SONGS IN THE NIGHT
NOVEMBER
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NOVEMBER 1
For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My
kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant
of My peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee.
Isaiah 54:10
HOW wonderfully the Lord has guided his people! His children
have ever been his constant care. No good thing hath he withheld
from them, and all things have been made to work together for
their good if they obeyed him. Who that has trusted the Lord
through many years, through sunshine and shadow, through smiles
and tears, by still waters and through storm and tempest, has
not proved the verity of his precious promises and his abiding
faithfulness! Surely “not one thing hath failed of all the good
things which the Lord your God spake concerning you”! ( Joshua
23:14 ) In the smallest and in the greatest affairs of our lives
he has ever watched for our interests. Every cloud has had a
golden lining! Z'14-280 (Hymn 63) |
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NOVEMBER 2
The whole earth is at rest, and is quiet: they break forth into
singing. Isaiah 14:7
THANK God for the prospect of an unshakable kingdom, whose King
shall reign in righteousness and whose princes shall decree
justice (Isa. 32:1; Prov. 8:15) and under whose dominion the
whole earth shall be at rest. (Isa. 14:7) This is the kingdom
which the prophet declares will indeed be “the desire of all
nations,” when it is once established and its blessings begin to
be realized by the world. Yes, truly “the desire of all nations
shall come”—with blessings of life and health and peace and
prosperity and good government. Z'02-234 (Hymn 156) |
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NOVEMBER 3
Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud:
and He shall hear my voice. Psalm 55:17
UNQUESTIONABLY the best men and women in the world are those who
pray, and pray regularly, who bow the knee, as did Daniel. (Dan.
6:10) Unquestionably the moments thus taken from earthly affairs
are well spent and bring more than commensurate blessings upon
the worshiper and all with which he has to do. Unquestionably it
is impossible to live a consecrated life in neglect of
prayer....To the Christian this privilege is still further
enhanced by a realization that “we have an Advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ, the Righteous,” in whose all- prevailing
name we may approach with courage to the throne of heavenly
grace, and obtain mercy and find grace to help in every time of
need. Z'11-348 (Hymn 97) |
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NOVEMBER 4
Behold the Bridegroom. Matthew 25:6
THE announcement, the truth upon this subject, is indeed a
testing, proving, which of the professed virgins of the Lord
have the oil in their vessels, the right spirit of humility,
patience, love, devotion, interest in the things of the
Bridegroom. Such and such only are desired by the Bridegroom or
will be permitted to enter. In view of this it is evident that
our work in the present time is not only to proclaim the
Bridegroom's presence, but to assist those who have the oil in
their vessels to trim their lamps. If it is not already too late
to buy the oil it soon will be, and hence our special care
should be in respect to those who have the oil of the Lord's
Spirit but who are still asleep or drowsy and need to have an
announcement of his presence brought kindly, patiently,
perseveringly to their attention. Z'06-315 (Hymn 230) |
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NOVEMBER 5
With the mouth confession is made unto salvation. Romans 10:10
THIS implies that a dumb believer will never make his calling
and election sure. We do not refer to those who are naturally
dumb: but understand the word “mouth” in the same sense that we
speak of the “ears” of our heart, and the “eyes of our
understanding.” A heart that sees and hears the grace of God,
and that truly accepts the same, must in due time become so
enthused with the things heard and seen that it cannot refrain
from some outward manifestation of its joy and peace and hope
and trust and thankfulness. As the apostles declared, “We cannot
but speak the things which we have seen and heard.” All
Christians who, having received the light of truth, having seen
the grace of God in the divine plan, having tasted that the Lord
is gracious, having heard the wonders of “so great salvation,
which began to be spoken by our Lord, and was confirmed unto us
by them that heard him” —these must not, cannot, keep silence
nor put their light under a bushel. If they do, it means the
extinguishment of their light, the stoppage of their growth; and
persevered in this would ultimately mean to them destruction in
the second death: for those who are ashamed of the Lord and his
Word, after they have discerned clearly, not only are not fit
for the kingdom, but of such the Lord would be ashamed under any
and all conditions. Z'02-72 (Hymn 261) |
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NOVEMBER 6
Kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation. I Peter
1:5
