MORNING THOUGHTS,
or
DAILY WALKING WITH GOD
DAILY WALKING WITH GOD
By Octavius Winslow
JUNE 28.
"The path of the just is as the shining light, that
shines more and more unto the perfect day." Proverbs 4:18
The first light that dawns upon the soul is the daybreak
of grace. When that blessed period arrives, when the Sun of Righteousness
has risen upon the long-benighted mind, how do the shadows of ignorance and
of guilt instantly disappear! What a breaking away of, perhaps, a long night
of alienation from God, of direct hostility to God, and of ignorance of the
Lord Jesus, then takes place. Not, however, strongly marked is this state
always at the first. The beginning of grace in the soul is frequently
analogous to the beginning of day in the natural world. The dawn of grace is
at first so faint, the daybreak so gentle, that a skillful eye only can
observe its earliest tints. The individual himself is, perhaps, ignorant of
the extraordinary transition through which his soul is passing. The
discovery of darkness which that day-dawn has made, the revelation it has
brought to view of the desperate depravity of his heart, the utter
corruption of his fallen nature, the number and the turpitude of his sins,
it may be, well near overwhelms the individual with despair! But what has
led to this discovery? What has revealed all this darkness and sin? Oh! it
is the daybreak of grace in the soul! One faint ray, what a change has it
produced! And is it real? Ah! just as real as that the first beam, faintly
painted on the eastern sky, is a real and an essential part of light. The
daybreak, faint and glimmering though it be, is as really day as the
meridian is day. And so is it with the day-dawn of grace in the soul. The
first serious thought- the first real misgiving- the first conviction of
sin- the first downfall of the eye- the first bending of the knee- the first
tear- the first prayer- the first touch of faith, is as really and as
essentially the daybreak of God's converting grace in the soul as is the
utmost perfection to which that grace can arrive. Oh, glorious dawn is this,
my reader, if now for the first time in your life the daybreak of grace has
come, and the shadows of ignorance and guilt are fleeing away before the
advancing light of Jesus in your soul. If now you are seeing how depraved
your nature is; if now you are learning the utter worthlessness of your own
righteousness; if now you are fleeing as a poor, lost sinner to Christ,
relinquishing your hold of everything else, and clinging only to Him; though
this be but in weakness, and tremulousness, and hesitancy, yet sing for joy,
for the day is breaking- the prelude to the day of eternal glory- and the
shadows of unregeneracy are forever fleeing away. And as this day of grace
has begun, so it will advance. Nothing shall impede its course, nothing
shall arrest its progress. "He which has begun a good work in you will
perform it until the day of Jesus Christ." The Sun, now risen upon you with
healing in His beams, shall never stand still- shall never go back. "He has
set a tabernacle for the sun" in the renewed soul of man; and onward that
sun will roll in its glorious orbit, penetrating with its beams every dark
recess, until all mental shadows are merged and lost in its unclouded and
eternal splendor. Charles Spurgeon, Evening, June 28
“But Aaron’s rod swallowed up their rods.”
This incident is an instructive
emblem of the sure victory of the
divine handiwork over all opposition. Whenever a divine principle
is cast into the heart, though the devil may fashion a
counterfeit,
and produce swarms of opponents, as sure as ever God is in the
work,
it will swallow up all its foes. If God’s grace takes possession
of a man, the world’s magicians may throw down all their
rods; and every rod may be as
cunning and poisonous as a serpent, but Aaron’s rod will swallow
up their rods. The sweet attractions of the cross
will woo and win the man’s heart, and he who lived only for this
deceitful earth will now have
an eye for the upper spheres, and a wing to mount into celestial
heights.
When grace has won the day the worldling seeks the world to come.
The same fact is to be observed in the life of the believer. What
multitudes of foes has our faith had to meet! Our old sins—the
devil threw them down before us, and they turned to serpents.
What hosts of them! Ah, but the cross of Jesus destroys them all.
Faith in Christ makes short work of all our sins. Then the devil
has
launched forth another host of serpents in the form of worldly
trials,
temptations, unbelief; but faith in Jesus is more than a match for
them, and overcomes them all. The same absorbing principle shines
in the faithful service of God! With an enthusiastic love for
Jesus
difficulties are surmounted, sacrifices become pleasures,
sufferings
are honours. But if religion is thus a consuming passion in the
heart,
then it follows that there are many persons who profess religion
but
have it not; for what they have will not bear this test. Examine
yourself,
my reader, on this point. Aaron’s rod proved its heaven-given power. Is your religion doing so? If Christ be anything
he must be everything. O rest not till love and faith in Jesus be
the master passions of your soul!
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