When we seem to doubt God's love and distrust His promises
we dishonor Him and grieve His Holy Spirit. How would a mother feel if
her children
were constantly complaining of her, just as though she did not mean them
well, when her whole life's effort had been to forward their interests
and to give them comfort? Suppose they should doubt her love; it would
break her heart. How would any parent feel to be thus treated by his
children? And how can our heavenly Father regard us when we distrust His
love, which has led Him to give His only-begotten Son that we might have
life? The apostle writes, "He that spared not His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give
us all things?" Romans 8:32. And yet how many, by their actions, if
not in word, are saying, "The Lord does not mean this for me.
Perhaps He loves others, but He does not love me."
All this is harming your own soul; for every word of doubt you utter
is inviting Satan's temptations; it is strengthening in you the tendency
to doubt, and it is grieving from you the ministering angels. When Satan
tempts you, breathe not a word of doubt or darkness. If you choose to
open the door to his suggestions, your mind will be filled with distrust
and rebellious questioning. If you talk out your feelings, every doubt
you express not only reacts upon yourself, but it is a seed that will
germinate and bear fruit in the life of others, and it may be impossible
to counteract the influence of your words. You yourself may be able to
recover from the season of temptation and from the snare of Satan, but
others who have been swayed by your influence may not be able to escape
from the unbelief you have suggested. How important that we speak only
those things that will give spiritual strength and life!
Angels are listening to hear what kind of report you are bearing to
the world about your heavenly Master. Let your conversation be of Him
who liveth to make intercession for you before the Father. When you take
the hand of a friend, let praise to God be on your lips and in your
heart. This will attract his thoughts to Jesus.
All have trials; griefs hard to bear, temptations hard to resist. Do
not tell your troubles to your fellow mortals, but carry everything to
God in prayer. Make it a rule never to utter one word of doubt or
discouragement. You can do much to brighten the life of others and
strengthen their efforts, by words of hope and holy cheer.
There is many a brave soul sorely pressed by temptation, almost ready
to faint in the conflict with self and with the powers of evil. Do not
discourage such a one in his hard struggle. Cheer him with brave,
hopeful words that shall urge him on his way. Thus the light of Christ
may shine from you. "None of us liveth to himself." Romans
14:7. By our unconscious influence others may be encouraged and
strengthened, or they may be discouraged, and repelled from Christ and
the truth.
There are many who have an erroneous idea of the life and character
of Christ. They think that He was devoid of warmth and sunniness, that
He was stern, severe, and joyless. In many cases the whole religious
experience is colored by these gloomy views.
It is often said that Jesus wept, but that He was never known to
smile. Our Saviour was indeed a Man of Sorrows, and acquainted with
grief, for He opened His heart to all the woes of men. But though His
life was self-denying and shadowed with pain and care, His spirit was
not crushed. His countenance did not wear an expression of grief and
repining, but ever one of peaceful serenity. His heart was a wellspring
of life, and wherever He went He carried rest and peace, joy and
gladness.
Our Saviour was deeply serious and intensely in earnest, but never
gloomy or morose. The life of those who imitate Him will be full of
earnest purpose; they will have a deep sense of personal responsibility.
Levity will be repressed; there will be no boisterous merriment, no rude
jesting; but the religion of Jesus gives peace like a river. It does not
quench the light of joy; it does not restrain cheerfulness nor cloud the
sunny, smiling face. Christ came not to be ministered unto but to
minister; and when His love reigns in the heart, we shall follow His
example.
If we keep uppermost in our minds the unkind and unjust acts of
others we shall find it impossible to love them as Christ has loved us;
but if our thoughts dwell upon the wondrous love and pity of Christ for
us, the same spirit will flow out to others. We should love and respect
one another, notwithstanding the faults and imperfections that we cannot
help seeing. Humility and self-distrust should be cultivated, and a
patient tenderness with the faults of others. This will kill out all
narrowing selfishness and make us large-hearted and generous.
The psalmist says, "Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shalt
thou dwell in the land, and verily thou shalt be fed." Psalm 37:3.
"Trust in the Lord." Each day has its burdens, its cares and
perplexities; and when we meet how ready we are to talk of our
difficulties and trials. So many borrowed troubles intrude, so many
fears are indulged, such a weight of anxiety is expressed, that one
might suppose we had no pitying, loving Saviour ready to hear all our
requests and to be to us a present help in every time of need.
Some are always fearing, and borrowing trouble. Every day they are
surrounded with the tokens of God's love; every day they are enjoying
the bounties of His providence; but they overlook these present
blessings. Their minds are continually dwelling upon something
disagreeable which they fear may come; or some difficulty may really
exist which, though small, blinds their eyes to the many things that
demand gratitude. The difficulties they encounter, instead of driving
them to God, the only source of their help, separate them from Him
because they awaken unrest and repining.
Do we well to be thus unbelieving? Why should we be ungrateful and
distrustful? Jesus is our friend; all heaven is interested in our
welfare. We should not allow the perplexities and worries of everyday
life to fret the mind and cloud the brow. If we do we shall always have
something to vex and annoy. We should not indulge a solicitude that only
frets and wears us, but does not help us to bear trials.
You may be perplexed in business; your prospects may grow darker and
darker, and you may be threatened with loss; but do not become
discouraged; cast your care upon God, and remain calm and cheerful. Pray
for wisdom to manage your affairs with discretion, and thus prevent loss
and disaster. Do all you can on your part to bring about favorable
results. Jesus has promised His aid, but not apart from our effort.
