Devotion 1
[Diposting Oleh : Bpk. Januar Johnly Tendean]
Morning & Evening Morning & Evening
Morning
After that ye have suffered awhile, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you. — 1 Peter 5:10
You have seen the arch of heaven as it spans the plain: glorious are
its colours, and rare its hues. It is beautiful, but, alas, it passes
away, and lo, it is not. The fair colours give way to the fleecy clouds,
and the sky is no longer brilliant with the tints of heaven. It is not
established. How can it be? A glorious show made up of transitory
sun-beams and passing rain-drops, how can it abide? The graces of the
Christian character must not resemble the rainbow in its transitory
beauty, but, on the contrary, must be stablished, settled, abiding.
Seek, O believer, that every good thing you have may be an abiding
thing. May your character not be a writing upon the sand, but an
inscription upon the rock! May your faith be no “baseless fabric of a
vision,” but may it be builded of material able to endure that awful
fire which shall consume the wood, hay, and stubble of the hypocrite.
May you be rooted and grounded in love. May your convictions be deep,
your love real, your desires earnest. May your whole life be so settled
and established, that all the blasts of hell, and all the storms of
earth shall never be able to remove you. But notice how this blessing of
being “stablished in the faith” is gained. The apostle’s words point us
to suffering as the means employed—“After that ye have suffered
awhile.” It is of no use to hope that we shall be well rooted if no
rough winds pass over us. Those old gnarlings on the root of the oak
tree, and those strange twistings of the branches, all tell of the many
storms that have swept over it, and they are also indicators of the
depth into which the roots have forced their way. So the Christian is
made strong, and firmly rooted by all the trials and storms of life.
Shrink not then from the tempestuous winds of trial, but take comfort,
believing that by their rough discipline God is fulfilling this
benediction to you.
Evening
Tell ye your children of it, and let your children tell their children, and their children another generation. — Joel 1:3
In this simple way, by God’s grace, a living testimony for truth is
always to be kept alive in the land—the beloved of the Lord are to hand
down their witness for the gospel, and the covenant to their heirs, and
these again to their next descendants. This is our first duty, we are to
begin at the family hearth: he is a bad preacher who does not commence
his ministry at home. The heathen are to be sought by all means, and the
highways and hedges are to be searched, but home has a prior claim, and
woe unto those who reverse the order of the Lord’s arrangements. To
teach our children is a personal duty; we cannot delegate it to Sunday
school teachers, or other friendly aids; these can assist us, but cannot
deliver us from the sacred obligation; proxies and sponsors are wicked
devices in this case: mothers and fathers must, like Abraham, command
their households in the fear of God, and talk with their offspring
concerning the wondrous works of the Most High. Parental teaching is a
natural duty—who so fit to look to the child’s well-being as those who
are the authors of his actual being? To neglect the instruction of our
offspring is worse than brutish. Family religion is necessary for the
nation, for the family itself, and for the church of God. By a thousand
plots Popery is covertly advancing in our land, and one of the most
effectual means for resisting its inroads is left almost neglected,
namely, the instruction of children in the faith. Would that parents
would awaken to a sense of the importance of this matter. It is a
pleasant duty to talk of Jesus to our sons and daughters, and the more
so because it has often proved to be an accepted work, for God has saved
the children through the parents’ prayers and admonitions. May every
house into which this volume shall come honour the Lord and receive his
smile.
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