The Seventeenth of January
From Spurgeon's "Faith's Check Book"
017-A Man Without Fear
"And he said, Certainly I will be with thee." (Exodus 3:12)
Of course, if the Lord sent Moses on an errand, He would not let him go alone. The tremendous
risk which it would involve and the great power it would require would render it ridiculous for
God to send a poor lone Hebrew to confront the mightiest king in all the world and then leave
him to himself. It could not be imagined that a wise God would match poor Moses with Pharaoh
and the enormous forces of Egypt. Hence He says, "Certainly I will be with thee," as if it were
out of the question that He would send him alone.
In my case, also, the same rule will hold good. If I go upon the Lord's errand with a simple
reliance upon His power and a single eye to His glory, it is certain that He will be with me.
His sending me binds Him to back me up. Is not this enough? What more can I want? If all the
angels and arch- angels were with me. I might fail; but if He is with me, I must succeed. Only
let me take care that I act worthily toward this promise. Let me not go timidly, halfheartedly,
carelessly, presumptuously. What manner of person ought he to be who has God with him! In such
company it behoveth me to play the man and, like Moses, go in unto Pharaoh without fear.
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