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May 11, 2019

5/11/2019

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  Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it (Prov. 22:6).
 
    We smiled," said Hazel M. Woodruff, "when a young mother took her 3-week-old son to church, 'so that he would always be in the habit of going to church.'  Forty years later, when we saw him assisting in the Communion, we remembered his mother's words."
 
    When a thoughtful child was asked why a certain tree in the garden was crooked, he answered, "I s'pose somebody must have stepped on it when it was a little fellow."  We need to be careful about stepping on little fellows.  It is claimed that training is a greater factor than heredity in character development.  However that may be, it is a primary parental duty.  Someday God will ask us, "Where is the flock that was given thee, thy beautiful flock?" (Jer. 13:20).
 
    In a meeting in London years ago Lord Shaftsbury stated that he had learned from personal observation that nearly all the adult male criminals of that city had fallen into crime between the ages of 8 and 16; that if a young man lived an honest life up to the age of 20, he had 49 chances to 1 of living an honorable life.
 
    A governor of Massachusetts once declared that the average age of 600 of the 700 inmates of the state prison was less than 21.  "These," he said, "are not good men fallen after good training, but mostly young men who never were trained."
 
    The apostle command is "bring them [your children] up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord" (Eph. 6:4).  Things of God are to be taught "diligently" to our children.  We are to talk of them in the house, out of doors, and everywhere (Deut. 6:7-9).  In order to train a child aright, we must ask God, "How shall we order the child, and how shall we do unto him?" (Judges 13:12).
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "O God, thou hast taught me from my youth: and hitherto have I declared thy wondrous works" (Ps. 71:17).
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May 10, 2019

5/10/2019

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 And Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees' excellency, shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah (Isa. 13:19).
 
    This is a promise of prophecy, a prediction, to be fulfilled in history.
 
    I was walking over the ruins of Babylon.  There they were, the foundations of the ancient palaces, the hanging gardens, the impregnable walls, the great temple, or ziggurat, the great avenues of victory.  But they were all a great ruin.
 
    I found exactly what Isaiah had prophesied.  Babylon, "the golden city of a golden age," lay in vast disorder with no human inhabitant within its ancient walls.  Its worldwide commerce was gone, its terrible armies vanished into the mists of time.
 
    King Nebuchadnezzar had looked out over his world capital and said, "Is not this great Babylon, that I have built for the house of the kingdom by the might of my power, and for the honour of my majesty?" (Dan. 4:30).  But now it is only a memory and a name.  The history of this world is really "a tale of two cities," Babylon and Jerusalem.  Ancient Babylon declared war against God's people and God's city, Jerusalem.  But Babylon collapsed and is forgotten in its grave of the past, from which no Gabriel of future history will ever call it forth to pleasant memories.  It is indeed like Sodom and Gomorrah.  Any nation, any city, any man, that forgets God and opposes God's plan for this world is on the road to ruin.
 
                                Great Pharaoh's hosts with tossing plumes,
                                Like echoes now in empty rooms,
                                All Assyria's marching death,
                                But a memory and a breath.
                                Babylon and her golden strand,
                                The place, the name, and drifting sand.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "But thou, O God, shalt bring them down into the pit of destruction: bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days; but I will trust in thee" (Ps. 55:23).
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May 9, 2019

5/9/2019

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   Can a woman forget her suckling child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee (Isa. 49:15).
 
    Can a woman forget her child?  She may, but it's unnatural.  A little girl was told by her busy mother to go and play with her dolls, but the child complained, "I just love them and love them, but they never love me back."  And so God keeps loving us and loving us, but often we do not love Him back.  Yet He does not forget us, even as a mother does not forget her wandering son, but remembers him as her baby.
 
    "If I am thy child, O God," said Augustine at the time of his conversion, "it is because thou didst give me such a mother."  And surely many of us may say that.
 
    Of the daughter of Pharaoh it is written, "She saw the child: and, behold, the babe wept" (Ex. 2:6).  A true woman may resist many things, but no woman with a mother's heart can resist the cry of her own child.  How many thousands of mothers have sacrificed their lives for their babies!  The story is as old as the world and as sweet as heaven.  God uses it to picture His love to us.  "Mother is the name of God in the lips and hearts of little children."
 
    A true mother never forgets, never forsakes.  She follows her babe through childhood, adulthood, and down to the end of the darkest path the world has ever known.  She never forgets.
 
    From the great father-mother heart of God comes the promise "Yea, they may forget, yet I will not forget thee."  He will not forget, because He loves and cares.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindness; for they have been ever of old" (Ps. 25:6).
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May 8, 2019

5/8/2019

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  Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings.  Behold, we come unto thee; for thou are the Lord our God (Jer. 3:22).
 
    God loves backsliders?  Here is the proof of it.  "Return," He says, "and I will heal your backslidings."  God Himself is the only physician who can do that.  A backslider is only a Christian grown cold.
 
    In a great bronze foundry, lying side by side, were two heads made of metal.  One was perfect, with all the features of a noble, manly face clear and distinct.  In the other, hardly a feature was discernable.  The reason for this was that the metal had been allowed to grow a little too cool.  And that's the way it is in the Christian life.  Many a believer who might be stamped with the image and superscription of their Creator grows cold, the image is marred, the likeness blurred.
 
