
Table of Contents

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Chapter 4
The True Motive in Service"Take heed that ye do not your righteousness
before men, to be seen of them." Matthew 6:1, margin.
The words of Christ on the mount were an expression of that which had been the unspoken
teaching of His life, but which the people had failed to comprehend. They could not
understand how, having such great power, He neglected to use it in securing what they
regarded as the chief good. Their spirit and motives and methods were the opposite of His.
While they claimed to be very jealous for the honor of the law, self-glory was the real
object which they sought; and Christ would make it manifest to them that the lover of self
is a transgressor of the law.
But the principles cherished by the Pharisees are such as are characteristic of
humanity in all ages. The spirit of Pharisaism is the spirit of human nature; and as the
Saviour showed the contrast between His own spirit and methods and those of the rabbis,
His teaching is equally applicable to the people of all time.
In the days of Christ the Pharisees were continually trying to earn the favor of Heaven
in order to secure the worldly honor and prosperity which they regarded as the reward of
virtue. At the same time they paraded their acts of charity before the people in order to
attract their attention and gain a reputation for sanctity.
Jesus rebuked their ostentation, declaring that God does not recognize such service and
that the flattery and admiration of the people, which they so eagerly sought, was the only
reward they would ever receive.
"When thou doest alms," He said, "let not thy left hand know what thy
right hand doeth: that thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret
Himself shall reward thee openly."
In these words Jesus did not teach that acts of kindness should always be kept secret.
Paul the apostle, writing by the Holy Spirit, did not conceal the generous self-sacrifice
of the Macedonian Christians, but told of the grace that Christ had wrought in them, and
thus others were imbued with the same spirit. He also wrote to the church at Corinth and
said, "Your zeal hath stirred up very many." 2 Corinthians 9:2, R.V.
Christ's own words make His meaning plain, that in acts of charity the aim should not
be to secure praise and honor from men. Real godliness never prompts an effort at display.
Those who desire words of praise and flattery, and feed upon them as a sweet morsel, are
Christians in name only.
By their good works, Christ's followers are to bring glory, not to themselves, but to
Him through whose grace and power they have wrought. It is through the Holy Spirit that
every good work is accomplished, and the Spirit is given to glorify, not the receiver, but
the Giver. When the light of Christ is shining in the soul, the lips will be filled with
praise and thanksgiving to God. Your prayers, your performance of duty, your benevolence,
your self-denial, will not be the theme of your thought or conversation. Jesus will be
magnified, self will be hidden, and Christ will appear as all in all.
We are to give in sincerity, not to make a show of our good deeds, but from pity and
love to the suffering ones. Sincerity of purpose, real kindness of heart, is the motive
that Heaven values. The soul that is sincere in its love, wholehearted in its devotion,
God regards as more precious than the golden wedge of Ophir.
We are not to think of reward, but of service; yet kindness shown in this spirit will
not fail of its recompense. "Thy Father which seeth in secret Himself shall reward
thee openly." While it is true that God Himself is the great Reward, that embraces
every other, the soul receives and enjoys Him only as it becomes assimilated to Him in
character. Only like can appreciate like. It is as we give ourselves to God for the
service of humanity that He gives Himself to us.
No one can give place in his own heart and life for the stream of God's blessing to
flow to others, without receiving in himself a rich reward. The hillsides and plains that
furnish a channel for the mountain streams to reach the sea suffer no loss thereby. That
which they give is repaid a hundredfold. For the stream that goes singing on its way
leaves behind its gift of verdure and fruitfulness. The grass on its banks is a fresher
green, the trees have a richer verdure, the flowers are more abundant. When the earth lies
bare and brown under the summer's parching heat, a line of verdure marks the river's
course; and the plain that opened her bosom to bear the mountain's treasure to the sea is
clothed with freshness and beauty, a witness to the recompense that God's grace imparts to
all who give themselves as a channel for its outflow to the world.
