From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
"Set up waymarks, make guideposts--set your heart toward
the highway, even the way which you went--turn again, O virgin of Israel,
turn again to these your cities." –Jeremiah 31:21 To look at the past is often a blessed encouragement for
the future. If we are travelers in the way Zionward, we shall have our
various waymarks. A conspicuous call, or a signal deliverance, or a gracious
manifestation of Christ; a promise applied here, or a marked answer to
prayer there; a special blessing under the preached word; a soft and
unexpected assurance of an interest in the blood of the Lamb; a breaking in
of divine light when walking in great darkness; a sweet sip of consolation
in a season of sorrow and trouble; a calming down of the winds and waves
without and within by, "It is I, be not afraid"--such and similar waymarks
it is most blessed to be able to set up as evidences that we are in the
road. And if many who really fear God cannot set up these
conspicuous waymarks, yet they are not without their testimonies equally
sure, if not equally satisfying. The fear of God in a tender conscience, the
spirit of grace and of supplications in their breast, their cleaving to the
people of God in warm affection, their love for the truth in its purity and
power, their earnest desires, their budding hopes, their anxious fears,
their honesty and simplicity making them jealous over themselves lest they
be deceived or deluded, their separation from the world, their humility,
meekness, quietness, and general consistency often putting to shame louder
profession and higher pretensions--these and similar evidences mark many as
children of God who cannot read their title clear to such a privilege and
such a blessing. But whether the waymarks be high or low, shining in the
sun or obscure in the dawn, the virgin of Israel is still bidden to "set
them up," and to "set also her heart toward the highway, even the way by
which she came."January 2
January 2