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MY DAILY
MEDITATION
for the Circling Year
by John Henry Jowett
MAY |
MAY
1
THE CONDITIONS OF SERENITY
Psalm 124:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
IF I would be like the Psalmist, I must clearly recognize my perils. He
sees the “waters,” the “proud waters.” He beholds the “enemy,” and his
“wrath,” and his “teeth.” He sees “the fowler” with his snare! I must not
shut my eyes, and “make my judgment blind.” One of the gifts of grace is
the spirit of discernment, the eyes which not only detect hidden treasure,
but hidden foes. The devil is an expert in mimicry; he can make himself
look like an angel of light. And so must I be able to discover his snares,
even when they appear as the most seductive food.
And if I would be like the Psalmist, I must clearly recognize my great
Ally. “If it has not been the Lord, who was on our side!” To see the Ally
on the perilous field, and to see Him on my side, gives birth to holy
confidence and song. “The Lord is on my side, whom shall I fear?” I must
make sure of the Ally, and “victory is secure.”
And if I would be like the Psalmist, I must not omit the doxology of
praise. When the prayer is answered, I am apt to forget the praise. My
thanksgivings are not so ready as my requests. And so the apparently
conquered enemy steals in again at the door of an ungrateful heart.
May 2
THE HAPPY WARRIOR
Ephesians 6:10, 11,12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18.
HERE is a portrait of the happy warrior! Let me first look at the warrior,
and then at the implements with which he fights.
“You cannot fight the French merely with red uniforms; there must be men
inside them!” So said Thomas Carlyle. Well, look at this man.
“Strengthened in the Lord, and in the power of His might.” There is a
secret communion with the Almighty, and he draws his resources from the
Infinite. The water in my home comes from the Welsh hills; every drop was
gathered on those grand and expansive uplands. And this man’s soldierly
strength is drawn from the hills of God; every ounce of his fighting blood
comes from the veins of the Lord.
And mark the nature of his armoury. His weapons are dispositions. He
fights with “truth,” and “righteousness,” and “peace,” and “faith,” and
“prayer”! There are no implements like these. A sword will fail where a
courtesy will prevail. We can kill our enemies by kindness. And as for the
devil himself there is nothing like a grace-filled disposition for putting
him to flight! A prayerful disposition can drive him off any field, at any
hour of the day or night. “Put on the whole armour of God.”
May 3
OTHER GODS!
“Thou shalt have no other gods before Me.”
Exodus 20:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11.
IF we kept that commandment all the other commandments would be obeyed. If
we secure this queen-bee we are given the swarm. To put nothing “before”
God! What is left in the circle of obedience? God first, always and
everywhere. Nothing allowed to usurp His throne for an hour! I was once
allowed to sit on an earthly throne for a few seconds, but even that is
not to be allowed with the throne of God. Nothing is to share His
sovereignty, even for a moment. His dominion is to be unconditional and
unbroken. “Thou shalt have no other gods beside Me.”
But we have many gods we set upon His throne. We put money there, and
fame, and pleasure, and ease. Yes, we sometimes usurp God’s throne, and we
ourselves dare to sit there for days, and weeks, and years, at a time.
Self is the idol, and we enthrone it, and we fall down and worship it. But
no peace comes from such sovereignty, and no deep and vital joy. For the
real King is not dead, and He is out and about, and our poor little
monarchy is as the reign of the midge on a summer’s night. Our real
kingship is in the acknowledgment of the King of kings. When we worship
Him, and Him only, He will ask us to sit on His throne.
MAY 4
A HEALTHY PALATE
“How sweet are Thy words unto my taste.”
Psalm 119:97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104.
SOME people like one thing, and some another. Some people appreciate the
bitter olive; others feel it to be nauseous. Some delight in the sweetest
grapes; others feel the sweetness to be sickly. It is all a matter of
palate. Some people love the Word of the Lord; to others the reading of it
is a dreary task. To some the Bible is like a vineyard; to others it is
like a dry and tasteless meal. One takes the word of the Master, and it is
“as honey to the mouth”; to another the same word is as unwelcome as a
bitter drug. It is all a matter of palate.
