Our Daily Homily
by F B Meyer
Blessed is he that considereth the poor: - Psalm 41:1
The realm of Blessedness is all around. It may be entered at any minute, and we may dwell in it all the days of
our life. Our enjoyment of blessedness is totally undetermined by outward circumstances. If you stand in some great
retail emporium and watch the faces of the women, you will be greatly instructed. Yonder sits a richly-dressed
lady with society and fashion, dress and money at her command, but her manner and tone are utterly weary and dissatisfied;
whilst across the counter a girl waits on her, whose thin face and simple attire tell their own story, but her
expression and bearing betoken the possession of an inner calm and strength, an inexhaustible fund of patience
and sweetness. Such contrasts meet us everywhere. The realm of blessedness dips down into humble and lowly lives
on every side of us. Have we entered it.
Christ's beatitudes give us eight gates, any one of which will immediately conduct us within its confines. But
here is another: "Blessed is he that considereth the poor." Even if you cannot help or relieve them to
any appreciable extent, consider them; let them feel that you are thinking of and for them; do not hurry them when
they recite their long, sad story; put them at their ease; treat them with Christian courtesy and consideration.
Begin at once. There are plenty around you, who, if not poor in the things of this world, are poor in love and
hope and the knowledge of God. Tell them of "the blessing of the Lord," which "maketh rich, and
He addeth no sorrow with it." Silver and gold you may have none; but such as you have be sure and give. Learn
to consider people. Try and look on things from their standpoint.
Deep calleth unto deep - Psalm 42:7
There are wonderful harmonies in nature. Voices call to one another across vast spaces. The depths below the firmament
call to the heights above. The deep of the ocean calls to the deep of the azure sky. Listen, O my soul, to the
mighty voices sounding ever through the universe of God.
The deep of Divine Redemption calls to the deep of human need. - It sometimes seems as though the opposite were
true, and as though the cry originated in man; but it is not so. God is always first; and as He looks into hearts
stricken and desperate, conscious of unfathomable yearnings, and infinite capacity, He calls aloud, and the depth
of his heart appeals to the depth of the heart of man. Would that it might ever answer back!
The deep of Christ's wealth calls to the deep of the saint's poverty. - He looks down upon our attenuated and poverty-stricken
experience with an infinite yearning. He cannot endure that we should go through life naked and miserable, poor
and blind, when He has got gold, and precious stones, and white raiment. "Hearken, O daughter, and consider.
Forsake thy father's house. Come unto Me, and receive from my fulness. Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it."
The deep of the Holy Spirit's intercession calls to the deep of the Church's prayer. - He awakens in us groanings
that cannot be uttered, and burdens us with the will of God.
Whatever depths there are in God, they appeal to corresponding depths in us. And whatever be the depths of our
sorrow, desire, or necessity, there are correspondences in God from which full supplies may be obtained. Thou hast
the pitcher of faith, and the well is deep.
O God my God. - Psalm 43:4
What a change within the soul one short hour spent in God's presence will prevail to make! The psalmist is opposed
by an ungodly nation, and resisted by a deceitful and unjust man. He mourns because of the oppression of the enemy;
he questions whether God has cast him off. Then led by those twin angels, Light and Truth, commissioned and sent
forth for that purpose from the presence of God, he enters in thought and spirit within the precincts of the Divine
Tabernacle, and stands before the Altar. Immediately the clouds break. Putting his puny hand upon the great God,
he appropriates all He is and has, as though it were his own, and takes again, in a very ecstasy of realizing faith,
his harp, too long silent, and breaks into rapturous melody.
Have you not sometimes groped in the dark, till those two angels have come to lead you also to the altar where
the High Priest stands? Then what a change! Your circumstances have not altered, but you have conceived a new idea
of what God can be to you. You have said, This God is my God for ever and ever. You have said, O God, MY God! You
have laid your hand on God's wealth and called it all your own. You have chided your soul for being disquieted
and depressed whilst such a heritage is yours. You have spoken of God, first as the God of your strength; secondly,
as the gladness of your joy; thirdly, as the health of your face.
"Why, therefore, should we do ourselves this wrong,
Or others - that we are not always strong,
That we are ever overborne with care,
That we should ever weak and heartless be,
Anxious or troubled when with us is prayer,
And joy and strength and courage are with Thee?"
Thou art my King, O God: command deliverances - Psalm 44:4
Before a man can say that God is his King, he must have very definitely consecrated himself to God. The relation
of too many believers to Christ falls short of this supreme act of the soul; and in consequence their lives lack
directness, power, victory over temptation. My reader, thou hast been sorely tried by overmastering temptations
before which thy resolutions have been swept as children's sand-heaps by the tide. Wilt thou quietly consider whether
from the very depth of thy being thou hast ever said to God, Thou art my King. The kingship of Jesus is always
associated with victory; and just as soon as his supremacy is acknowledged, He will begin to command deliverance
and victory.
