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 Day 1 
	
	"That in the ages 
	to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace" (Eph. ii. 7). 
	
	Christ's great 
	purpose for His people is to train them up to know the hope of their 
	calling, and the riches of the glory of their inheritance and what the 
	exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe. 
	
	Let us prove, in 
	all our varied walks of life, and scenes of conflict, the fulness of His 
	power and grace and thus shall we know "In the ages to come the exceeding 
	riches of His grace in His kindness to us in Jesus Christ." 
	
	Beloved, are you 
	thus following your Teacher in the school of faith, and finishing the 
	education which is by and by to fit you for "a far more exceeding and 
	eternal weight of glory"? This is only the School of Faith. 
	
	Little can we now 
	dream what these lessons will mean for us some day, when sitting with Him on 
	His throne and sharing with Him the power of God and the government of the 
	universe. Let us be faithful scholars now and soon with Him, we too, will 
	have "endured the cross despising the shame," and shall "sit down at the 
	right hand of the throne of God."   |  
			| 
 Day 2 
	
	"Moses gave not 
	any inheritance; the Lord God of Israel was their inheritance, as He said 
	unto them" (Josh. xiii. 33). 
	
	This is very 
	significant. God gave the land to the other tribes but He gave Himself to 
	the Levites. There is such a thing in Christian life as an inheritance from 
	the Lord, and there is such a thing as having the Lord Himself for our 
	inheritance. 
	
	Some people get a 
	sanctification from the Lord which is of much value, but which is variable, 
	and often impermanent. Others have learned the higher lesson of taking the 
	Lord Himself to be their keeper and their sanctity, and abiding in Him they 
	are kept above the vicissitudes of their own states and feelings. 
	
	Some get from the 
	Lord large measures of joy and blessing, and times of refreshing. 
	
	Others, again, 
	learn to take the Lord Himself as their joy. 
	
	Some people are 
	content to have peace with God, but others have taken "the peace of God that 
	passeth all understanding." 
	
	Some have faith 
	in God, while others have the faith of God. Some have many touches of 
	healing from God, others, again, have learned to live in the very health of 
	God Himself.   |  
			| 
 Day 3 
	
	"The little foxes 
	that spoil the vines" (Song of Solomon, ii. 15). 
	
	There are some 
	things good, without being perfect. You don't need to have a whole regiment 
	cannonading outside your room to keep you awake. It is quite enough that 
	your little alarm clock rings its little bell. It is not necessary to fret 
	about everything; it is quite enough if the devil gets your mind rasped with 
	one little worry, one little thought which destroys your perfect peace. It 
	is like the polish on a mirror, or an exquisite toilet table, one scratch 
	will destroy it; and the finer it is the smaller the scratch that will 
	deface it. And so your rest can be destroyed by a very little thing. Perhaps 
	you have trusted in God about your future salvation; but have you about your 
	present business or earthly cares, your money and your family? 
	
	What is meant by 
	the peace that passeth all understanding? It does not mean a peace no one 
	can comprehend. It means a peace that no amount of reasoning will bring. You 
	cannot get it by thinking. There may be perfect bewilderment and perplexity 
	all round the horizon, but yet your heart can rest in perfect security 
	because He knows, He loves, He leads.   |  
			| 
 Day 4 
	
	"Instead of the 
	brier, the myrtle tree" (Isa. lv. 13). 
	
	God's sweetest 
	memorial is the transformed thorn and the thistle blooming with flowers of 
	peace and sweetness, where once grew recriminations. 
	
	Beloved, God is 
	waiting to make just such memorials in your life, out of the things that are 
	hurting you most to-day. Take the grievances, the separations, the strained 
	friendships and the broken ties which have been the sorrow and heartbreak of 
	your life, and let God heal them, and give you grace to make you right with 
	all with whom you may be wrong, and you will wonder at the joy and blessing 
	that will come out of the things that have caused you nothing but regret and 
	pain. 
	
	"Blessed are the 
	peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God." The everlasting 
	employment of our blessed Redeemer is to reconcile the guilty and the 
	estranged from God, and the highest and most Christ-like work that we can do 
	is, to be like Him. 
	
