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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mind of Jesus
+
+Author: John R. Macduff
+
+Release Date: April 5, 2009 [EBook #28507]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIND OF JESUS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Heiko Evermann, Nigel Blower and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+Minor punctuation inconsistencies have been silently corrected.
+
+Title page: "MEMORIES OF OF GENNESARET" changed to "MEMORIES OF GENNESARET"
+p9: Verse number "2." added to "Mark, viii." for consistency
+p23: "brethern" changed to "brethren"
+p106: "vail" changed to "veil"
+p124: duplicate word "one" removed
+p126: "the its great fountain" changed to "its great fountain"
+p128: "frowed" changed to "frowned"
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ MIND OF JESUS.
+
+
+ BY
+ JOHN R. MACDUFF, D.D.
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "MORNING AND NIGHT WATCHES,"
+"THE WORDS OF JESUS," "FAMILY PRAYER,"
+"FOOTSTEPS OF ST. PAUL," "MEMORIES OF
+GENNESARET," "BOW IN THE CLOUD," "STORY
+OF BETHLEHEM," ETC.
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS,
+ No. 530 BROADWAY.
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+The Mind of Jesus.
+
+
+THE MIND OF JESUS! What a study is this! To attain a dim reflection of
+it, is the ambition of angels--higher they can not soar. "To be
+conformed to the image of His Son!"--it is the end of God in the
+predestination of His Church from all eternity. "We shall be like
+Him!"--it is the Bible picture of _heaven_!
+
+In a former little volume, we pondered some of the gracious _Words_
+which proceeded out of the mouth of Jesus. In the present, we have a few
+faint lineaments of that holy _Character_ which constituted the living
+exposition and embodiment of His precepts.
+
+But how lofty such a standard! How all creature-perfection shrinks
+abashed and confounded before a Divine portraiture like this! He is the
+true "Angel standing in the sun," who alone projects no shadow; so
+bathed in the glories of Deity that likeness to Him becomes like the
+light in which He is shrouded--"no man can approach unto it." May we
+not, however, seek at least to approximate, though we can not adequately
+resemble? It is impossible on earth to associate with a fellow-being
+without getting, in some degree, assimilated to him. So, the more we
+study "the Mind of Christ," the more we are in His company--holding
+converse with Him as our best and dearest friend--catching up his holy
+looks and holy deeds--the more shall we be "transformed into the same
+image."
+
+"Consider," says the Great Apostle (literally '_gaze_ on') "Christ
+Jesus" (Heb. iii. 1). Study feature by feature, lineament by lineament,
+of that Peerless Exemplar. "_Gaze_" on the Sun of Righteousness, till,
+like gazing long on the natural sun, you carry away with you, on your
+spiritual vision, dazzling images of His brightness and glory. Though He
+be the Archetype of all goodness, remember He is no shadowy
+model--though the Infinite Jehovah, He was "the _Man_ Christ Jesus."
+
+We must never, indeed, forget that it is not the _mind_, but the _work_
+of Immanuel, which lies at the foundation of a sinner's hope. He must be
+known as a _Saviour_, before He is studied as an _Example_. His doing
+and dying is the center jewel, of which all the virtues of His holy life
+are merely the setting. But neither must we overlook the Scripture
+obligation to walk in His footsteps and imbibe His Spirit, for "if any
+man have not the _Spirit of Christ_, he is _none of His_!"
+
+Oh, that each individual Christian were more Saviour-like! that, in the
+manifestation of a holy character and heavenly demeanor, it might be
+said in some feeble measure of the faint and imperfect reflection--"Such
+was _Jesus_!"
+
+How far short we are of such a criterion, mournful experience can
+testify. But it is at least comforting to know that there is a day
+coming, when, in the full vision and fruition of the Glorious Original,
+the exhortation of our motto-verse will be needed no more; when we shall
+be able to say, in the words of an inspired apostle,
+
+ "We _have_ the MIND OF CHRIST!"
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+
+ PAGE
+The Mind of Jesus 3
+Compassion 9
+Resignation in Trial 13
+Devotedness to God 17
+Forgiveness of Injuries 21
+Meekness 25
+Thankfulness 29
+Unselfishness 33
+Submission to God's Word 37
+Prayerfulness 41
+Love to the Brethren 45
+Sympathy 49
+Fidelity in Rebuke 53
+Gentleness in Rebuke 57
+Endurance of Contradiction 61
+Pleasing God 65
+Grief at Sin 69
+Humility 73
+Patience 77
+Subjection 81
+Not Retaliating 85
+Bearing the Cross 89
+Holy Zeal 93
+Benevolence 97
+Firmness in Temptation 101
+Receiving Sinners 105
+Guilelessness 109
+Activity in Duty 113
+Committing our Way to God 117
+Love of Unity 121
+Not of the World 125
+Calmness in Death 129
+
+
+
+
+ Let
+
+ THIS MIND
+
+ Be in you,
+
+ Which was also in
+
+ Christ Jesus.
+
+
+
+
+First Day.
+
+COMPASSION.
+
+ "I have compassion on the multitude."--Mark, viii. 2.
+
+
+What a pattern to His people, the tender _compassion_ of Jesus! He found
+the world He came to save a moral Bethesda. The wail of suffering
+humanity was every where borne to His ear. It was His delight to walk
+its porches, to pity, relieve, comfort, save! The faintest cry of misery
+arrested His footsteps--stirred a ripple in this fountain of Infinite
+Love. Was it a _leper_,--that dreaded name which entailed a life-long
+exile from friendly looks and kindly words? There was _One_, at least,
+who had tones and deeds of tenderness for the outcast. "_Jesus_, being
+moved with compassion, put forth His hand, and _touched_ him." Was it
+some blind beggars on the Jericho highway, groping in darkness, pleading
+for help? "_Jesus_ stood still, and had compassion on them, and touched
+their eyes!" Was it the speechless pleadings of a widow's tears at the
+gate of Nain, when she followed her earthly pride and prop to the grave?
+"When the _Lord_ saw her, He had compassion on her, and said, Weep not!"
+Even when He rebukes, the bow of compassion is seen in the cloud, or
+rather, that cloud, as it passes, dissolves in a rain-shower of mercy.
+He pronounces Jerusalem "_desolate_," but the doom is uttered amid a
+flood of anguished sorrow!
+
+Reader! do the compassionate words and deeds of a tender Saviour find
+any feeble echo and transcript in yours? As you traverse in thought the
+wastes of human wretchedness, does the spectacle give rise, not to the
+mere emotional feeling which weeps itself away in sentimental tears, but
+to an earnest desire to _do something_ to mitigate the sufferings of
+woe-worn humanity? How vast and world-wide the claims on your
+compassion!--now near, now at a distance--the unmet and unanswered cry
+of perishing millions abroad--the heathendom which lies unsuccored at
+your own door--the public charity languishing--the mission staff dwarfed
+and crippled from lack of needful funds--a suffering district--a
+starving family--a poor neighbor--a helpless orphan--it may be, some
+crowded hovel, where misery and vice run riot--or some lonely sick
+chamber, where the dim lamp has been wasting for dreary nights--or some
+desolate home which death has entered, where "Joseph is not, and Simeon
+is not," and where some sobbing heart, under the tattered garb of
+poverty, mourns, unsolaced and unpitied, its "loved and lost." Are there
+none such within your reach, to whom a trifling pittance would be as an
+angel of mercy? How it would hallow and enhance all you possess, were
+you to seek to live as almoner of Jehovah's bounties! If He has given
+you of this world's substance, remember it is bestowed, not to be
+greedily hoarded or lavishly squandered. Property and wealth are
+talents to be traded on and laid out for the good of others--sacred
+trusts, not selfishly to be _enjoyed_, but generously to be _employed_.
+
+"The poor are the representatives of Jesus, their wants He considers as
+His own," and He will recompense accordingly. The feeblest expression of
+Christian pity and love, though it be but the widow's mite, or the cup
+of cold water, or the kindly look and word when there is neither mite
+nor cup to give, yet, if done in _His_ name, it is entered in the "book
+of life" as a "loan to the Lord;" and in that day when "the books are
+opened," the loan will be paid back with usury.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Second Day.
+
+RESIGNATION IN TRIAL.
+
+ "Not my will, but Thine be done!"--Luke, xxii. 42.
+
+
+Where was there ever resignation like this! The life of Jesus was one
+long martyrdom. From Bethlehem's manger to Calvary's cross, there was
+scarce one break in the clouds; these gathered more darkly and ominously
+around Him till they burst over His devoted head as He uttered His
+expiring cry. Yet throughout this pilgrimage of sorrow no murmuring
+accent escaped His lips. The most suffering of all suffering lives was
+one of uncomplaining submission.
+
+"Not _my_ will, but _Thy_ will," was the motto of this wondrous Being!
+When He came into the world He thus announced His advent, "Lo, I come, I
+delight to do _Thy will_, O my God!" When He left it, we listen to the
+same prayer of blended agony and acquiescence, "O my Father, if it be
+possible let this cup pass from me! _Nevertheless_ not as _I will_, but
+as _Thou wilt_."
+
+Reader! is this mind also in _you_? Ah, what are your trials compared to
+His! What the ripples in your tide of woe, compared to the waves and
+billows which swept over him! If He, the spotless Lamb of God, "murmured
+not," how can _you_ murmur? _His_ were the sufferings of a bosom never
+once darkened with the passing shadow of guilt or sin. _Your_ severest
+sufferings are deserved, yea, infinitely less _than_ deserved! Are you
+tempted to indulge in hard suspicions, as to God's faithfulness and
+love, in appointing some peculiar trial? Ask yourself, Would Jesus have
+done _this_? Should _I_ seek to pry into "the deep things of God," when
+_He_, in the spirit of a weaned child, was satisfied with the solution,
+"_Even so, Father, for so it seems good in Thy sight_"?
+
+"Even so, _Father_!" Afflicted one! "tossed with tempest, and not
+comforted," take that _word_ on which thy Lord pillowed His suffering
+head, and make it, as He did, the secret of thy resignation.
+
+The sick child will take the bitterest draught from a _father's_ hand.
+"This cup which Thou, O God, givest me to drink, shall I not drink it?"
+Be it mine to lie passive in the arms of Thy chastening love, exulting
+in the assurance that all Thy appointments, though sovereign, are never
+arbitrary, but that there is a gracious "need be" in them all. "My
+Father!" my Covenant God! the God who _spared not Jesus_! It may well
+hush every repining word.
+
+Drinking deep of his sweet spirit of submission, you will be able thus
+to meet, yea, even to welcome, your sorest cross, saying, "Yes, Lord,
+all _is_ well, just because it is Thy blessed will. Take me, use me,
+chasten me, as seemeth good in Thy sight. My will is resolved into
+Thine. This trial is dark; I can not see the 'why and the wherefore' of
+it--but 'not my will, but Thy will!' The gourd is withered; I can not
+see the reason of so speedy a dissolution of the loved earthly shelter;
+sense and sight ask in vain why these leaves of earthly refreshment have
+been doomed so soon to droop in sadness and sorrow. But it is enough.
+'The Lord prepared the worm;' 'not _my_ will, but _Thy_ will!'"
+
+Oh, how does the stricken soul honor God by thus being _dumb_ in the
+midst of dark and perplexing dealings, recognizing in these, part of the
+needed discipline and training for a sorrowless, sinless, deathless
+world; regarding every trial as a link in the chain which draws it to
+heaven, where the whitest robes will be found to be those here baptized
+with suffering, and bathed in tears!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Third Day.
+
+DEVOTEDNESS TO GOD.
+
+ "Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's business?"--
+ Luke, ii. 49.
+
+
+"My meat and my drink are to do the will of Him that sent me, and to
+finish His work." That _one_ object brought Jesus from heaven--that
+_one_ object he pursued with unflinching, undeviating constancy, until
+He could say, "It is finished."
+
+However short man comes of _his_ "chief end," "Glory to God in the
+highest" was the motive, the rule, and exponent of every act of that
+wondrous life. With us, the magnet of the soul, even when truest, is
+ever subject to partial oscillations and depressions, trembling at times
+away from its great attraction-point. _His_ never knew one tremulous
+wavering from its all-glorious center. With Him there were no ebbs and
+flows, no fits and starts. He could say, in the words of that prophetic
+psalm which speaks so preëminently of Himself, "I have set the Lord
+_always_ before me!"
+
+Reader! do you feel that in some feeble measure this lofty life-motto of
+the sinless Son of God is written on your home and heart, regulating
+your actions, chastening your joys, quickening your hopes, giving energy
+and direction to your whole being, subordinating all the affections of
+your nature to their high destiny? With pure and unalloyed motives, with
+a single eye, and a single aim, can you say, somewhat in the spirit of
+His brightest follower, "This _one_ thing I do"? Are you ready to regard
+all you have--rank, name, talents, riches, influence,
+distinctions--valuable, only so far as they contribute to promote the
+glory of Him who is "first and last, and all in all"? Seek to feel that
+your heavenly Father's is not only _a_ business; but _the_ business of
+life. "Whose I am, and whom I serve,"--let this be the superscription
+written on your thoughts and deeds, your employments and enjoyments,
+your sleeping and waking. Be not, as the fixed stars, cold and distant;
+but be ever bathing in the sunshine of conscious nearness to Him who is
+the sun and center of all happiness and joy.
+
+Each has some appointed work to perform, some little niche in the
+spiritual temple to occupy. Yours may be no splendid services, no
+flaming or brilliant actions to blaze and dazzle in the eye of man. It
+may be the quiet, unobtrusive inner work, the secret prayer, the
+mortified sin, the forgiven injury, the trifling act of self-sacrifice
+for God's glory and the good of others, of which no eye but the Eye
+which seeth in secret is cognizant. It matters not how _small_.
+Remember, with Him, motive dignifies action. It is not _what_ we do, but
+_how_ we do it. He can be glorified in _little_ things as well as
+_great_ things, and by nothing more than the daily walk, the daily
+life.
+
+Beware of any thing that would interfere with a surrender of heart and
+soul to His service--worldly entanglements, indulged sin, an uneven
+walk, a divided heart, nestling in creature comforts, shrinking from the
+cross. How many hazard, if they do not make shipwreck, of their eternal
+hopes by becoming _idlers_ in the vineyard; lingerers, like Lot;
+world-lovers, like Demas; "do-nothing Christians," like the inhabitants
+of Meroz! The command is, "Go, work!" _Words_ tell what you _should_ be;
+_deeds_ tell what you _are_. Let those around you see there is a reality
+in walking _with_ God, and working _for_ God!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fourth Day.
+
+FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
+
+ "Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they
+ do."--Luke, xxiii. 34.
+
+
+Many a death-struggle has been made to save a friend. A dying Saviour
+gathers up His expiring breath to plead for His foes! At the climax of
+His own woe, and of human ingratitude--man-forsaken, and
+God-deserted--His faltering voice mingles with the shout of His
+murderers,--"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do!" Had
+the faithless Peter been there, could he have wondered at the reply to a
+former question,--"Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and
+I forgive him,--till seven times?" Jesus said unto him, "I say not unto
+thee, Until seven times; but, Until seventy times seven." (Matt. xviii.
+21.)
+
+Superiority to insult and ignominy, with some, proceeds from a callous
+and indifferent temperament,--a cold, phlegmatic, stoical insensibility,
+alike to kindness or unkindness. It was not so with Jesus. The tender
+sensibilities of His holy nature rendered Him keenly sensible to
+ingratitude and injury, whether this was manifested in the malice of
+undisguised enmity, or the treachery of trusted friendship. Perhaps to a
+noble nature the latter of these is the more deeply wounding. Many are
+inclined to forgive an open and unmasked antagonist, who are not so
+willing to forget or forgive heartless faithfulness, or unrequited love.
+But see, too, in this respect, the conduct of the blessed Redeemer! Mark
+how He deals with His own disciples who had basely forsaken him and
+fled, and that, too, in the hour He most needed their sympathy. No
+sooner does He rise from the dead than He hastens to disarm their fears
+and to assure them of an unaltered and unalterable affection. "Go tell
+_my brethren_," is the first message He sends; "_Peace be unto you_," is
+the salutation at the first meeting; "_Children!_" is the word with
+which He first greets them on the shores of Tiberias. Even Joseph, (the
+Old Testament type and pattern of generous forgiveness,) when he makes
+himself known to his brethren, recalls the bitter thought, "Whom ye sold
+into Egypt." The true Joseph, when _He_ reveals Himself to His
+disciples, buries in oblivion the memory of by-gone faithlessness. He
+_meets_ them with a benediction. He _leaves_ them at His ascension with
+the same--"He lifted up His hands and blessed them!"
+
+Reader! follow in all this the spirit of your Lord and Master. In rising
+from the study of His holy example, seek to feel that with you there
+shall be no such name, no such word, as _enemy_! Harbor no resentful
+thought, indulge in no bitter recrimination. Surrender yourself to no
+sullen fretfulness. Let "the law of kindness" be in your heart. Put the
+best construction on the failings of others Make no injurious comments
+on their frailties; no uncharitable insinuations. "Consider thyself,
+lest thou also be tempted." When disposed at any time to cherish an
+unforgiving spirit towards a brother, think, if thy God had retained His
+anger for ever, where wouldst thou have been? If _He_, the Infinite One,
+who might have spurned thee for ever from His presence, hath had
+patience with thee, and forgiven thee _all_, wilt _thou_, on account of
+some petty grievance which thy calmer moments would pronounce unworthy
+of a thought, indulge in the look of cold estrangement, the unrelenting
+word, or unforgiving deed? "If any man have a quarrel against any, even
+as Christ forgave you, so also do ye."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fifth Day.
+
+MEEKNESS.
+
+ "I am meek and lowly in heart."--Matt. xi. 29.
+
+
+There is often a beautiful blending of majesty and humility, magnanimity
+and lowliness, in great minds. The mightiest and holiest of all Beings
+that ever trod our world was the meekest of all. The Ancient of Days was
+as the "infant of days." He who had listened to nothing but
+angel-melodies from all eternity, found, while on earth, melody in the
+lispings of an infant's voice, or in an outcast's tears! No wonder an
+innocent _lamb_ was His emblem, or that the annointing Spirit came down
+upon Him in the form of the gentle _dove_. He had the wealth of worlds
+at His feet. The hosts of heaven had only to be summoned as His
+retinue. But all the pageantry of the world, all its dreams of carnal
+glory, had, for Him, no fascination. The Tempter, from a
+mountain-summit, showed Him a wide scene of "splendid misery;" but He
+spurned alike the thought and the adversary away! John and James would
+call down fire from heaven on a Samaritan village; He rebukes the
+vengeful suggestion! Peter, on the night of the betrayal, cuts off the
+ear of an assassin; the intended Victim, again, only challenges His
+disciple, and heals His enemy!
+
+Arraigned before Pilate's judgment-seat, how meekly He bears nameless
+wrongs and indignities! Suspended on the cross--the execrations of the
+multitude are rising around, but He hears as though He heard them not;
+they extract no angry look, no bitter word--"Behold the _Lamb_ of God!"
+Need we wonder that "meekness" and "poverty of spirit" should stand
+foremost in His own cluster of beatitudes; that He should select _this_
+among all His other qualities for the peculiar study and imitation of
+His disciples, "Learn of Me, _for_ I am _meek_;" or that an apostle
+should exhort "by the _meekness_ and _gentleness_ of Christ!"
+
+How different the world's maxims, and His! The _world's_--"Resent the
+affront, vindicate honor!" _His_--"Overcome evil with good!" _The
+world's_--"Only let it be when for your _faults_ ye are buffeted that ye
+take it patiently." _His_--"When ye do _well_ and suffer for it, ye take
+it patiently, _this_ is acceptable with God." (1 Pet. ii. 20.)
