George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
January 11
The Reach of His Faithfulness
"Thy faithfulness reacheth unto the
clouds." Psa 36:5
The faithfulness of God is one of the
strong truths of the Old Testament. It is one distinction of the Jewish faith,
in contrast with the ancient pagan faiths. Pagan gods were not generally
faithful whether in Babylon or Greece. They were immoral, careless of their
promises regardless of their pledged word. And the wonderful thing about the
Jewish faith was that the God of the Jew was always faithful both to His
covenant and to His children.
Such a magnificent and upholding thought
sprang not only from personal experience, it was interwoven with the fact that
the Jewish religion was historical. The Jew could look backward over the tracts
of time and discover there the faithfulness of God in a way the brief life
might never show. As he recalled the story of the past, of Abraham traveling to
the promised land, of the slaves in Egypt rescued from their slavery, of the
desert pilgrimage of forty years, one thing that was stamped upon his heart,
never to be erased by any finger, was that Jehovah was a faithful God.
That thought sustained the psalmist, and
with him, all the saints of the old covenant. In the Old Testament the word
"faith" is rare, but the word "faithfulness" occurs a score
of times. And here the psalmist, in his poetic way, and like Jesus, drawing his
images from nature, says, "Thy faithfulness reacheth to the clouds."
The Clouds of Scripture
One thinks, for instance, of the clouds of
Scripture in such a passage as the Ascension story. When our Lord ascended to
the Father, a cloud received Him from the disciples' sight (Act 1:9). That was
a lonesome and desolating hour when the cloud wrapped around Him and He was
gone. They had loved Him so and leaned upon Him so that I take it they were
well-nigh broken-hearted. Then the days went on, and they discovered that the
engulfing cloud was not the end of everything. It, too, was touched by the
faithfulness of heaven. He had promised to be with them always, and He was
faithful to that promise still. He had said, "I will manifest Myself to
you," and that promised word was verified. The cloud had come and engulfed
their Lord, and they thought the sweet companionship was over. But His
faithfulness reached unto the clouds.
The Clouds of History
Again, one thinks of the clouds of history,
for history has its dark and cloudy days. For instance, what a cloudy day that
was when the Jews were carried off to Babylon. Exiled to a distant, heathen
land, they thought that God had forgotten to be gracious. They said: "My
way is hidden from the Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God."
It was not the hardship of exile that confounded them. It was that God seemed
to have broken His covenant and had been found unfaithful to His promises. By
the waters of Babylon they sat and wept. They hung their harps upon the willow
trees. How could they sing of the faithfulness of God when He had let them go
into captivity?
And yet the day was coming when the
instructed heart would rise to another view of that captivity and say:
"Thy faithfulness reacheth to the clouds." Memory became
illuminative. Things lost grew doubly precious. Distance helped them to a
clearer vision of what sin was and what God was. And then across that dark and
cloudy day came the ringing of prophetic voices with the message of ransom and
return (Isa 35:1-10). They were not forgotten. They were not rejected. Their
way was not passed over by their God. Sunny days did not exhaust His
faithfulness. It reached even to the clouds. And of how many a dark day of
history (as when we revert in thought to the World Wars) can we set to our seal
that this is true!
The Clouds Over Our Lives
Again, one thinks how this great truth
applies to the clouds that hang over our human lives. What multitudes can say,
in an adoring gratitude, "Thy faithfulness hath reached unto the
clouds"? Just as in every life are days of sunshine when the sky is blue
and all the birds are singing, when every wind blows from where the Lord is and
when we feel it is good to be alive, so in every life are shadowed days when
the sun withdraws its shining for a season and the clouds return after the
rain. It may be a time of trouble in the family or of great anxiety in
business, the time when health is showing signs of failing or when the chair is
empty and the grave is full. It may be the time when all that a man has lived
for seems washed away like a castle in the sand. It may be the day of
unexpected poverty.
How unlooked for often are the clouds of
life. They gather swiftly like some tropical thunderstorm. We confidently
expect a cloudless day, and before evening the sky is darkened. And yet what
multitudes of folk as they look backward, with much experience in life, can
take our text and in quiet adoring gratitude claim it as the truth of their
experience. You thought (don't you remember thinking?) that God had quite
forgotten to be gracious. Possibly you were tempted to deny Him or secretly to
doubt His care for you. But now, looking back upon it all, you have another
vision and another certainty, just as the experienced psalmist had. If there
are any of those who read these lines for whom this is the dark and cloudy day,
who are anxious and distressed, who say in the morning, "Would God that it
were evening"--have faith. Do not despair. The hour is nearer than you
think when you also will say with David, "Thy faithfulness reacheth to the
clouds."
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