The Everlasting Arms of our Chief Shepherd
"I
have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek Thy
servant; for I do not forget Thy
commandments."
-Psalm
119:176 [KJV]
If
the Lord did not seek us, we should never seek the Lord. That is most
certain. If you are one that seeks the Lord in prayer, in
supplication, in secret desire, with many a heartrending groan, and
often by night and by day, be well assured, that you would never have
sought the Lord, had not the Lord first sought you. He is now seeking
you. It may be (as you fear), some time before He
finds you; but He
will find you at last. How sweetly the Lord has set this forth in the
parable of the lost sheep! The poor sheep has gone astray; and
having once left the fold, it
is pretty sure to have got into some strange place or other. It has
fallen down a rock, or has rolled into a ditch, or is hidden beneath
a bush, or has crept into a cave, or is lying in some deep, distant
ravine, where none but an experienced eye and hand can find it out.
And
so with the Lord's lost sheep; they get into strange places. They
fall off rocks, slip into holes, hide among the bushes, and sometimes
creep off to die in caverns. When the literal sheep has gone astray,
the shepherd goes after it to find it. Here he sees a footmark, there
a little lock of wool torn off by the thorns. Every nook he searches;
into every corner he looks, until at last he finds the poor sheep
wearied, torn, and half expiring, with scarce strength enough to
groan forth its misery. Nor does he beat it home, nor thrust the goad
into its back; but he gently takes it up, lays it upon his shoulder,
and brings it home rejoicing. Similar in grace are the Lord's ways
with His lost sheep.
Men
act otherwise. Let a pharisee see a sheep cast, as it is called in
the country, that is, lying helpless upon its back, he would soon
kick it up and kick it home, beat its head with his crook, or drive
the sharp nail into its flank. David's was a wise prayer, "Let
me fall into the hands of God, and not into the hands of man."
O to fall into the hands of God; into the hands of a merciful and
compassionate High Priest, who was tempted in all points, like as we
are, and can therefore sympathise with His poor tempted people!
These, these are the only hands for us safely to fall into; and he
that falls into these hands will neither fall out of them, nor
through them, for "underneath
are the everlasting arms," and these can neither
be sundered nor broken.
-Gospel
report by preacher J.C.
Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
Comments