DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
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EVENING:
February 8 Many persons, if they are asked what they understand by salvation, will reply,
"Being saved from hell and taken to heaven." This is one result of salvation,
but it is not one tithe of what is contained in that boon. It is true our Lord Jesus
Christ does redeem all his people from the wrath to come; he saves them from the fearful
condemnation which their sins had brought upon them; but his triumph is far more complete
than this. He saves his people "from their sins." Oh! sweet deliverance from our
worst foes. Where Christ works a saving work, he casts Satan from his throne, and will not
let him be master any longer. No man is a true Christian if sin reigns in his mortal body.
Sin will be in us--it will never be utterly expelled till the spirit enters glory; but it
will never have dominion. There will be a striving for dominion--a lusting against the new
law and the new spirit which God has implanted--but sin will never get the upper hand so
as to be absolute monarch of our nature. Christ will be Master of the heart, and sin must
be mortified. The Lion of the tribe of Judah shall prevail, and the dragon shall be cast
out. Professor! is sin subdued in you? If your life is unholy your heart is unchanged, and
if your heart is unchanged you are an unsaved person. If the Saviour has not sanctified
you, renewed you, given you a hatred of sin and a love of holiness, he has done nothing in
you of a saving character. The grace which does not make a man better than others is a
worthless counterfeit. Christ saves his people, not in their sins, but from them.
"Without holiness no man shall see the Lord." "Let every one that nameth
the name of Christ depart from iniquity." If not saved from sin, how shall we hope to
be counted among his people. Lord, save me now from all evil, and enable me to honour my
Saviour. |
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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