	Shall we go forth 
	to dry the tears of a sorrowing world, to heal the broken-hearted, to bind 
	up the wounds of human lives, and to unite heart to heart, and earth to 
	heaven?   |  
			| 
 Day 5 
	
	"He hath triumphed 
	gloriously" (Ex. xv. 1). 
	
	Beloved, God calls 
	us to victory. Have any of you given up the conflict, have you surrendered? 
	Have you said, "This thing is too much"? Have you said, "I can give up 
	anything else but this"? If you have, you are not in the land of promise. 
	God means you should accept every difficult thing that comes in your life. 
	He has started with you, knowing every difficulty. And if you dare to let 
	Him, He will carry you through not only to be conquerors, but "more than 
	conquerors." Are you looking for all the victory? 
	
	God gives His 
	children strength for the battle and watches over them with a fond 
	enthusiasm. He longs to fold you to His arms and say to you, "I have seen 
	thy conflict, I have watched thy trials, I have rejoiced in thy victory; 
	thou hast honored Me." You know He told Joshua at the beginning, "There 
	shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life; as 
	I was with Moses, so shall I be with thee: I will not fail thee, nor forsake 
	thee." And again, He says to us, "Fear thou not, for I am with thee."   |  
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 Day 6 
	
	"Ephraim, he hath 
	mixed himself" (Hos. vii. 8). 
	
	It is a great 
	thing to learn to take God first, and then He can afford to give us 
	everything else, without the fear of its hurting us. 
	
	As long as you 
	want anything very much, especially more than you want God, it is an idol. 
	But when you become satisfied with God, everything else so loses its charm 
	that He can give it to you without harm, and then you can take just as much 
	as you choose, and use it for His glory. 
	
	There is no harm 
	whatever in having money, houses, lands, friends and dearest children, if 
	you do not value these things for themselves. 
	
	If you have been 
	separated from them in spirit, and become satisfied with God Himself, then 
	they will become to you channels to be filled with God to bring Him nearer 
	to you. Then every little lamb around your household will be a tender cord 
	to bind you to the Shepherd's heart. Then every affection will be a little 
	golden cup filled with the wine of His love. Then every bank, stock and 
	investment will be but a channel through which you can pour out His 
	benevolence and extend His gifts.   |  
			| 
 Day 7 
	
	"He opened not His 
	mouth" (Isa. liii. 7). 
	
	How much grace it 
	requires to bear a misunderstanding rightly, and to receive an unkind 
	judgment in holy sweetness! Nothing tests a Christian character more than to 
	have some evil thing said about him. This is the file that soon proves 
	whether we are electro-plate or solid gold. If we could only know the 
	blessings that lie hidden in our lives, we would say, like David, when 
	Shimei cursed him, "Let him curse; it may be the Lord will requite me good 
	for his cursing this day." 
	
	Some people get 
	easily turned aside from the grandeur of their life-work by pursuing their 
	own grievances and enemies, until their life gets turned into one little 
	petty whirl of warfare. It is like a nest of hornets. You may disperse the 
	hornets, but you will probably get terribly stung, and get nothing for your 
	pains, for even their honey is not worth a search. 
	
	God give us more 
	of His Spirit, who, when reviled, reviled not again; but committed Himself 
	to Him that judgeth righteously. 
	
	Consider Him that 
	endured such contradiction of sinners against Himself.   |  
			| 
 Day 8 
	
	"There failed not 
	aught of any good thing which the Lord had spoken" (Josh. xxi. 45). 
	
	Some day, even 
	you, trembling, faltering one, shall stand upon those heights and look back 
	upon all you have passed through, all you have narrowly escaped, all the 
	perils through which He guided you, the stumblings through which He guarded 
	you, and the sins from which He saved you; and you shall shout, with a 
	meaning you cannot understand now, "Salvation unto Him who sitteth upon the 
	throne, and unto the Lamb." 
	
	Some day He will 
	sit down with us in that glorious home, and we shall have all the ages in 
	which to understand the story of our lives. And He will read over again this 
	old marked Bible with us, He will show us how He kept all these promises, He 
	will explain to us the mysteries that we could not understand, He will 
	recall to our memory the things we have long forgotten, He will go over 
	again with us the book of life, He will recall all the finished story, and I 
	am sure we will often cry: "Blessed Christ! you have been so true, you have 
	been so good! Was there ever love like this?" And then the great chorus will 
	be repeated once more--"There failed not aught of any good thing that He 
	hath spoken; all came to pass."   |  
			| 
 Day 9 
	
	"Peace be unto 
	you" (John xx. 19, 21). 
	
