Things Which Will Outlast Time ~ Fit for Eternity...
"O that Thou wouldest bless me indeed!" -I Chronicles 4:10 [KJV]
An
"indeed" blessing is what the soul is seeking after which has ever felt
the misery and bitterness of sin, and ever tasted the sweetness of
God's salvation. And these "indeed" blessings are seen to be spiritual
and eternal. Compared with such blessings as these, it sees how vain and
empty are all earthly things, what vain toys, what idle dreams, what
passing shadows. It wonders at the folly of men in hunting after such
vain shows, and spending time, health, money, life itself, in a pursuit
of nothing but misery and destruction. Every passing bell that it hears,
every corpse borne slowly along to the grave that it sees, impresses it
with solemn feelings as to the state of those who live and die in their
sins.
Thus it learns more and more to contrast time with
eternity, earth with heaven, sinners with saints, and professors with
possessors. By these things it is taught, with Baruch, not "to seek
great things" (see Jeremiah 45:5) for itself, but real things; things which will outlast
time, and fit it for eternity. It is thus brought to care little for the
opinion of men as to what is good or great, but much for what God has
stamped His own approbation upon, such as a tender conscience, a broken
heart, a contrite spirit, a humble mind, a separation from the world and
everything worldly, a submission to His holy will, a meek endurance of
the cross, a conformity to Christ's suffering image, and a living to
God's glory.
As, then, the gracious Lord is pleased to indulge it
with some discovery of Himself, shedding abroad a sweet sense of His
goodness and mercy, atoning blood, and dying love, it is made to long
more and more for the manifestation of those blessings which alone are
to be found in Him. For His blessings are not like the mere temporal
mercies which we enjoy at His hands, all of which perish in the using,
but are for ever and ever; and when once given are never taken away.
They thus become earnests and foretastes of eternal joys, for they are
absolutely irreversible.
When Isaac had once blessed Jacob in
God's name, though the blessing had been obtained by guile, yet having
been once given, it could not be recalled. He said, therefore, to Esau,
"I have blessed him, and he shall be blessed." So when the Lord has
blessed His people with any of those spiritual blessings which are
stored up in His inexhaustible fulness, these blessings are like Himself, unchanging and unchangeable; for "He is in one mind and none
can turn Him;" "The same yesterday, to-day, and for ever."
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802–1869 A.D.)
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