Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 109 pages of information about Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians.

Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 109 pages of information about Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians.

REFLECTION.

How often when walking down the country lane in the twilight of a summer’s evening you have looked upon the round, full moon and exclaimed, “What a tender, beautiful light! how soft and mellow is the glow!” But you must remember the light is not its own.  Of itself it is a cold, dark body.  The great luminary that so recently sank behind the western hills is the real light.  It pours its brilliant rays upon the moon and the moon reflects the sun’s light upon your pathway.  The moon, therefore, is only a reflector.  You stand before a mirror and behold your face and form imaged in the glass.  The glass acts as a reflector, reproducing the objects that are placed before it and shine upon it.  The unregenerate heart is dark and reflects no light; but God can take it and cleanse, purge, and polish it, and make it capable of reflecting the virtues of heaven’s grace.

1 Cor. 13:12 is rendered thus by Conybeare and Howson:  “So now we see darkly, by a mirror; but then face to face.”  While here in this life we can not see the real and true glories of the eternal world; but we can see some of its beauties and glories mirrored in the face of nature and the Bible.  The starry worlds above us, the verdant hills, the swaying forests, the waving grain, the fleeting cloud, the blooming flower, dimly shadow forth the glory that awaits our expectant souls in that bright world where angels dwell.

The Greek text of 2 Cor. 3:18 is beautifully rendered in these words by the above mentioned translators:  “With face unveiled we behold in a mirror the brightness of our Lord’s glory, are ourselves transformed into the same likeness; and the glory which shines upon us is reflected by us, even as it proceeds from the Lord, the Spirit.”  These words are full of grandeur to my soul.  Their wondrous beauty and sublimity can not fail to awaken admiration in every Spirit-quickened and purity-loving heart.  You will see, Christian reader, the position you occupy as a follower of the Lamb of God.  You are a reflector; you have no light of yourself.  God shines his glory upon you and you reflect it to the world, and thus you become the light of the world.  In one translation “character” is used instead of “glory.”  God’s character is shined into your soul, and you are to reflect it to the world.

There is another clause in the above quotation too full of riches and too well adapted to this work to pass by unnoticed.  It is this:  “We behold in a mirror the brightness of our Lord’s glory, are ourselves transformed into the same likeness.”  We do not grow into salvation, neither do we grow into sanctification; but after we receive this glorious experience there is still a continual transforming into a more perfect likeness of Christ.  While in the Museum of Art in one of our large cities last spring I saw an artist reproducing on canvas a painting which hung upon the wall.  I looked upon the painting

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Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.