DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() Mountain evening
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EVENING:
April 24 Sweet is the season of spring: the long and dreary winter helps us to appreciate its
genial warmth, and its promise of summer enhances its present delights. After periods of
depression of spirit, it is delightful to behold again the light of the Sun of
Righteousness; then our slumbering graces rise from their lethargy, like the crocus and
the daffodil from their beds of earth; then is our heart made merry with delicious notes
of gratitude, far more melodious than the warbling of birds--and the comforting assurance
of peace, infinitely more delightful than the turtle's note, is heard within the soul. Now
is the time for the soul to seek communion with her Beloved; now must she rise from her
native sordidness, and come away from her old associations. If we do not hoist the sail
when the breeze is favorable, we shall be blameworthy: times of refreshing ought not to
pass over us unimproved. When Jesus himself visits us in tenderness, and entreats us to
arise, can we be so base as to refuse his request? He has himself risen that he may draw
us after him: he now by his Holy Spirit has revived us, that we may, in newness of life,
ascend into the heavenlies, and hold communion with himself. Let our wintry state suffice
us for coldness and indifference; when the Lord creates a spring within, let our sap flow
with vigor, and our branch blossom with high resolve. O Lord, if it be not spring time in
my chilly heart, I pray thee make it so, for I am heartily weary of living at a distance
from thee. Oh! the long and dreary winter, when wilt thou bring it to an end? Come, Holy
Spirit, and renew my soul! quicken thou me! restore me, and have mercy on me! This very
night I would earnestly implore the Lord to take pity upon his servant, and send me a
happy revival of spiritual life! |
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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