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WE ARE ALL GUILTY OF
SELF-RIGHTEOUSNESS
Hezekiah (as we see in 2
Chronicles 32:31 was growing so inwardly great, and priding himself
so much upon the favor of God, that self-righteousness crept in, and
through his carnal security, the grace of God was for a time, in its
more active operations, withdrawn.
Here is quite enough to
account with the Babylonians; for if the grace of God should leave
the best believer, there is enough of sin in our hearts to make us
the worst of transgressors. If left to ourselves, we who are warmest
for Christ would cool down like Laodicea into sickening luke-warmness: we who are sound in the faith would be white with the
leprosy of false doctrine; we who now walk before the Lord in
excellency and integrity would reel to and fro, and stagger with a
drunkenness of evil passion.
Like the moon, we borrow our
light; bright as we are when grace shines on us, we are darkness
itself when the Sun of Righteousness withdraws Himself. Therefore
let us cry to God never to leave us. “Lord, take not thy Holy Spirit
from us! Withdraw not from us Thine indwelling grace!
Hast Thou not said, ‘I the Lord do keep it; I will water it every
moment: lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day’? Lord, keep
us everywhere.
Keep us when in the valley,
that we murmur not against Thy humbling hand; keep us when on the
mountain, that we wax not giddy through being lifted up; keep us in
youth, when our passions are strong; keep us in old age, when
becoming conceited of our wisdom, we may therefore prove greater
fools than the young and giddy; keep us when we come to die, lest,
at the very last, we should deny Thee! Keep us living, keep us
dying, keep us laboring, keep us suffering, keep us fighting, keep
us resting, keep us everywhere, for everywhere we need Thee, O our
God!
PLEBEIAN GARMENTS
Even in this world saints are
God’s children, but men cannot discover them to be so, except by
certain moral characteristics. The adoption is not manifested, the
children are not yet openly declared. Among the Romans a man might
adopt a child, and keep it private for a long time: but there was a
second adoption in public; when the child was brought before the
constituted authorities, its former garments were taken off, and the
father who took it to be his child gave it raiment suitable to its
new condition of life.
“Beloved, now are we the sons
of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be.” We are not yet
arrayed in the apparel which befits the royal family of heaven; we
are wearing in this flesh and blood just what we wore as the
sons of Adam; but we know that “when He shall appear” who is the
“first-born among many brethren,” we shall be like Him, we shall see
Him as He is. Cannot you imagine that a child taken from the lowest
ranks of society, and adopted by a Roman senator, would say to
himself, “I long for the day when I shall be publicly adopted. Then
I shall leave off these plebeian garments, and be robed as becomes
my senatorial rank”?
Happy in what he has received,
for that very reason he groans to get the fullness of what is
promised him. So it is with us today. We are waiting till we shall
put on our proper garments, and shall be manifested as the children
of God. We are young nobles, and have not yet worn our coronets. We
are young brides, and the marriage day is not yet come, and by the
love our Spouse bears us, we are led to long and sigh for the bridal
morning. Our very happiness longs to well up like an Iceland geyser,
leaping to the skies, and it heaves and groans within our spirit for
want of space and room by which to manifest itself to men.
CHRIST HIMSELF IS THE BUILDER
Christ Himself is the builder
of His spiritual temple, and He has built it on the mountains of His
unchangeable affection, His omnipotent grace, and His infallible
truthfulness. But as it was in Solomon’s temple, so in this; the
materials need making ready. There are the “Cedars of Lebanon,” but
they are not framed for the building; they are not cut down, and
shaped, and made into those planks of cedar, whose odoriferous
beauty shall make glad the courts of the Lord’s house in Paradise.
There are also the rough stones still in the quarry, they must be
hewn thence, and squared. All this is Christ’s own work. Each
individual believer is being prepared, and polished, and made ready
for his place in the temple; but Christ’s own hand performs the
preparation-work. Afflictions cannot sanctify, excepting as they are
used by Him to this end. Our prayers and efforts cannot make us
ready for heaven, apart from the hand of Jesus, who fashioneth our
hearts aright.
As in the building of
Solomon’s temple, “there was neither hammer, nor axe, nor any tool
of iron, heard in the house,” because all was brought perfectly
ready for the exact spot it was to occupy - so is it with the temple
which Jesus builds; the making ready is all done on earth. When we
reach heaven, there will be no sanctifying us there, no squaring us
with affliction, no planning us with suffering. No, we must be made
meet here-all that Christ will do beforehand; and when He has done
it, we shall be ferried by a loving hand across the stream of death,
and brought to the heavenly Jerusalem, to abide as eternal pillars
in the temple of our Lord.
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“Beneath His eye and care,
- The
edifice shall rise,
- Majestic, strong, and fair,
- And
shine above the skies,”
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