This is the blessing of those who show mercy to the poor. The prophet Isaiah says,
"Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are
cast out to thy house? when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou hide
not thyself from thine own flesh? Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and
thine health shall spring forth speedily. . . . And the Lord shall guide thee continually,
and satisfy thy soul in drought: . . . and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a
spring of water, whose waters fail not." Isaiah 58:7-11.
The work of beneficence is twice blessed. While he that gives to the needy blesses
others, he himself is blessed in a still greater degree. The grace of Christ in the soul
is developing traits of character that are the opposite of selfishness,--traits that will
refine, ennoble, and enrich the life. Acts of kindness performed in secret will bind
hearts together, and will draw them closer to the heart of Him from whom every generous
impulse springs. The little attentions, the small acts of love and self-sacrifice, that
flow out from the life as quietly as the fragrance from a flower--these constitute no
small share of the blessings and happiness of life. And it will be found at last that the
denial of self for the good and happiness of others, however humble and uncommended here,
is recognized in heaven as the token of our union with Him, the King of glory, who was
rich, yet for our sake became poor.
The deeds of kindness may have been done in secret, but the result upon the character
of the doer cannot be hidden. If we work with wholehearted interest as a follower of
Christ, the heart will be in close sympathy with God, and the Spirit of God, moving upon
our spirit, will call forth the sacred harmonies of the soul in answer to the divine
touch.
He who gives increased talents to those who have made a wise improvement of the gifts
entrusted to them is pleased to acknowledge the service of His believing people in the
Beloved, through whose grace and strength they have wrought. Those who have sought for the
development and perfection of Christian character by exercising their faculties in good
works, will, in the world to come, reap that which they have sown. The work begun upon
earth will reach its consummation in that higher and holier life to endure throughout
eternity.
"When thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are." Matthew 6:5.
The Pharisees had stated hours for prayer; and when, as often came to pass, they were
abroad at the appointed time, they would pause wherever they might be--perhaps in the
street or the market place, amid the hurrying throngs of men--and there in a loud voice
rehearse their formal prayers. Such worship, offered merely for self-glorification, called
forth unsparing rebuke from Jesus. He did not, however, discountenance public prayer, for
He Himself prayed with His disciples and in the presence of the multitude. But He teaches
that private prayer is not to be made public. In secret devotion our prayers are to reach
the ears of none but the prayer-hearing God. No curious ear is to receive the burden of
such petitions.
"When thou prayest, enter into thy closet." Have a place for secret prayer.
Jesus had select places for communion with God, and so should we. We need often to retire
to some spot, however humble, where we can be alone with God.
"Pray to thy Father which is in secret." In the name of Jesus we may come
into God's presence with the confidence of a child. No man is needed to act as a mediator.
Through Jesus we may open our hearts to God as to one who knows and loves us.
In the secret place of prayer, where no eye but God's can see, no ear but His can hear,
we may pour out our most hidden desires and longings to the Father of infinite pity, and
in the hush and silence of the soul that voice which never fails to answer the cry of
human need will speak to our hearts.
"The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy." James 5:11. He waits with
unwearied love to hear the confessions of the wayward and to accept their penitence. He
watches for some return of gratitude from us, as the mother watches for the smile of
recognition from her beloved child. He would have us understand how earnestly and tenderly
His heart yearns over us. He invites us to take our trials to His sympathy, our sorrows to
His love, our wounds to His healing, our weakness to His strength, our emptiness to His
fullness. Never has one been disappointed who came unto Him. "They looked unto Him,
and were lightened: and their faces were not ashamed." Psalm 34:5.
Those who seek God in secret telling the Lord their needs and pleading for help, will
not plead in vain. "Thy Father which seeth in secret Himself shall reward thee
openly." As we make Christ our daily companion we shall feel that the powers of an
unseen world are all around us; and by looking unto Jesus we shall become assimilated to
His image. By beholding we become changed. The character is softened, refined, and
ennobled for the heavenly kingdom. The sure result of our intercourse and fellowship with
our Lord will be to increase piety, purity, and fervor. There will be a growing
intelligence in prayer. We are receiving a divine education, and this is illustrated in a
life of diligence and zeal.
