DISCUSSION FORUMS
MAIN MENU
Home
Help
Advanced Search
Recent Posts
Site Statistics
Who's Online
Forum Rules
Bible Resources
• Bible Study Aids
• Bible Devotionals
• Audio Sermons
Community
• ChristiansUnite Blogs
• Christian Forums
• Facebook Apps
Web Search
• Christian Family Sites
• Top Christian Sites
• Christian RSS Feeds
Family Life
• Christian Finance
• ChristiansUnite KIDS
Shop
• Christian Magazines
• Christian Book Store
Read
• Christian News
• Christian Columns
• Christian Song Lyrics
• Christian Mailing Lists
Connect
• Christian Singles
• Christian Classifieds
Graphics
• Free Christian Clipart
• Christian Wallpaper
Fun Stuff
• Clean Christian Jokes
• Bible Trivia Quiz
• Online Video Games
• Bible Crosswords
Webmasters
• Christian Guestbooks
• Banner Exchange
• Dynamic Content

Subscribe to our Free Newsletter.
Enter your email address:

ChristiansUnite
Forums
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
May 17, 2024, 02:38:04 PM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
Our Lord Jesus Christ loves you.
286828 Posts in 27568 Topics by 3790 Members
Latest Member: Goodwin
* Home Help Search Login Register
+  ChristiansUnite Forums
|-+  Theology
| |-+  General Theology (Moderator: admin)
| | |-+  Thoughts of God
« previous next »
Pages: [1] 2 3 Go Down Print
Author Topic: Thoughts of God  (Read 4815 times)
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« on: March 07, 2009, 07:15:08 AM »

THE THOUGHTS OF GOD

       by John MacDuff, 1864

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God! how great is the sum of them! Were I to count them, they would outnumber the grains of sand. When I awake, I am still with You." Psalm 139: 17-18

       Introduction

       The thoughts of a great man on earth how valued! With what feelings shall we ponder "the thoughts of God?" We treasure the thoughts of the wise and the good for their own sake, but how is their value enhanced when they are personal, and have a special reference to ourselves? These "Thoughts of God," are thoughts toward us. "I know the thoughts that I think towards you." "Your thoughts which are to us." "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God."

       We peruse with additional interest the Diary - the recorded thoughts - of those with whom, while living, we interchanged hallowed friendship, and whose regard and love we had been privileged to enjoy. In opening the Divine "Diary" - unfolding the Divine Thoughts as these are recorded in Sacred Scripture - we have the elevating assurance, "this Great Being loves me - pities me - carries me on His heart." If it be consoling to be much in the thoughts of a revered earthly friend, what must it be to occupy the thoughts of ONE, better than the best, more loving than the most loving human relative?

       An earthly father writes his son in a distant land, 'You are never absent from my thoughts.' Such, too, is the comforting declaration of our Father in heaven. The humblest and loneliest of His children on earth can say, "I am poor and needy, yet the Lord thinks upon me."

       In one sense we are everywhere surrounded with God's thoughts. The world of nature is a majestic volume of these. His sublime thoughts are the everlasting mountains - His lofty thoughts the distant stars - His dreadful thoughts the lightning and tempest, the earthquake and volcano - His minute thoughts of discriminating care the tiny moss and lichen, the tender grass, the lily of the field, and pearly dewdrop - His loving thoughts, the blue sky, the quiet lake, the sunny glade, the budding blossoms and beauteous flowers - His joyful thoughts, the singing streams and sparkling waves - His unchanging thoughts, the rock in mid-ocean, on which the waves are in vain spending their fury.

       But it is not in these mute, undefined, often mysterious symbols, that sinners, redeemed by the blood of Jesus, can discover the true Divine breathings and utterances of the very heart of a reconciled Father. "He has magnified his word above all his name." He "has in these last days spoken unto us [given expression and utterance to His 'thoughts'] by His Son." It is in Christ that each thought of God becomes "precious," - a ministering angel of comfort and hope, a deep pool of unfathomable grace and love, reflecting the image and the peace of heaven. Jesus is the true ladder of Jacob, upon which thoughts upon thoughts of unutterable tenderness flood down from the upper sanctuary. The Father is represented in an impressive figure as "wakening him morning by morning," - "wakening his ear to hear as the learned," - confiding to Him one blessed thought after another, that He may speak them as "words in season to him that is weary."

       And how precious are these thoughts of God! Well may He say regarding them, "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts," - infinite, immutable, everlasting - a glorious chime carrying their echoes from eternity to eternity. We may try to form whatever estimate of them we may, they far transcend our loftiest imaginings. "Now," says the apostle, "unto Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think."