	This is the type 
	of His first appearing to our hearts when He comes to bring us His peace and 
	to teach us to trust Him and love Him. 
	
	But there is a 
	second peace which He has to give. Jesus said unto them again, "Peace be 
	unto you." There is a "peace," and there is an "again peace." There is a 
	peace with God, and there is "the peace of God that passeth understanding." 
	It is the deeper peace that we need before we can serve Him or be used for 
	His glory. 
	
	While we are 
	burdened with our own cares, He cannot give us His. While we are occupied 
	with ourselves, we cannot be at leisure to serve Him. Our minds will be so 
	filled with our own anxieties that we would not be equal to the trust which 
	He requires of us, and so, before He can entrust us with His work, He wants 
	to deliver us from every burden and anxiety. 
				
				"Peace, perfect 
	peace, in this dark world of sin,
				
				The 
	blood of Jesus whispers peace within.
				
				Peace, 
	perfect peace, by thronging duties pressed,
				
				To 
	do the will of Jesus, this is rest."
			   |  
			| 
 Day 10 
	
	"If ye, through 
	the Spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live" (Rom. viii. 
	13). 
	
	The Holy Spirit is 
	the only one who can kill us and keep us dead. Many Christians try to do 
	this disagreeable work themselves, and they are going through a continual 
	crucifixion, but they can never accomplish the work permanently. This is the 
	work of the Holy Spirit, and when you really yield yourself to the death, it 
	is delightful to find how sweetly He can slay you. 
	
	By the touch of 
	the electric spark they tell us life is extinguished almost without a quiver 
	of pain. But, however this may be in natural things, we know the Holy Spirit 
	can touch with celestial fire the surrendered thing, and slay it in a 
	moment, after it is really yielded up to the sentence of death. That is our 
	business, and it is God's business to execute that sentence, and to keep it 
	constantly operative. 
	
	Don't let us live 
	in the pain of perpetual and ineffectual suicide, but reckoning ourselves 
	dead indeed, let us leave ourselves in the hands of the blessed Holy Spirit, 
	and He will slay whatever rises in opposition to His will, and keep us true 
	to our heavenly reckoning, and filled with His resurrection life.   |  
			| 
 Day 11 
	
	"And He that 
	searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because He 
	maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God" (Rom. viii. 
	27). 
	
	The Holy Spirit 
	becomes to the consecrated heart the Spirit of intercession. We have two 
	Advocates. We have an Advocate with the Father, who prays for us at God's 
	right hand; but the Holy Spirit is the Advocate within, who prays in us, 
	inspiring our petitions and presenting them, through Christ, to God. 
	
	We need this 
	Advocate. We know not what to pray for, and we know not how to pray as we 
	ought, but He breathes in the holy heart the desires that we may not always 
	understand, the groanings which we could not utter. 
	
	But God 
	understands, and He, with a loving Father's heart, is always searching our 
	hearts to find the Spirit's prayer, and to answer it. He finds many a prayer 
	there that we have not discovered, and answers many a cry that we never 
	understood. And when we reach our home and read the records of life, we 
	shall better know and appreciate the infinite love of that Divine Friend, 
	who has watched within as the Spirit of prayer, and breathed out our every 
	need to the heart of God.   |  
			| 
 Day 12 
	
	"The law of the 
	Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free" (Rom. viii. 2). 
	
	The life of Jesus 
	Christ brought into our heart by the Holy Spirit, operates there as a new 
	law of divine strength and vitality, and counteracts, overcomes and lifts us 
	above the old law of sin and death. 
	
	Let us illustrate 
	these two laws by a simple comparison. Look at my hand. By the law of 
	gravitation it naturally falls upon the desk and lies there, attracted 
	downward by that natural law which makes heavy bodies fall to the earth. 
	
