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    Cut & Paste

    Classics: Streams in the Desert
     
      God's Timing

    "And when forty years were expired, there appeared to him in the wilderness of Mount Sinai an angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in a bush?saying?I have seen the affliction of my people which is in Egypt, and I have heard their groaning, and am come down to deliver them. And now come, I will send thee into Egypt" (Acts 7:30, 32, 34).

    That was a long wait in preparation for a great mission. When God delays, He is not inactive. He is getting ready His instruments, He is ripening our powers; and at the appointed moment we shall arise equal to our task. Even Jesus of Nazareth was thirty years in privacy, growing in wisdom before He began His work. --Dr. Jowett

    God is never in a hurry but spends years with those He expects to greatly use. He never thinks the days of preparation too long or too dull.

    The hardest ingredient in suffering is often time. A short, sharp pang is easily borne, but when a sorrow drags its weary way through long, monotonous years, and day after day returns with the same dull routine of hopeless agony, the heart loses its strength, and without the grace of God, is sure to sink into the very sullenness of despair. Joseph's was a long trial, and God often has to burn His lessons into the depths of our being by the fires of protracted pain. "He shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver," but He knows how long, and like a true goldsmith He stops the fires the moment He sees His image in the glowing metal. We may not see now the outcome of the beautiful plan which God is hiding in the shadow of His hand; it yet may be long concealed; but faith may be sure that He is sitting on the throne, calmly waiting the hour when, with adoring rapture, we shall say, "All things have worked together for good." Like Joseph, let us be more careful to learn all the lessons in the school of sorrow than we are anxious for the hour of deliverance. There is a "need-be" for every lesson, and when we are ready, our deliverance will surely come, and we shall find that we could not have stood in our place of higher service without the very things that were taught us in the ordeal. God is educating us for the future, for higher service and nobler blessings; and if we have the qualities that fit us for a throne, nothing can keep us from it when God's time has come. Don't steal tomorrow out of God's hands. Give God time to speak to you and reveal His will. He is never too late; learn to wait. --Selected

    "He never comes too late; He knoweth what is best;
    Vex not thyself in vain; until He cometh--REST."

    Do not run impetuously before the Lord; learn to wait His time: the minute-hand as well as the hour-hand must point the exact moment for action.

    Cut & Paste

    Classics: Streams in the Desert
     
    According to Our Faith

     

    "According to your faith be it unto you" (Matt. 9:29).

    "Praying through" might be defined as praying one's way into full faith, emerging while yet praying into the assurance that one has been accepted and heard, so that one becomes actually aware of receiving, by firmest anticipation and in advance of the event, the thing for which he asks.

    Let us remember that no earthly circumstances can hinder the fulfillment of His Word if we look steadfastly at the immutability of that Word and not at the uncertainty of this ever-changing world. God would have us believe His Word without other confirmation, and then He is ready to give us "according to our faith."

    "When once His Word is past,
    When He hath said , 'I will,'
    (Heb. 13:5)
    The thing shall come at last;
    God keeps His promise still."
    (2 Cor. 1:20)

    The prayer of the Pentecostal age was like a cheque to be paid in coin over the counter. --Sir R. Anderson

    "And God said?and it was so."

    (Gen. 1:9.)

    Cut & Paste

    Classics: Streams in the Desert
     
    Sorrowful, Yet Rejoicing

    "As sorrowful, yet always rejoicing" (2 Cor. 6:10).

    The stoic scorns to shed a tear; the Christian is not forbidden to weep. The soul may be dumb with excessive grief, as the shearer's scissors pass over the quivering flesh; or, when the heart is on the point of breaking beneath the meeting surges of trial, the sufferer may seek relief by crying out with a loud voice. But there is something even better.

    They say that springs of sweet fresh water well up amid the brine of salt seas; that the fairest Alpine flowers bloom in the wildest and most rugged mountain passes; that the noblest psalms were the outcome of the profoundest agony of soul.

    Be it so. And thus amid manifold trials, souls which love God will find reasons for bounding, leaping joy. Though deep call to deep, yet the Lord's song will be heard in silver cadence through the night. And it is possible in the darkest hour that ever swept a human life to bless the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Have you learned this lesson yet? Not simply to endure God's will, nor only to choose it; but to rejoice in it with joy unspeakable and full of glory. --Tried as by Fire

    I will be still, my bruised heart faintly murmured,
    As o'er me rolled a crushing load of woe;
    The cry, the call, e'en the low moan was stifled;
    I pressed my lips; I barred the tear drop's flow.

    I will be still, although I cannot see it,
    The love that bares a soul and fans pain's fire;
    That takes away the last sweet drop of solace,
    Breaks the lone harp string, hides Thy precious lyre.

    But God is love, so I will bide me, bide me--
    We'll doubt not, Soul, we will be very still;
    We'll wait till after while, when He shall lift us
    Yes, after while, when it shall be His will.

