Evening and Morning
By Charles
Haddon Spurgeon
May 6
Morning
"We dwell in Him."—1 John 4:13.
Do you want a house for
your soul? Do you ask, "What is the purchase?" It is something less
than proud human nature will like to give. It is without money and without
price. Ah! you would like to pay a respectable rent!
You would love to do something to win Christ? Then you cannot have the house,
for it is "without price." Will you take my Master's house on a lease
for all eternity, with nothing to pay for it, nothing but the ground-rent of
loving and serving Him for ever? Will you take Jesus and "dwell in
Him?" See, this house is furnished with all you want, it is filled with
riches more than you will spend as long as you live. Here you can have intimate
communion with Christ and feast on His love; here are tables well-stored
with food for you to live on for ever; in it, when weary, you can find rest
with Jesus; and from it you can look out and see heaven itself. Will you have
the house? Ah! if you are houseless, you will say,
"I should like to have the house; but may I have it?" Yes; there is the key—the key is, "Come to
Jesus." "But," you say, "I am too shabby for such a
house." Never mind; there are garments inside. If you feel guilty and
condemned, come; and though the house is too good for you, Christ will make you
good enough for the house by-and-by. He will wash you and cleanse you, and you
will yet be able to sing, "We dwell in Him." Believer: thrice happy
art thou to have such a dwelling-place! Greatly privileged thou art, for thou
hast a "strong habitation" in which thou art ever safe. And
"dwelling in Him," thou hast not only a perfect and secure house, but an everlasting one. When this world shall have
melted like a dream, our house shall live, and stand more imperishable than
marble, more solid than granite, self-existent as God, for it is God
Himself—"We dwell in Him."
Evening
"All the days of my appointed time will I
wait."—Job 14:14.
A little stay on earth will
make heaven more heavenly. Nothing makes rest so sweet as toil; nothing renders security so
pleasant as exposure to alarms. The bitter quassia
cups of earth will give a relish to the new wine which
sparkles in the golden bowls of glory. Our battered armour
and scarred countenances will render more illustrious our victory above, when
we are welcomed to the seats of those who have overcome the world. We should
not have full fellowship with Christ if we did not for awhile sojourn below, for He was baptized with a baptism of
suffering among men, and we must be baptized with the same if we would share
his kingdom. Fellowship with Christ is so honourable
that the sorest sorrow is a light price by which to procure it. Another reason
for our lingering here is for the good of others. We would not wish to
enter heaven till our work is done, and it may be that we are yet ordained to
minister light to souls benighted in the wilderness of sin. Our prolonged stay
here is doubtless for God's glory. A tried saint, like a well-cut
diamond, glitters much in the King's crown. Nothing reflects so much honour on a workman as a protracted and severe trial of his
work, and its triumphant endurance of the ordeal without giving way in any
part. We are God's workmanship, in whom He will be glorified by our
afflictions. It is for the honour of Jesus that we
endure the trial of our faith with sacred joy. Let each man surrender his own longings
to the glory of Jesus, and feel, "If my lying in the dust would elevate my
Lord by so much as an inch, let me still lie among the pots of earth. If to
live on earth for ever would make my Lord more glorious, it should be my heaven
to be shut out of heaven." Our time is fixed and settled by eternal
decree. Let us not be anxious about it, but wait with patience till the gates
of pearl shall open.