+
+Reader! strive to obtain, like your adorable Lord, this "ornament of a
+meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight of God, is of great price."
+Be "clothed" with gentleness and humility. Follow not the world's
+fleeting shadows that mock you as you grasp them. If always
+aspiring--ever soaring on the wing--you are likely to become
+discontented, proud, selfish, time-serving. In whatever position of life
+God has placed you, be satisfied. What! ambitious to be on a pinnacle of
+the temple--a higher place in the Church, or in the world?--Satan might
+hurl you down! "Be not high-minded, but fear." And with respect to
+others, honor their gifts, contemplate their excellences only to imitate
+them. Speak kindly, act gently, "condescend to men of low estate."
+
+Be assured, no happiness is equal to that enjoyed by the "_meek
+Christian_." He has within him a perpetual inner sunshine, a perennial
+well-spring of peace. Never ruffled and fretted by real or imagined
+injuries, he puts the best construction on motives and actions, and by a
+gentle answer to unmerited reproach often disarms wrath.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Sixth Day.
+
+THANKFULNESS.
+
+ "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth."--Matt. xi. 25.
+
+A thankful spirit pervaded the entire life of Jesus, and surrounded with
+a heavenly halo His otherwise darkened path. In moments we least expect
+to find it, this beauteous ray breaks through the gloom. In instituting
+the memorial of His _death_, He "_gave thanks_!" Even in crossing the
+Kedron to Gethsemane, "He sang an hymn!"
+
+We know in seasons of deep sorrow and trial that every thing wears a
+gloomy aspect. Dumb Nature herself to the burdened spirit seems as if
+she partook in the hues of sadness. The life of Jesus was one
+continuous experience of privation and woe--a "Valley of Baca," from
+first to last; yet, amid accents of plaintive sorrow, there are ever
+heard subdued undertones of _thankfulness_ and joy!
+
+Ah, if He, the suffering "Man of sorrows," could, during a life of
+unparalleled woe, lift up His heart in grateful acknowledgment to His
+Father in heaven, how ought the lives of those to be one perpetual "hymn
+of thankfulness," who are from day to day and hour to hour (for all they
+have, both temporally and spiritually) pensioners on God's bounty and
+love!
+
+Reader! cultivate this thankful spirit; it will be to thee a perpetual
+feast. There is, or ought to be, with us no such thing as _small_
+mercies; all are _great_, because the least are undeserved. Indeed, a
+really thankful heart will extract motive for gratitude from every
+thing, making the most even of scanty blessings. St. Paul, when in his
+dungeon at Rome, a prisoner in chains, is heard to say, "I have _all_,
+and abound!"
+
+Guard, on the other hand, against that spirit of continual fretting and
+moping over fancied ills; that temptation to exaggerate the real or
+supposed disadvantages of our condition, magnifying the trifling
+inconveniences of every-day life into enormous evils. Think, rather, how
+much we have to be thankful for. The world in which we live, in spite of
+all the scars of sin and suffering upon it, is a happy world. It is not,
+as many would morbidly paint it, flooded with tears and strewn with
+wrecks, plaintive with a perpetual dirge of sorrow. True, the
+"Everlasting Hills" are in glory, but there are numberless eminences of
+grace, and love, and mercy below; many green spots in the lower valley,
+_many more than we deserve_!
+
+God will reward a thankful spirit. Just as on earth, when a man receives
+with gratitude what is given, we are more disposed to give again, so
+also, "the _Lord_ loveth" a cheerful "receiver," as well as a cheerful
+"giver."
+
+Let ours, moreover, be a _Gospel_ thankfulness. Let the incense of a
+grateful spirit rise not only to the Great Giver of all good, but to our
+Covenant God in Christ. Let it be the spirit of the child exulting in
+the bounty and beneficence of his _Father's_ house and home! "Giving
+_thanks_ always for all things unto God and _the Father_, in the name of
+our Lord Jesus Christ!"
+
+While the sweet melody of gratitude vibrates through every successive
+moment of our daily being, let love to our adorable Redeemer show for
+_whom_ and for _what_ it is we reserve our notes of loftiest and most
+fervent praise. Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable gift!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Seventh Day.
+
+UNSELFISHNESS.
+
+ "For even Christ pleased not Himself."--Rom. xv. 8.
+
+
+Too legibly are the characters written on the fallen heart and a fallen
+world--"All seek their own!" Selfishness is the great law of our
+degenerated nature. When the love of God was dethroned from the soul,
+self vaulted into the vacant seat, and there, in some one of its Proteus
+shapes, continues to reign.
+
+Jesus stands out for our imitation a grand solitary exception in the
+midst of a world of selfishness. His entire life was one abnegation of
+self; a beautiful living embodiment of that charity which "seeketh not
+her own." He who for others turned water into wine, and provided a
+miraculous supply for the fainting thousands in the wilderness, exerted
+no such miraculous power for His own necessities. During His forty days'
+temptation, no table did He spread for Himself, no booth did He rear for
+his unpillowed head. Twice do we read of Him shedding tears--on neither
+occasion were they for Himself. The approach of His cross and passion,
+instead of absorbing Him in His own approaching suffering, seemed only
+to elicit new and more gracious promises to His people. When His enemies
+came to apprehend Him, His only stipulation was for His disciples'
+release--"Let these go their way." In the very act of departure, with
+all the boundless glories of eternity in sight, _they_ were still all
+His care.
+
+Ah, how different is the spirit of the world! With how many is day after
+day only a new oblation to that idol which never darkened with its
+shadow His Holy heart; pampering their own wishes; "envying and grieving
+at the good of a neighbor;" unable to brook the praise of a rival;
+establishing their own reputation on the ruins of another; thus
+engendering jealousy, discontent, peevishness, and every kindred unholy
+passion.
+
+"But ye have not so learned Christ!" Reader! have you been sitting at
+the feet of Him who "pleased not Himself"? Are you "dying daily;"--dying
+to self as well as to sin? Are you animated with _this_ as the high end
+and aim of existence--to lay out your time, and talents, and
+opportunities, for God's glory, and the good of your fellow-men; not
+seeking your own interests, but rather ceding these, if, by doing so,
+another will be made happier, and your Saviour honored? You may not have
+it in your power to manifest this "mind of Jesus" on a great scale, by
+enduring great sacrifices; nor is this required. His denial of self had
+about it no repulsive austerity; but you can evince its holy influence
+and sway by innumerable little offices of kindness and good-will; taking
+a generous interest in the welfare and pursuits of others, or engaging
+and coöperating in schemes for the mitigation of human misery.
+
+Avoid _ostentation_--another repulsive form of self. Be willing to be in
+the shade; sound no trumpet before you. The evangelist Matthew made a
+great feast, which was graced by the presence of Jesus; in his Gospel he
+says not one word about it!
+
+Seek to live more constantly and habitually under the constraining
+influence of the love of Jesus. Selfishness withers and dies beneath
+Calvary.
+
+Ah, believer! if Christ had "pleased Himself," where wouldst _thou_ have
+_been_ this day?
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eighth Day.
+
+SUBMISSION TO GOD'S WORD.
+
+ "Jesus said unto him, It is written."--Matt. iv. 7.
+
+
+We can not fail to be struck, in the course of the Saviour's public
+teaching, with His constant appeal to the word of God. While, at times,
+He utters, in His own name, the authoritative behest, "Verily, verily, I
+say unto you," He as often thus introduces some mighty work, or gives
+intimation of some impending event in His own momentous life, "These
+things must come to pass, that _the Scriptures be fulfilled, which
+saith_." He commands His people to "search the Scriptures;" but He sets
+the example by searching and submitting to them Himself. Whether he
+drives the money-changers from their sacrilegious traffic in the
+temple, or foils his great adversary on the mount of temptation, he does
+so with the same weapon, "_It is written._" When He rises from the
+grave, the theme of His first discourse is one impressive tribute to the
+value and authority of the same sacred oracles. The disciples on the
+road to Emmaus listen to nothing but a _Bible lesson_. "He expounded
+unto them in all _the Scriptures_ the things concerning Himself."
+
+How momentous the instruction herein conveyed! The necessity of the
+absolute subjection of the mind to God's written Word--making churches,
+creeds, ministers, books, religious opinion, all subordinate and
+subservient to this--"How readest thou?" rebuking the philosophy,
+falsely so called, that would distort the plain statements of
+Revelation, and bring them to the bar of proud Reason.
+
+If an infallible Redeemer, "a law to Himself," was submissive in all
+respects to the "_written_ law," shall fallible man refuse to sit with
+the teachableness of a little child, and listen to the Divine message?
+There may be, there _is_, in the Bible, what reason staggers at: "we
+have nothing to draw with, and the well is deep." But, "_Thus saith the
+Lord_," is enough. Faith does not first ask what the bread is made of,
+but _eats_ it. It does not analyse the components of the living stream,
+but with joy draws the water from "the wells of salvation."
+
+Reader! take that Word as "the lamp to thy feet, and the light to thy
+path." In days when false lights are hung out, there is the more need of
+keeping the eye steadily fixed on the unerring beacon. Make the Bible
+the arbiter in all difficulties--the ultimate court of appeal. Like
+Mary, "sit at the feet of Jesus," willing only to learn of Him. How many
+perplexities it would save you! how many fatal steps in life it would
+prevent--how many tears! "It is a great matter," says the noblest of
+modern Christian philosophers, "when the mind dwells on any passage of
+Scripture, just to think _how true it is_." (_Chalmers' Life_).
+
+In every dubious question, when the foot is trembling on debatable
+ground, knowing not whether to advance or recede, make this the final
+criterion, "What saith the Scripture?" The world may remonstrate--erring
+friends may disapprove--Satan may tempt--ingenious arguments may explain
+away; but, with our finger on the revealed page, let the words of our
+Great Example be ever a Divine formula for our guidance:--"_This_
+commandment have I received of my Father!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Ninth Day.
+
+PRAYERFULNESS.
+
+ "He continued all night in prayer to God."--Luke, vi. 12.
+
+
+We speak of _this_ Christian and _that_ Christian as "a man of prayer."
+Jesus was emphatically so. The Spirit was "poured upon Him without
+measure," yet--_He prayed_! He was incarnate wisdom, "needing not that
+any should teach Him." He was infinite in His power, and boundless in
+His resources, yet--_He prayed_! How deeply sacred the prayerful
+memories that hover around the solitudes of Olivet and the shores of
+Tiberias! He seemed often to turn night into day to redeem moments for
+prayer, rather than lose the blessed privilege.
+
+We are rarely, indeed, admitted into the solemnities of His inner life.
+The veil of night is generally between us and the Great High Priest,
+when He entered "the holiest of all;" but we have enough to reveal the
+depth and fervor, the tenderness and confidingness of this blissful
+intercommunion with His heavenly Father. No morning dawns without His
+fetching fresh manna from the mercy-seat. "He wakeneth morning by
+morning; He wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned." (Isa. l. 4).
+Beautiful description!--a praying Redeemer, wakening, as if at early
+dawn, the ear of His Father, to get fresh supplies for the duties and
+the trials of the day! All His public acts were consecrated by
+prayer,--His baptism, His transfiguration, His miracles, His agony, His
+death. He breathed away His spirit in prayer. "His last breath," says
+Philip Henry, "was praying breath."
+
+How sweet to think, in holding communion with God--_Jesus_ drank of this
+very brook! He consecrated the bended knee and the silent chamber. He
+refreshed His fainting spirit at the same great Fountain-head from which
+it is life for us to draw and death to forsake.
+
+Reader! do you complain of your languid spirit, your drooping faith,
+your fitful affections, your lukewarm love? May you not trace much of
+what you deplore to an unfrequented chamber? The treasures are locked up
+from you, because you have suffered the key to rust; the hands hang down
+because they have ceased to be uplifted in prayer. Without prayer!--It
+is the pilgrim without a staff--the seaman without a compass--the
+soldier going unarmed and unharnessed to battle.
+
+Beware of encouraging what indisposes to prayer--going to the audience
+chamber with soiled garments, the din of the world following you, its
+distracting thoughts hovering unforbidden over your spirit. Can you
+wonder that the living water refuses to flow through obstructed
+channels, or the heavenly light to pierce murky vapors!
+
+On earth, fellowship with a lofty order of minds imparts a certain
+nobility to the character; so, in a far higher sense, by communion with
+God you will be transformed into His image, and get assimilated to His
+likeness. Make every event in life a reason for fresh going to Him. If
+difficulted in duty, bring it to the test of prayer. If bowed down with
+anticipated trial,--"fearing to enter the cloud,"--remember Christ's
+preparation, "Sit ye here while I go and _pray_ yonder."
+
+Let prayer consecrate every thing--your time, talents, pursuits,
+engagements, joys, sorrows, crosses, losses. By it, rough paths will be
+made smooth, trials disarmed of their bitterness, enjoyments hallowed
+and refined, the bread of the world turned into angels' food. "It is in
+the closet," says Payson, "the battle is lost or won!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Tenth Day.
+
+LOVE TO THE BRETHREN.
+
+ "And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us."--Eph. v. 2.
+
+
+"Jesus," says a writer, "came from heaven on the wings of love." It was
+the element in which he moved and walked. He sought to baptize the world
+afresh with it. When we find Him teaching us by love to vanquish an
+_enemy_, we need not wonder at the tenderness of His appeals to the
+_brethren_ to "love one another." Like a fond father impressing his
+children, how the Divine Teacher lingers over the lesson, "This is _My_
+commandment!"
+
+If selfishness had guided His actions, we might have expected him to
+demand all His people's love for himself. But He claims no such
+monopoly. He not only encourages mutual affection, but He makes it the
+badge of discipleship! He gives them at once its measure and motive.
+"Love one another, as I have loved you!" What a love was that!--it
+reached to the lowliest and humblest,--"Inasmuch as ye did it to the
+_least_ of these, ye did it unto _Me_."
+
+Ah! if such was the Elder Brother's love to His younger brethren, what
+should the love of these younger brothers be for one another! How
+humbling that there should be so much that is sadly and strangely unlike
+the spirit which our blessed Master sought to inculcate alike by precept
+and example! Individual Christians, why these bitter estrangements,
+these censorious words, these harsh judgments, this want of kind
+consideration of the feelings and failings of those who may differ from
+you? Why are your friendships so often like the summer brook, soon
+dried? You hope, ere long, to meet in glory. Doubtless when you enter on
+that "sabbath of love," many a greeting will be this, "Alas! my
+brother, that on earth I did not love thee more!"
+
+Do you see the image of God in a professing believer? It is your duty to
+love him for the sake of that image. No church, no outward livery, no
+denominational creed, should prevent your owning and claiming him as a
+fellow-pilgrim and fellow-heir. It has been said of a portrait, however
+poor the painting, however unfinished the style, however faulty the
+touches, however coarse and unseemly the frame, yet if the _likeness_ be
+faithful, we overlook many subordinate defects. So it is with the
+Christian: however plain the exterior, however rough the setting, or
+even manifold the blemishes still found cleaving to a
+partially-sanctified nature, yet if the Redeemer's _likeness_ be feebly
+and faintly traced there, we should love the copy for the sake of the
+Divine Original. There may be other bonds of association and intercourse
+linking spirit with spirit; family ties, mental congenialities,
+intellectual tastes, philanthropic pursuits; but that which ought to
+take the precedence of all, is the love of God's image in the brethren.
+What will heaven be but this love perfected--loving Christ, and beloved
+by those who love Him?
+
+Reader! seek to love _Him_ more, and you will love His people more. John
+had more love than the other disciples. Why? He drank deepest of the
+love within that Bosom on which he delighted to lean, every beat of
+which was love. "Walk," then, "in love!" Let it be the very foot-road
+you tread; let your way to heaven be paved with it. Soon shall we come
+to look within the portal. Then shall every jarring and dissonant note
+be merged into the sublime harmonies of "the new heavens and the new
+earth," and we shall all "see eye to eye!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eleventh Day.
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+ "Jesus wept."--John, xi. 35.
+
+
+It is an affecting thing to see a Great man in tears! "_Jesus wept!_" It
+was ever His delight to tread in the footsteps of sorrow--to heal the
+broken-hearted--turning aside from His own path of suffering to "weep
+with those that weep."
+
+_Bethany!_ That scene, that _word_, is a condensed volume of consolation
+for yearning and desolate hearts. What a majesty in those tears! He had
+just been discoursing on Himself as the Resurrection and the Life--the
+next moment He is a Weeping Man by a human grave, melted in anguished
+sorrow at a bereaved one's side! Think of the funeral at the gate of
+Nain, reading its lesson to dejected myriads--"Let thy widows trust in
+me!" Think of the farewell discourse to His disciples, when, muffling
+all His own foreseen and anticipated sorrows, He thought only of
+soothing and mitigating theirs! Think of the affecting pause in that
+silent procession to Calvary, when He turns round and stills the sobs of
+those who are tracking His steps with their weeping! Think of that
+wondrous epitome of human tenderness, just ere His eyes closed in their
+sleep of agony--in the mightiest crisis of all time--when filial love
+looked down on an anguished mother, and provided her a son and a home!
+
+Ah, was there ever sympathy like this! Son! Brother! Kinsman! Saviour!
+all in one! The majesty of Godhead almost lost in the tenderness of a
+Friend. But so it _was_, and so it is. The heart of the now enthroned
+King beats responsive to the humblest of His sorrow-stricken people. "I
+am poor and needy, yet the Lord _carries me on His heart_!" (margin.)
+
+Let us "go and do likewise." Let us be ready, like our Lord, to follow
+the beck of misery,--"to deliver the needy when he crieth, the poor
+also, and him that hath no helper." Sympathy costs but little. Its
+recompense and return are great, in the priceless consolation it
+imparts. Few there are who undervalue it. Look at Paul--the weary, jaded
+prisoner,--chained to a soldier--recently wrecked, about to stand before
+Cæsar. He reaches Appii Forum and the Three Taverns, dejected and
+depressed. Brethren come from Rome, a distance of sixty miles, to offer
+their _sympathy_. The aged man is cheered! His spirit, like Jacob's,
+"revived!" "He thanked God, and took courage!"
+
+Reader! let "this mind," this holy, Christ-like _habit_ be in you, which
+was also in your adorable Master. Delight, when opportunity occurs, to
+frequent the house of mourning--to bind up the widow's heart, and to dry
+the orphan's tears. If you can do nothing else, you can whisper into the
+ear of disconsolate sorrow those majestic solaces, which, rising first
+in the graveyard of Bethany, have sent their undying echoes through the
+world, and stirred the depths of ten thousand hearts. "Exercise your
+souls," says Butler, "in a loving sympathy with sorrow in every form.
+Soothe it, minister to it, succor it, revere it. It is the relic of
+Christ in the world, an image of the Great Sufferer, a shadow of the
+cross. It is a holy and venerable thing."
+
+Jesus Himself "_looked_ for some to take _pity_, but there was _none_;
+and for comforters, but He found _none_!" It shows how even _He_ valued
+sympathy, and that, too, in its commonest form of "_pity_," though an
+ungrateful World denied it.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twelfth Day.
+
+FIDELITY IN REBUKE.
+
+ "The Lord turned and looked upon Peter."--Luke, xxii. 61.
