Heb 12:1 Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us,
There
are weights which are not sins in themselves, but which become
distractions and stumbling blocks in our Christian progress.
One of the
worst of these is despondency.
The heavy heart is indeed a weight that
will surely drag us down in our holiness and usefulness.
The
failure of Israel to enter the land of promise began in murmuring, or,
as the text in Numbers literally puts it, "as it were murmured."
Just a
faint desire to complain and be discontented. This led on until it
blossomed and ripened into rebellion and ruin.
Let us give ourselves no
liberty ever to doubt God or His love and faithfulness to us in
everything and forever.
We can set our will against
doubt just as we do against any other sin; and as we stand firm and
refuse to doubt, the Holy Spirit will come to our aid and give us the
faith of God and crown us with victory.
It is very
easy to fall into the habit of doubting, fretting, and wondering if God
has forsaken us and if after all our hopes are to end in failure.
Let us
refuse to be discouraged. Let us refuse to be unhappy.
Let us "count it
all joy" when we cannot feel one emotion of happiness.
Let us rejoice
by faith, by resolution, by reckoning, and we shall surely find that God
will make the reckoning real.
~Selected~
The devil
has two master tricks. One is to get us discouraged; then for a time at
least we can be of no service to others, and so are defeated.
The other
is to make us doubt, thus breaking the faith link by which we are bound
to our Father. Lookout! Do not be tricked either way.
~G.E.M.~
Gladness!
I like to cultivate the spirit of gladness! It puts the soul so in tune
again, and keeps it in tune, so that Satan is shy of touching it--the
chords of the soul become too warm, or too full of heavenly electricity,
for his infernal fingers, and he goes off somewhere else!
Satan is
always very shy of meddling with me when my heart is full of gladness
and joy in the Holy Ghost.
My plan is to shun the
spirit of sadness as I would Satan; but, alas! I am not always
successful.
Like the devil himself it meets me on the highway of
usefulness, looks me so fully in my face, till my poor soul changes
color!
Sadness discolors everything; it leaves all
objects charmless; it involves future prospects in darkness; it deprives
the soul of all its aspirations, enchains all its powers, and produces a
mental paralysis!
An old believer remarked, that
cheerfulness in religion makes all its services come off with delight;
and that we are never carried forward so swiftly in the ways of duty as
when borne on the wings of delight;
Adding, that Melancholy clips such
wings; or, to alter the figure, takes off our chariot wheels in duty,
and makes them, like those of the Egyptians, drag heavily.
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