MORNING THOUGHTS,
or
DAILY WALKING WITH GOD
By Octavius Winslow, Leamington, Dec. 1856.
"My voice shall You hear in the morning, O Lord;
in the morning will I direct my prayer unto You, and will look up."
Psalm 5:3
PREFACE.
In compliance with a request frequently, and from various
quarters, preferred, that the author would allow selections from some of his
published works to appear in the form of Daily Readings, he ventures to
offer to the Christian Church the following pages. They have been gleaned-
with much care, and with a strict regard to variety, yet consecutiveness, of
topic; presenting a spiritual, and occasionally a critical, exposition of
each Scripture motto. In the large family of similar productions which have
issued from the press, he trusts that his little volume- not quite a
stranger to some who will peruse it- may find a humble place. Should it,
with the Holy Spirit's blessing, drop occasionally a Christ-endearing,
heart-soothing, soul-guiding, word in seasons of daily toil, conflict, or
trial, his utmost wish in its publication will be realized.
Robert Hall was wont to define domestic prayer as "that
border which keeps the web of my life from unraveling." With equal
appropriateness this beautiful remark will apply to morning religion. To
begin the day with God is the great secret of walking through the day with
God. What a privilege this the moment that "slumber's chain" is broken, and
we wake to duty and toil- perchance to temptation and trial- to raise the
soul to God, and seek to fill it at this Infinite Fountain of life, love,
and bliss, with such thoughts, and feelings, and purposes as will exert a
hallowing, soothing, and controlling influence upon the day! Before the
secular commences, to begin with the spiritual. Before care insinuates, to
preoccupy the mind with peace. Before temptation assails, to fortify the
heart with prayer. Before sorrow beclouds, to irradiate the soul with Divine
sunshine. What a precious privilege this! A morning without God is the
precursor of a uneasy, cloudy, and dark day. It is like a morning around
whose eastern horizon thick vapors gather, veiling the ascending sun, and
foreshadowing a day of storm. "The first thing I do when I awake in the
morning," remarks an aged saint of God, "is to ask the Holy Spirit to take
possession of my mind, my imagination, my heart, directing, sanctifying, and
controlling my every thought, feeling, and word." (See "Life in Jesus,
Memoir of Mrs. Mary Winslow.") What profound spiritual wisdom is there in
this conception! What a God-descending, heaven-returning spirit does it
betray! How the well of water in the soul springs up! "In the morning will I
direct my prayer unto You, and will look up." "Look up!" Ah! here is the
true and befitting attitude of the spiritual soul. Looking up for the day's
supply of grace to restrain, of power to keep, of wisdom to guide, of
patience to suffer, of meekness to endure, of strength to bear, of faith to
overcome, of love to obey, and of hope to cheer. Jesus stands at the
Treasury of Infinite grace, ready to meet every application, and to supply
every need. His fullness is for a poor, needy, asking people. He loves for
us to bring the empty vessel. Oh, to have our "morning thoughts" occupied
with God, and Christ, and the Holy Spirit, and heaven! Truly this is the
border which keeps the web of daily life from unraveling! Dear reader, let
your first thought be of God, and your first incense be to Jesus, and your
first prayer be to the Holy Spirit, and thus anointed with fresh oil, you
will glide serenely and safely through the day, beginning, continuing, and
ending it with God.
"Direct, control, suggest, this day,
All I design, or do, or say,
That all my powers, with all their might,
In Your sole glory may unite."
JANUARY 1.
"You have not passed this way heretofore." Joshua 3:4.
How solemn is the reflection that with a new cycle of
time commences, with each traveler to Zion, a new and untrodden path! New
events in his history will transpire- new scenes in the panorama of life
will unfold- new phases of character will develop- new temptations will
assail- new duties will devolve- new trials will be experienced- new sorrows
will be felt- new friendships will be formed- and new mercies will be
bestowed. How truly may it be said of the pilgrim journeying through the
wilderness to his eternal home, as he stands upon the threshold of this
untried period of his existence, pondering the unknown and uncertain future,
"You have not passed this way heretofore!"
Reader! if you are a believer in the Lord Jesus, you will
enter upon a new stage of your journey by a renewed surrender of yourself to
the Lord. You will make the cross the starting-point of a fresh setting-out
in the heavenly race. Oh, commence this year with a renewed application to
the "blood of sprinkling." There is vitality in that blood; and its fresh
sprinkling on your conscience will be as a new impartation of spiritual life
to your soul. Oh, to begin the year with a broken heart for sin, beneath the
cross of Immanuel! looking through that cross to the heart of a loving,
forgiving Father. Do not be anxious about the future; all that future God
has provided for. "All my times are in Your hands." "Casting all your care
upon Him, for He cares for you." "Cast your burden upon the Lord, and He
shall sustain you." Let it be a year of more spiritual advance. "Speak to
the children of Israel that they go forward." Forward in the path of duty-
forward in the path of suffering- forward in the path of conflict- forward
in the path of labor- and forward in the path to eternal rest and glory.
Soon will that rest be reached, and that glory appear. This new year may be
the jubilant year of your soul- the year of your release. Oh
spirit-stirring, ecstatic thought- this year I may be in heaven!
JANUARY 2.
