| January 4 Morning
"Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
2 Peter 3:18
"Grow in grace" not in one grace only, but in all grace. Grow in that
root-grace, faith. Believe the promises more firmly than you have done. Let faith increase
in fulness, constancy, simplicity. Grow also in love. Ask that your love may become
extended, more intense, more practical, influencing every thought, word, and deed. Grow
likewise in humility. Seek to lie very low, and know more of your own nothingness. As you
grow downward in humility, seek also to grow upward having nearer approaches to God
in prayer and more intimate fellowship with Jesus.
May God the Holy Spirit enable you to "grow in the knowledge of our Lord and
Saviour." He who grows not in the knowledge of Jesus, refuses to be blessed. To know
Him is "life eternal," and to advance in the knowledge of Him is to increase in
happiness. He who does not long to know more of Christ, knows nothing of Him yet. Whoever
hath sipped this wine will thirst for more, for although Christ doth satisfy, yet it is
such a satisfaction, that the appetite is not cloyed, but whetted.
If you know the love of Jesus as the hart panteth for the water-brooks, so will you
pant after deeper draughts of His love. If you do not desire to know Him better, then you
love Him not, for love always cries, "Nearer, nearer." Absence from Christ is
hell; but the presence of Jesus is heaven. Rest not then content without an increasing
acquaintance with Jesus. Seek to know more of Him in His divine nature, in His human
relationship, in His finished work, in His death, in His resurrection, in His present
glorious intercession, and in His future royal advent. Abide hard by the Cross, and search
the mystery of His wounds. An increase of love to Jesus, and a more perfect apprehension
of His love to us is one of the best tests of growth in grace.
Evening
"And Joseph knew his brethren, but they knew not him." Genesis 42:8
This morning our desires went forth for growth in our acquaintance with the Lord Jesus; it
may be well to-night to consider a kindred topic, namely, our heavenly Joseph's knowledge
of us. This was most blessedly perfect long before we had the slightest knowledge of Him.
"His eyes beheld our substance, yet being imperfect, and in His book all our members
were written, when as yet there was none of them." Before we had a being in the world
we had a being in His heart. When we were enemies to Him, He knew us, our misery, our
madness, and our wickedness.
When we wept bitterly in despairing repentance, and viewed Him only as a judge and a
ruler, He viewed us as His brethren well beloved, and His bowels yearned towards us. He
never mistook His chosen, but always beheld them as objects of His infinite affection.
"The Lord knoweth them that are His," is as true of the prodigals who are
feeding swine as of the children who sit at the table.
But, alas! we knew not our royal Brother, and out of this ignorance grew a host of sins.
We withheld our hearts from Him, and allowed Him no entrance to our love. We mistrusted
Him, and gave no credit to His words. We rebelled against Him, and paid Him no loving
homage. The Sun of Righteousness shone forth, and we could not see Him. Heaven came down
to earth, and earth perceived it not. Let God be praised, those days are over with us; yet
even now it is but little that we know of Jesus compared with what He knows of us. We have
but begun to study Him, but He knoweth us altogether. It is a blessed circumstance that
the ignorance is not on His side, for then it would be a hopeless case for us. He will not
say to us, "I never knew you," but He will confess our names in the day of His
appearing, and meanwhile will manifest Himself to us as He doth not unto the world. |