Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
September 16
Morning
"Partakers
of the divine nature."—2 Peter 1:4.
To be a partaker of the
divine nature is not, of course, to become God. That cannot be. The essence of
Deity is not to be participated in by the creature. Between the creature and
the Creator there must ever be a gulf fixed in respect of essence; but as the first
man Adam was made in the image of God, so we, by the renewal of the Holy
Spirit, are in a yet diviner sense made in the image of the Most High, and are
partakers of the divine nature. We are, by grace, made like God. "God is
love"; we become love—"He that loveth
is born of God." God is truth; we become true, and we love that which is
true: God is good, and He makes us good by His grace, so that we become the
pure in heart who shall see God. Moreover, we become
partakers of the divine nature in even a higher sense than this—in fact,
in as lofty a sense as can be conceived, short of our being absolutely divine.
Do we not become members of the body of the divine person of Christ? Yes, the
same blood which flows in the head flows in the hand:
and the same life which quickens Christ quickens His people, for "Ye are
dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." Nay, as if this were not
enough, we are married unto Christ. He hath betrothed us unto Himself in
righteousness and in faithfulness, and he who is joined unto the Lord is one
spirit. Oh! marvellous
mystery! we look into it, but who shall understand it?
One with Jesus—so one with Him that the branch is not more one with the
vine than we are a part of the Lord, our Saviour, and
our Redeemer! While we rejoice in this, let us remember that those who are made
partakers of the divine nature will manifest their high and holy relationship
in their intercourse with others, and make it evident by their daily walk and
conversation that they have escaped the corruption that is in the world through
lust. O for more divine holiness of life!
Evening
"Am I a
sea, or a whale, that Thou settest a watch over
me?"—Job 7:12.
This was a strange question
for Job to ask of the Lord. He felt himself to be too insignificant to be so
strictly watched and chastened, and he hoped that he was not so unruly as to
need to be so restrained. The enquiry was natural from one surrounded with such
insupportable miseries, but after all, it is capable of a very humbling answer.
It is true man is not the sea, but he is even more troublesome and unruly. The
sea obediently respects its boundary, and though it be
but a belt of sand, it does not overleap the limit. Mighty as it is, it hears
the divine hitherto, and when most raging with tempest it respects the
word; but self-willed man defies heaven and oppresses earth, neither is there
any end to this rebellious rage. The sea, obedient to the moon, ebbs and flows
with ceaseless regularity, and thus renders an active as well as a passive
obedience; but man, restless beyond his sphere, sleeps within the lines of
duty, indolent where he should be active. He will neither come nor go at the
divine command, but sullenly prefers to do what he should not, and to leave
undone that which is required of him. Every drop in the ocean, every beaded
bubble, and every yeasty foam-flake, every shell and pebble, feel the power of
law, and yield or move at once. O that our nature were
but one thousandth part as much conformed to the will of God! We call the sea
fickle and false, but how constant it is! Since our fathers' days, and the old
time before them, the sea is where it was, beating on the same cliffs to the
same tune; we know where to find it, it forsakes not its bed, and changes not
in its ceaseless boom; but where is man-vain, fickle man? Can the wise man
guess by what folly he will next be seduced from his obedience? We need more
watching than the billowy sea, and are far more rebellious. Lord, rule us for Thine own glory. Amen.