The soul that turns to God for its help, its support, its power, by daily, earnest
prayer, will have noble aspirations, clear perceptions of truth and duty, lofty purposes
of action, and a continual hungering and thirsting after righteousness. By maintaining a
connection with God, we shall be enabled to diffuse to others, through our association
with them, the light, the peace, the serenity, that rule in our hearts. The strength
acquired in prayer to God, united with persevering effort in training the mind in
thoughtfulness and care-taking, prepares one for daily duties and keeps the spirit in
peace under all circumstances.
If we draw near to God, He will put a word in our mouth to speak for Him, even praise
unto His name. He will teach us a strain from the song of the angels, even thanksgiving to
our heavenly Father. In every act of life, the light and love of an indwelling Saviour
will be revealed. Outward troubles cannot reach the life that is lived by faith in the Son
of God.
"When ye pray, use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do." Matthew 6:7.
The heathen looked upon their prayers as having in themselves merit to atone for sin.
Hence the longer the prayer the greater the merit. If they could become holy by their own
efforts they would have something in themselves in which to rejoice, some ground for
boasting. This idea of prayer is an outworking of the principle of self-expiation which
lies at the foundation of all systems of false religion. The Pharisees had adopted this
pagan idea of prayer, and it is by no means extinct in our day, even among those who
profess to be Christians. The repetition of set, customary phrases, when the heart feels
no need of God, is of the same character as the "vain repetitions" of the
heathen.
Prayer is not an expiation for sin; it has no virtue or merit of itself. All the
flowery words at our command are not equivalent to one holy desire. The most eloquent
prayers are but idle words if they do not express the true sentiments of the heart. But
the prayer that comes from an earnest heart, when the simple wants of the soul are
expressed, as we would ask an earthly friend for a favor, expecting it to be granted--this
is the prayer of faith. God does not desire our ceremonial compliments, but the unspoken
cry of the heart broken and subdued with a sense of its sin and utter weakness finds its
way to the Father of all mercy.
"When ye fast, be not, as the hypocrites." Matthew 6:16.
The fasting which the word of God enjoins is something more than a form. It does not
consist merely in refusing food, in wearing sackcloth, in sprinkling ashes upon the head.
He who fasts in real sorrow for sin will never court display.
The object of the fast which God calls upon us to keep is not to afflict the body for
the sin of the soul, but to aid us in perceiving the grievous character of sin, in
humbling the heart before God and receiving His pardoning grace. His command to Israel
was, "Rend your heart, and not your garments, and turn unto the Lord your God."
Joel 2:13.
It will avail nothing for us to do penance or to flatter ourselves that by our own
works we shall merit or purchase an inheritance among the saints. When the question was
asked Christ, "What shall we do, that we might work the works of God?" He
answered, "This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent."
John 6:28, 29. Repentance is turning from self to Christ; and when we receive Christ so
that through faith He can live His life in us, good works will be manifest. Jesus said,
"When thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face; that thou appear not unto
men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in secret." Matthew 6:17, 18. Whatever is
done to the glory of God is to be done with cheerfulness, not with sadness and gloom.
There is nothing gloomy in the religion of Jesus. If Christians give the impression by a
mournful attitude that they have been disappointed in their Lord, they misrepresent His
character and put arguments into the mouth of His enemies. Though in words they may claim
God as their Father, yet in gloom and sorrow they present to the world the aspect of
orphans.
Christ desires us to make His service appear attractive, as it really is. Let the
self-denials and the secret heart trials be revealed to the compassionate Saviour. Let the
burdens be left at the foot of the cross, and go on your way rejoicing in His love who
first loved you. Men may never know of the work going on secretly between the soul and
God, but the result of the Spirit's work upon the heart will be manifest to all, for He
"which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly."
