“But
seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall
be added to you.”
Matthew
6:33
Jesus
said to him, “You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all
your soul, and with all your mind.”
Matthew
22:37
Silently
the heart may be kept fragrant with God’s felt presence, and sunny with the
light of His face. There are towns nestling beneath the Alps, every narrow
filthy alley of which looks to the great solemn snow peaks, and the inhabitants,
amid all the squalor of their surroundings, have that apocalypse of wonder ever
before them, if they would only lift their eyes. So we, if we will, may live
with the majesties and beauties of the great white throne and of Him that sat
on it closing every vista and filling the end of every commonplace passage in
our lives.
ALEXANDER MACLAREN
Each
believer should be thirsting for God, for the living God, and longing to climb
the hill of the Lord, and see Him face to face. We ought not to rest content in
the mists of the valley when the summit of Tabor awaits us. My soul thirsteth
to drink deep of the cup which is reserved for those who reach the mountain's
brow, and bathe their brows in heaven. How pure are the dews of the hills, how
fresh is the mountain air, how rich the fare of the dwellers aloft, whose
windows look into the New Jerusalem! Many saints are content to live like men
in coal mines, who see not the sun; they eat dust like the serpent when they
might taste the ambrosial meat of angels; they are content to wear the miner's
garb when they might put on king's robes; tears mar their faces when they might
anoint them with celestial oil. Satisfied I am that many a believer pines in a
dungeon when he might walk on the palace roof, and view the goodly land and
Lebanon.
Rouse thee, O believer,
from thy low condition! Cast away thy sloth, thy lethargy, thy coldness, or
whatever interferes with thy chaste and pure love to Christ, thy soul's
Husband. Make Him the source, the centre, and the circumference of all thy
soul's range of delight. What enchants thee into such folly as to remain in a
pit when thou mayst sit on a throne? Live not in the lowlands of bondage now
that mountain liberty is conferred upon thee. Rest no longer satisfied with thy
dwarfish attainments, but press forward to things more sublime and heavenly.
Aspire to a higher, a nobler, a fuller life. Upward to heaven! Nearer to God!
"When
wilt Thou come unto me, Lord?
Oh
come, my Lord most dear!
Come
near, come nearer, nearer still,
I'm
blest when Thou art near."
C.H. SPURGEON
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