| HOLY COVETOUSNESS 
												'Covet earnestly the best gifts,' wrote Paul to his Officers and 
			Soldiers at Corinth. Not the highest promotions, not the best 
			positions, but 'the best gifts,' those gifts which God bestows upon 
			the people who earnestly covet them and diligently seek Him. 
 Nero sat upon the throne of the world; he held the highest position 
			in the reach of man; but a poor, despised Jew in a dungeon in Rome, 
			whose head Nero cut off as a dog's head, possessed the best gifts; 
			and while Nero's name rots, Paul's name and works are a foundation 
			upon which the righteous build for centuries and millenniums.
 
 There were deacons, archdeacons, and venerable archdeacons, bishops, 
			and archbishops in England, some hundreds of years ago, who held 
			high places and power, and to whom other men bowed low; but a poor, 
			despised tinker in the filthy Bedford jail had coveted earnestly and 
			received 'the best gifts'; and while these church dignitaries are 
			forgotten by the mass of men, the world knows and loves the saintly 
			tinker, John Bunyan, and is ever being made better and lifted nearer 
			to God by his wise works and words.
 
 Comrades, you and I should seek these 'best gifts' with all our 
			hearts, and we should be satisfied with nothing short of them. It 
			makes but little difference what our position and rank; if we have 
			these gifts we shall have a name and bless the world; but without 
			them we shall prove to be only sham -- painted fire and hollow 
			mockery; and the greater our position and the higher our rank, the 
			greater shams we are, and the greater will be our shame in God's 
			great day of reckoning.
 
 What are these gifts?
 
 There is one which in a sense includes them all, the germ of them 
			all is in that -- the gift of the Holy Ghost. Have you received the 
			Holy Ghost? Is He dwelling in your heart? Covet Him. Live not a day 
			without His blessed presence in you.
 
 Then there is the gift of wisdom. Covet this. The world is full of 
			foolish men and women who don't know how to save themselves, nor how 
			to promote salvation and peace among their fellow foolish ones who 
			miss the way, who stumble along in darkness and perish in their 
			folly. The world needs wise men, men who know when to speak and what 
			to say; who know when to be silent; who know God and His way, and 
			walk in it.
 
 God gives wisdom to those that seek Him. ' If any of you lack 
			wisdom, let him ask of God,....and it shall be given him' -- if he 
			ask in faith without wavering. (James i.5.) Nothing will so 
			distinguish a man and exalt him among his fellows as fullness of 
			wisdom.
 
 There are several marks by which to know this heavenly wisdom. James 
			tells us what they are. He says (James iii. 17): 'The wisdom that is 
			from above is first --
 
 'Pure.' The man who is truly wise will keep himself pure. He will 
			flee from all impurity in thought, word, and act. Filthy habits of 
			every kind are broken and put away by this heavenly wisdom.
 
 'Then peaceable.' The man who has this gift and wisdom from God does 
			not meddle with strife. He seeks peace and runs after it. (i Peter 
			iii. 11.) He is essentially a peacemaker. He has learned the secret 
			of the 'soft answer ' which turns away wrath. He is not quick to 
			take offense.
 
 'Gentle.' The man who lives in the Spirit of this world may be rough 
			and boorish, but he who is wise from above is gentle and 
			considerate; and this gentleness may exist in the same heart with 
			lion-like strength and determination. Jesus was as 'a Lamb slain,' 
			but He was also 'the Lion of the tribe of Judah.' He was gentle as a 
			mother and at the same time immeasurably strong.
 
 'Easy to be entreated.' Though he is sinned against seventy times 
			seven in a day, yet this heavenly-wise man stands ready to forgive. 
			(Matthew xviii. 21- 35.) His heart is an exhaustless fountain of 
			good will. While, if it be his lot to rule, he rules 'with diligence 
			' (Romans xii. 8), and. if necessary, with vigor, yet he counts not 
			his life dear unto himself, but is willing to lay it down for the 
			good of his brethren. (Acts xx. 24; I John iii. 16.)
 