+
+
+Jesus never spake one unnecessarily harsh or severe word. He had a
+Divine sympathy for the frailties and infirmities of a tried, and
+suffering, and tempted nature in others. He was forbearing to the
+ignorant, encouraging to the weak, tender to the penitent, loving to
+all,--yet how faithful was He as "the Reprover of sin!" Silent under His
+own wrongs, with what burning invectives did He lay bare the Pharisees'
+masked corruption and hypocrisy! When His Father's name and temple were
+profaned, how did He sweep, with an avenging hand, the mammon-crowd
+away, replacing the superscription, "Holiness to the Lord," over the
+defiled altars!
+
+Nor was it different with His own disciples. With what fidelity, when
+rebuke was needed, did He administer it: the withering reprimand
+conveyed sometimes by an impressive _word_ (Matt. xvi. 23); sometimes by
+a silent _look_ (Luke, xxii. 61). "Faithful always were the wounds of
+_this_ Friend."
+
+Reader! art thou equally faithful with thy Lord in rebuking evil; not
+with "the wrath of man, which worketh not the righteousness of God," but
+with a holy jealousy of His glory, feeling, with the sensitive honor of
+"the good soldier of Jesus Christ," that an affront offered to Him is
+offered to thyself? The giving of a wise reproof requires much Christian
+prudence and delicate discretion. It is not by a rash and inconsiderate
+exposure of failings that we must attempt to reclaim an erring brother.
+But neither, for the sake of a false peace, must we compromise fidelity;
+even friendship is too dearly purchased by winking at sin. Perhaps, when
+Peter was led to call the Apostle who honestly reproved him, "Our
+beloved brother Paul," in nothing did he love his rebuker more, than for
+the honest boldness of his Christian reproof. If Paul had, in that
+crisis of the Church, with a timidity unworthy of him, evaded the
+ungracious task, what, humanly speaking, might have been the result?
+
+How often does a seasonable reprimand, a faithful caution, save a
+lifetime of sin and sorrow! How many a death-bed has made the
+disclosure, "That kind warning of my friend put an arrest on my career
+of guilt; it altered my whole being; it brought me to the cross, touched
+my heart, and, by God's grace, saved my soul!" On the other hand, how
+many have felt, when death has put his impressive seal on some close
+earthly intimacy, "This friend, or that friend,--I might have spoken a
+solemn word to him; but now he is no more; the opportunity is lost,
+never to be recalled!"
+
+Reader! see that you act not the spiritual coward. When tempted to sit
+silent when the name of God is slighted or dishonored, think, _would
+Jesus have done so_?--would _He_ have allowed the oath to go
+unrebuked--the lie to be uttered unchallenged--the Sabbath with impunity
+to be profaned? Where there is a natural diffidence which makes you
+shrink from a more bold and open reproof, remember much may be done to
+discountenance sin, by the silent holiness of demeanor which refuses to
+smile at the unholy allusion or ribald jest. "A word spoken in due
+season, how good is it!" "Speak gently," yet speak faithfully: "be
+pitiful--be courteous:" yet "quit you like men; be strong!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirteenth Day.
+
+GENTLENESS IN REBUKE.
+
+ "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?"--John, xxi. 15.
+
+
+No word here of the erring disciple's past faithlessness;--his guilty
+cowardice--_unmentioned_;--his base denial--his oaths--and curses, and
+treacherous desertion--all _unmentioned_! The memory of a threefold
+denial is _suggested_, and no more, by the threefold question of
+unutterable tenderness, "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?" When
+Jesus finds His disciples sleeping at the gate of Gethsemane, He rebukes
+them; but how is the rebuke disarmed of its poignancy by the merciful
+apology which is added--"The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is
+weak!" How different from _their_ unkind insinuation regarding _Him_,
+when, in the vessel on Tiberias, "He was asleep"--"Master carest thou
+not that we perish!" The woman of Samaria is full of earthliness,
+carnality, sectarianism, guilt. Yet how gently the Saviour speaks to
+her--how forbearingly, yet faithfully. He directs the arrow of
+conviction to that seared and hardened conscience, till He lays it
+bleeding at His feet! Truly, "He will not break the bruised reed--He
+will not quench the smoking flax." By "the _goodness_ of God," He would
+lead to repentance. When others are speaking of merciless violence, He
+can dismiss the most guilty of profligates with the words, "Neither do I
+condemn thee; go, and sin no more."
+
+How many have an unholy pleasure in finding a brother in the
+wrong--blazing abroad his failings; administering rebuke, not in gentle
+forbearance and kindly expostulation, but with harsh and impatient
+severity! How beautifully did Jesus unite intense sensibility to sin,
+along with tenderest compassion for the sinner, showing in this that
+"He knoweth our frame!" Many a scholar needs gentleness in
+chastisement. The reverse would crush a sensitive spirit, or drive it to
+despair. Jesus tenderly "considers" the case of those He disciplines,
+"tempering the wind to the shorn lamb." In the picture of the good
+shepherd bearing home the wandering sheep, He illustrated by parable
+what He had often and again taught by His own example. No word of
+needless harshness or upbraiding uttered to the erring wanderer!
+Ingratitude is too deeply felt to need rebuke! In silent love, "He lays
+it on His shoulders rejoicing."
+
+Reader! seek to mingle gentleness in all your rebukes; bear with the
+infirmities of others; make allowance for constitutional frailties;
+never say harsh things, if kind things will do as well; do not
+unnecessarily lacerate with recalling former delinquencies. In reproving
+another, let us rather feel how much we need reproof ourselves.
+"Consider thyself," is a searching Scripture motto for dealing with an
+erring brother. Remember thy Lord's method of silencing fierce
+accusation--"Let him that is without sin cast the first stone."
+Moreover, anger and severity are not the successful means of reclaiming
+the backslider, or of melting the obdurate. Like the _smooth_ stones
+with which David smote Goliath, _gentle_ rebukes are generally the most
+powerful. The old fable of the traveller and his cloak has a moral here
+as in other things. The genial sunshine will effect its removal sooner
+than the rough tempest. It was said of Leighton, that "he rebuked faults
+so mildly, that they were never repeated, not because the admonished
+were afraid, but ashamed to do so."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fourteenth Day.
+
+ENDURANCE IN CONTRADICTION.
+
+ "Who endured such contradiction of sinners against Himself."--
+ Heb. xii. 3.
+
+
+What endurance was this! Perfect truth in the midst of error; perfect
+love in the midst of ingratitude and coldness; perfect rectitude in the
+midst of perjury, violence, fraud; perfect constancy in the midst of
+contumely and desertion; perfect innocence, confronting every debased
+form of depravity and guilt; perfect patience, encountering every
+species of gross provocation--"oppressed and afflicted, He opened not
+His mouth!" "For my love" (in return for my love), "they are mine
+adversaries; _but_" (see His endurance!--the only species of revenge of
+which His sinless nature was capable) "_I give myself unto prayer!_"
+(Ps. cix. 4.)
+
+Reader! "let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus!" The
+greatest test of an earthly soldier's courage is _patient endurance_!
+The noblest trait of the spiritual soldier is the same. "Having done all
+_to stand_," "He _endured_, as seeing Him who is invisible!" Beware of
+the angry recrimination, the hasty ebullition of temper. Amid unkind
+insinuations--when motives are misrepresented, and reputation assailed;
+when good deeds are ridiculed, kind intentions coldly thwarted and
+repulsed, chilling reserve manifested where you expected nothing but
+friendship--what a triumph over natural impulse to manifest a spirit of
+meek endurance!--like a rainbow, radiant with the hues of heaven,
+resting peacefully amid the storms of derision and "the floods of
+ungodly men." What an opportunity of magnifying the "sustaining grace of
+God!" "It is a small thing for me to be judged of you, or of man's
+judgment; He that judgeth me is the Lord." "The Lord is on my side; I
+will not fear what man can do unto me." "Blessed is the man that
+_endureth_." "He that _endureth_ to the end, the same shall be saved."
+
+If faithful to our God, we must expect to encounter contradiction in the
+same form which Jesus did--"the contradiction of _sinners_." It has been
+well said, "There is no cross of nails and wood erected now for the
+Christian, but there is one of words and looks which is never taken
+down." If believers are set as lights in the earth, lamps in the "city
+of destruction," we know that "he that doeth evil _hateth_ the light."
+"Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you!"
+
+Weary and faint ones, exposed to the shafts of calumny and scorn because
+of your fidelity to your God; encountering, it may be, the coldness and
+estrangement of those dear to you, who can not, perhaps, sympathize in
+the holiness of your walk and the loftiness of your aims, "consider
+_Him_ that endured such contradiction of sinners against Himself, _lest_
+ye be weary and faint in your minds!" What is _your_ "contradiction" to
+_His_? Soon your cross, whatever it be, will have an end. "The seat of
+the scorner" has no place in yonder glorious heaven, where all will be
+peace--no jarring note to disturb its blissful harmonies! Look forward
+to the great coronation-day of the Church triumphant,--the day of your
+divine Lord's appearing, when motives and aims, now misunderstood, will
+be vindicated, wrongs redressed, calumnies and aspersions wiped away.
+Meanwhile, "rejoice that you are counted worthy to suffer shame for His
+name."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fifteenth Day.
+
+PLEASING GOD.
+
+ "I do always those things that please Him."--John, viii. 29.
+
+
+What a glorious motto for a man--"_I live for God!_" It is religion's
+truest definition. It is the essence of angelic bliss--the
+motive-principle of angelic action; "Ye ministers of His, that do His
+pleasure." The Lord of angels knew no higher, no _other_ motive. It was,
+during His incarnation, the regulator and directory of His daily being.
+It supported Him amid the depressing sorrows of His woe-worn path. It
+upheld him in their awful termination in the garden and on the cross.
+For a moment, sinking human nature faltered under the load His Godhead
+sustained; but the thought of "pleasing God" nerved and revived Him.
+"Not my will, but _Thine_ be done."
+
+It is only when the love of God is shed abroad in the heart, that this
+animating desire to "please Him" can exist. In the holy bosom of Jesus,
+that love reigned paramount, admitting no rival--no competing affection.
+Though infinitely inferior in degree, it is the same impelling principle
+which leads His people still to link enjoyment with His service, and
+which makes consecration to Him of heart and life its own best
+recompense and reward. "There is a gravitation," says one whose life was
+the holy echo of his words, "in the moral as in the physical world. When
+love to God is habitually in the ascendant, or occupying the place of
+will, it gathers round it all the other desires of the soul as
+satellites, and whirls them along with it in its orbit round the center
+of attraction." (_Hewitson's Life._) Till the heart, then, be changed,
+the believer can not have "this testimony that he _pleases God_." The
+world, self, sin--these be the gods of the unregenerate soul. And even
+_when_ changed, alas that there should be so many ebbings and flowings
+in our tide of devotedness! Jesus could say, "I do _always_ those things
+that please the Father." Glory to God burned within His bosom like a
+living fire. "Many waters could not quench it." His were no fitful and
+inconsistent frames and feelings, but the persistent habit of a holy
+life, which had the one end in view, from which it never diverged or
+deviated.
+
+Let it be so, in some lowly measure with us. Let God's service not be
+the mere livery of high days,--of set times and seasons; but, like the
+alabaster box of ointment, let us ever be giving forth the fragrant
+perfume of holiness. Even when the shadows of trial are falling around
+us, let us "pass through the cloud" with the sustaining motive--"All my
+wish, O God, is to please and glorify Thee! By giving or taking--by
+smiting or healing--by the sweet cup or the bitter--'Father, glorify thy
+name!'" "I don't want to be weary of God's dealing with me," said
+Bickersteth, on his death-bed; "I want to glorify Jesus in them, and to
+find Him more precious." Do I shrink from
+trials--duties--crosses--because involving hardships and self-denial, or
+because frowned on by the world? Let the thought of God's approving
+countenance be enough. Let me dread no censure, if conscious of acting
+in accordance with _His_ will. Let the Apostle's monitory word determine
+many a perplexing path--"If I please men, I am not the servant of
+Christ."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Sixteenth Day.
+
+GRIEF AT SIN.
+
+ "Being grieved for the hardness of their hearts."--Mark, iii. 5.
+
+
+On this one occasion only is the expression used with reference to
+Jesus--(what intensity of emotion does it denote, spoken of a sinless
+nature!)--"He looked round on them _with anger_!" Never did He grieve
+for Himself. His intensest sorrows were reserved for those who were
+tampering with their own souls, and dishonoring His God. The continual
+spectacle of moral evil, thrust on the gaze of spotless purity, made His
+earthly history one consecutive history of grief, one perpetual "cross
+and passion."
+
+In the tears shed at the grave of Bethany, sympathy, doubtless, for the
+world's myriad mourners, had its own share (the bereaved could not part
+with so precious a tribute in their hours of sadness), but a far more
+impressive cause was one undiscerned by the weeping sisters and
+sorrowing crowd; His knowledge of the deep and obdurate impenitence of
+those who were about to gaze on the mightiest of miracles, only to
+"despise, and wonder, and perish." "_Jesus wept!_"--but His profoundest
+anguish was over resisted grace, abused privileges, scorned mercy. It
+was the Divine Artificer mourning over His shattered handiwork; the
+Almighty Creator weeping over His ruined world; God, the God-man,
+"grieving" over the Temple of the soul, a humiliating wreck of what once
+was made "after His own image!"
+
+Can we sympathize in any respect with such exalted tears? Do we mourn
+for sin, our _own_ sin--the deep insult which it inflicts on God--the
+ruinous consequences it entails on ourselves? Do we grieve at sin in
+_others_? Do we know any thing of "vexing our souls," like righteous
+Lot, "from day to day," with the world's "unlawful deeds," the stupid
+hardness and obduracy of the depraved heart, which resists alike the
+appliances of wrath and love, judgment and mercy? Ah! it is easy, in
+general terms, to condemn vice, and to utter harsh, severe, and cutting
+denunciations on the guilty: it is easy to pass uncharitable comments on
+the inconsistencies or follies of others: but to "_grieve_" as our Lord
+did, is a different thing; to mourn over the hardness of heart, and yet
+to have the burning desire to teach it better things; to hate, as He
+did, the sin, but, like Him also, to love the _sinner_!
+
+Reader! look specially to your own spirit. In one respect, the example
+of Jesus falls short of your case. He had no sin of His own to mourn
+over. He could only commiserate others. _Your_ intensest grief must
+begin with _yourself_. Like the watchful Levite of old, be a guardian at
+the temple-gates of your own soul. Whatever be your besetting iniquity,
+your constitutional bias to sin, seek to guard it with wakeful
+vigilance. Grieve at the thought of incurring one passing shadow of
+displeasure from so kind and compassionate a Saviour. Let this be a holy
+preservative in your every hour of temptation, "How can I do this great
+wickedness, and sin against God?"
+
+Grieve for a perishing world--a groaning creation fettered and chained
+in unwilling "subjection to vanity." Do what you can, by effort, by
+prayer, to hasten on the hour of jubilee, when its ashy robes of sin and
+sorrow shall be laid aside, and, attired in the "beauties of holiness,"
+it shall exult in "the glorious liberty of the sons of God!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Seventeenth Day.
+
+HUMILITY.
+
+ "He riseth from supper, and laid aside His garments; and took a
+ towel and girded Himself. After that He poureth water into a basin,
+ and began to wash the disciples' feet."--John, xiii. 4, 5.
+
+
+What a matchless picture of humility! At the very moment when His throne
+was in view; angel-anthems floating in His ear; the hour come "when He
+was to depart out of this world;" possessing a lofty consciousness of
+His peerless dignity, that "He came _from_ God and went _to_ God;" THEN
+"Jesus took a towel, and girded Himself, and began to wash the
+disciples' feet!" All heaven was ready at that moment to cast their
+combined crowns at His feet. But the High and the Lofty One, inhabiting
+eternity, is on earth "as one that serveth!" "That _infinite stoop_! it
+sinks all creature humiliation to nothing, and renders it impossible for
+a creature to _humble_ himself."--(_Evans_).
+
+Humility follows Him, from His unhonored birthplace to His borrowed
+grave. It throws a subdued splendor over all He did. "The poor in
+spirit,"--the "mourner,"--the "meek,"--claim His first beatitudes. He
+was severe only to one class--those who looked down upon others. However
+He is employed; whether performing His works of miraculous power, or
+receiving angel-visitants, or taking little children in His arms, He
+stands forth "clothed with humility." Nay, this humility becomes more
+conspicuous as He draws nearer glory. Before His death, He calls His
+disciples "_Friends_;" subsequently, it is "_Brethren_," "_Children_."
+How sad the contrast between the Master and His disciples! Two hours had
+not elapsed after He washed their feet, when "there was a strife among
+them which should be the greatest!"
+
+Let the mental image of that lowly Redeemer be ever bending over us.
+His example may well speak in silent impressiveness, bringing us down
+from our pedestal of pride. There surely can be no labor of love too
+humiliating when _He_ stooped so low. Let us be content to take the
+humblest place; not envious of the success or exaltation of another;
+not, "like Diotrephes, loving preëminence;" "but willing to be thought
+little of;" saying with the Baptist, with our eye on our Lord, "He must
+increase, but I must decrease!"
+
+How much we have cause to be humble for! the constant cleaving of
+defilement to our souls; and even what is partially good in us, how
+mixed with imperfection, self-seeking, arrogance, vain-glory! A proud
+Christian is a contradiction in terms. The Seraphim of old (type of the
+Christian Church, and of believers) had six wings--_two_ were for
+errands of love, but "with _four_ he _covered_ himself!" It has been
+beautifully said, "You lie nearest the River of Life when you _bend_ to
+it; you can not drink, but as you _stoop_." The corn of the field, as
+it ripens, bows its head; so the Christian, as he ripens in the Divine
+life, bends in this lowly grace. Christ speaks of His people as
+"lilies"--they are "lilies of _the valley_," they can only grow in the
+shade!
+
+"Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God." "Go" with what
+Rutherford calls "a low sail." It is the livery of your blessed Master;
+the family badge--the family likeness. "With this man will I dwell, even
+with him that is _humble_." Yes! the humble, sanctified heart is God's
+_second Heaven_!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eighteenth Day.
+
+PATIENCE.
+
+ "He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter."--Isa. liii, 7.
+
+
+How great was the _patience_ of Jesus! Even among His own disciples, how
+forbearingly He endured their blindness, their misconceptions and
+hardness of heart! Philip had been for three years with Him, yet he had
+"not known Him!"--all that time he had remained in strange and culpable
+ignorance of his Lord's dignity and glory. See how tenderly Jesus bears
+with him; giving him nothing in reply for his confession of ignorance
+but unparalleled promises of grace! Peter, the honored and trusted,
+becomes a renegade and a coward. Justly might his dishonored Lord, stung
+with such unrequited love, have cut the unworthy cumberer down. But He
+spares him, bears with him, gently rebukes him, and loves him more than
+ever! See the Divine Sufferer in the terminating scenes of His own
+ignominy and woe. How patient!--"As a sheep before her shearers is dumb,
+so He opened not His mouth." In these awful moments, outraged
+Omnipotence might have summoned twelve legions of angels and put into
+the hand of each a vial of wrath. But He submits in meek, majestic
+silence. Verily, in _Him_ "patience had her _perfect_ work!"
+
+Think of this same patience with His Church and people since He ascended
+to glory. The years upon years He has borne with their perverse
+resistance of His grace, their treacherous ingratitude, their wayward
+wanderings, their hardness of heart and contempt of His holy word. Yet,
+behold the forbearing love of this Saviour of God! His hand of mercy is
+"stretched out still!"
+
+Child of God! art thou now undergoing some bitter trial? The way of thy
+God, it may be, all mystery; no footprints of love traceable in the
+checkered path; no light, in the clouds above; no ray in the dark
+future. _Be patient!_ "The Lord is good to them that _wait_ for Him."
