Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
December 4
Morning
"I have much people in this
city."—Acts 18:10.
This
should be a great encouragement to try to do good,
since God has among the vilest of the vile, the most reprobate, the most
debauched and drunken, an elect people who must be saved. When you take the
Word to them, you do so because God has ordained you to be the messenger of
life to their souls, and they must receive it, for so the decree of
predestination runs. They are as much redeemed by blood as the saints before
the eternal throne. They are Christ's property, and yet perhaps they are lovers
of the ale-house, and haters of holiness; but if Jesus
Christ purchased them He will have them. God is not unfaithful to forget the price which His Son has paid. He will not suffer His
substitution to be in any case an ineffectual, dead thing. Tens of thousands of
redeemed ones are not regenerated yet, but regenerated they must be; and this
is our comfort when we go forth to them with the quickening Word of God.
Nay,
more, these ungodly ones are prayed for by Christ before the throne.
"Neither pray I for these alone," saith the
great Intercessor, "but for them also which shall believe on Me through their word." Poor, ignorant souls, they know
nothing about prayer for themselves, but Jesus prays for them. Their names are
on His breastplate, and ere long they must bow their stubborn knee, breathing
the penitential sigh before the throne of grace. "The time of figs is not
yet." The predestinated moment has not struck; but, when it comes, they
shall obey, for God will have His own; they must, for the Spirit is
not to be withstood when He cometh forth with fulness
of power—they must become the willing servants of the living God.
"My people shall be willing in the day of my power." "He shall
justify many." "He shall see of the travail of His soul."
"I will divide him a portion with the great, and He shall divide the spoil
with the strong."
Evening
"Even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the
adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body."—Romans
8:23.
This
groaning is universal among the saints: to a greater or less extent we all feel
it. It is not the groan of murmuring or complaint: it is rather the note of
desire than of distress. Having received an earnest, we desire the whole of our
portion; we are sighing that our entire manhood, in its trinity of spirit,
soul, and body, may be set free from the last vestige of the fall; we long to
put off corruption, weakness, and dishonour, and to
wrap ourselves in incorruption, in immortality, in glory, in the spiritual body
which the Lord Jesus will bestow upon His people. We long for the manifestation
of our adoption as the children of God. "We groan," but it is "within
ourselves." It is not the hypocrite's groan, by which he would make
men believe that he is a saint because he is wretched. Our sighs are sacred
things, too hallowed for us to tell abroad. We keep our longings to our Lord
alone. Then the apostle says we are "waiting," by which we
learn that we are not to be petulant, like Jonah or Elijah, when they said,
"Let me die"; nor are we to whimper and sigh for the end of life
because we are tired of work, nor wish to escape from our present sufferings
till the will of the Lord is done. We are to groan for glorification, but we
are to wait patiently for it, knowing that what the Lord appoints is best.
Waiting implies being ready. We are to stand at the door expecting the Beloved
to open it and take us away to Himself. This "groaning" is a test.
You may judge of a man by what he groans after. Some men groan after
wealth—they worship Mammon; some groan continually under the troubles of
life—they are merely impatient; but the man who sighs after God, who is
uneasy till he is made like Christ, that is the blessed man. May God help us to
groan for the coming of the Lord, and the resurrection which
He will bring to us.