I Corinthians 2:4 And my speech and my preaching was not with
enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and
of power:
It is not the work of the Spirit to produce doubts and
fears, but to overcome them.
And yet we are continually subject to them.
Infidel thoughts fly across the mind; doubts and questionings suggest
themselves;
Satan is busy in plying his arguments; a guilty conscience falls
too readily under his accusations;
Painful recollections of past slips,
falls, and backslidings strengthen the power of unbelief, so that to come to
a spot wherein there is not the least shadow of a doubt of divine realities,
and, what is far more, of our own saving interest in them, is a rare
circumstance, and only attainable at those favored moments when the Lord is
pleased to shine into the soul and settle the matter between himself and our
conscience.
But these very doubts, these very questionings, these
cutting, killing fears, these anxious surmising's work together for good, and
are mercifully overruled for our spiritual benefit.
What else has brought us
to this point that nothing short of demonstration will satisfy the soul
really born and taught of God?
It must have demonstration--nothing else will
do. We cannot live and die upon uncertainties.
It won't do to be always in a
state that we don't know whether we are going to heaven or hell; to be
tossed up and down on a sea of uncertainty, scarcely knowing who commands
the ship, what is our destination, what our present course, or what will be
the end of the voyage.
Now all human wisdom leaves us upon this sea of
uncertainty. It is useful in nature, but useless in grace.
It is foolish and
absurd to despise all human learning, wisdom, and knowledge. Without them we
would be a horde of wild, wandering savages.
But it is worse than foolish to
make human wisdom our guide to eternity, and make reason the foundation of
our faith or hope.
What you thus believe today, you will disbelieve
tomorrow; all the arguments that may convince your reasoning mind, all the
appeals to your natural passions, which may seem for the time to soften your
heart, and all the thoughts swaying to and fro which may sometimes lead you
to hope you are right and sometimes make you to fear you are wrong--all
these will be found insufficient when the soul comes into any time of real
trial and perplexity.
We want, therefore, demonstration to remove and dispel
all these anxious questionings, and settle the whole matter firmly in our
heart and conscience; and this nothing can give us but the Spirit by
revealing Christ, taking of the things of Christ, and showing them unto us,
applying the word with power to our hearts, and bringing the sweetness,
reality, and blessedness of divine things into our soul.
It is only in this
way that he overcomes all unbelief and infidelity, doubt and fear, and
sweetly assures us that all is well between God and the soul.
~J. C. Philpot~
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.