+"They that _wait_ on the Lord shall renew their strength!" Or hast thou
+been long tossed on some bed of sickness--days of pain and nights of
+weariness appointed thee? _Be patient!_ "I trust this groaning," said a
+suffering saint, "is not murmuring." God, by this very affliction, is
+nurturing within thee this beauteous grace which shone so conspicuously
+in the character of thy dear Lord. With Him it was a lovely _habit_ of
+the soul. With thee, the "tribulation" which worketh "patience" is
+needful discipline. It is _good_ for a man that he should both hope and
+quietly _wait_ for the salvation of God. Art thou suffering some
+unmerited wrong or unkindness, exposed to harsh and wounding
+accusations, hard for flesh and blood to bear? _Be patient!_ Beware of
+hastiness of speech or temper; remember how much evil may be done by a
+few inconsiderate words "spoken unadvisedly with the lip." Think of
+Jesus standing before a human tribunal, in the silent submissiveness of
+conscious innocence and integrity. Leave thy cause with God. Let this be
+the only form of thy complaint, "O God, I am oppressed; undertake Thou
+for me!"
+
+"In patience," then, "possess ye your souls." Let it not be a grace for
+peculiar seasons, called forth on peculiar exigences; but an habitual
+frame manifested in the calm serenity of a daily walk;--placidity amid
+the little fretting annoyances of every-day life--a fixed purpose of the
+heart to wait upon God, and cast its every burden upon Him.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Nineteenth Day.
+
+SUBJECTION.
+
+ "As the Father gave me commandment, even so I do."--John, xiv. 31.
+
+
+Jesus as God-man had omnipotence slumbering in His arm. He had the
+hoarded treasures of eternity in His grasp. He had only to "speak, and
+it was done." But, as an example to His people, His whole life on earth
+was one impressive act of subordination and dependence. At Nazareth He
+was "subject to His parents." There He remained in studied obscurity,
+occupying for thirty years a lowly hut, willing to continue in a state
+of seclusion, till the Father's summons called Him to His appointed
+work.
+
+At His baptism, sinless Himself, He gives this reason for receiving a
+sinner's rite at a sinner's hands--"Suffer it to be so now, for thus it
+becometh Me to fulfill all righteousness." The same beautiful spirit of
+filial _subjection_ shines conspicuous amid His acts of stupendous
+power. "Jesus lifted up His eyes and said, Father, I thank Thee that
+Thou hast heard Me; and I know that Thou hearest Me always; but because
+of the people which stand by, I said it, that they may believe that Thou
+has sent Me." Even among His own disciples His language is, "I am among
+you as He that serveth." With an act of submission He closed His
+pilgrimage and work of love. "Father, into Thy hands I commend My
+spirit."
+
+What an example to us, in all this, is our beloved Lord! Surely, if
+_He_, "God only wise"--the Self-existent One, to whom "all power was
+committed;"--the Sinless One, never liable to err, on whom "the Spirit
+was poured without measure"--if _He_ manifested such habitual dependence
+on His heavenly Father, how earnestly ought _we_, weak, erring,
+fallible creatures, to seek to live every hour--every moment--as
+pensioners on God's grace and love, following in all things His
+directing hand! As the servant has his eyes on his master, or the child
+on its parent, "so should our eyes be on the Lord our God." Howsoever He
+speaks, be it ours with all docility to follow the voice, indorsing
+every utterance of providence, and every precept of Scripture, with our
+Lord's own words, "_This is the Father's will!_"
+
+Beware of self-dependence. The first step in spiritual declension is
+this: "Let him that _thinketh he standeth_!" The secret of real strength
+is this: "_Kept_ by the _power of God_!"
+
+How it sweetens all our blessings, and alleviates all our sorrows, to
+regard both as emanations from a loving Father's hand. Even if we should
+be, like the disciples of old, "_constrained_" to go into the ship; if
+all should be darkness and tempest, frowning providences--"the wind
+contrary;" how blessed to feel that in embarking on the unquiet
+element, "the Lord has bidden us!" Paul could not speak even of taking
+an earthly journey, without the parenthesis ("if the Lord will"). How
+many trials, and sorrows, and _sins_, would it save us, if the same were
+the habitual regulator of our daily life! It would lead to calm
+contentment with our lot, hushing every disquieting suggestion with the
+thought that that lot, with all that is apparently adverse in it, was
+_ordained_ for us. It would teach us not to be aspiring after _great_
+things, but humbly to wait the will and purposes of a wise Provider; not
+to go _before_ our Heavenly Guide, but to _follow_ Him, saying, in meek
+subjection, "Lord, my heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty, neither
+do I exercise myself in great matters, or in things too high for for me
+... my soul is even as a weaned child!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twentieth Day.
+
+NOT RETALIATING.
+
+ "Who, when He was reviled, reviled not again."--1 Peter, ii. 23.
+
+
+What a common dictate of the fallen and regenerate heart to resent and
+recriminate! How alien to natural feeling to answer cutting taunts, and
+meet unmerited wrong with the Divine method the Gospel
+prescribes--"Overcome evil with good!" It was in the closing scenes of
+the Saviour's humiliation, when, silent and unresenting, He stood "dumb
+before His shearers," that this beautiful feature in His character was
+most wondrously manifested; but it beams forth, also, for our imitation
+in the ordinary and less prominent incidents of His pilgrimage.
+
+When He met Nathanael of Cana in Galilee, He found him clinging to an
+unreasonable prejudice--"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" The
+severe remark is allowed to pass unnoticed. Overlooking the unkind
+insinuation, the Saviour fixes on the favorable feature of his
+character, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!" After His
+resurrection, He appears to His disciples. They were cowering in shame,
+half afraid to confront the glance of injured goodness. He breathes on
+them, and says, "Peace be unto you!" Peter was the one of all the rest
+who had most reason to dread estranged looks and upbraiding words; but a
+special message is sent to reassure that trembling spirit that there was
+no alienation in the unresentful Heart he had so deeply wounded; "Go and
+tell the disciples ... and _Peter_!" Even when Judas first revealed
+himself to his Lord as the betrayer, we believe it was not in bitter
+irony or rebuke, but in the fullness of pitying tenderness, that Jesus
+addressed him, "Friend, wherefore art thou come?" Tears and prayers
+were His only revenge on the city and scene of His murder. "Beginning at
+Jerusalem," was the closing illustration of a spirit "not of this
+world"--a significant parting testimony that in the bosom that uttered
+it retaliation had no place.
+
+More than one of the disciples seem to have imbibed much of this "mind"
+of their Lord. "We owe St. Paul," says Augustine, "to the death of
+Stephen;" "they stoned Stephen ... and he kneeled down and cried with a
+loud voice, Lord! lay not this sin to their charge."
+
+Take another example: The great Apostle of the Gentiles felt himself
+under a painful necessity faithfully to rebuke Peter in presence of the
+whole Church. He had _recorded_ that rebuke, too, in one of his
+epistles. It was thus to be handed down to every age as a permanent and
+humiliating evidence of the wavering inconstancy of his fellow-laborer.
+Peter, doubtless, must have felt acutely the severity of the
+chastisement. Does he resent it? He, too, puts on record, long after, in
+one of his own epistles a sentence regarding his Rebuker, but it is
+this--"Our _beloved brother_ Paul!"
+
+Reader! when tempted to utter the harsh word, or give the cutting or
+hasty answer, seek to check yourself with the question, "Is this the
+reply my Saviour would have given?" If your fellow-men should prove
+unkind, inconsiderate, ungrateful, be it yours to refer the cause to
+God. Speak of the faults of others only in prayer; manifesting more
+sorrow for the sin of the censorious and unkind, than for the evil
+inflicted on yourselves. _Retaliate!_ No such word should have a place
+in the Christian's vocabulary. _Retaliate!_ If I cherish such a spirit
+towards my brother, how can I meet that brother in heaven?--"But ye have
+not so learned in Christ."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-first Day.
+
+BEARING THE CROSS.
+
+ "And He bearing His cross."--John, xix. 17.
+
+
+When did Jesus bear the cross? Not that moment alone, surely, when the
+bitter tree was placed on His shoulders, on the way to Golgotha. Its
+vision may be said to have risen before Him in His infant dreams in
+Bethlehem's cradle; there, rather, its reality began; and He ceased not
+to carry it, till His work was finished, and the victory won! A _cloud_,
+of old, hovered over the mercy-seat in the tabernacle and temple. So it
+was with the Great Antitype--the living Mercy-Seat--He had ever a cloud
+of woe hanging over him. "He _carried_ our sorrows."
+
+Reader! dwell much and often under the shadow of your Lord's cross, and
+it will lead you to think lightly of your own! If _He_ gave utterance to
+not one murmuring word, canst _thou_ complain? "If we were deeper
+students of his bitter anguish, we should think less of the ripplings of
+our waves, amidst His horrible tempest."--(_Evans._) The saint's cross
+assumes many and diverse shapes. Sometimes it is the bitter trial, the
+crushing pang of bereavement--desolate households, and aching hearts.
+Sometimes it is the crucifixion of sin, the determined battle with
+"lusts which war against the soul." Sometimes it is the resistance of
+evil maxims and practices of a lying world; vindicating the honor of
+Christ, in the midst, it may be, of taunt, and obloquy, and shame. And
+as there are different crosses, so there are different ways of bearing
+them. To some, God says, "put your shoulder to the burden; lift it up,
+and bear it on; work, and toil, and labor!" To others, He says, "Be
+still, bear it, and _suffer_!"
+
+Believer! thy cross may be hard to endure; it may involve deep
+struggles--tears by day, watchings by night; bear it meekly, patiently,
+justifying God's wisdom in laying it on. Rejoice in the assurance that
+He gives not one atom more of earthly trial than He sees to be really
+needful; not one redundant thorn pierces your feet. In the very bearing
+of the cross for _His_ sake, there are mighty compensations. What new
+views of your Saviour's love! His truth, His promises, His sustaining
+grace, His sufferings, His glory! What new filial nearness; increased
+delight in prayer; an inner sunshine when it is darkest without! The
+waves cover you, but underneath them all, are "the everlasting arms!"
+
+Do not look out for a situation _without_ crosses. Be not over anxious
+about "smooth paths;"--leaving your God, as Orpah did Naomi, just when
+the cross requires to be carried. Immoderate earthly
+enjoyments--unbroken earthly prosperity--write upon these, "_Beware!_"
+You may live to see them become your greatest trials!
+
+Remember the old saying, "No cross, no crown." The sun of the saint's
+life generally struggles through "weeping clouds." One of the loveliest
+passages of Scripture is that in which, the portals of heaven being
+opened, we overhear this dialogue between two ransomed ones--"And one of
+the elders answered saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in
+white robes, and whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir, thou
+knowest. And he said to me, _These are they which came out of great
+tribulation!_"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-second Day.
+
+HOLY ZEAL.
+
+ "The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me up."--John, ii. 17.
+
+
+"Zeal, is a principle; enthusiasm is a feeling. The one is a spark of a
+sanguine temperament and overheated imagination. The other, a sacred
+flame kindled at God's altar, and burning in God's
+shrine."--(_Vaughan._) Such was the holy, heavenly zeal of our Great
+Exemplar! His were no transient outbursts of ardor, which time cooled
+and difficulties impeded. His life was one indignant protest against
+sin;--one ceaseless current of undying love for souls, which all the
+malignity of foes, and unkindness of friends, could not for one moment
+divert from its course. Even when He rises from the dead, and we
+imagine His work at an end, His zeal only meditates fresh deeds of love.
+"Still His heart and His care," says Godwin, "is upon doing more. Having
+now dispatched that great work on earth, He sends His disciples word
+that He is hastening to heaven as fast as He can, to do another." (John,
+xx. 17).
+
+Reader! do you know any thing of this zeal, which "many waters could not
+quench"? See that, like your Lord's, it be steady, sober, consistent,
+undeviating. How many are, like the children of Ephraim, "carrying
+bows"--all zealous when zeal demands no sacrifice, but "turning their
+backs in the day of battle!" Others "running well" for a time, but
+gradually "hindered," through the benumbing influences of worldliness,
+selfishness, and sin. Two disciples, apparently equally devoted and
+zealous, send through Paul, in one of his epistles, a conjoint Christian
+salutation--"Luke and Demas greet you." A few years afterward, thus he
+writes from his Roman dungeon--"Only _Luke_ is with me," "_Demas_ hath
+_forsaken_ me, having loved this present world!"
+
+While zeal is commendable, remember the Apostle's qualification, "It is
+good to be zealously affected always in a _good_ thing." There is in
+these days much base coin current, _called_ "zeal," which bears not the
+image and superscription of Jesus. There is zeal for church-membership
+and party; zeal for creeds and dogmas; zeal for figments and
+non-essentials. "From such turn aside." Your Lord stamped with His
+example and approval no such counterfeits. _His_ zeal was ever brought
+to bear on two objects, and two objects alone--_the glory of God_ and
+_the good of man_. Be it so with _you_. Enter, first of all (as He did
+the earthly temple), the sanctuary of _your own heart_, with "the
+scourge of small cords." Drive out every unhallowed intruder there. Do
+not suffer yourself to be deceived. Others may call such jealous
+searchings of spirit "sanctimoniousness" and "enthusiasm." But remember,
+to be _almost saved_, is to be _altogether lost_!--to be zealous about
+every thing but "the one thing needful," is an insult to God and your
+everlasting interests!
+
+Have a zeal for _others_. Dying myriads are around you. As a member of
+the Christian priesthood, it becomes you to rush in with your censer and
+incense between the living and the dead, "that the plague may be
+stayed!"
+
+Be it yours to say, "Blessed Jesus! I am _Thine_!--Thine only!--Thine
+wholly!--Thine for ever! I am willing to follow Thee, and (if need be)
+to _suffer_ for Thee. I am ready at Thy bidding to leave the homestead
+in the valley, and to face the cutting blasts of the mountain. Take
+me--use me for Thy glory. 'Lord! what wilt Thou have me to do?'"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-third Day.
+
+BENEVOLENCE.
+
+ "Who went about doing good."--Acts, x. 38.
+
+
+"Christ's great end," says Richard Baxter, "was to save men from their
+_sins_; but He delighted to save them from their _sorrows_." His heart
+bled for human misery. Benevolence brought Him from heaven; benevolence
+followed His steps wherever He went on earth. The journeys of the Divine
+Philanthropist were marked by tears of thankfulness, and breathings of
+grateful love. The helpless, the blind, the lame, the desolate, rejoiced
+at the sound of His footfall. Truly might it be said of Him, "When the
+ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me, it gave
+witness to me." (Job, xxix. 11.) All suffering hearts were a magnet to
+Jesus. It was not more His prerogative than His happiness to turn tears
+into smiles. One of the few pleasures which on earth gladdened the
+spirit of the "Man of sorrows" was the pleasure of _doing
+good_--soothing grief, and alleviating misery. Next to the joy of the
+widow of Nain when her son was restored, was the joy in the bosom of the
+Divine Restorer! He often went out of His way to be kind. A journey was
+not grudged, even if _one_ aching spirit were to be soothed. (Mark, v.
+1; John, iv. 4, 5.) Nor were his kindnesses dispensed through the
+intervention of others. They were all personal acts. His own hand
+healed. His own voice spake. His own footsteps lingered on the threshold
+of bereavement, or at the precincts of the tomb. Ah! had the princes of
+this world known the loving-tenderness and unselfishness of _that_
+heart, "they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory"!
+
+Reader! do you know any thing of such active benevolence? Have you never
+felt the _luxury_ of doing good? Have you never felt, that in making
+_others_ happy, you make _your self_ so? that, by a great law of your
+being, enunciated by the Divine Patron and Pattern of Benevolence, "it
+is more blessed to give than to receive"? Has God enriched you with this
+world's goods? Seek to view yourself as a consecrated medium for
+dispensing them to others. Beware alike of penurious hoarding and
+selfish extravagance. How sad the case of those whose lot God has made
+thus to abound with temporal mercies, who have gone to the grave
+unconscious of diminishing one drop of human misery, or making one of
+the world's myriad aching hearts happier! How the example of _Jesus_
+rebukes the cold and calculating kindnesses--the mite-like offerings of
+many even of His own people! "whose libation is not like His, from the
+brim of an overflowing cup, but from the bottom--from the _dregs_!"
+
+You may have little to give. Your sphere and means may be alike limited.
+But remember God can be as much glorified by the trifle saved from the
+earnings of poverty, as by the splendid benefaction from the lap of
+plenty "The Lord loveth a _cheerful_ giver."
+
+The nobler part of Christian benevolence is not vast largesses,
+munificent pecuniary sacrifices. "_He went about_ doing good." The
+merciful visit--the friendly word--the look of sympathy--the cup of cold
+water, the little unostentatious service--the giving without thought or
+hope of recompense--the kindly "considering of the poor"--anticipating
+their wants--studying their comforts; these are what God values and
+loves. They are "loans" to Himself--tributary streams to "the river of
+_His_ pleasure;" they will be acknowledged at last as such--"Ye did it
+unto _Me_."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-fourth Day.
+
+FIRMNESS IN TEMPTATION.
+
+ "Jesus saith unto him, Get thee hence, Satan."--Matt. iv. 10.
+
+
+There is an awful intensity of meaning in the words, as applied to
+Jesus, "He _suffered_, being tempted!" Though incapable of sin, there
+was, in the refined sensibilities of His holy nature, that which made
+temptation unspeakably fearful. What must it have been to confront the
+Arch-traitor?--to stand face to face with the foe of His throne, and His
+universe? But the "prince of this world" came, and found "nothing in
+Him." Billow after billow of Satanic violence spent their fury, in vain,
+on the Living Rock!
+
+Reader! you have still the same malignant enemy to contend with;
+assailing you in a thousand insidious forms; marvelously adapting his
+assaults to your circumstances, your temperament, your mental bias, your
+master-passion! There is no place where "Satan's seat" is not; "the
+whole world lieth in the Wicked one." (1 John, v. 19.) He has his
+whispers for the ear of childhood; hoary age is not inaccessible to his
+wiles. "_All this will I give thee_"--is still his bribe to deny Jesus
+and to "mind earthly things." He will meet you in the crowd; he will
+follow you to the solitude; his is a sleepless vigilance!
+
+Are you bold in repelling him as your Master was? Are you ready with the
+retort to every foul suggestion, "Get thee hence, Satan"? Cultivate a
+tender sensitiveness about sin. The finest barometers are the most
+sensitive. Whatever be your besetting frailty--whatever bitter or
+baleful passion you are conscious aspires to the mastery--watch it,
+crucify it, "nail it to your Lord's cross." _You_ may despise "the day
+of small things"--the Great Adversary does _not_. He knows the power of
+_littles_; that little by little consumes and eats out the vigor of the
+soul. And once the retrograde movement in the spiritual life begins, who
+can predict where it may end? the going on "from weakness to weakness,"
+instead of "from strength to strength." Make no compromises; never join
+in the ungodly amusement, or venture on the questionable path, with the
+plea, "It does me no harm." The Israelites, on entering Canaan, instead
+of obeying the Divine injunction of extirpating their enemies, made a
+hollow truce with them. What was the result? Years upon years of tedious
+warfare. "They were scourges in their sides, and thorns in their eyes!"
+It is quaintly but truthfully said by an old writer, "The candle will
+never burn clear, while there is a _thief_ in it. Sin indulged, in the
+conscience, is like Jonah in the ship, which causeth such a tempest,
+that the conscience is like a troubled sea, whose waters cannot
+rest."--(_Thomas Brooks_.)
