Thirty-Eighth Week
I feel . . . more than ever that all is vanity, but what is for ever. We all know it, but how foolish all else will seem when we meet the blessed Lord.
I know I am a poor workman, but I know the hour will come when the only thing worth remembering — save eternal grace and Him who is the source . . . of it — if memory it can then be called, will be service and labour for Him who has loved us.
The time will soon come when we shall say of all that has not been Christ in our lives and ways, "That was all lost."
Faith should pierce through and see the things that are not seen: things get their true value in another world, and faith when vivid sees them there.
We shall sorrow at no sacrifice when we meet Him.
May the Lord graciously raise up labourers in His harvest. My heart is only there when not with Christ in heaven — there where through grace it will ever be. I find all that is not seen ever more, and alone, real. . . . I cannot conceive of having the heart anywhere else.
If we live to serve Christ, the sorrow of this world is worth while; but it is not the less sorrow in itself, whatever blessing may cheer us through it.
Do not faint . . . for if we really labour we must be more or less in conflict, trial and sorrow; for it is a work of faith, if a labour of love and of patience of hope; because though blessed fruits be by the way, and we may see them ripening, it is the great ingathering is the time of joy. And it is a distinct view and reference to that which gives our work a real, deep, holy character, such as His was, and will prove real in that day. You must labour in sorrow, for it is in the midst of evil, if you would reap in joy; and if we get our corn up into shocks, still it is unprotected out in the field, and we have the watchful care and anxiety till it is housed.
The new creation's stainless joy
Gleams through the present gloom;
That world of bliss without alloy —
The saint's eternal home.
Lot saw a well-watered plain and a city, and then dwelt in it on the earth, and consequently was in the midst of judgment; while Abraham sought a city out of sight, and he enjoyed the blessing and comfort of God being with him, go where he might.
Oh, the blessedness! when after all troubles and conflicts are over we shall "awake in his likeness." Believers, is there nothing in this to quicken your joy in meeting Jesus. Is there nothing in this to throw contempt upon the world and its unmeaning joys?
May the Lord's love and approbation be the things that govern us, and not the things that fade away.
Our Needs and His Fulness
"Grace to help in time of need."
Heb. 4:16
On to Canaan's rest still wending,
E'en thy wants and woes shall bring
Suited grace from high descending; —
Thou shalt taste of mercy's spring.
Thirty-Ninth Week
Wisdom and philosophy never found out God; He makes Himself known to us through our needs; necessity finds Him out. . . . The sinner's heart — yes, and the saint's heart too — is put in its right place in this way. I doubt much if we have ever learned anything solidly except we have learnt it thus.
We never ought to be discouraged, because the Lord we trust in never fails, nor can. It is just in 2 Timothy, when all was in ruin and declension, that Paul looks for his dear son to be strong in the faith: there never is so good a time for it, because it is needed, and the Lord always meets need.
I have learnt at the cross what God was to me as a sinner; and now I have to learn how He meets my wants as a saint, by feeling my need and bringing it to Him. To be hungry is not enough, I must be really starving to know what is in His heart towards me. When the prodigal was hungry he went to feed upon husks; but when he was starving, he turned to his father's house, and then learnt the love of the father's heart.
If we did but know a little more of the comfort and joy of drinking into the fulness of God's love, we should feel present circumstances to be as nothing.
Whenever there is real need in the wilderness, it is a sin to doubt whether God will help us or not. . . . Tempting the Lord is doubting the supply of His goodness in giving all that we need.
"Lord, if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean." The leper was sure of the power, but did not know the love that was there. He carries the love right up to the leper, "and touched him, saying, I will; be thou clean." If man touched a leper he was unclean and put out of the camp. But He cannot be defiled. . . . Holiness undefiled and undefilable carries to sinners the love they need.
