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Our Lord Jesus Christ loves you.
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nChrist
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« Reply #1635 on: October 18, 2010, 11:52:46 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
Very Old - But Beautiful and Timeless Treasures.
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O the preciousness of this truth!

(Arthur Pink, "The Sovereignty of God")

God is infinite in power, and therefore it is impossible for any to withstand His will, or resist the outworking of His decrees!!

Such a statement as that is well calculated to fill the lost sinner with alarm--but from the believer, it evokes nothing but praise.

Let us add a word, and see what a difference it makes--"My God is infinite in power, and therefore it is impossible for any to withstand His will, or resist the outworking of His decrees!!"

My God is infinite in power! Then "I will not fear what man can do unto me!"

My God is infinite in power! Then "whenever I am afraid--I will trust in Him!"

My God is infinite in power! Then "I will both lay me down in peace, and sleep--for You alone Lord, make me dwell in safety!" Psalm 4:8

"There is no one like the God of Israel. He rides across the heavens to help you, across the skies in majestic splendor. The eternal God is your refuge, and His everlasting arms are under you!" Deuteronomy 33:26, 27

O the preciousness of this truth! Here I am--a poor, helpless, senseless 'sheep,' yet I am secure in the hand of Christ! And why am I secure there? None can pluck me thence--because the hand that holds me is that of the Son of God, and all power in heaven and earth is His!

I have no strength of my own--the world, the flesh, and the Devil, are arrayed against me--so I commit myself into the care and keeping of my Lord Jesus. And what is the ground of my confidence? How do I know that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him? I know it because He is God Almighty--the King of kings and Lord of lords!
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« Reply #1636 on: October 18, 2010, 11:53:46 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
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In affliction look to Jesus

(Octavius Winslow)

God's family is a sorrowing family. "I have chosen you," He says, "in the furnace of affliction." The history of the church finds its fittest emblem in the burning, yet unconsumed bush, which Moses saw. Man is "born to sorrow;" but the believer is "appointed thereunto."
If he is a "chosen vessel"--it is in the "furnace of affliction."
If he is an adopted child of God--"chastening" is the mark.
If he is journeying to the heavenly kingdom--his path lies through "much tribulation."
But if his sufferings abound, much more so do His consolations. To be comforted by God, may well reconcile us to any sorrow with which it may please our heavenly Father to visit us with.

In each season of affliction, to whom can we more appropriately look--than to Jesus? He was preeminently the man of sorrows--and acquainted with grief.

If you would tell your grief to one who knew grief as none ever knew it;
if you would weep upon the bosom of one who wept as none ever wept;
if you would disclose your sorrow to one who sorrowed as none ever sorrowed;
if you would bare your wound to one who was wounded as none ever was wounded
--then, in your affliction, turn from all creature sympathy and succor, and look to Jesus! You could not take . . .
  your trial,
  your affliction,
  and your sorrow . . .
    to a kinder nature,
    to a tenderer bosom,
    to a deeper love,
    to a more powerful arm,
    to a more sympathizing friend!
Go and breathe your sorrows into His heart--and He will comfort you!

Blessed sorrow if, in the time of your bereavement, your grief, and your solitude--you are led to Jesus, making Him your Savior, your Friend, your Counselor and your Shield.

Blessed loss, if it is compensated by a knowledge of God, if you find in Him a Father now, to whom you will transfer your ardent affections, upon whom you will repose your bleeding heart, and in whom you will trust.
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« Reply #1637 on: October 18, 2010, 11:54:48 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
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Run to your Father!

(James Smith, "Precious Things from the Everlasting Hills" 1853)

"This, then, is how you should pray: Our Father in heaven" Matthew 6:9

"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

Beloved, we have a heavenly Father.
He has adopted us into His family.
He not only wears a father's name--but he has a father's heart.
He loves every believer with a father's love.
He watches over each of His children with a father's care.
Yes, we have a Father--and He is always near us.
His heart is ever disposed to do us good.
He will not withdraw His eye from us!
He bids us . . .
  to cast every care upon Him,
  to expect every blessing from Him, and
  to carry everything that troubles us, to Him.

Does providence frown on us, perplex, and trouble us? Let us not fret, complain, or forebode--but go and tell Father!

Does Satan tempt, suggest evil thoughts, or endeavor to mislead us? Let us not parley with him, be alarmed at him, or yield to him--but go at once and tell Father!