+
+"Keep," then, "thy heart with all diligence," or, (as it is in the
+forcible original Hebrew,) "keep thy heart _above all keeping_," "for
+out of it are the issues of life." (Prov. iv. 23.) Let this ever be your
+preservative against temptation, "How would _Jesus_ have acted here?
+would _He_ not have recoiled, like the sensitive plant, from the
+remotest contact with sin? Can _I_ think of dishonoring Him by tampering
+with His enemy; incurring from His own lips the bitter reflection of
+injured love, 'I am wounded in the house of my friends'?"
+
+He tells us the secret of our preservation and safety, "Simon! Simon!
+Satan hath desired to have thee, that he might sift thee as wheat; _but
+I_ have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-fifth Day.
+
+RECEIVING SINNERS.
+
+ "This man receiveth sinners."--Luke, xv. 2.
+
+
+The ironical taunt of proud and censorious Pharisees formed the glory of
+Him who came, "not to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance."
+Publicans and outcasts; those covered with a deeper than any bodily
+leprosy--laid bare their wounds to the "Great Physician;" and as
+conscious guilt and timid penitence crept abashed and imploring to His
+feet, they found nothing but a forgiving and a gracious welcome!
+
+"His ways" were not as "man's ways!" The "watchmen," in the Canticles,
+"smote" the disconsolate one seeking her lost Lord; they tore off her
+veil, mocking with chilling unkindness her anguished tears. Not so "the
+Chief Shepherd and Bishop of souls." "_This_ man _receiveth_ sinners"!
+See Nicodemus, stealing under the shadows of night to elude
+observation--type of the thousand thousand who in every age have gone
+trembling in their night of sin and sorrow to this Heavenly Friend! Does
+Jesus punish his timidity by shutting His door against him, spurning him
+from His presence? "He will not break the bruised reed, He will not
+quench the smoking flax!"
+
+And He is still the same! He who arrested a persecutor in his
+blasphemies, and tuned the lips of an expiring felon with faith and
+love, is at this hour standing, with all the garnered treasures of
+Redemption in His hand, proclaiming, "Him that cometh unto Me, I will in
+no wise cast out"!
+
+Are we from this to think lightly of sin? or, by example and conduct, to
+palliate and overlook its enormity? Not so; sin, _as_ sin, can never be
+sufficiently stamped with the brand of reprobation. But we must seek
+carefully to distinguish between the offence and the offender. Nothing
+should be done on our part, by word or deed, to mock the penitential
+sighings of a guilty spirit, or send the trembling outcast away, with
+the despairing feeling of "_No hope_." "This man receiveth sinners," and
+shall not _we_? Does _He_ suffer the veriest dregs of human depravity to
+crouch unbidden at His feet, and to gaze on His forgiving countenance
+with the uplifted eye of hope, and shall _we_ dare to deal out harsh,
+and severe, and crushing verdicts on an offending (it may be a _deeply_
+offending) brother? Shall we pronounce "crimson" and "scarlet" sins and
+sinners beyond the pale of mercy, when _Jesus_ does not? Nay, rather,
+when wretchedness, and depravity, and backsliding cross our path, let it
+not be with the bitter taunt or the ironical retort that we bid them
+away. Let us bear, endure, remonstrate, deal tenderly. Jesus _did_ so,
+Jesus _does_ so! Ah! If we had within us His unconquerable love of
+souls; His yearning desire for the everlasting happiness of sinners, we
+should be more frequently in earnest expostulation and affectionate
+appeal with those who have hitherto got no other than harsh thoughts and
+repulsive words. If this "mind" really were in us, "which was also in
+Him," we should more frequently ask ourselves, "Have I done all I
+_might_ have done to pluck this brand from the burning! Have I
+remembered what grace _has_ wrought, what grace _can_ do?"
+
+"Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert him, let
+him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way
+shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of sins!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-sixth Day.
+
+GUILELESSNESS.
+
+ "Neither was guile found in His mouth."--1 Pet. ii. 22.
+
+
+How rare, and all the more beautiful because of its rarity, is a purely
+_guileless_ spirit! A crystalline medium through which the transparent
+light of Heaven comes and goes; open, candid, just, honorable, sincere;
+scorning every unfair dealing, every hollow pretension, every narrow
+prejudice. Wherever such characters exist, they are like "apples of gold
+in pictures of silver."
+
+Such, in all the loveliness of sinless perfection, was the Son of God!
+His guilelessness shining the more conspicuously amid the artful and
+malignant subtlety alike of men and devils. Passing by manifold
+instances in the course of His ministry, look at its manifestation as
+the hour of His death approached. When, on the night of his
+apprehension, He confronts the assassin band, in meek majesty He puts
+the question, "Whom seek ye?" They say to Him, "Jesus of Nazareth." In
+guileless innocence, He replies, "I am He!" "Art thou the King of the
+Jews?" asks Pilate, a few hours after. An evasive answer might again
+have purchased immunity from suffering and indignity, but once more the
+lips which scorned the semblance of evasion reply, "Thou sayest!"
+
+How He loved the same spirit in His people! "Behold," said He, of
+Nathanael, "an Israelite indeed, in whom is _no guile_!" That upright
+man had, we may suppose, been day after day kneeling in prayer under his
+fig-tree, with an open and candid spirit--
+
+ "Musing on the law he taught,
+ And waiting for the Lord he loved."
+
+See how the Saviour honored him; setting His own Divine seal on the
+loveliness of this same spirit! Take one other example, when the
+startling, saddening announcement is made to the disciples, "One of you
+shall betray me;" they do not accuse one another; they attempt to throw
+no suspicion on Judas; each in trembling apprehension suspects only his
+own treacherous heart, "Lord, is it I?"
+
+How much of a different "mind" is there abroad! In the school of the
+world (this "_painted_ world"), how much is there of what is called
+"policy," double-dealing!--accomplishing its ends by tortuous means;
+outward, artificial polish, often only a cloak for baseness and
+selfishness!--in the daily interchange of business, one seeking to
+over-reach the other by wily arts; sacrificing principle for temporal
+advantage. There is nothing so derogatory to religion as aught allied to
+such a spirit among Christ's people--any such blot on the "living
+epistles." "Ye are the light of the world." That world is a quick
+observer. It is sharp to detect inconsistencies--slow to forget them.
+The true Christian has been likened to an _anagram_--you ought to be
+able to read him up and down, every way!
+
+Be all reality, no counterfeit. Do not pass for current coin what is
+base alloy. Let transparent honor and sincerity regulate all your
+dealings; despise all meanness; avoid the sinister motive, the underhand
+dealing; aim at that unswerving love of truth that would scorn to stoop
+to base compliances and unworthy equivocations; live more under the
+power of the purifying and ennobling influences of the gospel. Take its
+golden rule as the matchless directory for the daily transactions of
+life--"Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to
+them."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-seventh Day.
+
+ACTIVITY IN DUTY.
+
+ "I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is day; the
+ night cometh, when no man can work."--John, ix. 4.
+
+
+How constant and unremitting was Jesus in the service of His Heavenly
+Father! "He rose a great while before day;" and, when His secret
+communion was over, His public work began. It mattered not to Him where
+He was: whether on the bosom of the deep, or a mountain slope--in the
+desert, or at a well-side--the "gracious words" ever "proceeded out of
+His mouth." We find, on one touching occasion, exhausted nature sinking,
+after a day of unremitting duty; in crossing, in a vessel, the Lake of
+Tiberias--"_He fell asleep_"! (Matt. viii.) He redeemed every precious
+moment. His words to the Pharisee seem a _formula_ for all, "Simon, I
+have somewhat to say unto _thee_"!
+
+Oh, how our most unceasing activities pale into nothing before such an
+example as this! Would that we could remember that each of us has some
+great mission to perform for God, that religion is not a thing of dreamy
+sentimentalism, but of energetic practical action; moreover, that no
+trade, no profession, no position, however high or however humble in the
+scale of society, can disqualify for this life of Christian activity and
+usefulness! Who were the writers in the Bible? We have among them a
+King--a Lawgiver--a Herdsman--a Publican--a Physician! Nor is it to high
+spheres, or to great services only, that God looks. The widow's mite and
+Mary's "alabaster box of ointment" are recorded as examples for
+imitation by the Holy Ghost, while many more munificent deeds are passed
+by unrecorded. We believe that God says, regarding the attempt of many a
+humble Christian to serve Him by active duty, "I saw that effort, that
+_feeble_ effort to serve and glorify Me; it was the very _feebleness_
+of it I loved!"
+
+Did it never strike you, notwithstanding the _dignity_ of Christ, and
+the _activity_ of Christ, how little success comparatively He met with
+in His public work? We read of no _numerous_ conversions; no Pentecostal
+revivals in the course of His ministry. May not this well encourage in
+the absence of great outward results? He sets up no higher standard than
+this--"She hath done what she could." An artist may be _great_ in
+painting a peasant as well as a king--_it is the way he does it_. Yes,
+and if laid aside from the _activities_ of the Christian life, we can
+equally glorify God by _passive endurance_. "Who am I," said Luther,
+when he witnessed the patience of a great sufferer; "who am I? a wordy
+preacher in comparison with this great doer."
+
+Reader! forget not the motive of our motto verse, "_The night cometh!_"
+Soon our tale shall be told; our little day is flitting fast, the
+shadows of night are falling. "Our span length of time," as Rutherford
+says, "will come to an inch." What if the eleventh hour should strike
+after having been "all the day _idle_"? A long lifetime of opportunities
+suffered to pass unemployed and unimproved, and absolutely _nothing_
+done for God! A judgment-day come--our golden moments squandered--our
+talents untraded on--our work undone--met at the bar of Heaven with the
+withering repulse, "Inasmuch as ye did it _not_." "The time we have
+lost," says Richard Baxter, "can not be recalled; should we not then
+redeem and improve the little that remains? If a traveler sleep or
+trifle most of the day, he must travel so much the faster in the
+evening, or fall short of his journey's end."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-eighth Day.
+
+COMMITTING OUR WAY TO GOD.
+
+ "But committed himself to Him that judgeth righteously."--
+ 1 Peter, ii. 23.
+
+
+With what perfect and entire confidingness did Jesus commit Himself to
+his Heavenly Father's guidance! He loved to call Him, "My Father!" There
+was music in that name, which enabled Him to face the most trying hour,
+and to drink the most bitter cup. The scoffing taunt arose at the scene
+of crucifixion: "He trusted in God that He would deliver Him, let Him
+deliver Him!" It failed to shake, for one moment, His unswerving
+confidence, even when the sensible tokens of the Divine presence were
+withdrawn; the realized consciousness of God's abiding love sustained
+Him still: "My God! my God!"
+
+How many a perplexity should we save ourselves by thus implicitly
+"committing ourselves," as He did, to God! In seasons of darkness and
+trouble--when our way is shut up with thorns, to lift the confiding eye
+of faith to Him, and say, "I am oppressed, undertake for me!" How
+blessed to feel that He directs all that befalls us; that no
+contingencies can frustrate His plans; that the way he leads us is not
+only _a_ "right way," but, with all its briers and thorns--_its_ tears
+and trials--it is _the_ right way!
+
+The result of such an habitual staying ourselves on the Lord will be a
+deep, abiding _peace_; any ripple will only be on the surface--no more.
+It is the _bosom_ of the ocean alone which the storm ruffles; all
+beneath is a serene, settled calm. So "Thou wilt keep him, oh God, in
+perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on _Thee_!"
+
+"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want." I shall be content alike
+with what He appoints or withholds. I _can not_ wrong that love with
+one shadow of suspicion! I have His own plighted promise of unchanging
+faithfulness, that "all things work together for good to them that love
+Him!" Often there are earthly sorrows hard to bear;--the unkind
+accusation, when it was least merited or expected; the estrangement of
+tried and trusted friends, the failure of cherished hopes, favorite
+schemes broken up, plans of usefulness demolished, the gourd breeding
+its own worm and withering. "Commit thy cause and thy way to God!" We
+little know what tenderness there is in the blast of the rough wind;
+what "needs be" are folded under the wings of the storm! "All is well,"
+because _all_ is from _Him_. "Events are God's," says Rutherford; "let
+Him sit at His own helm, that moderateth all."
+
+Christian! look back on your checkered path. How wondrously has He
+threaded you through the mazy way--disappointing your fears, realizing
+your hopes! Are evils looming through the mists of the future? Do not
+anticipate the trials of to-morrow, to aggravate those of to-day. Leave
+the morrow with Him, who has promised, by "casting all your care on Him,
+to care for you." No affliction will be sent greater than you can bear.
+His voice will be heard stealing from the bosom of the threatening
+cloud, "Be still, and know that I am God!"
+
+"_My Father!_" With such a word, you can stretch out your neck for any
+yoke; as with Israel of old, He will make those very waves that may now
+be so threatening, a fenced wall on every side! "Rest in the Lord, and
+wait patiently for Him." "In _all_ thy ways acknowledge Him, and He
+shall direct thy paths!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-ninth Day.
+
+LOVE OF UNITY.
+
+ "That they all may be one."--John, xvii. 21.
+
+
+Surely there is nothing for which Christian churches have such cause to
+hang their harps on the willows, as the extent to which the Shibboleth
+of party is heard in the camp of the faithful--sectarianism rearing its
+"untempered walls" within the Temple gates!
+
+How different "the mind of Jesus!" Sent "to the lost sheep of the house
+of Israel," He was never found disowning "_other_ sheep not of that
+fold." "Them also will I bring," was an assertion continually
+illustrated by His deeds. Take one example: The woman of Samaria
+revealed what, alas! is too common in the world--a total absence of all
+real religion, along with an ardent zeal for her sect. She was living
+in open sin; yet she was all alive to the nice distinction between a Jew
+and a Samaritan--between Mount Gerizim and Mount Zion: "How is it that
+thou, being a Jew, askest drink of me, who am a woman of Samaria?" Did
+Jesus sanction or reciprocate her sectarianism?--did He leave her
+bigotry unrebuked? Hear His reply--"If thou knewest the gift of God, and
+who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldst have asked
+of _Him_, and _He_ would have given thee!" _He_ would have allowed no
+such narrow-minded exclusiveness to have interfered with the interchange
+of kindly civilities with a stranger. Nay, He would have given thee,
+better than all, the "living water" which "springeth up to everlasting
+life!"
+
+How sad, that when the enemy is "coming in like a flood"--the ranks of
+Popery and infidelity linked in fatal and formidable confederacy--that
+the soldiers of Christ are forced to meet the assault with standards
+soiled and mutilated by internal feuds! "Uniformity" there _may_ not
+be, but "unity," in the true sense of the word, there _ought_ to be. We
+may be clad in different livery, but let us stand side by side, and rank
+by rank, fighting the battles of our Lord. We may be different branches
+of the seven golden candlesticks, varying and diversified in outward
+form and workmanship; but let us combine in "showing forth the praises
+of Him" who recognizes, as the one true "churchmanship," fidelity in
+shining for His glory "as lights in the world." How can we read the 13th
+chapter of 1st Corinthians, and then think of our divisions? "How
+miserable," says Edward Bickersteth, "would an hospital be, if each
+patient were to be so offended with his neighbor's disease, as to differ
+with him on account of it, instead of trying to alleviate it!"
+
+Ah! if we had more real communion with our Saviour, should we not have
+more real communion with one another? If Christians would dip their
+arrows more in "the balm of Gilead," would there not be fewer wounds in
+the body of Christ? "How that word '_toleration_' is used amongst us,"
+said one who drank deeper than most, of his Master's spirit--"how we
+_tolerate_ one another--Dissenters _tolerate_ Churchmen, and Churchmen
+_tolerate_ Dissenters! Oh! hateful word! TOLERATE one for whom _Jesus_
+died! _Tolerate_ one whom He bears upon His heart! _Tolerate_ a temple
+of the living God! Oh! there ought to be _that_ in the word which should
+make us feel _ashamed_ before God!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirtieth Day.
+
+NOT OF THE WORLD.
+
+ "I am not of the world."--John, xvii. 14.
+
+
+In one sense it was _not_ so. Jesus did not seek to maintain His
+holiness intact and unspotted by avoiding contact with the world. He
+mingled familiarly in its busy crowds. He frowned on none of its
+innocent enjoyments; He fostered, by His example, no love of seclusion;
+He gave no warrant or encouragement to mortified pride, or disappointed
+hopes, to rush from its duties; yet, with all this, what a halo of
+heavenliness encircled His pathway through it! "I am from above," was
+breathed in His every look, and word, and action, from the time when He
+lay in the slumbers of guileless infancy in His Bethlehem cradle, until
+He said, "I leave the world, and go to my Father!" He had moved
+uncontaminated through its varied scenes, like the sunbeam, which,
+whatever it touches, remains as unsullied, as when it issues from its
+great fountain.
+
+But though Himself in His sinless nature "unconquerable" by
+temptation--immutably secure from the world's malignant influences, it
+is all worthy of note, as an example to us, that He never unnecessarily
+braved these. He knew the seducing spell that same world would exercise
+on His people, of whom, with touching sympathy, He says, "_These_ are in
+the world!" He knew the _many_ who would be involved and ensnared in its
+subtle worship, who, "minding earthly things, would seek to slake their
+thirst at polluted streams!"
+
+Reader! the great problem you have to solve, Jesus has solved for
+you--to be "_in_ the world, and yet not _of_ it." To abandon it, would
+be a dereliction of duty. It would be servants deserting their work;
+soldiers flying from the battle-field. _Live_ in it, that while you
+live, the world, may feel the better for you. _Die_, that _when_ you
+die, the world, the _Church_, may feel your loss, and cherish your
+example! On its cares and duties, its trusts and responsibilities, its
+employments and enjoyments, inscribe the motto, "The world passeth
+away!" Beware of every thing in it that would tend to deaden
+spirituality of heart; unfitting the mind for serious thought, lowering
+the standard of Christian duty, and inducing a perilous conformity to
+its false manners, habits, tastes, and principles. As the best antidote
+to the love of the world, let the inner _vacuum_ of the heart be filled
+with the love of God. Seek to feel the nobility of your regenerated
+nature; that you have a nobler heritage to care for than the transitory
+glories which encircle "an indivisible point, a fugitive atom." How can
+I mix with the potsherds of the earth? Once, "I lay among the pots;"
+now, I am "like a dove, whose wings are covered with silver, and her
+feathers with yellow gold!" "Stranger--pilgrim--sojourner" "my
+_citizenship_ is in heaven!" Why covet tinsel honors and glories? Why be
+solicitous about the smiles of that which knew not (nay, which frowned
+on) its Lord? "Paul calls it," says an old writer, "_schema_ (a
+mathematical figure), which is a mere _notion_, and nothing in
+substance."--(_Thomas Brooks._)
+
+Live above its corroding cares and anxieties; remembering the
+description Jesus gives of His own true people; "They are not of the
+world, even as I am not of the world!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirty-first Day.
+
+CALMNESS IN DEATH.
+
+ "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit."--Luke, xxiii. 46.
+
+
+In the death of Jesus, there were elements of fearfulness, which the
+believer can know nothing of. It was with Him the execution of a penal
+sentence. The sins of an elect world were bearing him down! The very
+voice of His God was giving the tremendous summons, "Awake, O sword,
+against my shepherd!" Yet His was a death of _peace_, nay, of _triumph_!
