From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
October 27 "Peace, peace to him that is far off." Isaiah 57:19 Far off! What does that mean? It means that the soul
passing through that experience is separated, in its feelings, and at an
infinite distance from God. Now this inward sense of being "far off" is one
of the most painful feelings that a quickened soul can experience. The
ungodly, who are really afar off, know nothing experimentally of distance
from God, for they have never been brought spiritually near. They have felt
no "cords of love, no bands of a man" drawing them with sweet attraction to
the throne of the most High; they have never sighed after the sweet
manifestations of God's mercy and love; but they live gladly, and wallow
wilfully in those things which separate the soul from its Maker. But those who are "afar off" in their feelings, are such
as have seen something of the beauty of the Lord, and felt the evil of sin,
who spiritually know Jehovah's purity and the creature's impurity, and have
experienced the inward curse, bondage, and condemnation of a holy law. A
spiritual discovery of his purity and holiness, making manifest their own
vileness, has thrust them down from their self-righteous or presumptuous
standing, and made them far off from him; not daring to draw near, nor able
to approach; not feeling any spiritual access, but sighing and mourning over
their evil hearts in the wilderness, in desolate places; and unable to move
a single step forward, because the Lord does not draw them by his smile. A man must know something experimentally of this before
he is brought near. How can we know a feeling of nearness if we have not
known a feeling of distance? How can we know what it is to be brought "from
the end of the earth" (Psalm 61:2) by the manifestation of God's mercy and
love, unless we have been driven there, in our feelings, by some
manifestation of the wrath of God against sin? But to see the blessed Lord,
and not be able to draw near to him; to view his atoning blood at an
infinite distance from us, his glorious righteousness well-near out of
sight, and his lovely Person out of the reach of our spiritual view, so as
not to enjoy any access to these glorious realities--to know this
experimentally and feelingly, is to be "far off" from God. And I believe
that God's people know very much of this feeling. There is not much nearness
in our day; not much dandling upon the knees, not much smiling upon the
soul, not many love visits, nor love tokens communicated. There is, indeed,
a great deal of talking about them; and there are abundance of people who
profess to have them; but I fear they are, for the most part, cheats and
counterfeits. The real people of God, the true-hearted family are, for the
most part, "afar off upon the sea," for it is a dark and cloudy day in which
we live.