But what is a man to do who has got a perverted palate, and who calls
sweet things bitter and bitter things sweet? He must get a new mouth! And
where is he to get it? Not by any ministry of his own creation; his own
endeavours will be impotent. A healthy moral palate depends upon the
purity of the heart. Our spiritual discernments are all determined by the
state of the soul. If the heart be pure, the mouth will be clean, and we
shall love God’s law. If the soul-appetite be healthy, God’s words will be
sweet unto our taste. And so does the good Lord give us new palates by
giving us new hearts. “Create within us clean hearts, O God, and renew
right spirits within us.”
MAY 5
HEALTHY LISTENING
“Be ye doers of the word and not hearers only.”
James 1:21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27.
WHEN we hear the word, but do not do it, there has been a defect in our
hearing. We may listen to the word for mere entertainment. Or we may
attach a virtue to the mere act of listening to the word. We may assume
that some magical efficacy belongs to the mere reading of the word. And
all this is perverse and delusive. No listening is healthy which is not
mentally referred to obedience. We are to listen with a view to obedience,
with our eyes upon the very road where the obedient feet will travel. That
is to say, we are to listen with purpose, as though we were Ambassadors
receiving instructions from the King concerning some momentous mission.
Yes, we must listen with an eye on the road.
“Doing” makes a new thing of “hearing.” The statute obeyed becomes a song.
The commandment is found to be a beatitude. The decree discloses riches of
grace. The hidden things of God are not discovered until we are treading
the path of obedience. “And it came to pass that as he went he received
his sight.” In the way of obedience the blind man found a new world. God
has wonderful treasures for the dutiful. The faithful discover the “hidden
manna.”
MAY 6
THE PERFECTING OF LOVE
“Herein is our love made perfect.”
1John 4:11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21.
HOW? By dwelling in God and God in us. Love is not a manufacture; it is a
fruit. It is not born of certain works; it springs out of certain
relations. It does not come from doing something; it comes from living
with Somebody. “Abide in Me.” That is how love is born, for “love is of
God, and God is love.”
How many people are striving who are not abiding. They live in a
manufactory, they do not live in a home. They are trying to make something
instead of to know Somebody. “This is life, to know Thee.” When I am
related to the Lord Jesus, when I dwell with Him, love is as surely born
as beauty and fragrance are born when my garden and the spring-time dwell
together. If we would only wisely cultivate the fellowship of Jesus,
everything else would follow in its train—all that gracious succession of
beautiful things which are called “the fruits of the Spirit.”
And “herein is our love made perfect.” It is always growing richer,
because it is always drawing riches from the inexhaustible love of God.
How could it be otherwise? Endless resource must mean endless growth. “Our
life is hid with Christ in God,” and hence our love will “grow in all
wisdom and discernment.”
MAY 7
IN THE WAYS OF OBEDIENCE
Psalm 19:7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,14.
LET me listen to the exquisite chimes of this wonderful psalm as they ring
out the blessedness of the man whose delight is in the law of the Lord.
What shall he find in the ways of obedience?
He shall find restoration. “Restoring the soul.” He shall find new stores
of food along the way. In every emergency he shall find fresh provision;
every new need shall discover new supplies. When one store is spent,
another shall take its place. “Thou re-storest my soul.” In the ways of
righteousness the good Lord has appointed ample stores for the provision
of all His faithful pilgrims.
He shall find joy. “Rejoicing the heart.” In the way of obedience there
shall be springs of delight as well as stores of provision. “With joy
shall ye draw waters out of the wells of salvation.” Fountains of
delicious satisfaction rise in the realm of duty, the satisfaction of
being right with God, and in union with the eternal will. There is no day
without its spring, and “the joy of the Lord is our strength.”
He shall find vision. “Enlightening the eyes.” The eyes of the obedient
are anointed with the eye-salve of grace, and wondrous panoramas break
upon the sight. Visions of grace! Visions of love! Visions of glory!
MAY 8
HOW NOT TO FORGET
Deuteronomy 11:18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25.