"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth." Matthew 6:19.
Treasure laid up on earth will not endure; thieves break through and steal; moth and
rust corrupt; fire and storm sweep away your possessions. And "where your treasure
is, there will your heart be also." Treasure laid up on the earth will engross the
mind to the exclusion of heavenly things.
The love of money was the ruling passion in the Jewish age. Worldliness usurped the
place of God and religion in the soul. So it is now. Avaricious greed for wealth exerts
such a fascinating, bewitching influence over the life that it results in perverting the
nobility and corrupting the humanity of men until they are drowned in perdition. The
service of Satan is full of care, perplexity, and wearing labor, and the treasure men toil
to accumulate on earth is only for a season.
Jesus said, "Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor
rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal: for where your
treasure is, there will your heart be also."
The instruction is to "lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven." It
is for your own interest to secure heavenly riches. These alone, of all that you possess,
are really yours. The treasure laid up in heaven is imperishable. No fire or flood can
destroy it, no thief despoil it, no moth or rust corrupt it; for it is in the keeping of
God.
This treasure, which Christ esteems as precious above all estimate, is "the riches
of the glory of His inheritance in the saints." Ephesians 1:18. The disciples of
Christ are called His jewels, His precious and peculiar treasure. He says, "They
shall be as the stones of a crown." "I will make a man more precious than fine
gold; even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir." Zechariah 9:16; Isaiah 13:12.
Christ looks upon His people in their purity and perfection as the reward of all His
sufferings, His humiliation, and His love, and the supplement of His glory--Christ, the
great Center, from whom radiates all glory.
And we are permitted to unite with Him in the great work of redemption and to be
sharers with Him in the riches which His death and suffering have won. The apostle Paul
wrote to the Thessalonian Christians: "What is our hope, or joy, or crown of
rejoicing? Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at His coming? for ye
are our glory and joy." 1 Thessalonians 2:19, 20. This is the treasure for which
Christ bids us labor. Character is the great harvest of life. And every word or deed that
through the grace of Christ shall kindle in one soul an impulse that reaches heavenward,
every effort that tends to the formation of a Christlike character, is laying up treasure
in heaven.
Where the treasure is, there the heart will be. In every effort to benefit others, we
benefit ourselves. He who gives money or time for spreading the gospel enlists his own
interest and prayers for the work, and for the souls to be reached through it; his
affections go out to others, and he is stimulated to greater devotion to God, that he may
be enabled to do them the greatest good.
And at the final day, when the wealth of earth shall perish, he who has laid up
treasure in heaven will behold that which his life has gained. If we have given heed to
the words of Christ, then, as we gather around the great white throne, we shall see souls
who have been saved through our agency, and shall know that one has saved others, and
these still others--a large company brought into the haven of rest as the result of our
labors, there to lay their crowns at Jesus' feet, and praise Him through the ceaseless
ages of eternity. With what joy will the worker for Christ behold these redeemed ones, who
share the glory of the Redeemer! How precious will heaven be to those who have been
faithful in the work of saving souls!
"If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ
sitteth on the right hand of God." Colossians 3:1.
"If . . . thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light."
Matthew 6:22.
Singleness of purpose, wholehearted devotion to God, is the condition pointed out by
the Saviour's words. Let the purpose be sincere and unwavering to discern the truth and to
obey it at whatever cost, and you will receive divine enlightenment. Real piety begins
when all compromise with sin is at an end. Then the language of the heart will be that of
the apostle Paul: "This one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and
reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize
of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." "I count all things but loss for
the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss
of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ." Philippians 3:13,
14, 8.
But when the eye is blinded by the love of self, there is only darkness. "If thine
eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness." It was this fearful darkness
that wrapped the Jews in stubborn unbelief, making it impossible for them to appreciate
the character and mission of Him who came to save them from their sins.
Yielding to temptation begins in permitting the mind to waver, to be inconstant in your
trust in God. If we do not choose to give ourselves fully to God then we are in darkness.
