Job 23:10 But he knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.
Believer!
What a glorious assurance! This way of thine-this, it may be, a
crooked, mysterious, tangled way-this way of trial and tears. "He
knoweth it."
The furnace seven times heated...He lighted it. There is an
Almighty Guide knowing and directing our footsteps, whether it be to the
bitter Marah pool, or to the joy and refreshment of Elim.
That
way, dark to the Egyptians, has its pillar of cloud and fire for His
own Israel.
The furnace is hot; but not only can we trust the hand that
kindles it, but we have the assurance that the fires are lighted not to
consume, but to refine; and that when the refining process is completed
(no sooner-no later) He brings His people forth as gold.
When they think Him least near, He is often nearest. "When my spirit was overwhelmed, then thou knewest my path."
Do
we know of ONE brighter than the brightest radiance of the visible sun,
visiting our chamber with the first waking beam of the morning; an eye
of infinite tenderness and compassion following us throughout the day,
knowing the way that we take?
The world, in its cold
vocabulary in the hour of adversity, speaks of Providence-the will
of Providence-the strokes of Providence. PROVIDENCE! what is that?
Why
dethrone a living, directing GOD from the sovereignty of His own earth?
Why substitute an inanimate, death-like abstraction, in place of an
acting, controlling, personal Jehovah?
How it would
take the sting from many a goading trial, to see what Job saw (in his
hour of aggravated woe, when every earthly hope lay prostrate at his
feet) no hand but the Divine.
He saw that hand behind the gleaming
swords of the Sabeans-he saw it behind the lightning flash-he saw it
giving wings to the careening tempest-he saw it in the awful silence of
his rifled home.
The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord!
Thus
seeing GOD in everything, his faith reached its climax when this once
powerful prince of the desert, seated on his bed of ashes, could say,
"Though he slay me, yet will I trust him."
~Macduff~
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