IN OUR journey through life almost daily we come to places and
circumstances which, wrongly received, may change our entire
course from fellowship and relationship to God to sin and
opposition to him. What Christian has not realized certain
crises in his life in which two voices seemed to speak to him;
the one favoring humility and obedience to God at any cost; the
other urging self-will backed by pride? If we are advanced
Christians, who through numerous victories have gained a
position where such besetments are rare, we still need to be on
guard and to remember that we have a very wily Adversary, that
we have the treasure of the new mind in an earthen vessel, and
that in our flesh dwelleth no perfection. These recollections
should make us very humble, and lead us to cling closely to the
Lord, and to fear and abhor any attitude of conduct and even of
thought that would in any measure seem to antagonize the divine
will. Z'08-265 (Hymn 183) |
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NOVEMBER 7
Brother shall deliver up the brother to death. Matthew 10:21
ALAS, that this should be so —that the love of God should at any
time fail to constrain us so that we would not only turn from
his love and fellowship, but that the sword should be used to
smite down brethren! Get the picture impressed in our minds and
sealed in our hearts of coming days with spiritual Israel, when
brother shall be against brother, which the Lord will permit
just prior to the establishment of his kingdom. Let us resolve
that however others may fight, the weapons of our warfare shall
not be carnal and that our battling shall not be against those
who are the Lord's by covenant, but against the great Adversary.
Carnal weapons are not merely guns and swords, but more
injurious and death-dealing is the tongue when used to slander
and wound. God forbid that our tongues, wherewith we praise God,
should work injury to any man, but particularly to any of the
household of faith. Z'08-267 (Hymn 333) |
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NOVEMBER 8
Ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after
the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called. I
Corinthians 1:26
HOW strange! Yet it is just like the Lord to pass by the
self-righteous and the proud, and to declare that only those who
humble themselves shall be exalted and those that exalt
themselves shall be abased. This fact, then, that God will
accept none but the humble accounts for the fact that those who
have received the message in humility are chiefly the mean, the
ignoble. It is only the humble-minded, taught in the school of
Christ, who are able and willing to accept the ignoble ones who
rally to the Lord's standard and who may be accepted. To love
the ignoble signifies that we must view them from the divine
standpoint and love them as God loves them —not because of their
ignoble and mean qualities, but in spite of these; because of
their heart's desires toward God and righteousness. As we come
to love and appreciate all those who stand for and strive for
those principles, we take our position with God and view the
situation from the divine standpoint, having compassion upon
those who are weak and out of the way and doing all we can to
assist them, if they are of those who love righteousness and
hate iniquity and are striving in harmony with their ideals.
Z'08-326 (Hymn 194) |
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NOVEMBER 9
Forsake not the assembling of ourselves together. Hebrews 10:25
AS DAVID desired to be near to the tabernacle, close to the
Lord, so we, members of the Beloved, should find ourselves
longing for a closer walk with God, a nearness to his
arrangement of the mercy seat, Christ Jesus. This will signify a
desire to be near to the members of his body, the church, to
have fellowship with them, because the condition of things is
represented as being the “holy” of the tabernacle, with only a
veil between this and that glorious condition beyond the veil.
And is it not so that whoever desires to be near to the Lord and
to those in fellowship with him, along the lines of the new
nature, will give heed to the privileges of showing forth his
praise by manifesting their love for the brethren and their
confidence and faith in the Lord and in his light and wisdom and
love? Z'08-311 (Hymn 329) |
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NOVEMBER 10
And He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for My
strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will
I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may
rest upon me. II Corinthians 12:9
AH, SAYS the apostle, if having this affliction means more
divine grace, then I am content to keep it and would be sorry to
part with it. Let us, dear friends, view our trials,
persecutions, difficulties, thus — as of divine permission for
our good. Let us be assured that he who has accepted us in the
bonds of love and who has begotten us with his Spirit and called
us sons, is not unmindful of our highest interests and would not
suffer us to be tried and tempted except as he would make all
such experiences work out harmoniously to our highest welfare.