IF we wish to retain “the word of the Lord” everything depends upon where
we keep it. If we just keep it in the mind, a leaky memory may waste the
treasure. A Chinese convert declared that he found the best way to
remember the word was to do it! The engraved word became character,
written upon the fleshy tables of the heart. He incarnated the word, and
it became a vital part of his own personality. He lived it and it lived in
him. The word became flesh. This is the only really vital “way of
remembrance,” to convert the word into the primary stuff of the life.
There is a secondary way by which we may help our apprehension of God’s
word. “Ye shall teach them.” Our hold upon a truth is increased while we
impart it to others. The gospel becomes more vivid as we proclaim it to
our fellow-men. We see it while we explain it. It grips us the more firmly
as we use it to grip our children. This is a great law in life. In these
matters it is literally true that memory best retains what she gives away.
A truth that is never shared is never really possessed. The word that we
teach becomes rooted in our own mind.
MAY 9
LOVING THE LORD
Luke 10:21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28.
THE secret of life is to love the Lord our God, and our neighbours as
ourselves. But how are we to love the Lord? We cannot manufacture love. We
cannot love to order. We cannot by an act of will command its appearing.
No, not in these ways is love created. Love is not a work, it is a fruit.
It grows in suitable soils, and it is our part to prepare the soils. When
the conditions are congenial, love appears, just as the crocus and the
snowdrop appear in the congenial air of the spring.
What, then, can we do? We can seek the Lord’s society. We can think about
Him. We can read about Him. We can fill our imaginations with the grace of
His life and service. We can be much with Him, talking to Him in prayer,
singing to Him in praise, telling Him our yearnings and confessing to Him
our defeats. And love will be quietly born. For this is how love is born
between heart and heart. Two people are “much together,” and love is born!
And when we are much with the Lord, we are with One who already loves us
with an everlasting love. We are with One who yearns for our love and who
seeks in every way to win it. “We love Him because He first loved us.” And
when we truly love God, every other kind of holy love will follow. Given
the fountain, the rivers are sure.
MAY 10
GOD’S USE OF MEN
“I have surely seen the affliction of My people ...come now, therefore, I will send thee.”
Exodus 3:1,2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.
DOES that seem a weak ending to a powerful beginning? The Lord God looks
upon terrible affliction and He sends a weak man to deal with it. Could He
not have sent fire from heaven? Could He not have rent the heavens and
sent His ministers of calamity and disasters? Why choose a man when the
arch-angel Gabriel stands ready at obedience?
This is the way of the Lord. He uses human means to divine ends. He works
through man to the emancipation of men. He pours His strength into a worm,
and it becomes “an instrument with teeth.” He stiffens a frail reed and it
becomes as an iron pillar.
And this mighty God will use thee and me. On every side there are Egypts
where affliction abounds, there are homes where ignorance breeds, there
are workshops where tyranny reigns, there are lands where oppression is
rampant. “Come now, therefore, I will send thee.” Thus saith the Lord, and
He who gives the command will also give the equipment.
MAY 11
BUT——!
“And Moses answered and said, But——”
Exodus 4:1, 2, 3,4 ,5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
WE know that “but.” God has heard it from our lips a thousand times. It is
the response of unbelief to the divine call. It is the reply of fear to
the divine command. It is the suggestion that the resources are
inadequate. It is a hint that God may not have looked all round. He has
overlooked something which our own eyes have seen. The human “buts” in the
Scriptural stories make an appalling record.
“Lord, I will follow Thee, but——” There is something else to be attended
to before discipleship can begin. Obedience is not primary: it must wait
for something else. And so our obedience is not a straight line: it is
crooked and circuitous; it takes the way of by-path meadow instead of the
highway of the Lord. We do not wait upon the Lord’s pleasure; we make Him
wait upon ours.
There need be no “buts” in our relationship to the King’s will. Everything
has been foreseen. Nothing will take the Lord by surprise. The entire
field has been surveyed, and the preparations are complete. When the Lord
says to thee or me, “I will send thee,” every provision has been made for
the appointed task. “I will not fail thee.”
MAY 12
MOUTH AND MATTER
“Now therefore go, and I will be with thy mouth.”
Exodus 4:10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17.