When we make any reserve we are leaving open a door through which Satan can enter to lead
us astray by his temptations. He knows that if he can obscure our vision, so that the eye
of faith cannot see God, there will be no barrier against sin.
The prevalence of a sinful desire shows the delusion of the soul. Every indulgence of
that desire strengthens the soul's aversion to God. In following the path of Satan's
choosing, we are encompassed by the shadows of evil, and every step leads into deeper
darkness and increases the blindness of the heart.
The same law obtains in the spiritual as in the natural world. He who abides in
darkness will at last lose the power of vision. He is shut in by a deeper than midnight
blackness; and to him the brightest noontide can bring no light. He "walketh in
darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because that darkness hath blinded his
eyes." 1 John 2:11. Through persistently cherishing evil, willfully disregarding the
pleadings of divine love, the sinner loses the love for good, the desire for God, the very
capacity to receive the light of heaven. The invitation of mercy is still full of love,
the light is shining as brightly as when it first dawned upon his soul; but the voice
falls on deaf ears, the light on blinded eyes.
No soul is ever finally deserted of God, given up to his own ways, so long as there is
any hope of his salvation. "Man turns from God, not God from him." Our heavenly
Father follows us with appeals and warnings and assurances of compassion, until further
opportunities and privileges would be wholly in vain. The responsibility rests with the
sinner. By resisting the Spirit of God today, he prepares the way for a second resistance
of light when it comes with mightier power. Thus he passes on from one stage of resistance
to another, until at last the light will fail to impress, and he will cease to respond in
any measure to the Spirit of God. Then even "the light that is in thee" has
become darkness. The very truth we do know has become so perverted as to increase the
blindness of the soul.
"No man can serve two masters." Matthew 6:24.
Christ does not say that man will not or shall not serve two masters, but that he cannot
. The interests of God and the interests of mammon have no union or sympathy. Just
where the conscience of the Christian warns him to forbear, to deny himself, to stop, just
there the worldling steps over the line, to indulge his selfish propensities. On one side
of the line is the self-denying follower of Christ; on the other side is the
self-indulgent world lover, pandering to fashion, engaging in frivolity, and pampering
himself in forbidden pleasure. On that side of the line the Christian cannot go.
No one can occupy a neutral position; there is no middle class, who neither love God
nor serve the enemy of righteousness. Christ is to live in His human agents and work
through their faculties and act through their capabilities. Their will must be submitted
to His will; they must act with His Spirit. Then it is no more they that live, but Christ
that lives in them. He who does not give himself wholly to God is under the control of
another power, listening to another voice, whose suggestions are of an entirely different
character. Half-and-half service places the human agent on the side of the enemy as a
successful ally of the hosts of darkness. When men who claim to be soldiers of Christ
engage with the confederacy of Satan, and help along his side, they prove themselves
enemies of Christ. They betray sacred trusts. They form a link between Satan and the true
soldiers, so that through these agencies the enemy is constantly working to steal away the
hearts of Christ's soldiers.
The strongest bulwark of vice in our world is not the iniquitous life of the abandoned
sinner or the degraded outcast; it is that life which otherwise appears virtuous,
honorable, and noble, but in which one sin is fostered, one vice indulged. To the soul
that is struggling in secret against some giant temptation, trembling upon the very verge
of the precipice, such an example is one of the most powerful enticements to sin. He who,
endowed with high conceptions of life and truth and honor, does yet willfully transgress
one precept of God's holy law, has perverted His noble gifts into a lure to sin. Genius,
talent, sympathy, even generous and kindly deeds, may become decoys of Satan to entice
other souls over the precipice of ruin for this life and the life to come.
"Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the
world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the
flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of
the world." 1 John 2:15, 16.
"Be not anxious." Matthew 6:25, R.V.
He who has given you life knows your need of food to sustain it. He who created the
body is not unmindful of your need of raiment. Will not He who has bestowed the greater
gift bestow also what is needed to make it complete?
