| January 26 Morning
"Your heavenly Father." Matthew 6:26
God's people are doubly His children, they are His offspring by creation, and they are His
sons by adoption in Christ. Hence they are privileged to call Him, "Our Father which
art in heaven." Father! Oh, what precious word is that. Here is authority: "If I
be a Father, where is mine honour?" If ye be sons, where is your obedience? Here is
affection mingled with authority; an authority which does not provoke rebellion; an
obedience demanded which is most cheerfully rendered which would not be withheld
even if it might.
The obedience which God's children yield to Him must be loving obedience. Do not go about
the service of God as slaves to their taskmaster's toil, but run in the way of His
commands because it is your Father's way. Yield your bodies as instruments of
righteousness, because righteousness is your Father's will, and His will should be the
will of His child. Father! Here is a kingly attribute so sweetly veiled in love,
that the King's crown is forgotten in the King's face, and His sceptre becomes, not a rod
of iron, but a silver sceptre of mercy the sceptre indeed seems to be forgotten in
the tender hand of Him who wields it. Father! Here is honour and love. How great is
a Father's love to his children!
That which friendship cannot do, and mere benevolence will not attempt, a father's heart
and hand must do for his sons. They are his offspring, he must bless them; they are his
children, he must show himself strong in their defence. If an earthly father watches over
his children with unceasing love and care, how much more does our heavenly Father? Abba,
Father! He who can say this, hath uttered better music than cherubim or seraphim can
reach. There is heaven in the depth of that word Father! There is all I can ask;
all my necessities can demand; all my wishes can desire. I have all in all to all eternity
when I can say, "Father."
Evening
"All they that heard it wondered at those things." Luke 2:18
We must not cease to wonder at the great marvels of our God. It would be very difficult to
draw a line between holy wonder and real worship; for when the soul is overwhelmed with
the majesty of God's glory, though it may not express itself in song, or even utter its
voice with bowed head in humble prayer, yet it silently adores. Our incarnate God is to be
worshipped as "the Wonderful." That God should consider His fallen creature,
man, and instead of sweeping him away with the besom of destruction, should Himself
undertake to be man's Redeemer, and to pay his ransom price, is, indeed marvellous! But to
each believer redemption is most marvellous as he views it in relation to himself.
It is a miracle of grace indeed, that Jesus should forsake the thrones and royalties
above, to suffer ignominiously below for you. Let your soul lose itself in wonder, for
wonder is in this way a very practical emotion. Holy wonder will lead you to grateful
worship and heartfelt thanksgiving. It will cause within you godly watchfulness; you will
be afraid to sin against such a love as this. Feeling the presence of the mighty God in
the gift of His dear Son, you will put off your shoes from off your feet, because the
place whereon you stand is holy ground. You will be moved at the same time to glorious
hope.
If Jesus has done such marvellous things on your behalf, you will feel that heaven itself
is not too great for your expectation. Who can be astonished at anything, when he has once
been astonished at the manger and the cross? What is there wonderful left after one has
seen the Saviour? Dear reader, it may be that from the quietness and solitariness of your
life, you are scarcely able to imitate the shepherds of Bethlehem, who told what they had
seen and heard, but you can, at least, fill up the circle of the worshippers before the
throne, by wondering at what God has done. |