    And I did listen to my heart's brave promise;
    And I did quiver, struggling to be still;
    And I did lift my tearless eyes to Heaven,
    Repeating ever, "Yea, Christ, have Thy will."

    But soon my heart upspake from 'neath our burden,
    Reproved my tight-drawn lips, my visage sad:
    "We can do more than this, O Soul," it whispered.
    "We can be more than still, we can be glad!"

    And now my heart and I are sweetly singing--
    Singing without the sound of tuneful strings;
    Drinking abundant waters in the desert,
    Crushed, and yet soaring as on eagle's wings.
    --

    S. P. W.

    Streams in the Desert - Jan 9

    Made Perfect Through Suffering
    by
    Mrs. Charles E. Cowman

    "For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us"

    (Rom. 8:18).

    I kept for nearly a year the flask-shaped cocoon of an emperor moth. It is very peculiar in its construction. A narrow opening is left in the neck of the flask, through which the perfect insect forces its way, so that a forsaken cocoon is as entire as one still tenanted, no rupture of the interlacing fibers having taken place. The great disproportion between the means of egress and the size of the imprisoned insect makes one wonder how the exit is ever accomplished at all--and it never is without great labor and difficulty. It is supposed that the pressure to which the moth's body is subjected in passing through such a narrow opening is a provision of nature for forcing the juices into the vessels of the wings, these being less developed at the period of emerging from the chrysalis than they are in other insects.

    I happened to witness the first efforts of my prisoned moth to escape from its long confinement. During a whole forenoon, from time to time, I watched it patiently striving and struggling to get out. It never seemed able to get beyond a certain point, and at last my patience was exhausted. Very probably the confining fibers were drier and less elastic than if the cocoon had been left all winter on its native heather, as nature meant it to be. At all events I thought I was wiser and more compassionate than its Maker, and I resolved to give it a helping hand. With the point of my scissors I snipped the confining threads to make the exit just a very little easier, and lo! immediately, and with perfect case, out crawled my moth dragging a huge swollen body and little shrivelled wings. In vain I watched to see that marvelous process of expansion in which these silently and swiftly develop before one's eyes; and as I traced the exquisite spots and markings of divers colors which were all there in miniature, I longed to see these assume their due proportions and the creature to appear in all its perfect beauty, as it is, in truth, one of the loveliest of its kind. But I looked in vain. My false tenderness had proved its ruin. It never was anything but a stunted abortion, crawling painfully through that brief life which it should have spent flying through the air on rainbow wings. I have thought of it often, often, when watching with pitiful eyes those who were struggling with sorrow, suffering, and distress; and I would fain cut short the discipline and give deliverance. Short-sighted man! How know I that one of these pangs or groans could be spared? The far-sighted, perfect love that seeks the perfection of its object does not weakly shrink from present, transient suffering. Our Father's love is too true to be weak. Because He loves His children, He chastises them that they may be partakers of His holiness. With this glorious end in view, He spares not for their crying. Made perfect through sufferings, as the Elder Brother was, the sons of God are trained up to obedience and brought to glory through much tribulation. --Tract.

     

    Jan 8

    Showers and Sunshine

    "I will cause the shower to come down in his season; there shall be showers of blessing"
    (Ezek. 34:26).

    What is thy season this morning? Is it a season of drought? Then that is the season for showers. Is it a season of great heaviness and black clouds? Then that is the season for showers. "As thy day so shall thy strength be." "I will give thee showers of blessing." The word is in the plural. All kinds of blessings God will send. All God's blessings go together, like links in a golden chain. If He gives converting grace, He will also give comforting grace. He will send "showers of blessings." Look up today, O parched plant, and open thy leaves and flowers for a heavenly watering. --Spurgeon

    "Let but thy heart become a valley low,
    And God will rain on it till it will overflow."

    Thou, O Lord, canst transform my thorn into a flower. And I want my thorn transformed into a flower. Job got the sunshine after the rain, but has the rain been all waste? Job wants to know, I want to know, if the shower had nothing to do with the shining. And Thou canst tell me Thy Cross can tell me. Thou hast crowned Thy sorrow. Be this my crown, O Lord. I only triumph in Thee when I have learned the radiance of the rain. --George Matheson

    The fruitful life seeks showers as well as sunshine."The landscape, brown and sere beneath the sun,
    Needs but the cloud to lift it into life;
    The dews may damp the leaves of tree and flower,
    But it requires the cloud-distilled shower
    To bring rich verdure to the lifeless life."Ah, how like this, the landscape of a life:
    Dews of trial fall like incense, rich and sweet;
    But bearing little in the crystal tray
    Like nymphs of night, dews lift at break of day
    And transient impress leave, like lips that meet."But clouds of trials, bearing burdens rare,
    Leave in the soul, a moisture settled deep:
    Life kindles by the magic law of God;
    And where before the thirsty camel trod,
    There richest beauties to life's landscape leap.

