DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
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MORNING: April 29 The path of the Christian is not always bright with sunshine; he has his seasons of
darkness and of storm. True, it is written in God's Word, "Her ways are ways of
pleasantness, and all her paths are peace;" and it is a great truth, that religion is
calculated to give a man happiness below as well as bliss above; but experience tells us
that if the course of the just be "As the shining light that shineth more and more
unto the perfect day," yet sometimes that light is eclipsed. At certain periods
clouds cover the believer's sun, and he walks in darkness and sees no light. There are
many who have rejoiced in the presence of God for a season; they have basked in the
sunshine in the earlier stages of their Christian career; they have walked along the
"green pastures" by the side of the "still waters," but suddenly they
find the glorious sky is clouded; instead of the Land of Goshen they have to tread the
sandy desert; in the place of sweet waters, they find troubled streams, bitter to their
taste, and they say, "Surely, if I were a child of God, this would not happen."
Oh! say not so, thou who art walking in darkness. The best of God's saints must drink the
wormwood; the dearest of his children must bear the cross. No Christian has enjoyed
perpetual prosperity; no believer can always keep his harp from the willows. Perhaps the
Lord allotted you at first a smooth and unclouded path, because you were weak and timid.
He tempered the wind to the shorn lamb, but now that you are stronger in the spiritual
life, you must enter upon the riper and rougher experience of God's full-grown children.
We need winds and tempests to exercise our faith, to tear off the rotten bough of
self-dependence, and to root us more firmly in Christ. The day of evil reveals to us the
value of our glorious hope. |
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From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
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