"How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! ". . . This is a blessed theme, the theme of God's thoughts — higher, as the heavens are higher than the earth, than our thoughts, the theme of God's fathomless and illimitable grace. Here is real liberty. Do we know what it is to have our own thoughts, so narrow, so beggared, so mean, beaten down by God's high, generous, liberal thoughts — His thoughts of us as to what we are in Christ? . . . Jesus is the great thought of God — God's thoughts are expressed to us in Him. It is not an unfallen angel but a sinner quickened by the Spirit of God who can thus get into the deep thoughts of God.
Power
"All power is given unto me."
Matt. 28.18
"Behold, I give unto you power . . . over all the power of the enemy."
Luke 10:19
God has been glorified in Man;
Man sits at God's right hand:
Obedient in the race He ran,
Can now all power command.
Fortieth Week
When there are great arrangements for carrying on work, there is not the recognition of this inherent blessing, which "tarrieth not for the sons of men." I do not tarry for men if I have faith in God, and act upon the strength of that. Let a man act as the Lord leads him. The Spirit of God is not to be fettered by man. All power arises from the direct authoritative energy of the Holy Ghost in the individual.
Uncompromising firmness becomes us, yet calmness, and nothing keeps the soul so calm as a sense of grace. This is a sign of power, and moreover connected with humbleness. . . . A sense of nothingness, with the spirit of peace gives a power to surmount all things.
It is not the quantity but the quality of my labour which ever troubles me. I do nothing else, and labour . . . without stint, but it is inward power, abstraction of heart to Christ, so as to come from the fulness of power in Him, and have nothing there which hinders absolute association of mind with His thoughts and purposes — Himself. . . . It is a different thing coming in the consciousness that we come from Him, as in His confidence, and having His message.
It is Christ Himself that becomes your power — the power of Christ resting upon you. His power you get in your weakness as your power to walk through this world.
In prayer God is ours, power is put in motion.
It is all important for us to get to the end of ourselves. . . . All our work feels the effect of our state, and a heart full of Christ and the seriousness of dealing with souls for eternity, which we feel when full of Him, and speaking from Him, gives weight and unction to it.
We cannot be the full epistle of Christ unless we exhibit power over all obstacles — even over death. Death is given us. The believer living in the power of Christ's life has entire power over death.
We are not to be occupied with evil, or be in any way terrified with the adversary, as if the Lord had not the upper hand. He has overcome and is leading on to a full blessing, when the enemy will be bound. We must go on in the confidence that power belongs to Him and is in His hands
In every case it is where God would have us to be that we find His precious blessing. Without Him we can do nothing. When He works in His grace, how happy one is to be the instrument of His power and goodness! The exercises of our hearts even, in the difficulties of the work, lead us to Him, and everything that does this is in blessing for us.
There is power in Christ, there is sufficiency in Christ for all He would have you to do or be.
The Divine Heart
"He was moved with compassion."
Matt. 9:36
"The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy."
James 5:11
But who, Thy path of service,
Thy steps removed from ill,
Thy patient love to serve us,
With human tongue can tell?
O'er all, Thy perfect goodness
Rose blessedly divine;
Poor hearts oppressed with sadness,
Found ever rest in Thine!
Forty-First Week
"God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son." I get the knowledge of what was in God's heart as proved by His acts. He has thought of my state when I was a mere sinner and needed His love — God commendeth His love towards us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. I have thus the heart of God as the spring and source of all.
He can pity with the utmost tenderness for He came into the very centre of our misery.
If man had no heart for Christ, Christ had a heart for man.
There is heart enough in Jesus to open the heart of the vilest sinner. The sinner finds he has a title in God's heart when he can find none in his own. The woman that was a sinner loved much because much was forgiven her. It was a broken heart that met the heart of God, and the heart of God met a broken heart. It is wonderful when the heart of man really meets the heart of God.
The hand of God never deals but in concert with His heart of infinite love towards us. . . . And even if He sees good to allow a sorrow to arise — yea, to send it — it is from a hand which never mistakes, nor fails in answering to a heart whose love is perfect.
Jesus . . . could say, "I have glorified thee." The more evil there was done here, the more the Father was glorified. Never did irritation enter into Him; no contradiction ever prevented His having the same heart for man and for God.