Jesus pointed His hearers to the birds as they warbled their carols of
praise, unencumbered with thoughts of care, for "they sow not, neither do they
reap;" and yet the great Father provides for their needs. And He asks, "Are not
ye of much more value than they?" R.V.
"No sparrow falls without His care,
No soul bows low but Jesus knows;
For He is with us everywhere,
And marks each bitter tear that flows.
And He will never, never, never
Forsake the soul that trusts Him ever."
The hillsides and the fields were bright with flowers, and, pointing to them in the
dewy freshness of the morning, Jesus said, "Consider the lilies of the field, how
they grow." The graceful forms and delicate hues of the plants and flowers may be
copied by human skill, but what touch can impart life to even one flower or blade of
grass? Every wayside blossom owes its being to the same power that set the starry worlds
on high. Through all created things thrills one pulse of life from the great heart of God.
The flowers of the field are clothed by His hand in richer robes than have ever graced the
forms of earthly kings. And "if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is,
and tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little
faith?"
It is He who made the flowers and who gave to the sparrow its song who says,
"Consider the lilies," "Behold the birds." R.V. In the loveliness of
the things of nature you may learn more of the wisdom of God than the schoolmen know. On
the lily's petals, God has written a message for you, written in language that your heart
can read only as it unlearns the lessons of distrust and selfishness and corroding care.
Why has He given you the singing birds and the gentle blossoms, but from the overflowing
love of a Father's heart, that would brighten and gladden your path of life? All that was
needed for existence would have been yours without the flowers and birds, but God was not
content to provide what would suffice for mere existence. He has filled earth and air and
sky with glimpses of beauty to tell you of His loving thought for you. The beauty of all
created things is but a gleam from the shining of His glory. If He has lavished such
infinite skill upon the things of nature, for your happiness and joy, can you doubt that
He will give you every needed blessing?
"Consider the lilies." Every flower that opens its petals to the sunshine
obeys the same great laws that guide the stars, and how simple and beautiful and how sweet
its life! Through the flowers, God would call our attention to the loveliness of
Christlike character. He who has given such beauty to the blossoms desires far more that
the soul should be clothed with the beauty of the character of Christ.
Consider, says Jesus, how the lilies grow; how, springing from the cold, dark earth, or
from the mud of the river bed, the plants unfold in loveliness and fragrance. Who would
dream of the possibilities of beauty in the rough brown bulb of the lily? But when the
life of God, hidden therein, unfolds at His call in the rain and the sunshine, men marvel
at the vision of grace and loveliness. Even so will the life of God unfold in every human
soul that will yield itself to the ministry of His grace, which, free as the rain and the
sunshine, comes with its benediction to all. It is the word of God that creates the
flowers, and the same word will produce in you the graces of His Spirit.
God's law is the law of love. He has surrounded you with beauty to teach you that you
are not placed on earth merely to delve for self, to dig and build, to toil and spin, but
to make life bright and joyous and beautiful with the love of Christ--like the flowers, to
gladden other lives by the ministry of love.
Fathers and mothers, let your children learn from the flowers. Take them with you into
garden and field and under the leafy trees, and teach them to read in nature the message
of God's love. Let the thoughts of Him be linked with bird and flower and tree. Lead the
children to see in every pleasant and beautiful thing an expression of God's love for
them. Recommend your religion to them by its pleasantness. Let the law of kindness be in
your lips.
Teach the children that because of God's great love their natures may be changed and
brought into harmony with His. Teach them that He would have their lives beautiful with
the graces of the flowers. Teach them, as they gather the sweet blossoms, that He who made
the flowers is more beautiful than they. Thus the tendrils of their hearts will be
entwined about Him. He who is "altogether lovely" will become to them as a daily
companion and familiar friend, and their lives will be transformed into the image of His
purity.
"Seek ye first the kingdom of God." Matthew 6:33.
