George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
February 4
Refusing to Go Back
"So will not we go back from
thee." Psa 80:18
To go back from God is to desert Him. It is
to turn away the footsteps of our heart from Him. It is to doubt the vision we
have had of Him in our more intense and illumined moments.
To determine that whatever comes, we shall
not go back from God, is one of the open secrets of the saints. To cling to Him
when life is difficult and we are tempted to question if He cares; to believe
in Him with a simple childlike faith when clouds and darkness hide His
throne--this is one of the triumphs of the spirit which makes the humblest life
a thing of victory and brings it to the sunrise at the end.
When Mallory and Irvine were last seen
climbing Everest, they were "going strong for the top." From that
top, a thousand feet above them, nothing could turn them back. What a great
victory it would be for all of us were we to say, like these heroic climbers,
So we shall not go back from Thee.
When Things Eternal Grow Dim
We are tempted sometimes to go back from
God by the apparent indifference of heaven. There are seasons of the soul when
things unseen are touched with a strange sense of unreality. The lamp that
burns upon my study table is as nothing to the radiance of the moon. But then
the lamp is near me, and I read by it till I grow oblivious of the moon.
And so there are seasons when the things
around us so grip us in their vividness that things eternal tend to grow
unreal. At such times we do not renounce God, but we are often tempted to go
back from Him. We grow oblivious to His peace and light and there passes a
certain deadness over us as the winter, and we forfeit the joy of our
salvation. Prayer becomes a chore; the Bible loses its fragrance and its dew.
We are in the dark night of the soul and lying under spiritual desertion. But
even so (observe the psalmist's word) the true heart will cry out of the
darkness, "We will not go back from thee." To cling to God and His
great love to us when things grow dim and shadowy and distant, to affirm God to
our own souls in the hours when the unseen is as a dream is one of the tasks of
all who claim the name of Christ. "So will not we go back from thee."
We are also tempted to this retrogression
in hours when all the lights are burning low. None is so strong that he does
not now and then have fainting spells. We lose heart, and a dull depression
seizes on our spirits. We move on the flat margins of despair, and are all
tempted to go back from God as the disciples were tempted to go back from
Christ.
To be perfect as our heavenly Father is a
standard that often seems impossible. Is it any use striving to be holy with
these insurgent and rebellious hearts? Is not sainthood for rare and elect
souls, and beyond the compass of our common clay? So are we tempted to take the
lower road, thinking it more on the level of our powers, and we settle down
into second best. That is the tragedy of many lives--they have settled down
into the second best. They had visions once of the summit of Mount Everest; now
they are content to dwell below it. But the real victory of this life of ours
is not to gain the summit we have seen; it is to keep on climbing to the end.
God's best in Christ is not for elect souls. It is for everyone who trusts Him.
Things that are impossible with man are possible with God, and in spite of all
our failures, we shall not go back from Thee.
Comments
Post a Comment