Z'09-86 (Hymn 43) |
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NOVEMBER 11
And the hand of the Lord was with them: and a great number
believed, and turned unto the Lord. Acts 11:21
THE word hand as a symbol signifies power and direction. Here we
have the true secret of all successful Christian work which will
have the divine approval. Each individual Christian, so to
speak, is a finger of the Lord....If we would be used and useful
as God's agencies, ambassadors, we should seek to be impulsed
and guided by him. We are to hear his voice through the
Scriptures and we are to realize his energizing power in the
spirit of the truth....Nor are we to gauge the success of our
endeavors by the great numbers, as in this case, which was quite
exceptional. We should, however, expect some fruitage to our
labors, and if peradventure, by unwisdom in our methods of
presenting the message we have lost our influence as
“ambassadors for God,” we should seek to appreciate the lesson
of greater wisdom and should look to the Lord for an open door
to service along some other lines or in some other place, where
our lessons of experience could be put to practical effect.
Z'09-90 (Hymn 275) |
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NOVEMBER 12
Certainly I will be with thee. Exodus 3:12
OUR text is an inspiration to the Lord's people everywhere and
at all times, when endeavoring properly to do any part of the
Lord's work, heeding his call through the Word. If God be for
us, and if God be with us, who can prevail against us
eventually? There may be with us, as there were with Moses and
his service, various difficulties, trials, vexations, and
disappointments, for we have the treasure of the new nature in
earthen vessels, and the weaknesses and imperfections and
shortsightedness of these are sure at times to cause us
difficulties and discouragements. On such occasions our duty is
to turn the eyes of our understanding to him whom we serve,
whose ambassadors and representatives we are, and to recall his
promise, “Certainly I will be with thee.” This means eventual
victory, though perhaps through devious ways that we know not,
and expect not, which nevertheless will ultimately prove to have
been advantageous to us and to our Master's glory. Z'01-361
(Hymn 126) |
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NOVEMBER 13
Prepare to meet thy God. Amos 4:12
THE right way to prepare to meet God and to hear his decision
respecting the character is not as usually supposed, to begin to
get pious when we feel the approach of sickness or death or in
the presence of calamity. From the moment we become believers in
Christ and turn from sin and seek forgiveness and thus become
eligible to God's favor, we are urged to present our bodies
living sacrifices to him and thus to receive of him an adoption
of his Spirit to fellowship. This in turn proves to be but the
entrance way to the school of Christ, where they are to be
taught as sons of God, to be prepared for the glorious work in
association with their Redeemer in his glorious kingdom. As they
grow in grace and knowledge, they grow in appreciation of divine
favor. Such as are in this attitude of heart are prepared to
meet their God at any time. Indeed, their meeting with him has
already begun, and anything that will serve in any degree to
hinder its pleasurable continuance will be a disaster indeed.
Z'08-266 (Hymn 162) |
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NOVEMBER 14
Blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.
John 20:29
NOW, while it is dark, before the Sun of Righteousness has
arisen with healing in his beams, to scatter all the doubts and
fears and hindrances, the Lord puts a premium upon faith, and
only those who can and do exercise it may and do have certain
rewards, privileges, opportunities, and blessings. Of the
Gospel-age little flock it is written, we “walk by faith and not
by sight.” We endure, “as seeing him who is invisible”; we run
for a crown and a throne which we may see only with the eye of
faith; we obey the voice of him who speaketh from heaven, but
whose voice now is the still small voice, which only the few who
exercise faith can hear, appreciate, and understand. By and by
the time will come when this voice shall shake the earth and
cause the knowledge of the Lord to fill the whole earth.
