; and the unwritten mandate comes to us with as
much force as if it had been recorded on the tables of stone, or handed to us from the top of thundering Sinai.
Yes, it is the Christian's duty to praise God. It is not only a pleasurable exercise, but it is the absolute obligation
of his life. Think not ye who are always mourning, that ye are guiltless in this respect, or imagine that ye can
discharge your duty to your God without songs of praise. You are bound by the bonds of His love to bless His name
so long as you live, and His praise should continually be in your mouth, for you are blessed, in order that you
may bless Him; "this people have I formed for myself, they shall show forth my praise"; and if you do
not praise God, you are not bringing forth the fruit which He, as the Divine Husbandman, has a right to expect
at your hands. Let not your harp then hang upon the willows, but take it down, and strive, with a grateful heart,
to bring forth its loudest music. Arise and chant His praise. With every morning's dawn, lift up your notes of
thanksgiving, and let every setting sun be followed with your song. Girdle the earth with your praises; surround
it with an atmosphere of melody, and God Himself will hearken from heaven and accept your music.
"E'en so I love Thee, and will love,
And in Thy praise will sing,
Because Thou art my loving God,
And my redeeming King."
This evening's verse:
"A living dog is better than a dead lion." Ecclesiastes 9:4
Life is a precious thing, and in its humblest form it is superior to death. This truth is eminently certain in
spiritual things. It is better to be the least in the kingdom of heaven than the greatest out of it. The lowest
degree of grace is superior to the noblest development of unregenerate nature. Where the Holy Ghost implants divine
life in the soul, there is a precious deposit which none of the refinements of education can equal. The thief on
the cross excels Caesar on his throne; Lazarus among the dogs is better than Cicero among the senators; and the
most unlettered Christian is in the sight of God superior to Plato. Life is the badge of nobility in the realm
of spiritual things, and men without it are only coarser or finer specimens of the same lifeless material, needing
to be quickened, for they are dead in trespasses and sins.
A living, loving, gospel sermon, however unlearned in matter and uncouth in style, is better than the finest discourse
devoid of unction and power. A living dog keeps better watch than a dead lion, and is of more service to his master;
and so the poorest spiritual preacher is infinitely to be preferred to the exquisite orator who has no wisdom but
that of words, no energy but that of sound. The like holds good of our prayers and other religious exercises; if
we are quickened in them by the Holy Spirit, they are acceptable to God through Jesus Christ, though we may think
them to be worthless things; while our grand performances in which our hearts were absent, like dead lions, are
mere carrion in the sight of the living God. O for living groans, living sighs, living despondencies, rather than
lifeless songs and dead calms. Better anything than death. The snarlings of the dog of hell will at least keep
us awake, but dead faith and dead profession, what greater curses can a man have? Quicken us, quicken us, O Lord!
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