Job 8:11 Can the rush grow up without mire? can the flag grow without water?
The rush is spongy and hollow, and even so is a hypocrite; there is no
substance or stability in him.
It is shaken to and fro in every wind
just as formalists yield to every influence...
For this reason the rush is
not broken by the tempest, neither are hypocrites troubled with
persecution.
I would not willingly be a deceiver or be deceived...
Perhaps the text
for this day may help me to try myself whether I be a hypocrite or no.
The rush by nature lives in water, and owes its very existence to the
mire and moisture wherein it has taken root...
Let the mire become dry,
and the rush withers very quickly.
Its greenness is absolutely dependent
upon circumstances...
A present abundance of water makes it flourish, and
a drought destroys it at once.
Is this my case?
Do I only serve God
when I am in good company, or when religion
is profitable and respectable?
Do I love the Lord only when temporal
comforts are received from His hands?
If so I am a base hypocrite...
And
like the withering rush, I shall perish when death deprives me of
outward joys.
But can I honestly assert that when bodily comforts have been few...
And
my surroundings have been rather adverse to grace than at all helpful to
it...
I have still held fast my integrity?
Then have I hope that there is
genuine vital godliness in me.
The rush cannot grow without mire...
But
plants of the Lord's right hand planting can and do flourish even in the
year of drought.
A godly man often grows best when his worldly
circumstances decay.
He who follows Christ
for his bag is a Judas...
They who follow for loaves and fishes are
children of the devil...
But they who attend Him out of love to Himself
are His own beloved ones.
Lord, let me find my life in Thee, and not in
the mire of this world's favor or gain.
~Charles Spurgeon~
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