AND what a promise that is for anyone who is commissioned to proclaim the
King’s decrees. Here can teachers and preachers find their strength. God
will be with their mouths. He will control their speech, and order their
words like troops. He does not promise to make us eloquent, but to endow
our words with the “demonstration of power.”
“And I will teach thee what thou shall say.” The Lord will not only be
with our mouths, but with our minds. He will guide our thoughts as well as
our words. He will be as sentinel at the lips. He will be our guide in our
processes of meditation and judgment, and He will bring us to enlightened
ends. All of which is just this: He will give us mouth and matter.
This does not put a premium upon idleness. The Lord guides when men are
honestly groping. He gives us fire when we have built the altar. He works
His miracle when we have provided the five loaves. He sends His light
through diligent thinking. The divine power is given through the
consecrated strength.
MAY 13
COMMONPLACE FIDELITIES
Exodus 2:11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25.
GOD prepares us for the greater crusades by more commonplace fidelities.
Through the practice of common kindnesses God leads us to chivalrous
tasks. Little courtesies feed nobler reverences. No man can despise
smaller duties and do the larger duties well. Our strength is sapped by
small disobediences. Our discourtesies to one another impair our worship
of God. The neglect of the “pointing” of a house may lead to dampness and
fatal disease.
And thus the only way to live is by filling every moment with fidelity. We
are ready for anything when we have been faithful in everything. “Because
thou hast been faithful in that which is least!” That is the order in
moral and spiritual progress, and that is the road by which we climb to
the seats of the mighty. When every stone in life is “well and truly laid”
we are sure of a solid, holy temple in which the Lord will delight to
dwell. The quality of our greatness depends upon what we do with “that
which is least.”
MAY 14
CALAMITY AS REVEALER
“In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the Lord.”
Isaiah 6:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8.
WE lost a hero, and he found the Lord. He feared because a great pillar had
fallen: and he found the Pillar of the universe. He thought everything
would topple into disaster, and lo! he felt the strength of the
everlasting arms. When Uzziah lived Isaiah had forgotten his Lord. He so
depended on the earthly that he had overlooked the heavenly. Uzziah
concealed his Lord as a thick veil can hide a face. And when Uzziah died,
when the earthly king passed away, the eternal King was revealed; as when
by the passing of an earth-born cloud the moon reigns radiant in the open
sky.
And thus it is that apparent calamity is often the minister of revelation.
The great storm clears the air, and luminous vistas come into view. The
howling wind of adversity drives away the earth-born clouds and we see the
face of God. Our sorrows prove the occasion of our visions. We see new
panoramas through our tears. Bereavement gives us spiritual surprises, and
death becomes the servant of life. And so it happens that days which began
in gloom end in revelation, and we keep their recurring anniversary with
deepening praise.
MAY 15
GOD IS WIDE-AWAKE
“Jeremiah, what seest thou? And I said, I see a rod of an almond tree.”
Jeremiah 1:7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
AND through the almond tree the Lord gave the trembling young prophet the
strength of assurance. The almond tree is the first to awake from its
wintry sleep. When all other trees are held in frozen slumber the almond
blossoms are looking out on the barren world. And God is like that, awake
and vigilant. Nobody anticipates Him. Wherever Jeremiah was sent on his
prophetic mission the Lord would be there before him. Before the prophet’s
enemies could get to work the Lord was on the field. In the wintriest
circumstances of a prophet’s life God is wide awake: “He that keepeth
Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep.”
And still the almond tree has its heartening significance for thee and me.
Our God is wide-awake. He looks out upon our wintry circumstances, and
nothing is hid from His sight. There is no unrecognized and uncounted
factor which may steal in furtively and take Him by surprise. Everything
is open. He is wide-awake on the far-off field where the isolated
missionary is ploughing his lonely furrow. He is wide-awake on the field
of common labour where some young disciple finds it hard to keep clean
hands while he earns his daily bread.
MAY 16
THE DETAILS OF PROVIDENCE
“The very hairs of your head are all numbered.”
Matthew 10:24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31.
PROVIDENCE goes into details. Sometimes, in our human intercourse, we
cannot see the trees for the wood. We cannot see the individual sheep for
the flock. We cannot see the personal soul for the masses. We are blinded
by the bigness of things; we cannot see the individual blades of grass
because of the field.
