Lectionary Calendar
Tuesday, April 23rd, 2024
the Fourth Week after Easter
Attention!
Tired of seeing ads while studying? Now you can enjoy an "Ads Free" version of the site for as little as 10¢ a day and support a great cause!
Click here to learn more!

Daily Devotionals
Mornings and Evenings with Jesus
Devotional: March 24th

Resource Toolbox
Morning Devotional

It doth not yet appear what we shall be. - 1 John 3:2.

ALTHOUGH we read, in one place, that “life and immortality are brought to light through the gospel,” yet we read in another place of the “glory that shall be revealed in us.” Of the saint’s future state of blessedness, we have been supplied with sublime and glorious intimations; for “God hath revealed unto us the things which he hath prepared for them that love him by his Spirit;” so that, while we know something of the heavenly state, much, very much, remains hidden. As yet we are able only to survey its dawnings: for the full disclosures of its blessedness and glory we are not yet prepared. There is a natural and a moral prevention. It would not be proper, if it were possible; and it would not be possible, if it were proper.

As the only-wise God has attempered our senses to our present condition, the knowledge we possess of the heavenly world is adjusted in conformity to the claims of our present sphere of action and happiness. Some duties, if they do not entirely result from our ignorance, are enforced by it. Hence our Lord said unto his disciples, “Watch, for you know not the day or the hour wherein the Son of man cometh.” We are to “walk by faith, and not by sight;” and are to honour God by obeying and trusting, him. Fuller developments of the glory that shall be revealed would derange the present order of things. The revelation would be so engrossing and overwhelming as to render our present engagements insignificant and uninteresting, and so loosen and detach us from the necessary and every-day duties of life that we should be both indisposed and unable to abide with God in our calling. Our station would become deserted, and other agents would be required to carry on these concerns.

The full knowledge of the future blessedness of the righteous would also be dangerous and destructive. Our physical powers are very limited, and we are unable to bear very powerful excitement. The Queen of Sheba fainted at seeing the glory of Solomon. When the angel approached Daniel, there was no strength in him; and though John had reclined on the Saviour’s bosom, yet when he appeared to him at Patmos he fell at his feet as dead. No; we are now unable to bear up under that exceeding weight of glory which shall be revealed in us. Nor is the full knowledge more practical than it is expedient. We have no adequate medium of receiving the communication. Our modes of apprehending and feeling are not refined and exalted enough to take hold of objects so peculiar and spiritual. Even our thoughts, that seem to “leave dull mortality behind,” here labour and strive in vain. The sublimest genius, aided by inspiration, could only say, “Oh, how great is thy goodness which thou hast laid up for them that fear thee!”

Yet, with all our deficiencies, we are not ignorant of the reality of this glory, nor are left without such a knowledge concerning it as our duty and welfare allow and require; for though “it doth not yet appear what we shall be, yet we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.”

Evening Devotional

My word. - Isaiah 55:11.

AS we are the creatures of God, and as he hath made us reasonable creatures, it is natural to suppose that he would give to us a revelation of his mind and will concerning us. Without this we cannot walk so as to please him, or obtain a knowledge of his approbation, upon which all our happiness depends. In the Holy Scriptures God has made this revelation, which is emphatically designated the Word of God. “My word,” says God. Abundant evidences establish the divine origin of the Scriptures-evidences derived from various proofs, and proofs so convincing that a man must have closed his eyes not to perceive the force of them. “Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.” All we have met with in the Scriptures constrain us to say, “This is the finger of God.” We have here prophecies, precepts, promises, admonitions, the achievements of the best of men, and the convictions of the wisest of men. We have internal evidence in the purity and dignity and consistency of its contents. We have external evidences in the numberless miracles openly performed in the presence of enemies, who would have gladly denied them if they could. We have prophecies, many of which have been fulfilled, and others which are fulfilling under our own eye; and the establishment and spread of his cause by means which could never be considered adequate to the production of the result without a divine interposition and agency.

And how delightful is it, in a world of uncertainties and suspicions, of conjectures and errors, to find something concerning which we may say, This is truth; this is something upon which we may rely, firm and secure; and here we have something upon which we can depend, with more assurance than upon the continuance of the earth and heaven, for our Saviour says: “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass away.”

Subscribe …
Get the latest devotional delivered straight to your inbox every week by signing up for the "Mornings and Evenings with Jesus" subscription list. Simply provide your email address below, click on "Subscribe!", and you'll receive a confirmation email from us. Follow the instructions in the email to confirm your subscription to this list.
adsFree icon
Ads FreeProfile