Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
January 3
Morning
"I will
give thee for a covenant of the people."—Isaiah 49:8.
Jesus Christ is
Himself the sum and substance of the covenant, and as one of its gifts, He is
the property of every believer. Believer, canst thou estimate what thou hast
gotten in Christ? "In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily." Consider that word
"God" and its infinity, and then meditate upon "perfect
man" and all his beauty; for all that Christ, as God and man, ever had, or
can have, is thine—out of pure free favour, passed over to thee to be thine
entailed property forever. Our blessed Jesus, as God, is omniscient,
omnipresent, omnipotent. Will it not console you to
know that all these great and glorious attributes are altogether yours? Has he
power? That power is yours to support and strengthen you, to overcome your
enemies, and to preserve you even to the end. Has He love? Well, there is not a
drop of love in His heart which is not yours; you may
dive into the immense ocean of His love, and you may say of it all, "It is
mine." Hath He justice? It may seem a stern attribute, but even that is
yours, for He will by His justice see to it that all which is promised to you
in the covenant of grace shall be most certainly secured to you. And all that
He has as perfect man is yours. As a perfect man the Father's delight
was upon Him. He stood accepted by the Most High. O believer, God's acceptance
of Christ is thine acceptance; for knowest thou not that the love which
the Father set on a perfect Christ, He sets on thee now? For all that
Christ did is thine. That perfect righteousness which
Jesus wrought out, when through His stainless life He kept the law and made it honourable, is thine, and is
imputed to thee. Christ is in the covenant.
"My God,
I am thine—what a comfort divine!
What a
blessing to know that the Saviour is mine!
In the
heavenly Lamb thrice happy I am,
And my heart
it doth dance at the sound of His name."
Evening
"The
voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his
paths straight."—Luke 3:4.
The voice crying in the
wilderness demanded a way for the Lord, a way prepared, and a way prepared
in the wilderness. I would be attentive to the Master's proclamation, and
give Him a road into my heart, cast up by gracious operations, through the
desert of my nature. The four directions in the text must have my serious
attention.
Every valley must be exalted. Low and grovelling thoughts of God must be given up; doubting and
despairing must be removed; and self-seeking and carnal delights must be
forsaken. Across these deep valleys a glorious causeway of grace must be raised.
Every mountain and hill
shall be laid low. Proud creature-sufficiency, and boastful self-righteousness, must be levelled, to make a highway for the King of kings. Divine
fellowship is never vouchsafed to haughty, highminded
sinners. The Lord hath respect unto the lowly, and visits the contrite in
heart, but the lofty are an abomination unto Him. My soul, beseech the Holy
Spirit to set thee right in this respect.
The crooked shall be made
straight.
The wavering heart must have a straight path of decision for God and holiness
marked out for it. Double-minded men are strangers to the God of truth. My
soul, take heed that thou be in all things honest and true, as in the sight of
the heart-searching God.
The rough places shall be
made smooth.
Stumbling-blocks of sin must be removed, and thorns
and briers of rebellion must be uprooted. So great a visitor must not find miry
ways and stony places when He comes to honour His favoured ones with His company. Oh
that this evening the Lord may find in my heart a highway made ready by His
grace, that He may make a triumphal progress through the utmost bounds of my
soul, from the beginning of this year even to the end of it.