Now God’s vision is not general, it is particular. There are no “masses”
to the Infinite. “He calleth His own sheep by name.” The single one is
seen as though he alone possessed the earth. When God looks at the wood He
sees every tree. When He looks at the race He sees every man.
And, therefore, I need not fear that “my way is overlooked by my God.” He
knows every turning. He knows just where the strain begins at the hill. He
knows the perils of every descent. He knows every happening along the
road. He knows every letter that came to me by this morning’s post. He
knows every visitor who knocks at the door of my life, whether the visitor
come at the high noon or at the midnight. “There is nothing hid.” “The
very hairs of your head are all numbered.”
MAY 17
MY BODILY INFIRMITIES
John 9:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.
AN infirmity becomes doubly burdensome when we give it a false
interpretation. The weight of a thing is determined by our conception of
it. If I look upon my ailment as the stroke of an offended God, I wear it
like the chains of a slave. If I look upon it as the fire of the gracious
Refiner, I can calmly await the beneficent issue. It is my Lord, engaged
in chastening His jewels!
And so our Master first of all relieves the blind man of the false
interpretation of his infirmity. “Neither did this man sin, nor his
parents.” That lifts the sorrow out of the winter into the spring. It sets
it in the warm, sweet light of grace. It becomes transfigured. It wears a
new face, placed there in “the light of His countenance.”
And then our Lord relieves the blind man of the infirmity itself. The
ministry of blindness was accomplished, and sight was given. No man is
kept in the darkness a moment longer than infinite love deems good. Our
Lord does not overlook the prison-house, and leave us there forgotten. “He
that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep.” So cheer thee, my
soul! The Lord is on thy side! The Miracle-worker knows His time and “the
dreariest path, the darkest way, shall issue out in heavenly day.”
MAY 18
BLINDED JUDGMENTS
John 9:13, 14,15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25.
HERE is a ceremonialism which is blind to the humane. Its scrupulous
ritualisms have dried up its philanthropy. It thinks more of etiquette
than equity. It esteems genuflexions more than generosity. It values the
husk more than the kernel. It is Sabbatarian but not humanitarian. My God,
deliver me from all pious conventionalities which make me indifferent to
the ailments and cries of my fellow-men!
And here is a dense prejudice which is blind to the evident. “They did not
believe that he had been blind.” A prejudice can deflect the judgment, as
subtle magnetic currents can deflect the needle. The film of an
ecclesiastical prejudice can be so opaque as to make us “blind to facts.”
We do not “see things as they are.” Our perverted eyes give us a crooked
world.
And here is a bitter violence which is blind to the glory of the Lord. “We
know that this man is a sinner!” And so it comes to that. Our judgments
can become so warped that when we look upon Him, “who is the chief among
ten thousand and the altogether lovely,” “there is no beauty that we
should desire Him”! And therefore let this be my daily prayer, “Lord, that
I might receive my sight!”
MAY 19
THE ROCK OF EXPERIENCE
John 9:26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41.
THE Lord gains a witness, and a stalwart witness too! First, he stood upon
his own inalienable experience. “One thing I know, that whereas I was
blind, now I see.” Second, he drew his own firm inferences from the
beneficence of the work. And, in the third place, he reached his grand
conclusion. “If this man were not of God, He could do nothing.” A grand
testimony, and given by one who “dared to stand alone!”
And the witness gained a Friend. “Jesus heard that they had cast him out,
and when He had found him....” Our Lord is always seeking the outcasts. He
never abandons the abandoned. When the faithful witness is driven into the
wilderness he finds “a table spread” before him “in the presence of his
enemies.” The man who had recovered his sight was cast out, but on the
threshold he met his Lord!
And further sight was given. By the first sight he could see his parents,
by the second sight he saw the Son of God. The film was first removed from
his eyes, and then from his soul, and he saw “the glory of the Lord.” “And
he said, Lord, I believe. And he worshipped Him.”
MAY 20
THE LONE CRY IN THE BIG CROWD
Mark 10:46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52.
