DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
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MORNING: January 8 What a veil is lifted up by these words, and what a
disclosure is made! It will be humbling and profitable for us to pause awhile and see this
sad sight. The iniquities of our public worship, its hypocrisy, formality, lukewarmness,
irreverence, wandering of heart and forgetfulness of God, what a full measure have we
there! Our work for the Lord, its emulation, selfishness, carelessness, slackness,
unbelief, what a mass of defilement is there! Our private devotions, their laxity,
coldness, neglect, sleepiness, and vanity, what a mountain of dead earth is there! If we
looked more carefully we should find this iniquity to be far greater than appears at first
sight. Dr. Payson, writing to his brother, says, "My parish, as well as my heart,
very much resembles the garden of the sluggard; and what is worse, I find that very many
of my desires for the melioration of both, proceed either from pride or vanity or
indolence. I look at the weeds which overspread my garden, and breathe out an earnest wish
that they were eradicated. But why? What prompts the wish? It may be that I may walk out
and say to myself, 'In what fine order is my garden kept!' This is pride. Or, it may be
that my neighbors may look over the wall and say, 'How finely your garden flourishes!'
This is vanity. Or I may wish for the destruction of the weeds, because I am weary of
pulling them up. This is indolence." So that even our desires after holiness may be
polluted by ill motives. Under the greenest sods worms hide themselves; we need not look
long to discover them. How cheering is the thought, that when the High Priest bore the
iniquity of the holy things he wore upon his brow the words, "HOLINESS TO THE
LORD:" and even so while Jesus bears our sin, he presents before his Father's face
not our unholiness, but his own holiness. O for grace to view our great High Priest by the
eye of faith! |
To Evening Reading for January 8
| To Other Spurgeon Devotions | First Baptist Church Canton |
From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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