From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
November 27 "They will spring up . . . as willows by the flowing
streams." Isaiah 44:4 The willow, we know, cannot exist without water; it must
be near the brook or river, or it withers and dies. Take a young willow and
plant it upon a mountain top or in the sandy desert, and it soon droops and
perishes. But take the barest twig off the willow, and plant it near a
stream, so that the water may reach it, and it will soon shoot downwards and
push a vigorous stem upwards. So it is with the child of grace--he must live by the
river side; he must dip his roots into that "river, the streams whereof make
glad the city of God," and by it he must be continually bathed, or he droops
and dies. He cannot live in the world, away from Jesus, his word,
ordinances, house, people, presence, Spirit, and grace, any more than a
willow can live upon the mountain top. He cannot live among carnal men, cut
off from union and communion with his great and glorious Head, any more than
the willow can thrive and grow in the wilderness. How beautifully is this
set forth by the prophet Jeremiah--"Blessed is the man that trusts in the
Lord, and whose hope the Lord is--for he shall be as a tree planted by the
waters, and that spreads out her roots by the river, and shall not see when
heat comes, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the
year of drought, neither shall cease from yielding fruit" (Jer. 17:7, 8).
The saints of God, then, grow like "willows by the flowing streams." How enduring, also, is the willow. What life in every
branch! and even when cut down low, still reviving "through the scent of
water" (Job 14:9), and shooting out its branches afresh. May we not see in
this a fitting emblem of the child of God, and admire how, like the willow,
he preserves life and vigor when the nobler trees of the forest are blown
down by the storm or are cut down for fuel?