With All Thine Heart

Jul 29, 2008 at 19:52 o\clock

Opportunities in Disguise

Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Job 38:22-23 

Our Great Opportunities

"Hast thou seen the treasures of the hail, which I have reserved against the day of trouble?" (Job 38:22-23).

Our trials are great opportunities. Too often we look on them as great obstacles. It would be a haven of rest and an inspiration of unspeakable power if each of us would henceforth recognize every difficult situation as one of God's chosen ways of proving to us His love and look around for the signals of His glorious manifestations; then, indeed, would every cloud become a rainbow, and every mountain a path of ascension and a scene of transfiguration.

If we will look back upon the past, many of us will find that the very time our Heavenly Father has chosen to do the kindest things for us, and given us the richest blessings, has been the time we were strained and shut in on every side. God's jewels are often sent us in rough packages and by dark liveried servants, but within we find the very treasures of the King's palace and the Bridegroom's love. --A. B. Simpson

Trust Him in the dark, honor Him with unwavering confidence even in the midst of mysterious dispensations, and the recompense of such faith will be like the moulting of the eagle's plumes, which was said to give them a new lease of youth and strength. J. R. Macduff

"If we could see beyond today
As God can see;
If all the clouds should roll away,
The shadows flee;
O'er present griefs we would not fret.
Each sorrow we would soon forget,
For many joys are waiting yet

For you and me.

"If we could know beyond today
As God doth know,
Why dearest treasures pass away
And tears must flow;
And why the darkness leads to light,
Why dreary paths will soon grow bright;
Some day life's wrongs will be made right,
Faith tells us so.

"'If we could see, if we could know,'
We often say,
But God in love a veil doth throw
Across our way;
We cannot see what lies before,
And so we cling to Him the more,
He leads us till this life is o'er;
Trust and obey."

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 27, 2008 at 22:03 o\clock

God's Resources

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Malachi 3:10 

My Father's Giving

"Prove me now" (Mal. 3:10).

What is God saying here but this: "My child, I still have windows in Heaven. They are yet in service. The bolts slide as easily as of old. The hinges have not grown rusty. I would rather fling them open, and pour forth, than keep them shut, and hold back. I opened them for Moses, and the sea parted. I opened them for Joshua, and Jordan rolled back. I opened them for Gideon, and hosts fled. I will open them for you--if you will only let Me. On this side of the windows, Heaven is the same rich storehouse as of old. The fountains and streams still overflow. The treasure rooms are still bursting with gifts. The lack is not on my side. It is on yours. I am waiting. Prove Me now. Fulfill the conditions, on your part. Bring in the tithes. Give Me a chance. --Selected

I can never forget my mother's very brief paraphrase of Malachi 3:10. The verse begins, "Bring ye the whole tithe in," and it ends up with "I will pour" the blessing out till you'll be embarrassed for space. Her paraphrase was this: Give all He asks; take all He promises." --S. D. Gordon

The ability of God is beyond our prayers, beyond our largest prayers! I have been thinking of some of the petitions that have entered into my supplication innumerable times. What have I asked for? I have asked for a cupful, and the ocean remains! I have asked for a sunbeam, and the sun abides! My best asking falls immeasurably short of my Father's giving: it is beyond that we can ask. --J. H. Jowett

"All the rivers of Thy grace I claim,
Over every promise write my name"
(Eph. 1:8-19).

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 25, 2008 at 17:08 o\clock

John Owen Quotes

Quotes to reflect upon 

Did you never run for shelter in a storm, and find fruit which you expected not? Did you never go to God for safeguard, driven by outward storms, and there find unexpected fruit?

John Owen


It is not the glorious battlements, the painted windows, the crouching gargoyles that support a building, but the stones that lie unseen in or upon the earth. It is often those who are despised and trampled on that bear up the weight of a whole nation.

John Owen 

I will not judge a person to be spiritually dead whom I have judged formerly to have had spiritual life, though I see him at present in a swoon (faint)as to all evidences of the spiritual life. And the reason why I will not judge him so is this -- because if you judge a person dead, you neglect him, you leave him; but if you judge him in a swoon,(faint) though never so dangerous, you use all means for the retrieving of his life.