    How about it, friend; is the metal growing cold?  Return--return to God.  Sit down and read the fifteenth chapter of Luke, which was written especially for you.  It has been called the greatest short story ever written, the story of the prodigal son and the forgiving father.  When that boy "came to himself" he said, "I will arise and go to my father."  Friend, haven't you come to yourself today?  Won't you arise and come back home?  "Return," God says, "and I will heal your backslidings."  Won't you make part of our text your response to Him, "Behold, we come unto thee"?
 
    The symptoms of backslidings are like those attending a physical decline: loss of appetite, disrelish for food.  When you find yourself not enjoying prayer and the reading of the Bible, beware!  Begin to pray as never before, feed of the Word of God, exercise in Christian work.  Return to the Lord, the Great Physician, and He will heal you.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "O Lord my God, I cried unto thee, and thou hast healed me" (Ps. 30:2).
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May 7, 2019

5/7/2019

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 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh (Eze. 36:26).
 
    Years ago an American Indian chief, Tedyuskung, of the Delawares, was sitting at the fireside of a devout Quaker.  Both were silently looking into the fire, enjoying each other's company.  Suddenly the Quaker said, "I will tell thee what I have been thinking about.  It is of a rule given by the Author of the Christian religion, which from its excellence we call the golden rule."
 
    "Stop," said the chief.  "Don't praise it to me.  Tell me what it is."
 
    "It is for one to do to another as he would have the other do to him."
 
    "That is impossible.  It cannot be done," replied Tedyuskung.  Silence again reigned.  The chief arose and walked nervously about the room.  Stopping before his friend, he said, "Brother, I have been thoughtful of what you told me.  If the Great Spirit that made man would give him a new heart, he could do as you say, but not else."  And Tedyuskung was right.  Only the regenerated heart can please God.  More often we should hear the prayer and pray the prayer "Create in me a clear heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me" (Ps. 51:10).
 
    "I feel like a contemptible fine lady--all outside and no inside," said Elizabeth Fry before she was converted.  It is the heart, the mind, the inside, that must be changed and can be changed only by the power of God.
 
                                I come in faith to Thee,
                                        For all my sins atone.
                                A new heart give to me
                                        For this, my heart of stone.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise" (Ps. 51:17).
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May 6, 2019

5/6/2019

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MAY 6
 
        Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; and he shall send Jesus Christ, which before has preached unto you (Acts 3:19, 20).
 
    We really have four great promises in our text today: that we shall be converted, that our sins will be blotted out, that times of refreshing will come, and above all, that Jesus Christ Himself will be sent to this world.  But repentance is the key to it all.  Jesus said, Except ye repent, ye shall all...perish" (Luke 13:3).
 
    When the people at Wittenberg showed Luther their licenses to sin, his answer was "Unless you repent you will perish."  And when he fist heard of Tetzel's selling these indulgencies, he said, "Please, God, I'll make a hole in his drum."
 
    Without repentance there can be no conversion or blotting out of sins, no time of refreshing from the presence of the Lord.  God is looking for "twice-born men," as Harold Begbie called them, people who are converted, "born again" (John 3:3).  True conversion is evidenced by a change in the life.
 
    A janitor in an Episcopal chapel became converted.  When asked for evidence of her change of heart, she said, "I now take up the big mat at the entrance and sweep under it, while before I just swept around it."  To those who truly repent and are converted come the words "I have blotted out, as a thick cloud...thy sins" (Isa. 44:22).
 
    The gift of the Holy Spirit is given to all who believe (Acts 2:38), but he fulness of the promised refreshing will come in the latter rain.
 
    First the showers from the presence of the Lord, then our Lord Himself.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "For I acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me" (Ps. 51:3).
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May 5, 2019

5/5/2019

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 And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever (Dan. 2:44).
 
    In his monumental work A Study of History Arnold J. Toynbee describes the rise and fall of 20 civilizations down to our own time, and says: "Having explored the extension of our Western society in space, we have to consider its extension in time; though we are at once confronted with the fact that we cannot know its future."
 
    To the world's most brilliant minds the future of our civilization is an absolute blank, but to the eye of faith it is revealed in such great promise prophecies as our text today.  "In the days of these kings"--that is, in the days of the kingdoms of modern Europe--the God of heaven shall set up a kingdom.  In other words, heaven on earth.
 
    We read the entire second chapter of the book of Daniel and see that the image of prophecy as become the image of history--the head of gold, Babylon; breast of silver, Medo-Persia; belly and sides, Grecia; legs of iron, Rome; feet part of iron and part of clay, the broken fragments of the Roman Empire, partly strong, partly brittle.  Then the mystery stone, cut out without human hands, smites the image on its feet and grows to be a mighty mountain and fills the whole earth.  It is the fifth kingdom, God's kingdom, the kingdom of Christ, the "stone which the builders rejected" (Luke 20:17).  And it is to be in the days of these kingdoms, these modern kingdoms that we know.
 
