DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() Seashore evening
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EVENING:
May 17 If we have received the grace of God in our hearts, its practical effect has been to
make us God's servants. We may be unfaithful servants, we certainly are unprofitable ones,
but yet, blessed be his name, we are his servants, wearing his livery, feeding at his
table, and obeying his commands. We were once the servants of sin, but he who made us free
has now taken us into his family and taught us obedience to his will. We do not serve our
Master perfectly, but we would if we could. As we hear God's voice saying unto us,
"Thou art my servant," we can answer with David, "I am thy servant; thou
hast loosed my bonds." But the Lord calls us not only his servants, but his chosen
ones--"I have chosen thee." We have not chosen him first, but he hath chosen us.
If we be God's servants, we were not always so; to sovereign grace the change must be
ascribed. The eye of sovereignty singled us out, and the voice of unchanging grace
declared, "I have loved thee with an everlasting love." Long ere time began or
space was created God had written upon his heart the names of his elect people, had
predestinated them to be conformed unto the image of his Son, and ordained them heirs of
all the fullness of his love, his grace, and his glory. What comfort is here! Has the Lord
loved us so long, and will he yet cast us away? He knew how stiff-necked we should be, he
understood that our hearts were evil, and yet he made the choice. Ah! our Savior
is no
fickle lover. He doth not feel enchanted for awhile with some gleams of beauty from his
church's eye, and then afterwards cast her off because of her unfaithfulness. Nay, he
married her in old eternity; and it is written of Jehovah, "He hateth putting
away." The eternal choice is a bond upon our gratitude and upon his faithfulness
which neither can disown. |
To Morning Reading for May 17
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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