From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
July 20 "For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God
by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by
his life." Romans 5:10 What a fearful spot it is to be in--to feel and fear
oneself an enemy to God! I think it is one of the most painful feelings that
ever passed through my breast, to fear I was an enemy to God. For what must
be the consequence, if a man lives and dies having God for his enemy? In
that warfare he must perish. If God be his enemy, who can be his friend?
Such sensations in the bosom are well-near akin to despair. Let a man fully
feel that he is God's enemy, where can he hide his head? Hell itself seems
to afford him no refuge. But he must be exercised with something of this
before he can prize reconciliation. He must see himself to be an enemy of
God by birth--that he was born in what our Reformers called "birth sin;" and
that his carnal mind is enmity against God. O the painful sensations of the
carnal mind being enmity against God! It is bad enough to be God's enemy;
but that every fiber of our nature should be steeped in enmity against God,
that holy and blessed Being to whom we owe so much, and to whom we desire to
owe everything; that our carnal heart in all its constitution, in its very
blood, should be one unmitigated mass of enmity to God, O it is a dreadful
thought! If you are made to experience that enmity in your bosom, and to
feel more or less of its upheavings and risings--that will cut to pieces all
the sinews of creature righteousness; that will mar all your loveliness, and
turn it into corruption. Now, when a man is thus exercised, it will make him look
out, if he has any root of spiritual feeling, for a remedy. God has provided
such in the sacrifice of his dear Son, in the blood of the Lamb; in the
sufferings, obedience, death, and resurrection of the blessed Jesus. Now
when this is opened up in our soul by the Spirit of God; when faith is given
to receive it; when the Holy Spirit applies it; when it is received into the
heart (for the Apostle says, "We have received the atonement"), then a felt
reconciliation takes place; we are then reconciled to God; love takes the
place of enmity, praise of sighing, and blessing his name instead of writing
bitter things against ourselves.