Ah! when we study Christ's life down here, and what His heart and motives were, how shallow we are, . . . and how deep and far beyond our view the sufferings of His soul down here!
A broken heart is suited to a heart-healing God.
Whatever produces a care in us produces God's care for us.
There is much more reality in a living loving care of us than we are aware of. The Lord takes pains to assure us of His love, to persuade us of His love. "Ye are of more value than many sparrows."
"Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are." He puts them under the shelter of the name "holy Father." He looked for them to be kept with all the Father's tenderness.
Let us trust Him more; let us seek to get more from Him; we cannot look for too much of His favour who has not spared His Son for us.
Christ will be a sure friend, and even if we begin to sink in the water, will stretch out His hand and lift us up. It is sweet to have His hand in any case, even if our failing foot has led Him to stretch it out.
Practical Sanctification
"Fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ, unto the glory and praise of God."
Phil. 1:11
A holy Father's constant care
Keeps watch with an unwearying eye,
To see what fruits His children bear,
Fruits that may suit their calling high.
Forty-Second Week
You say you are in Christ . . . if you are in Christ, Christ is in you: then let me see Christ and nothing else.
The apostle prays for . . . the Philippians . . . "that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ" without a single stumble all the way along until the coming of the Lord.
The abiding in the sense of grace, in the presence of God, is the secret of all holiness, peace, and quietness of spirit.
If I wanted to describe a holy man, I should describe one who was always thinking of the Father's love and the Son's grace, and never of self.
Are you careful to avoid everything that dishonours Christ? Whatever destroys Christ's character before men is really a fall, though it may not be positively gross sin.
The characters that Christ takes in connection with these last days are these, "the holy, the true." Yes, that is the character He takes; that which He desires in His own, in their walk, when He is about to come. We have to watch over ourselves and over our brethren that it may be so.
I do not believe that when people have really got out of Romans 7 they get back into it. One may have truly received forgiveness of sins and had joy; but self is not known; and it is necessary to know oneself to be delivered. . . . Until we are delivered, sin has dominion; when we are, Christ is our strength.
If you are tempted, tried, look straight to Him; little by little you will become accustomed to believe in His goodness, though it be necessary to recur to it constantly: but the eye directed to Him makes Him known to the heart. Looking to Him who delivers us from ourselves is what excludes the thought of self, and sanctifies us . . . in a practical way.
In general those who say much about . . . being dead to nature do so because they are not. . . . In the epistle of Romans . . . we get "dead to sin" . . . "dead to the law" . . . it is also said, "if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin." But dead to nature is, in all that we are said to be dead to, quite unknown to scripture in word or thought.
Let us beware, in ordinary things, of the first step that would separate us from inward holiness, and that separation of heart to Him which gives us His secret, light from above on all that is around; for the secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him.
We never have any excuse for any sin of act or thought, because Christ's grace is sufficient for us, and God is faithful not to suffer us to be tempted above that which we are able to bear.
Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. . . . Is this our simple purpose? . . . In any common act of life, our question should be, is this acceptable to the Lord? In purchasing an article of dress, it should not be simply, will this suit me? but is it acceptable to the Lord, does it suit Him?
Praise
"Unto him that loved us . . . be glory and dominion for ever and ever."
Rev. 1:5, 6
We'll praise Thee, glorious Lord!
Who died to set us free:
No earthly songs can joy afford
Like heavenly melody.
Forty-Third Week
There is no other subject of praise for heaven than for earth; the blood of Christ has the same efficacy on earth as in heaven: that for which they praise God there is equally true for us. Their harps are better tuned than ours, but their song is the same.
Let us be persuaded to praise the Lord alone. He only is worthy of being praised, revered and adored. The song of the blessed (Rev. 5) praises none but Him who redeemed them with His blood. It contains not one word of praise for any of their own number. . . . Let us strive to bring our hearts into unison with that song. . . . This will be our happiness even here below, and contribute to God's glory, which is wronged by the praise that Christians too often bestow on each other.
