Day 1
"The fruit of the
Spirit is gentleness" (Gal. v. 22).
Nature's harshness
has melted away and she is now beaming with the smile of spring, and
everything around us whispers of the gentleness of God. This beautiful fruit
is in lovely harmony with the gentle month of which it is the keynote. May
the Holy Spirit lead us, beloved, these days, into His sweetness, quietness,
and gentleness, subduing every coarse, rude, harsh, and unholy habit, and
making us like Him, of whom it is said, "He shall not strive, nor cry, nor
cause His voice to be heard in the streets."
The man who is
truly filled with Jesus will always be a gentleman. The woman who is
baptized of the Holy Ghost, will have the instincts of a perfect lady,
although low born and little bred in the schools of earthly refinement.
Beloved, let us receive and reflect the gentleness of Christ, the spirit of
the holy babe, until the world will say of us, as the polished and infidel
Chesterfield once said of the saintly Fenelon, "If I had remained in his
house another day, I should have had to become a Christian."
Lord, help us
to-day, to so yield to the gentle Dove-Spirit, that our lives shall be as
His life.
|
Day 2
"Always causeth us
to triumph" (II. Cor. ii. 14).
How these words
help us. Think of them when the people rasp you, when the devil pricks you
with his fiery darts, when your sensitive, self-willed spirit chafes or
frets; let a gentle voice be heard above the strife, whispering, "Keep
sweet, keep sweet!" And, if you will but heed it quickly, you will be saved
from a thousand falls and kept in perfect peace.
True, you cannot
keep yourself sweet, but God will keep you if He sees that it is your fixed,
determined purpose to be kept sweet, and to refuse to fret or grudge or
retaliate. The trouble is, you rather enjoy a little irritation and
morbidness. You want to cherish the little grudge, and sympathize with your
hurt feelings, and nurse your little grievance.
Dear friends, God
will give you all the love you really want and honestly choose. You can have
your grievance or you can have the peace that passeth all understanding; but
you cannot have both.
There is a balm
for a thousand heartaches, and a heaven of peace and power in these two
little words--KEEP SWEET.
|
Day 3
"My peace I give
unto you" (John xiv. 27).
Here lies the
secret of abiding peace--God's peace. We give ourselves to God and the Holy
Spirit takes possession of our breast. It is indeed "Peace, Peace." But it
is just then that the devil begins to turn us away, and he does it through
our thoughts, diverting or distracting them as occasion requires. This is
the time to prove the sincerity of our consecration and the singleness of
our heart. If we truly desire His Presence more than all else, we will turn
away from every conflicting thought and look steadily up to Jesus. But if we
desire the gratification of our impulse more than His Presence, we will
yield to the passionate word or the frivolous thought or the sinful
diversion, and when we come back our Shepherd has gone, and we wonder why
our peace has departed. Failure occurs often in some trifling thing, and the
soul failure has occurred in some trifling thing, usually a thought or word,
and the soul which would not have feared to climb a mountain has really
stumbled over a straw.
The real secret of
perfect rest is to be jealously, habitually occupied with Jesus.
|
Day 4
"Greater is He
that is in you than he that is in the world" (I. John iv. 4).
Satan loves to
trip us over little things. The reason of this is because it is generally a
greater victory for him, and shows that he can upset us by a shaving and
knock us down with a straw. It is the old boast of the Jebusite, when they
told David they could defend Jerusalem by a garrison of the blind and lame.
Most of us get on better in our great struggles than we do in our little
ones. It was over a little apple that Adam fell, but all the world was
wrecked. Look out, beloved, for the little stumbling blocks, and do not let
Satan laugh at you, and tell his myrmidons how he tripped you over an orange
peel. And, too, when the devil wants to stop some great blessing in our
lives, he generally throws some ugly shadow over it and makes it look
distasteful to us. How many of us have been keeping back from truths, places
and persons in which God has reappeared, the greatest blessing of our lives,
and the devil has succeeded in keeping us away from them by some false or
foolish prejudice!
|
Day 5
"If ye then be
risen" (Col. iii. 1).
God is waiting
this morning to mark the opening hours for every ready and willing heart
with a touch of life and power that will lift our lives to higher pleasures
and offer to our vision grander horizons of hope and holy service.
