Morning & Evening for June 13th - Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Morning
Whosoever
will, let him take the water of life
freely.
Revelation 22:17
Jesus says, "take
freely." He wants no payment or preparation. He
seeks no recommendation from our virtuous emotions.
If you have no good feelings, if you be but
willing, you are invited; therefore come! You have
no belief and no repentance,--come to Him, and He
will give them to you. Come just as you are, and
take "Freely," without money and without price. He
gives Himself to needy ones. The drinking fountains
at the corners of our streets are valuable
institutions; and we can hardly imagine any one so
foolish as to feel for his purse, when he stands
before one of them, and to cry, "I cannot drink
because I have not five pounds in my pocket."
However poor the man is, there is the fountain, and
just as he is he may drink of it. Thirsty
passengers, as they go by, whether they are dressed
in fustian or in broadcloth, do not look for any
warrant for drinking; its being there is their
warrant for taking its water freely. The liberality
of some good friends has put the refreshing crystal
there and we take it, and ask no questions. Perhaps
the only persons who need go thirsty through the
street where there is a drinking fountain, are the
fine ladies and gentlemen who are in their
carriages. They are very thirsty, but cannot think
of being so vulgar as to get out to drink. It would
demean them, they think, to drink at a common
drinking fountain: so they ride by with parched
lips. Oh, how many there are who are rich in their
own good works and cannot therefore come to Christ!
"I will not be saved," they say, "in the same way
as the harlot or the swearer." What! go to heaven
in the same way as a chimney sweep. Is there no
pathway to glory but the path which led the thief
there? I will not be saved that way. Such proud
boasters must remain without the living water; but,
"WHOSOEVER WILL, LET HIM TAKE THE WATER OF
LIFE FREELY."
Evening
Remove
far from me vanity and
lies.
Proverbs 30:8
"O my God, be not far
from me." Psalm 38:21. Here we have two great
lessons--what to deprecate and what to supplicate.
The happiest state of a Christian is the holiest
state. As there is the most heat nearest to the
sun, so there is the most happiness nearest to
Christ. No Christian enjoys comfort when his eyes
are fixed on vanity--he finds no satisfaction
unless his soul is quickened in the ways of God.
The world may win happiness elsewhere, but he
cannot. I do not blame ungodly men for rushing to
their pleasures. Why should I? Let them have their
fill. That is all they have to enjoy. A converted
wife who despaired of her husband was always very
kind to him, for she said, "I fear that this is the
only world in which he will be happy, and therefore
I have made up my mind to make him as happy as I
can in it." Christians must seek their delights in
a higher sphere than the insipid frivolities or
sinful enjoyments of the world. Vain pursuits are
dangerous to renewed souls. We have heard of a
philosopher who, while he looked
up
to the
stars, fell into a pit; but how deeply do they fall
who look down.
Their fall
is fatal. No Christian is safe when his soul is
slothful, and his God is far from him. Every
Christian is always safe as to the great matter of
his standing in Christ, but he is not safe as
regards his experience in holiness, and communion
with Jesus in this life. Satan does not often
attack a Christian who is living near to God. It is
when the Christian departs from his God, becomes
spiritually starved, and endeavours to feed on
vanities, that the devil discovers his vantage
hour. He may sometimes stand foot to foot with the
child of God who is active in his Master's service,
but the battle is generally short: he who slips as
he goes down into the Valley of Humiliation, every
time he takes a false step invites Apollyon to
assail him. O for grace to walk humbly with our
God!