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Spurgeon's Morning & Evening devotion for: 8/1/2010
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Morning: "Let me now go to the field, and glean ears of corn."
Ruth 2:2
Downcast and troubled Christian, come and glean to-day in the broad
field of promise. Here are abundance of precious promises, which
exactly meet thy wants. Take this one: "He will not break the bruised
reed, nor quench the smoking flax." Doth not that suit thy case? A
reed, helpless, insignificant, and weak, a bruised reed, out of which
no music can come; weaker than weakness itself; a reed, and that reed
bruised, yet, he will not break thee; but on the contrary, will
restore and strengthen thee. Thou art like the smoking flax: no light,
no warmth, can come from thee; but he will not quench thee; he will
blow with his sweet breath of mercy till he fans thee to a flame.
Wouldst thou glean another ear? "Come unto me all ye that labour and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." What soft words! Thy heart
is tender, and the Master knows it, and therefore he speaketh so
gently to thee. Wilt thou not obey him, and come to him even now? Take
another ear of corn: "Fear not, thou worm Jacob, I will help thee,
saith the Lord and thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel." How canst
thou fear with such a wonderful assurance as this? Thou mayest gather
ten thousand such golden ears as these! "I have blotted out thy sins
like a cloud, and like a thick cloud thy transgressions." Or this,
"Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow;
though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool." Or this, "The
Spirit and the Bride say, Come, and let him that is athirst come, and
whosoever will let him take the water of life freely." Our Master's
field is very rich; behold the handfuls. See, there they lie before
thee, poor timid believer! Gather them up, make them thine own, for
Jesus bids thee take them. Be not afraid, only believe! Grasp these
sweet promises, thresh them out by meditation and feed on them with
joy.
Evening: "Thou crownest the year with thy goodness."
Psalm 65:11
All the year round, every hour of every day, God is richly blessing
us; both when we sleep and when we wake his mercy waits upon us. The
sun may leave us a legacy of darkness, but our God never ceases to
shine upon his children with beams of love. Like a river, his
lovingkindness is always flowing, with a fulness inexhaustible as his
own nature. Like the atmosphere which constantly surrounds the earth,
and is always ready to support the life of man, the benevolence of God
surrounds all his creatures; in it, as in their element, they live,
and move, and have their being. Yet as the sun on summer days gladdens
us with beams more warm and bright than at other times, and as rivers
are at certain seasons swollen by the rain, and as the atmosphere
itself is sometimes fraught with more fresh, more bracing, or more
balmy influences than heretofore, so is it with the mercy of God; it
hath its golden hours; its days of overflow, when the Lord magnifieth
his grace before the sons of men. Amongst the blessings of the nether
springs, the joyous days of harvest are a special season of excessive
favour. It is the glory of autumn that the ripe gifts of providence
are then abundantly bestowed; it is the mellow season of realization,
whereas all before was but hope and expectation. Great is the joy of
harvest. Happy are the reapers who fill their arms with the liberality
of heaven. The Psalmist tells us that the harvest is the crowning of
the year. Surely these crowning mercies call for crowning
thanksgiving! Let us render it by the inward emotions of gratitude.
Let our hearts be warmed; let our spirits remember, meditate, and
think upon this goodness of the Lord. Then let us praise him with our
lips, and laud and magnify his name from whose bounty all this
goodness flows. Let us glorify God by yielding our gifts to his cause.
A practical proof of our gratitude is a special thank-offering to the
Lord of the harvest. |