Everything, whether painful or pleasant--should lead us to our Father in heaven. He loves to listen to our broken prayers. He loves to sympathize with us. He never chides us for coming too often, or refuses to listen to us. Happy child, who has such a Father! And wise is that child--who carries everything to his Father--who tells Him all, keeping nothing from Him.  When we carry our cares or our troubles to Him, He says, "Leave them with Me. I will manage them. I will settle them."

Christian, run to your Father from every foe--and from every danger! Tell your Father everything that vexes, grieves, or troubles you. Trust your Father to manage all your affairs. Honor your Father, by consulting Him on all matters, by confiding to Him all your secrets, and by making His written Word your daily rule on all points.

"The righteous cry, and the Lord hears, and delivers them out of all their troubles." With childlike simplicity, filial confidence, and honest hearts--they go and tell their Father!
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« Reply #1638 on: October 18, 2010, 11:55:59 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
Very Old - But Beautiful and Timeless Treasures.
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Your severest sufferings

(John MacDuff, "The Mind of Jesus" 1870)

"Yet I want Your will to be done--not Mine!" Luke 22:42

Where was there ever resignation like this? The life of Jesus was one long martyrdom. From Bethlehem's manger to Calvary's cross, there was scarcely one break in the clouds; these gathered more darkly and ominously around Him--until they burst over His devoted head as He uttered His expiring cry! Yet throughout this pilgrimage of sorrow--no murmuring accent escaped His lips. The most suffering of all suffering lives--was one of uncomplaining submission.

"Yet I want Your will to be done--not Mine!" was the motto of this wondrous Being! When He came into the world He thus announced His advent, "Lo, I come, I delight to do Your will, O my God!" When He left it, we listen to the same prayer of blended agony and acquiescence, "O My Father, if it is possible--let this cup pass from Me! Yet I want Your will to be done--not Mine!"

Ah reader, what are your trials--compared to His! What are the ripples in your tide of woe--compared to the waves and billows which swept over Him! If He, the spotless Lamb of God, "murmured not," how can you murmur? His were the sufferings of a bosom never once darkened with the passing shadow of guilt or sin. Your severest sufferings are deserved--yes, infinitely less than you deserve! Are you tempted to indulge in hard suspicions, as to God's faithfulness and love, in appointing some peculiar trial? Ask yourself--Would Jesus have complained? Should I seek to pry into "the deep things of God," when He, in the spirit of a weaned child, was satisfied with the solution, "Even so, Father--for so it seems good in Your sight!"

"Even so, Father!" Afflicted one! "tossed with tempest, and not comforted," take that word on which Your adorable Redeemer pillowed His suffering head, "Father!"--and make it, as He did, the secret of your resignation. "My Father!" my covenant God! the God who spared not Jesus! It may well hush my every repining word.

The sick child will take the bitterest medicine from a father's hand. "This cup which You, O God, give me to drink--shall I not drink it? Be it mine to lie passive in the arms of Your chastening love, exulting in the assurance that all Your appointments, though sovereign, are never arbitrary--but that there is a gracious 'need be' in them all."

Drinking deep of His sweet spirit of submission, you will be able thus to meet, yes, even to welcome, your sorest cross, saying, "Yes, Lord, all is well--just because it is Your blessed will. Take me, use me, chasten me--as seems good in Your sight. My will is resolved into Yours. This trial is dark; I cannot see the 'why and the wherefore' of it--yet I want Your will to be done--not mine! My gourd is withered; I cannot see the reason of so speedy a dissolution of my beloved earthly shelter; my sense and sight ask in vain why these leaves of earthly refreshment have been doomed so soon to droop in sadness and sorrow. But it is enough. 'The Lord prepared the worm!' I want Your will to be done--not mine!"

Oh, how does the stricken soul honor God by thus being silent in the midst of dark and perplexing dealings, recognizing in these, part of the needed discipline and training--for a sorrowless, sinless, deathless world; regarding every trial as a link in the chain--which draws it to heaven, where the whitest robes will be found to be those here baptized with suffering, and bathed in tears!
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« Reply #1639 on: October 18, 2010, 11:57:27 PM »

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Selfishness withers and dies beneath Calvary!

(John MacDuff, "The Mind of Jesus" 1870)

"For even Christ did not please Himself." Romans 15:3

Too legibly, are the characters written on the fallen heart and a fallen world--"All seek their own!" Selfishness is the great law of our degenerated nature! When the love of God was dethroned from the soul--SELF vaulted into the vacant seat, and there, in some one of its ever-changing shapes, continues to reign.

Jesus stands out for our imitation, as a grand solitary exception in the midst of a world of selfishness. His entire life was one abnegation of self--a beautiful living embodiment of that love which "seeks not her own."

