DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
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MORNING: April 12 Our blessed Lord experienced a terrible sinking and melting of soul. "The spirit
of a man will sustain his infirmity, but a wounded spirit who can bear?" Deep
depression of spirit is the most grievous of all trials; all besides is as nothing. Well
might the suffering Saviour cry to his God, "Be not far from me," for above all
other seasons a man needs his God when his heart is melted within him because of
heaviness. Believer, come near the cross this morning, and humbly adore the King of glory
as having once been brought far lower, in mental distress and inward anguish, than any one
among us; and mark his fitness to become a faithful High Priest, who can be touched with a
feeling of our infirmities. Especially let those of us whose sadness springs directly from
the withdrawal of a present sense of our Father's love, enter into near and intimate
communion with Jesus. Let us not give way to despair, since through this dark room the
Master has passed before us. Our souls may sometimes long and faint, and thirst even to
anguish, to behold the light of the Lord's countenance: at such times let us stay
ourselves with the sweet fact of the sympathy of our great High Priest. Our drops of
sorrow may well be forgotten in the ocean of his griefs; but how high ought our love to
rise! Come in, O strong and deep love of Jesus, like the sea at the flood in spring tides,
cover all my powers, drown all my sins, wash out all my cares, lift up my earth-bound
soul, and float it right up to my Lord's feet, and there let me lie, a poor broken shell,
washed up by his love, having no virtue or value; and only venturing to whisper to him
that if he will put his ear to me, he will hear within my heart faint echoes of the vast
waves of his own love which have brought me where it is my delight to lie, even at his
feet for ever. |
To Evening Reading for April 12
From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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