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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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THE
ANCHORAGE OF THE SOUL
"Be followers of them who through faith and
patience inherit the 1)promises."
HEBREWS vi. 12.
THE PROMISES OF GOD! That is
a key-word here. Inherit the promises (ver.
12); God made promise (ver. 13); he
obtained the promise (ver. 15); the heirs of
promise (ver. 17). But perhaps the reiteration of
the word does not awaken the interest or stir the heart of
those who read it. We are so familiar with it; and, above
all, we are not in circumstances which make the divine
promises specially precious. The night of sorrow must
obscure our sky, or we can never descry or appreciate the
stars of promise that sparkle as gems in the firmament of
Scripture. Those who are rich and increased in goods and
have need of nothing cannot realize what the promises of
God really mean.
Possessed of a good income,
guaranteeing the supply of every need, it is of little
moment that God has pledged himself to provide all needful
things for those who seek his kingdom first. Environed by
troops of faithful friends, like so many successive lines
of defense intrenched in the strong fortress of position
and rank, there is less interest in the assurance that God
will be the shield and buckler, the munition of rocks, the
refuge from the storm for his saints. But when riches
dwindle, and friends fail, and health declines, and
difficulty, persecution, and trial threaten, then the soul
betakes itself to the promises of God, and cons them over,
studying them by the hour together, until it wakes up to
find mines of treasure under pages which were blank as the
moorlands beneath which coal-beds lie. It would be well
for some of us if God would strip us of all those things
in which we place such confidence; so that we might be
compelled, perhaps for the first time in our lives, to
seek in himself all that we are now wont to seek in his
gifts. Oh, blessed loss, which should teach us our true
wealth! Oh, happy deprivation, which should reveal our
inexhaustible resources! Oh, loving discipline, which
should break the cisterns that hold the brackish
rain-water, and compel us to betake ourselves to the river
of God, which proceeds from the throne of God and the
Lamb!
The lax and cursory manner in which we
read pages begemmed with divine promise is largely due to
the fact that we have never been put into such straits of
sorrow and privation as to appreciate their value. One
crushing trial would open up whole tracts of promise,
which are now like the shut doors of a corridor in a royal
palace. This is one reason why such a man as the Christian
hero, Gordon, would spend hours over the Word of God,
counting his Father's promises, holding them up as jewels
in the sunshine, and rejoicing over them as great spoil;
such men as he have had little else; they have had no
other resources to fall back upon; they were driven to lay
hold on them for very existence. And thus they fulfilled
the enigma of the Apostle, "Having nothing, yet
possessing all things." Those who are conscious of
their poverty are they who become rich in faith, and heirs
of the Kingdom.
It was in precisely such a condition
that the Hebrews here addressed were found. Their goods
had been spoiled; they had endured a great fight of
affliction; they had been made a gazing stock both by
reproaches and afflictions; all on which men are
accustomed to rely had been swept from them; and therefore
the Holy Ghost, in these pages, directs their minds to the
exceeding great and precious promises, in which God
pledged himself to supply all their need; and to furnish
from his own treasuries all, and more than all, that they
had lost; not giving them these things in visible
possession, but supplying them as they were needed, and in
proportion to their faith. It was surely a good exchange,
to lose all, and to recover all in God!
GOD'S PROMISES ARE RELIABLE. A good
man's word is his bond. And when such a one has given a
promise our anxiety is allayed, our fears are quieted, we
have strong consolation. But if, in addition to the
promise, our friend has solemnly bound himself by an oath,
calling heaven and earth to witness, and God to ratify,
the asseveration is so momentous, the appeal so awful, the
impression made on the mind so deep, that, whatever
happens, the soul shelters itself in the immutability of
his decision. It is doubly impossible for him to change or
deceive. And this is the bond by which God has bound
himself.
When dealing with Abraham, God gave him
repeated promises, first of the land, then of the seed,
also of the blessing which should accrue to all
generations of men through him. On one occasion he went
through the form of covenant making in vogue among the
surrounding peoples (Gen. xv.17). But, on Mount Moriah,
when the faithful patriarch had given the one stupendous
evidence of faith and obedience, even unto death, God
sware, and "because he could sware by no
greater, he sware by himself." "By myself have I
sworn, saith the Lord', (Gen. xxii. i6).
And so it is with us. We who by faith
are the spiritual seed of Abraham are blessed with him.