Ah, how different is the spirit of the world! With how many, is day after day only a new oblation to that idol SELF--pampering their own wishes; and envying and grieving at the good of a neighbor--thus engendering jealousy, discontent, peevishness, and every kindred unholy passion.

"But you have not so learned Christ!" Reader! have you been sitting at the feet of Him who "pleased not Himself?" Are you "dying daily;" dying to self--as well as to sin? Are you animated with this as the high end and aim of existence--to lay out your time, and talents, and opportunities--for God's glory and the good of your fellow-men; not seeking your own interests--but rather relinquishing these, if, by doing so, another will be made holier, and your Savior honored?

Christ's denial of self, had about it no repulsive austerity. And you can evince its holy influence and sway, by innumerable little offices of kindness and goodwill; taking a generous interest in the welfare of others, or engaging in schemes for the mitigation of human misery.

Avoid ostentation--which is only another repulsive form of self. Be eager to be in the shadows; sound no trumpet before you. The evangelist Matthew held a great banquet for Jesus at his house; but in his Gospel, he says not one word about it!

Seek to live more constantly and habitually under the constraining influence of the love of Jesus! Selfishness withers and dies beneath Calvary!

Ah, believer! if Christ had "pleased Himself," where would you have been this day?
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« Reply #1640 on: October 18, 2010, 11:58:32 PM »

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The Divine Philanthropist

(John MacDuff, "The Mind of Jesus" 1870)

"He went around doing good." Acts 10:38

"Christ's great end," says Richard Baxter, "was to save men from their sins--but He also delighted to save them from their sorrows." His heart bled for human misery. Benevolence brought Him from heaven; and benevolence followed His steps wherever He went on earth. The journeys of the Divine Philanthropist were marked by tears of thankfulness, and breathings of grateful love. The helpless, the blind, the lame, the desolate--rejoiced at the sound of His footfall. Truly might it be said of Him, "I helped those without hope--and they blessed Me. And I caused the widows' hearts to sing for joy!" (Job 29:13)

All suffering hearts were a magnet to Jesus. It was not more His prerogative, than His happiness--to turn tears into smiles! One of the few pleasures which on earth gladdened the spirit of the "Man of sorrows" was the pleasure of doing good--soothing grief, and alleviating misery. Next to the joy of the widow of Nain when her son was restored--was the joy in the bosom of the Divine Restorer!

He often went out of His way to be kind. A journey was not grudged, even if one aching heart were to be soothed (Mark 5:1; John 4:4, 5). Nor were His kindnesses dispensed through the intervention of others. They were all personal acts. His own hand healed. His own voice spoke. His own footsteps lingered on the threshold of bereavement, or at the precincts of the tomb. Ah! had the princes of this world known the loving tenderness and unselfishness of that wondrous heart--"they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory!"

Reader! do you know anything of such active benevolence? Have you ever felt the luxury of doing good? Have you ever felt, that in making others happy--you make yourself so? Do you know anything of that great law of your being, enunciated by the Divine Patron and Pattern of Benevolence, "It is more blessed to give--than to receive?"

Has God enriched you with this world's goods? Seek to view yourself as a consecrated medium for dispensing them to others. Beware alike of miserly hoarding--and selfish extravagance! How sad the case of those whose lot God has made thus to abound with temporal mercies, who have gone to the grave unconscious of diminishing one drop of human misery, or making one of the world's myriad aching hearts happier! How the example of Jesus rebukes the cold and calculating kindnesses--the mite-like offerings of many even of His own people! "whose libation is not like His, from the brim of an overflowing cup--but from the bottom--from the dregs!"

You may have little to give. Your sphere and means may be alike limited. But remember that God is as much glorified by the trifle bestowed from the earnings of poverty--as by the splendid benefaction from the lap of plenty. "The Lord loves a cheerful giver!"

The nobler part of Christian benevolence is not vast donations, or munificent financial sacrifices. "He went about doing good." The merciful visit--the friendly word--the look of sympathy--the cup of cold water--the little unostentatious service--the giving without thought or hope of recompense--the kindly "considering of the poor"--anticipating their needs--considering their comforts--these are what God values and loves! They are "loans" to Himself--tributary streams to "the river of His pleasure". They will be acknowledged at last as such--"I assure you: Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of Mine--you did for Me!"
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« Reply #1641 on: October 20, 2010, 01:38:33 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
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The only suitable dress for a saved sinner!

