There is an experience of soul exactly like the
fainting of the body.
When a person faints there is an utter loss of
strength accompanied with a real sickish feeling, paleness and a clammy
sweat, causing the body to get limp, beyond the control of the will,
and fall away in an unconscious swoon.
There is a real fainting of the
soul which we are admonished against in the Word, "My son, despise not
the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him."
We
have this treasure in earthen vessels, for which cause we faint not. "
Faint, yet pursuing."
Some of the feelings which may lead the Christian heart to faint are the following:
A feeling of loneliness of soul, as if we were isolated from all
other spirits, and especially shut off from the souls that are around
us.
We seem to be a castaway on some ethereal and desert island, with
all intelligible communication with other souls cut off.
We sometimes
think we would like to open all our inner feelings to a fellow-spirit,
but if the opportunity occurs to do so, an invisible yet powerful check
is laid upon us.
We seem to be more in fellowship with the souls of
far-distant ages than with those near by.
We seem to pace the boundless
shore of our solitary island, waiting for any sort of a change to break
upon our experience, until we feel like sinking down under sheer
sameness and monotone of soul.
Another feeling is that of
being caged in, hampered and tied in an inextricable manner.
Providence seems to go off and leave us to the heartlessness of a
thousand petty demons who pervade every little circumstance; who seem,
like the fabled Liliputians, to tie our hands and feet while we sleep;
who snap all the threads in our financial looms; who upset our ordinary
plans; who turn anticipated joys into ashes; who bother us with a host
of mental perplexities too subtle to define and too numerous to count.
There are times when a current of such things seems to set in; times
when everything seems to weave itself into a network of crippling
environment, and any effort to extricate ourselves only bruises us.
At
such times the question is shot into the mind, "What's the use?"
Another feeling is that of a strange pressure and a heavy bearing down
in the soul, it seems we cannot get low enough to slip out from under
the weight; the floor or ground is entirely too high for us.
Another feeling is that of paralysis. The faculties seem benumbed
and unable to exert themselves.
Prayer is not versatile and fluent, but
is reduced to a heart groan or the simple cry of the woman in the
gospel, "Lord, help me."
This inertia of the faculties is accompanied
with a sense of weariness in the soul;
The Holy Spirit recognizes this
state of experience and distinctly mentions this heart tiredness, "Lest
ye be weary and faint in your minds."
The Spirit has given us three
remedies to prevent soul-fainting:
One remedy is, " Consider Him who
endured lest ye be weary and faint."
When prayer is inert, when every
pinion of heart and mind is bound, we are to quietly fix our
consideration on Him who endured;
Spread out before the mind how He was
cramped, limited, contradicted;
His inner feelings fettered and smitten
in a thousand inconceivable ways;
How the normal yearnings of His
heart were denied and snubbed;
How the whole of His outward environment
was at such horrible disagreement with the fitness of things in His
soul;
To consider all this, and much more which will occur to a
meditative soul, will bring a sense of fellowship with Him which is
excellent medicine for faintness of spirit.
Another
remedy is, "Despise not thou the chastening of the Lord."
God arranges,
or permits, for our chastening to come to us in such strange and
unlooked-for ways, in such mortifying and disagreeable circumstances,
by such undignified and outlandish agencies that we are apt to "despise
the chastening."
We think we could take the
scourging much better if it were applied with a more dignified and
beautiful whip.
Our chastisement often occurs by things in which we see
no semblance of divinity.
The trials, the besetments, the persons, the
events, the gnarled and knotty annoyances, which God employs to
correct or rebuke us, seem often so low and mean and out of harmony
with the fitness of things that we are liable to despise the
correction.
Now, if we can discover the hand of God in all these ugly
things, if we can see the divine presence under all this network of
unpleasantness, it will at once throw a new light on them, and the
recognition of His presence will keep us from fainting.
Despise not
the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked by Him.
Another remedy for soul-fainting is the manifestation of Jesus to
the inner spirit.
Paul tells us in second Corinthians, fourth chapter,
that God hath shined in our hearts to give us the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, and says
this manifestation is a treasure which we have in earthen vessels..
Then, after alluding to our peculiar sufferings, concludes by saying, "
For which cause we faint not."
So the best cure for heart-fainting is
the blessedness of Jesus revealed in us by the Holy Ghost.
The dear,
deep apprehension of Jesus as a personal, sympathizing, indwelling
Saviour is a soul tonic, an invigorating balm to the spirit which
nothing else can be.
~G. D. Watson~
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