OUR Lord hears the cry of need even when it rises from the midst of the
tumultuous crowd. A mother can hear the faint cry of her child in the
chamber above, even when the room resounds with the talk and laughter of
her guests. And our Lord heard the wail of poor Bartimaeus! That lone,
sorrowful cry pierced the clamour, “and Jesus stood still.” My soul, cry
to Him! “Jesus of Nazareth passeth by.”
And Bartimaeus knew what he wanted. He merged all his petitions in one.
“Lord, that I might receive my sight!” And let me, too, come to my Saviour
with some great, dominant, all-commanding request. I trifle with my
Master. I ask Him for toys, for petty things, while all the time He is
waiting to give me “unsearchable wealth,” “sight, riches, healing of the
mind.” “The Lord is great”; and shall I add, “and greatly to be prayed!”
And how delicately gracious it is that our Lord should attribute the
miracle to Bartimæus himself. “Thy faith hath made thee whole!” As though
the Lord had had no share in the ministry! He makes so much of our faith,
and our endeavour, and our obedience. “If ye had faith as a grain of
mustard-seed!” That’s all He wants, and miracles are accomplished.
MAY 21
HUMAN FRAILTIES
Isaiah 42:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.
WHAT a winsome revelation of the delicate gentleness of the Lord! “The
bruised reed”—is it the impaired musical reed, that cannot now emit a
musical sound, and can only be thrown away? He will not snap it and cast
it to the void. The discordant life can be made tuneful again: He will put
“a new song in my mouth.”
“And the smoking flax”—the life that has lost its fire, and therefore its
light, its enthusiasm, and therefore its ideals; the life that is
smouldering into the cold ashes of moral and spiritual death! He will not
stamp it out with His foot. The smouldering fire can be rekindled, a spent
enthusiasm can be revived. “He shall baptize you ... with fire!”
And so He comes to minister to the infirm. He comes to restore injured
faculty; “to open blind eyes.” He comes to give vision to restored sight:
“to be a light of the Gentiles.” And He comes to endow the restored life
with a rich and gracious freedom: “to bring out the prisoners from the
prison.” Sight, and light, and freedom! And my Lord is at the gate, and
these gifts are in His hand.
MAY 22
THE LIGHT AS DARKNESS
Matthew 13:10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17.
THE condition of the heart determines the quality of my discernment. If
“the heart is waxed gross,” the ears will be “dull of hearing,” and the
eyes will be “closed.” My spiritual senses gain their acuteness or
obtuseness from my affections. If my love is muddy my sight will be dim.
If my love be “clear as crystal” the spiritual realm will be like a
gloriously transparent air.
And the awful nemesis of sin-created blindness is this, that it interprets
itself as sight. “The light that is in thee is darkness.” We think we see,
and all the time we are the children of the night. We think it is “the
dawn of God’s sweet morning,” and behold! it is the perverse flare of the
evil one. He has given us a will-o’-the-wisp, and we boastfully proclaim
it to be “the morning star.”
But there is hope for any man, however blind he be, who will humbly lay
himself at Jesus’ feet. Let this be my prayer, O Lord, “Cleanse Thou me
from secret faults.” Deliver me from self-deception, save me from
confusing the fixed light of heaven with the wandering beacon-lights of
hell. And again and again will I pray, “Lord, that I might receive my
sight!”
MAY 23
WIND AND FIRE
Acts 2:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,
20, 21.
THE Holy Spirit will minister to me as a wind. He will create an atmosphere
in my life which will quicken all sweet and beautiful growth. And this
shall be my native air. Gracious seeds, which have never awaked, shall now
unfold themselves, and “the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose.”
It was a saying of Huxley, that if our little island were to be invaded by
tropical airs, tropical seeds which are now lying dormant in English
gardens and fields would troop out of their graves in bewildering wealth
and beauty! “Breathe on me, breath of God!”
And the Holy Spirit will minister to me as a fire. And fire is our supreme
minister of cleansing. Fire can purify when water is impotent. The great
fire burnt out the great plague. There are evil germs which cannot be
dealt with except by the searching ministry of the flame. “He shall
baptize you ... with fire.” He will create a holy enthusiasm in my soul,
an intense and sacred love, which will burn up all evil intruders, but in
which all beautiful things shall walk unhurt.