       God loves and treasures even our poor thoughts of Him. "A book of remembrance was written for those who feared the Lord, and that thought upon His name." Oh, how should we cherish and garner His ineffable thoughts towards us! - take them to solve our doubts, calm our fears, soothe our sorrows, hush our misgivings - it may be to smooth our sick-pillows or our death-pillows. These, like tremulous music in some hallowed, time-honored sanctuary, floating on the entranced ear, have fallen with their heavenly vibrations on many a downcast, mourning, troubled, pensive spirit, and woke it up to hope and confidence, peace and joy. This has been the experience of believers in every age - "In the multitude of my thoughts within me, Your comforts [Your comforting thoughts] delight my soul."

       With the devout Psalmist these 'thoughts' seem to have formed the theme of morning meditation - for he adds, in our motto-verse, "When I awake, I am still with you." "What is man," exclaims a saint of an older age still, "that You should magnify him? and that You should set Your heart upon him? and that You should visit him every morning?"

       In this little volume of daily readings, we have been able only to make a brief selection from these "precious thoughts." "Many," truly, "O Lord my God, are Your wonderful works which You have done, and Your thoughts which are to us - they cannot be reckoned up in order unto You; if I would declare and speak of them, they are more than can be numbered." But may these few sparks of living fire - a handful of burning coals taken from the holy altar - serve to kindle the fuel, or brighten the flame of the morning, or, it may be, evening sacrifice. Nothing surely can serve better to quicken faith and animate love - to mitigate grief and disarm temptation - to temper and moderate life's anxieties and engrossments - to sweeten our earthly joys - to hallow our earthly sorrows - to elevate and dignify our earthly pursuits, than to go forth to the world, climbing its mountains of toil, and descending its valleys of care, preoccupied and solemnized with A THOUGHT OF GOD!

       "If we would let God's thoughts, as they are revealed in the Word, come in and fill the chambers of our minds, how different our views and feelings would be regarding both Him and ourselves. What an ado unbelief sometimes stirs up within us, as if all were over! What weeping and dirging as of minstrels waking the dead! Were God's thoughts to be let in, it would be like Jesus coming into the midst of the mourners and saying, 'Why make you this ado and weep?' As the minstrels and other mourners were put out of the house by Jesus, so must our thoughts be put out of our hearts by God's thoughts - then, all being still, the sweet voice of the Redeemer will be heard, 'Tabitha' - 'Arise.'" (Hewitson)
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #1 on: March 07, 2009, 07:38:33 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       1. INFINITE CONDESCENSION

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       The high and lofty one who inhabits eternity, the Holy One, says this: 'I live in that high and holy place with those whose spirits are contrite and humble. I refresh the humble and give new courage to those with repentant hearts.' Isaiah 57:15

       This verse may with reverence be termed, God's own description of His two dwelling-places. How amazing the contrast and disparity; inhabiting eternity, AND - the human bosom! The great of the earth associate with the great; kings have their abodes in palaces - one of God's palaces is the lowly heart. Inconceivable is the distance of those stars whose light takes millions of years in traveling to our earth; and yet what is this? A mere span, compared to the distance which separates the creature from the Creator. We are "but of yesterday." Our days are as an handbreadth - "as a dream when one awakens!"

       Eternity is the lifetime - the biography of the Almighty - ages and eras the pages of the vast volume! If our distance from Him be great as creatures, it is greater still as sinners. Yet this high and lofty One, dwelling in the high and holy place, and whose name is Holy, condescends to be the inmate of the humble, contrite spirit, and to listen to its penitent sighs. Oh, unutterable, unimaginable stoop! The sovereign earthly king visiting the abode of poverty is earth's illustrative picture and symbol of condescension. Yet what, after all, is this, but one perishable mortal visiting another perishable mortal.

       But here is Omnipotence dwelling with weakness, Majesty with nothingness, the Infinite with the finite, Deity with dust! How this "precious thought" ennobles, elevates, consecrates the human soul. That home of earth is ever afterwards rendered illustrious where royalty has sojourned. "If any man loves Me," says Jesus, "he will keep My words, and My Father will love him, and We will come unto him and make Our abode with him."

       What, O Lord, is man, that You are thus mindful of him - that You visit him? Prepare my heart for Your reception. Rend Your heavens and come down - fill its temple-courts with Your glory. May all its powers - sprinkled, like the sacred vessels of old, with the consecrating blood - be dedicated to Your service. "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit - a broken and a contrite heart, O God, You will not despise." Destroy every pedestal of pride. Make me humble - keep me humble. What have I to be proud of? Nothing. I am dependent continually on Your bounty. My existence - my health - my strength - my reason - are a loan from You the Great Proprietor, who can, in the twinkling of an eye, paralyze strength, dethrone reason, arrest the pulses of joyous life, and write upon all I have, "Ichabod, the glory has departed!"

