Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
May 18
Morning
"In Him dwelleth all
the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are
complete in Him."—Colossians 2:9, 10.
All the attributes of
Christ, as God and man, are at our disposal. All the fulness
of the Godhead, whatever that marvellous term may comprehend,
is ours to make us complete. He cannot endow us with the attributes of Deity;
but He has done all that can be done, for He has made even His divine power and
Godhead subservient to our salvation. His omnipotence, omniscience,
omnipresence, immutability and infallibility, are all combined for our defence. Arise, believer, and behold the Lord Jesus yoking
the whole of His divine Godhead to the chariot of salvation! How vast His
grace, how firm His faithfulness, how unswerving His immutability, how infinite
His power, how limitless His knowledge! All these are by the Lord Jesus made
the pillars of the temple of salvation; and all, without diminution of their
infinity, are covenanted to us as our perpetual inheritance. The fathomless
love of the Saviour's heart is every drop of it ours;
every sinew in the arm of might, every jewel in the crown of majesty, the
immensity of divine knowledge, and the sternness of divine justice, all are
ours, and shall be employed for us. The whole of Christ, in His adorable
character as the Son of God, is by Himself made over to us most richly to
enjoy. His wisdom is our direction, His knowledge our instruction, His power
our protection, His justice our surety, His love our comfort, His mercy our
solace, and His immutability our trust. He makes no reserve, but opens the
recesses of the Mount of God and bids us dig in its mines for the hidden
treasures. "All, all, all are yours," saith
He, "be ye satisfied with favour and full of the
goodness of the Lord." Oh! how sweet thus to
behold Jesus, and to call upon Him with the certain confidence that in seeking
the interposition of His love or power, we are but asking for that which He has
already faithfully promised.
Evening
"Afterward."—Hebrews 12:11.
How happy are tried
Christians, afterwards. No calm more deep than that which succeeds a
storm. Who has not rejoiced in clear shinings after
rain? Victorious banquets are for well-exercised soldiers. After killing the
lion we eat the honey; after climbing the Hill Difficulty, we sit down in the arbour to rest; after traversing the Valley of Humiliation,
after fighting with Apollyon, the shining one
appears, with the healing branch from the tree of life. Our sorrows, like the
passing keels of the vessels upon the sea, leave a silver line of holy light
behind them "afterwards." It is peace, sweet, deep peace, which
follows the horrible turmoil which once reigned in our tormented, guilty souls.
See, then, the happy estate of a Christian! He has his best things last, and he
therefore in this world receives his worst things first. But even his worst
things are "afterward" good things, harsh ploughings
yielding joyful harvests. Even now he grows rich by his losses, he rises by his
falls, he lives by dying, and becomes full by being emptied; if, then, his
grievous afflictions yield him so much peaceable fruit in this life, what shall
be the full vintage of joy "afterwards" in heaven? If his dark nights
are as bright as the world's days, what shall his days be? If even his
starlight is more splendid than the sun, what must his sunlight be? If he can
sing in a dungeon, how sweetly will he sing in heaven! If he can praise the
Lord in the fires, how will he extol Him before the eternal throne! If evil be
good to him now, what will the overflowing goodness of God be to him then?
Oh, blessed "afterward!" Who would not be a Christian? Who would not
bear the present cross for the crown which cometh afterwards? But herein is
work for patience, for the rest is not for to-day, nor
the triumph for the present, but "afterward." Wait, O soul, and let
patience have her perfect work.