Monday, December 27, 2021

The Journey Is Too Great For Thee, And I Am Going To Refresh You

1Kings 19:7  And the angel of the LORD came again the second time, and touched him, and said, Arise and eat; because the journey is too great for thee. 

And what did God do with His tired servant? 

Gave him something good to eat, and put him to sleep. 

Elijah had done splendid work, and had run alongside of the chariot in his excitement, and it had been too much for his physical strength, and the reaction had come on, and he was depressed. 

The physical needed to be cared for. 

What many people want is sleep, and the physical ailment attended to. 

There are grand men and women who get where Elijah was...under the juniper tree! 

And it comes very soothingly to such to hear the words of the Master: “The journey is too great for thee, and I am going to refresh you.” 

Let us not confound physical weariness with spiritual weakness.

I’m too tired to trust and too tired to pray, Said one, as the over-taxed strength gave way...

The one conscious thought by my mind possessed, Is, oh, could I just drop it all and rest.

Will God forgive me, do you suppose, If I go right to sleep as a baby goes, Without an asking if I may,
Without ever trying to trust and pray?

Will God forgive you? why think, dear heart, When language to you was an unknown art, Did a mother deny you needed rest, Or refuse to pillow your head on her breast?

Did she let you want when you could not ask?

Did she set her child an unequal task?

Or did she cradle you in her arms, And then guard your slumber against alarms?

Ah, how quick was her mother love to see, The unconscious yearnings of infancy.

When you’ve grown too tired to trust and pray, When over-wrought nature has quite given way:

Then just drop it all, and give up to rest, As you used to do on a mother’s breast...

He knows all about it...the dear Lord knows, So just go to sleep as a baby goes; 

Without even asking if you may, God knows when His child is too tired to pray.

He judges not solely by uttered prayer, He knows when the yearnings of love are there.

He knows you do pray, He knows you do trust, And He knows, too, the limits’ of poor weak dust.

Oh, the wonderful sympathy of Christ, For His chosen ones in that midnight tryst, When He bade them sleep and take their rest, While on Him the guilt of the whole world pressed...

You’ve given your life up to Him to keep, Then don’t be afraid to go right to sleep.

Monday, December 6, 2021

Will Worrying Make Matters Any Better?

Mat 6:27  Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?

So it is useless to worry!

A short person cannot, by any amount of anxiety, make himself an inch taller.

Why, therefore, should he waste his energy and fret his life away in wishing he were taller?

One worries because he is too short another because he is too tall...

One because he too lean another because he is too fat...

One because he has a lame foot another because he has a mole on his face.

No amount of fretting will change any of these things!

People worry, too, over their circumstances.

They are poor, and have to work hard.

They have troubles, losses, and disappointments which come through causes entirely beyond their own control.

They find difficulties in their environment which they cannot surmount.

There are hard conditions in their lot which they cannot change.

Now why should they worry about these things?

Will worrying make matters any better?

Will discontentment cure the blind eye, or remove the ugly mole, or give health to the infirm body?

Will chafing make the hard work, lighter; or the burdens, easier; or the troubles, fewer?

Will anxiety keep the winter away, or keep the storm from rising, or put coal in the cellar, or put bread in the pantry, or get clothes for the children?

Even human reason shows the uselessness of worrying, since it helps nothing, and only wastes one's strength and unfits one for doing one's best!

The Christian gospel goes farther, and says that even the hard things and the obstacles, are blessings if we meet them in the right spirit.

They are stepping-stones lifting our feet upward...disciplinary experiences in which we grow.

So we learn that we should quietly, and with faith, accept life as it comes to us fretting at nothing, and changing hard conditions to easier if we can.

And if we cannot then we must use them as means for growth and advancement.

~J. R. Miller~