DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
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EVENING:
May 16 The armies of the three kings were famishing for want of water: God was about to send
it, and in these words the prophet announced the coming blessing. Here was a case of human
helplessness: not a drop of water could all the valiant men procure from the skies or find
in the wells of earth. Thus often the people of the Lord are at their wits' end; they see
the vanity of the creature, and learn experimentally where their help is to be found.
Still the people were to make a believing preparation for the divine blessing; they were
to dig the trenches in which the precious liquid would be held. The church must by her
varied agencies, efforts, and prayers, make herself ready to be blessed; she must make the
pools, and the Lord will fill them. This must be done in faith, in the full assurance that
the blessing is about to descend. By-and-by there was a singular bestowal of the needed
boon. Not as in Elijah's case did the shower pour from the clouds, but in a silent and
mysterious manner the pools were filled. The Lord has his own sovereign modes of action:
he is not tied to manner and time as we are, but doeth as he pleases among the sons of
men. It is ours thankfully to receive from him, and not to dictate to him. We must also
notice the remarkable abundance of the supply --there was enough for the need of all. And
so it is in the gospel blessing; all the wants of the congregation and of the entire
church shall be met by the divine power in answer to prayer; and above all this, victory
shall be speedily given to the armies of the Lord. |
To Morning Reading for May 16
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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