DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() Mountain evening
|
EVENING:
April 11 It is well for us when prayers about our sorrows are linked with pleas concerning our
sins--when, being under God's hand, we are not wholly taken up with our pain, but remember
our offences against God. It is well, also, to take both sorrow and sin to the same place.
It was to God that David carried his sorrow: it was to God that David confessed his sin.
Observe, then, we must take our sorrows to God. Even your little sorrows you may roll upon
God, for he counted the hairs of your head; and your great sorrows you may commit to him,
for he holds the ocean in the hollow of his hand. Go to him, whatever your present
trouble may be, and you shall find him able and willing to relieve you. But we must take
our sins to God too. We must carry them to the cross, that the blood may fall upon them,
to purge away their guilt, and to destroy their defiling power. |
To Morning Reading for April 11
| To Other Spurgeon Devotions | First Baptist Church Canton |
From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
This daily devotional has been inspiring Christians for more than 100 years. This old version of this work is no longer under copyright. If you know differently - let me know and these pages will be removed from this site. There are some more recent versions of this work that have been written in a more modern language style. Those versions are still protected by copyright.