Obedience then will be proper and bring a blessing; but
obedience now, even unto sacrifice of earthly interests in
following the footsteps of him who set us an example, brings the
greater blessings —the blessings which pertain not only to the
life which now is, but also to that which is to come —the
blessings of glory, honor, and immortality. Z'01-141 (Hymn 46) |
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NOVEMBER 15
Make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be
turned out of the way. Hebrews 12:13
WHAT does the apostle mean? He does not mean that we should
literally shovel a path smooth, nor does he refer to our literal
feet. All will agree to this. Evidently the apostle's teaching
is that each one of the Lord's sheep has more or less of earthly
blemish (imperfection), in consequence of which lameness it is
difficult for him to make steady progress in the footsteps of
our Lord. He urges that as we find out what our weaknesses are,
physical and mental, we should endeavor to shape our course of
life accordingly, so as to be able to overcome the difficulties
of the way and the besetments of the Adversary. We make the
straight paths by choosing such a course as will not
unnecessarily aggravate and excite our weaknesses, and thus make
us the more lame. We are to seek to overcome the lameness, and
to do so, are not only to pray, “Abandon us not in temptation,”
but are to seek to avoid the temptation in all ways. How do we
do this? We answer, by the exercise of our wills, or
determinations —by mental resolutions; or, in other words, by
making vows or solemn promises to the Lord respecting our
determinations to take the proper course. Anyone, therefore, who
has followed the apostle's injunction in our text has made vows
to the Lord, which he should be faithful in performing, if he
would come off a victor and have the divine approval. Z'09-75
(Hymn 135) |
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NOVEMBER 16
And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the song
of the Lamb. Revelation 15:3
WE WHO hope to be members of the bride class and joint-heirs
with Him are expected to learn to sing the song of Moses the
servant and the song of the Lamb, for “worthy is the Lamb that
was slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and might,
and honor, and glory, and blessing.” Realizing that this new
song is the tidings of great joy which shall be to all people,
we are correspondingly interested to know to what extent we have
learned —to what extent we can sing it now. We find indeed that
it is a life study to learn this lesson. We rejoice in the
privilege to bear witness of our God to all those who have ears
to hear, even though doing so brings reproaches, frowns,
opposition. Our patience and our faith are to continue, and we
are to wait for the kingdom in its beauty and the glorious
“change” in ourselves to tell to others more effectively than
ever the blessed tidings. Z'08-269 (Hymn 79) |
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NOVEMBER 17
Jesus Christ maketh thee whole. Acts 9:34
OUR text is from Peter's words to Aeneas, the paralytic, whom
the apostle found at Lydda and healed. We are not told that he
was one of the saints; the presumption, therefore, is that he
was not, but that at most he was a friend to some of them, and
that thus the apostle's attention was drawn to him. The fact
that he had been bedfast, helpless, eight years, testified that
the healing was a miracle. Its fame spread abroad, and resulted,
we are told, in the drawing of many unto the Lord and to the
church. Thus did the Lord establish the church and attract to it
those who were in the right attitude of heart, using miracles
then, as he now uses other means. Those miracles cannot have
lasted much longer than the apostles themselves, the gifts of
healing etc., being granted only through the laying on of hands
of the apostles —and the twelve had no successors — the heavenly
Jerusalem had twelve foundations, and no more, and in them were
written the names of the twelve apostles, and no others.