(John MacDuff, "The Footsteps of Jesus" 1856)

"Be clothed with humility." 1 Peter 5:5

"True humility," said one, "is a lovely ornament; it is the only suitable dress for a saved sinner!" O let us seek then to be clothed in this robe--that we may be brought to lie low at the footstool of our Maker and Redeemer.

In the saints of old, this grace of humility appeared with marked prominence--and they are patterns for our imitation.

There was Abraham, the father of the faithful and the friend of God. How great was his humility! how profound his self-abasement! "I have ventured to speak to the Lord--even though I am nothing but dust and ashes!" He was filled with a consciousness of his absolute nothingness in the presence of the Great Eternal.

There was David also, who speaks of himself as "a worm--and not a man!"

Job cried out, "Behold, I am vile!"

In the apostle Paul, again, what a striking exemplification have we of this grace of humility. If self-delight were ever allowable in any individual, it would be in him; for such a laborious, self-denying, unselfish character, has, doubtless, not yet appeared--the man Christ Jesus alone and always excepted.

But what were his views and feelings in reference to himself? On one occasion we hear him saying that he was not worthy to be called an apostle. At another time he says, "I am less than the least of all God's people!" And when penning one of his last epistles, he designates himself the very chief of sinners! He was brought to know himself--a knowledge in which all wisdom centers. If we knew ourselves as he did--pride and self-delight would find no room within us!

But, above all, let us consider Him who said, "Take my yoke upon you and learn from Me--for I am gentle and humble in heart." The heaven of heavens could not contain Him; all the fullness of the Eternal Godhead dwelt in Him; devils trembled at His rebuke, and flew from His presence to the abodes of misery; yet how gentle, how humble He was! Reader, aspire after conformity to Christ--in His humility.

Against the proud--God's displeasure has been manifested in all ages.

Think of Pharaoh. The language of that proud monarch was, "Who is the Lord--that I should obey Him?" But the Divine Majesty could not bear to be thus insulted; hence the puny worm with all his legions were destroyed--they sank as lead in the mighty waters!

Think of Nebuchadnezzar. Hear his boasting exclamation, "Is not this great Babylon that I have built, by the might of my power, and for the honor of my majesty?" But God resisted him, and he was turned from the society of men--to eat grass with the beasts of the field!

Think of Herod. With what delight did he receive the applause of the people, when they cried, "It is the voice of a god, and not the voice of man!" But the angel of the Lord smote him--and he was eaten with worms!

While, however, God resists the proud--He has promised to give grace unto the humble. The humble are the objects of His special regard. "For thus says the high and lofty One, who inhabits eternity, whose name is holy: I dwell in the high and holy place"--that is one of the palaces of the Great King, where the throne of His glory is erected--where the countless armies of cherubim and seraphim are stationed, and where perfected saints reside. But He has another place of habitation: "with him also, who is humble and contrite in spirit!"

O Lord, subdue the pride of my heart; and help me to manifest, by my whole demeanor--that humility of spirit which is in Your sight of great price!
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« Reply #1642 on: October 21, 2010, 01:32:21 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
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Could we look into the lake of fire!

(John MacDuff, "The Footsteps of Jesus" 1856. This one is longer--but it is choice! Please forward it to those who are going through times of affliction.)

"Why should any living man complain?" Lamentations 3:39

Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upwards. We are not therefore to think that any strange thing has happened to us--if sorrow, in any of its multifarious forms, befalls us here on earth.

"If you endure chastening," says the apostle, "God deals with you as with sons." But HOW should we endure it?

It should be done in an inquiring spirit. We ought to be anxious to know the cause of the painful visitation. With the patriarch of old, our language should be, "Show me why You contend with me?"

It should be done also in a prayerful spirit--"Is any among you afflicted? Let him pray."

And it should be done especially in a submissive spirit. We should not merely feel the 'chastening rod'--but kiss it! Instead of cherishing any feelings of murmuring and rebellion under the afflictive dispensations of God's providence--we should humble ourselves under His mighty hand, that He may exalt us in due time. And how many considerations are there, which should induce and promote such a submissive spirit towards affliction!

1. If we compare our sufferings--with our deserts--shall we not find abundant reason to banish every complaint, and hush every murmur into silence?

Should we complain of our light and momentary trouble--when we deserve to be tormented in hell forever?

Should we complain of the chastisements of a gracious Father--when we have rendered ourselves obnoxious to the sentence of a holy and angry Judge?

Should we complain that God sits by us as a refiner to purify us--when He might be a consuming fire to destroy us?

Should we complain that we have to pass under the rod of His love--when we might have been set up as a "mark for the arrows of His indignation, and His terrors be arrayed against us?"

