Be of Good Cheer, Broken-Hearted Children of GOD
"A time to weep, and a time to laugh." -Ecclesiastes 3:4 [KJV]
Does
a man only weep once in his life? Does not the time of weeping run,
more or less, through a Christian's life? Does not mourning run parallel
with his existence in this tabernacle of clay? for "man is born to
trouble as the sparks fly upwards." Then "a time to kill, and a time to
heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up" must run parallel
with a Christian's life, just as much as "a time to weep, and a time to
laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance."
Living souls will know
many times to weep; they will have often to sigh and cry over their base
hearts; to mourn with tears of godly sorrow their backslidings from
God; to weep over their broken idols, faded hopes, and marred prospects;
to weep at having so grieved the Spirit of God by their disobedience,
carnality, and worldliness; to be melted into contrition at the feet of a
dying Lord, so as in some measure to be led into the path in which
Jesus walked as "a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief."
They
will have to bewail the falling off of those friends whom once they
looked upon as bidding fairer for the kingdom of God than themselves; to
weep at the cruel arrows of calumny which are shot against them by
professors; to mourn over the low state of Zion, how few there are who
really serve the Lord acceptably with reverence and godly fear, and
adorn the doctrine in all things. But above all things will they have to
weep over the inward idolatries of their filthy nature; to weep that
they ever should have treated with such insult that God whom they desire
to love and adore; that they should so neglect and turn their backs
upon that Saviour who crowns them with lovingkindness and tender
mercies; and that they bear so little in mind the instruction that has
been communicated to them by the Holy Spirit. There is many a weeping
time for God's children; and if there be one frame of mind in soul
experience more to be coveted than another, it is to be weeping at
Jesus' feet.
We have two sweet instances of the Lord's
manifesting Himself to those who were weeping—one to "the woman which
was a sinner,"who stood behind Him, and washed His feet with her tears;
the other was to Mary Magdalene, who "stood without at the sepulchre
weeping." Oh, how different is the weeping, chastened spirit of a living
soul from the hardened, seared presumption of a proud professor!
How different are the feelings of a broken-hearted child of God from the lightness, the frivolity, the emptiness, and the worldliness of hundreds who stand in a profession of religion! How different is a mourning saint, weeping in his solitary corner over his base backslidings, from a reckless professor who justifies himself in every action, who thinks sin a light thing, and who, however inconsistently he acts, never feels conscience wounded thereby! "Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted."
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
Comments