| January 8 Morning
"The iniquity of the holy things." Exodus 28:38
What a veil is lifted up by these words, and what a disclosure is made! It will be
humbling and profitable for us to pause awhile and see this sad sight. The iniquities of
our public worship, its hypocrisy, formality, lukewarmness, irreverence, wandering of
heart and forgetfulness of God, what a full measure have we there! Our work for the Lord,
its emulation, selfishness, carelessness, slackness, unbelief, what a mass of defilement
is there! Our private devotions, their laxity, coldness, neglect, sleepiness, and vanity,
what a mountain of dead earth is there!
If we looked more carefully we should find this iniquity to be far greater than appears at
first sight. Dr. Payson, writing to his brother, says, "My parish, as well as my
heart, very much resembles the garden of the sluggard; and what is worse, I find that very
many of my desires for the melioration of both, proceed either from pride or vanity or
indolence. I look at the weeds which overspread my garden, and breathe out an earnest wish
that they were eradicated. But why? What prompts the wish?
It may be that I may walk out and say to myself, In what fine order is my garden
kept!' This is pride. Or, it may be that my neighbours may look over the wall and say,
How finely your garden flourishes!' This is vanity. Or I may wish for the
destruction of the weeds, because I am weary of pulling them up. This is indolence."
So that even our desires after holiness may be polluted by ill motives.
Under the greenest sods worms hide themselves; we need not look long to discover them. How
cheering is the thought, that when the High Priest bore the iniquity of the holy things he
wore upon his brow the words, "HOLINESS TO THE LORD:" and even so while Jesus
bears our sin, He presents before His Father's face not our unholiness, but his own
holiness. O for grace to view our great High Priest by the eye of faith!
Evening
"Thy love is better than wine." Song of Solomon 1:2
Nothing gives the believer so much joy as fellowship with Christ. He has enjoyment as
others have in the common mercies of life, he can be glad both in God's gifts and God's
works; but in all these separately, yea, and in all of them added together, he doth not
find such substantial delight as in the matchless person of his Lord Jesus. He has wine
which no vineyard on earth ever yielded; he has bread which all the corn-fields of Egypt
could never bring forth. Where can such sweetness be found as we have tasted in communion
with our Beloved? In our esteem, the joys of earth are little better than husks for swine
compared with Jesus, the heavenly manna. We would rather have one mouthful of Christ's
love, and a sip of his fellowship, than a whole world full of carnal delights.
What is the chaff to the wheat? What is the sparkling paste to the true diamond? What is a
dream to the glorious reality? What is time's mirth, in its best trim, compared to our
Lord Jesus in His most despised estate? If you know anything of the inner life, you will
confess that our highest, purest, and most enduring joys must be the fruit of the tree of
life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God.
No spring yields such sweet water as that well of God which was digged with the soldier's
spear. All earthly bliss is of the earth earthy, but the comforts of Christ's presence are
like Himself, heavenly. We can review our communion with Jesus, and find no regrets of
emptiness therein; there are no dregs in this wine, no dead flies in this ointment. The
joy of the Lord is solid and enduring. Vanity hath not looked upon it, but discretion and
prudence testify that it abideth the test of years, and is in time and in eternity worthy
to be called "the only true delight." For nourishment, consolation,
exhilaration, and refreshment, no wine can rival the love of Jesus. Let us drink to the
full this evening. |