"Blessed are they that dwell in thy house: they will be still praising thee." Nothing but praise becomes those who shall dwell in God's house; it will be their unwearied, untiring employ — continual praise.
The Lord says, "I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praise to thee." . . . May we be in tune with our heavenly Guide! He shall well conduct our praises, and agreeably to the Father. His ear shall be attentive when He hears this voice lead us.
In spirit, we are in heaven. We are in Christ who fills it with His glory and His perfections. . . . Holiness and love and joy characterize the land. They are the fruits which grow there spontaneously, as are the thanksgivings that arise in the hearts of those who are there through redeeming power.
Any one can rejoice in the Lord when the Lord gives him what he likes. "Bless the Lord at all times: " that is the testing point. "In everything give thanks."
Are your voices tuned to praise with Christ? He is gone from the wrath and darkness of the cross into the light and love of His Father's, presence, and is praising. Can you praise with Him? There all trembling disappears. . . . Oh, how those who seek Him lag behind His heart. . . . If you seek Him, His word warrants that you shall praise Him.
The Christian may sometimes say, I am not in a state to praise; he may, it is true, be more or less capable of doing it well, but he is always in a state to do it . . . because Christ is always suitable to a sinful soul. His praises will be modified, but he will always praise.
"Oh Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me . . . Thou winnowest my path [marg.] and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways." . . . God is not forming a people for their own, but "for His praise." He is shewing them what they are in themselves, in order to shew them by His Spirit the blessed suitability of Christ to all their need.
Cheer for Pilgrims
"Strangers and pilgrims."
1 Peter 2:11
"Be of good cheer."
John 16:33
This world is a wilderness wide:
I have nothing to seek or to choose —
I've no thought in the waste to abide —
I've nought to regret nor to lose.
Forty-Fourth Week
We are on a pilgrimage, and God makes us feel it in our circumstances. He detaches us from what is dearest down here; He weans us, and then without being aware of it, we ripen for heaven.
I was always a solitary soul, thinking more for, than with people: but it is good to be more alone — most good, if it be more alone with Christ. What a place that is!
"God who comforteth them that are cast down." Ah, I say, it is worth while being cast down for such comfort as that! . . . and think what it is to have God occupying Himself with us in our sorrows when we remember who He is.
I feel increasingly, what we all know, that the work for God is the work of God.
When the soul is down, like a ship when the tide is low, it is in danger of shoals and sandbanks; but when the tide is up there are no sandbanks, because the ship is lifted up above them all. Thus when the soul is happy in Christ it will go on peacefully, independently of all the trials we may be called to meet with in our fellow saints. . . . And thus going on in the tide of divine goodness, forgetting everything else, we can walk happily together, being occupied with Christ, and not with each other.
If Christ be between our hearts and the suffering, instead of the suffering getting between our hearts and Christ, we shall find the place of suffering to be the best place on the face of the earth for us, as all suffering will then bring us nearer Christ.
Be assured that God does more in us than we do for Him; and that what we do is only for Him in proportion as it is He Himself who works it in us.
The truth needs not man: man needs the truth.
Sweeping away snow is long work; if the sun is well up, it is gone. A night covers the earth afoot deep — what millions of men could not do, a day takes it all away if God's warmth comes in.
Do not be afraid of . . . consequences. If we do right God will take care of them.
I cannot do the work I did, but I have His work to do as long as He gives it to me.
We should like to go always with a full, favourable wind, but this does not make a good sailor.
Not a single thing in which we have served Christ shall be forgotten . . . all shall come out that is real, and what is real is Christ in us, and this only.
I have often seen isolated souls, if they kept close to the Lord, making more progress than those who enjoyed greater spiritual advantages. The latter thought that all that they enjoyed was of their faith, when it was not, whilst what one possesses alone, at least one possesses with God.
The Will of God
My meat is to do the will of him that sent me."
John 4:34
Yet I will wait, in labour still,
In Thy blest service here;
What Thou hast given me to fulfil —
Thy will — to me is dear!
Forty-Fifth Week