Enduring Patiently
"...and patience of hope." -I Thessalonians 1:3 [KJV]
What
is meant by the expression "patience?" It means endurance; as though
hope had to endure, faith to work, and love to labour. It is the
"patience of hope" that proves its reality and genuineness. Hope does
not go forward fighting and cutting its way. Hope is like a quiet
sufferer, patiently bearing what comes upon it. Hope is manifested in
enduring, as faith is manifested in acting. For instance: when the Lord
hides His face, when testimonies sink out of sight, when signs are not
seen, when Satan tempts, when the work of grace upon the soul seems to
be all obscured, and in consequence a feeling of despondency begins to
set in, then the "patience of hope" is needed to endure all things—not
to give way, but to maintain its hold.
It acts in the same way,
according to the beautiful figure of Paul, as the anchor holds the ship.
What is the main value, the chief requisite in the cable that holds the
anchor? Is it not endurance? The cable does nothing; it simply endures.
It does not make a great ado in the water; its only good quality, the
only quality wanted in it, is strength to endure, not to break. When the
waves rise, the billows beat, the storm blows, and the tide runs
strongly, then the work of the cable is not to part from the anchor, not
to break, but firmly to maintain the hold it has once taken. And thus
with the anchor too. It does nothing, and is wanted to do nothing. To
hold fast is all its work and all its excellence.
Thus it is with
a hope in a sinner's breast. Has the Lord ever shewn Himself gracious
unto him? Has the Lord ever made Himself precious to his soul? ever
dropped a testimony into his conscience? ever spoken with power to his
heart? Has his soul ever felt the Spirit inwardly testifying that he is
one of God's people? Then his hope is manifested by enduring patiently
everything that is brought against it to crush it, and if God did not
keep, utterly to destroy it.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802–1869 A.D.)
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