	But there is a 
	stronger law than the law of gravitation--my own life and will. And so 
	through the operation of this higher law--the law of vitality--I defy the 
	law of gravitation, and lift my hand and hold it above its former 
	resting-place, and move it at my will. The law of vitality has made me free 
	from the law of gravitation. 
	
	Precisely so the 
	indwelling life of Christ Jesus, operating with the power of a law, lifts me 
	above, and counteracts the power of sin in my fallen nature.   |  
			| 
 Day 13 
	
	"The carnal mind 
	is enmity against God" (Rom. viii. 7). 
	
	The flesh is 
	incurably bad. "It is not subject to the law of God, neither, indeed, can 
	be." It never can be any better. It is no use trying to improve the flesh. 
	You may educate it all you please. You may train it by the most approved 
	methods, you may set before it the brightest examples, you may pipe to it or 
	mourn to it, treat it with encouragement or severity; its nature will always 
	be incorrigibly the same. 
	
	Like the wild hawk 
	which the little child captures in its infancy and tries to train in the 
	habits of the dove, before you are aware it will fasten its cruel beak upon 
	the gentle fingers that would caress it, and show the old wild spirit of 
	fear and ferocity. It is a hawk by nature, and it can never be made a dove. 
	"For the carnal mind is enmity against God. It is not subject to the law of 
	God, neither, indeed, can be." 
	
	The only remedy 
	for human nature is to destroy it, and receive instead the divine nature. 
	God does not improve man. He crucifies the natural life with Christ, and 
	creates the new man in Christ Jesus.   |  
			| 
 Day 14 
	
	"Get thee, behind 
	me, Satan" (Matt. xvi. 23). 
	
	When your old self 
	comes back, if you listen to it, fear it, believe it, it will have the same 
	influence upon you as if it were not dead; it will control you and destroy 
	you. But if you will ignore it and say: "You are not I, but Satan trying to 
	make me believe that the old self is not dead; I refuse you, I treat you as 
	a demon power outside of me, I detach myself from you"; if you treat it as a 
	wife would her divorced husband, saying: "You are nothing to me, you have no 
	power over me, I have renounced you, in the name of Jesus I bid you 
	hence,"--lo! the evil thing will disappear, the shadow will vanish, the wand 
	of faith will lay the troubled spirit, and send it back to the abyss, and 
	you will find that Christ is there instead, with His risen life, to back up 
	your confidence and seal your victory. 
	
	Satan can stand 
	anything better than neglect. If you ignore him he gets disgusted and 
	disappears. Jesus used to turn His back upon him and say, "Get thee behind 
	Me, Satan." So let us refuse him, and we shall find that he will be 
	compelled to act according to our faith.   |  
			| 
 Day 15 
	
	"Faith is the 
	evidence of things not seen" (Heb. xi. 1). 
	
	True faith drops 
	its letter in the post-office box, and lets it go. Distrust holds on to a 
	corner of it, and wonders that the answer never comes. 
	
	I have some 
	letters in my desk that have been written for weeks, but there was some 
	slight uncertainty about the address or the contents, so they are yet 
	unmailed. They have not done either me or anybody else any good yet. They 
	will never accomplish anything until I let them go out of my hands and trust 
	them to the postman and the mail. 
	
	This is the case 
	with true faith. It hands its case over to God, and then He works. 
	
	That is a fine 
	verse in the thirty-seventh Psalm: "Commit thy way unto the Lord, trust also 
	in Him, and He worketh." But He never worketh until we commit. 
	
	Faith is a 
	receiving, or still better, a taking of God's proffered gifts. We may 
	believe, and come, and commit, and rest, but we will not fully realize all 
	our blessing until we begin to receive and come into the attitude of abiding 
	and taking.   |  
			| 
 Day 16 
	
	"Whereas thou hast 
	been forsaken and hated, I will make thee a joy" (Isa. lx. 15). 
	
	God loves to take 
	the most lost of men, and make them the most magnificent memorials of His 
	redeeming love and power. He loves to take the victims of Satan's hate, and 
	the lives that have been the most fearful examples of his power to destroy, 
	and to use them to illustrate and illuminate the possibilities of Divine 
	mercy and the new creations of the Holy Spirit. 
	
	He loves to take 
	the things in our own lives that have been the worst, the hardest and the 
	most hostile to God, and to transform them so that we shall be the opposites 
	of our former selves. 
	