Could we look into the lake of fire, and have a sight of the wretched beings who are there writhing in deathless agonies--we would then thank God for the most miserable condition on earth--if it were only sweetened with the hope of escaping that place of eternal torment!

2. Let us think, again, of the many mercies of which we have been, and still continue to be, the subjects. "And shall we receive good at the hand of God--and shall we not receive evil?" Should we not receive our afflictions from the Divine hand with similar feelings? Should we forget our blessings--which are so many; and dwell upon our crosses--which are so few?

3. It would be well also for us to compare our sufferings--with what others have had to endure. The people of God have been, in all ages, a suffering people; and many of them could say with special emphasis, "I am the man who has seen affliction!"

Look at the godly man, Job. In a single day he was cast down from the highest pinnacle of prosperity--to the lowest depths of adversity! In the morning--he was the richest man in all the East--and with patriarchal dignity he looked around upon the joyous circle of seven sons and three daughters. But in the evening--he found himself without flock, or herd, or child!

O what are our troubles--compared with his? And did he murmur? No, he adored the hand that smote him! Prostrate in the dust he exclaimed, "I came naked from my mother's womb, and I will be naked when I leave. The Lord gave me what I had--and the Lord has taken it away. Praise the name of the Lord!"

But let us turn from the servant--to the Master, and consider Him. What was His condition during His earthly sojourn? He was a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief; notwithstanding His infinite dignity and unsullied purity! Our sufferings are only partial--but He suffered in every way. Ours are only occasional--but His sufferings were uninterrupted--they accompanied Him from the manger to the cross! What He endured, especially during the closing scenes of His memorable career, passes all comprehension! Hear His heart-rending cry, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death!" "And being in an agony--He prayed more earnestly, and His sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground."

O shall we compare our sufferings--with His? To do so would be to weigh a mote against a mountain! If we desire to bear our trials with submission--let us think much, then, of what the Savior endured for us!
Would you, Christian, wish to fare better than Him?
Jesus Christ was a man of sorrows--and are you not to even taste the bitter cup?
He was acquainted with grief--and would you be a stranger to it?
Would you have nothing but ease--where He had nothing but trouble?
Would you have nothing but honor--where He had nothing but disgrace?
Would you reign with Him hereafter--and not suffer with Him here?
O say, then, with Him, "The cup which My Father has given Me--shall I not drink it?" And as you drink your cup--O, think of His! Well may we say--

"How bitter that cup, no heart can conceive,
 Which He drank quite up, that sinners might live;
 His way was much rougher and darker than mine,
 Did Jesus thus suffer--and shall I repine?"

"Now let our pains be all forgot,
 Our hearts no more repine;
 Our sufferings are not worth a thought,
 When, Lord, compared with Thine!"

4. Another consideration that should produce a spirit of submission is--that our sorrows are not to last forever. Your deliverance from sorrow is as sure as the purpose, the promise, the covenant, the oath of God can render it! And not merely is it certain--but it is near! A few weeks, or months, or years more--and all will be peace and quietness and bliss forever!

5. And, it must be added Christian, that your end will be unspeakably glorious. "God will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever!" There will be no shattered frame--no emaciated countenance--no furrowed cheek--no faltering voice, in those blessed regions! There every eye shall sparkle with delight--every countenance will beam with ineffable satisfaction--every pulse will beat high with immortality--and every frame will be able to sustain without weariness, an eternal weight of glory!

O child of sorrow--think of these things! Be anxious to feel their hallowing influence, that resignation may have her perfect work, and that no murmuring spirit may be indulged in, even for a moment!
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« Reply #1643 on: October 22, 2010, 01:13:40 PM »

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From Grace Gems:
Very Old - But Beautiful and Timeless Treasures.
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The gods of the unregenerate soul

(John MacDuff, "The Christian's Pathway" 1858")

"Their heart went after their idols!" Ezekiel 20:16

"These men have set up idols in their heart!" Ezekiel 14:3

The world, self, and sin--these are the gods of the unregenerate soul.

"Dear children, keep yourselves from idols!" 1 John 5:21
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« Reply #1644 on: October 23, 2010, 02:49:21 PM »

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The secret of being content!

(John MacDuff, "THE MIND OF JESUS" 1870)

"I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed--or hungry, whether living in plenty--or in need." Philippians 4:11-13

It is from the state of our minds that contentment arises--and not from the amount of our possessions. If we are not content with those things which we have--we are not likely to be content, if we succeeded in attaining all that we desire. The possession of all the good we may think it desirable or even possible to attain--would still leave an aching void; there would still be "a cruel something" unpossessed. But when the mind and the present condition are brought to meet--then, and then only, will true contentment be found! If our heart is brought to our condition--then our condition will then be according to our heart.