We shall not need
to seek far to discover our risen Lord. He was in advance even of the
earliest seeker that Easter morning, and He will be waiting for us before
the break of day with His glad "All Hail," if we have only eyes to see and
hearts to welcome and obey Him.
What is His
message to us this spring time? "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those
things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. For
ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God."
It is not risen
with Christ, but resurrected. It is not rising a little higher in the old
life, but it is rising from the dead. The resurrection will mean no more
than the death has meant. Only so far as we are really dead shall we live
with Him.
|
Day 6
"Reckon ye also
yourselves to be alive unto God" (Rom. vi. 11).
Death is but for a
moment. Life is forevermore. Live, then, ye children of the resurrection, on
His glorious life, more and more abundantly, and the fulness of your life
will repel the intrusion of self and sin, and overcome evil with good, and
your existence will be, not the dreary repression of your own struggling,
but the springing tide of Christ's spontaneous overcoming life.
Once in a
religious meeting a dear brother gave us a most exhilarating talk on the
risen life. Then another brother got up and talked for a long time on the
necessity of self-crucifixion. A cold sweat fell over us all, and we could
scarcely understand why. But after he had got through, a good sister
clarified the whole situation by saying, that "Pastor S. had taken us all
out of the grave by his address, and then Pastor P. has put us back again."
Don't go back into
the grave again after you have got out, but live like Him, who "liveth and
was dead, and lo! He is alive forevermore, and has the keys of hell and of
death." Keep out of the tomb, and keep the door locked, and the keys in His
risen hands.
|
Day 7
"I travail in
birth again until Christ be formed in you" (Gal. iv. 19).
It is a blessed
moment when we are born again and a new heart is created in us after the
image of God. It is a more blessed moment when in this new heart Christ
Himself is born and the Christmas time is reproduced in us as we, in some
real sense, become incarnations of the living Christ. This is the deepest
and holiest meaning of Christianity. It is expressed in Paul's prayer for
the Galatians. "My little children, for whom I travail in birth again till
Christ be formed in you."
There will yet be
a more glorious era when we, like Him, shall be transformed and transfigured
into His glory, and in the resurrection shall be, in spirit, soul and body,
even as He.
Let us live, under
the power of the inspiring thought, incarnations of Christ; not living our
life, but the Christ-life, and showing forth the excellencies, not of
ourselves, but of Him who hath called us "out of darkness into His marvelous
light"; so our life shall be to all the re-living in our position of the
Christ life, as He would have lived it, had He been here.
|
Day 8
"Except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and die" (John xii. 24).
Death and
resurrection are the central ideas of nature and Christianity. We see them
in the transformation of the chrysalis, in the buried seed bursting into the
bud and blossom of the spring, in the transformation of the winding sheet of
winter to the many tinted robes of spring. We see it all through the Bible
in the symbol of circumcision, with its significance of death and life, in
the passage of the Red Sea and the Jordan leading out and leading in, and in
the Cross of Calvary and the open grave of the Easter morning. We see it in
every deep spiritual life. Every true life is death-born, and the deeper the
dying the truer the living. We doubt not the months that have been passing
have shown us all many a place where there ought to be a grave, and many a
lingering shred of the natural and sinful which we would gladly lay down in
a bottomless grave. God help us to pass the irrevocable sentence of death
and to let the Holy Ghost, the great undertaker, make the interment eternal.
Then our life shall be ever budding and blossoming and shedding fragrance
over all.
|
Day 9
"All hail" (Matt.
xxviii. 9).
It was a stirring
greeting which the Lord of Life spake to His first disciples on the morning
of the resurrection. It is a bright and radiant word which in His name we
would speak to His beloved children at the commencement of another day. It
means a good deal more than appears on the surface. It is really a prayer
for our health, but which none but those who believe in the healing of the
body can fully understand. A thoughtful friend suggested once that the word
"hail" really means health, and it is just the old Saxon form of the word.