John Owen


Common experience declares how momentary and how useless are those violent fits and gusts of endeavours which proceed from fear and uncertainty, both in things spiritual and things temporal, or civil. Whilst men are under the power of actual impressions from such fears, they will convert to God, yea, they will turn in a moment, and perfect their holiness in an instant; but so soon as that impression wears off (as it will do on every occasion, and upon none at all) such persons are as dead and cold towards God as the lead or iron, which but now ran in a fiery stream, is now when the heat is departed from it.

John Owen

It is not the distance of the earth from the sun, nor the sun's withdrawing itself, that makes a dark and gloomy day; but the interposition of clouds and vaporous exhalations. Neither is thy soul beyond the reach of the promise, nor does God withdraw Himself; but the vapours of thy carnal, unbelieving heart do cloud thee.

John Owen 

When someone acts weak, negligent, or casual in a duty - performing it carelessly or lifelessly, without any genuine satisfaction, joy, or interest - he has already entered into the spirit that will lead him into trouble. How many we see today who have departed from warmhearted service and have become negligent, careless, and indifferent in their prayer life or in the reading of the Scriptures. For each one who escapes this peril, a hundred others will be ensnared. Then it may be too late to acknowledge, "I neglected private prayer," or "I did not meditate on God's Word," or "I did not hear what I should have listened to."

John Owen 

See in the meantime that your faith brings forth obedience, and God in due time will cause it to bring forth peace.

John Owen
 

A minister may fill his pews, his communion roll, the mouths of the public, but what that minister is on his knees in secret before God Almighty, that he is and no more.

John Owen

Let our hearts admit, "I am poor and weak. Satan is too subtle, too cunning, too powerful; he watches constantly for advantages over my soul. The world presses in upon me with all sorts of pressures, pleas, and pretences. My own corruption is violent, tumultuous, enticing, and entangling. As it conceives sin, it wars within me and against me. Occasions and opportunities for temptation are innumerable. No wonder I do not know how deeply involved I have been with sin. Therefore, on God alone will I rely for my keeping. I will continually look to Him.

John Owen

If we do not abide in prayer, we will abide in temptation. Let this be one aspect of our daily intercession: "God, preserve my soul, and keep my heart and all its ways so that I will not be entangled." When this is true in our lives, a passing temptation will not overcome us. We will remain free while others lie in bondage.

John Owen

To believe that He will preserve us is, indeed, a means of preservation. God will certainly preserve us, and make a way of escape for us out of the temptation, should we fall. We are to pray for what God has already promised. Our requests are to be regulated by His promises and commands. Faith embraces the promises and so finds relief.

John Owen

Sin aims always at the utmost; every time it rises up to tempt or entice, if it has its own way it will go out to the utmost sin in that kind. Every unclean thought or glance would be adultery if it could, every thought of unbelief would be atheism if allowed to develop. Every rise of lust, if it has its way reaches the height of villainy; it is like the grave that is never satisfied. The deceitfulness of sin is seen in that it is modest in its first proposals but when it prevails it hardens mens' hearts, and brings them to ruin.

John Owen

Your state is not at all to be measured by the opposition that sin makes to you, but by the opposition you make to it.

John Owen 

Without absolutes revealed from without by God Himself, we are left rudderless in a sea of conflicting ideas about manners, justice and right and wrong, issuing from a multitude of self-opinionated thinkers.

John Owen 

Let no man think to kill sin with few, easy, or gentle strokes. He who hath once smitten a serpent, if he follow not on his blow until it be slain, may repent that ever he began the quarrel. And so he who undertakes to deal with sin, and pursues it not constantly to the death.

John Owen

If we would talk less and pray more about them, things would be better than they are in the world: at least, we should be better enabled to bear them.

John Owen

Jul 23, 2008 at 19:54 o\clock

Minors Keys also

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Ephesians 5:20 

We Need Minor Keys Too

"Giving thanks always for all things unto God" (Eph. 5:20).