"He knows the way that I take." Job 23:10.
Untried, untrodden, and unknown as your future path may
be, it is, each step, mapped, arranged, and provided for in the everlasting
and unchangeable covenant of God. To Him who leads us, who accepts us in the
Son of His love, who knows the end from the beginning, it is no new, or
uncertain, or hidden way. We thank Him that while He wisely and kindly veils
all the future from our reach, all that future- its minutest event- is as
transparent and visible to Him as the past. Our Shepherd knows the windings
along which He skillfully, gently, and safely leads His flock. He has
traveled that way Himself, and has left the traces of His presence on the
road. And as each follower advances- the new path unfolding at each step- he
can exultingly exclaim, "I see the footprint of my Lord; here went my
Master, my Leader, my Captain, leaving me an example that I should follow
His steps." Oh, it is a thought replete with strong consolation, and well
calculated to gird us for the coming year- the Lord knows and has ordained
each step of the untrodden path upon which I am about to enter.
Another reflection. The infinite forethought, wisdom, and goodness which
have marked each line of our new path, have also provided for its every
necessity. Each exigency in the history of the new year has been
anticipated. Each need will bring its appropriate and adequate supply- each
perplexity will have its guidance- each sorrow its comfort- each temptation
its shield- each cloud its light. Each affliction will suggest its lesson-
each correction will impart its teaching- each mercy will convey its message
of love. The promise will be fulfilled to the letter, "As your day, so shall
your strength be."
JANUARY 3.
"For it pleased the Father that in him should all
fullness dwell." Colossians 1:19
All wisdom to guide, all power to uphold, all love to
soothe, all grace to support, all tenderness to sympathize, dwells in
Christ. Let us, then, gird ourselves to a fresh taking hold of Christ. We
must walk through this year not by sight, but by faith- and that faith must
deal simply and directly, with Jesus. "Without me you can do nothing." But
with His strength made perfect in our weakness, we can do all things. Oh, be
this our course and our posture- "coming up from the wilderness leaning on
her Beloved." Living in a world of imperfection and change, we must expect
nothing perfect, nothing stable, in what we are, in what we do, or in what
we enjoy. But amid the dissolving views of the world that "passes away," let
us take firm hold of the unchangeableness of God. The wheels may revolve,
but the axle on which they turn is immoveable. Such is our covenant God.
Events may vary- providences may change- friends may die- feelings may
fluctuate- but God in Christ will know "no variableness, neither the shadow
of a turning." "Having loved His own that were in the world, He loved them
unto the end."
JANUARY 4.
"The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God,
and the communion of the Holy Spirit, be with you all. Amen." 2 Corinthians
13:14.
The doctrine of the Trinity is to the Christian the key
of the Bible. The Spirit imparting skill to use it, and the power, when
used, it unlocks this divine arcade of mysteries, and throws open every door
in the blest sanctuary of truth. But it is in the light of salvation that
its fitness and beauty most distinctly appear- salvation in which Jehovah
appears so inimitably glorious- so like Himself. The Father's love appears
in 'sending' His Son; the Son's love in 'undertaking' the work; the Holy
Spirit's love in 'applying' the work. Oh, it is delightful to see how, in
working out the mighty problem of man's redemption, the Divine Three were
thus deeply engaged. With which of these could we have dispensed? All were
needed; and had one been lacking, our salvation would have been incomplete,
and we would have been eternally lost. In bringing to glory the church they
thus have saved, the sacred Three are solemnly pledged. And in the matter of
prayer, how sustaining to faith, and how soothing to the mind, when we can
embrace, in our ascending petitions, the blessed Three in One. "For through
Him (the Son) we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father."
JANUARY 5.
"He that believes (on the Son of God) has the witness in
himself." 1 John 5:10.
The Spirit of God breaking, humbling, healing the heart;
taking his own truth and transcribing it upon the soul; witnessing, sealing,
sanctifying; opening the eye of the soul to the holiness of God's law- to
its own moral guilt, poverty, helplessness, and deep need of Christ's blood
and righteousness, thus leading it to rest on Him as on an all-sufficient
Savior; thus producing "righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit"-
this is the truth experienced- this is the religion of the heart; and all
other religion, beautiful as may be its theory, and orthodox as may be its
creed, is worth nothing! Without this experience there is no true belief in
God's Word. The revelation of God asks not for a faith that will merely
endorse its divine credentials; it asks not merely that skepticism will lay
aside its doubts, and receive it as a divine verity; it asks, yes, it
demands, more than this- it demands a faith that will fully, implicitly,
practically receive the momentous and tremendous facts it announces- a faith
that brings them home with a realizing power to the soul, and identifies it
with them- a faith that believes there is a hell, and seeks to escape it- a
faith that believes there is a heaven, and strives to enter it- a faith that
credits the doctrine of man's ruin by nature, and that welcomes the doctrine
of man's recovery by grace- in a word, a faith that rejects all human
dependence, and accepts as its only ground of refuge "the righteousness of
Christ, which is unto all, and upon all those who believe." Oh, this is the
true faith of the gospel! Do you have it, reader?
JANUARY 6.
"In the world you shall have tribulation." John 16:33.