       Much more is this the case in spiritual things - a pensioner from hour to hour on redeeming grace and love - but for Jesus, I would be lost forever! It is lying low at the foot of His cross that I can learn how the Greatest of all Beings can be the most condescending of all. "I cease to wonder at anything," said an ardent believer, "after the discovery of God's love to me in Christ."

       Who is like the Lord our God, the One who sits enthroned on high, who stoops down to look on the heavens and the earth? Psalm 113:5-6
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #2 on: March 07, 2009, 07:49:06 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       2. EVERLASTING LOVE

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       I have loved you, My people, with an everlasting love. With unfailing love I have drawn you to Myself. Jeremiah 31:3

       Here we have an everlasting thought of God, "in the beginning, before ever the earth was." Believer, travel back in imagination to the ages of the past. Before the trance of eternity was broken by any visible manifestation of power - before one temple was erected in space, before one angel waved his wing, or one note was heard of seraph's song - when God inhabited alone these sublime solitudes - then there was a thought of you, and that thought was - Love!

       Think of the sovereignty of that love. He says not, 'You have loved Me with your poor earthly love, therefore have I drawn you.' No, no! It is from nothing in you - no foreseen goodness on your part. Grace is the reason of all He has done - "God who is rich in mercy for His great love with which He loved us." "I will have mercy," is His own declaration - on whom I will have mercy." "Jacob," (that cunning, scheming, crafty youth,) "I have loved."

       Manasseh, (that miserable man who has defiled his crown, dishonored his throne, and deluged Jerusalem with blood,) "I have loved." That dying thief - fresh from a life of infamy, breathing out his blasphemies on a felon's cross - "I have loved." And why, let each of us ask, am I not a Cain or a Judas? Why am I not a wrecked and stranded vessel, like thousands before me? Here is the reason; "Yes, I have loved you." Before you had one thought of Me, yes, when your thoughts were those of hatred, rebellion, enmity - My thoughts towards you were thoughts of love!

       And that Sovereign love, as it is from everlasting, so is it to everlasting - endless in duration - enduring as eternity. The love of the creature is but of yesterday - it may be gone tomorrow - dried like a summer-brook when most needed. But the love of God is fed from the glacier summits - the everlasting hills. We may estimate its intensity, when the Savior could utter regarding it such a prayer as this, "That the love with which You have loved Me, may be in them."

       Oh, amid the often misgivings of my own doubting heart, with its frames and feelings vacillating as the shifting sand, let me delight to ponder this precious thought - the long line of unbroken love - every link love - connecting the eternity that is past with the eternity to come - God thinking of me before the birth of time - even then mapping out all my future happiness and heavenly bliss - and standing now, with the hoarded love of that eternity in His heart, seeking therewith to "draw" me!

       It is "the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness towards us through Christ Jesus" - the moral gravitation-power of the cross, by which His true people have ever been drawn. "I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto Myself." Draw me, Lord, and I will run after You. Show me Your loving-kindness thus enshrined and manifested in Your dear Son. Constrain me to love You in Him, because You have first loved, and so loved, me."

       How priceless is Your unfailing love! Both high and low among men find refuge in the shadow of Your wings. Psalm 36:7
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #3 on: March 07, 2009, 07:59:32 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       3. A DIVINE CHALLENGE

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       This is what the Lord says: 'If you can break My covenant with the day and My covenant with the night, so that day and night no longer come at their appointed time, then My covenant with David My servant - and My covenant with the Levites who are priests ministering before Me - can be broken.' Jeremiah 33:20-21

       It is remarkable how often God's revealed thoughts have for their theme the immutability of His covenant; as if the contemplation of His own inviolable faithfulness formed the mightiest of all topics of comfort and consolation for His believing people. Here He makes a solemn appeal to the constancy of the natural world, as a pledge and guarantee of His unchanging fidelity in spiritual things. Nothing seems so undeviating as the succession of day and night - the revolution of the seasons. The sun sinking at eventide in the golden west, and rising again like a giant refreshed. "While the earth remains," said the Great Creator over His own world, as it emerged of old from the waters of the Deluge, "seed-time and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease."

       In our motto-verse, using human language as a vehicle of Divine thought, He makes the challenge - 'If you can forbid that sun to rise - if you can put drags on his burning chariot wheels, and prevent him from setting - if you can forbid the moon to hang her silver lamp from the vault of night, or pluck the stars from their silent thrones - if you can transpose summer's heat and winter's cold - if you can make seed-time belie its promise to expecting autumn - then, but not until then, shall I break My covenant with My chosen servants.' "Just as the heavens cannot be measured and the foundation of the earth cannot be explored, so I will not consider casting them away forever for their sins. I, the Lord, have spoken!"

