From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
September 6 "Exercise yourself unto godliness." 1 Timothy 4:7 "The Lord tries the righteous" (Ps. 11:5). In fact, a
righteous life is for the most part a tried life. There is not a child of
God, whose graces are lively and active, that is not tried in his soul. I
have no more belief that the soul can live without exercise than that the
body can. The more the soul is exercised, the healthier it will be. Trial is
one main source of exercise. If you are tried as to your standing; tried as
to your state; tried as to the reality of the work of grace upon your soul;
tried as to your experience; tried as to your manifestations, deliverances,
and evidences; tried by your sins; tried by Satan; tried by professors;
tried by profane; and above all tried by your own heart, and that
continually--it will keep your soul in exercise. And this is "exercise
unto godliness." If these exercises are unto godliness, they lead
to godliness, they take you on your way to godliness, they bring you near to
godliness, they bring you into godliness; and, above all things, they bring
godliness into your soul. And thus, there is an exercise of the soul unto
godliness. Does not your heart at times seem without a grain of it? You
see what godliness is in its nature, in its branches, in its fruits, in its
graces, in what a Christian should be, practically, experimentally, and
really--outwardly and inwardly--in the church, and in the world. You say, "I
a Christian! I a godly man or woman! Let me compare myself with godliness. Am I godly? Is there grace in my heart? Do I live? do I
speak? do I think? do I act? do I walk? do I suffer as becomes a Christian?
Is my life, my profession, my conduct--in the family, in the world--in the
business, in the church--at home, abroad--openly, secretly--privately,
publicly--is it such that I can take it and lay it down, step by step, with
vital, real, experimental, scriptural godliness? "O," say you, "I shrink
back from the test. There are many things in me, inwardly and outwardly,
which will not bear to be weighed up with godliness as revealed in the
Scriptures of truth." Well, your mind is exercised, I suppose, when you have
these workings. Now, what is the result? It is an "exercise unto godliness."
You want it; you strive for it; you cry for it; you press after it; you know
that none but the Lord can work it in your soul; you feel needy, naked, and
destitute; you know that without it you can neither happily live nor die;
yet have it you must, or perish body and soul forever.