	The sweetest 
	spirits are made out of the most stormy and self-willed, the mightiest faith 
	is created out of a wilderness of doubts and fears, and the Divinest love is 
	transformed out of stony hearts of hate and selfishness. 
	
	The grace of God 
	is equal to the most uncongenial temperaments, to the most unfavorable 
	circumstances; and its glory is to transform a curse into blessing, and show 
	to men and angels of ages yet to come, that "where sin abounded, there grace 
	did much more abound."   |  
			| 
 Day 17 
	
	"Abraham believed 
	God" (Rom. iv. 3). 
	
	Abraham's faith 
	reposed on God Himself. He knew the God he was dealing with. It was a 
	personal confidence in one whom he could utterly trust. 
	
	The real secret of 
	Abraham's whole life was that he was the friend of God, and knew God to be 
	his great, good and faithful Friend, and, taking Him at His word, he had 
	stepped out from all that he knew and loved, and gone forth upon an unknown 
	pathway with none but God. 
	
	Beloved, are we 
	trusting not only in the word of God, but have we learned to lean our whole 
	weight upon Himself, the God of infinite love and power, our covenant God 
	and everlasting Friend? 
	
	We are told that 
	Abraham glorified God by this life of faith. The true way to glorify God is 
	to let the world see what He is, and what He can do. God does not want us so 
	much to do things, as to let people see what He can do. God is not looking 
	for extraordinary characters as His instruments, but He is looking for 
	humble instruments through whom He can be honored throughout the ages.   |  
			| 
 Day 18 
	
	"All things are 
	naked and open unto the eyes of Him with whom we have to do" (Heb. iv. 13). 
	
	The literal 
	translation of this phrase is, all things are stripped and stunned. This is 
	the force of the Greek words. The figure is that of an athlete in the 
	Coliseum who has fought his best in the arena, and has at length fallen at 
	the feet of his adversary, disarmed and broken down in helplessness. There 
	he lies, unable to strike a blow, or lift his arm. He is stripped and 
	stunned, disarmed and disabled, and there is nothing left for him but to lie 
	at the feet of his adversary and throw up his arms for mercy. 
	
	Now this is the 
	position that God wants to bring us to, where we shall cease our struggles 
	and our attempts at self-defence or self-improvement, and throw ourselves 
	helplessly upon the mercy of God. This is the sinner's only hope, and when 
	he thus lies at the feet of mercy, Jesus is ready to lift him up and give 
	him that free salvation which is waiting for all. 
	
	This, too, is the 
	greatest need of the Christian seeking a deeper and higher life, to come to 
	a full realization of his nothingness and helplessness, and to lie down, 
	stripped and stunned at the feet of Jesus.   |  
			| 
 Day 19 
	
	"Denying 
	ungodliness" (Titus ii. 12). 
	
	Let us say, "No," 
	to the flesh, the world and the love of self, and learn that holy 
	self-denial in which consists so much of the life of obedience. Make no 
	provision for the flesh; give no recognition to your lower life. Say "No" to 
	everything earthly and selfish. How very much of the life of faith consists 
	in simply denying ourselves. 
	
	We begin with one 
	great "Yes," to God, and then we conclude with an eternal "No," to 
	ourselves, the world, the flesh and the devil. 
	
	If you look at the 
	ten commandments of the Decalogue, you will find that nearly every one of 
	them is a "Thou shalt not." If you read the thirteenth chapter of First 
	Corinthians, with its beautiful picture of love, you will find that most of 
	the characteristics of love are in the negative, what love "does not, thinks 
	not, says not, is not." And so you will find that the largest part of the 
	life of consecration is really saying, "No." 
				
				I am not my own,
				
				I 
	belong to Him.
				
				I 
	am His alone,
				
				I 
	belong to Him.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 20 
	
	"Let us not be 
	weary in well-doing" (Gal. vi. 9). 
	
	If Paul could only 
	know the consolation and hope that he has ministered to the countless 
	generations who have marched along the pathway from the cross to the Kingdom 
	above, he would be willing to go through a thousand lives and a thousand 
	deaths such as he endured for the blessing that has followed since his noble 
	head rolled in the dust by the Ostian gate of Rome. 
	