+Ere He closed His eyes, light broke through the curtains of thick
+darkness. In the calm composure of filial confidence He breathed away
+His soul--"Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit!" What was the
+secret of such tranquillity? This is His own key to it--"I have
+glorified Thee on the earth; I have finished the work which Thou gavest
+me to do."
+
+Reader! will it be so with _you_ at a dying hour? will _your_ "work" be
+done? Have you already fled to Jesus? Are you reposing in Him as your
+only Saviour, and following Him as your only pattern? Then--let death
+overtake you when it may--you will have nothing to do _but to die_! The
+grave will be irradiated with His presence and smile. He will be
+standing there as He did by His own tomb of old, pointing to yours,
+tenanted with angel forms, nay, Himself as the "Precursor," showing you
+"_the path of life!_" There can be no true peace till the fear of death
+be conquered by the sense of sin forgiven, through "the blood of the
+Cross." "Not till then," as one has it, "will you be able to be a quiet
+spectator of the open grave at the bottom of the hill which you are soon
+to descend." "The sting of death is _sin_, but thanks be to God who
+giveth us the victory through the Lord Jesus Christ!"
+
+Seek now to live in the enjoyment of greater filial nearness to your
+covenant God; and thus, when the hour of departure _does_ come, you will
+be able, without irreverence, to take the very words of your dying Lord,
+and make them your own--"FATHER! into Thy hands I commend my spirit."
+FATHER! It is going HOME! the heart of the child leaping at the thought
+of the paternal roof, and the paternal welcome! "Son, thou art ever with
+me, and all that I have is thine!"
+
+It is said of Archbishop Leighton, that he "was always happiest when,
+from the shaking of the prison-doors, he was led to hope that some of
+those brisk blasts would throw them open, and give him the release he
+coveted." Christian! can you dread _that_ which your Saviour has already
+vanquished? _Death!_ It is as the angel to Peter, breaking the
+dungeon-doors, and leading to open day; it is going to the world of your
+birthright, and leaving the one of your exile; "it is the soldier at
+night-fall, lying down in his tent in peace, waiting the morning to
+receive his laurels." Oh! to be ever living in a state of holy
+preparation! the mental eye gazing on the vista-view of an opening
+Heaven! feeling that _every moment_ is bringing us nearer and nearer
+that happy _Home_! soon to be within reach of the Heavenly threshold, in
+sight of the Throne! soon to be bending in adoring rapture with the
+Church triumphant--bathing in floods of infinite glory--"LIKE
+HIM,"--"seeing HIM _as He is_," and that _for Ever and Ever_!
+
+ "AND EVERY MAN THAT HATH THIS HOPE IN HIM PURIFIETH HIMSELF,
+ EVEN AS HE IS PURE!"
+
+
+
+
+ Leaving us
+
+ AN EXAMPLE
+
+ that we should follow
+
+ HIS STEPS.
+
+
+ 1 Peter, ii. 21.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
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+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mind of Jesus
+
+Author: John R. Macduff
+
+Release Date: April 5, 2009 [EBook #28507]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIND OF JESUS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Heiko Evermann, Nigel Blower and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="notes">
+
+<h4>Transcriber&#8217;s Note</h4>
+
+<p>Minor punctuation inconsistencies have been silently corrected.</p>
+
+<p>The following minor typographical errors have been corrected:<br />
+Title page: duplicate word &ldquo;of&rdquo; removed<br />
+p9: Verse number &ldquo;2.&rdquo; added to &ldquo;Mark, viii.&rdquo; for consistency<br />
+p23: &ldquo;brethern&rdquo; changed to &ldquo;brethren&rdquo;<br />
+p106: &ldquo;vail&rdquo; changed to &ldquo;veil&rdquo;<br />
+p124: duplicate word &ldquo;one&rdquo; removed<br />
+p126: &ldquo;the its great fountain&rdquo; changed to &ldquo;its great fountain&rdquo;<br />
+p128: &ldquo;frowed&rdquo; changed to &ldquo;frowned&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a>
+<span class="halfsize">THE</span><br /><br />
+MIND OF JESUS.</h1>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top:2em;"><span class="halfsize">BY</span><br />
+JOHN R. MACDUFF, D.D.</h2>
+
+<h6 style="margin-top:3em;">AUTHOR OF &ldquo;MORNING AND NIGHT WATCHES,&rdquo; &ldquo;THE WORDS OF JESUS,&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;FAMILY PRAYER,&rdquo; &ldquo;FOOTSTEPS OF ST. PAUL,&rdquo; &ldquo;MEMORIES OF GENNESARET,&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;BOW IN THE CLOUD,&rdquo; &ldquo;STORY OF BETHLEHEM,&rdquo; ETC.</h6>
+
+<h4 style="margin-top:3em;">NEW YORK<br />
+ROBERT CARTER &amp; BROTHERS,<br />
+No. 530 BROADWAY.<br />
+1860.</h4>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></a>
+<a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Mind" id="Mind"></a>The Mind of Jesus.</h2>
+<img src="images/preface.png"
+ alt="The Mind of Jesus." title="The Mind of Jesus." />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Mind of Jesus</span>! What a study is this! To attain
+a dim reflection of it, is the ambition of angels&mdash;higher
+they can not soar. &ldquo;To be conformed to the image of
+His Son!&rdquo;&mdash;it is the end of God in the predestination
+of His Church from all eternity. &ldquo;We shall be like
+Him!&rdquo;&mdash;it is the Bible picture of <i>heaven</i>!</p>
+
+<p>In a former little volume, we pondered some of the
+gracious <i>Words</i> which proceeded out of the mouth of
+Jesus. In the present, we have a few faint lineaments
+of that holy <i>Character</i> which constituted the living exposition
+and embodiment of His precepts.</p>
+
+<p>But how lofty such a standard! How all creature-perfection
+shrinks abashed and confounded before a Divine
+portraiture like this! He is the true &ldquo;Angel standing
+in the sun,&rdquo; who alone projects no shadow; so bathed in
+the glories of Deity that likeness to Him becomes like
+the light in which He is shrouded&mdash;&ldquo;no man can approach
+unto it.&rdquo; May we not, however, seek at least to
+approximate, though we can not adequately resemble?
+It is impossible on earth to associate with a fellow-being
+without getting, in some degree, assimilated to him. So,
+the more we study &ldquo;the Mind of Christ,&rdquo; the more we
+are in His company&mdash;holding converse with Him as our
+best and dearest friend&mdash;catching up his holy looks and
+holy deeds&mdash;the more shall we be &ldquo;transformed into the
+same image.&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Consider,&rdquo; says the Great Apostle (literally &lsquo;<i>gaze</i> on&rsquo;)
+&ldquo;Christ Jesus&rdquo; (Heb. iii. 1). Study feature by feature,
+lineament by lineament, of that Peerless Exemplar.
+&ldquo;<i>Gaze</i>&rdquo; on the Sun of Righteousness, till, like gazing long
+on the natural sun, you carry away with you, on your
+spiritual vision, dazzling images of His brightness and
+glory. Though He be the Archetype of all goodness,
+remember He is no shadowy model&mdash;though the Infinite
+Jehovah, He was &ldquo;the <i>Man</i> Christ Jesus.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We must never, indeed, forget that it is not the <i>mind</i>,
+but the <i>work</i> of Immanuel, which lies at the foundation
+of a sinner&#8217;s hope. He must be known as a <i>Saviour</i>,
+before He is studied as an <i>Example</i>. His doing and dying
+is the center jewel, of which all the virtues of His holy
+life are merely the setting. But neither must we overlook
+the Scripture obligation to walk in His footsteps
+and imbibe His Spirit, for &ldquo;if any man have not the
+<i>Spirit of Christ</i>, he is <i>none of His</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Oh, that each individual Christian were more Saviour-like!
+that, in the manifestation of a holy character and
+heavenly demeanor, it might be said in some feeble
+measure of the faint and imperfect reflection&mdash;&ldquo;Such was
+<i>Jesus</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How far short we are of such a criterion, mournful experience
+can testify. But it is at least comforting to
+know that there is a day coming, when, in the full vision
+and fruition of the Glorious Original, the exhortation of
+our motto-verse will be needed no more; when we shall
+be able to say, in the words of an inspired apostle,</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;We <i>have</i> the <span class="smcap">mind of Christ</span>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Contents" id="Contents"></a>Contents.</h2>
+<img src="images/contents.png"
+ alt="Contents." title="Contents." />
+</div>
+
+<table class="contents" summary="Contents">
+<tr>
+<th class="lt">&nbsp;</th>
+<th class="rb"><span class="small lowercase smcap">PAGE</span></th>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Mind">The Mind of Jesus</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Mind">3</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#First_Day">Compassion</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#First_Day">9</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Second_Day">Resignation in Trial</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Second_Day">13</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Third_Day">Devotedness to God</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Third_Day">17</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Fourth_Day">Forgiveness of Injuries</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Fourth_Day">21</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Fifth_Day">Meekness</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Fifth_Day">25</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Sixth_Day">Thankfulness</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Sixth_Day">29</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Seventh_Day">Unselfishness</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Seventh_Day">33</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Eighth_Day">Submission to God&#8217;s Word</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Eighth_Day"></a>37</td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Ninth_Day">Prayerfulness</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Ninth_Day">41</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Tenth_Day">Love to the Brethren</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Tenth_Day">45</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Eleventh_Day">Sympathy</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Eleventh_Day">49</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twelfth_Day">Fidelity in Rebuke</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twelfth_Day">53</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Thirteenth_Day">Gentleness in Rebuke</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Thirteenth_Day">57</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Fourteenth_Day">Endurance of Contradiction</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Fourteenth_Day">61</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Fifteenth_Day">Pleasing God</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Fifteenth_Day">65</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Sixteenth_Day">Grief at Sin</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Sixteenth_Day">69</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Seventeenth_Day">Humility</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Seventeenth_Day">73</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Eighteenth_Day">Patience</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Eighteenth_Day">77</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg vi]</a></span>
+ <a href="#Nineteenth_Day">Subjection</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Nineteenth_Day">81</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twentieth_Day">Not Retaliating</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twentieth_Day">85</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_first_Day">Bearing the Cross</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_first_Day">89</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_second_Day">Holy Zeal</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_second_Day">93</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_third_Day">Benevolence</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_third_Day">97</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_fourth_Day">Firmness in Temptation</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_fourth_Day">101</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_fifth_Day">Receiving Sinners</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_fifth_Day">105</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_sixth_Day">Guilelessness</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_sixth_Day">109</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_seventh_Day">Activity in Duty</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_seventh_Day">113</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_eighth_Day">Committing our Way to God</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_eighth_Day">117</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Twenty_ninth_Day">Love of Unity</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Twenty_ninth_Day">121</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Thirtieth_Day">Not of the World</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Thirtieth_Day">125</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+<td class="lt"><a href="#Thirty_first_Day">Calmness in Death</a></td>
+<td class="rb"><a href="#Thirty_first_Day">129</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<p class="hidden center">Let THIS MIND be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.</p>
+<img src="images/quote1.png"
+ alt="Let THIS MIND be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus."
+ title="Let THIS MIND be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus." />
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>
+<a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="First_Day" id="First_Day"></a>First Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t01.png"
+ alt="First Day." title="First Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>COMPASSION.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I have compassion on the multitude.&rdquo;&mdash;Mark, viii. 2.</p>
+
+<p>What a pattern to His people, the tender
+<i>compassion</i> of Jesus! He found the world He
+came to save a moral Bethesda. The wail of
+suffering humanity was every where borne to
+His ear. It was His delight to walk its
+porches, to pity, relieve, comfort, save! The
+faintest cry of misery arrested His footsteps&mdash;stirred
+a ripple in this fountain of Infinite
+Love. Was it a <i>leper</i>,&mdash;that dreaded name
+which entailed a life-long exile from friendly
+looks and kindly words? There was <i>One</i>, at
+least, who had tones and deeds of tenderness
+for the outcast. &ldquo;<i>Jesus</i>, being moved with
+compassion, put forth His hand, and <i>touched</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+him.&rdquo; Was it some blind beggars on the
+Jericho highway, groping in darkness, pleading
+for help? &ldquo;<i>Jesus</i> stood still, and had
+compassion on them, and touched their eyes!&rdquo;
+Was it the speechless pleadings of a widow&#8217;s
+tears at the gate of Nain, when she followed
+her earthly pride and prop to the grave?
+&ldquo;When the <i>Lord</i> saw her, He had compassion
+on her, and said, Weep not!&rdquo; Even when
+He rebukes, the bow of compassion is seen in
+the cloud, or rather, that cloud, as it passes,
+dissolves in a rain-shower of mercy. He
+pronounces Jerusalem &ldquo;<i>desolate</i>,&rdquo; but the
+doom is uttered amid a flood of anguished
+sorrow!</p>
+
+<p>Reader! do the compassionate words and
+deeds of a tender Saviour find any feeble echo
+and transcript in yours? As you traverse in
+thought the wastes of human wretchedness,
+does the spectacle give rise, not to the mere
+emotional feeling which weeps itself away in
+sentimental tears, but to an earnest desire to
+<i>do something</i> to mitigate the sufferings of woe-worn
+humanity? How vast and world-wide the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+claims on your compassion!&mdash;now near, now at
+a distance&mdash;the unmet and unanswered cry of
+perishing millions abroad&mdash;the heathendom
+which lies unsuccored at your own door&mdash;the
+public charity languishing&mdash;the mission staff
+dwarfed and crippled from lack of needful
+funds&mdash;a suffering district&mdash;a starving family&mdash;a
+poor neighbor&mdash;a helpless orphan&mdash;it may
+be, some crowded hovel, where misery and
+vice run riot&mdash;or some lonely sick chamber,
+where the dim lamp has been wasting for
+dreary nights&mdash;or some desolate home which
+death has entered, where &ldquo;Joseph is not, and
+Simeon is not,&rdquo; and where some sobbing heart,
+under the tattered garb of poverty, mourns,
+unsolaced and unpitied, its &ldquo;loved and lost.&rdquo;
+Are there none such within your reach, to
+whom a trifling pittance would be as an angel
+of mercy? How it would hallow and enhance
+all you possess, were you to seek to live as
+almoner of Jehovah&#8217;s bounties! If He has
+given you of this world&#8217;s substance, remember
+it is bestowed, not to be greedily hoarded or
+lavishly squandered. Property and wealth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+are talents to be traded on and laid out for
+the good of others&mdash;sacred trusts, not selfishly
+to be <i>enjoyed</i>, but generously to be <i>employed</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The poor are the representatives of Jesus,
+their wants He considers as His own,&rdquo; and He
+will recompense accordingly. The feeblest
+expression of Christian pity and love, though
+it be but the widow&#8217;s mite, or the cup of cold
+water, or the kindly look and word when
+there is neither mite nor cup to give, yet, if
+done in <i>His</i> name, it is entered in the &ldquo;book
+of life&rdquo; as a &ldquo;loan to the Lord;&rdquo; and in that
+day when &ldquo;the books are opened,&rdquo; the loan
+will be paid back with usury.</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Second_Day" id="Second_Day"></a>Second Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t02.png"
+ alt="Second Day." title="Second Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>RESIGNATION IN TRIAL.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Not my will, but Thine be done!&rdquo;&mdash;Luke, xxii. 42.</p>
+
+<p>Where was there ever resignation like
+this! The life of Jesus was one long martyrdom.
+From Bethlehem&#8217;s manger to Calvary&#8217;s
+cross, there was scarce one break in the clouds;
+these gathered more darkly and ominously
+around Him till they burst over His devoted
+head as He uttered His expiring cry. Yet
+throughout this pilgrimage of sorrow no murmuring
+accent escaped His lips. The most
+suffering of all suffering lives was one of uncomplaining
+submission.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not <i>my</i> will, but <i>Thy</i> will,&rdquo; was the motto
+of this wondrous Being! When He came
+into the world He thus announced His advent,
+&ldquo;Lo, I come, I delight to do <i>Thy will</i>, O my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+God!&rdquo; When He left it, we listen to the
+same prayer of blended agony and acquiescence,
+&ldquo;O my Father, if it be possible let this
+cup pass from me! <i>Nevertheless</i> not as <i>I will</i>,
+but as <i>Thou wilt</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! is this mind also in <i>you</i>? Ah,
+what are your trials compared to His! What
+the ripples in your tide of woe, compared to
+the waves and billows which swept over him!
+If He, the spotless Lamb of God, &ldquo;murmured
+not,&rdquo; how can <i>you</i> murmur? <i>His</i> were the
+sufferings of a bosom never once darkened
+with the passing shadow of guilt or sin. <i>Your</i>
+severest sufferings are deserved, yea, infinitely
+less <i>than</i> deserved! Are you tempted to indulge
+in hard suspicions, as to God&#8217;s faithfulness
+and love, in appointing some peculiar
+trial? Ask yourself, Would Jesus have done
+<i>this</i>? Should <i>I</i> seek to pry into &ldquo;the deep
+things of God,&rdquo; when <i>He</i>, in the spirit of a
+weaned child, was satisfied with the solution,
+&ldquo;<i>Even so, Father, for so it seems good in Thy
+sight</i>&rdquo;?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Even so, <i>Father</i>!&rdquo; Afflicted one! &ldquo;tossed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+with tempest, and not comforted,&rdquo; take that
+<i>word</i> on which thy Lord pillowed His suffering
+head, and make it, as He did, the secret
+of thy resignation.</p>
+
+<p>The sick child will take the bitterest
+draught from a <i>father&#8217;s</i> hand. &ldquo;This cup
+which Thou, O God, givest me to drink, shall
+I not drink it?&rdquo; Be it mine to lie passive in
+the arms of Thy chastening love, exulting in
+the assurance that all Thy appointments,
+though sovereign, are never arbitrary, but
+that there is a gracious &ldquo;need be&rdquo; in them all.
+&ldquo;My Father!&rdquo; my Covenant God! the God
+who <i>spared not Jesus</i>! It may well hush
+every repining word.</p>
+
+<p>Drinking deep of his sweet spirit of submission,
+you will be able thus to meet, yea, even
+to welcome, your sorest cross, saying, &ldquo;Yes,
+Lord, all <i>is</i> well, just because it is Thy blessed
+will. Take me, use me, chasten me, as
+seemeth good in Thy sight. My will is resolved
+into Thine. This trial is dark; I can
+not see the &lsquo;why and the wherefore&rsquo; of it&mdash;but
+&lsquo;not my will, but Thy will!&rsquo; The gourd<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+is withered; I can not see the reason of so
+speedy a dissolution of the loved earthly shelter;
+sense and sight ask in vain why these
+leaves of earthly refreshment have been
+doomed so soon to droop in sadness and sorrow.
