"What! Shall we receive good at the hand of God--and shall we not receive evil?" Job 2:10
The consistent Christian speaks well of God, whatever "evil" he receives from God. To bless God for mercies is the way to increase them and to bless God for miseries is the way to remove them.
If the possession of riches will not draw away our hearts, then the loss of them would not break our hearts!
"The Lord gives--and the Lord takes away; blessed be the Name of the Lord." Job 1:21. God gives before He takes--and He takes only what He gives!
The hour-glass of outward happiness soon runs out! Today Job is the richest man in all the east; tomorrow Job is the poorest man in all the world. Yet his heart was like a fruitful paradise when his estate was like a barren wilderness! Though God burnt up his houses, yet his palace (his heart) was left standing.
Outward mercies are like the tide which ebbs as well as flows. They are like the sky which sometimes is clear and at another time clouded. They are like a budding flower which opens on a warm day, and shuts on a cold day. If God blesses us in taking as well as in giving, let us bless Him for taking as well as for giving.
That is a choice artist who can play well upon a broken instrument. To be impatient with our affliction and patient with our corruption is to be angry with the medicine which heals us and in love with the poison which kills us! Beloved, it is sometimes a mercy to us that God removes outward mercies from us! He never wounds a saint to kill him except to heal him! God does but take that out of your hands which would thrust Him out of your heart!
Too many think that God is cutting down the whole tree when He is but lopping off its wasteful branches. They imagine that He is demolishing the superstructure, when He is only laying a right foundation. Poor souls, He is not nipping the flowers, but plucking up the weeds! He is not laying your land fallow, but ploughing the field!
God's Providence has a beautiful face, but it often seems like it is under a black mask. God has the fairest ends in the foulest ways! The sheep may be dipped in water to wash it, when all along there is no design in the Good Shepherd to drown it!
Dear believer, you may read the marks of a kind Father in the severe stripes of His children. Every twig of His black rod of affliction is but to draw His lovely image upon you!
- William Secker
Friday, November 28, 2008
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