       It is delightful thus to look around us on the steadfast and unvarying sequences in the material universe, and to regard them as sacraments of grace - silent witnesses for the inviolability of God's word and promise. Nature, in her majestic constancy, becomes a temple filled with monuments, each bearing the inscription - "God who cannot lie." The God of nature and the God of grace are one - and He who for the last six thousand years has given such proof of unswerving faithfulness in the one economy - (for "they continue this day according to Your ordinances") - will be equally faithful in fulfilling the more permanent provisions of the other. "Look up to the skies above, and gaze down on the earth beneath. For the skies will disappear like smoke, and the earth will wear out like a piece of clothing. The people of the earth will die like flies, but My salvation lasts forever. My righteous rule will never end!"

       It is an "everlasting covenant, well ordered in all things, and sure." How can it be otherwise, seeing it is founded on the work and righteousness of Jehovah-Jesus, Immanuel - God with us. Before one provision of that covenant can fail, immutability must first become mutable, and God himself cease to be God! Standing on this "sure foundation," we can boldly utter the challenge - "Who is he that condemns?" - not God the Father, for "He has justified;" - not Christ, for "He has died;" - not angels in the heights above, not devils in the depths beneath.

       Universal nature, in the ceaseless hymn of her own constancy, proclaims and celebrates our covenant security and safety. Her four great evangelists, Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter, endorse the utterances of the inspired volume. In the mouth of the two witnesses - "Day and Night," every word is established. Thus, with reference not only to the glory and wisdom and power of God, but to His purpose and promise of salvation for His people, "Day unto day utters speech; and night unto night shows knowledge."

       But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of His heart through all generations. Psalm 33:11
===================================

Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #4 on: March 07, 2009, 08:07:57 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       4. THE THOUGHT OF THOUGHTS

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life. John 3:16

       Here is what Cyprian calls "an ocean of thought in a drop of language." Who can sound the depths of this "thought of God?" It will form the theme and the mystery of eternity. Manifold other and glorious are His thoughts regarding His people. But this is the center and focus of all - around which all the others constellate. It is the jewel of which all the others are the setting - the thought of thoughts - the gift of gifts. We may well say, "How precious!"

       There is no measuring that love; it defies all human computation. Christ Himself, in speaking of it, can only intimate its indescribableness. He puts the plumb-line into the hand, but He does not attempt to gauge or fathom - all He can say of the precious thought and the precious love is, "God so loved!" And His redeemed Church in heaven will forever stoop over the edge of the precipice and exclaim, in the contemplation of the profound abyss, "Your thoughts are very deep."

       Think of that love in the past - a love so great as to put into the lips of the Eternal Father the mysterious summons, "Awake, O sword, against My Shepherd, and against the Man who is My Fellow - smite the Shepherd!" The same Almighty Being is represented elsewhere as looking around - scanning and surveying the needs of a doomed and dying world: "I looked, and there was none to help; and I wondered that there was none to uphold - therefore My own arm brought salvation unto Me." The alternative, "condemn - or not condemn," was before the Infinite mind. BUT "God did not send His Son into the world to condemn it, but to save it."

       Think of that love when it culminated thus in its triumph on the cross. When God's "precious thoughts," had their awful exponent and interpreter in "the precious blood of Christ." Think of that moment when Infinite paternal love laid His Isaac on the altar, and the unsheathed sword descended on the priceless Sacrifice! Think of it, too, as a love evoked by rebels - a love manifested towards the guilty and undeserving. History's noblest deed and record of love is in the self devotion of one generous heathen, Pylades, who forfeited his life to save his friend - but "God commends His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us!"

       "You have not yet seen," says a great writer and profound thinker, "the greatest gift of all - the HEART of God, the love of His heart - the heart of His love. And will He, in very deed, show us that? Yes, unveil that cross, and see! It was His only mode of showing us His heart. It is Infinite Love laboring to reveal itself - agonizing to utter the fullness of infinite love. Apart from that act, a boundless ocean of love would have remained forever shut up and concealed in the heart of God. But now it has found an ocean-channel. Beyond this He cannot go. Once and forever the proof has been given - God is love."

       "My thoughts are completely different from yours," says the Lord. "And My ways are far beyond anything you could imagine. For just as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts higher than your thoughts." Isaiah 55:8-9
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #5 on: March 07, 2009, 08:16:08 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       5. TENDER REMONSTRANCE

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       O Israel, how can you say the Lord does not see your troubles? How can you say God refuses to hear your case? Have you never heard or understood? Don't you know that the Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of all the earth? He never grows faint or weary. No one can measure the depths of His understanding. Isaiah 40:27-28

       Here is a thought of desponding man, in contrast with a "thought of God." No, not only so; it is an ungrateful thought of God's own people. It is "Jacob," - "Israel," - who are guilty of these unworthy complainings. They question the rectitude of His dispensations. "Surely," is the language of their doubting hearts, He cannot be cognizant of our situation - our trials - our temptations - our perplexities - otherwise He would long before now have come to our relief - "Surely the Lord does not see my troubles, and God refuses to hear my case."