Could we draw aside, for a moment, the thin veil that
separates us from the glorified saints, and inquire the path along which
they were conducted by a covenant God to their present enjoyments, how few
exceptions, if any, would we find to that declaration of Jehovah- "I have
chosen you in the furnace of affliction." All world tell of some peculiar
cross; some domestic, relative, or personal trial which attended them every
step of their journey; which made the valley they trod, truly, "a valley of
tears," and which they only threw off when the spirit, divested of its robe
of flesh, fled where sorrow and sighing are forever done away. God's people
are a sorrowful people. The first step they take in the divine life is
connected with tear's of godly sorrow; and, as they, travel on, sorrow and
tears do but trace their steps. They sorrow over the body of sin which they
are compelled to carry with them; they sorrow over their perpetual proneness
to depart, to backslide, to live below their high and holy calling. They
mourn that they mourn so little; they, weep that they weep so little; that
over so much indwelling sin, over so many and so great departures, they yet
are found so seldom mourning in the posture of one low in the dust before
God. In connection with this, there is the sorrow which results from the
needed discipline which the correcting hand of the Father who loves them
almost daily employs. For, in what light are all their afflictions to be
viewed, but as so many correctives, so much discipline employed by their God
in covenant, in order to make them "partakers of His holiness." Viewed in
any other light, God is dishonored, the Spirit is grieved, and the believer
is robbed of the great spiritual blessing for which the trial was sent.
JANUARY 7.
"Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift." 2 Cor.
9:15.
The Atonement itself precludes all idea of human merit,
and, from its very nature, proclaims that it is free. Consider the grandeur
of the Atonement- contemplate its costliness: incarnate Deity- perfect
obedience- spotless purity- unparalleled grace and love- acute and
mysterious sufferings- wondrous death, resurrection, ascension, and
intercession of the Savior, all conspire to constitute it the most august
sacrifice that could possibly be offered. And shall there be anything in the
sinner to merit this sacrifice? Shall God so lower its dignity, underrate
its value, and dishonor Himself, as to 'barter' it to the sinner? And if God
were so disposed, what is there in the sinner that could purchase it? Where
is the equivalent, where the price? "Alas!" is the exclamation of a
convinced soul, "I am a spiritual bankrupt; I lost everything in my first
parent who fell; I came into the world poor and helpless; and to the sin of
my nature I have added actual transgression of the most aggravated
character. I have nothing to recommend me to the favor of God; I have no
claim upon His mercy; I have no price with which to purchase it; and if
redemption is not free, without money and without price, I am undone." The
very costliness, then, of the Atonement puts it beyond all price, and stamps
it with infinite freeness.
JANUARY 8.
"Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from
all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good
works." Titus 2:14.
There is no victory, over the indwelling power of sin,
and there is no pardon for the guilt of sin, but as the soul deals with the
blood of Christ. The great end of our dear Lord's death was to destroy the
works of the devil. Sin is the great work of Satan. To overcome this, to
break its power, subdue its dominion, repair its ruins, and release from its
condemnation, the blessed Son of God suffered the ignominious death of the
cross. All that bitter agony which He endured- all that mental suffering-
the sorrow of His soul in the garden- the sufferings of His body on the
cross- all was for sin. See, then, the close and beautiful connection
between the death of Christ, and the death of sin. All true sanctification
comes through the cross. Reader, seek it there. The cross brought into your
soul by the eternal Spirit will be the death of your sins. Go to the cross-
oh, go to the cross of Jesus. In simplicity of faith, go. With the strong
corruption, go. With the burden of guilt, go, go to the cross. You will find
nothing but love there- nothing but welcome there- nothing but purity there.
The precious blood of Jesus "cleanses us from all sin." And while you are
kept low beneath the cross, your enemy dares not approach you, sin shall not
have dominion over you, nor shall Satan, your accuser, condemn you.
JANUARY 9.
"And the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter. And Peter
remembered the word of the Lord." Luke 22:61.
His Lord's solemn prediction of his sin he seemed quite
to have forgotten. But when that look met his eye, it summoned back to
memory the faded recollections of the faithful and tender admonitions that
had forewarned him of his fall. There is a tendency, in our fallen minds to
forget our sinful departures from God. David's threefold backsliding seemed
to have been lost in deep oblivion, until the Lord sent His prophet to
recall it to his memory. Christ will bring our forgotten departures to view,
not to upbraid or to condemn, but to humble us, and to bring us afresh to
the blood of sprinkling. The heart searching look from Christ turns over
each leaf in the book of memory; and sins and follies, inconsistencies and
departures, there inscribed, but long forgotten, are read and re-read, to
the deep sin-loathing and self-abasement of our souls. Ah! let a look of
forgiving love penetrate your soul, illuminating memory's dark cell, and how
many things, and circumstances, and steps in your past life will you
recollect to your deepest humiliation before God. And oh! how much do we
need thus to be reminded of our admonitions, our warnings, and our falls,
that we may in all our future spirit and conduct "walk humbly with God."
JANUARY 10.
"They took knowledge of them, that they had been with
Jesus." Acts 4:13.
