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SEPTEMBER 4.
"Come ye yourselves apart" (Mark vi. 31).
One of the greatest hindrances to spirituality is the lack of waiting upon G.o.d. You cannot go through twenty-four hours with two or three breaths of air, in the morning, as you sip your coffee. But you must live in the atmosphere, and you must breathe it all day long. Christians do not wait upon G.o.d enough. It needs hours and hours daily of spiritual communion with the Holy Spirit to keep your vitality healthful and full. Every moment should find you breathing out yourself into Christ, and breathing afresh His life, and love and power.
G.o.d is waiting to send us the Holy Spirit. He is longing to bless us. His one business is to quicken and sustain our spiritual life. He has nothing else to do with His infinite and great resources. Let us receive Him. Let us live in Him. Let us give to Him the joy of knowing that His infinite grace has not been bestowed in vain, but that we appreciate and improve the blessings which He oft has so freely bestowed.
Lord, help me this day to dwell in Thee as the flower in the suns.h.i.+ne, as the fish in the sea, living in Thy love as the atmosphere and element of my being.
SEPTEMBER 5.
"He breathed on them" (John xx. 22).
The beautiful figure suggested by this pa.s.sage is full of simple instruction. It is as easy to receive the Holy Ghost as it is to breathe.
It almost seems as if the Lord had given them the very impression of breathing, and had said, "Now, this is the way to receive the Holy Ghost."
It is not necessary for you to go to a smallpox hospital to have your lungs contaminated with impure air. It is enough for you to keep in your lungs the air you inhaled a minute ago and it will kill you. All the pure elements have been absorbed from it, and there is nothing left but carbon and other deadly gases and fluids.
Therefore, if you are to be filled with the Holy Spirit, you must first get emptied not only of your old sinful life, but of your old spiritual life. You must get a new breath every moment, or you will die. G.o.d wants you to empty out all your being into Him, and then you will take Him in, without needing to try too hard. A vacuum always gets filled, an empty pair of lungs unavoidably breathes in the pure air. If you are only in the true att.i.tude, there will be no trouble about receiving the Holy Ghost.
SEPTEMBER 6.
"Finally, my brethren, rejoice in the Lord" (Phil. iii. 1).
There is no spiritual value in depression. One bright and thankful look at the cross is worth a thousand morbid, self-condemning reflections. The longer you look at evil the more it mesmerizes and defiles you into its own likeness. Lay it down at the cross, accept the cleansing blood, reckon yourself dead to the thing that was wrong, and then rise up and count yourself as if you were another man and no longer the same person; and then, identifying yourself with the Lord Jesus, accept your standing in Him and look in your Father's face as blameless as Jesus. Then out of your every fault will come some lesson of watchfulness or some secret of victory which will enable you some day to thank Him, even for your painful experience.
But praise is a sacrifice, for "it is acceptable to G.o.d." It goes up to heaven sweeter than the songs of angels, "a sweet smelling savor to your Lord and King." It should be unintermittent-"the sacrifice of praise continually." One drop of poison will neutralize a whole cup of wine, and make it a cup of death, and one moment of gloom will defile a whole day of suns.h.i.+ne and gladness. Let us "rejoice evermore."
SEPTEMBER 7.
"I will joy in the G.o.d of my salvation" (Hab. iii. 18).
The secret of joy is not to wait until you feel happy, but to rise, by an act of faith, out of the depression which is dragging you down, and begin to praise G.o.d as an act of choice. This is the meaning of such pa.s.sages as these: "Rejoice in the Lord alway, and again I say, rejoice"; "I do rejoice; yes, and I will rejoice." "Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations." In all these cases there is an evident struggle with sadness and then the triumphs of faith and praise.
Now, this is what is meant-in part, at least-by the sacrifice of praise. A sacrifice is that which costs us something. And when a man or woman has some cherished grudge or wrong and is harboring it, nursing it, dwelling on it, rolling it as a sweet morsel under the tongue, and quite determined to enjoy a miserable time in selfish morbidness and grumbling, it costs us no little sacrifice to throw off the morbid spell, to refuse the suggestions of injury, neglect and the remembrance of unkindness, to rise out of the mood of self-commiseration in wholesome and holy determination, and say, "I will rejoice in the Lord"; I will "count it all joy."
SEPTEMBER 8.
"He that eateth Me, even He shall live by Me" (John vi. 57).
What the children of G.o.d need is not merely a lot of teaching, but the Living Bread. The best wheat is not good food. It needs to be ground and baked before it can be digested and a.s.similated so as to nourish the system. The purest and the highest truth cannot sanctify or satisfy a living soul.
He breathes the New Testament message from His mouth with a kiss of love and a breath of quickening power. It is as we abide in Him, lying upon His bosom and drinking in His very life that we are nourished, quickened, comforted and healed.
This is the secret of Divine healing. It is not believing a doctrine, it is not performing a ceremony, it is not wringing a pet.i.tion from the heavens by the logic of faith and the force of your will; but it is the inbreathing of the life of G.o.d; it is the living touch which none can understand except those whose senses are exercised to know the realities of the world unseen. Often, therefore, a very little truth will bring us much more help and blessing than a great amount of instruction.
SEPTEMBER 9.
"All things are lawful for Me" (I. Cor. x. 23).
I may be perfectly free myself to do many things, the doing of which might hurt my brother and wound his conscience, and love will gladly surrender the little indulgence, that she may save her brother from temptation.
There are many questions which are easily settled by this principle.
So there are many forms of recreation which, in themselves might be harmless, and, under certain circ.u.mstances, un.o.bjectionable, but they have become a.s.sociated with worldliness and G.o.dlessness, and have proved snares and temptations to many a young heart and life; and, therefore, the law of love would lead you to avoid them, discountenance them, and in no way give encouragement to others to partic.i.p.ate in them.
It is just in these things that are not required of us by absolute rules, but are the impulses of a thoughtful love, that the highest qualities of Christian character show themselves, and the most delicate shades of Christian love are manifested.
SEPTEMBER 10.
"Wherefore, receive ye one another as Christ also received us, to the glory of G.o.d" (Rom. xv. 7).
This is a sublime principle, and it will give sublimity to life. It is stated elsewhere in similar language, "Whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus."
This is our high calling, to represent Christ, and act in His behalf, and in His character and spirit, under all circ.u.mstances and toward all men.
"What would Jesus do?" is a simple question which will settle every difficulty, and always settle it on the side of love.
But we cannot answer this question rightly without having Jesus Himself in our hearts. We cannot _act_ Christ. This is too grave a matter for acting.