No matter what the source of the evil, if you are in God and surrounded by Him as by an atmosphere, all evil has to pass through Him before it comes to you. Therefore you can thank God for everything that comes, not for the sin of it, but for what God will bring out of it and through it. May God make our lives thanksgiving and perpetual praise, then He will make everything a blessing.

We once saw a man draw some black dots. We looked and could make nothing of them but an irregular assemblage of black dots. Then he drew a few lines, put in a few rests, then a clef at the beginning, and we saw these black dots were musical notes. On sounding them we were singing,

"Praise God from whom all blessings flow,
Praise Him all creatures here below."

There are many black dots and black spots in our lives, and we cannot understand why they are there or why God permitted them to come. But if we let God come into our lives, and adjust the dots in the proper way, and draw the lines He wants, and separate this from that, and put in the rests at the proper places; out of the black dots and spots in our lives He will make a glorious harmony. Let us not hinder Him in this glorious work! --C. H. P.

"Would we know that the major chords were sweet,
If there were no minor key?
Would the painter's work be fair to our eyes,
Without shade on land or sea?

"Would we know the meaning of happiness,
Would we feel that the day was bright,
If we'd never known what it was to grieve,
Nor gazed on the dark of night?"

Many men owe the grandeur of their lives to their tremendous difficulties. --C. H. Spurgeon

When the musician presses the black keys on the great organ, the music is as sweet as when he touches the white ones, but to get the capacity of the instrument he must touch them all. --Selected

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 21, 2008 at 19:06 o\clock

Trusting God no matter what

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Judges 6:39 

Degrees of Faith

"Let me prove, I pray thee, but this once with the fleece" (Judges 6:39).

There are degrees to faith. At one stage of Christian experience we cannot believe unless we have some sign or some great manifestation of feeling. We feel our fleece, like Gideon, and if it is wet we are willing to trust God. This may be true faith, but it is imperfect. It always looks for feeling or some token besides the Word of God. It marks quite an advance in faith when we trust God without feelings. It is blessed to believe without having any emotion.

There is a third stage of faith which even transcends that of Gideon and his fleece. The first phase of faith believes when there are favorable emotions, the second believes when there is the absence of feeling, but this third form of faith believes God and His Word when circumstances, emotions, appearances, people, and human reason all urge to the contrary. Paul exercised this faith in Acts 27:20, 25, "And when neither sun nor stars in many days appeared, and no small tempest lay on us, all hope that we should be saved was then taken away." Notwithstanding all this Paul said, "Wherefore, sirs, be of good cheer; for I believe God, that it shall be even as it was told me."

May God give us faith to fully trust His Word though everything else witness the other way. --C. H. P.

When is the time to trust?
Is it when all is calm,
When waves the victor's palm,
And life is one glad psalm
Of joy and praise?
Nay! but the time to trust
Is when the waves beat high,
When storm clouds fill
the sky,
And prayer is one long cry,
O help and save!

When is the time to trust?
Is it when friends are true?
Is it when comforts woo,
And in all we say and do
We meet but praise?
Nay! but the time to trust
Is when we stand alone,
And summer birds have flown,
And every prop is gone,
All else but God.

What is the time to trust?
Is it some future day,
When you have tried your way,
And learned to trust and pray
By bitter woe?
Nay! but the time to trust
Is in this moment's need,
Poor, broken, bruised reed!
Poor, troubled soul, make speed
To trust thy God.

What is the time to trust?
Is it when hopes beat high,
When sunshine gilds the sky,
And joy and ecstasy
Fill all the heart?
Nay! but the time to trust
Is when our joy is fled,
When sorrow bows the head,
And all is cold and dead,
All else but God.
--Selected

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 16, 2008 at 19:32 o\clock

Whatever the Cost

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Genesis 22:16-18 

Whatever the Cost

"'Because thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son...I will multiply thy seed as the stars of the heaven;…because thou hast obeyed my voice" (Gen. 22:16-18).