We have a right to look for one or more of the moral
features of our dear Lord's character in His people. Some resemblance to His
image; something that marks the man of God; some lowliness of mind-
gentleness of temper- humility of deportment- charity- patience in the
endurance of affliction- meekness in the suffering of persecution-
forgiveness of injuries- returning good for evil- blessing for cursing- in a
word, some portion of "the fruit of the Spirit," which is "love, joy, peace,
long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance." If one
or more of these are not "in us and abound, so that they make us that we
shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus
Christ," and in a resemblance to His likeness, we have great reason to doubt
whether we have ever "known the grace of God in truth." That is indeed a
melancholy profession in which can be traced nothing that identifies the man
with Jesus; nothing in his principles, his motives, his tone of mind, his
spirit, his very looks, that reminds one of Christ- that draws the heart to
Him, that makes the name of Immanuel fragrant, and that lifts the soul in
ardent desires to be like Him too. This is the influence which a believer
exerts, who bears about with him a resemblance to his Lord and Master. A
holy man is a blessing, go where he may. He is a savor of Christ in every
place.
JANUARY 11.
"We have not a high priest which cannot be touched with
the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we
are, yet without sin." Hebrews 4:15.
See Him bearing our sicknesses and our sorrows; more than
this, carrying our iniquities and our sins. Think not that your path is a
isolated one. The incarnate God has trodden it before you, and He can give
you the clear eye of faith to see His footprint in every step. Jesus can
say, and He does say to you, "I know your sorrow; I know what that cross is,
for I have carried it. You have not a burden that I did not bear, nor a
sorrow that I did not feel, nor a pain that I did not endure, nor a path
that I did not tread, nor a tear that did not bedew my eye, nor a cloud that
did not shade my spirit, before you, and for you. Is it bodily weakness? I
once walked forty miles, to carry the living water to a poor sinner at
Samaria. Is it the sorrow of bereavement? I wept at the grave of my friend,
although I knew that I was about to recall the loved one back again to life.
Is it the frailty and the fickleness of human friendship? I stood by and
heard my person denied by lips that once spoke kindly to me; lips now
renouncing me with an oath that once vowed affection unto death. Is it
straitness of circumstance, the galling sense of dependence? I was no
stranger to poverty, and was often nourished and sustained by the charity of
others. Is it that you are houseless and friendless? So was I. The foxes
have their shelter, and the birds their nests; but I, though Lord of all,
had nowhere to lay my head; and often day after day passed away, and no
soothing accents of friendship fell upon my ear. Is it the burden of sin?
Even that I bore in its accumulated and tremendous weight when I hung
accursed upon the tree."
JANUARY 12.
"With You is the fountain of life." Psalm 36:9.
Behold, what a fountain of life is God! All
intelligences, from the highest angel in heaven to the lowliest creature on
earth, drawing every breath of their existence from Him. "In Him we live,
and move, and have our being." But He is more than this to the Church. He is
the fountain of love, as well as of life. The spirits of "just men made
perfect," and the redeemed on earth, satiate their thirsty souls at the
overflowing fullness of the Father's love. How much do we need this truth!
What stinted views, unjust conceptions, and wrong interpretations have we
cherished of Him, simply because we overlook His character as the Fountain
of living waters! We "limit the Holy One of Israel." We judge of Him by our
poor, narrow conception of things. We think that He is such a one as we
ourselves are. We forget, in our approaches, that we are coming to an
Infinite Fountain. That the heavier the demand we make upon God, the more we
shall receive, and that the oftener we come, the more are we welcome. That
we cannot ask too much. That our sin and His dishonor are, that we ask so
little. We forget that He is glorified in giving; and that the more grace He
metes out to His people, the richer the revenue of praise which He receives
in return. How worthy of such an infinite Fountain of love and grace is His
"unspeakable gift." It came from a large heart; and the heart that gave
Jesus will withhold no good thing from those who walk uprightly.
JANUARY 13.
And when He (the Comforter) has come, He will reprove
(marg. convince) the world of sin." John 16:8.
This is the great office of the Spirit- this is His first
work, prior to His bringing the soul to rest on the great sacrifice for sin.
Not a step will the soul take to Christ, until that soul has been brought in
guilty and condemned by the law of God. And this is the work of the Spirit.
"No man," says the excellent Newton, "ever did or ever will feel himself to
be a lost, miserable, and hateful sinner, unless he is powerfully and
supernaturally convinced by the Spirit of God." And what is the instrument
by which the Spirit thus powerfully and supernaturally convinces of sin? We
reply, the Law. "By the law is the knowledge of sin." "The law was our
schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ." The law, brought into the conscience
by the Holy Spirit; condemns the man, and leads him to condemn himself; it
holds up to view the holiness of God- the purity and inflexibility of every
precept- contrasts it with the unrighteousness, guilt, and misery, of the
sinner, and thus prostrates the soul in the dust, exclaiming in all the
lowliness of self-accusation, "the law is holy, just, and good- I am guilty,
guilty, guilty." Through this instrument- the law of God- and thus
effectually, does the Holy Spirit convince the soul of sin, and lay it low
before God.
JANUARY 14.
"Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Matthew
6:34.