Behold, thy King cometh to thee, having salvation. Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and the King of Glory shall
come in; but He is also the merciful Saviour. Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour.
It is always Prince first. If thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus as Lord, thou shalt be saved.
What a battle-shout this is! Whenever temptation is near; when the foe seems about to take the citadel by assault;
when heart and flesh quail before the noise of battle - then to look up to the living Christ, and say, Thou art
my King, O Son of God: command victory! There is no devil in hell but would flee before that cry of the tempted
and tried believer; and God could not be neglectful of such an appeal. Jacob is only a worm; yet even he is more
than a conqueror when God fights for him. It is thus that Jacob Behmen begins one of his letters: "May the
Overcomer, Jesus Christ, through Himself, overcome in us all his enemies."
I speak of the things which I have made touching the king - Psalm 45:1
This dignifies the meanest occupation. By this motive the apostles urged their converts to daily duty, slaves though
they were in the houses of rich and godless owners. They were taught to look upon their lot as the will of God;
and to do service as. unto the Lord, and not unto men, seeking the praise of God as their sufficient reward.
As we take in hand the bits of carved work which once stood high in the cathedral roof, but now lie almost hidden
by rank vegetation, and consider the exquisite carving, which the artists never thought would be so minutely inspected,
we feel that each unknown craftsman did his work for the King. There is no doubt that the religious intention of
their work elevated their meanest toils to the level of sacred service. Let us endeavour each day to realize that
everything may be done for Jesus which may be done at all. Do you take food? It is that the body may be deft and
quick to execute his purposes. Do. you rest and seek recreation? It is that your energies may be recuperated, and
that the tide of nervous power may return with fresh vigour. Do you manufacture, buy and sell, advise and preach?
All may be inspired by the one purpose, that Iris will may be done, his kingdom come - which is righteousness,
peace, and goodwill to men.
Such a life, however, is only possible when the heart overflows, bubbles up and over, with goodly matter. The heart
must always be in contact with the fervent love of Christ. It is only as the Divine heat passes into us that the
affections will boil up. and overflow in holy act. Let us make the things about the King before we speak them.
Let us give time to muse, that the fire may burn.
He maketh wars to cease - Psalm 46:9
"My soul is among lions, and I dwell among those that are set on fire: even the sons of men, whose words are
spears and arrows, and their tongue .a sharp sword." Such is the frequent confession or the child of God.
Hemmed in by foes, the butt of vehement hate! But the moment comes at length when God arises to deliver. He utters
his voice the earth melts. In the night the enemy has wrapped up his tents and stolen silently away. War has ceased,
and all the land of life lies plain and open.
God makes the wars of the outward life cease, so that as life's afternoon comes the man who had fought his way
through overwhelming odds - as a reformer, or inventor, or philanthropist - spends his years amid troops of friends
and loving recognition.
God makes the wars of the home cease, so that the disturbing elements pass out, or are transmuted by invincible
patience and love.
God makes the wars of the heart cease, so that Satan no longer annoys. The storm dies down, and the river which
makes glad the city of God purls quietly through the soul. Sennacherib and his vast array lie as the leaves of
autumn, silent in the last sleep.
If as yet God has not made your wars to cease, it is because He knows that you have still strength to fight on.
Do not faint in the day of battle. Ponder those great words of Cromwell: "Call not your burden sad or heavy,
for if your Heavenly Father sent it (or permitted it) He intended it to be neither." It is through the fight
that you are winning experience, strength, the approval of your Captain, .and the crown.
He shall choose our inheritance for us, - Psalm 47:4
"Choose for us, our Father." We say it; deliberately. If He were to give us our choice at this moment,
though there is no one of us that does not cherish a secret longing too deep for words, we would put it back into
his hand and say, "Thou knowest better than words can tell Thee what lies closest to our soul, but we dare
not take the opportunity of snatching at it; Thou wilt give it or its equivalent in the sweetest form and at the
most opportune hour," Would not this be the wisest attitude for any one of us to assume, believing, as we
do, that our Father's wisdom is only outshone by his love?
Wilt thou, O soul of man, standing at the foot of the Hill of God, ask thy Father to choose the track He knows
thy strength and powers of endurance; He knows also thy ardent yearning for the best. Subordinate thy choice to
his in all things. Then whatever the difficulties may prove to be, dare to believe that they are less than any
that would have opposed thee hadst thou chosen the route for thyself. Never look back; never doubt thy Father's
personal interest; the clouds that sweep darkly over thy path may hide Him from thee, but not thee from Him.