And from that day to this, men have been learning that when, at God's voice, they surrender up to Him the one thing above all else that was dearest to their very hearts, that same thing is returned to them by Him a thousand times over. Abraham gives up his one and only son, at God's call, and with this disappear all his hopes for the boy's life and manhood, and for a noble family bearing his name. But the boy is restored, the family becomes as the stars and sands in number, and out of it, in the fullness of time, appears Jesus Christ.

That is just the way God meets every real sacrifice of every child of His. We surrender all and accept poverty; and He sends wealth. We renounce a rich field of service; He sends us a richer one than we had dared to dream of. We give up all our cherished hopes, and die unto self; He sends us the life more abundant, and tingling joy. And the crown of it all is our Jesus Christ. For we can never know the fullness of the life that is in Christ until we have made Abraham's supreme sacrifice. The earthly founder of the family of Christ must commence by losing himself and his only son, just as the Heavenly Founder of that family did. We cannot be members of that family with the full privileges and joys of membership upon any other basis. --C. G. Trumbull

We sometimes seem to forget that what God takes He takes in fire; and that the only way to the resurrection life and the ascension mount is the way of the garden, the cross, and the grave.

Think not, O soul of man, that Abraham's was a unique and solitary experience. It is simply a specimen and pattern of God's dealings with all souls who are prepared to obey Him at whatever cost. After thou hast patiently endured, thou shalt receive the promise. The moment of supreme sacrifice shall be the moment of supreme and rapturous blessing. God's river, which is full of water, shall burst its banks, and pour upon thee a tide of wealth and grace. There is nothing, indeed, which God will not do for a man who dares to step out upon what seems to be the mist; though as he puts down his foot he finds a rock beneath him. --F. B. Meyer

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 9, 2008 at 23:10 o\clock

Devotion vs. Commotion

And after the earthquake a fire; but the LORD was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice. (1 Kings 19:12)

"The accent in the Church today," says Leonard Ravenhill, the English evangelist, "is not on devotion, but on commotion." Religious extroversion has been carried to such an extreme in evangelical circles that hardly anyone has the desire, to say nothing of the courage, to question the soundness of it. Externalism has taken over. God now speaks by the wind and the earthquake only; the still small voice can be heard no more. The whole religious machine has become a noisemaker. The adolescent taste which loves the loud horn and the thundering exhaust has gotten into the activities of modern Christians. The old question, "What is the chief end of man?" is now answered, "To dash about the world and add to the din thereof."…

We must begin the needed reform by challenging the spiritual validity of externalism. What a man is must be shown to be more important than what he does. While the moral quality of any act is imparted by the condition of the heart, there may be a world of religious activity which arises not from within but from without and which would seem to have little or no moral content. Such religious conduct is imitative or reflex. It stems from the current cult of commotion and possesses no sound inner life.

"Lord, quiet my heart today, in the midst of the rush and din of church busyness, that I might be able to hear the ’still small voice.’ Amen."

(A.W. Tozer, Tozer on Christian Leadership, July 7)

http://christianresearchnetwork.com/?p=5303 

Jul 7, 2008 at 19:48 o\clock

Blessing thru Trouble

Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Isaiah 49:2 

Polish Comes Through Trouble

"He hath made me a polished shaft" (Isa. 49:2).

There is a very famous "Pebble Beach" at Pescadero, on the California coast. The long line of white surf comes up with its everlasting roar, and rattles and thunders among the stones on the shore. They are caught in the arms of the pitiless waves, and tossed and rolled, and rubbed together, and ground against the sharp-grained cliffs. Day and night forever the ceaseless attrition goes on--never any rest. And the result?

Tourists from all the world flock thither to gather the round and beautiful stones. They are laid up in cabinets; they ornament the parlor mantels. But go yonder, around the point of the cliff that breaks off the force of the sea; and up in that quiet cove, sheltered from the storms, and lying ever in the sun, you shall find abundance of pebbles that have never been chosen by the traveler.

