DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() mountain evening
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EVENING:
March 21 If inclined to boast of our abilities, the grandeur of nature may soon show us how puny
we are. We cannot move the least of all the twinkling stars, or quench so much as one of
the beams of the morning. We speak of power, but the heavens laugh us to scorn. When the
Pleiades shine forth in spring with vernal joy we cannot restrain their influences, and
when Orion reigns aloft, and the year is bound in winter's fetters, we cannot relax the
icy bands. The seasons revolve according to the divine appointment, neither can the whole
race of men effect a change therein. Lord, what is man? |
To Morning Reading for March 21
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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