We all know that a hale person is a healthy person. Our Lord's message,
therefore, was substantially that greeting which from time immemorial we
give to one another when we meet. "How is your health?" "How are you?" or,
better still, "I wish you health." Christ's wish is tantamount to a promise
and command. It is very similar to the Apostle John's benediction to his
dear friend Gaius, and we would re-echo it to our beloved friends according
to the fulness of the Master's will.
|
Day 10
"I am alive
forevermore" (Rev. i. 18).
Here is the
message of the Christ of the cross and the still more glorious and precious
Christ of the resurrection. It is beautiful and inspiring to note the touch
of light and glory with which these simple words invest the cross. It is not
said I am He that was dead and liveth, but "I am He that liveth and was
dead, but am alive forevermore." Life is mentioned before the death. There
are two ways of looking at the cross. One is from the death side and the
other from the life side. One is the Ecce Homo and the other is the
glorified Jesus with only the marks of the nails and the spear. It is thus
we are to look at the cross. We are not to carry about with us the mould of
the sepulchre, but the glory of the resurrection. It is not the Ecce Homo,
but the Living Christ. And so our crucifixion is to be so complete that it
shall be lost in our resurrection and we shall even forget our sorrow and
carry with us the light and glory of the eternal morning. So let us live the
death-born life, ever new and full of a life that can never die, because it
is "dead and alive forevermore."
|
Day 11
"Whosoever will
save his life shall lose it" (Luke ix. 24).
First and foremost
Christ teaches resurrection and life. The power of Christianity is life. It
brings us not merely law, duty, example, with high and holy teaching and
admonition. It brings us the power to follow the higher ideal and the life
that spontaneously does the things commanded. But it is not only life, but
resurrection life.
And it begins with
a real crisis, a definite transaction, a point of time as clear as the
morning dawn. It is not an everlasting dying and an eternal struggle to
live. But it is all expressed in a tense that denotes definiteness,
fixedness and finished action. We actually died at a certain point and as
actually began to live the resurrection life.
Let us reckon
ourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus
Christ.
And death is only
the pathway and portal,
To
the life that shall die nevermore;
And
the cross leadeth up to the crown everlasting,
The
Jordan to Canaan's bright shore.
|
Day 12
"Tell me where
Thou makest Thy flock to rest at noon" (Song of Solomon i. 7).
Beloved, do you
not long for God's quiet, the inner chambers, the shadow of the Almighty,
the secret of His presence? Your life has been, perhaps, all driving and
doing, or perhaps straining, struggling, longing and not obtaining. Oh, for
rest! to lie down upon His bosom and know that you have all in Him, that
every question is answered, every doubt settled, every interest safe, every
prayer answered, every desire satisfied. Lift up the cry, "Tell me, O Thou
whom my soul loveth, where Thou feedest, where Thou makest Thy flock to rest
at noon"!
Blessed be His
name! He has this for us, His exclusive love--a love which each individual
somehow feels is all for himself, in which he can lie alone upon His breast
and have a place which none other can dispute; and yet His heart is so great
that He can hold a thousand millions just as near, and each heart seem to
possess Him just as exclusively for his own, even as the thousand little
pools of water upon the beach can reflect the sun, and each little pool
seems to have the whole sun embosomed in its beautiful depths. And Christ
can teach us this secret of His inmost love.
|
Day 13
"Abide in Me"
(John xv. 4).
Christianity may
mean nothing more than a religious system. Christian life may mean nothing
more than an earnest and honest attempt to follow and imitate Christ.
Christ life is
more than these, and expresses our actual union with the Lord Jesus Christ,
and He is undoubtedly in us as the life and source of all our experience and
work.
This conception of
the highest Christian life is at once simpler and sublimer than any other.
We do not teach in these pages, that the purpose of Christ's redemption is
to restore us to Adamic perfection, for if we had it we should lose it
to-morrow; but rather to unite us with the Second Adam, and lift us up to a
higher plane than our first parents ever knew.
This is the only
thing that can reconcile the warring elements of diverse schools of teaching
with respect to Christian life.
The Spirit of God
will lead us to have no controversy respecting mere theories, but simply
hold to the person and life of Jesus Christ Himself, and the privilege of
being united to Him, and living in constant dependence upon His keeping
power and grace.
|
Day 14
"But God" (Luke
xii. 20).