The consideration that our earthly lot is appointed by God--that it is He who fixes the bounds of our habitation--is eminently calculated to promote contentment. We are to remember that He is not merely the Creator--but the Governor of the world; and that every circumstance which transpires in our life, is under His superintendence and control. And hence we find the people of God, in every age, passing by merely second causes--until they came to the First Great Cause of all. They heard His voice, and saw His hand--in whatever befell them.

There are some who think that it is beneath the notice of God to regard such trivial events as those which make up our common everyday history. But in God's estimation, the distinctions of great and small, of vast and minute--are altogether unknown. It is not a greater act of condescension in God to number the hairs of our head--than it is for Him to number the stars of heaven; the one being as near to His immensity as the other. Such is His infinite greatness, that in comparison with it--the mightiest world is on a level with the smallest atom!

This doctrine is clearly taught in the volume of inspiration. He who rules in the armies of heaven--who commissions angels and flaming seraphs that stand before His throne, saying to one, "Come!" and he comes, and to another, "Go!" and he goes; who wheels the innumerable worlds which are scattered through the immensity of space in their appointed courses--this great, adorable, incomprehensible Being, regards with tender compassion the poor little sparrow which falls unheeded to the ground, and clothes the lowliest flower with its tints of beauty! Of His care, we are warranted in saying that nothing is too great to be above it--and that nothing, on the other hand, is too minute to be beneath it!

Were the doctrine of "chance" a doctrine of God's Word, there might then be some reason for our murmuring. But if it is He who makes poor--and who makes rich; who brings low--and lifts up; if whatever befalls us is by His appointment or permission, whom we profess to love and honor--then, surely, contentment with our lot must be a reasonable duty indeed!

"In all this, Job did not sin by charging God with wrongdoing." Job 1:22. Job saw the hand of God in all that took place! It was not to the invasion of the Sabeans and Chaldeans--that he traced the loss of his property. It was not to the fury of "mother nature"--that he traced the death of his children. No! He looked farther and higher! Prostrate in adoration at the Divine footstool, he exclaimed, "I came naked from my mother's womb, and I will be stripped of everything when I die. The Lord gave me everything I had--and the Lord has taken it away. Praise the name of the Lord!"

Now, how important it is, that the same mind which was in Job--should be in us also. To murmur under the Divine dispensations--to be dissatisfied with the lot which has been appointed to us--to be always complaining of one circumstance or another--what is this, in effect--but to charge God with wrongdoing? It is practically to attribute folly to Him who is the only wise God, and whose knowledge and understanding are infinite! O let us beware then of a discontented spirit--remembering that God orders all our affairs!

Whatever He gives us--let us thankfully receive it.

Whatever He denies us--let us be satisfied without it.

Whatever He takes from us--let us uncomplainingly part with it.

Whatever trial He lays on us--let us endeavor patiently to bear it.

Yes, our lot in life, with all its attendant circumstances, is chosen by God! Let the sun of prosperity shine--or let the clouds of adversity lower; let our path be smooth--or let it be rugged; we should be disposed to say, "It is the Lord's will--let Him do what He thinks best!" We may be often afflicted, being called to eat the bread of trouble, and drink the waters of affliction--but let us not rest until we can utter these words. We may not be able now to see how it is good; but let us think of the wisdom and love of Him who placed us there--and can we doubt it, whether we understand it or not? He is too wise to err--and too good to be unkind!

"Good when He gives, supremely good,
 Nor less when He denies!
 Even crosses from His sovereign hand
 Are blessings in disguise!"
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« Reply #1645 on: October 24, 2010, 11:51:41 AM »

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Is this all?

(John MacDuff, "THE FOOTSTEPS OF JESUS" 1856)

"Since, then, you have been raised with Christ--set your hearts on things above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above--not on earthly things!" Colossians 3:1-2

The history of six thousand years has given indisputable evidence of the insufficiency of all earthly objects to yield true and satisfying enjoyment.
Man has needs--which no earthly riches can supply;
he has soul diseases--which no human skill can cure;
he has fears--which no mortal courage can quell;
he has debts--which no finite resources can discharge; and
he has miseries--which no earth-born sagacity can console.

In earthly things, to whatever extent they may be possessed, there is a lack of adaptation to yield real happiness. It is recorded of Caesar, that he exclaimed, when in possession of universal empire, "Is this all?" His expectations of happiness were not answered by the attainment of worldly things.