    The kingdom of grace is ours now, the kingdom that is within you (Luke 17:21).  The kingdom of glory is surely coming.  Behind the changing Kaleidoscope of civilization, behind the confusion and chaos of sin, this world is God's world; and the glory is coming--soon.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "Be thou exalted, O God, above the heavens; let thy glory be above all the earth" (Ps. 57:5).
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May 4, 2019

5/4/2019

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  But whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed (James 1:25).
 
    The whole of this great passage may be summed up in little--there is blessing in obedience.
 
    A missionary attempting to learn the language of the people for whom he was laboring, was trying to find a word for obedience, a virtue that was seldom, if ever, practiced in that land.  One day as he returned home from the village his dog stayed behind.  But when he whistled, the dog came running at top speed.  An old man sitting by the roadside said with admiration, "Mui aden delejan ge,"  a free translation of which would be "Your dog is all ear."  That was it!  The missionary had found his word for obedience, and a beautiful one it was.  We should indeed be "all ear" to our Lord.  If God really has our ear, He will have our heart, too.  True hearing is obeying.  Forgetful hearers are disobedient.
 
    We are to be not only hearers but lookers.  We are to look into the perfect law of liberty and continue therein; that is, continue our looking and walking in that way.
 
    As boys on the farm, my brother and I used to see who could plow the straightest furrow.  We would fix our eye on some distant object at the far end of the field and keep looking at it as we plowed toward it.  We had to continue therein.  The person who continues looking at God's perfect law continues listening to His perfect words.  That person is obedient.  And such a one is "blessed in his deed."
 
                                Jesus calls us!  By Thy mercies,
                                        Savior, may we hear Thy call,
                                Give our hearts to Thy obedience,
                                        Serve and love Thee best of all.
                                                                    ___Frances Alexander
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "I delight to do thy will, O my God: yea, thy law is within my heart" (Ps. 40:8).
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May 3, 2019

5/3/2019

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  David said moreover, The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear, he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine (1 Sam. 17:37).
 
    This is a promise in anticipation.  David spoke the word, and God endorsed it and so made it true.  Because of past deliverances David argued that God would help him in a new danger, and we can argue on the same basis.  In Jesus Christ all the promises of Holy Scripture are "yea, and...Amen, unto the glory of God" (2 Cor. 1:20).
 
    Our Lord has said, "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee" (Heb. 13:5).  So why should we fear?  David ran to meet the giant Philistine.  Why?  He was thinking of the dead bear and lion.  He had known God's presence in the past, so he trusted Him for the present and for the future.  Our Lord is "the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever" (verse 8).
 
    At a dark time during the American Civil War, Governor Richard Yates of Illinois wrote a despairing letter to Abraham Lincoln.  The president's brief reply was "Dick, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord." The man in the White House had known troubles before, but he also knew that God was a God of deliverance.
 
    In the fifty-fifth psalm we read the words of David: "I will call upon God; and the Lord shall save me" (verse 16).  What gave him this faith?  Notice the eighteenth verse: "He hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle that was against me."  Let us never forget God's deliverances in the past, the deliverances of others as well as our own.
 
                                In all my ways Thy hand I own,
                                        Thy ruling providence I see;
                                Assist me still my course to run,
                                        And still direct my paths to Thee.
                                                                    ___Charles Wesley
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "When I cry unto thee, then shall mine enemies turn back: this I know; for God is for me" (Ps. 56:9).
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May 2, 2019

5/2/2019

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 So then every one of us shall give account of himself to God (Rom. 14:12).
 
    Did you ever make out an income tax report?  Did you have any trouble with it?  Were you afraid that the sharp-eyed government auditors would find some flaw in it?  It is quite a task for many people to make out a simple and accurate statement of their financial affairs, but it would be still more difficult for them to make out a complete report of their lives--thoughts, words, and actions--that would pass the scrutiny of a holy and righteous and divine judge.
 
    Notice the word in this passage is not may, could, or should, but shall.  "Every one of us shall give an account of himself to God."  If we must go to judgment, we need a lawyer, an advocate, someone to represent is at court.  Let me recommend an advocate who has never lost a case.  "We have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous" (1 John 2:1).  He appeared in Pilate's judgment hall, and from there He went to the cross.  Then He appeared in the presence of God to make intercession for us.  Last of all, to those who look for Him He shall "appear the second time without sin [that is, not dealing with sin] unto salvation" (Heb. 9:28).
 
    A woman of prominence once needed legal counsel and was advised to consult an eminent attorney.  She kept putting it off until finally she could wait no longer, for the court was about to convene.  She went to the attorney and began to state her case, but he stopped her, saying: "Madam, you're too late.  Yesterday I would have been glad to take your case and appear before the court as your advocate, but now I cannot, for I have just been appointed to be your judge."
 
    "God hath committed all judgment unto the Son" because He is the Son of God (John 5:22).  Let us hasten to put ourselves and all our interests in His hands so that He may represent us before God.
 
 
MEDITATION PRAYER:  "Thou dost establish equity, thou executest judgment and righteousness in Jacob" (Ps. 99:4).
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