“Kindle a flame of sacred love
On these cold hearts of ours.”
MAY 24
CALVARY AND PENTECOST
Acts 2:22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36.
THE Apostle Peter traces the stream of Pentecostal blessing to a tomb. This
“river of water of life” has its “rise” in a death of transcendent
sacrifice. And I must never forget these dark beginnings of my eternal
hope. It is well that I should frequently visit the sources of my
blessedness, and kneel on “the green hill far away.”
It will save me from having a cheap religion. I shall never handle the
gifts of grace as though they had cost nothing. There will always be the
marks of blood upon them, the crimson stain of incomparable sacrifice.
And it will save me from all flippancy in my religious life. When I visit
the cross and the tomb, life is transformed from a picnic into a crusade.
For that is ever my peril, to picnic on the banks of the river and to
spend my days in emotional loitering.
After all, my Pentecost is purposed to prepare me for my own Gethsemane
and Calvary! Life is given me in order that I may spend it again in ready
and fruitful sacrifice.
MAY 25
VISIONS AND DREAMS
Joel 2:21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31,32.
AND this old-world promise is good for me to-day. It is like some
weather-stained well, whose waters have continued flowing throughout the
generations, right down to my own time. Let me drink!
Holy inspiration will give me insight into the mind of my God. “Your sons
and your daughters shall prophesy.” The breath of God creates an
atmosphere in which spiritual realities are clearly seen. It is like the
Sabbath air in some busy city, when the fumes and smoke of commerce have
been blown away. “Thou shalt behold the land that is very far off.”
And so in my younger days holy inspiration will give me visions. “Your
young men shall see visions.” I shall be an idealist, and I shall see
things as they exist in God’s idea, even though at present they be maimed
and imperfect. I shall see them “according to the pattern on the Mount.”
And in my later days holy inspiration will give me dreams. “Your old men
shall dream dreams.” And what shall they dream about? Not like the
Chinese, of a golden age in a distant past, but of a golden age to be.
Their dreams shall have a “forward-looking eye.” They shall see “the new
Jerusalem coming down out of heaven from God.”
MAY 26
THE UNITING OF SUNDERED PEOPLES
“On the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Ghost.”
Acts 10:34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48.
AND this is ever the issue of a true outpouring of the Spirit: sundered
peoples become one. At “low tide” there are multitudes of separated pools
along the shore: at “high tide” they flow together, and the little
distinctions are lost in a splendid union.
It is so racially. “Jew and Gentile!” Peter and Cornelius lose their
prejudices in the emancipating ministry of the Spirit. And so shall it be
with English and Irish, with French and German, with Asiatic and European:
they shall be “all one” in Christ.
It is so socially. “Bond and free!” The master and the servant shall
discover a glorious intimacy and union. And so shall rich and poor, the
learned and the illiterate, the many-talented and the obscure. The pools
shall flow together.
It is so ecclesiastically. Our sectarianisms are always most frowning and
obtrusive when spiritually we are at “low tide.” When the tide rises, it
is amazing how the ramparts are submerged. It is not round-table
conferences that we need, but seasons of communion when together we shall
await the outpouring of the Holy Ghost.
MAY 27
RECEIVING THE HOLY GHOST
Acts 237, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47.
THE sacred process by which the Holy Spirit is received is the same
throughout all the years.
First there is repentance. And repentance is not a flow of emotion, but a
certain direction of mind. I may repent with dry eyes. It is not a matter
of feeling, but of willing. It is to lay hold of the aimless, drifting
thought, and steer it toward God! It is a change of mind.
Second, there is a definite and avowed choice of my new Goal, my new Lord
and King. The Christian life cannot be a subterfuge. It cannot be lived
incognito. I cannot be the Christ’s and wear the livery of an alien power.
There must be confession, a bold and clarion-like avowal that henceforth I
am a soldier of the Lord.
And the spiritual experiences will be sure, as sure as the law-governed
processes of the material world. There will be “remission of sins.” The
old guilt will fall away from my soul as the chains fell from Peter’s
limbs when the angel touched them. And there will be “the gift of the Holy
Ghost.” A new dynamic is mine! I enter into fellowship with the power of
the ascended Lord.
