Spiritual Mindedness = Life and Peace
"For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace." -Romans 8:6 [KJV]
One
of the most blessed marks of regenerating grace and the sure fruit of
the love of God shed abroad in the heart, is that spiritual-mindedness
of which Paul declares, it is "life and peace." "To be
spiritually-minded," to live and walk under the blessed power and
influence of the Holy Spirit, to have the heart and affections drawn up
from this poor, vain scene to where Jesus sits at the right hand of God,
this is "life," the life of God in the soul, with all its present
blessedness and all its future glory, and "peace," for peace and rest
are alone to be found in this path of union and communion with a
glorified Redeemer.
In this sweet spirituality of mind, in these
heavenly affections, and in this intercourse with the Lord at His own
throne of grace, the life and power of godliness much consist. We trust
we know, from what we have felt in our own bosom, what this sweet
spiritual-mindedness is, and what are its blessed effects. It is a key
to unlock the Scriptures, for then we read them under the same sacred
influence, and by the same divine teaching by which they were written;
it is a door of prayer, for under these calm and peaceful emotions the
soul, as if instinctively and necessarily, seeks holy communion with
God; it is the fruitful parent of sweet meditation, for the truth of God
is then thought over, fed upon, and is found to be bread from heaven;
it is the secret of all life and power in preaching, for unless the
heart be engaged in, and melted and softened by the truth delivered,
there will be a hardness in its delivery which will make itself sensibly
felt by the living hearer; and it is the power of all spiritual
conversation, for how can we talk with any unction or profit unless we
are spiritually-minded, and in that frame of soul wherein the things of
God are our chief element, the language of our lips, because the delight
of our soul?
But to be otherwise—to be carnally-minded on our knees,
with the Bible open before our eyes, in the house of prayer, at the
Lord's table, in the company of the family of God—what a burden to our
spirit, what a condemnation to our conscience, what a parent of doubt
and fear whether matters can be right between God and our own soul, when
there is such a distance between Him and us!
It is true that the
most eminent saints and servants of God have their dead and dark
seasons, when the life of God seems sunk to so low an ebb as to be
hardly visible, so hidden is the stream by the mud-banks of their fallen
nature. Still it glides onward, round them, if not through them; and
sometimes a beam of light falls upon it from above, as it threads its
way toward the ocean of eternal love, which manifests not only its
existence but its course, and that it gives back to heaven the ray it
receives from heaven.
Nay, by these very dark and dead seasons,
the saints and servants of God are instructed. They see and feel what
the flesh really is, how alienated from the life of God; they learn in Whom all their strength and sufficiency lie; they are taught that in
them, that is, in their flesh, dwelleth no good thing; that no exertions
of their own can maintain in strength and vigour the life of God; and
that all they are and have, all they believe, know, feel, and enjoy,
with all their ability, usefulness, gifts, and grace, flow from the
pure, sovereign grace, the rich, free, undeserved, yet unceasing
goodness and mercy of God.
They learn in this hard school of painful experience their emptiness and nothingness, and that without Christ indeed they can do nothing. They thus become clothed with humility, that comely, becoming garb; cease from their own strength and wisdom, and learn experimentally that Christ is, and ever must be, all in all to them, and all in all in them.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802–1869 A.D.)
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