Contents
Rejoicing in
the Lord
Chapter 13
(115)
The children of God are called to be
representatives of Christ, showing forth the goodness and mercy of the Lord. As
Jesus has revealed to us the true character of the Father, so we are to reveal
Christ to a world that does not know His tender, pitying love. "As Thou
hast sent Me into the world," said Jesus, "even so have I also sent
them into the world." "I in them, and Thou in Me; . . . that the world
may know that Thou hast sent Me." John 17: 18, 23. The apostle Paul says to
the disciples of Jesus, "Ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of
Christ," "known and read of all men." 2 Corinthians 3:3, 2. In
every one of His children, Jesus sends a letter to the world. If you are
Christ's follower, He sends in you a letter to the family, the village, the
street, where you live. Jesus, dwelling in you, desires to speak to the hearts
of those who are not acquainted with Him. Perhaps they do not read the Bible, or
do not hear the voice that speaks to them in its pages; they do not see the love
of God through His works. But if you are a true representative of Jesus, it may
be that through you they will be led to understand something of His goodness and
be won to love and serve Him.
Christians are set as light bearers on
the way to heaven. They are to reflect to the world the light shining upon them
from Christ. Their life and character should be such that through them others
will get a right conception of Christ and of His service.
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If we do represent Christ, we shall
make His service appear attractive, as it really is. Christians who gather up
gloom and sadness to their souls, and murmur and complain, are giving to others
a false representation of God and the Christian life. They give the impression
that God is not pleased to have His children happy, and in this they bear false
witness against our heavenly Father.
Satan is exultant when he can lead the
children of God into unbelief and despondency. He delights to see us mistrusting
God, doubting His willingness and power to save us. He loves to have us feel
that the Lord will do us harm by His providences. It is the work of Satan to
represent the Lord as lacking in compassion and pity. He misstates the truth in
regard to Him. He fills the imagination with false ideas concerning God; and
instead of dwelling upon the truth in regard to our heavenly Father, we too
often fix our minds upon the misrepresentations of Satan and dishonor God by
distrusting Him and murmuring against Him. Satan ever seeks to make the
religious life one of gloom. He desires it to appear toilsome and difficult; and
when the Christian presents in his own life this view of religion, he is,
through his unbelief, seconding the falsehood of Satan.
Many, walking along the path of life,
dwell upon their mistakes and failures and disappointments, and their hearts are
filled with grief and discouragement. While I was in Europe, a sister who had
been doing this, and who was in deep distress, wrote to me, asking for some word
of encouragement. The night after I had read her letter I dreamed that I was in
a garden, and one who seemed to be the owner of
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the garden was conducting me through
its paths. I was gathering the flowers and enjoying their fragrance, when this
sister, who had been walking by my side, called my attention to some unsightly
briers that were impeding her way. There she was mourning and grieving. She was
not walking in the pathway, following the guide, but was walking among the
briers and thorns. "Oh," she mourned, "is it not a pity that this
beautiful garden is spoiled with thorns?" Then the guide said, "Let
the thorns alone, for they will only wound you. Gather the roses, the lilies,
and the pinks."
Have there not been some bright spots
in your experience? Have you not had some precious seasons when your heart
throbbed with joy in response to the Spirit of God? When you look back into the
chapters of your life experience do you not find some pleasant pages? Are not
God's promises, like the fragrant flowers, growing beside your path on every
hand? Will you not let their beauty and sweetness fill your heart with joy?
The briers and thorns will only wound
and grieve you; and if you gather only these things, and present them to others,
are you not, besides slighting the goodness of God yourself, preventing those
around you from walking in the path of life?
It is not wise to gather together all
the unpleasant recollections of a past life,--its iniquities and
disappointments,--to talk over them and mourn over them until we are overwhelmed
with discouragement. A discouraged soul is filled with darkness, shutting out
the light of God from his own soul and casting a shadow upon the pathway of
others.
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Thank God for the bright pictures which
He has presented to us. Let us group together the blessed assurances of His
love, that we may look upon them continually: The Son of God leaving His
Father's throne, clothing His divinity with humanity, that He might rescue man
from the power of Satan; His triumph in our behalf, opening heaven to men,
revealing to human vision the presence chamber where the Deity unveils His
glory; the fallen race uplifted from the pit of ruin into which sin had plunged
it, and brought again into connection with the infinite God, and having endured
the divine test through faith in our Redeemer, clothed in the righteousness of
Christ, and exalted to His throne--these are the pictures which God would have
us contemplate.
When we seem to doubt God's love and
distrust His promises we dishonor Him and grieve His Holy Spirit. How would a
mother feel if her children were constantly complaining of her, just as though
she did not mean them well, when her whole life's effort had been to forward
their interests and to give them comfort? Suppose they should doubt her love; it
would break her heart. How would any parent feel to be thus treated by his
children? And how can our heavenly Father regard us when we distrust His love,
which has led Him to give His only-begotten Son that we might have life? The
apostle writes, "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for
us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?" Romans
8:32. And yet how many, by their actions, if not in word, are saying, "The
Lord does
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not mean this for me. Perhaps He loves
others, but He does not love me."
