Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
January 7
Morning
"For me
to live is Christ."—Philippians 1:21.
The believer did not always
live to Christ. He began to do so when God the Holy Spirit convinced him of
sin, and when by grace he was brought to see the dying Saviour
making a propitiation for his guilt. From the moment of the new and celestial
birth the man begins to live to Christ. Jesus is to believers the one pearl of
great price, for whom we are willing to part with all
that we have. He has so completely won our love, that
it beats alone for Him; to His glory we would live, and in defence
of His gospel we would die; He is the pattern of our life, and the model after
which we would sculpture our character. Paul's words mean more than most men
think; they imply that the aim and end of his life was Christ—nay,
his life itself was Jesus. In the words of an ancient saint, he did eat, and
drink, and sleep eternal life. Jesus was his very breath, the soul of his soul,
the heart of his heart, the life of his life. Can you say, as a professing Christian, that you live up to this idea? Can you honestly
say that for you to live is Christ? Your business—are you doing it for
Christ? Is it not done for self-aggrandizement and for family advantage? Do
you ask, "Is that a mean reason?" For the Christian it is. He
professes to live for Christ; how can he live for another object without
committing a spiritual adultery? Many there are who carry out this principle in
some measure; but who is there that dare say that he hath lived wholly for
Christ as the apostle did? Yet, this alone is the true life of a
Christian—its source, its sustenance, its fashion, its end, all gathered
up in one word—Christ Jesus. Lord, accept me; I here present myself,
praying to live only in Thee and to Thee. Let me be as the bullock
which stands between the plough and the altar, to work or to be
sacrificed; and let my motto be, "Ready for either."
Evening
"My
sister, my spouse."—Song of Solomon 4:12.
Observe the sweet titles
with which the heavenly Solomon with intense affection addresses His bride the
church. "My sister, one near to me by ties of nature, partaker of
the same sympathies. My spouse, nearest and dearest, united to me by the
tenderest bands of love; my
sweet companion, part of my own self. My sister, by my
Incarnation, which makes me bone of thy bone and flesh of thy flesh; my
spouse, by heavenly betrothal, in which I have espoused thee unto myself in
righteousness. My sister, whom I knew of old, and over whom I
watched from her earliest infancy; my spouse, taken from among the
daughters, embraced by arms of love, and affianced unto me for ever. See how
true it is that our royal Kinsman is not ashamed of us, for He dwells with
manifest delight upon this two-fold relationship. We have the word
"my" twice in our version; as if Christ
dwelt with rapture on His possession of His Church. "His delights were
with the sons of men," because those sons of men were His own chosen ones.
He, the Shepherd, sought the sheep, because they were His sheep; He has
gone about "to seek and to save that which was lost," because that
which was lost was His long before it was lost to itself or lost to Him.
The church is the exclusive portion of her Lord; none else may claim a
partnership, or pretend to share her love. Jesus, thy church delights to have
it so! Let every believing soul drink solace out of these wells. Soul! Christ
is near to thee in ties of relationship; Christ is dear to thee in bonds of
marriage union, and thou art dear to Him; behold He grasps both of thy hands
with both His own, saying, "My sister, my spouse." Mark
the two sacred holdfasts by which thy Lord gets such a double hold of thee that
He neither can nor will ever let thee go. Be not, O beloved, slow to return the
hallowed flame of His love.