It is a matter of much practical importance, that you
take heed not to anticipate or to forestall the promised grace. For every
possible circumstance in which you may be placed, the fullness of Christ and
the supplies of the covenant are provided. That provision is only meted out
as the occasions for whose history it was provided occur. Beware of creating
trouble by ante-dating it. Seen through the mist, the advancing object may
appear gigantic in size, and terrific in appearance; and yet the trouble you
so much dread may never come; or coming, it will assuredly bring with it the
"word spoken in due season." In the case of every child of God, calamity
never comes alone; it invariably brings Jesus with it.
JANUARY 15.
"Christ is all, and in all." Colossians 3:11.
Anything, even if it be the blessed production of the
Eternal Spirit of God, which takes the place of Christ, which shuts out
Christ from the soul, is dangerous. In the great work of salvation, Christ
must be everything or nothing; from Him solely, from Him entirely, from Him
exclusively, must pardon and justification be drawn. Whatever, then, rises
between the soul and Christ- whatever would tend to satisfy the soul in His
absence- whatever would take His place in the affections, must be
surrendered. Is it as the plucking out of a right eye? It must be yielded.
Is it as the cutting off of a right hand? Let it go. Christ in his Godhead,
Christ in his humanity, Christ in his great and finished work, Christ in his
mediatorial fullness, must be all in all to the believer.
JANUARY 16.
"If his children forsake my law, and walk not in my
judgments; If they break my statutes, and keep not my commandments; Then
will I visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with
stripes. Nevertheless my loving-kindness will I not utterly take from him,
nor suffer my faithfulness to fail." Psalm 89:30-33
Divine love chastens, because it sees the necessity for
the correction. The Lord's love is not a blind affection. It is all-seeing
and heart-searching. When has He ever shown Himself blind to the follies of
His people? When has His love been ignorant of their sinful departures? Was
He blind to the unbelief of Abraham? He chastened him for it. Was He blind
to the deception of Jacob? He chastened Him for it. Was He blind to the
impatience of Moses? He chastened him for it. Was He blind to the
self-applause of Hezekiah? He chastened him for it. Was He blind to the
adultery and murder of David? He chastened him for it. Was He blind to the
idolatry of Solomon? He chastened him for it. Was He blind to the
disobedience of Jonah? He chastened him for it. Was He blind to the
self-righteousness of Job? He corrected him for it. Was He blind to the
denial of Peter? He rebuked him for it. It is our mercy to know that love
marks our iniquity, and that love and not justice, grace and not vengeance,
holds the rod and administers the correction. Do you think, O chastened
child of the Lord, that your Father would have touched you where your
feelings are the acutest, where your anguish is the deepest, had He not seen
a real necessity? Had He marked no iniquity, no flaw, no departure, no spot,
you would have known what the "kisses of His mouth" were, rather than the
strokes of His rod. And yet believe it, for he has declared it, those
stripes of His rod are as much the fruit and the expression of His love as
are the "kisses of His mouth;" "For whom the Lord loves he chastens."
JANUARY 17.
"And it shall come to pass, that before they call, I will
answer: and while they are yet speaking, I will hear. Isaiah 65:24.
Remember, the throne of grace is near at hand. You have
not to travel far to reach it: no lengthy and painful journey; no wearisome
and mortifying pilgrimage. It is near at hand. Lying down or rising up-
going out or coming in- in the streets or in the house- in public or in
private- in the chamber or in the sanctuary, God is everywhere; and where He
is, there is a prayer-hearing and a prayer-answering God. In a moment, in
the greatest emergency, you may lift up your heart to the Lord, and in a
moment your cry shall be heard, and your request shall be granted. Remember,
the throne of grace is everywhere. On the land and on the sea- at home or
abroad- in the publicity of business or in the privacy of retirement, "the
eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and His ears are open unto their
cry." Wherever a believer goes, he bears about with him the intercession of
the Spirit below, and he has the consolation of knowing that he has the
intercession of Jesus above.
JANUARY 18.
"Mighty to save." Isaiah 63:1.
Let us glance at the authoritative manner with which He
executes His mighty acts of grace. Mark His deportment. Was there anything
that betrayed the consciousness of an inferior, the submission of a
dependant, the weakness of a mortal, or the imperfection of a sinner? Did
not the God shine through the man with majestic awe, when to the leper He
said, "I will, be clean;"- to the man with the withered hand, "Stretch forth
your hand;"- to the blind man, "Receive your sight;"- to the dead man, "I
say unto you, Arise;"- and to the tumultuous waves, "Peace, he still"? Dear
reader, are you an experimental believer in Jesus? Then this omnipotent
Christ is wedded to your best interests. He is omnipotent to save-
omnipotent to protect- omnipotent to deliver- omnipotent to subdue all your
iniquities, to make you humble, holy, and obedient. All power resides in
Him. "It pleased the Father that in Him"- in Him as the Mediator of His
Church- "all fullness should dwell." Not a corruption, but He is omnipotent
to subdue it: not a temptation, but He is omnipotent to overcome it: not a
foe, but He is omnipotent to conquer it: not a fear, but He is omnipotent to
quell it. "All power," is His own consoling language, "all power is given
unto Me in heaven and in earth."
JANUARY 19.