Z'02-105 (Hymn 264) |
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NOVEMBER 18
I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a
blessing. Genesis 12:2
THE fulfilment has already commenced in our hearts, but that is
not the end, not the fulness, not the ultimate meaning of the
promises; for by and by this holy nation (the body of Christ,
the church), shall be great indeed when filled with the divine
blessing and power as God's glorified kingdom. We realize too
that while it is our blessed privilege to let shine upon others
the light which the Lord by his Spirit has graciously shined
into our hearts, nevertheless our time for bestowing the great
blessing is still future —that it belongs to the period for
which we pray, “Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth.” We
reason that although our name may be now cast out as evil, and
the reproaches bestowed upon the Head of the body may fall also
upon us, his members, nevertheless the time is surely hastening
when the name Christ shall be great throughout all the earth,
and that being the name of our Bridegroom it will also be our
name as his bride and joint-heir. We look forward with joy to
the time when the holy nation, now so misunderstood and
considered a peculiar people, shall recompense the poor,
blinded, Satan-deceived world and nominal church for all the
evils inflicted upon The Christ, Head and body, by blessing
them, returning good for evil in the highest degree —instructing
and uplifting all who will to return to divine favor. Z'01-231
(Hymn 310) |
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NOVEMBER 19
He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his
God, and he shall be my son. Revelation 21:7
THOSE addressed are not the bride class, selected during the
Gospel age, but the sheep class of Matthew 25 —such of mankind
as during the Millennial Age become the Lord's sheep and obey
his voice. To these at the end of the millennial age, in harmony
with the Father's plan he says, “Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world.” They are not invited to inherit the kingdom prepared for
us, in joint-heirship with the Lord, the heavenly kingdom. But
they shall inherit the earth, the purchased possession —they
shall come back into all the good estate of father Adam which he
lost for himself and his children through disobedience, but
which Jesus redeemed with his own precious blood, and will
restore at the close of the Millennium to all the children of
Adam who shall have accepted his gracious favors and been
regenerated by him, and thus become his sons, and he their God
—their father. Z'01-201 (Hymn 214) |
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NOVEMBER 20
Wait, I say, on the Lord. Psalm 27:14
SOME of us have learned by experience that to attempt to go
before the Lord in any matter is dangerous. We are not wise
enough to guide ourselves. Indeed, as the poet has expressed it,
“We fear to touch Things that involve so much.” If we could
recognize the delicacy of our situation at times, it would make
us more modest and cautious. Not only our own interests and
eternal glory are at stake, but also the interests of other
fellow-members of the body of Christ. A rash word, a thoughtless
action, inconsiderateness in any sense of the word might lead to
unfavorable conditions of heart, and, even though we gained the
promise, it might be by tribulation rather than by the way in
which the Lord would lead. Z'08-267 (Hymn 313) |
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NOVEMBER 21
Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ
shall give thee light. Ephesians 5:14
WHEN the believing, converted, consecrated, begotten, sleeping
“new creature” has been awakened — when the eyes and ears of his
understanding have been opened to see the true conditions of the
world, and to realize himself as a new creature in Christ —his
next duty is to “arise.” His arising from the dead signifies the
activity of the new mind, the new will, in directing and
controlling his mortal body. This implies effort; the putting
forth of all the energy of the new creature. It requires no
effort to sleep, or to lie after one gets awake; but to rise
requires the exercise of every muscle. Arising is not an
instantaneous act, but a process requiring one movement after
another, until it is fully accomplished; so also is the arising
of the new creature from the dead conditions of sin and trespass
against the laws of righteousness and truth and purity; it
requires his every effort, and is a work of time. Indeed all
experienced Christians who have followed the apostle's
injunction to arise from the dead have found that it requires
days, months, years, of energetic effort to rise up above,
superior to the fallen tendencies of his own flesh, common to
the world of mankind. He finds that even after he has risen
fully up, so that he does not wilfully practice sin, nor
countenance it in any sense or degree, he still must be on his
guard lest he be entrapped by the weaknesses of his mortal body;
or by the allurements of the world; or by the temptations of the
Adversary; and thus stumble again over some of the things of sin
and death from which he had arisen by the Lord's grace. Z'02-73
(Hymn 20) |
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NOVEMBER 22
Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Ephesians 5:20
AS FOR the days of national thanksgiving, we, as citizens of the
heavenly kingdom, have no special need of them; for every day
should be with us a day of thanksgiving for all things —for the
prosperity of our “holy nation” under the righteous authority of
Christ our King, for its peace and joy and its glorious hope,
for its privileges of spiritual enlightenment and blessing, for