"The promise is sure to all the seed; not to that
only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the
faith of Abraham, who is the father of us all" (Rom.
iv. 16). All the promises of God are Yea and Amen. He is
not a man that he should lie, nor the son of man that he
should repent. He has well calculated his resources,
before he has pledged himself; and when once he has done
so it is impossible that he should fail. Fall flat on the
divine promises; cling to them as a shipwrecked sailor to
the floating spar; venture all on them; their fulfillment
is guaranteed by covenant and oath; by blood and agony and
death; by the light of the resurrection morning and the
glory of the ascension mount; by the experience of
myriads, who have never found them fail. If any man living
has found one promise untrustworthy, let him publish it to
the world; and the heavens will clothe themselves in
sackcloth, and the sun and moon and stars will reel from
their seats, the universe will rock, and a hollow wind
moan through creation, bearing the tidings that God is
mutable, that God can lie. And that voice will be the
herald of universal dissolution. But it can never, never
be. Heirs of promise! God's power Is eternal, his counsel
is immutable. Heaven and earth may pass away, but his word
shall never pass away. Ye therefore may have strong
consolation; though ye lose all else, your heritage in the
word and oath of God shall be unimpaired, world without
end.
GOD'S PROMISES, THUS ASSURED, MAKE AN
ANCHORAGE FOR THE SOUL. Few things are more important for
the mariner than to secure a good anchorage ground, where
the soil will not give before the weight of the vessel and
the strain of the storm. And with all those inclinations
toward drifting which we have already
considered, we urgently need to discover something
permanent, unchanging, and satisfying, with which we may
grapple by the anchor of our hope.
The faculty of hope in a Christian is
not different to that of a worldly man. It is the same
faculty or quality in each. But there is a vast difference
in the ground in which the anchor is fixed. In the case of
the worldly man, it is the loose, light, unreliable soil
of peradventures and speculations. In the case of the
Christian, it is the unyielding, immutable promise and
oath of the Eternal God. Therefore the former is often
darkened with mis-giving and fear; while the latter cries,
without a shadow of doubt, "I know whom I have
believed, and am persuaded."
Hope is something more than faith.
Faith accepts and credits testimony; hope anticipates.
Faith says the fruit is good; hope picks and eats. Faith
is bud; hope blossom. Faith presents the check; hope lays
out the amount received. And such hope is the anchor
of the soul. The comparison between hope and an anchor
is familiar even to heathen writers, and it is easy to see
how fit it is. It steadies the soul. Take an illustration
from common life. A young man pledges his troth to a poor
but noble girl. He is drafted for foreign service, and
says farewell for long years. Meanwhile she is left to do
as well as she can to maintain herself. Work is scanty,
wages low, she is sometimes severely tempted and tried.
But, amidst all, she is kept true to her absent lover, and
to her nobler self, by the little strand of hope which
links her to a happy and united future. So, when suffering
or tempted or discouraged, our hope goes forward into the
blessed future, depicted on the page of Scripture in
glowing colors, and promised by the word of him who cannot
lie; and the anticipation of it fills the soul with
courage and patience, so as to endure the trials of time,
in view of the certain blessedness of eternity.
THE ANCHORAGE IN THE PROMISES HAS A
THREEFOLD VALUE. It is sure, there is no
fear of its failing; sure as the sure mercies of David;
sure as the "everlasting covenant, ordered in all
things and sure"; sure as God can make it. It is steadfast,
its influence on the soul is to keep it steady:
"Steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work
of the Lord." It entereth into that within the
veil. In the ancient world, when there was not
water enough to float a ship into the harbor, a man would
carry the anchor over the shoals, and fix it in the calm
waters of the inner basin. In some such way as this, our
Lord Jesus, when, like the high-priest in the Jewish
Tabernacle, he passed through the blue veil that hides the
celestial world from ours, took our hope with him, and
holds it there. The Lord Jesus is our hope (I Tim. i.1 ; I
John iii. 3). He is our forerunner. He has preceded us
into his Father's presence, the first fruits of them that
slept. He has gone thither as our Representative and
Priest. When he majestically passed from the sight of his
disciples, and was hidden from the eyes that longingly
followed him, he entered within the veil. There he ever
liveth; and because of it our hopes follow him, center in
him, and connect us already with that bright home of which
he is the radiant center.
THERE ARE CERTAIN QUALITIES WHICH WE
MUST LEARN TO EXERCISE. Faith and patience can alone
inherit the promises (ver. 12). Abraham had patiently to
endure before he received the promise (ver. 15). It is not
easy to wait, or to let patience have her perfect work;
and it is only possible to faith. There is no sublimer
instance of long waiting than the history of Abraham, for
which his faith nerved him, and to whom the promise was
literally fulfilled. And so shall it be again. Patience
weary, eager hearts. The time shall come when you shall
lay hands on your capital; but be content in the meanwhile
to enjoy the interest. The auspicious moment hastens when
you shall know and taste all the blessedness of Paradise
regained; but feast in the interim on the grapes of Eshcol,
the pomegranates and other produce of the land. Claim the
patience of Christ, of which the last of the apostles, who
had need of it to sustain him in the long delay, so
sweetly speaks (Rev. i. 9). "Be ye patient; stablish
your hearts; for the coming of the Lord draweth
nigh." "Let us run with patience the race set
before us, looking unto Jesus." Thus shall we
manifest "the patience of the saints"; and thus
shall we, like those who have preceded us, finally inherit
the promises.
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