What else do we
really need? What else is He trying to make us understand? The religion of
the Bible is wholly supernatural. The one resource of faith has always been
the living God, and Him alone. The children of Israel were utterly dependent
upon Jehovah as they marched through the wilderness, and the one reason
their foes feared them and hastened to submit themselves was that they
recognized among them the shout of a King, and the presence of One compared
with whom all their strength was vain.
"Wherein," asked
Moses, "shall we be separated from all other peoples of the earth, except it
be in this that Thou goest before us."
A church relying
on human wisdom, wealth or resources, ceases to be the body of Christ and
becomes an earthly society. When we dare to depend entirely upon God and
without doubt, the humblest and feeblest agencies will become "mighty
through God, to the pulling down of strongholds." May the Holy Spirit give
to us at all times, His own conception of these two great words, "But God."
|
Day 15
"I press toward
the mark" (Phil. iii. 14).
We have thought
much about what we have received. Let us think of the things we have not
received, of some of the vessels that have not yet been filled, of some of
the places in our life that the Holy Ghost has not yet possessed for God,
and signalized by His glory and His presence.
Shall the coming
months be marked by a diligent, heart-searching application of "the rest of
the oil," to the yet unoccupied possibilities of our life and service?
Have we known His
fulness of grace in our spiritual life? Have we tasted a little of His
glory? Have we believed His promise for the mind, the soul, the spirit? Have
we known all His possibilities for the body? Have we tested Him in His power
to control the events of providence, and to move the hearts of men and
nations? Has He opened to us the treasure-house of God, and met our
financial needs as He might? Have we even begun to understand the ministry
of prayer, as God would have us exercise it? God give us "the rest of the
oil"!
|
Day 16
"It is not in man
that walketh to direct his steps" (Jer. x. 23).
United to Jesus
Christ as your Redeemer, you are accepted in the Beloved. He does not merely
take my place as a man and settle my debts. He does that and more. He comes
to give a perfect ideal of what a man should be. He is the model man, not
for us to copy, for that would only bring discouragement and utter failure;
but He will come and copy Himself in us. If Christ lives in me, I am another
Christ. I am not like Him, but I have the same mind. The very Christ is in
me. This is the foundation of Christian holiness and Divine healing. Christ
is developing a perfect life within us. Some say man can never be perfect.
"It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps." We are all a lot of
failures. This is true, but we should go further. We must take God's
provision for our failure and rise above it through His grace. We must take
Jesus as a substitute for our miserable self. We must give up the good as
well as the bad and take Him instead. It is hard for us to learn that the
very good must go, but we must have Divine impulses instead of even our best
attainments.
|
Day 17
"To him that
overcometh, will I give" (Rev. ii. 17).
A precious secret
of Christian life is to have Jesus dwelling within the heart and conquering
things that we never could overcome. It is the only secret of power in your
life and mine, beloved. Men cannot understand it, nor will the world believe
it; but it is true, that God will come to dwell within us, and be the power,
and the purity, and the victory, and the joy of our life. It is no longer
now, "What is the best that I can do?" but the question is, "What is the
best that Christ can do?" It enables us to say, with Paul, in that beautiful
passage in Philippians, "I know both how to be abased, and I know how to
abound, everywhere and in all things, I am instructed both to be full and to
be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through
Christ, which strengtheneth me."
With this
knowledge I go forth to meet my testings, and the secret stands me good. It
keeps me pure and sweet, as I could never keep myself. Christ has met the
adversary and defeated him for me. Thanks be unto God who giveth us the
victory through Jesus Christ.
|
Day 18
"For ye are dead"
(Col. iii. 3).
Now, this
definite, absolute and final putting off of ourselves in an act of death, is
something we cannot do ourselves. It is not self-mortifying, but it is dying
with Christ. There is nothing can do it but the Cross of Christ and the
Spirit of God. The church is full of half dead people who have been trying,
like poor Nero, to slay themselves for years, and have not had the courage
to strike the fatal blow. Oh, if they would just put themselves at Jesus'
feet, and let Him do it, there would be accomplishment and rest. On that
cross He has provided for our death as well as our life, and our part is
just to let His death be applied to our nature just as it has been to our
old sins, and then leave it with Him, think no more about it, and count it
dead, not recognizing it any longer as ourselves, but another, refusing to
listen or fear it, to be identified with it, or even try to cleanse it, but
counting it utterly in His hands, and dead to us forever, and for all our
new life depending on Him at every breath, as a babe just born depends upon
its mother's life.
|
Day 19
"He purgeth it
that it may bring forth more fruit" (John xv. 2).