Why are these left all the years through unsought? For the simple reason that they have escaped all the turmoil and attrition of the waves, and the quiet and peace have left them as they found them, rough and angular and devoid of beauty. Polish comes through trouble.

Since God knows what niche we are to fill, let us trust Him to shape us to it. Since He knows what work we are to do, let us trust Him to drill us to the proper preparation.

"O blows that smite! O hurts that pierce
This shrinking heart of mine!
What are ye but the Master's tools
Forming a work Divine?"

"Nearly all God's jewels are crystallized tears."

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 3, 2008 at 19:09 o\clock

Plowing our Lives

Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Isaiah 28:24 

Master Plowman

"Doth the plowman plow all day to sow?" (Isa. 28:24).

One day in early summer I walked past a beautiful meadow. The grass was as soft and thick and fine as an immense green Oriental rug. In one corner stood a fine old tree, a sanctuary for numberless wild birds; the crisp, sweet air was full of their happy songs. Two cows lay in the shade, the very picture of content.

Down by the roadside the saucy dandelion mingled his gold with the royal purple of the wild violet.

I leaned against the fence for a long time, feasting my hungry eyes, and thinking in my soul that God never made a fairer spot than my lovely meadow.

The next day I passed that way again, and lo! the hand of the despoiler had been there. A plowman and his great plow, now standing idle in the furrow, had in a day wrought a terrible havoc. Instead of the green grass there was turned up to view the ugly, bare, brown earth; instead of the singing birds there were only a few hens industriously scratching for worms. Gone were the dandelion and the pretty violet. I said in my grief, "How could any one spoil a thing so fair?"

Then my eyes were opened by some unseen hand, and I saw a vision, a vision of a field of ripe corn ready for the harvest. I could see the giant, heavily laden stalks in the autumn sun; I could almost hear the music of the wind as it would sweep across the golden tassels. And before I was aware, the brown earth took on a splendor it had not had the day before.

Oh, that we might always catch the vision of an abundant harvest, when the great Master Plowman comes, as He often does, and furrows through our very souls, uprooting and turning under that which we thought most fair, and leaving for our tortured gaze only the bare and the unbeautiful. --Selected

Why should I start at the plough of my Lord, that maketh the deep furrows on my soul? I know He is no idle husbandman, He purposeth a crop. --Samuel Rutherford

This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jul 2, 2008 at 18:06 o\clock

Letters of Samuel Rutherford

A Review by Rev Roderick MacLeod of Letters of Samuel Rutherford.

This is a compilation of 365 letters written by Samuel Rutherford in times of severe ecclesiastical trials in Scotland. They span a period from 1627 (possibly 1624) to 1661. This is the second reprint the Banner of Truth has produced of the 1891 edition, which was edited by Andrew Bonar. There are over 700 pages of letters, a glossary of terms, notes elucidating the text and other material of antiquarian interest, and useful indices – of persons and subjects. The book also contains a useful 30-page historical sketch of the author; several pages give a helpful summary of the letters. The book closes with the “Last Words”, A R Cousin’s extracts from the letters, turning into poetry some of Rutherford’s “most remarkable utterances”.

Apart from a few exceptions, these are private letters and they bear the marks of such. Many, if not all of them, bear a pastoral character – they are the utterances of a minister of Jesus Christ who is about the business of His high and honourable calling. In them we hear the spiritual heartbeat of a true and able minister of the New Testament, and it would be good if, in reading them, we would acquire a little proficiency in the divine art of drawing from the same fountain of “grace for grace” that he drew from. The recipients are various: men and women, ministers and elders, nobility and commoners. The letters embody the spirit of the words of Jude “Beloved, when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to write unto you, and exhort [you] that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints” (Jude 1:3).

Having been asked to review Rutherford’s Letters, I have found it difficult to offer a critical appraisal of these most intimate expressions of the heart of this holy servant of Jesus Christ. I will therefore attempt to weigh this spiritual gold in the scales of another. When Dr John Kennedy, in The Days of the Fathers in Ross-shire, described the gospel work of ministers as (1) self-denied, (2) earnest, (3) faithful, (4) wise, (5) powerful and (6) discriminating, he was describing its character in every age. I think the reader of these letters will discover that Rutherford conducted his ministry with a heart motivated, to an unusual degree, by these same heavenly principles. We will refer in turn to Kennedy’s characteristics.