"We know that we have passed from death unto life." 1
John 3:14
For it is a thing of whose possession the believer may be
assured. He can speak of its possession with holy boldness and with humble
confidence. The life of God in the soul authenticates itself. It brings with
it its own evidence. Is it possible that a believer can be a subject of the
quickening grace of the Holy Spirit, and not know it? Possess union with
Christ, and not know it? The pardon of sin, and not know it? Communion with
God, and not know it? Breathing after holiness, and not know it? Impossible!
The life of God in the soul evidences itself by its actings. Are you
sensible of your sinfulness? Do you love the atoning blood? Is Jesus
precious to your soul? Do you delight in God, and in retirement for
communion with Him? Then, for your encouragement we remind you, that these
are not the actings of a soul lying in a state of moral death, nor are these
the productions of a soil still unregenerate. They proceed from the
indwelling life of God, and are the ascendings of that life to God, the
Fountain from where it flows. Thus the weakest believer in Jesus may humbly
exclaim, "This one thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see."
JANUARY 20.
"Partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light."
Colossians. 1:12.
The glorified saints are "the saints in light." No more
veilings of the Father's countenance- no more "walking in darkness, having
no light,"- no more mourning over Divine desertions, the suspensions of the
Father's experienced love- no more tears to dim the eye- no more clouds of
unbelief to darken the mind- no more mental despondency to enshroud the
spirit; they leave the gloom, and the mist, and the fog, and the darkness of
ignorance, error, and pollution behind them, and they flee to the regions of
light, to "the inheritance of the saints" of which "the Lamb is the light
thereof."
But it will be observed, that these glorified saints are said to be
"partakers of the inheritance." There is something very emphatic in the
word. We are "partakers" of it now, in Christ our Head. In consequence of
our union to Christ, the exalted Head of the Church, we are at present
"partakers" of this inheritance. We have the first dawnings of it in our
soul: the foretaste and the antepast, and, what is best of all, the
indwelling of the Spirit, who is the earnest of its possession; and if we
have the "earnest" of the inheritance in the possession of the Spirit, we
must, and shall assuredly, have the inheritance itself.
"Partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light." "Partakers" with all
the saints of God; "partakers" with the whole family of the elect;
"partakers" with all the children of adoption; "partakers" with Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob; with David, and Solomon, and with all who have gone before
us, with all who have entered heaven a little in advance; and "partakers"
with all the "ransomed of the Lord," who shall yet "come to Zion with songs,
and everlasting joy upon their heads, obtaining joy and gladness, their
sorrow and their sighing fleeing away!" Oh, who would not be a "partaker of
the inheritance of the saints in light"? Reader, if you are a humble
possessor of the inner life, you shall be a happy partaker of this glorious
inheritance- the life which is to come.
JANUARY 21.
"This also we wish, even your perfection." 2 Cor. 13:9
Seek larger degrees of grace. Let your standard be the
loftiest, and your aim the highest. Place no limit to that which God has not
limited. Never cease expecting until He ceases giving. If you are satisfied
with your present measure of grace, a worse sign you could not have. To be
content with being stationary in the divine life places you in a doubtful
position. It is an essential property of grace that it grows. It is the
immortal seed of God, and must, from its very nature, germinate. If your
faith does not increase, your doubts will increase; and if your grace does
not strengthen, your fears will strengthen. Fill the measure with pure
wheat, as one has said, and there will be no room for chaff. Aim after
elevated principles, if you desire elevated practice. Low principles
invariably lead to low practice. Watch against that which tends to impair
the vigor of your grace. Watch against your besetting sins- your greatest
infirmities- your strongest temptations. Beware of your own heart- beware of
self-confidence- beware of creature idolatry- beware of the world. Beware,
too, of any neglect of the means of grace. God has appointed His channels of
conveyance. Beware that you do not despise any one of them. A neglected
sanctuary- a forsaken throne of grace- an unread Bible- will soon bring
leanness into your soul. God has as much ordained the means of grace, as He
has appointed the grace of the means.
JANUARY 22.
"This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all
acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners." 1
Timothy 1:15.
He came into the world to save sinners- and He will save
you. His compassion inclines Him to save sinners- His power enables Him to
save sinners- His promise binds Him to save sinners. And, oh, how easy is it
to be saved when the Holy Spirit draws the heart to Christ! It is not great
faith, nor deep experience, nor extensive knowledge that are required. The
dimmest eye that ever looked to Christ- the feeblest hand that ever took
hold of Christ- the most trembling step that ever traveled to Christ, has in
it present salvation- has in it life eternal. The smallest measure of real
faith will take the soul to heaven. Yes! there is hope for the trembling
penitent. Jesus suffered to the uttermost, therefore He is able to "save to
the uttermost all that come unto God by Him."
JANUARY 23.
"Christ shall be magnified in my body, whether it be by
life or by death." Phil. 1:20.
You shall not lack a Christ when most you need Him. He,
who has been with you all your earthly pilgrimage, will be with you in its
last step. The Shepherd, who has guided you through the wilderness, will not
leave you when just emerging from it into the promised land. The Pilot, who
has conducted you across the stormy main, will not resign the government
just as the vessel enters the haven of rest. The Captain, who has conquered
for and conquered in you, will not leave you when on the eve of the final
conflict and the
certain victory. Oh no! Jesus will be with you to the last. Do not be
painfully anxious about a dying hour. Let all your solicitude be how you may
best glorify Him in your life- He will glorify Himself in your death. All
grace, all strength, all glory is laid up for you against that moment. And
when it comes, and not until then, will Jesus unlock the treasury and bring
it forth. But oh, to live to Him! To be able to say, "To me to live is
Christ." Strive for this. Whatever opposes it, take it to His grace, lay it
beneath, yes, fasten it to His cross. Oh! let Christ be everything to you in
life, then will He be everything to you in death.