All this is harming your own soul; for
every word of doubt you utter is inviting Satan's temptations; it is
strengthening in you the tendency to doubt, and it is grieving from you the
ministering angels. When Satan tempts you, breathe not a word of doubt or
darkness. If you choose to open the door to his suggestions, your mind will be
filled with distrust and rebellious questioning. If you talk out your feelings,
every doubt you express not only reacts upon yourself, but it is a seed that
will germinate and bear fruit in the life of others, and it may be impossible to
counteract the influence of your words. You yourself may be able to recover from
the season of temptation and from the snare of Satan, but others who have been
swayed by your influence may not be able to escape from the unbelief you have
suggested. How important that we speak only those things that will give
spiritual strength and life!
Angels are listening to hear what kind
of report you are bearing to the world about your heavenly Master. Let your
conversation be of Him who liveth to make intercession for you before the
Father. When you take the hand of a friend, let praise to God be on your lips
and in your heart. This will attract his thoughts to Jesus.
All have trials; griefs hard to bear,
temptations hard to resist. Do not tell your troubles to your fellow mortals,
but carry everything to God in prayer. Make it a rule never to utter one word of
doubt or discouragement. You can do much to brighten the
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life of others and strengthen their
efforts, by words of hope and holy cheer.
There is many a brave soul sorely
pressed by temptation, almost ready to faint in the conflict with self and with
the powers of evil. Do not discourage such a one in his hard struggle. Cheer him
with brave, hopeful words that shall urge him on his way. Thus the light of
Christ may shine from you. "None of us liveth to himself." Romans
14:7. By our unconscious influence others may be encouraged and strengthened, or
they may be discouraged, and repelled from Christ and the truth.
There are many who have an erroneous
idea of the life and character of Christ. They think that He was devoid of
warmth and sunniness, that He was stern, severe, and joyless. In many cases the
whole religious experience is colored by these gloomy views.
It is often said that Jesus wept, but
that He was never known to smile. Our Saviour was indeed a Man of Sorrows, and
acquainted with grief, for He opened His heart to all the woes of men. But
though His life was self-denying and shadowed with pain and care, His spirit was
not crushed. His countenance did not wear an expression of grief and repining,
but ever one of peaceful serenity. His heart was a wellspring of life, and
wherever He went He carried rest and peace, joy and gladness.
Our Saviour was deeply serious and
intensely in earnest, but never gloomy or morose. The life of those who imitate
Him will be full of earnest purpose; they will have a deep sense of personal
responsibility. Levity will be repressed; there will be no
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boisterous merriment, no rude jesting;
but the religion of Jesus gives peace like a river. It does not quench the light
of joy; it does not restrain cheerfulness nor cloud the sunny, smiling face.
Christ came not to be ministered unto but to minister; and when His love reigns
in the heart, we shall follow His example.
If we keep uppermost in our minds the
unkind and unjust acts of others we shall find it impossible to love them as
Christ has loved us; but if our thoughts dwell upon the wondrous love and pity
of Christ for us, the same spirit will flow out to others. We should love and
respect one another, notwithstanding the faults and imperfections that we cannot
help seeing. Humility and self-distrust should be cultivated, and a patient
tenderness with the faults of others. This will kill out all narrowing
selfishness and make us large-hearted and generous.
The psalmist says, "Trust in the
Lord, and do good; so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily thou shalt be
fed." Psalm 37:3. "Trust in the Lord." Each day has its burdens,
its cares and perplexities; and when we meet how ready we are to talk of our
difficulties and trials. So many borrowed troubles intrude, so many fears are
indulged, such a weight of anxiety is expressed, that one might suppose we had
no pitying, loving Saviour ready to hear all our requests and to be to us a
present help in every time of need.
Some are always fearing, and borrowing
trouble. Every day they are surrounded with the tokens of God's love; every day
they are enjoying the bounties of His providence; but they overlook these
present
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blessings. Their minds are continually
dwelling upon something disagreeable which they fear may come; or some
difficulty may really exist which, though small, blinds their eyes to the many
things that demand gratitude. The difficulties they encounter, instead of
driving them to God, the only source of their help, separate them from Him
because they awaken unrest and repining.
Do we well to be thus unbelieving? Why
should we be ungrateful and distrustful? Jesus is our friend; all heaven is
interested in our welfare. We should not allow the perplexities and worries of
everyday life to fret the mind and cloud the brow. If we do we shall always have
something to vex and annoy. We should not indulge a solicitude that only frets
and wears us, but does not help us to bear trials.
You may be perplexed in business; your
prospects may grow darker and darker, and you may be threatened with loss; but
do not become discouraged; cast your care upon God, and remain calm and
cheerful. Pray for wisdom to manage your affairs with discretion, and thus
prevent loss and disaster. Do all you can on your part to bring about favorable
results. Jesus has promised His aid, but not apart from our effort. When,
relying upon our Helper, you have done all you can, accept the result
cheerfully.
It is not the will of God that His
people should be weighed down with care. But our Lord does not deceive us. He
does not say to us, "Do not fear; there are no dangers in your path."