       So thought Gideon in his hour of faithless despondency, when Israel had been ground down for seven years by the oppression of the Midianites - "If the Lord is with us, why then is all this befallen us?" So thought David, in the wilds of Gilead, when, a broken-hearted exile, he repeated through his anguished tears the challenge of his enemies, who continually said unto him,"Where is your God?" So thought Asaph in his moments of guilty unbelief, when he saw the wicked prospering and the righteous suffering. Misjudging and misinterpreting the divine procedure, "his feet were almost gone - his steps had well-near slipped;" he "remembered God and was troubled;" and amid the misery of unbelieving thoughts, exclaimed, "Has God forgotten to be gracious? has He in anger shut up His tender mercies?"

       So thought Martha and Mary in the extremity of their grief, after they had sent prayer and messenger in vain, and were still left unsupported in their agony. They had ever fondly trusted that mighty Heart of divine tenderness. But how could they trust it now, in these mysterious moments of blank despair? If He had indeed 'loved' them and their lost one, why could Jesus, "abide two days still in the same place where He was?" Could there be kindness - could there be anything but forgetfulness in this strange prolonged absence? Surely, was their hasty, unworthy surmise - 'our way is hidden from Him, He has passed over and overlooked our case and our cause!' No, O desponding ones! "My thoughts are not your thoughts." "I am the Lord; I change not." You have fainted and grown weary of Me; but I, the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth - have not fainted, and never can faint or grow weary of you!

       Go, Gideon, on your deliverance-mission, trusting in My sure word; and out of weakness you shall be made strong, become valiant in fight, and turn to flight the armies of the aliens. Go, fainting pilgrim of Gilead, take down your harp from the willows - sing the Lord's song even in that strange land, for He will soon turn for you your mourning into dancing - take off your sackcloth, and gird you with gladness.

       Go, mourning psalmist of the olden temple, "call to remembrance your song in the night," "commune with your own heart," and thus rebuke your peevish murmurings, "This is my infirmity, but I will remember the years of the right hand of the Most High."

       Go, mourning sisters of Bethany, go forth to meet the lingering steps of 'the Brother born for adversity.' Dry these unkind, distrustful tears. There are wise, though yet undeveloped reasons, which both you and the Church will yet learn to appreciate, for these two long days of unsuccoured sorrow. Imagine anything but this - "Your God has forsaken you, and your Lord has forgotten you!"

       Believer, trust the divine faithfulness in the dark - trust where sight and sense fail to trace. Think especially of the mighty God, yet Brother-man, who has left this last promise legacy - "Surely, I am with you always." He ever lives and ever loves - the true Moses on the mount, whose hands never grow heavy. Oh, amid the fainting and failing of what may be dearest to you in earthly love; be this your sublime solace amid all trials and all changes - "He faints not, neither is weary."

       You will keep in perfect peace all who trust in You, whose thoughts are fixed on You! Isaiah 26:3
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #6 on: March 07, 2009, 08:23:05 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       6. PATERNAL PITY

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       The Lord is like a father to his children, tender and compassionate to those who fear Him. For He understands how weak we are; He knows we are only dust. Psalm 103:13-14

       What feelings on earth are to be compared, in depth and intensity, to those that link a parent to his offspring? Has some member of his family been unjustly wronged? Many a man would willingly himself submit to unmerited injury and ridicule - bear in silence the tongue of calumny and slander - receive in silence the arrows of unkindness, who could not rest thus unmoved under the affront or stigma attempted to be fastened on his child.

       Or does the parent see his child in suffering? He could himself bear pain with comparative composure; but when he sees slow, torturing disease ploughing its furrows on the young cheek, and dimming the luster of the young eye, the iron enters into his soul; he would gladly even risk his own life were that of his loved one endangered. Many a father has stood by an early grave, and said, through anguished tears, "I wish I could have died rather than you!"

       Behold, in the loving, pitying thoughts and tender pitying deeds of the earthly parent, a picture and symbol, O believer, of God's thoughts and God's love to you. No, more - He identifies Himself with the sufferings and wrongs of His children. Injure them, and you injure Him. He that touches them touches the apple of His eye. He says, as David said to Abiathar, "Abide with me, for he that seeks your life, seeks my life - but with me you shall be in safeguard."

       When and where does this pitying love of God begin? "And when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him!" God's thoughts of pity were upon us when we had not thought of pity on ourselves. And at this hour, too, is He pitying us - in our weakness, our sorrows, our temptations, our difficulties, our perplexities. Many an earthly father can make only a little allowance for the weakness and feebleness of his offspring. Not so our heavenly Father. "He remembers that we are but dust." When Job was greatly perplexed and downcast by the bitter reflections of his adversaries, this was his comfort - "But He knows the way that I take."