the perfection of its laws and the shaping of its course and
destiny, and for the needed discipline as well, which is to
prepare it for its future exaltation and glory. Let the people
of the world and less enlightened Christians give thanks, as
doubtless many of them do, out of a sincere heart, for the
common blessings of this present life —for the air and sunshine
and rain, for bountiful harvests and for seasons of comparative
peace with the nations abroad. Yes, blessed be God, out of his
abundant mercy these rich blessings are common to all —to the
just and to the unjust —and it is well that the attention of all
men should be called to mark and consider them....And while the
world thus marks and rejoices in, and in some cases returns
thanks to God for the truly glorious common blessings which our
loving and benevolent Father showers alike upon the evil and the
just, let our hearts not only rejoice in these things, but also
in the higher spiritual favors bestowed upon the sons of God,
giving thanks always and for all things unto God the Father in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Z'93-12 (Hymn 324) |
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NOVEMBER 23
He shall drink of the brook in the way: therefore shall he lift
up the head. Psalm 110:7
WE PERCEIVE that if it was necessary for our glorious Lord from
the heavenly courts to drink of the brook of experience, and
gain wisdom by the things he suffered, endured, and thereby to
demonstrate his confidence in God, it is equally necessary that
all the members of his body should likewise drink of the brook
in the way if they would hope to share with the Lord in the
kingdom blessings —glory, honor, and immortality, the divine
nature. Our dear Master's time for drinking at the brook is
past, yet the lessons and encouragements therefrom are still
before us in the Scripture records. It is now our time to drink
of the brook of experience —to learn the lessons that are
necessary to our preparation for the kingdom. It is not enough
that we have tasted of the brook of experience, that we have
learned something of obedience, that we have endured some
trials, that on some occasions we have learned obedience through
the things we have suffered; we must continue drinking until we
can gladly say, Father, thy will, not ours be done! If we drink
not of the brook in the way we shall not share in the glory to
follow. Z'02-13 (Hymn 222) |
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NOVEMBER 24
The Word of the Lord was unto them precept upon precept;...line
upon line. Isaiah 28:13
THE Christian's experience is a continual schooling. Daily we
are learning more and more about ourselves and about the wisdom
and justice of God. As we learn these lessons day by day, we are
learning more to reprobate and correct in ourselves. In thus
discovering our own imperfections, we should learn, as a matter
of course, not to expect perfection in others; and we should
give them credit for doing their best to exemplify the highest
ideals which they have in respect to the unity and perfection
required for membership in the body of Christ. Z'12-337 (Hymn
198) |
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NOVEMBER 25
As an eagle stirreth up her nest. Deuteronomy 32:11
THUS does the Lord at times permit trials, persecutions, etc.,
which outwardly seem to imply the wrecking of most precious
interests, and sometimes cause surprise to his people by the
roughness and jarring conditions. Nevertheless, under divine
supervision, the stirring up of the nest and the throwing of
responsibility upon his people can be made advantageous to them,
strengthening, helping them. Then comes a time of rest and
opportunity for spiritual edification, comfort, growth in grace
and knowledge. Happy are those who, in the time of the stirring
up of the nest, are rightly exercised by the Lord's providences
and taught of him and made more and more active in his service
—the service of righteousness, truth, and love. Z'09-55 (Hymn
307) |
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NOVEMBER 26
I will show him how great things he must suffer for My name's
sake. Acts 9:16
IS ANY other service than that of our Lord ever entered on these
terms —promises of suffering? Surely not. Yet how honest for the
Lord not to call his disciples under any misapprehension of the
facts! We are called to suffer with him —to sacrifice ourselves,
our earthly interests —to share his cross, and by these
experiences to prove that we have been begotten of his Spirit,
and that it has been shed abroad in our hearts and constituted
us copies of God's dear Son. Faithfulness to this cause insures
the reward of joint-heirship with our Redeemer in his kingdom;
nor can those kingdom honors be hoped for on any other terms.
The apostle understood this, and seems to give the thought also
that the more any of the Lord's followers can share of the
sufferings of Christ, in the flesh, proportionately will be his
share in the glory which by and by shall be revealed to us —in
the “members of his body.” The expression, “For my name's sake,”
is comprehensive. It includes everything connected with the
divine plan, of which Jesus, the Messiah, is the center. It
includes sufferings for the truth's sake, because the truth is
vitally connected with the “only name.” It includes the brethren
because they have named the name of Christ and they are under
his name as members of his body. It includes all the work of the
millennial kingdom because he is the Head of it all, and his
name, his honor, is associated with it all. Let us, therefore,
be glad of any sufferings which come to us directly or
indirectly, because of our faithfulness to the “precious name”
and these various interests which are associated with it.
