Streams In The Desert
And the Lord’s slave must not engage in heated disputes but be kind toward all, an apt teacher, patient, (2 Tim 2:24)
When God conquers us and takes all the flint out of our nature, and we
get deep visions into the Spirit of Jesus, we then see as never before
the great rarity of gentleness of spirit in this dark and unheavenly
world.
The graces of the Spirit do not settle themselves down upon us by
chance, and if we do not discern certain states of grace, and choose
them, and in our thoughts nourish them, they never become fastened in
our nature or behavior.
Every advance step in grace must be preceded by first apprehending it, and then a prayerful resolve to have it.
So few are willing to undergo the suffering out of which thorough
gentleness comes. We must die before we are turned into gentleness, and
crucifixion involves suffering; it is a real breaking and crushing of
self, which wrings the heart and conquers the mind.
There is a good deal of mere mental and logical sanctification
nowadays, which is only a religious fiction. It consists of mentally
putting one’s self on the altar, and then mentally saying the altar
sanctifies the gift, and then logically concluding therefore one is
sanctified; and such an one goes forth with a gay, flippant, theological
prattle about the deep things of God.
But the natural heartstrings have not been snapped, and the Adamic
flint has not been ground to powder, and the bosom has not throbbed with
the lonely, surging sighs of Gethsemane; and not having the real death
marks of Calvary, there cannot be that soft, sweet, gentle, floating,
victorious, overflowing, triumphant life that flows like a spring
morning from an empty tomb.
—G. D. W.
—G. D. W.
“And great grace was upon them all” (Acts 4:33).
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