JANUARY 24.
"Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil
heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God." Hebrews 3:12.
Observe to what cause He traces all departure from God-
unbelief. This is the sin which, in another place, he exhorts the Christian
to "lay aside," as "the sin which does so easily beset us." What is the easy
besetting sin of every child of God? Let any believer testify. Ask him to
point to his most subtle, constant, powerful, and dangerous foe. Ask him
what has the most easy access to his mind; what most entangles his feet, and
so impedes him in the race that is set before him; what has most easily and
frequently vanquished him; what has brought most distress to his soul, and
dishonor to God- and he will unhesitatingly reply, "My evil heart of
unbelief." He may have constitutional infirmities, and be assailed by
peculiar temptations, and may yield to "presumptuous sins," and these, in
secret and close transaction with God, may cause him deep bitterness and
humiliation of soul. But the sin which does so easily and so perpetually
beset him is the sin of unbelief, the fruitful cause of all other sin. For
as faith is the parent of all holiness, so is unbelief the parent of all
unholiness.
JANUARY 25.
"In all things it behooved him to be made like unto his
brethren." Hebrews 2:17.
Partaking of our nature, nothing that was human was
foreign to Him but the sin that tainted and defaced it. Separate from it all
that is fallen, exorcize every evil spirit from the soul, expel every low
sentiment from the mind, extirpate every selfish feeling from the heart, and
let all that remains of our humanity, be its pure affections, its exquisite
sensibilities, its refined feelings, its noble purposes, its lofty,
generous, and delicate sentiments of sympathy and love, and you have a
perfect portrait of our Lord and Savior. Our Lord, as man, was truly and
purely human. Entering Himself into every affinity of our nature, He became
intimate with each thought and feeling, with each sentiment and emotion,
with each sorrow and pang, with each tear, groan, and sigh of our humanity-
all, all were His, but its sin. Nor was it essential to the exquisite and
perfect tenderness and sympathy of His nature that He should, like us, be
sinful. No, this would have but beclouded, blunted, and impaired all the
gentle sensibilities and intellectual perceptions of His human soul, as in
us it has woefully done. The human susceptibilities which Jesus possessed
were all the deeper, richer, and intenser from the very fact of their
perfect purity, their entire sinlessness. How perfect, then, must be His
love, how tender His compassion, how exquisite His sympathy, since it flows
from a humanity all immaculate as His Godhead!
JANUARY 26.
"My times are in your hand." Psalm 31:15.
Let this precious truth divest your mind of all needless,
anxious care for the present or the future. Exercising simple faith in God,
"Do not be anxious about anything." Learn to be content with your present
lot, with God's dealings with, and His disposal of, you. You are just where
His providence has, in its inscrutable but all-wise and righteous decision,
placed you. It may be a position painful, irksome, trying, but it is right.
Oh, yes! it is right. Only aim to glorify Him in it. Wherever you are
placed, God has a work for you to do, a purpose through you to be
accomplished, in which He blends your happiness with His glory. And, when
you have learned the lessons of His love, He will transfer you to another
and a wider sphere, for whose nobler duties and higher responsibilities the
present is, perhaps, but disciplining and preparing you. Covet, then, to
live a life of daily dependence upon God. Oh, it is a sweet and holy life!
It saves from many a desponding feeling, from many a corroding care, from
many an anxious thought, from many a sleepless night, from many a tearful
eye, and from many an imprudent and sinful scheme. Repairing to the
"covenant ordered in all things and sure," you may confide children,
friends, calling, yourself, to the Lord's care, in the fullest assurance
that all their 'times' and yours are in His hand.
JANUARY 27.
"If Christ has not been raised, your faith is vain; you
are yet in your sins." 1 Corinthians 15:17.
Here was the grand evidence of the perfection and
acceptance of His sacrifice. The atoning work of Jesus was in itself perfect
and complete. It was all that God demanded, all that the Church required,
and all that law and justice asked. Yet there lacked one proof that this
work was accepted by God, and was satisfactory to divine justice. On the
cross He had uttered that wondrous cry, which sent gladness through all
heaven, and dismay through all hell- "It is finished." But, lo, He dies! The
Captain of our salvation is conquered! The promised Victor is vanquished! He
is laid in the grave! The stone covers Him! The earth imprisons Him! What
proof have we now that He was more than mortal? What evidence that He was
God? What divine seal is affixed to the great charter of redemption? What
pledge have we that it is complete? What security against the law's loud
thunder, and the consuming flames of justice- against the wrath of an
offended God, and the condemnation that is to come? In a word, how may we
know that all the divine perfections are harmonized in our salvation, and
that "whoever believes in Jesus shall not perish, but have everlasting
life"? Behold, the Father raises Him from the dead! This is the evidence-
this is the seal- this is the pledge- and this is the security. We need even
ask no more. It satisfied God; it satisfies us. At that moment all created
intelligences were summoned to witness the great and final seal affixed to
redemption's perfect work; and while every eye was thus intently bent upon
the yielding grave, the Father, in that stupendous act of His power and
love, utters His solemn voice, "This is my beloved Son, in whose person I
delight, and with whose work I am well satisfied." Oh, what majesty now
encircled the rising form of the incarnate God! Never had He appeared so
truly a Savior, never so illustrious a Redeemer, and never so perfectly the
Mediator and Advocate as now- sealed by God the Father, quickened by God the
Spirit, and radiant with the beams of His own divine glory.
