DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() mountain evening
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EVENING:
February 10 Attentively observe THE INSTRUCTIVE SIMILITUDE: our sins are like a cloud. As clouds
are of many shapes and shades, so are our transgressions. As clouds obscure the light of
the sun, and darken the landscape beneath, so do our sins hide from us the light of
Jehovah's face, and cause us to sit in the shadow of death. They are earth-born things,
and rise from the miry places of our nature; and when so collected that their measure is
full, they threaten us with storm and tempest. Alas! that, unlike clouds, our sins yield
us no genial showers, but rather threaten to deluge us with a fiery flood of destruction.
O ye black clouds of sin, how can it be fair weather with our souls while ye remain? |
To Morning Reading for February 10
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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