| February 10 Morning
"I know how to abound." Philippians 4:12
There are many who know "how to be abased" who have not learned "how to
abound." When they are set upon the top of a pinnacle their heads grow dizzy, and
they are ready to fall. The Christian far oftener disgraces his profession in prosperity
than in adversity. It is a dangerous thing to be prosperous. The crucible of adversity is
a less severe trial to the Christian than the fining-pot of prosperity. Oh, what leanness
of soul and neglect of spiritual things have been brought on through the very mercies and
bounties of God! Yet this is not a matter of necessity, for the apostle tells us that he
knew how to abound. When he had much he knew how to use it. Abundant grace enabled him to
bear abundant prosperity.
When he had a full sail he was loaded with much ballast, and so floated safely. It needs
more than human skill to carry the brimming cup of mortal joy with a steady hand, yet Paul
had learned that skill, for he declares, "In all things I am instructed both to be
full and to be hungry." It is a divine lesson to know how to be full, for the
Israelites were full once, but while the flesh was yet in their mouth, the wrath of God
came upon them. Many have asked for mercies that they might satisfy their own hearts'
lust.
Fulness of bread has often made fulness of blood, and that has brought on wantonness of
spirit. When we have much of God's providential mercies, it often happens that we have but
little of God's grace, and little gratitude for the bounties we have received. We are full
and we forget God: satisfied with earth, we are content to do without heaven. Rest assured
it is harder to know how to be full than it is to know how to be hungry so
desperate is the tendency of human nature to pride and forgetfulness of God. Take care
that you ask in your prayers that God would teach you "how to be full."
"Let not the gifts Thy love bestows Estrange our hearts from Thee."
Evening
"I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins:
return unto Me; for I have redeemed thee." Isaiah 44:22
Attentively observe THE INSTRUCTIVE SIMILITUDE: our sins are like a cloud. As clouds are
of many shapes and shades, so are our transgressions. As clouds obscure the light of the
sun, and darken the landscape beneath, so do our sins hide from us the light of Jehovah's
face, and cause us to sit in the shadow of death. They are earth-born things, and rise
from the miry places of our nature; and when so collected that their measure is full, they
threaten us with storm and tempest. Alas! that, unlike clouds, our sins yield us no genial
showers, but rather threaten to deluge us with a fiery flood of destruction. O ye black
clouds of sin, how can it be fair weather with our souls while ye remain?
Let our joyful eye dwell upon THE NOTABLE ACT of divine mercy "blotting
out." God Himself appears upon the scene, and in divine benignity, instead of
manifesting His anger, reveals His grace: He at once and for ever effectually removes the
mischief, not by blowing away the cloud, but by blotting it out from existence once for
all. Against the justified man no sin remains, the great transaction of the cross has
eternally removed His transgressions from him. On Calvary's summit the great deed, by
which the sin of all the chosen was for ever put away, was completely and effectually
performed.
Practically let us obey THE GRACIOUS COMMAND, "return unto me."Why should
pardoned sinners live at a distance from their God? If we have been forgiven all our sins,
let no legal fear withhold us from the boldest access to our Lord. Let backslidings be
bemoaned, but let us not persevere in them. To the greatest possible nearness of communion
with the Lord, let us, in the power of the Holy Spirit, strive mightily to return. O Lord,
this night restore us! |