	And if the least 
	of us could only anticipate the eternal issues that will probably spring 
	from the humblest services of faith, we should only count our sacrifices and 
	labors unspeakable heritages of honor and opportunity, and would cease to 
	speak of trials and sacrifices made for God. 
	
	The smallest grain 
	of faith is a deathless and incorruptible germ, which will yet plant the 
	heavens and cover the earth with harvests of imperishable glory. Lift up 
	your head, beloved, the horizon is wider than the little circle that you can 
	see. We are living, we are suffering, we are laboring, we are trusting, for 
	the ages yet to come!   |  
			| 
 Day 21 
	
	"Who shall 
	separate us from the love of Christ?" (Rom. viii. 35). 
	
	And then comes the 
	triumphant answer, after all the possible obstacles and enemies have been 
	mentioned one by one, "Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors, 
	through Him that loved us." Our trials will be turned to helps; our enemies 
	will be taken prisoners and made to fight our battles. Like the weights on 
	yonder clock, which keep it going, our very difficulties will prove 
	incentives to faith and prayer, and occasions for God becoming more real to 
	us. 
	
	We shall get out 
	of our troubles not only deliverance but triumph, and in all these things be 
	even more than conquerors through Him that loved us. 
	
	Our security 
	depends not upon our unchanging love, but on the love of God in Christ Jesus 
	toward us. It is not the clinging arms of the babe on the mother's breast 
	that keep it from falling, but the strong arms of the mother about it which 
	will never let it go. He has loved us with an everlasting love, and although 
	all else may change, yet He will never leave us nor forsake us.   |  
			| 
 Day 22 
	
	"Touched with the 
	feeling of our infirmities" (Heb. iv. 15). 
	
	Some of us know a 
	little what it is to be thrilled with a sense of the sufferings of others, 
	and sometimes, the sins of others, and sins that seem to saturate us as they 
	come in contact with us, and throw over us an awful sense of sin and need. 
	
	This is, perhaps, 
	intended to give us some faint conception of the sympathy that Jesus felt 
	when He had taken our sins, our sicknesses and our sorrows. Let us not 
	hesitate to lay them on Him! It is far easier for Him to bear them off us 
	than to bear them with us. He has already borne them for us, both in His 
	life and in His death. Let us roll the burden upon Him, and let it roll 
	away, and then, strong in His strength, and rested in His life and love, let 
	us go forth to minister to others the sympathy and help which He has so 
	richly given us. 
	
	The world is full 
	of sorrow, and they that have known its bitterness and healing are God's 
	ministers of consolation to a weeping world. 
				
				O, the tears that 
	flow around us,
				
				Let 
	us wipe them while we may;
				
				Bring 
	the broken hearts to Jesus,
				
				He 
	will wipe their tears away.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 23 
	
	"How long halt ye 
	between two opinions?" (I. Kings xviii. 21). 
	
	It is strange that 
	people will not get over the idea that a consecrated life is a difficult 
	one. A simple illustration will answer this foolish impression. Suppose a 
	street car driver were to say, "It is much easier to run with one wheel on 
	the track and the other off," his line would soon be dropped by the public, 
	and they would prefer to walk. Of course, it is ever so much easier to run 
	with both wheels on the track, and always on the track, and it is much 
	easier to follow Christ fully than to follow with a half heart and halting 
	step. The prophet was right in his pungent question, "How long halt ye 
	between two opinions?" The undecided man is a halting man. The halting man 
	is a lame man and a miserable man, and the out-and-out Christian is the 
	admiration of men and angels, and a continual joy to himself. 
				
				Say, is it all for 
	Jesus,
				
				As 
	you so often sing;
				
				Is 
	He your Royal Master,
				
				Is 
	He your heart's true King?
			   |  
			| 
 Day 24 
	
	"First gave their 
	ownselves to the Lord, and unto us by the will of God" (II. Cor. viii. 5). 
	
	It is essential, 
	in order to be successful in Christian work, that you shall be loyal not 
	only to God, but to the work with which you are associated. The more deeply 
	one knows the Lord the easier it is to get along with Him. 
	
	Superficial 
	Christians are apt to be crotchetty. Mature Christians are so near the Lord 
	that they are not afraid of missing His guidance, and not always trying to 
	assert their loyalty to Him and independence of others. 
	