Z'09-86 (Hymn 177) |
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NOVEMBER 27
Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over
the which the Holy Spirit hath made you overseers, to feed the
church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood. Acts
20:28
THE elders everywhere need to take special heed, because in
every trial the most favored and most prominent have the
severest besetments and tests. Hence the apostle exhorts, “Be
not many of you teachers, brethren, knowing that a man shall
receive the more severe testing.” We, likewise, exhort all the
elders who in heart are pure, unselfish, that they have nothing
but love and good wishes for all mankind, and that they become
more and more filled with the fruits and graces of the Holy
Spirit, taking heed also to the flock. Remember that the flock
is the Lord's and that you have a responsibility to the Lord, as
well as to them. Remember, that you are to watch for their souls
(interests) as those who must give an account to the great Chief
Shepherd. Remember, that the principal thing is love, in all;
and while not neglecting doctrines, give special heed to the
development of the Lord's Spirit among the various members of
his body, that thus they may become “meet for the inheritance of
the saints in light,” and according to the divine will, be not
suffered to stumble in this evil day, but having done all to
stand complete in Christ, his body, his members, his joint-sacrificers,
his joint-heirs. Z'09-73 (Hymn 183) |
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NOVEMBER 28
God is light, and in him is no darkness at all. I John 1:5
THE Scriptures represent God as being a light. In the tabernacle
he was represented by a brilliant light on the mercy seat,
called the Shekinah glory. Our Lord Jesus, filled with the light
of the Holy Spirit, was called “the true Light.” And it was he
that said of his followers, “Ye are the light of the world....
Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good
works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” Similarly
the divine power at Pentecost was represented by flames of
light, cloven tongues of fire. Similarly the Spirit of the Lord
from his Word is in the Scriptures pictured as the blaze of
light from a lamp. As we read, Thy Word is a lamp to my feet, a
lantern to my footsteps. The flame of sacred love, the Holy
Spirit of the Father and of the Son, was enkindled in our hearts
through the Word of grace and the impartation of the Holy
Spirit. In proportion as we have fed this flame (the Spirit)
with the truth, we have become burning and shining lights in the
world — the Spirit of the Lord in us. Z'09-188 (Hymn 36) |
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NOVEMBER 29
I am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive
forevermore. Revelation 1:18
THERE is no more important lesson in connection with the Gospel
than that of the resurrection of our Lord Jesus. The death of
Jesus indeed exhibits to us his love, and the love of the Father
on our behalf. But in the divine plan, in order for the proper
benefit to come to man from the death of Jesus, he must rise
from the dead; he must become the Captain of our Salvation, as
well as our Redeemer. A dead Christ could not be our Savior; as
it is declared, “Because I live, ye shall live also.” ( John
14:19 )...It is in full accord with the scriptural presentation
that joy thrills our hearts as we come to the resurrection
morning of the millennial day and the promise that therein and
thereby the Lord shall wipe away all tears from off all faces.
Z'08-154, 156 (Hymn 111) |
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NOVEMBER 30
Having an High Priest over the house of God; let us draw near
with a true heart in full assurance of faith. Hebrews 10:21, 22
IF THE child of God would draw very near, and would have the blessed
realization of the Father's smile of approval continually, he must
seek to have a conscience void of offense toward God and toward men
—a conscience which can truthfully say, I am striving to do that
which would be pleasing to the Lord, that which is in full harmony
with my covenant of sacrifice; and I am striving also to do that
which would justly have the approval of righteous men. Nothing short
of this is at all permissible in those who have consecrated
themselves to be members of the royal priesthood, to sacrifice their
lives in the Lord's service that they may reign with him. Let us
never forget that he who has begun this good work in us changes
never, and that if we keep our hearts in harmony with him, if our
faith is still firm and clear in the great atonement made for our
sins, and we continually renew our consecration to him, keeping our
all on the altar of sacrifice, letting the Lord consume it in his
own way, seeking not our own will, our own way, but his will alone,
we have every reason to have full confidence that this good work in
us will be finished, that we shall enter with joy into the
everlasting kingdom of our Lord, and shall hear his blessed words of
approval, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Z'14-90 (Hymn
241) |
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