Reader, have you not often felt something similar to this? You may have set your heart upon some distant object; and oh! what sacrifices you made for its attainment! What self-denial did you undergo! At length, perhaps, the desire of your heart was granted you. But was it what you expected? Were you not, on the contrary, led to exclaim, in the language of the disappointed emperor, "Is this all?"

It is an absolute certainty, that the things of earth cannot satisfy the cravings of our immortal nature. Wealth, fame, learning, pleasure, domestic happiness--none of these things can do it. "Whoever drinks of these waters shall thirst again," as the Savior declared to the Samaritan woman; "but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him, shall never thirst--but it shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life!"

But the things of earth, besides being unsatisfying in their nature--are, at best, transitory in their duration.

What are RICHES? 'Uncertain' is the epithet which the pen of inspiration employs in describing them. (1 Timothy 6:16) "Will you set your eyes upon that which is not? for riches certainly make themselves wings; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven!" (Proverbs 23:5)

What is PLEASURE? Something that is only for a season.

What is WISDOM? More precious than rubies, if it is the wisdom which comes from above; but if it the wisdom of this world--it also is vanity, and will soon pass away.

What is FAME? Often a bubble, no sooner blown--than it bursts!

Yes, the earth itself is only temporary!

A Roman general, on one occasion, when elated by the splendors of a triumphal entrance into the imperial city, which had been awarded to him in honor of the victories he had won, exclaimed, "Ah, that it would continue!" But, alas! it did not continue. All the glittering pomp soon vanished! It floated away like a fleeting dream. And so with all earthly bliss--it will not, and cannot, continue. Had earthly things a character of abiding permanence belonging to them, men might with some semblance of reason, make them the fit objects of their desires and pursuits. Such a character, however, they do not possess. "The world with its lust is passing away!" "Why spend money on what is not bread, and your labor on what does not satisfy?"

But, O blessed heavenly world!
This fullness of joy;
this unclouded vision of God and the Lamb;
this sweet fellowship with saints and angels;
this day without a night;
this sky without a cloud;
this sea without a ruffle;
these ravishing melodies;
this seraphic transport and exulting joy
--they will continue--and that forever!
"We have a priceless inheritance--pure and undefiled, beyond the reach of change and decay!" (1 Peter 1:4)

"O what folly, O what madness!
 That my thoughts should go astray,
 After toys and empty pleasures--
 Pleasures only of a day!

 This vain world, with all its trifles,
 Soon, alas! will be no more;
 There's no object worth admiring,
 But the God whom I adore!"
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« Reply #1646 on: October 25, 2010, 12:32:23 PM »

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You have allowed the key to rust!

(John MacDuff, "The Mind of Jesus" 1870)

"He continued all night in prayer to God." Luke 6:12

Jesus was emphatically "a man of prayer". The Spirit was "poured upon Him without measure"--yet He prayed! He was incarnate wisdom, "needing not that any should teach Him"--yet He prayed! He was infinite in His power, and boundless in His resources--yet He prayed! How deeply sacred are His prayerful memories that hover around the solitudes of Olivet and the shores of Tiberias! He seemed often to turn night into day--to redeem moments for prayer, rather than lose the blessed privilege.

All His public acts were consecrated by prayer--His baptism, His transfiguration, His miracles, His agony, His death. He breathed away His life in prayer. "His last breath," says Philip Henry, "was praying breath."

How sweet to think, in holding communion with God--that Jesus drank of this very brook! He consecrated the bended knee and the silent chamber. He refreshed His fainting spirit at the same great Fountain-head from which it is life for us to draw, and death to forsake.

Reader! do you complain of your languid spirit, your drooping faith, your fitful affections, your lukewarm love? May you not trace much of what you deplore--to an unfrequented prayer chamber? The treasures are locked up from you--because you have allowed the key to rust! Your hands hang down--because they have ceased to be uplifted in prayer. Without prayer! This is . . .
  the pilgrim without a staff;
  the seaman without a compass;
  the soldier going unarmed to battle!

Beware of encouraging what indisposes to prayer--of going to the audience-chamber of God with soiled garments, the din of the world following you, its distracting thoughts hovering unforbidden over your spirit. Can you wonder that the living water refuses to flow through obstructed channels, or the heavenly light to pierce murky vapors?

Among men, fellowship with lofty minds--imparts a certain nobility to the character. Just so, in a far higher sense, by communion with God--you will be transformed into His image, and get assimilated to His likeness! Make every event in life--a reason for fresh going to Him. If difficulties in duty--bring them to the test of prayer. If bowed down with anticipated trial--remember Christ's preparation, "Sit here while I go and pray yonder."