+But it is enough. &lsquo;The Lord prepared
+the worm;&rsquo; &lsquo;not <i>my</i> will, but <i>Thy</i>
+will!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how does the stricken soul honor God
+by thus being <i>dumb</i> in the midst of dark and
+perplexing dealings, recognizing in these, part
+of the needed discipline and training for a
+sorrowless, sinless, deathless world; regarding
+every trial as a link in the chain which draws
+it to heaven, where the whitest robes will be
+found to be those here baptized with suffering,
+and bathed in tears!</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Third_Day" id="Third_Day"></a>Third Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t03.png"
+ alt="Third Day." title="Third Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>DEVOTEDNESS TO GOD.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Wist ye not that I must be about my Father&#8217;s
+business?&rdquo;&mdash;Luke, ii. 49.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My meat and my drink are to do the will
+of Him that sent me, and to finish His work.&rdquo;
+That <i>one</i> object brought Jesus from heaven&mdash;that
+<i>one</i> object he pursued with unflinching,
+undeviating constancy, until He could say,
+&ldquo;It is finished.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>However short man comes of <i>his</i> &ldquo;chief
+end,&rdquo; &ldquo;Glory to God in the highest&rdquo; was the
+motive, the rule, and exponent of every act
+of that wondrous life. With us, the magnet
+of the soul, even when truest, is ever subject
+to partial oscillations and depressions, trembling
+at times away from its great attraction-point.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+<i>His</i> never knew one tremulous wavering
+from its all-glorious center. With Him
+there were no ebbs and flows, no fits and
+starts. He could say, in the words of that
+prophetic psalm which speaks so pre&euml;minently
+of Himself, &ldquo;I have set the Lord <i>always</i> before
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! do you feel that in some feeble
+measure this lofty life-motto of the sinless Son
+of God is written on your home and heart,
+regulating your actions, chastening your joys,
+quickening your hopes, giving energy and
+direction to your whole being, subordinating
+all the affections of your nature to their high
+destiny? With pure and unalloyed motives,
+with a single eye, and a single aim, can you
+say, somewhat in the spirit of His brightest
+follower, &ldquo;This <i>one</i> thing I do&rdquo;? Are you
+ready to regard all you have&mdash;rank, name,
+talents, riches, influence, distinctions&mdash;valuable,
+only so far as they contribute to promote
+the glory of Him who is &ldquo;first and last, and
+all in all&rdquo;? Seek to feel that your heavenly
+Father&#8217;s is not only <i>a</i> business; but <i>the</i> business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+of life. &ldquo;Whose I am, and whom I
+serve,&rdquo;&mdash;let this be the superscription written
+on your thoughts and deeds, your employments
+and enjoyments, your sleeping and
+waking. Be not, as the fixed stars, cold and
+distant; but be ever bathing in the sunshine
+of conscious nearness to Him who is the sun
+and center of all happiness and joy.</p>
+
+<p>Each has some appointed work to perform,
+some little niche in the spiritual temple to
+occupy. Yours may be no splendid services,
+no flaming or brilliant actions to blaze and
+dazzle in the eye of man. It may be the
+quiet, unobtrusive inner work, the secret
+prayer, the mortified sin, the forgiven injury,
+the trifling act of self-sacrifice for God&#8217;s glory
+and the good of others, of which no eye but
+the Eye which seeth in secret is cognizant.
+It matters not how <i>small</i>. Remember, with
+Him, motive dignifies action. It is not <i>what</i>
+we do, but <i>how</i> we do it. He can be glorified
+in <i>little</i> things as well as <i>great</i> things, and by
+nothing more than the daily walk, the daily
+life.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Beware of any thing that would interfere
+with a surrender of heart and soul to His
+service&mdash;worldly entanglements, indulged sin,
+an uneven walk, a divided heart, nestling in
+creature comforts, shrinking from the cross.
+How many hazard, if they do not make shipwreck,
+of their eternal hopes by becoming
+<i>idlers</i> in the vineyard; lingerers, like Lot;
+world-lovers, like Demas; &ldquo;do-nothing Christians,&rdquo;
+like the inhabitants of Meroz! The
+command is, &ldquo;Go, work!&rdquo; <i>Words</i> tell what
+you <i>should</i> be; <i>deeds</i> tell what you <i>are</i>. Let
+those around you see there is a reality in
+walking <i>with</i> God, and working <i>for</i> God!</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Fourth_Day" id="Fourth_Day"></a>Fourth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t04.png"
+ alt="Fourth Day." title="Fourth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they
+know not what they do.&rdquo;&mdash;Luke, xxiii. 34.</p>
+
+<p>Many a death-struggle has been made to
+save a friend. A dying Saviour gathers up
+His expiring breath to plead for His foes!
+At the climax of His own woe, and of
+human ingratitude&mdash;man-forsaken, and God-deserted&mdash;His
+faltering voice mingles with
+the shout of His murderers,&mdash;&ldquo;Father, forgive
+them; for they know not what they
+do!&rdquo; Had the faithless Peter been there,
+could he have wondered at the reply to a
+former question,&mdash;&ldquo;Lord, how often shall my
+brother sin against me, and I forgive him,&mdash;till
+seven times?&rdquo; Jesus said unto him, &ldquo;I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+say not unto thee, Until seven times; but,
+Until seventy times seven.&rdquo; (Matt. xviii. 21.)</p>
+
+<p>Superiority to insult and ignominy, with
+some, proceeds from a callous and indifferent
+temperament,&mdash;a cold, phlegmatic, stoical insensibility,
+alike to kindness or unkindness.
+It was not so with Jesus. The tender sensibilities
+of His holy nature rendered Him
+keenly sensible to ingratitude and injury,
+whether this was manifested in the malice
+of undisguised enmity, or the treachery of
+trusted friendship. Perhaps to a noble nature
+the latter of these is the more deeply wounding.
+Many are inclined to forgive an open
+and unmasked antagonist, who are not so
+willing to forget or forgive heartless faithfulness,
+or unrequited love. But see, too, in
+this respect, the conduct of the blessed Redeemer!
+Mark how He deals with His own
+disciples who had basely forsaken him and
+fled, and that, too, in the hour He most
+needed their sympathy. No sooner does He
+rise from the dead than He hastens to disarm
+their fears and to assure them of an unaltered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+and unalterable affection. &ldquo;Go tell <i>my
+brethren</i>,&rdquo; is the first message He sends;
+&ldquo;<i>Peace be unto you</i>,&rdquo; is the salutation at the
+first meeting; &ldquo;<i>Children!</i>&rdquo; is the word with
+which He first greets them on the shores of Tiberias.
+Even Joseph, (the Old Testament type
+and pattern of generous forgiveness,) when he
+makes himself known to his brethren, recalls
+the bitter thought, &ldquo;Whom ye sold into
+Egypt.&rdquo; The true Joseph, when <i>He</i> reveals
+Himself to His disciples, buries in oblivion
+the memory of by-gone faithlessness. He
+<i>meets</i> them with a benediction. He <i>leaves</i>
+them at His ascension with the same&mdash;&ldquo;He
+lifted up His hands and blessed them!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! follow in all this the spirit of your
+Lord and Master. In rising from the study
+of His holy example, seek to feel that with
+you there shall be no such name, no such
+word, as <i>enemy</i>! Harbor no resentful thought,
+indulge in no bitter recrimination. Surrender
+yourself to no sullen fretfulness. Let &ldquo;the
+law of kindness&rdquo; be in your heart. Put the
+best construction on the failings of others<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+Make no injurious comments on their frailties;
+no uncharitable insinuations. &ldquo;Consider thyself,
+lest thou also be tempted.&rdquo; When
+disposed at any time to cherish an unforgiving
+spirit towards a brother, think, if thy God
+had retained His anger for ever, where wouldst
+thou have been? If <i>He</i>, the Infinite One,
+who might have spurned thee for ever from
+His presence, hath had patience with thee,
+and forgiven thee <i>all</i>, wilt <i>thou</i>, on account of
+some petty grievance which thy calmer moments
+would pronounce unworthy of a thought,
+indulge in the look of cold estrangement, the
+unrelenting word, or unforgiving deed? &ldquo;If
+any man have a quarrel against any, even as
+Christ forgave you, so also do ye.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Fifth_Day" id="Fifth_Day"></a>Fifth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t05.png"
+ alt="Fifth Day." title="Fifth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>MEEKNESS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I am meek and lowly in heart.&rdquo;&mdash;Matt. xi. 29.</p>
+
+<p>There is often a beautiful blending of
+majesty and humility, magnanimity and lowliness,
+in great minds. The mightiest and
+holiest of all Beings that ever trod our world
+was the meekest of all. The Ancient of
+Days was as the &ldquo;infant of days.&rdquo; He who
+had listened to nothing but angel-melodies
+from all eternity, found, while on earth,
+melody in the lispings of an infant&#8217;s voice,
+or in an outcast&#8217;s tears! No wonder an innocent
+<i>lamb</i> was His emblem, or that the
+annointing Spirit came down upon Him in
+the form of the gentle <i>dove</i>. He had the
+wealth of worlds at His feet. The hosts of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+heaven had only to be summoned as His
+retinue. But all the pageantry of the world,
+all its dreams of carnal glory, had, for Him,
+no fascination. The Tempter, from a mountain-summit,
+showed Him a wide scene of
+&ldquo;splendid misery;&rdquo; but He spurned alike the
+thought and the adversary away! John and
+James would call down fire from heaven on a
+Samaritan village; He rebukes the vengeful
+suggestion! Peter, on the night of the betrayal,
+cuts off the ear of an assassin; the
+intended Victim, again, only challenges His
+disciple, and heals His enemy!</p>
+
+<p>Arraigned before Pilate&#8217;s judgment-seat,
+how meekly He bears nameless wrongs and
+indignities! Suspended on the cross&mdash;the
+execrations of the multitude are rising around,
+but He hears as though He heard them
+not; they extract no angry look, no bitter
+word&mdash;&ldquo;Behold the <i>Lamb</i> of God!&rdquo; Need
+we wonder that &ldquo;meekness&rdquo; and &ldquo;poverty
+of spirit&rdquo; should stand foremost in His own
+cluster of beatitudes; that He should select
+<i>this</i> among all His other qualities for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+peculiar study and imitation of His disciples,
+&ldquo;Learn of Me, <i>for</i> I am <i>meek</i>;&rdquo; or that an
+apostle should exhort &ldquo;by the <i>meekness</i> and
+<i>gentleness</i> of Christ!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How different the world&#8217;s maxims, and His!
+The <i>world&#8217;s</i>&mdash;&ldquo;Resent the affront, vindicate
+honor!&rdquo; <i>His</i>&mdash;&ldquo;Overcome evil with good!&rdquo;
+<i>The world&#8217;s</i>&mdash;&ldquo;Only let it be when for your
+<i>faults</i> ye are buffeted that ye take it patiently.&rdquo;
+<i>His</i>&mdash;&ldquo;When ye do <i>well</i> and suffer for it, ye
+take it patiently, <i>this</i> is acceptable with God.&rdquo;
+(1 Pet. ii. 20.)</p>
+
+<p>Reader! strive to obtain, like your adorable
+Lord, this &ldquo;ornament of a meek and quiet
+spirit, which, in the sight of God, is of great
+price.&rdquo; Be &ldquo;clothed&rdquo; with gentleness and
+humility. Follow not the world&#8217;s fleeting
+shadows that mock you as you grasp them.
+If always aspiring&mdash;ever soaring on the
+wing&mdash;you are likely to become discontented,
+proud, selfish, time-serving. In whatever
+position of life God has placed you, be
+satisfied. What! ambitious to be on a pinnacle
+of the temple&mdash;a higher place in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+Church, or in the world?&mdash;Satan might hurl
+you down! &ldquo;Be not high-minded, but fear.&rdquo;
+And with respect to others, honor their gifts,
+contemplate their excellences only to imitate
+them. Speak kindly, act gently, &ldquo;condescend
+to men of low estate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Be assured, no happiness is equal to that
+enjoyed by the &ldquo;<i>meek Christian</i>.&rdquo; He has
+within him a perpetual inner sunshine, a
+perennial well-spring of peace. Never ruffled
+and fretted by real or imagined injuries, he
+puts the best construction on motives and
+actions, and by a gentle answer to unmerited
+reproach often disarms wrath.</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Sixth_Day" id="Sixth_Day"></a>Sixth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t06.png"
+ alt="Sixth Day." title="Sixth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>THANKFULNESS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth.&rdquo;&mdash;Matt.
+xi. 25.</p>
+
+<p>A thankful spirit pervaded the entire
+life of Jesus, and surrounded with a heavenly
+halo His otherwise darkened path. In moments
+we least expect to find it, this beauteous
+ray breaks through the gloom. In
+instituting the memorial of His <i>death</i>, He
+&ldquo;<i>gave thanks</i>!&rdquo; Even in crossing the
+Kedron to Gethsemane, &ldquo;He sang an
+hymn!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We know in seasons of deep sorrow and
+trial that every thing wears a gloomy aspect.
+Dumb Nature herself to the burdened spirit
+seems as if she partook in the hues of sadness.
+The life of Jesus was one continuous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+experience of privation and woe&mdash;a &ldquo;Valley
+of Baca,&rdquo; from first to last; yet, amid
+accents of plaintive sorrow, there are ever
+heard subdued undertones of <i>thankfulness</i>
+and joy!</p>
+
+<p>Ah, if He, the suffering &ldquo;Man of sorrows,&rdquo;
+could, during a life of unparalleled
+woe, lift up His heart in grateful acknowledgment
+to His Father in heaven, how
+ought the lives of those to be one perpetual
+&ldquo;hymn of thankfulness,&rdquo; who are from day
+to day and hour to hour (for all they have,
+both temporally and spiritually) pensioners
+on God&#8217;s bounty and love!</p>
+
+<p>Reader! cultivate this thankful spirit;
+it will be to thee a perpetual feast. There
+is, or ought to be, with us no such thing as
+<i>small</i> mercies; all are <i>great</i>, because the least
+are undeserved. Indeed, a really thankful
+heart will extract motive for gratitude from
+every thing, making the most even of scanty
+blessings. St. Paul, when in his dungeon at
+Rome, a prisoner in chains, is heard to say,
+&ldquo;I have <i>all</i>, and abound!&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Guard, on the other hand, against that
+spirit of continual fretting and moping over
+fancied ills; that temptation to exaggerate
+the real or supposed disadvantages of
+our condition, magnifying the trifling inconveniences
+of every-day life into enormous
+evils. Think, rather, how much we have to
+be thankful for. The world in which we
+live, in spite of all the scars of sin and suffering
+upon it, is a happy world. It is not, as
+many would morbidly paint it, flooded with
+tears and strewn with wrecks, plaintive with
+a perpetual dirge of sorrow. True, the
+&ldquo;Everlasting Hills&rdquo; are in glory, but there
+are numberless eminences of grace, and love,
+and mercy below; many green spots in the
+lower valley, <i>many more than we deserve</i>!</p>
+
+<p>God will reward a thankful spirit. Just
+as on earth, when a man receives with gratitude
+what is given, we are more disposed to
+give again, so also, &ldquo;the <i>Lord</i> loveth&rdquo; a
+cheerful &ldquo;receiver,&rdquo; as well as a cheerful
+&ldquo;giver.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Let ours, moreover, be a <i>Gospel</i> thankfulness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+Let the incense of a grateful spirit rise
+not only to the Great Giver of all good, but
+to our Covenant God in Christ. Let it be the
+spirit of the child exulting in the bounty and
+beneficence of his <i>Father&#8217;s</i> house and home!
+&ldquo;Giving <i>thanks</i> always for all things unto
+God and <i>the Father</i>, in the name of our Lord
+Jesus Christ!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>While the sweet melody of gratitude vibrates
+through every successive moment of
+our daily being, let love to our adorable Redeemer
+show for <i>whom</i> and for <i>what</i> it is we
+reserve our notes of loftiest and most fervent
+praise. Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable
+gift!</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Seventh_Day" id="Seventh_Day"></a>Seventh Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t07.png"
+ alt="Seventh Day." title="Seventh Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>UNSELFISHNESS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;For even Christ pleased not Himself.&rdquo;&mdash;Rom. xv. 8.</p>
+
+<p>Too legibly are the characters written on
+the fallen heart and a fallen world&mdash;&ldquo;All
+seek their own!&rdquo; Selfishness is the great law
+of our degenerated nature. When the love
+of God was dethroned from the soul, self
+vaulted into the vacant seat, and there, in
+some one of its Proteus shapes, continues to
+reign.</p>
+
+<p>Jesus stands out for our imitation a grand
+solitary exception in the midst of a world of
+selfishness. His entire life was one abnegation
+of self; a beautiful living embodiment of
+that charity which &ldquo;seeketh not her own.&rdquo;
+He who for others turned water into wine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+and provided a miraculous supply for the
+fainting thousands in the wilderness, exerted
+no such miraculous power for His own necessities.
+During His forty days&#8217; temptation, no
+table did He spread for Himself, no booth did
+He rear for his unpillowed head. Twice do
+we read of Him shedding tears&mdash;on neither
+occasion were they for Himself. The approach
+of His cross and passion, instead of
+absorbing Him in His own approaching suffering,
+seemed only to elicit new and more gracious
+promises to His people. When His
+enemies came to apprehend Him, His only
+stipulation was for His disciples&#8217; release&mdash;&ldquo;Let
+these go their way.&rdquo; In the very act of
+departure, with all the boundless glories of
+eternity in sight, <i>they</i> were still all His care.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, how different is the spirit of the world!
+With how many is day after day only a new
+oblation to that idol which never darkened
+with its shadow His Holy heart; pampering
+their own wishes; &ldquo;envying and grieving at
+the good of a neighbor;&rdquo; unable to brook the
+praise of a rival; establishing their own reputation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+on the ruins of another; thus engendering
+jealousy, discontent, peevishness, and every
+kindred unholy passion.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But ye have not so learned Christ!&rdquo;
+Reader! have you been sitting at the feet of
+Him who &ldquo;pleased not Himself&rdquo;? Are you
+&ldquo;dying daily;&rdquo;&mdash;dying to self as well as to
+sin? Are you animated with <i>this</i> as the
+high end and aim of existence&mdash;to lay out
+your time, and talents, and opportunities, for
+God&#8217;s glory, and the good of your fellow-men;
+not seeking your own interests, but rather
+ceding these, if, by doing so, another will be
+made happier, and your Saviour honored?
+You may not have it in your power to manifest
+this &ldquo;mind of Jesus&rdquo; on a great scale,
+by enduring great sacrifices; nor is this required.
