Monday, July 19, 2010

A Divine Curse

from The Christian Reader:

A Divine Curse


“Trust in the Lord with all your heart; and lean not unto your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5-6)







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The constant exercise of prayer makes every burden light, and smooths every rugged step of a child of God: it is this only that keeps down his trials; not that he is ever exempt from them—no, it is “through much tribulation that he is to enter the kingdom”—he is a disciple of the cross, his religion is that of the cross, he is a follower of Him who died upon the cross, and entire exemption from the cross he never expects until he passes to the possession of the crown. But he may pray down his crosses: prayer will lessen their number, and will mitigate their severity.



The man whose walk is far from God, whose frame is cold, and worldly, and careless, if he be a true child of the covenant, one of the Lord’s family, may expect crosses and trials to increase upon every step he advances towards the kingdom. Ah! little do many of the tried, afflicted, and constantly disappointed believers think how closely related are these very trials, and afflictions, and disappointments, to their restraining of prayer before God; every step seems attended with some new cross, every scheme is blasted by some adverse wind, every effort is foiled, disappointment follows disappointment, wave attends upon wave, nothing they attempt prospers, all they enter upon fails, and everything seems against them.



Oh, could we pass behind the scene, what should we discover? a deserted throne of grace! Were we to divulge the secret, and place it in the form of a charge against the believer, what would it be? “You have restrained prayer before God!” The scheme was framed without prayer; the enterprise was entered upon without prayer; the effort was made without prayer—God has blown upon it, and all has come to nothing. No marvel, God was not consulted, the Lord was not acknowledged, His permission was not asked, His wisdom was not sought, His blessing was not craved; and so He blew upon it all! The precious injunction is, “In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.” Where this is honored, there is the divine blessing; where it is slighted, there is the divine curse.



by Octavius Winslow, from Morning Thoughts

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