       See how these same thoughts of pitying love, like the ivy clasping the battered ruin, cling even round His wayward, backsliding children - "Is not Israel still My son, My darling child? I had to punish him, but I still love him. I long for him and surely will have mercy on him." Oh, blessed assurance, this great Being loves me, pities me - pities me and loves me even in the midst of my truant forgetfulness, ungrateful wandering - and continues to call me His "darling child." I have in Him a love in which fatherhood, brotherhood, sisterhood, are all combined!

       Arise, go to your Father! He is waiting and willing to welcome you to His embrace. He asks elsewhere, in a passage which touchingly describes His thoughts (His loving, paternal thoughts) at work - "How shall I put you among the children?" The gospel plan of salvation has answered that question - solved that Divine problem of parental love. Jesus has opened a way of access to the heavenly household - and made us heirs to all these precious thoughts of a Father's heart. Seated under Calvary's cross, we can exclaim in grateful transport -

       "How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!" 1 John 3:1
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #7 on: March 07, 2009, 08:29:41 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       7. COMFORT FOR THE BEREAVED

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       I have seen his ways, but I will heal him; I will lead him and restore comfort to him. Isaiah 57:18

       We have here the utterance of God's thoughts to the bereft mourner. He who looked down of old on bondaged Israel, and thus unlocked the thoughts of His heart, "I know their sorrows" - He who, in a later age, watched from the mountain-side the frail bark tossed in the midst of Tiberias, and hastened to the rescue of faithless disciples - says to each poor afflicted one, 'My thoughts are upon you. I have appointed your trial. I have decreed that early, or that unlooked-for grave. Let faith trust Me in this dark hour, when fainting human nature may fail to comprehend the mystery of My dealings.'

       The successive clauses of this verse form a beautiful gradation. God "sees," He "heals," He "leads," He "comforts!"

       God SEES. He knows all my case, my character, my circumstances. He alone can judge as to the "needs-be" of trial. He has some wise reason for His discipline.

       God HEALS. He comes with the balm of His own heavenly consolation. When the wave of sorrow has answered the end for which it was sent, He says, "Thus far shall you go, and no farther!"

       God LEADS. He does not inflict the heavy blow, and then forsake. He does not leave the shorn lamb to the untempered winds of trial. "The Lord shall guide you continually, and satisfy your soul in drought" - guidance and provision, the two pilgrim necessities - and that, too, "in drought," - when the world's provisions fail!

       God COMFORTS. The mother's love for her child is manifested, not at the moment only when it receives some severe injury, but in the subsequent nights of patient, tender care, and unwearying watchfulness. "As one whom his mother comforts, so," says God, "will I comfort you!"

       In the hour of sorrowing bereavement many a precious revelation is made of a before unknown or hidden God. In wrestling like Jacob with the covenant Angel, the soul is often brought to feel for the first time, in that struggle-hour, His touch - the consciousness of a Presence, before dimly recognized, is now felt. Like 'Israel,' we may go 'halting' to our graves. But the place of affliction is called by us to the last "Peniel;" for there "we saw God face to face;" and from that hour we have journeyed on, sorrowful, yet always rejoicing.

       Let us cleave to this thought of sustaining comfort. Other thoughts of other hearts may have perished. Others that used to think of us, and to interchange thoughts with us, may now only greet us with mute smiles from their portraits on the wall. The parent's arms that comforted us may be mouldering in the dust. The brook that once sang along its joyous music may be silent and still - we gaze upon a dry and waterless channel. But 'Jehovah lives!' Towards the mourner there is ONE heart ever throbbing with thoughts of unalterable love. Weeping one! you can say, in the midst even of intensest loneliness, and through anguished tears, "As for me, I am poor and needy, but the Lord is thinking about me right now. You are my helper and my Savior. Do not delay, O my God." Psalm 40:17
===================================

Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #8 on: March 07, 2009, 08:38:30 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       8. A GRACIOUS PARDON

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       "I - yes, I alone - am the one who blots out your sins for My own sake and will never think of them again." Isaiah 43:25

       "I - yes, I alone" - the Great, the Pure, the Holy, the Righteous God! Surely if there be one way more than another, in which God's thoughts are not as man's thoughts, it is this - pardoning the rebel, welcoming the undeserving, forgiving and forgetting. How we remember the sins and the failings of others. How we harbor the recollection of ingratitude or unkindness. We say, "I forgive, but I cannot forget." God does both. Forgiveness is with Him no effort; it is a delight - "The Lord is well pleased for His righteousness' sake."

       "I - yes, I alone" - the God who for weeks and months, and, it may be, for years, we have been wearying with our iniquities, whose Book of Remembrance is crowded with the record of our guilt - "I - yes, I alone" - the very Being who has registered that guilt, is ready to take the recording pen and erase the pages thus blotted with transgression!