Self-denied. Samuel Rutherford’s theological abilities had already been recognised; he was later to become Professor of Theology in St Andrews University. Such a man might have been allowed to express himself in abstruse, technical terms, attracting much admiration from a certain class of people. However, like his Master, he chose to express eternal verities in pictures drawn by words, which the weakest intellect could not fail to understand. What Kennedy says of the preaching of others, we may say of the writing of Rutherford: “There are some who preach before the people, like actors on the stage, to display themselves and to please their audience. Not such were the self-denied ministers of Ross-shire.” Not such also were the self-denied letters of Rutherford. It is true that self-denial manifests itself in different ways in different men and in different times, and some find fault with Rutherford’s style. But it is to be feared that these critics thrive on the sap of a less noble vine and have learned little practical divinity in the school of self-denial. While there is a need for learned treatises (of which Rutherford wrote not a few), these letters are characterised by a pastor’s delight to reach the poorest of Christ’s afflicted ones.

Earnest. Men of a certain bent often tickle the ears of their hearers with fine questions, cleverly propounded and wonderfully resolved. They scratch the itching ears of a godless generation who suppose they have a specialised knowledge in high matters. It is no concern to them that Christ’s wounded children languish without spiritual balm. Let us consult Kennedy again. He speaks of those “who preach over their people. Studying for the highest, instead of doing so for the lowest, in intelligence, they elaborate learned treatises, which float like the mist, when delivered, over the heads of their hearers. Not such were the earnest preachers of Ross-shire.” Not such also were the letters of Rutherford. Eternity is stamped on them. The true way thither is carefully expounded. A searching description of those who are in that way is insisted on. The hypocritical heart is lamented and laid bare.

The solemn issue of the eternal state of immortal souls is a reality in these earnest letters of Rutherford. “Let [leave] feathers and shadows alone to children, and go seek your Well-beloved. Your only errand to the world is to woo Christ” (letter 127). The spirit of his Master is conspicuous in him, constraining him to bind up the broken-hearted; he comforts his persecuted friends with great tenderness. Consoling one who was drinking deep draughts of the cup of affliction, he wrote: “In the great work of redemption, your lovely, beautiful and glorious Friend and well-beloved Jesus was brought to tears and strong cries; so as His face was wet with tears and blood, arising from a holy fear and the weight of the curse. Take a drink of the Son of God’s cup, and love it the better that He drank it before you. There is no poison in it” (letter 41).

Faithful. Kennedy said that some ministers “never take aim at the views and conduct of the individuals before them. They step carefully aside, lest their hearers should be struck by their shaft, and aim them at phantoms beyond them. Not such were the faithful preachers of Ross-shire.” Not such also were the faithful letters of Rutherford. One example of his faithfulness is in letter 174. Lord Craighall, who was supportive of the prerogatives of the King of Zion in some issues, seemed to waver on other equally-important matters. Rutherford wrote to him: “Give me leave to be plain with you, as one who loveth both your honour and your soul.... Let me ... most humbly beseech you by the mercies of God, by the consolations of His Spirit, by the dear blood and wounds of your lovely Redeemer, by the salvation of your soul, by your compearance before the awful face of a sin-avenging and dreadful Judge, not to set in comparison together your soul’s peace, Christ’s love, and His kingly honour now called in question, with your place, honour, house or ease, that an inch of time will make out of the way. I verily believe that Christ is now begging a testimony of you and is saying, ‘And will ye also leave Me?’”