Recently we passed
a garden. The gardener had just finished his pruning, and the wounds of the
knife and saw were just beginning to heal, while the warm April sun was
gently nourishing the stricken plant into fresh life and energy. We thought
as we looked at that plant how cruel it would be to begin next week and cut
it down. Now, the gardener's business is to revive and nourish it into life.
Its business is not to die, but to live. So, we thought, it is with the
discipline of the soul. It, too, has its dying hour; but it must not be
always dying: Rather reckon ourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Death is but a moment. Live, then,
ye children of the resurrection, on His glorious life more and more
abundantly, and the fulness of your life will repel the intrusion of self
and sin, and overcome evil with good, and your existence will be, not the
dreary repression of your own struggling, but the springing tide of Christ's
spontaneous overcoming and everlasting life.
|
Day 20
"Ye are not your
own" (I. Cor. vi. 19).
What a privilege
that we may consecrate ourselves. What a mercy that God will take us
worthless worms. What rest and comfort lie hidden in those words, "Not my
own." Not responsible for my salvation, not burdened by my cares, not
obliged to live for my interests, but altogether His; redeemed, owned,
saved, loved, kept in the strong, unchanging arms of His everlasting love.
Oh, the rest from sin and self and cankering care which true consecration
brings! To be able to give Him our poor weak life, with its awful
possibilities and its utter helplessness, and know that He will accept it,
and take a joy and pride in making out of it the utmost possibilities of
blessing, power and usefulness; to give all, and find in so doing we have
gained all; to be so yielded to Him in entire self surrender, that He is
bound to care for us as for Himself. We are putting ourselves in the hands
of a loving Father, more solicitous for our good than we can be and only
wanting us to be fully submitted to Him that He may be more free to bless
us.
|
Day 21
"We will come unto
Him and make our abode with Him" (John xiv. 23).
The Bible has
always held out two great promises respecting Christ. First, I will come to
you; and, second, I will come into you. For four thousand years the world
looked forward to the fulfilment of the first. The other is the secret which
Paul says has been hid from ages and generations, but is now made manifest
to His saints, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. This is just as
great a revelation of God as the incarnation of Jesus, for it makes you like
Christ, as free from sin as He is. If Christ is in you, what will be the
consequences? Why, He will put you aside entirely. The I in you will go. You
will say, "Not I, but Christ." Christ undertakes your battles for you.
Christ becomes purity and grace and strength in you. You do not try to
attain unto these things, but you know you have obtained them in Him. It is
glorious rest with the Master. Jesus does not say, "Now we must bring forth
fruit, we must pray much, we must do this or that." There is no constraint
about it, except that we must abide in Him. That is the center of all joy
and help.
|
Day 22
"Fight the good
fight of faith" (I. Tim. vi. 12).
Oh, beloved, how
must God feel about us after He has given us His heart's blood, put so many
advantages in our way, expended upon us so much grace and care, if we should
disappoint Him. It makes the spirit cry, "Who is sufficient for these
things?" Evermore I can see before me the time when you and I shall stand on
yonder shore and look back upon the years that have been, these few short
years of time. Oh, may we cast ourselves at Jesus' feet and say: "Many a
time have we faltered; many a hard fight has come, but Thou hast kept me and
held me, thanks to God, who has given me the victory through the Lord Jesus
Christ." From the battlefields of the Peninsula, a little band of veterans
came forth, and they gave each a medal with the names of all their battles
on one side, and on the other side this little sentence, "I was there." Oh,
when that hour shall come, may it be a glad, glad thought to look back over
the trials and sacrifices of these days and remember, "I was there, and by
the help of God and the grace of Jesus, I am here."
|
Day 23
"The fulness of
the blessing of the Gospel of Christ" (Rom. xv. 29).