Let prayer consecrate everything--your time, your talents, your pursuits, your engagements, your joys, your sorrows, your crosses, your losses! By prayer . . .
  rough paths will be made smooth,
  trials are disarmed of their bitterness,
  enjoyments are hallowed and refined,
  the bread of the world turned into angels' food!

"It is in the prayer-closet," says Payson, "where the battle is lost or won!"
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« Reply #1647 on: October 26, 2010, 11:59:19 AM »

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You say you want to be like Christ

(J. R. Miller, "Miller's Year Book--a Year's Daily Readings" 1895)

"The Son of Man did not come to be served--but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many!" Matthew 20:28

The art of photography is now so perfect, that the whole picture of a large newspaper can be taken in miniature so small, as to be carried in a little pendant--and yet every letter and point be perfect.

Just so, the whole life of Christ is photographed in one little phrase, "not to be served--but to serve."

He came not to be served; if this had been His aim--He would never have left heaven's glory, where He lacked nothing, where angels praised Him and ministered unto Him. He came to serve. He went about doing good. He altogether forgot Himself. He served all He met--who would receive His service. At last He gave His life in uttermost service--giving it as a sin-atoning sacrifice for others. He came not to be served--but to serve.

You say you want to be like Christ. You ask Him to print His own image on your heart. Here, then is the image! It is no vague dream of perfection that we are to think of--when we ask to be made like Christ. The Catholic monks thought that they were becoming like Christ--when they went into the wilderness, away from men, to live in cold cells. But that is not the what this picture suggests. "To serve"--that is the Christlike thing! Instead of fleeing away from the world--we are to live among men, to serve them, to seek to bless them, to do them good, to give our life for them!
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« Reply #1648 on: October 27, 2010, 12:35:17 PM »

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What a happy world would this be!

(John MacDuff, "THE PRECEPTS OF JESUS" 1858 )

"Do unto others--what you would like them to do unto you!" Matthew 6:12

What a happy world would this be if the above command, or the parallel one of, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself," were universally acted upon!

There would be then no wars, no antipathies, no rivalries among nations. There would be no jealousies or bitter contentions among neighbors and families. There would be no haughtiness or oppression in the rich--and no envy or discontent in the poor. No heart would burn with anger, no breast rankle with revenge. Every species of violence, fraud, deceit, and treachery would be forever abolished!

Such would be the effects produced--were this precept embodied in the hearts and lives of men.

Let us guard, then, against every violation of this simple but sublime law. Let us seek, especially, to mortify that selfishness to which we are so prone; and, after the example of the Great Master, "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves. Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others. Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus!"
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« Reply #1649 on: October 28, 2010, 02:07:20 PM »

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When you see a dog following two men

(John MacDuff)

"You cannot serve both God--and mammon." Matthew 6:24

Of the enemies of the cross of Christ, the apostle declares that they "mind earthly things." They are only concerned about increasing their stores, and thus be able to say with the rich man of whom the Savior speaks, that they have much goods laid up for many years; on the strength of which they intend to take their ease, and eat, drink, and be merry. All their thoughts are of the earth, earthy. The things of time and sense--they regard as first and last, middle and end.

It is impossible for the mind to be governed at the same time by two opposite principles. The love of the world--and the love of God--are diametrically opposed to each other. "If any man loves the world--the love of the Father is not in him." "Don't you know that the friendship of the world--is enmity with God? Whoever, therefore, will be a friend of the world--is the enemy of God." "You cannot serve both God--and mammon."

To borrow a quaint illustration from one of our old writers, "When you see a dog following two men--so long as they walk together, you do not know to which of them the dog belongs. But let them come to a parting road and there separate from each other--then it will soon be seen who is the owner, for the dog will follow his master wherever he goes."

Just so, an individual may pursue the world, and retain a Christian profession at the same time--and it is often difficult to ascertain whether God or the world possesses his affections. But by and bye he comes to a parting road, when God calls him one way, and the world another way--and then he will show to whom he really belongs. If God is his master--then he will follow and obey God. But if the world is his master--then he will follow after it!

O my soul, how are you affected by the respective claims of the things of time--and those of eternity? After a few more rising and setting suns, it will be a matter of total indifference to you--whether you have been rich or poor, successful in your business or unsuccessful. But it will be of unspeakable consequence--whether you have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before you in the gospel.

Listen, then, to the words of the Lord Jesus, "Do not labor for food that spoils--but for food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you." "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also!"
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