He knows there are trials and dangers, and He deals with us plainly. He does not
propose to take His people out of a world of sin and evil, but He points them to
a never-failing
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refuge. His prayer for His disciples
was, "I pray not that Thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that
Thou shouldest keep them from the evil." "In the world," He says,
"ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the
world." John 17:15, 16:33.
In His Sermon on the Mount, Christ
taught His disciples precious lessons in regard to the necessity of trusting in
God. These lessons were designed to encourage the children of God through all
ages, and they have come down to our time full of instruction and comfort. The
Saviour pointed His followers to the birds of the air as they warbled their
carols of praise, unencumbered with thoughts of care, for "they sow not,
neither do they reap." And yet the great Father provides for their needs.
The Saviour asks, "Are ye not much better than they?" Matthew 6:26.
The great Provider for man and beast opens His hand and supplies all His
creatures. The birds of the air are not beneath His notice. He does not drop the
food into their bills, but He makes provision for their needs. They must gather
the grains He has scattered for them. They must prepare the material for their
little nests. They must feed their young. They go forth singing to their labor,
for "your heavenly Father feedeth them." And "are ye not much
better than they?" Are not you, as intelligent, spiritual worshipers, of
more value than the birds of the air? Will not the Author of our being, the
Preserver of our life, the One who formed us in His own divine image, provide
for our necessities if we but trust in Him?
Christ pointed His disciples to the
flowers of the
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field, growing in rich profusion and
glowing in the simple beauty which the heavenly Father had given them, as an
expression of His love to man. He said, "Consider the lilies of the field,
how they grow." The beauty and simplicity of these natural flowers far
outrival the splendor of Solomon. The most gorgeous attire produced by the skill
of art cannot bear comparison with the natural grace and radiant beauty of the
flowers of God's creation. Jesus asks, "If God so clothe the grass of the
field, which today is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much
more clothe you, O ye of little faith?" Matthew 6: 28, 30. If God, the
divine Artist, gives to the simple flowers that perish in a day their delicate
and varied colors, how much greater care will He have for those who are created
in His own image? This lesson of Christ's is a rebuke to the anxious thought,
the perplexity and doubt, of the faithless heart.
The Lord would have all His sons and
daughters happy, peaceful, and obedient. Jesus says, "My peace I give unto
you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled,
neither let it be afraid." "These things have I spoken unto you, that
My joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full." John 14:27;
15:11.
Happiness that is sought from selfish
motives, outside of the path of duty, is ill-balanced, fitful, and transitory;
it passes away, and the soul is filled with loneliness and sorrow; but there is
joy and satisfaction in the service of God; the Christian is not left to walk in
uncertain paths; he is not left to vain regrets and disappointments. If we do
not have the
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pleasures of this life we may still be
joyful in looking to the life beyond.
But even here Christians may have the
joy of communion with Christ; they may have the light of His love, the perpetual
comfort of His presence. Every step in life may bring us closer to Jesus, may
give us a deeper experience of His love, and may bring us one step nearer to the
blessed home of peace. Then let us not cast away our confidence, but have firm
assurance, firmer than ever before. "Hitherto hath the Lord helped
us," and He will help us to the end. 1 Samuel 7:12. Let us look to the
monumental pillars, reminders of what the Lord has done to comfort us and to
save us from the hand of the destroyer. Let us keep fresh in our memory all the
tender mercies that God has shown us,--the tears He has wiped away, the pains He
has soothed, the anxieties removed, the fears dispelled, the wants supplied, the
blessings bestowed,--thus strengthening ourselves for all that is before us
through the remainder of our pilgrimage.
We cannot but look forward to new
perplexities in the coming conflict, but we may look on what is past as well as
on what is to come, and say, "Hitherto hath the Lord helped us."
"As thy days, so shall thy strength be." Deuteronomy 33:25. The trial
will not exceed the strength that shall be given us to bear it. Then let us take
up our work just where we find it, believing that whatever may come, strength
proportionate to the trial will be given.
And by and by the gates of heaven will
be thrown open to admit God's children, and from the lips of the King of glory
the benediction will fall on their
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ears like richest music, "Come, ye
blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world." Matthew 25:34.
Then the redeemed will be welcomed to
the home that Jesus is preparing for them. There their companions will not be
the vile of earth, liars, idolaters, the impure, and unbelieving; but they will
associate with those who have overcome Satan and through divine grace have
formed perfect characters. Every sinful tendency, every imperfection, that
afflicts them here has been removed by the blood of Christ, and the excellence
and brightness of His glory, far exceeding the brightness of the sun, is
imparted to them. And the moral beauty, the perfection of His character, shines
through them, in worth far exceeding this outward splendor. They are without
fault before the great white throne, sharing the dignity and the privileges of
the angels.
In view of the glorious inheritance
that may be his, "what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
Matthew 16:26. He may be poor, yet he possesses in himself a wealth and dignity
that the world could never bestow. The soul redeemed and cleansed from sin, with
all its noble powers dedicated to the service of God, is of surpassing worth;
and there is joy in heaven in the presence of God and the holy angels over one
soul redeemed, a joy that is expressed in songs of holy triumph.
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