       How can He thus forgive? How can the God who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity, cancel the handwriting that is against us in these volumes of transgression, so that they are remembered no more? It is through the atoning work of Jesus. "The Son of man has power to forgive sins." He shed His precious blood that He might have a right to say, "Your sins, which are many, are all forgiven you." What a complete erasure! Crimson sins, scarlet sins; sins against grace, and love, and warning, and privilege - see them all cast into the depths of the sea, never again to be washed on shore!

       "Whatever our guiltiness is," says Rutherford, "yet when it falls into the sea of God's mercy, it is but like a drop of blood fallen into the great ocean." "The ancients said there was nothing so pure as snow. But we know of something purer, a human soul washed in the blood of Christ."

       What is the impelling MOTIVE with God in so wondrous a forgiveness as this? It is, it can be, nothing He sees in us. No repentance, however sincere; no good works, however imposing or splendid. It is His own free sovereign grace! "For My own sake!" "Thus says the Lord God, I do not this for your sakes, O house of Israel; but for My holy Name's sake." If He had meted out retribution in proportion to our deserts, His thoughts towards us must have been of evil, not of peace - our blood would, long before now, have been mingled with our sacrifices. But He is God, and not man. "It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed." "O Israel you have destroyed yourself, but in Me is your help found."

       Most wondrous chapter in the volume of God's thoughts! - His full, free, unconditional, everlasting forgiveness of the guilty and undeserving. All the most gigantic thoughts of man look poor and shabby after this. God, the just God, yet the Savior - just, in justifying the ungodly.

       Lord! I accept the gracious overture of pardon. I joyfully repose on this thought of Your forgiving mercy. "My debt is very great, neither can I pay anything thereof myself. But I trust in the riches and benignity of my Surety. Let Him free me, who became surety for me; who has taken my debt upon Himself." - (John Gerhard). Yes, He has taken my debt! Think of God, not only willing to blot out and bury in oblivion a guilty past - but hear Him giving the assurance that the legion-sins are already cancelled. The debt has been discharged - the wages paid. He makes it an argument for immediate return and acceptance, "I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, your transgressions, and, as a cloud, your sins; return unto Me; for I have redeemed you."

       What can we say about such wonderful things as these? If God is for us, who can ever be against us? Romans 8:31
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #9 on: March 07, 2009, 08:48:44 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       9. ALMIGHTY GUIDANCE

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       I will instruct you and teach you in the way which you shall go - I will guide you with My eye. Psalm 32:8



       No more precious assurance can I have, than this - that I am under the constant, loving guidance of my heavenly Father - that He appoints the bounds of my habitation, and overrules all events for my good - that my whole life is a plan arranged by Him. Every little apparent contingency, as well as every momentous turn and crisis-hour, forms part of that plan - a 'thought of God.' "God examines every path a man takes." "A man's heart devises his way, but the Lord directs his steps."

       "I will instruct you and teach you." How patiently does this almighty Preceptor train, and with what infinite wisdom and tenderness does He adapt His varied teachings to the needs and requirements of His people! It is "line upon line;" - or if need be, cross upon cross - trial upon trial. Or it may be that startling providences are no longer required - the gentle indications of His will are enough - "I will guide you with My eye." The earthquake - the hurricane - the wind - the fire, may now have fulfilled their mission. "The still, small voice" is now sufficient.

       And how does He promise to teach and to guide? Not in the way that we would like to go - the way of our own choosing, but "the way which you shall go." Often we would decide on pursuing the sunny highway. But God says, 'the rough mountain-track is best for you.' Often we would, like Israel, take the near and smooth road to Canaan by the land of the Philistines. But God's pillar-cloud decides otherwise, and takes us by a circuitous route "by the way of the wilderness." Often we would prefer, like the disciples at Tiberias, the safe path by the seashore, so as to avoid the gathering storm, "for the wind is contrary." But God says, "No." He constrains us to get into the ship.

       It is not for us to question His plans. He led His people of old - He leads them still - by the right way, that they might go to a city of habitation. There is a day coming when, in the words of Augustine, "both vessel and cargo safe, and not a hair of our heads hurt, we reach the haven of our desire," we shall own the wisdom of every earthly lesson, the "needs-be" of every wave in the troubled sea.

       The gardener has occasionally to subject his plants to apparently rough usage - cutting, lopping, mutilating; reducing them to unsightly shapes before they burst into flower. Summer, however, before long, vindicates the wisdom of his treatment, in its clusters of varied fragrance and beauty. So also, at times, does our heavenly Husbandman see fit to use His pruning-knife. But be assured there is not one superfluous or redundant lopping. We shall understand and acknowledge an infinitely wise necessity for all, when the plant has unfolded itself into the full flower, bathed in the tints and diffusing the fragrance of heaven.

