·
F. B. Meyer on
Christ our Passover.
The life of the church between the first and second
advents is symbolized by the feast on that memorable night. With joy in our
voices and triumph in our mien, we stand around the table where Christ's flesh
is the nourishment of all true hearts, straining our ear for the first clarion
notes which will tell that the time of our exodus has come. Christian people
are very much too thoughtless of the necessity of feeding off God's table for
the nourishment of spiritual life. There is plenty of work being done; much
attendance at conferences and special missions; diligent reading of religious
books; but there is a great and fatal lack of the holy meditation upon the
person, the words, and the work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
·
F. B. Meyer on
the Faith of David.
As day after day he considered the heavens and earth,
they appeared as one vast tent, in which God dwelt. Nature was the material
dwelling place of the eternal Spirit, who was as real to his young heart as the
works of his hands to his poet's eyes. God was as real to him as Jesse or his
brothers or Saul or Goliath. His soul had so rooted itself in this conception
of God's presence that he bore it with him, undisturbed by the shout of the
soldiers as they went forth to the battle, and the searching questions
addressed to him by Saul.
This is the unfailing secret. There is no short cut to
the life of faith, which is the all-vital condition of a holy and victorious
life. We must have periods of lonely meditation and fellowship with God. That
our souls should have their mountains of fellowship, their valleys of quiet
rest beneath the shadow of a great rock, their nights beneath the stars, when
darkness has veiled the material and silenced the stir of human life, and has
opened the view of the infinite and eternal, is as indispensable as that our
bodies should have food. Thus alone can the sense of God's presence become the
fixed possession of the soul, enabling it to say repeatedly, with the psalmist,
"Thou art near, O God
·
F. B. Meyer: Keep
in Touch with Jesus.
Avoid the spirit of fault-finding, criticism, uncharitableness,
and anything inconsistent with His perfect love. Go where He is most likely to
be found, either where two or three of His children are gathered, or where the
lost sheep is straying. Ask Him to wake you morning by morning for communion
and Bible-study. Make other time in the day, especially in the still hour of
the evening twilight, between the work of the day and the avocations of the
evening, when you shall get alone with Him, telling Him all things, and
reviewing the past under the gentle light which streams from His eyes.
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