From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
December 3 "The eternal God is your refuge." Deuteronomy 33:27 There is, to my mind, much sweetness in the contrast
between the eternal God being the refuge of his people, and the lying
refuges that most hide their heads in. God's people need an eternal
refuge. They have a never-dying soul; and unless they have a never-dying
refuge, it is not sufficient for a never-dying soul. Works! these are for
time; the never-dying soul needs something to stand when works and wonders
cease. Doctrines, opinions, sentiments, ordinances, the good opinion of men,
the applause and flattery of the creature--these are of the earth, earthy;
they fail when a man gives up the spirit. But a child of God needs a refuge, not merely that his
soul may anchor in it in time, but that when time is ended, when the angel
proclaims, "There shall be time no longer," and his liberated soul escapes
its prison-house, and is wafted into the presence of the eternal God, it may
find in Him at that solemn moment a refuge. No, all through eternity, in the
rolling circle of its never-ending ages, the soul will still need a refuge.
For could it even in eternity exist for a moment out of Christ--in a word,
were the refuge of the elect anything but eternal, the moment the limited
time of their shelter closed, the frowns of God would hurl them into
perdition; so that nothing but an eternal God can ever be a refuge for a
never-dying soul. It does not say, "His grace is your refuge." No; because
grace will end in glory. Nor does it say, "His mercy is your refuge," for
his mercy will end in blessing and praise. Nor does it say, "His attributes
or his perfections are a refuge." It drops the gifts, and leads the soul up
to the Giver, as though God's own gifts and mercies were not sufficient, but
that the immortal soul must have the immortal God, and the never-dying
spirit is only safe in the bosom of an eternal Jehovah.