The Power of Faith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about The Power of Faith.

The Power of Faith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about The Power of Faith.

“A few Sabbaths ago he preached from these words, ’I determined to know nothing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified.’  After proving that all the Scriptures, from the beginning of Genesis to the end of Revelation, pointed to Christ and his great work of redemption, and asserting that that sermon could not be called the gospel of which He was not the subject, he spoke home to his audience, and told them that this, through the aid of divine grace, was his firm purpose—­to dwell on redeeming love.  He was sure no subject would be welcome to any Christian, where Christ was not to be found; nor would any such subject ever convert a sinner; and therefore, if any were about to take their place there, expecting to hear any new or strange thing, let them not disappoint themselves.  O, for a thankful heart; the Lord has indeed done wonders for me and mine; and blessed be his name for his mercy also, that in a remarkable manner, by a strange concurrence of circumstances, he hedged me in to become a member of this congregation, where I am led and fed with the same truths which nourished my soul in Zion’s gates at Edinburgh; and I am helped to sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land.  Often have I been tempted to hang my harp upon the willow, ‘when Zion I thought on;’ but this was, and sometimes still is my sin and ingratitude, for I ought to build houses, and plant vineyards, and seek the good of the land; for he has a small vineyard here, which he waters and cultivates, and I ought to labor therein, and do whatsoever my hand findeth to do with diligence, and say, ’The earth is the Lord’s, and the fulness thereof; heaven is his throne, the earth his footstool,’ and he fills all things and all places.

“‘What aileth thee, Hagar?’ O what a God of mercy is our God!  Often has he hailed me in some such language:  ‘What aileth thee?’ why is thy countenance sad? am I not better to thee than ten friends?  Then has he turned my heart to him, made me feel myself close to him; he has suffered me to lean on his bosom, hang on his arm, and lisp out, Abba.  At such blest moments I have thought the whole earth but one point, and from that to heaven but one step, and the time between but as one moment; and my company here sufficient to satisfy me by the way.  At such blest moments I felt perfect, full, entire satisfaction with all that God is, all that he does; and could trust him fully with all my concerns, spiritual, temporal, and eternal.  But, alas, by and by, like a peevish child, I began to fret, wish this, wish that; grieve for this, grieve for that; fear this, fear that; stagger, stumble, fall.  O what a God of patience and long-suffering.  And O how rich that well-ordered covenant, that provides suitable grace for all these unsteady seasons.  It is my greatest consolation that the Lord knows it all.  There are times when I cannot see him, but every moment he sees me.  I should fall off and leave him, but he holds me fast and never leaves me.  O blessed plan, where God secures us in safety, even from ourselves.  We have not only destroyed ourselves, and he has been our help; but we are ever destroying ourselves, and still he renews this help.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Power of Faith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.