| January 19 Morning
"I sought him, but I found him not." Song of Solomon 3:1
Tell me where you lost the company of a Christ, and I will tell you the most likely place
to find Him. Have you lost Christ in the closet by restraining prayer? Then it is there
you must seek and find Him. Did you lose Christ by sin? You will find Christ in no other
way but by the giving up of the sin, and seeking by the Holy Spirit to mortify the member
in which the lust doth dwell. Did you lose Christ by neglecting the Scriptures? You must
find Christ in the Scriptures. It is a true proverb, "Look for a thing where you
dropped it, it is there." So look for Christ where you lost Him, for He has not gone
away. But it is hard work to go back for Christ. Bunyan tells us, the pilgrim found the
piece of the road back to the Arbour of Ease, where he lost his roll, the hardest he had
ever travelled. Twenty miles onward is easier than to go one mile back for the lost
evidence.
Take care, then, when you find your Master, to cling close to Him. But how is it you have
lost Him? One would have thought you would never have parted with such a precious friend,
whose presence is so sweet, whose words are so comforting, and whose company is so dear to
you! How is it that you did not watch Him every moment for fear of losing sight of Him?
Yet, since you have let Him go, what a mercy that you are seeking Him, even though you
mournfully groan, "O that I knew where I might find Him!" Go on seeking, for it
is dangerous to be without thy Lord.
Without Christ you are like a sheep without its shepherd; like a tree without water at its
roots; like a sere leaf in the tempest not bound to the tree of life. With thine
whole heart seek Him, and He will be found of thee: only give thyself thoroughly up to the
search, and verily, thou shalt yet discover Him to thy joy and gladness.
Evening
"Then opened He their understanding, that they might understand the
Scriptures." Luke 24:45
He whom we viewed last evening as opening Scripture, we here perceive opening the
understanding. In the first work He has many fellow-labourers, but in the second He stands
alone; many can bring the Scriptures to the mind, but the Lord alone can prepare the mind
to receive the Scriptures. Our Lord Jesus differs from all other teachers; they reach the
ear, but He instructs the heart; they deal with the outward letter, but He imparts an
inward taste for the truth, by which we perceive its savour and spirit.
The most unlearned of men become ripe scholars in the school of grace when the Lord Jesus
by His Holy Spirit unfolds the mysteries of the kingdom to them, and grants the divine
anointing by which they are enabled to behold the invisible. Happy are we if we have had
our understandings cleared and strengthened by the Master! How many men of profound
learning are ignorant of eternal things! They know the killing letter of revelation, but
its killing spirit they cannot discern; they have a veil upon their hearts which the eyes
of carnal reason cannot penetrate. Such was our case a little time ago; we who now see
were once utterly blind; truth was to us as beauty in the dark, a thing unnoticed and
neglected.
Had it not been for the love of Jesus we should have remained to this moment in utter
ignorance, for without His gracious opening of our understanding, we could no more have
attained to spiritual knowledge than an infant can climb the Pyramids, or an ostrich fly
up to the stars. Jesus' College is the only one in which God's truth can be really
learned; other schools may teach us what is to be believed, but Christ's alone can show us
how to believe it. Let us sit at the feet of Jesus, and by earnest prayer call in His
blessed aid that our dull wits may grow brighter, and our feeble understandings may
receive heavenly things. |