Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 51 pages of information about Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones.

Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 51 pages of information about Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones.

I know this is easier to some than to others.  Perhaps it “comes natural” to you to do everything heartily.  That is very nice, but it is not enough.  What else?  “Whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as unto the Lord, and not unto men.”  He knows whether the industrious energetic boy or girl is wishing to please Him, and looking up to Him for His smile; or whether He is forgotten all the while, and only the smile of others and the pleasure of being quick and busy is thought of.  But perhaps it is hard to you to do things heartily.  You like better to take your time, and so you dawdle, and do things in an idle way, especially what you do not much like doing.  Is this right?  Is it a little sin, when God’s word says, “Whatsoever ye do, do it heartily!” Is it not just as much disobeying God as breaking any other command?  Are you not guilty before Him?  Very likely you never thought of it in this way, but there the words stand, and neither you nor I can alter them.  First ask Him to forgive you all the past idleness and idle ways, for Christ’s sake, and then ask Him to give you strength henceforth to obey this word of His.  And then listen to the little chime, “Do it heartily! do it heartily!” And then the last word of the verse about Hezekiah will be true of you too—­“Prospered!”

    ’Up and doing, little Christian! 
      Up and doing, while ’tis day! 
    Do the work the Master gives you. 
      Do not loiter by the way. 
    For we all have work before us,
      You, dear child, as well as I;
    Let us learn to seek our duty,
      And to ‘do it heartily.’

28.  Twenty-eighth Day.

The Sight of Faith.

   “As seeing Him who is invisible.”—­Heb. xi. 27.

If we were always doing everything just as if we saw Him, whom having not seen we love, how different our lives would be!  How much happier too!  How brave, and bright, and patient we should be, if all the time we could really see Jesus as Stephen saw Him!  And by faith, the precious faith which God is ready to give to all who ask, we may go on our way with this light upon it, “as seeing Him who is invisible.”

These words were said of Moses; and this seeing Him by faith had three effects.  First, “he forsook Egypt;” it made him ready to give up anything for his God, and God’s people.  It made him true and loyal to God’s cause.  What did He care for anything else, so long as he saw “Him who is invisible?” Secondly, it took away all his fear.  What was “the wrath of the king” to him, when Jehovah was by his side?  Of what should he be afraid?  Thirdly, it enabled him to “endure,” to wait patiently for forty years in the desert, and then to work patiently for forty years in the wilderness; and only think how strength-giving that sight of faith must be which enabled him to endure everything for eighty years!

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Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.