	The Corinthians, 
	who had given themselves first to the Lord, had no difficulty in giving 
	themselves to His Apostle by the will of God. It is delightful to work with 
	true hearts on whom we can utterly depend. 
	
	God give us the 
	spirit of a sound mind and the heart to "help along." 
				
				You can help by 
	holy prayer,
				
				Helpful 
	love and joyful song;
				
				O, 
	the burdens you may bear;
				
				O, 
	the sorrows you may share;
				
				O, 
	the crowns you may yet may wear,
				
				If 
	you help along.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 25 
	
	"Now it is high 
	time to awake out of sleep. Let us cast off the works of darkness and let us 
	put on the armor of light" (Rom. xiii. 11, 12). 
	
	Let us wake out of 
	sleep; let us be alert; let us be alive to the great necessities that really 
	concern us. 
	
	Let us put off the 
	garments of the night and the indulgences of the night; the loose robes of 
	pleasure and flowing garments of repose; the festal pleasures of the hours 
	of darkness are not for the children of the day. Let us cast off the works 
	of darkness. 
	
	Let us arm 
	ourselves for the day. Before we put on our clothes, let us put on our 
	weapons, for we are stepping out into a land of enemies and a world of 
	dangers; let us put on the helmet of salvation, the breastplate of faith and 
	love, and the shield of faith, and stand armed and vigilant as the dangers 
	of the last days gather around us. 
	
	Let us put on the 
	Lord Jesus Christ. This is our robe of day. Not our own works or 
	righteousness, but the person and righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ, 
	who gave us His very life, and becomes to us our All-Sufficiency.   |  
			| 
 Day 26 
	
	"Go out into the 
	highways and compel them to come in" (Luke xiv. 23). 
	
	In the great 
	parable in the fourteenth chapter of Luke, giving an account of the great 
	supper an ancient lord prepared for his friends and neighbors, and to which, 
	when they asked to be excused, he invited the halt and the lame from the 
	city slums and the lepers from outside the gate, there is a significant 
	picture and object lesson of the program of Christianity in this age. 
	
	In the first 
	place, it is obvious to every thoughtful mind that the Master is beginning 
	to excuse the Gospel-hardened people of Christian countries. It is getting 
	constantly more difficult to interest the unsaved of our own land, 
	especially those that have been accustomed to hear the Gospel and the things 
	of Christ. They have asked to be excused from the Gospel feast, and the Lord 
	is excusing them. 
	
	At the same time, 
	two remarkable movements indicated in the parable are becoming more and more 
	manifest in our time. One is the Gospel for the slums and the neglected 
	classes at home; the other is the Gospel for the heathen or the neglected 
	classes abroad.   |  
			| 
 Day 27 
	
	"Behold, I am the 
	Lord, the God of all flesh; is there anything too hard for Me?" (Jer. xxxii. 
	27.) 
	
	Cyrus, the King, 
	was compelled to fulfil the vision of Jeremiah, by making a decree, the 
	instant the prophecy had foretold, declaring that Jehovah had bidden him 
	rebuild Jerusalem and invite her captives to return to their native home. So 
	Jeremiah's faith was vindicated and Jehovah's prophecy gloriously fulfilled, 
	as faith ever will be honored. Oh, for the faith, that in the dark present 
	and the darker future, shall dare to subscribe the evidences and seal up the 
	documents if need be, for the time of waiting, and then begin to testify to 
	the certainty of its hope like the prophet of Anathoth! 
	
	The word Anathoth 
	has a beautiful meaning, "echoes." So faith is the "echo" of God and God 
	always gives the "echo" to faith, as He answers it back in glorious 
	fulfilment. Oh, let our faith echo also the brave claim of the ancient 
	prophet and take our full inheritance, with his glorious shout, "Oh, Lord, 
	Thou art the God of all flesh, is there anything too hard for the Lord?" and 
	back like an echo will come the heavenly answer to our heart, "I am the God 
	of all flesh, is there anything too hard for Me?"   |  
			| 
 Day 28 
	
	"Thou good 
	servant, because thou hast been faithful in a very little, have thou 
	authority over ten cities" (Luke xix. 17). 
	
