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Keeping
The Commandments
God's Word is pure. Heaven itself and the
great white throne is no more pure than the Word of God.
That life may be pure, it must be in sweet harmony with
the blessed Bible. A life that is lived in obedience to
the Bible is as pure as the Bible. Such a life is pure
enough for heaven. The writer of Revelation, being in the
Spirit saw "a pure river of water of life, clear as
crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the
Lamb." This pure stream was the wonderful word of
life. It was as pure as its source, which was the throne
of God. The life through which this pure stream flows will
be as pure as the throne.
One of the Psalm writers said,
"The words of the Lord are pure words: as silver
tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times."
"Thy word is pure; therefore thy servant loveth
it." The writer of Proverbs says, "Every word of
God is pure." When the veil is drawn aside and our
souls are brought face to face with the purity of the
Bible, then we understand that a Bible life is the best,
purest, noblest, and holiest life that can be lived upon
the earth.
O soul of mine, unveil shine eye,
Look upward to thy God
A wreath of purity to see
Crowning his every word.
In the following words we have the
sum of all true and right living: "Let us hear the
conclusion of the whole matter: fear God and keep his
commandments; for this is the whole duty of man."
Eccl. 12:13. This text as rendered in the Septuagint
version brings out clearer the true signification:
"Hear the end of the matter, the sum. Fear God and
keep his commandments: for this is the whole man."
Man is not entire, he is not complete as originally
intended, when not keeping all the commands of God.
Something is lacking in the life that is not in full
obedience to every word of God.
The Bible speaks of a beautiful
city in that bright celestial world. It is a city of pure
gold, clear as glass. Its walls are of jasper; its twelve
foundations are garnished with all manner of precious
stones; its twelve gates are gates of pearl; its streets
are pure gold. In that fair city there is no sin, no pain,
no sickness; sorrow and trouble never come there; a tear
shall never fall from any eye, for no tears are there.
There is no death in that wonderful city so fair. In the
midst of the street stands the tree of life. Oh, who does
not desire to dwell forever and forever in that city of
love and light when the pains and sorrows, the trials and
tears, of this weary life are over?
Listen while I read to you in
accents, clear, distinct, and unmistakable—"Blessed
are they that do his commandments, that they might have
right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the
gates into the city." Rev. 22:14. O traveler to
eternity, your entrance into the beautiful, glorious city
of God depends upon your conduct respecting the
commandments of God while you are making the journey
across the turbulent sea of life. Keeping the commandments
of God is man's whole duty. If he does his whole duty
through life he will come up out of the dark valley and
shadow of death, and find the gates of pearl unfolding.
Who will not cleave to the commandments of God? Who will
not obey His voice and walk daily in His holy ways ? The
obedient will be rewarded by an unfading inheritance in
that eternal city of gold. There is a beautiful mansion in
the great house of God for every obedient soul. Oh, how
blessed!
I am thinking of heaven tonight,
Of the mansion prepared there for me,
Where Jesus my Saviour now dwells,
And where I am longing to be.
Will not heaven be well worth a
life of obedience to the Word of God, though obedience
calls us through storms of persecutions, furnaces of
trials, oceans of tribulations, and years of toil and
suffering? To Moses the reproaches of Christ were greater
treasures than the riches of Egypt, "for he had
respect unto the recompense of the reward." Sit quiet
for a moment and by a strong eye of faith look away into
heaven and see that bright mansion prepared for you. See
those jasper walls, those pearly gates, and those golden
walks. See the crown of life, the harp of God, and the
light of the Lamb. Shall we not bear the trials of life a
little longer in patience? Shall we not be watchful to
walk in God's ways and obey him, that this rich
inheritance may be ours forever? Methinks I can hear a
reply coming from the depths of many a sincere, trusting
heart—"Yes, I will live in humble obedience to God
on earth, that I may be with Him forever in that celestial
city of light." God bless you!
Beyond the shores of time and the
kingdoms of this world is a kingdom called the kingdom of
heaven. It is the place where God has his great white
throne, around which the angels play upon their golden
harps and shout, "Blessing and honor and glory and
praise and might be unto God forever and ever." It is
around this throne that those who have passed through the
tribulations and the trying scenes of this lower world and
burst through the gates of death are singing redemption's
sweet song. Who does not desire to join that happy,
heavenly throng and wave those palms and wear those white
robes and sing those sweet songs over beyond the shadowy
vale of death? I seem to hear many voices saying, "I
hope to be among that blood-washed throng." Let me
tell you in all tenderness and love, but very plainly,
that the realization of your hope depends entirely upon
how you live while here in this world. Oh, how much in
that great and awful future is depending upon our manner
of life in this time world! Let us learn to live well, to
be our best every day.
We may dream of a home in heaven;
we may entertain hopes of seeing Jesus and of inheriting a
mansion on the shores of eternal bliss; we may imagine
ourselves walking through the blooming fields of paradise
and sitting beneath the tree of life; but our dreams, our
hopes, and our imaginations will never be realized unless
we carefully keep the commandments of God. More than a
profession is necessary; obedience is the only door into
the kingdom of God. Jesus said, "Not every one that
sayeth unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter the kingdom of
heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is
in heaven." Until our faith pierces through and
beholds the beauties and the realities of God so we can
say from the very depths of the soul, "I delight to
do thy will, O God," and, "My meat and my drink
is to do the will of Him that sent me," we have not
fully entered the true and right pathway of life. Keeping
the commands of God is the whole man and the whole of a
perfect life.
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