Wise. Kennedy deplored those ministers who “serve out in a sermon the gossip of the week”, and seemed to be possessed with “the idea that the transgressor can be scolded out of the ways of iniquity. Not such were the wise ministers of Ross-shire.” Not such also were the wise letters of Rutherford. For an example of tender dealing with those still apparently in their sins see letter 164. A young parishioner’s sympathetic letter to her pastor in prison gave him the opportunity to write: “Loving friend... I entreat you now, in the morning of your life, to seek the Lord and His face. Beware of the follies of dangerous youth, a perilous time for your soul.”

These letters were written in a time when men suffered for standing against the encroachments of the state upon the liberties of the Church in Scotland. Because of this, many of them offer encouragement based, not on the strength derived from the arm of flesh, but from the arm of the Lord. To Alexander Gordon of Earlston he wrote: “I have heard of the mind and malice of your adversaries .... I doubt not but Christ will count it His honour to back His weak servant.” Rutherford encouraged him to persevere in the face of sore trials and bereavement: “Ye see your Father is homely with you. Strokes of a father evidence kindness and care; take them so” (letter 59).

Powerful. Kennedy complained of those preachers “who aim well, but they are weak. Their eye is along the arrow towards the heart of their hearers, but their arm is too feeble for sending it on to the mark. Superficial in their experience and in their knowledge, they reach not the case of God’s people by their doctrine, and they strike with no vigour at the consciences of the ungodly.” Not such were the powerful preachers of Ross-shire. Not such also were the powerful letters of Rutherford. Their preservation through over 300 years testifies to their power, reaching the case of God’s people. Not only had they power over those who received them and preserved them, but over the following generations, who continued to read them. Notice the forcefulness with which Rutherford addressed the conscience, in a letter we have already quoted from (174): “Will ye then go with them, and set your lip to the whore’s golden cup, and drink the wine of the wrath of God almighty with them? O poor hungry honour! O cursed pleasure! and O, damnable ease, bought with the loss of God.”

Who can question Rutherford’s knowledge and experience? The eminent Thomas Halyburton, on his deathbed, said that the few lines to a young man in letter 81 contained “more practical religion than a large volume”.

Discriminating. When Kennedy contrasts the false and the true ministers of Christ, he bemoans those preachers who do not discriminate between the precious and the vile. Not such were the letters of Rutherford, who clearly delineated the marks of those who are in Christ and those who are not (in, for example, letter 172). He did not fail to see the danger in his day from those within the pale of the visible Church who had no love to her Head, the Lord Jesus Christ, nor to His kingly prerogatives. “The truth is, Christ’s crown, His sceptre, and the freedom of His kingdom, is that which is now called in question; because we will not allow that Christ should pay tribute and be a vassal to the shields [rulers] of the earth, therefore the sons of our mother are angry at us. But it becometh not Christ to hold any man’s stirrup” (letter 69).

In conclusion, this peerless volume is recommended first to ministers and students of divinity. God’s servants – in Galloway and in Ross-shire, in the seventeenth and the nineteenth century – drew sap from the same eternal Vine and bore the same spiritual fruit: some more, some less. May the Lord of the harvest send forth many such servants in the twenty-first century. I believe it is the desire of every believer, and so, in particular, of all Christ’s true servants, to bear fruit on the same Vine, nourished on the same sap. It is perhaps appropriate in this context to quote the words: “If you would be a deep divine, I recommend to you sanctification. Fear Him, and He will reveal His covenant to you” (letter 170, to Mr John Meine, who was possibly a divinity student).

It is further recommended to all who have an interest in the history of this period. Apart from the biographical sketch already mentioned, many of the prominent ministers, men and women of that period are among Rutherford’s correspondents. It is of interest that he identifies at least one of those who were to rise to great usefulness after his departure. “Remember my love to... Mr John Brown. I never could get my love off that man: I think Christ hath something to do with him” (letter 243). Brown became the minister of Wamphray in Dumfries-shire and was later banished from Scotland. Taking up residence in Holland he wrote several volumes in defence of the Truth.

Lastly, it is recommended to all who love Zion and her illustrious King, especially in these troubled times, when it appears to human reason that the Church in Scotland is “old and grey-haired, near the grave, and no man taketh it to heart” (letter 7). This book will be relished by all who say of the ordinances of God’s worship:

“The habitation of Thine house,
Lord, I have lovèd well;
Yea, in that place I do delight
where doth Thine honour dwell”
(Psa. 26:7).