	It is not our 
	success in service that counts, but our fidelity. Caleb and Joshua were 
	faithful and God remembered it when the day of visitation came. It was a 
	very difficult and unpopular position, and all of us are called in the 
	crisis of our lives to stand alone and in this very matter of trusting God 
	for victory over sin and our full inheritance in Christ we have all to be 
	tested as they. 
	
	Our brethren even 
	in the church of God, while admitting in the abstract the loveliness and 
	advantages of such an ideal life, tell us as they told Israel that it is 
	impracticable and impossible, and many of us have to stand alone for years 
	witnessing to the power of Christ to save His people to the uttermost and 
	like Caleb following Him wholly, if alone. But this is the real victory of 
	faith and the proof of our uncompromising fidelity. 
	
	Let us not 
	therefore complain when we suffer reproach for our testimony or stand alone 
	for God, but thank Him that He so honors us, and so stand the test that He 
	can afterwards use us when the multitudes are glad to follow.   |  
			| 
 Day 29 
	
	"Whatsoever ye 
	shall ask the Father in my name, He will give it you" (John xvi. 23). 
	
	Two men go to the 
	bank cashier, both holding in their hands a piece of paper. One is dressed 
	in expensive style, and presents a gloved and jeweled hand; the other is a 
	rough, unwashed workman. The first is rejected with a polite sentence, and 
	the second receives a thousand dollars over the counter. What is the 
	difference? The one presented a worthless name; the other handed in a note 
	endorsed by the president of the bank. And so the most virtuous moralist 
	will be turned away from the gates of mercy, and the vilest sinner welcomed 
	in if he presents the name of Jesus. 
	
	What shall we give 
	to infinite purity and righteousness? Jesus! No other gift is worthy for God 
	to receive. And He has given Him to us for this very end, to give back as 
	our substitute and satisfaction. And He has "testified" of this gift what He 
	has of no other, namely, that in Him He is well pleased and all who receive 
	Him "are accepted in the Beloved." Shall we accept the testimony that God is 
	satisfied with His Son? Shall we be satisfied with Him?   |  
			| 
 Day 30 
	
	"Dwell deep" (Jer. 
	xlix. 8). 
	
	God's presence 
	blends with every other thought and consciousness, flowing sweetly and 
	evenly through our business plans, our social converse our heart's 
	affections, our manual toil, our entire life, blending with all, 
	consecrating all, and conscious through all, like the fragrance of a flower, 
	or the presence of a friend consciously near, and yet not hindering in the 
	least the most intense and constant preoccupation of the hands and brain. 
	How beautiful the established habit of this unceasing communion and 
	dependence, amid and above all thoughts and occupations! How lovely to see a 
	dear old saint folding away his books at night and humbly saying, "Lord 
	Jesus, things are still just the same between us," and the falling asleep in 
	His keeping. 
	
	So let us be 
	stayed upon Him. Let us grow into Him with all the root and fibers of our 
	being. He will not get tired of our friendship. He will not want to put us 
	off sometimes. Beautiful the words of the suffering saint: "He never says 
	good-bye." He stays. So let us be stayed on Him.   |  
			| 
 Day 31 
	
	"My grace is 
	sufficient for thee; for My strength is made perfect in weakness" (II. Cor. 
	xii. 9). 
	
	God allowed the 
	crisis to close around Jacob on the night when he bowed at Peniel in 
	supplication to bring him to the place where he could take hold of God as he 
	never would have done; and from that narrow pass of peril Jacob came 
	enlarged in his faith and knowledge of God, and in the power of a new and 
	victorious life. He had to compel David, by a long and painful discipline of 
	years, to learn the almighty power and faithfulness of his God, and to grow 
	up into the established principles of faith and godliness, which were 
	indispensable for his subsequent and glorious career as the king of Israel. 
	
	Nothing but the 
	extremities in which Paul was constantly placed could ever have taught him, 
	and taught the church through him, the full meaning of the great promise he 
	so learned to claim, "My grace is sufficient for thee." And nothing but our 
	trials and perils would ever have led some of us to know Him as we do, to 
	trust Him as we have, and to draw from Him the measures of grace which our 
	very extremities made indispensable.   |  |  |