MAY 28
THE SONS OF GOD
“For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God.”
Romans 8:9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17.
AND how unspeakably wealthy are the implications of the great word!
If a son, then what holy freedom is mine! Mine is not “the spirit of
bondage.” The son has “the run of the house.” That is the great contrast
between lodgings and home. And I am to be at home with the Lord.
And if a son, then heir! “All things are yours.” Samuel Rutherford used to
counsel his friends to “take a turn” round their estate. And truly it is
an inspiring exercise! The Spirit shall lead me over my estate, and I will
survey, with the sense of ownership, “the things which God hath prepared
for them that love Him.”
I wonder if I have the manner of a king’s son? I wonder if there is
anything in my very “walk” which indicates distinguished lineage and royal
blood? Or am I like a vagrant who has no possessions and no heartening
expectations?
“Lord, I would serve, and be a son!”
MAY 29
MANY GIFTS—ONE SPIRIT
1Corinthians 12:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13.
HERE is no monotony in the workmanship of my God. The multitude of His
thoughts is like the sound of the sea, and every thought commands a new
creation. When He thinks upon me, the result is a creative touch never
again to be repeated on land or sea. And so, when the Holy Spirit is given
to the people, the ministry does not work in the suppression of
individualities, but rather in their refinement and enrichment.
Our gifts will be manifold, and we must not allow the difference to breed
a spirit of suspicion. Because my brother’s gift is not mine I must not
suspect his calling. To one man is given a trumpet, to another a lamp, and
to another a spade. And they are all the holy gifts of grace.
And thus the gifts are manifold in order that every man may find his
completeness in his brother. One man is like an eye—he is a seer of
visions! Another man is like a hand—he has the genius of practicality! He
is “a handy man”! One is the architect, the other is the builder. And each
requires the other, if either is to be perfected. And so, by God’s
gracious Spirit, the individual man is only a bit, a portion, and he is
intended to fit into the other bits, and so make the complete man of the
race.
MAY 30
FINDING THE DEEP THINGS
“The Spirit searches all things, yea, the deep things of God.”
1Corinthians 2:7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.
THE deep things of God cannot be discovered by unaided reason. “Eye hath
not seen:” they are not to be apprehended by the artistic vision. “Ear
hath not heard:” they are not unveiled amid the discussion of the
philosophic schools. “Neither hath entered into the heart of man:” even
poetic insight cannot discern them. All the common lights fail in this
realm. We need another illumination, even that provided by the Holy
Spirit. And the Spirit is offered unto us “that we might know the things
that are freely given to us of God.”
And here we have the reason why so many uncultured people are spiritually
wiser than many who are learned. They lack talent, but they have grace.
They lack accomplishments, but they have the Holy Ghost. They lack the
telescope, but they have the sunlight. They are not scholars, but they are
saints. They may not be theologians, but they have true religion. And so
they have “the open vision.” They “walk with God,” and “the deep things of
God” are made known to their souls.
We must put first things first. We may be busy polishing our lenses when
our primary and fundamental need is light. It is not a gift that we
require, but a Friend.
MAY 31
CONNECTION AND CONCORD
“By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body.”
1Corinthians 12:12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
IT is only in the spirit that real union is born. Every other kind of union
is artificial, and mechanical, and dead. We can dovetail many pieces of
wood together and make the unity of an article of furniture, but we cannot
dovetail items together and make a tree. And it is the union of a tree
that we require, a union born of indwelling life. We may join many people
together in a fellowship by the bonds of a formal creed, but the result is
only a piece of social furniture, it is not a vital communion. There is a
vast difference between a connection and a concord.
Many members of a family may bear the same name, may share the same blood,
may sit and eat at the same table, and yet may have no more vital union
than a handful of marbles in a boy’s pocket. But let the spirit of a
common love dwell in all their hearts and there is a family bound together
in glorious union.
And so it is in the spirit, and there alone, that vital union is to be
found. And here is the secret of such spiritual union. “By one Spirit are
we all baptized into one body.” The Spirit of God, dwelling in all our
spirits, attunes them into glorious harmony. Our lives blend with one
another in the very music of the spheres. |
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