When, relying upon our Helper, you have done all you can, accept the
result cheerfully.
It is not the will of God that His people should be weighed down with
care. But our Lord does not deceive us. He does not say to us, "Do
not fear; there are no dangers in your path." He knows there are
trials and dangers, and He deals with us plainly. He does not propose to
take His people out of a world of sin and evil, but He points them to a
never-failing refuge. His prayer for His disciples was, "I pray not
that Thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest
keep them from the evil." "In the world," He says,
"ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome
the world." John 17:15, 16:33.
In His Sermon on the Mount, Christ taught His disciples precious
lessons in regard to the necessity of trusting in God. These lessons
were designed to encourage the children of God through all ages, and
they have come down to our time full of instruction and comfort. The
Saviour pointed His followers to the birds of the air as they warbled
their
carols of praise, unencumbered with thoughts of care, for "they sow
not, neither do they reap." And yet the great Father provides for
their needs. The Saviour asks, "Are ye not much better than
they?" Matthew 6:26. The great Provider for man and beast opens His
hand and supplies all His creatures. The birds of the air are not
beneath His notice. He does not drop the food into their bills, but He
makes provision for their needs. They must gather the grains He has
scattered for them. They must prepare the material for their little
nests. They must feed their young. They go forth singing to their labor,
for "your heavenly Father feedeth them." And "are ye not
much better than they?" Are not you, as intelligent, spiritual
worshipers, of more value than the birds of the air? Will not the Author
of our being, the Preserver of our life, the One who formed us in His
own divine image, provide for our necessities if we but trust in Him?
Christ pointed His disciples to the flowers of the field, growing in
rich profusion and glowing in the simple beauty which the heavenly
Father had given them, as an expression of His love to man. He said,
"Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow." The beauty
and simplicity of these natural flowers far outrival the splendor of
Solomon. The most gorgeous attire produced by the skill of art cannot
bear comparison with the natural grace and radiant beauty of the flowers
of God's creation. Jesus asks, "If God so clothe the grass of the
field, which today is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall He not
much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?" Matthew 6: 28, 30. If
God, the divine Artist, gives to the simple flowers that perish in a day
their delicate and varied colors, how much greater care will He have for
those who are created in His own image? This lesson of Christ's is a
rebuke to the anxious thought, the perplexity and doubt, of the
faithless heart.
The Lord would have all His sons and daughters happy, peaceful, and
obedient. Jesus says, "My peace I give unto you: not as the world
giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it
be afraid." "These things have I spoken unto you, that My joy
might remain in you, and that your joy might be full." John 14:27;
15:11.
Happiness that is sought from selfish motives, outside of the path of
duty, is ill-balanced, fitful, and transitory; it passes away, and the
soul is filled with loneliness and sorrow; but there is joy and
satisfaction in the service of God; the Christian is not left to walk in
uncertain paths; he is not left to vain regrets and disappointments. If
we do not have the pleasures of this life we may still be joyful in
looking to the life beyond.
But even here Christians may have the joy of communion with Christ;
they may have the light of His love, the perpetual comfort of His
presence. Every step in life may bring us closer to Jesus, may give us a
deeper experience of His love, and may bring us one step nearer to the
blessed home of peace. Then let us not cast away our confidence, but
have firm assurance, firmer than ever before. "Hitherto hath the
Lord helped us," and He will help us to the end. 1 Samuel 7:12. Let
us look to the monumental pillars, reminders of what the Lord has done
to comfort us and to save us from the hand of the destroyer. Let us keep
fresh in our memory all the tender mercies that God has shown us,--the
tears He has wiped away, the pains He has soothed, the anxieties
removed, the fears dispelled, the wants supplied, the blessings
bestowed,--thus strengthening ourselves for all that is before us
through the remainder of our pilgrimage.
We cannot but look forward to new perplexities in the coming
conflict, but we may look on what is past as well as on what is to come,
and say, "Hitherto hath the Lord helped us." "As thy
days, so shall thy strength be." Deuteronomy 33:25. The trial will
not exceed the strength that shall be given us to bear it. Then let us
take up our work just where we find it, believing that whatever may
come, strength proportionate to the trial will be given.
And by and by the gates of heaven will be thrown open to admit God's
children, and from the lips of the King of glory the benediction will
fall on their ears like richest music, "Come, ye blessed of My
Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world." Matthew 25:34.
Then the redeemed will be welcomed to the home that Jesus is
preparing for them. There their companions will not be the vile of
earth, liars, idolaters, the impure, and unbelieving; but they will
associate with those who have overcome Satan and through divine grace
have formed perfect characters. Every sinful tendency, every
imperfection, that afflicts them here has been removed by the blood of
Christ, and the excellence and brightness of His glory, far exceeding
the brightness of the sun, is imparted to them. And the moral beauty,
the perfection of His character, shines through them, in worth far
exceeding this outward splendor. They are without fault before the great
white throne, sharing the dignity and the privileges of the angels.
In view of the glorious inheritance that may be his, "what shall
a man give in exchange for his soul?" Matthew 16:26. He may be
poor, yet he possesses in himself a wealth and dignity that the world
could never bestow. The soul redeemed and cleansed from sin, with all
its noble powers dedicated to the service of God, is of surpassing
worth; and there is joy in heaven in the presence of God and the holy
angels over one soul redeemed, a joy that is expressed in songs of holy
triumph.


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