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If in your road heavenward, no valley ever sank
before you; if no mountain and hill ever rose up in sight; if you
encountered no crooked path through the dense woods; and no rough
places, with many a rolling stone and many a thorny briar in the
tangled forest, it would not seem that you were treading the way
which the saints of God have ever trod, nor would it appear as if
you needed special help from the sanctuary, or any peculiar power
to be put forth for your help and deliverance. But being in this
path, and that by God's own appointment, and finding right before
your eyes valleys of deep depression which you cannot raise up;
mountains and hills of difficulty that you cannot lay low; crooked
things which you cannot straighten; and rough places which you
cannot make smooth; you are compelled, from felt necessity, to
look for help from above.
These perplexing difficulties, then, are the very things that make
yours a case for the gospel, yours a state of mind to which
salvation by grace is thoroughly adapted, yours the very condition
of soul to which the revelation of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus Christ is altogether suitable. So that if you could at the
present moment view these trials with spiritual eyes, and feel
that they were all appointed by unerring wisdom and eternal love,
and were designed for the good of your soul, you would rather
bless God that your pathway was so cast in providence and grace
that you had now a valley, now a mountain, now a crook, and now a
thorn.
And even as regards the present experience of your soul, you would
feel that these very difficulties in the road were all productive
of so many errands to the throne--that they all called upon you,
as with so many speaking voices, to beg of the Lord that he would
manifest himself in love to your heart.
We all desire ease; we love a smooth path. We would like to be
carried to heaven in a palanquin; to enjoy every comfort that
earth can give or heart desire, and then, dying without a pang of
body or mind, find ourselves safe in heaven. But that is not God's
way. The word of truth, the sufferings of Christ, and the
universal experience of the saints, all testify against the path
of ease; all testify for the path of trial; they all proclaim, as
with one united voice, "Wide is the gate and broad is the way that
leads to destruction,"--and this is the way of ease and of that
prosperity which destroys fools (Prov.1:32); but "strait is the
gate and narrow is the way which leads unto life,"--and this is
the path of suffering and sorrow.
DAILY WORDS FOR ZION'S WAYFARERS
or, THROUGH BACA'S VALLEY
Selected from the works of J. C. Philpot by his daughters, 1893 |