From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
November 8 "I will make justice the measuring line and righteousness
the plumb line; hail will sweep away your refuge, the lie, and water will
overflow your hiding place." Isaiah 28:17 Wherever God the Holy Spirit begins and carries on a work
of grace in the heart, he will weigh up, and mete out, from time to time,
all a man's religion and test every inch of the way whether it lies straight
and level with the word and will of God. Depend upon it the Lord who "weighs
the spirits" (Prov. 16:2), and by whom "actions are weighed" (1 Sam. 2:3),
will put into his righteous and unerring scales both nature and grace, both
human and divine teaching, and make us know which is full weight in heaven's
court. The religion of the present day is too much to confuse everything of
an experimental nature; to cover and obscure the work of grace in the heart.
But there can be no question that God will never allow
our religion, if, indeed, he has mercifully taken us in hand, to be huddled
up in this confused way; but he will measure it all by his standard, and
refine it in his crucible. It is in this way that we learn the reality and
genuineness of his work. Thus, if he gives faith, he will bring that faith
to the touchstone, and prove it with heavy trials. It is in grace as in
nature. When we would ascertain the exact weight of a thing, we put it into
one scale, and a standard weight into the other, until the scales are even.
So when the Lord puts faith in one scale, he puts a burden in the other to
try whether it is standard weight. And the greater the faith the heavier the trial. The
father of the faithful had to slay his own son. If God communicates a
measure of hope, there will be many things that cause despondency to be put
into the opposite scale, that despondency and hope may be well balanced. If
the love of God be shed abroad in the soul, there will be trials and
temptations to prove it. Thus the child of God learns the meaning of the
words--"The work of faith, and labor of love, and patience of hope" (1
Thess. 1:3). Every token for good, every sip of mercy, every
manifestation of love is examined and searched into, weighed up and balanced
in the court of conscience, to know whether it is full weight or not. And in
this delicate and accurate scrutiny not only is religion weighed up, but
also that which is not religion. Sins, open and secret, backslidings,
idolatrous affections, covetous desires, presumptuous confidences, rotten
hopes, and vain props--all are weighed up in the balances of the sanctuary.
And as that which is received from God, when put into the balances, will be
found sterling and genuine; so all that did not come from God, all that
sprang from nature and the flesh, all vain confidence, bold claims, and
presumptuous notions, when put into the scales, will have tekel
stamped upon them--"Weighed in the balances, and found lacking."