Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
September 28
Morning
"The
Lord looketh from heaven; He beholdeth
all the sons of men."—Psalm 33:13.
Perhaps no figure of speech
represents God in a more gracious light than when He is spoken of as stooping
from His throne, and coming down from heaven to attend to the wants and to
behold the woes of mankind. We love Him, who, when Sodom and Gomorrah were full
of iniquity, would not destroy those cities until He had made a personal
visitation of them. We cannot help pouring out our heart in affection for our
Lord who inclines His ear from the highest glory, and puts it to the lip of the
dying sinner, whose failing heart longs after reconciliation. How can we but
love Him when we know that He numbers the very hairs of our heads, marks our
path, and orders our ways? Specially is this great
truth brought near to our heart, when we recollect how attentive He is, not merely
to the temporal interests of His creatures, but to their spiritual concerns.
Though leagues of distance lie between the finite creature and the infinite
Creator, yet there are links uniting both. When a tear is
wept by thee, think not that God doth not behold; for, "Like as a
father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him." Thy sigh is able to move
the heart of Jehovah; thy whisper can incline His ear unto thee; thy prayer can
stay His hand; thy faith can move His arm. Think not that God sits on high
taking no account of thee. Remember that however poor and needy thou art, yet
the Lord thinketh upon thee. For the eyes of the Lord
run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in the behalf
of them whose heart is perfect towards Him.
Oh! then
repeat the truth that never tires; No God is like the God my soul desires; He
at whose voice heaven trembles, even He, Great as He is, knows how to stoop to
me.
Evening
"Go
again seven times."—1 Kings 18:43.
Success is certain when the
Lord has promised it. Although you may have pleaded month after month without
evidence of answer, it is not possible that the Lord should be deaf when His
people are earnest in a matter which concerns His
glory. The prophet on the top of Carmel continued to wrestle with God, and
never for a moment gave way to a fear that he should be non-suited in Jehovah's
courts. Six times the servant returned, but on each occasion no word was spoken
but "Go again." We must not dream of unbelief, but hold to our faith
even to seventy times seven. Faith sends expectant hope to look from Carmel's
brow, and if nothing is beheld, she sends again and again. So far from being
crushed by repeated disappointment, faith is animated to plead more fervently
with her God. She is humbled, but not abashed: her groans are deeper, and her sighings more vehement, but she never relaxes
her hold or stays her hand. It would be more agreeable to flesh and blood to
have a speedy answer, but believing souls have learned to be submissive, and to
find it good to wait for as well as upon the Lord. Delayed
answers often set the heart searching itself, and so lead to contrition and
spiritual reformation: deadly blows are thus struck at our corruption, and the
chambers of imagery are cleansed. The great danger is lest men should faint,
and miss the blessing. Reader, do not fall into that
sin, but continue in prayer and watching. At last the little cloud was seen,
the sure forerunner of torrents of rain, and even so with you, the token for
good shall surely be given, and you shall rise as a prevailing prince to enjoy
the mercy you have sought. Elijah was a man of like passions with us: his power
with God did not lie in his own merits. If his believing
prayer availed so much, why not yours? Plead the precious blood with
unceasing importunity, and it shall be with you according to your desire.