 'Full of mercy and good fruits.' Like his Heavenly Father he is rich 
			in mercy.' (Ephesians ii. 4.)
 
 'Without partiality ' He is not a party man. He rises above party 
			and class prejudice and is a lover of all men. He stands for 'the 
			fair deal.'
 
 'And without hypocrisy.' There is no guile in his heart, no white 
			lies on his tongue, no double-dealing in his actions. He is square 
			and open and above-board in all his ways and dealings. He lives in 
			constant readiness for the Judgment Day. Blessed be God for such 
			wisdom, which He waits to bestow upon all those who covet it and who 
			ask for it in faith. Covet wisdom.
 
 Then there is the gift of faith. Covet faith. In every man there is, 
			in some measure, the power to believe, but added to this is a gift 
			of faith which God bestows upon those who diligently seek Him. Covet 
			this, O my comrades! Be steady, strong, intelligent believers. 
			Cultivate faith. Stir it up in your hearts as you stir up the fire 
			in your stove. Feed your faith on God's Word.
 
 I once heard a mighty evangelist say that he used to pray and pray 
			for faith, but one day he read: 'Faith cometh by hearing, and 
			hearing by the Word of God.' (Romans x. 17.) Then he began to study 
			God's Word and hide it in his heart, and his faith began to grow and 
			grow until through faith his works girded the globe. Covet faith.
 
 Again, there is the gift of the spirit of prayer. Anybody can pray, 
			if he will, but how few have the spirit of prayer! How few make a 
			business of prayer, and wrestle with God for blessing and power and 
			wisdom! Real prayer is something more than a form of words, or a 
			hasty address to God just after breakfast, before the Meeting, or 
			before going to bed at night. It is an intense, intelligent, 
			persistent council with the Lord, in which we wait on Him, and 
			reason and argue and plead our cause, and listen for His reply, and 
			will not let Him go till He blesses us. But how few pray in this way 
			! Let us covet earnestly and cultivate diligently the spirit of 
			prayer.
 
 We should also covet the spirit of prophecy that is, the ability to 
			speak to the hearts and minds of men so that they shall see and feel 
			that God is in us and in our words. (I Corinthians xiv. 1-3.) We may 
			not be able to preach like the General, but there is probably not 
			one of us but might preach and prophesy far more pungently, 
			powerfully and persuasively than we do if we earnestly coveted this 
			gift and sought it in fervent prayer, faithful study, and constant 
			and deep meditation. God would help us; and how greatly it would add 
			to our power and usefulness! Let us earnestly covet this gift, 
			asking God to touch our lips with fire and with grace. The people 
			wondered at the gracious words of Jesus; and why should we not be 
			such mouthpieces for Him that they shall wonder at our gracious 
			words too!
 
 Solomon said, 'He that loveth pureness of heart, for the grace of 
			his lips the king shall be his friend.' And Paul said, 'Let your 
			speech be always with grace.'
 
 But, above all, covet a heart full and flaming and overflowing with 
			love. Pray for love. Stir up what love you have; exercise love. It 
			is good to take the Bible and, with a concordance, hunt out the word 
			'love' until we know all the Bible says on the subject. And then 
			with a heart full of love, pour it out on the children, the 
			Soldiers, backsliders, and cranky folks, and poor loveless sinners, 
			until that wondrous text has its fulfillment in us Let them that 
			love Him be as the sun when he goeth forth in His might.' (Judges v. 
			31.) How the frost and snows melt, the frozen earth thaws, the trees 
			burst into bud and leaf, the flowers blossom, the birds sing, and 
			all nature wakes to a revelry of life and joy when the sun goeth 
			forth in his might!
 
 And we may be so full of love and faith and power and the Holy Ghost 
			that we shall be like that. Hallelujah! Then indeed we shall be a 
			blessing. Souls dead in trespasses and sin shall come to life under 
			our loving ministry and message; the weak shall be made strong, the 
			sorrowing shall receive Divine comfort, the ignorant shall be 
			taught, and heavenly light shall illumine those that are in 
			darkness. Let us then 'covet earnestly the best gifts.'
 
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