Jul 1, 2008 at 02:09 o\clock

Facing Giants

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Numbers 13:33 

There We Saw the Giants

"There we saw the giants" (Num. 13:33).

Yes, they saw the giants, but Caleb and Joshua saw God! Those who doubt say, "We be not able to go up." Those who believe say, "Let us go up at once and possess it, for we are well able."

Giants stand for great difficulties; and giants are stalking everywhere. They are in our families, in our churches, in our social life, in our own hearts; and we must overcome them or they will eat us up, as these men of old said of the giants of Canaan.

The men of faith said, "They are bread for us; we will eat them up." In other words, "We will be stronger by overcoming them than if there had been no giants to overcome."

Now the fact is, unless we have the overcoming faith we shall be eaten up, consumed by the giants in our path. Let us have the spirit of faith that these men of faith had, and see God, and He will take care of the difficulties. --Selected

It is when we are in the way of duty that we find giants. It was when Israel was going forward that the, giants appeared. When they turned back into the wilderness they found none.

There is a prevalent idea that the power of God in a human life should lift us above all trials and conflicts. The fact is, the power of God always brings a conflict and a struggle. One would have thought that on his great missionary journey to Rome, Paul would have been carried by some mighty providence above the power of storms and tempests and enemies. But, on the contrary, it was one long, hard fight with persecuting Jews, with wild tempests, with venomous vipers and all the powers of earth and hell, and at last he was saved, as it seemed, by the narrowest margin, and had to swim ashore at Malta on a piece of wreckage and barely escape a watery grave.

Was that like a God of infinite power? Yes, just like Him. And so Paul tells us that when he took the Lord Jesus Christ as the life of his body, a severe conflict immediately came; indeed, a conflict that never ended, a pressure that was persistent, but out of which he always emerged victorious through the strength of Jesus Christ.

The language in which he describes this is most graphic. "We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed, always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be manifested in our body."

What a ceaseless, strenuous struggle! It is impossible to express in English the forcible language of the original. There are five pictures in succession. In the first, the idea is crowding enemies pressing in from every side, and yet not crushing him because the police of heaven cleared the way just wide enough for him to get through. The literal translation would be, "We are crowded on every side, but not crushed."

The second picture is that of one whose way seems utterly closed and yet he has pressed through; there is light enough to show him the next step. The Revised Version translates it, "Perplexed but not unto despair." Rotherham still more literally renders it, "Without a way, but not without a by-way."

The third figure is that of an enemy in hot pursuit while the divine Defender still stands by, and he is not left alone. Again we adopt the fine rendering of Rotherham, "Pursued but not abandoned."

The fourth figure is still more vivid and dramatic. The enemy has overtaken him, has struck him, has knocked him down. But it is not a fatal blow; he is able to rise again. It might be translated, "Overthrown but not overcome."

Once more the figure advances, and now it seems to be even death itself, "Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus." But he does not die, for "the life also of Jesus" now comes to his aid and he lives in the life of another until his life work is done.

The reason so many fail in this experience of divine healing is because they expect to have it all without a struggle, and when the conflict comes and the battle wages long, they become discouraged and surrender. God has nothing worth having that is easy. There are no cheap goods in the heavenly market. Our redemption cost all that God had to give, and everything worth having is expensive. Hard places are the very school of faith and character, and if we are to rise over mere human strength and prove the power of life divine in these mortal bodies, it must be through a process of conflict that may well be called the birth travail of a new life. It is the old figure of the bush that burned, but was not consumed, or of the Vision in the house of the Interpreter of the flame that would not expire, notwithstanding the fact that the demon ceaselessly poured water on it, because in the background stood an angel ever pouring oil and keeping the flame aglow.

No, dear suffering child of God, you cannot fail if only you dare to believe, to stand fast and refuse to be overcome. --Tract.

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.