October 5 - Morning"He arose, and did eat and drink, and went in the strength of that meat forty days and forty nights." — 1 Kings 19:8
All the strength supplied to us by our gracious God is meant for service,
not for wantonness or boasting. When the prophet Elijah found the cake
baked on the coals, and the cruse of water placed at his head, as he lay
under the juniper tree, he was no gentleman to be gratified with dainty fare
that he might stretch himself at his ease; far otherwise, he was
commissioned to go forty days and forty nights in the strength of it,
journeying towards Horeb, the mount of God. When the Master invited
the disciples to "Come and dine" with Him, after the feast was concluded
He said to Peter, "Feed my sheep"; further adding, "Follow me."
Even thus it is with us; we eat the bread of heaven, that we may expend our
strength in the Master's service. We come to the passover, and eat of the
paschal lamb with loins girt, and staff in hand, so as to start off at once
when we have satisfied our hunger. Some Christians are for living on
Christ, but are not so anxious to live for Christ. Earth should be a
preparation for heaven; and heaven is the place where saints feast most
and work most. They sit down at the table of our Lord, and they serve
Him day and night in His temple. They eat of heavenly food and render
perfect service.
Believer, in the strength you daily gain from Christ labour
for Him. Some of us have yet to learn much concerning the design of our
Lord in giving us His grace. We are not to retain the precious grains of
truth as the Egyptian mummy held the wheat for ages, without giving it an
opportunity to grow: we must sow it and water it. Why does the Lord
send down the rain upon the thirsty earth, and give the genial sunshine? Is
it not that these may all help the fruits of the earth to yield food for man?
Even so the Lord feeds and refreshes our souls that we may afterwards use
our renewed strength in the promotion of His glory. October 5 - Evening"He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved." — Mark 16:16
Mr. MacDonald asked the inhabitants of the island of St. Kilda how a man
must be saved. An old man replied, "We shall be saved if we repent, and
forsake our sins, and turn to God." "Yes," said a middle-aged female, "and
with a true heart too." "Ay," rejoined a third, "and with prayer"; and,
added a fourth, "It must be the prayer of the heart." "And we must be
diligent too," said a fifth, "in keeping the commandments." Thus, each
having contributed his mite, feeling that a very decent creed had been made
up, they all looked and listened for the preacher's approbation, but they
had aroused his deepest pity.
The carnal mind always maps out for itself a
way in which self can work and become great, but the Lord's way is quite
the reverse. Believing and being baptized are no matters of merit to be
gloried in — they are so simple that boasting is excluded, and free grace
bears the palm. It may be that the reader is unsaved — what is the reason?
Do you think the way of salvation as laid down in the text to be dubious?
How can that be when God has pledged His own word for its certainty?
Do you think it too easy? Why, then, do you not attend to it? Its ease
leaves those without excuse who neglect it. To believe is simply to trust,
to depend, to rely upon Christ Jesus.
To be baptized is to submit to the
ordinance which our Lord fulfilled at Jordan, to which the converted ones
submitted at Pentecost, to which the jailer yielded obedience the very night
of his conversion. The outward sign saves not, but it sets forth to us our
death, burial, and resurrection with Jesus, and, like the Lord's Supper, is
not to be neglected. Reader, do you believe in Jesus? Then, dear friend,
dismiss your fears, you shall be saved. Are you still an unbeliever, then
remember there is but one door, and if you will not enter by it you will
perish in your sins. October 5 |