From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
October 7 "Brethren, farewell." 2 Corinthians 13:11 To fare well, spiritually understood, is to have
everything that God can make us happy in. All God's people will eventually
fare well. They all stand complete in Christ--nothing can touch their
eternal safety; for they are all complete in him, "without spot, or blemish,
or any such thing." In this point of view, they must all in the end and for
ever fare well. But when we come to the matter of experience, we often
find that those very times when God's people think they are faring ill,
may be the seasons when they are really faring well; and again, at
other times, when they think they are faring well, then they are
really faring ill. For instance, when their souls are bowed down with
trouble, it often seems to them that they are faring ill. God's hand
appears to be gone out against them--he has hidden his face from them; they
can find no access to a throne of grace; they have no sweet testimonies from
the Lord that the path in which he is leading them is one of his choosing,
and that all things will end well with them. This they think is indeed
faring ill, and yet perhaps they never fare better than when under these
circumstances of trouble, sorrow, and affliction. These things wean them from the world. If their heart and
affections were going out after idols, they instrumentally bring them back.
If they were hewing out broken cisterns, they dash them all to pieces. If
they were setting up, and bowing down to idols in the chambers of imagery,
affliction and trouble smite them to pieces before their eyes, take away
their gods, and leave them no refuge but the Lord God of hosts. If you can only look back, you will see that your
greatest sweets have often sprung out of your greatest bitters, and the
greatest blessings have flowed from the greatest miseries, and what at the
time you thought your greatest sorrows--you will find that the brightest
light has sprung up in the blackest darkness, and that the Lord never made
himself so precious as at the time when you were sunk lowest, so as to be
without human help, wisdom, or strength. So that when a child of God thinks he is faring very
ill, because burdened with sorrows, temptations, and afflictions, he is
never faring so well. The darkest clouds in due time will break, the most
puzzling enigmas will sooner or later be unriddled by the blessed Spirit
interpreting them, and the darkest providences cleared up; and we shall see
that God is in them all, leading and guiding us "by the right way, that we
may go to a city of habitation" (Psalm 107:7).