DAILY READINGS by Charles Spurgeon
![]() Bee in Flower
|
MORNING: July 3 Pharaoh's dream has too often been my waking experience. My days of sloth have
ruinously destroyed all that I had achieved in times of zealous industry; my seasons of
coldness have frozen all the genial glow of my periods of fervency and enthusiasm; and my
fits of worldliness have thrown me back from my advances in the divine life. I had need to
beware of lean prayers, lean praises, lean duties, and lean experiences, for these will
eat up the fat of my comfort and peace. If I neglect prayer for never so short a time, I
lose all the spirituality to which I had attained; if I draw no fresh supplies from
heaven, the old corn in my granary is soon consumed by the famine which rages in my soul.
When the caterpillars of indifference, the cankerworms of worldliness, and the palmerworms
of self-indulgence, lay my heart completely desolate, and make my soul to languish, all my
former fruitfulness and growth in grace avails me nothing whatever. How anxious should I
be to have no lean-fleshed days, no ill-favored hours! If every day I journeyed towards
the goal of my desires I should soon reach it, but backsliding leaves me still far off
from the prize of my high calling, and robs me of the advances which I had so laboriously
made. The only way in which all my days can be as the "fat kine," is to feed
them in the right meadow, to spend them with the Lord, in His service, in His company, in
His fear, and in His way. Why should not every year be richer than the past, in love, and
usefulness, and joy?--I am nearer the celestial hills, I have had more experience of my
Lord, and should be more like Him. O Lord, keep far from me the curse of leanness of soul;
let me not have to cry, "My leanness, my leanness, woe unto me!" but may I be
well-fed and nourished in thy house, that I may praise thy name. |
To Evening Reading for July 3
| To Other Spurgeon Devotions | First Baptist Church Canton |
From Charles H. Spurgeon's Morning and Evening.
This daily devotional has been inspiring Christians for more than 100 years. This old version of this work is no longer under copyright. If you know differently - let me know and these pages will be removed from this site. There are some more recent versions of this work that have been written in a more modern language style. Those versions are still protected by copyright.