       Believer, go up and on your way, rejoicing in the teaching and guidance of unerring Wisdom - "I will guide you with My eye." The sleepless eye of Israel's unslumbering Shepherd is upon you by day and by night - in sickness and in health - in joy and in sorrow - in life and in death. "Does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it?"

       But the Lord watches over those who fear Him, those who rely on His unfailing love. Psalm 33:18
===================================
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #10 on: March 07, 2009, 08:56:16 AM »

===================================
THE THOUGHTS OF GOD
by John MacDuff, 1864
Free from http://www.gracegems.org/
===================================


       10. HELP FOR THE FEEBLE

       "How precious also are Your thoughts unto me, O God!"

       Do not be afraid, O worm Jacob, O little Israel, for I Myself will help you," declares the Lord, your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel. Isaiah 41:14

       "Worm Jacob!" What weakness, insignificance, unworthiness! Yet it is this helpless, groveling "worm," that occupies 'the thoughts of God' - receives His sympathy, and has the assurance of His almighty aid.

       Believer, beaten down it may be with a great fight of affliction, or trembling under a sense of your unworthiness and guilt - mourning the coldness of your faith, the lukewarmness of your love, the frequency of your backslidings, the fitfulness of your best purposes, and the feebleness of your best services - your God draws near to you - He remembers that though you are a worm, still you are "worm Jacob," - His own beloved, covenant one; and He tells that the thoughts which He thinks towards you, are "thoughts of peace, and not of evil."

       Mark His message of comfort, "Do not be afraid." His promise, "I will help you." The guarantee which He gives for the fulfillment of that promise, it is His own great name; "says the Lord, your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel." "By whom shall Jacob arise?" says the prophet Amos, "for he is small." We have here an answer. He shall rise by the might of His covenant God - the God who has given JESUS as a pledge for the bestowment of all other blessings. "I Myself will help you!" Yes, poor, weak, trembling one, "Jehovah" - "your Redeemer" - "the Holy One of Israel" - in other words, Omnipotence, Love, Righteousness, are embarked on your side, and pledged for your salvation.

       He loves to draw near to His people in the extremity of their weakness. "He will not break the bruised reed, He will not quench the smoking flax." Man would do so. Man would often crush the writhing worm under his feet - bid the trembling penitent away; but He whose thoughts are not as our thoughts, says, "Neither do I condemn you." "He shall deliver the needy when he cries, the poor also, and him that has no helper." "All you descendants of Jacob, honor Him! Revere Him, all you descendants of Israel! For He has not despised or disdained the suffering of the afflicted one; He has not hidden His face from him but has listened to his cry for help." Listen to the testimony of one such lowly suppliant - "I called upon Your name, O Lord, out of the low dungeon. You drew near in the day that I called upon You - You said, Fear not."

       Seek to be humble. It is to the humble God 'gives grace.' He perfects strength in weakness. "When the high cedars," says Philip Henry, "tumble down, the shrubs are safe." "When I am weak," says the great apostle, "then am I strong." Worm Jacob, the halting cripple of Peniel, was made strong in the moment of his apparent weakness. He received a new name - "as a prince, he had power with God, and prevailed."

       Be it mine to go in the strength of the Lord God. "I will help you," is enough for all the emergencies of the present, and all the contingencies of an untried, and, it may be, a dark future.

       But happy are those who have the God of Israel as their helper, whose hope is in the Lord their God. Psalm 146:5
===================================

Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
Soldier4Christ
Global Moderator
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 60973


One Nation Under God


View Profile
« Reply #11 on: March 07, 2009, 09:47:26 AM »

Those are some really beautiful thoughts, brother. Thanks for posting them.

Logged

Joh 9:4  I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #12 on: March 07, 2009, 10:27:45 AM »

Thank you. There are more but the next one has an error. I am not sure what to do.
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
Soldier4Christ
Global Moderator
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 60973


One Nation Under God


View Profile
« Reply #13 on: March 07, 2009, 11:18:04 AM »

What kind of error?

Logged

Joh 9:4  I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.
David_james
Gold Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1494


Jesus loves you


View Profile
« Reply #14 on: March 07, 2009, 11:39:03 AM »

verse translation error. I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things. Isaiah 45:7
but God doesn't create evil.
Logged

Rev 21:4  And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
Pages: [1] 2 3 Go Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  



More From ChristiansUnite...    About Us | Privacy Policy | | ChristiansUnite.com Site Map | Statement of Beliefs



Copyright © 1999-2019 ChristiansUnite.com. All rights reserved.
Please send your questions, comments, or bug reports to the

Powered by SMF 1.1 RC2 | SMF © 2001-2005, Lewis Media