Pressing In, Calling Upon & Seeking His Face
"My
soul followeth hard after Thee."
-PSALM
63:8 [KJV]
The
Lord (we would speak with reverence) does not suffer Himself at first
to be overtaken. The more the soul follows after Him, the more He
seems to withdraw Himself, and thus He draws it more earnestly on the
pursuit. He means to be overtaken in the end: it is His own blessed
work in the conscience to kindle earnest desires and longings after
Himself; and therefore He puts strength into the soul, and "makes
the feet like hinds' feet" to run and continue the chase. But in
order to whet the ardent desire, to kindle to greater intensity the
rising eagerness, the Lord will not suffer Himself to be overtaken
till after a long and arduous pursuit.
This
is sweetly set forth in the Song of Solomon, 5:2-8. We find there the
Lord coming to His bride; but she is unwilling to open to Him till
"he puts his hand in by the hole of the door." She would
not rise at His first knocking, and therefore He is obliged to touch
her heart. But "when she opened to her Beloved, He was gone;"
and no sooner does He withdraw Himself, than she pursues after Him;
but she cannot find Him; He hides Himself from her view, draws her
round and round the walls of the city, until at length she overtakes,
and finds Him whom her soul loveth. This sweetly sets forth how the
Lord draws on the longing soul after Himself.
Could
we immediately obtain the object of our pursuit, we should not half
so much enjoy it when attained. Could we with a wish bring the Lord
down into the soul, it would be but the lazy wish of the sluggard,
who "desireth, and hath not." But when the Lord can only be
obtained by an arduous pursuit, every faculty of the soul is engaged
in panting after His manifested presence; and this was the experience
of the Psalmist, when he cried, "My soul followeth hard
after Thee."
-Gospel
report by preacher J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
April
28th, EARS FROM HARVESTED SHEAVES
Comments