From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
August 27 "The desire of our soul is to your Name, and to the
remembrance of you." Isaiah 26:8 How sweet and expressive is the phrase, "The desire of
our soul!" How it seems to carry our feelings with it! How it seems to
describe the longings and utterings of a soul into which God has breathed
the spirit of grace and mercy! "The desire of our soul,"--the breathing of
our heart, the longing of our inmost being; the cry, the sigh, the panting
of our new nature; the heavings, gaspings, lookings, longings, pantings,
hungerings, thirstings, and ventings forth of the new man of grace--all
are expressed in those sweet and blessed words, "The desire of our soul!"
And what a mercy it is, that there should ever be in us "the desire" of a
living soul; that though the righteous dealings of God are painful and
severe, running contrary to everything nature loves; yet that with all
these, there should be dropped into the heart that mercy, love, and grace,
which draw forth the desire of the soul toward the Name of God. This is expressed in the words that follow, "With my soul
have I desired you in the night!" If you can say no more about the work of
grace upon your heart than that--can you really use these words as
descriptive of feelings experienced within, "With my soul have I desired you
in the night?" Is your soul longing after the Lord Jesus Christ? Is it ever
in the night season panting after the manifestation of his presence?
hungering and thirsting after the dropping-in of some word from his lips,
some sweet whisper of his love to your soul? These are marks of grace. The
carnal, the unregenerate, the ungodly, have no such desires and feelings as
these; there is nothing in their heart corresponding with "the desire of the
soul" unto the Name of God. But it is the case with all the righteous; for