JANUARY 28.
"Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again
for our justification." Romans 4:25.
Obeying, suffering, and rising as the Representative, the
Surety, the Head of His Church, may we not say, that what He did was not so
much His own act, as that of the Church in Him? He obeyed not for Himself,
nor for Himself did He die and rise again, but for His "body, the Church."
His resurrection, therefore, was as much His Church's entire release,
discharge, and justification, as it was His own. Then was the glorious
sentence of acquittal passed, then transpired the great act of
justification. The emerging of the Redeemer from the grave was the emerging
of the redeemed from all condemnation. His release from the cold grasp of
the destroyer was their release from the iron hand of the law. "He was taken
from prison and from judgment," and as He passed out of the court of God's
justice, and from the prison-house of death, the Church, purchased with His
blood, passed out with Him, legally and fully discharged, exclaiming, as the
last barrier yielded and the last fetter broke, "Who is he that condemns? It
is Christ who died; yes, rather, who has risen again!" Precious Redeemer!
what surpassing glory beams forth from your emptied sepulcher!
JANUARY 29.
"We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is." 1
John 3:2.
Who can fully tell of all the Redeemer's glory in heaven?
Or, were it fully revealed, what power to grasp, what faculties to
comprehend, what eye to behold, and what tongue to describe so lofty a theme
and so sublime a spectacle as this? But we shall behold it! We, too, shall
be glorified. The mind shall be adjusted to the mightiness of the theme, and
the eye shall be strengthened for the dazzling magnificence of the
spectacle. With every physical and mental and moral faculty perfectly
developed and sanctified, we shall be a glorified Church, placed in the
presence, and contemplating through eternity the glory, of a glorified Head.
We shall behold the Redeemer's glory. "Shall I see the King in His beauty?
What! my eye behold His glory?" Yes! if you see beauty in Jesus now, if your
eye beholds glory in Immanuel, feeble and dim though the view may be, so
surely shall you be with Him where He is, and shall contemplate the
ceaseless unfoldings of His unclouded glory, and that through all eternity.
JANUARY 30.
"I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore
with loving-kindness have I drawn you. Jeremiah 31:3.
The law of love is the law of God's moral government of
His people. By this, and by this alone, He rules them. All that is
disciplinary in His conduct is resolvable into love. It is by kindness,
"loving-kindness," yes, "marvelous loving-kindness," that He wins back their
truant hearts, and binds them closer to Himself. "I am the Lord, who
exercise loving-kindness." Oh, to imitate Him in this particular!- to be
like God in His kindness to the children of men. Then would there be less
sitting in the judgment-seat; less readiness to cast the first stone; less
harshness and censoriousness in our conduct and spirit towards others; and
more of that self-judging, self-condemning, and self-abasement, before the
holy, heart-searching, all-seeing Lord God, without which we may be awfully
deceived.
JANUARY 31.
"Therefore glorify the Lord in the fires, even the name
of the Lord God of Israel." Isaiah 24:15
Great is the glory brought to our incarnate God by the
sanctified afflictions of His saints. How deep these often are, let many
testify; and yet the deeper the affliction, the deeper the glory. Behold the
glory brought to God by Daniel in the den of lions; by Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abednego in the fiery furnace; and by Paul and Silas in the prison. And
what is their history but a type of all the afflicted members of God's
family? The Lord will be glorified in His people: therefore does He afflict,
and try, and chasten them. "The Lord tries the righteous." He has His den,
His prison, His furnace. He has His own mode, His appointed way, of proving
His work in their hearts; and, whether by the lions' den, or the prison, or
the furnace, He is glorified in them. To see how Christ can shut the mouth
of the lion, and can temper the devouring flame, and can unbar the doors of
the prison-house; how glorious thus appears His power! To mark the resigned
will, the subdued spirit, the mute submission, the cheerful acquiescence in
the deepest affliction- how glorious thus appears His grace! To behold the
daily strength imparted, the precious promises applied, the soothing
consolation experienced, how glorious thus appears his love! To see the
chaff scattered, and the dross consumed, and the mind brought into perfect
harmony with God's will; to say with David, " My soul is even as a weaned
child," -how glorious thus appears His wisdom! Oh, if these are the
blessings which blossom upon the rod, then welcome the rod! If this is the
glory brought to the name of Jesus by a process of sanctified affliction,
then welcome the affliction! Only see that He is truly glorified in you by
it. See that He is glorified, while you are in the furnace, by your passive
graces; see that He is glorified, when you have come forth from the furnace,
by your active graces. "When he has tried me, I shall come forth as gold."