| April 28Morning"Remember the word unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope."Psalm 119:49
 Whatever your especial need may be, you  may readily find some promise in the Bible suited to it. Are you faint  and feeble because your way is rough and you are weary? Here is the  promise--"He giveth power to the faint." When you read such a promise,  take it back to the great Promiser, and ask him to fulfil his own word.  Are you seeking after Christ, and thirsting for closer communion with  him? This promise shines like a star upon you--"Blessed are they that  hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled." Take  that promise to the throne continually; do not plead anything else, but  go to God over and over again with  this--"Lord, thou hast said it, do as thou hast said." Are you  distressed because of sin, and burdened with the heavy load of your  iniquities? Listen to these words--"I, even I, am he that blotteth out  thy transgressions, and will no more remember thy sins." You have no  merit of your own to plead why he should pardon you, but plead his  written engagements and he will perform them. Are you afraid lest you  should not be able to hold on to the end, lest, after having thought  yourself a child of God, you should prove a castaway? If that is your  state, take this word of grace to the throne and plead it: "The  mountains may depart, and the hills may be removed, but the  covenant of my love shall not depart from thee." If you have lost the  sweet sense of the Saviour's presence, and are seeking him with a  sorrowful heart, remember the promises: "Return unto me, and I will  return unto you;" "For a small moment have I forsaken thee, but with  great mercies will I gather thee." Banquet your faith upon God's own  word, and whatever your fears or wants, repair to the Bank of Faith with  your Father's note of hand, saying, "Remember the word unto thy  servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope." Evening"All the house of Israel are impudent and hardhearted."Ezekiel 3:7
 Are there no exceptions? No, not one.  Even the favoured race are thus described. Are the best so bad?--then  what must the worst be? Come, my heart, consider how far thou hast a  share in this universal accusation, and while considering, be ready to  take shame unto thyself wherein thou mayst have been guilty. The first  charge is impudence, or hardness of forehead, a want of holy shame, an  unhallowed boldness in evil. Before my conversion, I could sin and feel  no compunction, hear of my guilt and yet remain unhumbled, and even  confess my iniquity and manifest no inward humiliation on account of it.  For a sinner to go to God's house and pretend to pray to him and  praise him argues a brazen-facedness of the worst kind! Alas! since the  day of my new birth I have doubted my Lord to his face, murmured  unblushingly in his presence, worshipped before him in a slovenly  manner, and sinned without bewailing myself concerning it. If my  forehead were not as an adamant, harder than flint, I should have far  more holy fear, and a far deeper contrition of spirit. Woe is me, I am  one of the impudent house of Israel. The second charge is  hardheartedness, and I must not venture to plead innocent here. Once I  had nothing but a heart of stone, and although through grace I now have a  new and fleshy heart, much of my former obduracy remains. I am not  affected by the  death of Jesus as I ought to be; neither am I moved by the ruin of my  fellow men, the wickedness of the times, the chastisement of my heavenly  Father, and my own failures, as I should be. O that my heart would melt  at the recital of my Saviour's sufferings and death. Would to God I  were rid of this nether millstone within me, this hateful body of death.  Blessed be the name of the Lord, the disease is not incurable, the  Saviour's precious blood is the universal solvent, and me, even me, it  will effectually soften, till my heart melts as wax before the fire. Reposted From Charles Spurgeon of Morning and Evening
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2 comments:
powerful verse! keep posting ( :
http://margaret-online.com/
Hi MargaretOnline,
Thanks for the compliments but as always, TO GOD BE THE GLORY. Thanks for your visit and comments. God bless.
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