The people who listened to the words of Christ were still anxiously watching for some
announcement of the earthly kingdom. While Jesus was opening to them the treasures of
heaven, the question uppermost in many minds was, How will a connection with Him advance
our prospects in the world? Jesus shows that in making the things of the world their
supreme anxiety they were like the heathen nations about them, living as if there were no
God, whose tender care is over His creatures.
"All these things," said Jesus, "do the nations of the world seek
after." "Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. But
seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be
added unto you." Luke 12: 30; Matt. 6:32, 33. I have come to open to you the kingdom
of love and righteousness and peace. Open your hearts to receive this kingdom, and make
its service your highest interest. Though it is a spiritual kingdom, fear not that your
needs for this life will be uncared-for. If you give yourself to God's service, He who has
all power in heaven and earth will provide for your needs.
Jesus does not release us from the necessity of effort, but He teaches that we are to
make Him first and last and best in everything. We are to engage in no business, follow no
pursuit, seek no pleasure, that would hinder the outworking of His righteousness in our
character and life. Whatever we do is to be done heartily, as unto the Lord.
Jesus, while He dwelt on earth, dignified life in all its details by keeping before men
the glory of God, and by subordinating everything to the will of His Father. If we follow
His example, His assurance to us is that all things needful in this life "shall be
added." Poverty or wealth, sickness or health, simplicity or wisdom--all are provided
for in the promise of His grace.
God's everlasting arm encircles the soul that turns to Him for aid, however feeble that
soul may be. The precious things of the hills shall perish, but the soul that lives for
God shall abide with Him. "The world passeth away, and the lust thereof; but he that
doeth the will of God abideth forever." 1 John 2:17. The city of God will open its
golden gates to receive him who learned while on earth to lean on God for guidance and
wisdom, for comfort and hope, amid loss and affliction. The songs of the angels will
welcome him there, and for him the tree of life shall yield its fruit. "The mountains
shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My kindness shall not depart from thee,
neither shall the covenant of My peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on
thee." Isaiah 54:10.
"Be not therefore anxious for the morrow. . . . Sufficient unto the day is the
evil thereof." Matthew 6:34, R.V.
If you have given yourself to God, to do His work, you have no need to be anxious for
tomorrow. He whose servant you are, knows the end from the beginning. The events of
tomorrow, which are hidden from your view, are open to the eyes of Him who is omnipotent.
When we take into our hands the management of things with which we have to do, and
depend upon our own wisdom for success, we are taking a burden which God has not given us,
and are trying to bear it without His aid. We are taking upon ourselves the responsibility
that belongs to God, and thus are really putting ourselves in His place. We may well have
anxiety and anticipate danger and loss, for it is certain to befall us. But when we really
believe that God loves us and means to do us good we shall cease to worry about the
future. We shall trust God as a child trusts a loving parent. Then our troubles and
torments will disappear, for our will is swallowed up in the will of God.
Christ has given us no promise of help in bearing today the burdens of tomorrow. He has
said, "My grace is sufficient for thee" (2 Corinthians 12:9); but, like the
manna given in the wilderness, His grace is bestowed daily, for the day's need. Like the
hosts of Israel in their pilgrim life, we may find morning by morning the bread of heaven
for the day's supply.
One day alone is ours, and during this day we are to live for God. For this one day we
are to place in the hand of Christ, in solemn service, all our purposes and plans, casting
all our care upon Him, for He careth for us. "I know the thoughts that I think toward
you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected
end." "In returning and rest shall ye be saved; in quietness and in confidence
shall be your strength." Jeremiah 29:11; Isaiah 30:15.
If you will seek the Lord and be converted every day; if you will of your own spiritual
choice be free and joyous in God; if with gladsome consent of heart to His gracious call
you come wearing the yoke of Christ,--the yoke of obedience and service,--all your
murmurings will be stilled, all your difficulties will be removed, all the perplexing
problems that now confront you will be solved.
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