And thou, who hast had much experience of God, wilt thou not still say, He shall choose? Thou canst not repent
the trust which thou reposedst years ago in his selection. Thou wilt not withdraw thy confidence. For evermore,
whatever life may bring here or hereafter, we will cry, He shall choose, He shall choose. As Nicholas Herman said:
"Pains and sufferings would be a paradise to me which I should suffer with my God; and the greatest pleasures
hell, if I could relish them without Him."
Consider her palaces - Psalm 48:13
The pious Jew broke into exclamations as he considered the beloved city of his fathers. Beautiful for situation,
the joy of the whole earth. In proud confidence he challenged the world of men to walk about Zion, count her towers,
and mark her bulwarks. Finally they were to traverse her palaces. But what Jerusalem was to the Jews, God's lovingkindness
is to us, as we think of it, in the midst of his temple. Let us consider its beauty and joy, its strength and glory.
"How great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty!"
Traverse the rooms in the Palace of God's love - that council-chamber of the eternal foreknowledge where we were
chosen in Christ; this suite of apartments, which began with the unrobing-room of Bethlehem, and ended with the
golden stairway of Olivet; those mansions of the Home-land which He is preparing for them that love Him; the pavilion
whither He will lead his bride where He comes to take her to Himself: then look onward to the new heaven and the
new earth, where God shall spread his tabernacle over his people, and all our loftiest ideals will be realized
for evermore.
Life is a traversing of the successive rooms of the Palace of Love. They are not alike: each has its own beauty;
each leads to something better; in each God is All. Some seem to pass through the rooms veiled or blind; others
miss seeing the King. But those who dare to look for Him everywhere, find Him. Always our Christ for ever and ever;
always our Guide even unto death, and beyond. Always the present opening to something better, as the rosebud to
the rose; as the acorn to the oak; as the chrysalis to the butterfly.
Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil - Psalm 49:5
Have I not God? At sundry times and in divers manners, He spake to, and succoured his saints. Will He not come
to me, and cast around me the soft mantle of his protecting love? And if I love Him, do I need any beside?
"Who that one moment has the least descried Him,
Dimly and faintly, hidden and afar,
Doth not despise all excellence beside Him,
Pleasures and powers that are not, and that are?"
Did He not walk with Enoch, and then take him home, before the deluge came? Did He not shut Noah in, with his own
hand, that there should be no jeopardy from the overflowing flood? Did He not assure Abram that He was his shield
and exceeding great reward, quieting his fears against any possible combination of foes? Did He not preserve his
servant Moses from the fury of Pharaoh and the murmurings of Israel?. Was not Elijah hidden in the secret of his
pavilion from the wrath of Ahab? Did He not send his angel to shut the lions' mouths that they might not hurt Daniel?
Were not the coals of the burning fiery furnace as sweet and soft as forest glades to the feet of the three young
confessors? Has God ever forsaken those that trusted Him? Has He ever given them over to the will of their enemies?
Wherefore, then, should I fear in the day of evil? I may be standing on the deck, whilst the ship is beset by icebergs
and jagged splintered rocks; the fog drapes everything, as the way slowly opens through this archipelago of peril:
but God is at the helm - why should I fear? Days of evil to others cannot be so to me, for the presence of God
transmutes the evil to good.
Our God shall come, - Psalm 50:3
The years pass as snowflakes on the river; and as each drops into the mighty past, it cries, God will come! Each
Advent season, with its cluster of services, herald-voices, reminiscences and anticipations, lifts the message
clear above the turmoil and tumult of mankind, God will come! The disappointments of our fairest hopes, the overcasting
of our sunrises, the failures of our politicians, statesmen and counsellors, to effect a permanent and radical
improvement of man's nature, all take up the word, Our God shall come!
"Surely He cometh, and a thousand voices
Call to the saints and to the deaf and dumb;
Surely He cometh, and the earth rejoices,
Glad in his coming, who hath sworn, I come."
Dear heart, get thee often to thine oriel window, and look out for the breaking of the day. Did not the Master
assure us that He would soon return? Hearken, He saith again to-day, "Surely I come quickly." The little
while will soon be over, and He will come first to receive his saints to Himself, and afterwards to come with them
to the earth. Why are we disconsolate and dismayed? The perplexities of the Eastern problem, the gradual return
of the Jews to Palestine, the despair and lawlessness of men, the unrest of nations, the preparedness on the part
of the Church - like so many minute guns at night - keep the heart awake. Oh, let your eyes flash with the glow
of thanksgiving! Be glad and strong, confident and calm. Let your loins be girded, and your lamps burning. Through
heaven's spaces you shall detect the advent of your God; and when He comes He will break the silence of the ages
with words of majesty and might.
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