October 11 - Morning"Let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens." — Lamentations 3:41
The act of prayer teaches us our unworthiness, which is a very salutary
lesson for such proud beings as we are. If God gave us favours without
constraining us to pray for them we should never know how poor we are,
but a true prayer is an inventory of wants, a catalogue of necessities, a
revelation of hidden poverty. While it is an application to divine wealth, it
is a confession of human emptiness. The most healthy state of a Christian
is to be always empty in self and constantly depending upon the Lord for
supplies; to be always poor in self and rich in Jesus; weak as water
personally, but mighty through God to do great exploits; and hence the use
of prayer, because, while it adores God, it lays the creature where it should
be, in the very dust.
Prayer is in itself, apart from the answer which it
brings, a great benefit to the Christian. As the runner gains strength for the
race by daily exercise, so for the great race of life we acquire energy by the
hallowed labour of prayer. Prayer plumes the wings of God's young
eaglets, that they may learn to mount above the clouds. Prayer girds the
loins of God's warriors, and sends them forth to combat with their sinews
braced and their muscles firm. An earnest pleader cometh out of his closet,
even as the sun ariseth from the chambers of the east, rejoicing like a strong
man to run his race.
Prayer is that uplifted hand of Moses which routs the
Amalekites more than the sword of Joshua; it is the arrow shot from the
chamber of the prophet foreboding defeat to the Syrians. Prayer girds
human weakness with divine strength, turns human folly into heavenly
wisdom, and gives to troubled mortals the peace of God. We know not
what prayer cannot do! We thank thee, great God, for the mercy-seat, a
choice proof of thy marvellous lovingkindness. Help us to use it aright
throughout this day! October 11 - Evening"Whom He did predestinate, them He also called." — Romans 8:30
In the second epistle to Timothy, first chapter, and ninth verse, are these
words — "Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling." Now,
here is a touchstone by which we may try our calling. It is "an holy calling,
not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace."
This calling forbids all trust in our own doings, and conducts us to Christ
alone for salvation, but it afterwards purges us from dead works to serve
the living and true God. As He that hath called you is holy, so must you
be holy.
If you are living in sin, you are not called, but if you are truly
Christ's, you can say, "Nothing pains me so much as sin; I desire to be rid
of it; Lord, help me to be holy." Is this the panting of thy heart? Is this the
tenor of thy life towards God, and His divine will? Again, in Philippians,
3:13, 14, we are told of "The high calling of God in Christ Jesus." Is then
your calling a high calling? Has it ennobled your heart, and set it upon
heavenly things? Has it elevated your hopes, your tastes, your desires?
Has it upraised the constant tenor of your life, so that you spend it with
God and for God?
Another test we find in Hebrews 3:1 — "Partakers of
the heavenly calling." Heavenly calling means a call from heaven. If man
alone call thee, thou art uncalled. Is thy calling of God? Is it a call to heaven
as well as from heaven? Unless thou art a stranger here, and heaven thy
home, thou hast not been called with a heavenly calling; for those who
have been so called, declare that they look for a city which hath
foundations, whose builder and maker is God, and they themselves are
strangers and pilgrims upon the earth. Is thy calling thus holy, high,
heavenly? Then, beloved, thou hast been called of God, for such is the
calling wherewith God doth call His people. October 11 |