Many Christians
fail to see these blessings as they are centered in Him. They want to get
the blessing of salvation, but that is not the Christ. They want to get the
blessing of His grace to help, but that is not Him. They want to get
answered prayer from Him to work for Him. You might have all that and not
have the blessing of Christ Himself. A great many people are attached rather
to the system of doctrine. They say, "Yes, I have got the truth; I am
orthodox." That is not the Christ. It may be the cold statue in the fountain
with the water passing from the cold hands and lips, but no life there. A
great many other people want to get the blessing of joy, but it is not the
blessing of Christ personally. A great many people are more attached to
their church and pastor, or to dear Christians friends, but that is not the
Christ. The blessing that will alone fill your heart when all else fails is
the loving heart of Jesus united to you, the fountain of all your blessings
and the unfailing one when they all wither and are exhausted--Jesus Christ
Himself.
|
Day 24
"Where is the way
where light dwelleth" (Job xxxviii. 19).
Jewels, in
themselves, are valueless, unless they are brought in contact with light. If
they are put in certain positions they will reflect the beauty of the sun.
There is no beauty in them otherwise. The diamond that is back in its dark
gallery or down in the deep mine, displays no beauty whatever. What is it
but a piece of charcoal, a bit of common carbon, unless it becomes a medium
for reflecting light? And so it is also with the other precious gems. Their
varied tints are nothing without light. If they are many-sided, they reflect
more light, and display more beauty. If you put paste beside a diamond there
is no brilliancy in it. In its crude state it does not reflect light at all.
So we are in a crude state and are of no use at all until God comes and
shines upon us. The light that is in a diamond is not its own possession; it
is the beauty of the sun. What beauty is there in the child of God? Only the
beauty of Jesus. We are His peculiar people, chosen to show forth His
excellencies who hath called us out of darkness into His marvelous light.
Let its reflect to-day His light and love.
|
Day 25
"That I may know
Him" (Phil. iii. 10).
Better to know
Jesus Himself than to know the truth about Him for the deep things of God as
they are revealed by the Holy Ghost. It was Paul's great desire, "That I may
know Him," not about Him, not the mysteries of the wonderful world, of the
deeper and higher teachings of God, but to enter into the Holy of Holies,
where Christ is, where the Shekinah is shining and making the place glorious
with the holiness of God, and then to enter into the secret of the Lord
Himself. It was what Jacob strove for at Peniel, when he pleaded with God,
"Tell me Thy name." He has told us His name, giving us "the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." That is the
secret. It is the Lord Himself, and nothing else; it is acquaintance with
God; it is knowing Jesus Christ as we know no one else; it is being able to
say, not only "I believe Him," but "I know Him"; not about Him, but I know
Him. That is the secret above all others that God wants us to have; it is
His provision for glory and power, and it is given freely to the
single-hearted seeker.
|
Day 26
"Be careful for
nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let
your requests be made known unto God" (Phil. iv. 6).
Commit means to
hand over, to trust wholly to another. So, if we give our trials to Him, He
will carry them. If we walk in righteousness He will carry us through.
"Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God that He may
exalt you in due time." There are two hands there--God's hand pressing us
down, humbling us, and then God's hand lifting us up. Cast all your care on
Him, then His hand will lift you up, exalt you in due time. There are two
cares in this verse--your care and His care. They are different in the
original. One means anxious care, the other means Almighty care. Cast your
anxious care on Him and take His Almighty care instead. Make no account of
trouble any more, but believe He is able to sustain you through it. The
government is on His shoulder. Believe that, if you trust and obey Him, and
meet His will, He will look after your interests. Simply exchange burdens.
Take His yoke upon you, and let Him care for you.
|
Day 27
"The government
shall be upon His shoulder" (Isa. ix. 6).
You cannot make
the heart restful by stopping its beating. Belladonna will do that, but that
is not rest. Let the breath of life come--God's life and strength--and there
will be sweet rest. Home ties and family affection will not bring it.
Deliverance from trouble will not bring it. Many a tried heart has said: "If
this great trouble was only gone, I should have rest." But as soon as one
goes another comes. The poor, wounded deer on the mountain side, thinks if
he could only bathe in the old mountain stream he would have rest. But the
arrow is in its flesh and there is no rest for it till the wound is healed.