    "Then read thou in each cloud that comes to thee
    The words of Paul, in letters large and clear:
    So shall those clouds thy soul with blessing feed,
    And with a constant trust as thou dost read,
    All things together work for good. Fret not, nor fear!"

     

    Jan 7

    Contentment 

    "I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content" (Phil. 4:11).

    Paul, denied of every comfort, wrote the above words in his dungeon. A story is told of a king who went into his garden one morning, and found everything withered and dying. He asked the oak that stood near the gate what the trouble was. He found it was sick of life and determined to die because it was not tall and beautiful like the pine. The pine was all out of heart because it could not bear grapes, like the vine. The vine was going to throw its life away because it could not stand erect and have as fine fruit as the peach tree. The geranium was fretting because it was not tall and fragrant like the lilac; and so on all through the garden. Coming to a heart's-ease, he found its bright face lifted as cheery as ever. "Well, heart's-ease, I'm glad, amidst all this discouragement, to find one brave little flower. You do not seem to be the least disheartened." "No, I am not of much account, but I thought that if you wanted an oak, or a pine, or a peach tree, or a lilac, you would have planted one; but as I knew you wanted a heart's-ease, I am determined to be the best little heart's-ease that I can.

    ""Others may do a greater work,
    But you have your part to do;
    And no one in all God's heritage
    Can do it so well as you."

    They who are God's without reserve, are in every state content; for they will only what He wills, and desire to do for Him whatever He desires them to do; they strip themselves of everything, and in this nakedness find all things restored an hundredfold.

    Streams in the Desert - Jan 6

    Step-By-Step Grace
    by Mrs. Charles E. Cowman

    "When thou passest through the waters...they shall not overflow thee" (Isa. 43:2).

    God does not open paths for us in advance of our coming. He does not promise help before help is needed. He does not remove obstacles out of our way before we reach them. Yet when we are on the edge of our need, God's hand is stretched out.

    Many people forget this, and are forever worrying about difficulties which they foresee in the future. They expect that God is going to make the way plain and open before them, miles and miles ahead; whereas He has promised to do it only step by step as they may need. You must get to the waters and into their floods before you can claim the promise. Many people dread death, and lament that they have not "dying grace." Of course, they will not have dying grace when they are in good health, in the midst of life's duties, with death far in advance. Why should they have it then? Grace for duty is what they need then, living grace; then dying grace when they come to die. --J. R. M.

    "When thou passest through the waters"
    Deep the waves may be and cold,
    But Jehovah is our refuge,
    And His promise is our hold;
    For the Lord Himself hath said it,
    He, the faithful God and true:
    "When thou comest to the waters

    Thou shalt not go down, BUT THROUGH."

    Seas of sorrow, seas of trial,
    Bitterest anguish, fiercest pain,
    Rolling surges of temptation
    Sweeping over heart and brain
    They shall never overflow us
    For we know His word is true;
    All His waves and all His billows
    He will lead us safely through.

    Threatening breakers of destruction,
    Doubt's insidious undertow,
    Shall not sink us, shall not drag us
    Out to ocean depths of woe;
    For His promise shall sustain us,
    Praise the Lord, whose Word is true!
    We shall not go down, or under,
    For He saith, "Thou passest
    THROUGH."
    --Annie Johnson Flint

    Streams in the Desert - Jan 5

    None to Help But God
    by Mrs. Charles E. Cowman

    "Lord, there is none beside thee to help." (2 Chron. 14:11, RV).

    Remind God of His entire responsibility. "There is none beside thee to help." The odds against Asa were enormous. There was a million of men in arms against him, besides three hundred chariots. It seemed impossible to hold his own against that vast multitude. There were no allies who would come to his help; his only hope, therefore, was in God. It may be that your difficulties have been allowed to come to so alarming a pitch that you may be compelled to renounce all creature aid, to which in lesser trials you have had recourse, and cast yourself back on your Almighty Friend.

    Put God between yourself and the foe.

    To Asa's faith, Jehovah seemed to stand between the might of Zerah and himself, as one who had no strength. Nor was he mistaken. We are told that the Ethiopians were destroyed before the Lord and before His host, as though celestial combatants flung themselves against the foe in Israel's behalf, and put the large host to rout, so that Israel had only to follow up and gather the spoil. Our God is Jehovah of hosts, who can summon unexpected reinforcements at any moment to aid His people. Believe that He is there between you and your difficulty, and what baffles you will flee before Him, as clouds before the gale. --F. B. Meyer

    "When nothing whereon to lean remains,
    When strongholds crumble to dust;

    When nothing is sure but that God still reigns,
    That is just the time to trust.

    "'Tis better to walk by faith than sight,
    In this path of yours and mine;

    And the pitch-black night, when there's no outer light
    Is the time for faith to shine."

    Abraham believed God, and said to sight, "Stand back!" and to the laws of nature, "Hold your peace!" and to a misgiving heart, "Silence, thou lying tempter!" He believed God. --Joseph Parker