It is as sore in the mountain lake as on the plain. We shall never have
God's rest and peace in the heart till we have given everything up to
Christ--even our work--and believe He has taken it all, and we have only to
keep still and trust. It is necessary to walk in holy obedience and let Him
have the government on His shoulder. Paul said this: "This one thing I do."
There is one narrow path for us all--Christ's will and work for us.
|
Day 28
"He humbled
Himself" (Phil. ii. 8).
One of the hardest
things for a lofty and superior nature is to be under authority, to renounce
his own will, and to take a place of subjection. But Christ took upon Him
the form of a servant, gave up His independence, His right to please
Himself, His liberty of choice, and after having from eternal ages known
only to command, gave Himself up only to obey. I have seen occasionally the
man who was once a wealthy employer a clerk in the same store. It was not an
easy or graceful position, I assure you. But Jesus was such a perfect
servant that His Father said: "Behold, My Servant in whom My soul
delighteth." All His life His watchword was, "The Son of Man came to
minister." "I am among you as He that doth serve." "I can do nothing of
Myself." "Not My will, but Thine, be done." Have you, beloved, learned the
servant's place?
And once more, "He
became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross." His life was all a
dying, and at last He gave all up to death, and also shame, the death of
crucifixion. This last was the consummation of His love.
|
Day 29
"The body is for
the Lord and the Lord for the body" (I. Cor. vi. 13).
Now, just as it
was Christ Himself who justified us, and Christ Himself who was made unto us
sanctification, so it is only by personal union with Him that we can receive
this physical life and redemption. It is, indeed, not a touch of power upon
our body which restores and then leaves it to the mere resources of natural
strength and life for the future; but it is the vital and actual union of
our mortal body with the risen body of our Lord Jesus Christ, so that His
own very life comes into our frame and He is Himself made unto us strength,
health and full physical redemption.
He is alive
forevermore and condescends to live in these houses of clay. They who thus
receive Him may know Him as none ever can who exclude Him from the bodies
which He has made for Himself. This is one of the deep and precious
mysteries of the Gospel. "The body is for the Lord, and the Lord for the
body." "Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is
in you, and ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price; therefore,
glorify God in your body, which is God's." (R. V.)
|
Day 30
"I will put My
Spirit within you" (Ez. xxxvi. 27).
"I will put My
Spirit within you, and I will cause you to walk in My statutes, and ye shall
keep My judgments." "I will put My fear in your hearts, and ye shall not
turn away from Me." Oh, friend, would not that be blessed, would not that be
such a rest for you, all worn out with this strife in your own strength? Do
you not want a strong man to conquer the strong man of self and sin? Do you
not want a leader? Do you not want God Himself to be with you, to be your
occupant? Do you not want rest? Are you not conscious of this need? Oh, this
sense of being beaten back, longing, wanting, but not accomplishing. That is
what He comes to do; "Ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost has
come upon you." Better than that, "Ye shall receive the power of the Holy
Ghost coming upon you." That is the true version, and really it is immensely
different from the other. You shall not receive power yourself, so that
people shall say: "How much power that man has. You shall not have any power
whatever, but you shall receive the power of the Holy Ghost coming upon you,
He having the power, that is all."
|
Day 31
"Whosoever
therefore shall humble himself as this little child" (Matt. xviii. 4).
You will never get
a humble heart until it is born from above, from the heart of Christ. For
man has lost his own humanity and alas, too often has a demon heart. God
wants us, as Christians, to be simple, human, approachable and childlike.
The Christians that we know and love best, and that are nearest to the Lord,
are the most simple. Whenever we grow stilted we are only fit for a picture
gallery, and we are only good on a pedestal; but, if we are going to live
among men and love and save them, we must be approachable and human. All
stiffness is but another form of self-consciousness. Ask Christ for a human
heart, for a smile that will be as natural as your little child's in your
presence. Oh, how much Christ did by little touches! He never would have got
at the woman of Samaria if He had come to her as the prophet. He sat down, a
tired man, and said: "Give me a drink of water." And so, all through His
life, it was His simple humanness and love that led Him to others, and led
them to Him and to His great salvation.
|
|
|