+His denial of self had about it no
+repulsive austerity; but you can evince its
+holy influence and sway by innumerable little
+offices of kindness and good-will; taking a
+generous interest in the welfare and pursuits
+of others, or engaging and co&ouml;perating in
+schemes for the mitigation of human misery.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Avoid <i>ostentation</i>&mdash;another repulsive form
+of self. Be willing to be in the shade; sound
+no trumpet before you. The evangelist
+Matthew made a great feast, which was graced
+by the presence of Jesus; in his Gospel he
+says not one word about it!</p>
+
+<p>Seek to live more constantly and habitually
+under the constraining influence of the love
+of Jesus. Selfishness withers and dies beneath
+Calvary.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, believer! if Christ had &ldquo;pleased Himself,&rdquo;
+where wouldst <i>thou</i> have <i>been</i> this day?</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Eighth_Day" id="Eighth_Day"></a>Eighth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t08.png"
+ alt="Eighth Day." title="Eighth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>SUBMISSION TO GOD&#8217;S WORD.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Jesus said unto him, It is written.&rdquo;&mdash;Matt. iv. 7.</p>
+
+<p>We can not fail to be struck, in the course
+of the Saviour&#8217;s public teaching, with His
+constant appeal to the word of God. While,
+at times, He utters, in His own name, the
+authoritative behest, &ldquo;Verily, verily, I say
+unto you,&rdquo; He as often thus introduces some
+mighty work, or gives intimation of some impending
+event in His own momentous life,
+&ldquo;These things must come to pass, that <i>the
+Scriptures be fulfilled, which saith</i>.&rdquo; He commands
+His people to &ldquo;search the Scriptures;&rdquo;
+but He sets the example by searching and
+submitting to them Himself. Whether he
+drives the money-changers from their sacrilegious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+traffic in the temple, or foils his great
+adversary on the mount of temptation, he
+does so with the same weapon, &ldquo;<i>It is written.</i>&rdquo;
+When He rises from the grave, the theme of
+His first discourse is one impressive tribute to
+the value and authority of the same sacred
+oracles. The disciples on the road to Emmaus
+listen to nothing but a <i>Bible lesson</i>. &ldquo;He expounded
+unto them in all <i>the Scriptures</i> the
+things concerning Himself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How momentous the instruction herein
+conveyed! The necessity of the absolute
+subjection of the mind to God&#8217;s written Word&mdash;making
+churches, creeds, ministers, books,
+religious opinion, all subordinate and subservient
+to this&mdash;&ldquo;How readest thou?&rdquo; rebuking
+the philosophy, falsely so called, that
+would distort the plain statements of Revelation,
+and bring them to the bar of proud
+Reason.</p>
+
+<p>If an infallible Redeemer, &ldquo;a law to Himself,&rdquo;
+was submissive in all respects to the
+&ldquo;<i>written</i> law,&rdquo; shall fallible man refuse to sit
+with the teachableness of a little child, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+listen to the Divine message? There may be,
+there <i>is</i>, in the Bible, what reason staggers at:
+&ldquo;we have nothing to draw with, and the well
+is deep.&rdquo; But, &ldquo;<i>Thus saith the Lord</i>,&rdquo; is
+enough. Faith does not first ask what the
+bread is made of, but <i>eats</i> it. It does not
+analyse the components of the living stream,
+but with joy draws the water from &ldquo;the wells
+of salvation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! take that Word as &ldquo;the lamp to
+thy feet, and the light to thy path.&rdquo; In days
+when false lights are hung out, there is the
+more need of keeping the eye steadily fixed
+on the unerring beacon. Make the Bible the
+arbiter in all difficulties&mdash;the ultimate court
+of appeal. Like Mary, &ldquo;sit at the feet of
+Jesus,&rdquo; willing only to learn of Him. How
+many perplexities it would save you! how
+many fatal steps in life it would prevent&mdash;how
+many tears! &ldquo;It is a great matter,&rdquo; says the
+noblest of modern Christian philosophers,
+&ldquo;when the mind dwells on any passage of
+Scripture, just to think <i>how true it is</i>.&rdquo;
+(<i>Chalmers&#8217; Life</i>).<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In every dubious question, when the foot is
+trembling on debatable ground, knowing not
+whether to advance or recede, make this the
+final criterion, &ldquo;What saith the Scripture?&rdquo;
+The world may remonstrate&mdash;erring friends
+may disapprove&mdash;Satan may tempt&mdash;ingenious
+arguments may explain away; but, with our
+finger on the revealed page, let the words of
+our Great Example be ever a Divine formula
+for our guidance:&mdash;&ldquo;<i>This</i> commandment have
+I received of my Father!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Ninth_Day" id="Ninth_Day"></a>Ninth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t09.png"
+ alt="Ninth Day." title="Ninth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>PRAYERFULNESS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;He continued all night in prayer to God.&rdquo;&mdash;Luke,
+vi. 12.</p>
+
+<p>We speak of <i>this</i> Christian and <i>that</i> Christian
+as &ldquo;a man of prayer.&rdquo; Jesus was emphatically
+so. The Spirit was &ldquo;poured upon
+Him without measure,&rdquo; yet&mdash;<i>He prayed</i>! He
+was incarnate wisdom, &ldquo;needing not that any
+should teach Him.&rdquo; He was infinite in His
+power, and boundless in His resources, yet&mdash;<i>He
+prayed</i>! How deeply sacred the prayerful
+memories that hover around the solitudes of
+Olivet and the shores of Tiberias! He seemed
+often to turn night into day to redeem moments
+for prayer, rather than lose the blessed privilege.</p>
+
+<p>We are rarely, indeed, admitted into the
+solemnities of His inner life. The veil of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+night is generally between us and the Great
+High Priest, when He entered &ldquo;the holiest of
+all;&rdquo; but we have enough to reveal the depth
+and fervor, the tenderness and confidingness
+of this blissful intercommunion with His
+heavenly Father. No morning dawns without
+His fetching fresh manna from the mercy-seat.
+&ldquo;He wakeneth morning by morning; He
+wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned.&rdquo;
+(Isa. l. 4). Beautiful description!&mdash;a praying
+Redeemer, wakening, as if at early dawn, the
+ear of His Father, to get fresh supplies for
+the duties and the trials of the day! All His
+public acts were consecrated by prayer,&mdash;His
+baptism, His transfiguration, His miracles,
+His agony, His death. He breathed away
+His spirit in prayer. &ldquo;His last breath,&rdquo; says
+Philip Henry, &ldquo;was praying breath.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How sweet to think, in holding communion
+with God&mdash;<i>Jesus</i> drank of this very brook!
+He consecrated the bended knee and the silent
+chamber. He refreshed His fainting spirit at
+the same great Fountain-head from which it is
+life for us to draw and death to forsake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Reader! do you complain of your languid
+spirit, your drooping faith, your fitful affections,
+your lukewarm love? May you not
+trace much of what you deplore to an unfrequented
+chamber? The treasures are locked
+up from you, because you have suffered the
+key to rust; the hands hang down because
+they have ceased to be uplifted in prayer.
+Without prayer!&mdash;It is the pilgrim without a
+staff&mdash;the seaman without a compass&mdash;the
+soldier going unarmed and unharnessed to
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>Beware of encouraging what indisposes to
+prayer&mdash;going to the audience chamber with
+soiled garments, the din of the world following
+you, its distracting thoughts hovering unforbidden
+over your spirit. Can you wonder
+that the living water refuses to flow through
+obstructed channels, or the heavenly light to
+pierce murky vapors!</p>
+
+<p>On earth, fellowship with a lofty order of
+minds imparts a certain nobility to the
+character; so, in a far higher sense, by communion
+with God you will be transformed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+into His image, and get assimilated to His
+likeness. Make every event in life a reason
+for fresh going to Him. If difficulted in
+duty, bring it to the test of prayer. If
+bowed down with anticipated trial,&mdash;&ldquo;fearing
+to enter the cloud,&rdquo;&mdash;remember Christ&#8217;s
+preparation, &ldquo;Sit ye here while I go and
+<i>pray</i> yonder.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Let prayer consecrate every thing&mdash;your
+time, talents, pursuits, engagements, joys,
+sorrows, crosses, losses. By it, rough paths
+will be made smooth, trials disarmed of their
+bitterness, enjoyments hallowed and refined,
+the bread of the world turned into angels&#8217;
+food. &ldquo;It is in the closet,&rdquo; says Payson,
+&ldquo;the battle is lost or won!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Tenth_Day" id="Tenth_Day"></a>Tenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t10.png"
+ alt="Tenth Day." title="Tenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>LOVE TO THE BRETHREN.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us.&rdquo;&mdash;Eph.
+v. 2.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jesus,&rdquo; says a writer, &ldquo;came from heaven
+on the wings of love.&rdquo; It was the element
+in which he moved and walked. He sought
+to baptize the world afresh with it. When
+we find Him teaching us by love to vanquish
+an <i>enemy</i>, we need not wonder at the tenderness
+of His appeals to the <i>brethren</i> to &ldquo;love
+one another.&rdquo; Like a fond father impressing
+his children, how the Divine Teacher lingers
+over the lesson, &ldquo;This is <i>My</i> commandment!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>If selfishness had guided His actions, we
+might have expected him to demand all His
+people&#8217;s love for himself. But He claims no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+such monopoly. He not only encourages
+mutual affection, but He makes it the badge
+of discipleship! He gives them at once its
+measure and motive. &ldquo;Love one another,
+as I have loved you!&rdquo; What a love was
+that!&mdash;it reached to the lowliest and humblest,&mdash;&ldquo;Inasmuch
+as ye did it to the <i>least</i> of
+these, ye did it unto <i>Me</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ah! if such was the Elder Brother&#8217;s love
+to His younger brethren, what should the
+love of these younger brothers be for one
+another! How humbling that there should
+be so much that is sadly and strangely unlike
+the spirit which our blessed Master sought to
+inculcate alike by precept and example! Individual
+Christians, why these bitter estrangements,
+these censorious words, these harsh
+judgments, this want of kind consideration
+of the feelings and failings of those who may
+differ from you? Why are your friendships
+so often like the summer brook, soon dried?
+You hope, ere long, to meet in glory. Doubtless
+when you enter on that &ldquo;sabbath of
+love,&rdquo; many a greeting will be this, &ldquo;Alas!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+my brother, that on earth I did not love thee
+more!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Do you see the image of God in a professing
+believer? It is your duty to love him
+for the sake of that image. No church, no
+outward livery, no denominational creed,
+should prevent your owning and claiming
+him as a fellow-pilgrim and fellow-heir. It
+has been said of a portrait, however poor the
+painting, however unfinished the style, however
+faulty the touches, however coarse and
+unseemly the frame, yet if the <i>likeness</i> be
+faithful, we overlook many subordinate defects.
+So it is with the Christian: however
+plain the exterior, however rough the setting,
+or even manifold the blemishes still found
+cleaving to a partially-sanctified nature, yet
+if the Redeemer&#8217;s <i>likeness</i> be feebly and
+faintly traced there, we should love the copy
+for the sake of the Divine Original. There
+may be other bonds of association and intercourse
+linking spirit with spirit; family ties,
+mental congenialities, intellectual tastes, philanthropic
+pursuits; but that which ought to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+take the precedence of all, is the love of God&#8217;s
+image in the brethren. What will heaven be
+but this love perfected&mdash;loving Christ, and
+beloved by those who love Him?</p>
+
+<p>Reader! seek to love <i>Him</i> more, and you
+will love His people more. John had more
+love than the other disciples. Why? He
+drank deepest of the love within that Bosom
+on which he delighted to lean, every beat of
+which was love. &ldquo;Walk,&rdquo; then, &ldquo;in love!&rdquo;
+Let it be the very foot-road you tread; let
+your way to heaven be paved with it. Soon
+shall we come to look within the portal.
+Then shall every jarring and dissonant note
+be merged into the sublime harmonies of
+&ldquo;the new heavens and the new earth,&rdquo; and
+we shall all &ldquo;see eye to eye!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Eleventh_Day" id="Eleventh_Day"></a>Eleventh Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t11.png"
+ alt="Eleventh Day." title="Eleventh Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>SYMPATHY.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Jesus wept.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xi. 35.</p>
+
+<p>It is an affecting thing to see a Great man
+in tears! &ldquo;<i>Jesus wept!</i>&rdquo; It was ever His
+delight to tread in the footsteps of sorrow&mdash;to
+heal the broken-hearted&mdash;turning aside from
+His own path of suffering to &ldquo;weep with
+those that weep.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><i>Bethany!</i> That scene, that <i>word</i>, is a condensed
+volume of consolation for yearning
+and desolate hearts. What a majesty in those
+tears! He had just been discoursing on Himself
+as the Resurrection and the Life&mdash;the
+next moment He is a Weeping Man by a
+human grave, melted in anguished sorrow at
+a bereaved one&#8217;s side! Think of the funeral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+at the gate of Nain, reading its lesson to dejected
+myriads&mdash;&ldquo;Let thy widows trust in
+me!&rdquo; Think of the farewell discourse to
+His disciples, when, muffling all His own foreseen
+and anticipated sorrows, He thought
+only of soothing and mitigating theirs!
+Think of the affecting pause in that silent
+procession to Calvary, when He turns round
+and stills the sobs of those who are tracking
+His steps with their weeping! Think of that
+wondrous epitome of human tenderness, just
+ere His eyes closed in their sleep of agony&mdash;in
+the mightiest crisis of all time&mdash;when filial
+love looked down on an anguished mother,
+and provided her a son and a home!</p>
+
+<p>Ah, was there ever sympathy like this!
+Son! Brother! Kinsman! Saviour! all in one!
+The majesty of Godhead almost lost in the
+tenderness of a Friend. But so it <i>was</i>, and so
+it is. The heart of the now enthroned King
+beats responsive to the humblest of His sorrow-stricken
+people. &ldquo;I am poor and needy,
+yet the Lord <i>carries me on His heart</i>!&rdquo; (margin.)</p>
+
+<p>Let us &ldquo;go and do likewise.&rdquo; Let us be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+ready, like our Lord, to follow the beck of
+misery,&mdash;&ldquo;to deliver the needy when he
+crieth, the poor also, and him that hath no
+helper.&rdquo; Sympathy costs but little. Its recompense
+and return are great, in the priceless
+consolation it imparts. Few there are who
+undervalue it. Look at Paul&mdash;the weary,
+jaded prisoner,&mdash;chained to a soldier&mdash;recently
+wrecked, about to stand before C&aelig;sar.
+He reaches Appii Forum and the Three
+Taverns, dejected and depressed. Brethren
+come from Rome, a distance of sixty miles, to
+offer their <i>sympathy</i>. The aged man is cheered!
+His spirit, like Jacob&#8217;s, &ldquo;revived!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;He thanked God, and took courage!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! let &ldquo;this mind,&rdquo; this holy, Christ-like
+<i>habit</i> be in you, which was also in your
+adorable Master. Delight, when opportunity
+occurs, to frequent the house of mourning&mdash;to
+bind up the widow&#8217;s heart, and to dry the orphan&#8217;s
+tears. If you can do nothing else, you
+can whisper into the ear of disconsolate sorrow
+those majestic solaces, which, rising first
+in the graveyard of Bethany, have sent their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+undying echoes through the world, and stirred
+the depths of ten thousand hearts. &ldquo;Exercise
+your souls,&rdquo; says Butler, &ldquo;in a loving sympathy
+with sorrow in every form. Soothe it,
+minister to it, succor it, revere it. It is the
+relic of Christ in the world, an image of the
+Great Sufferer, a shadow of the cross. It is
+a holy and venerable thing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Jesus Himself &ldquo;<i>looked</i> for some to take <i>pity</i>,
+but there was <i>none</i>; and for comforters, but
+He found <i>none</i>!&rdquo; It shows how even <i>He</i>
+valued sympathy, and that, too, in its commonest
+form of &ldquo;<i>pity</i>,&rdquo; though an ungrateful
+World denied it.</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twelfth_Day" id="Twelfth_Day"></a>Twelfth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t12.png"
+ alt="Twelfth Day." title="Twelfth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>FIDELITY IN REBUKE.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;The Lord turned and looked upon Peter.&rdquo;&mdash;Luke,
+xxii. 61.</p>
+
+<p>Jesus never spake one unnecessarily harsh
+or severe word. He had a Divine sympathy
+for the frailties and infirmities of a tried, and
+suffering, and tempted nature in others. He
+was forbearing to the ignorant, encouraging to
+the weak, tender to the penitent, loving to
+all,&mdash;yet how faithful was He as &ldquo;the Reprover
+of sin!&rdquo; Silent under His own wrongs, with
+what burning invectives did He lay bare the
+Pharisees&#8217; masked corruption and hypocrisy!
+When His Father&#8217;s name and temple were
+profaned, how did He sweep, with an avenging
+hand, the mammon-crowd away, replacing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+superscription, &ldquo;Holiness to the Lord,&rdquo; over
+the defiled altars!</p>
+
+<p>Nor was it different with His own disciples.
+With what fidelity, when rebuke was needed,
+did He administer it: the withering reprimand
+conveyed sometimes by an impressive <i>word</i>
+(Matt. xvi. 23); sometimes by a silent <i>look</i>
+(Luke, xxii. 61). &ldquo;Faithful always were the
+wounds of <i>this</i> Friend.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! art thou equally faithful with thy
+Lord in rebuking evil; not with &ldquo;the wrath of
+man, which worketh not the righteousness of
+God,&rdquo; but with a holy jealousy of His glory,
+feeling, with the sensitive honor of &ldquo;the good
+soldier of Jesus Christ,&rdquo; that an affront offered
+to Him is offered to thyself? The giving of
+a wise reproof requires much Christian prudence
+and delicate discretion. It is not by a
+rash and inconsiderate exposure of failings
+that we must attempt to reclaim an erring
+brother. But neither, for the sake of a false
+peace, must we compromise fidelity; even
+friendship is too dearly purchased by winking
+at sin. Perhaps, when Peter was led to call<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+the Apostle who honestly reproved him, &ldquo;Our
+beloved brother Paul,&rdquo; in nothing did he love
+his rebuker more, than for the honest boldness
+of his Christian reproof. If Paul had, in that
+crisis of the Church, with a timidity unworthy
+of him, evaded the ungracious task, what,
+humanly speaking, might have been the
+result?</p>
+
+<p>How often does a seasonable reprimand, a
+faithful caution, save a lifetime of sin and
+sorrow! How many a death-bed has made the
+disclosure, &ldquo;That kind warning of my friend
+put an arrest on my career of guilt; it altered
+my whole being; it brought me to the cross,
+touched my heart, and, by God&#8217;s grace, saved
+my soul!&rdquo; On the other hand, how many
+have felt, when death has put his impressive
+seal on some close earthly intimacy, &ldquo;This
+friend, or that friend,&mdash;I might have spoken a
+solemn word to him; but now he is no more;
+the opportunity is lost, never to be recalled!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! see that you act not the spiritual
+coward. When tempted to sit silent when
+the name of God is slighted or dishonored,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+think, <i>would Jesus have done so</i>?&mdash;would <i>He</i>
+have allowed the oath to go unrebuked&mdash;the
+lie to be uttered unchallenged&mdash;the Sabbath
+with impunity to be profaned? Where there
+is a natural diffidence which makes you shrink
+from a more bold and open reproof, remember
+much may be done to discountenance sin, by
+the silent holiness of demeanor which refuses
+to smile at the unholy allusion or ribald jest.
+&ldquo;A word spoken in due season, how good is
+it!&rdquo; &ldquo;Speak gently,&rdquo; yet speak faithfully:
+&ldquo;be pitiful&mdash;be courteous:&rdquo; yet &ldquo;quit you
+like men; be strong!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Thirteenth_Day" id="Thirteenth_Day"></a>Thirteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t13.png"
+ alt="First Thirteenth." title="Thirteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>GENTLENESS IN REBUKE.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?&rdquo;&mdash;John, xxi. 15.</p>
+
+<p>No word here of the erring disciple&#8217;s past
+faithlessness;&mdash;his guilty cowardice&mdash;<i>unmentioned</i>;&mdash;his
+base denial&mdash;his oaths&mdash;and
+curses, and treacherous desertion&mdash;all <i>unmentioned</i>!
+The memory of a threefold denial is
+<i>suggested</i>, and no more, by the threefold
+question of unutterable tenderness, &ldquo;Simon,
+son of Jonas, lovest thou me?&rdquo; When Jesus
+finds His disciples sleeping at the gate of
+Gethsemane, He rebukes them; but how is
+the rebuke disarmed of its poignancy by the
+merciful apology which is added&mdash;&ldquo;The spirit
+indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak!&rdquo; How
+different from <i>their</i> unkind insinuation regarding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+<i>Him</i>, when, in the vessel on Tiberias, &ldquo;He
+was asleep&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Master carest thou not that
+we perish!&rdquo; The woman of Samaria is full
+of earthliness, carnality, sectarianism, guilt.
+Yet how gently the Saviour speaks to her&mdash;how
+forbearingly, yet faithfully. He directs
+the arrow of conviction to that seared and
+hardened conscience, till He lays it bleeding
+at His feet! Truly, &ldquo;He will not break the
+bruised reed&mdash;He will not quench the smoking
+flax.&rdquo; By &ldquo;the <i>goodness</i> of God,&rdquo; He would
+lead to repentance. When others are speaking
+of merciless violence, He can dismiss the
+most guilty of profligates with the words,
+&ldquo;Neither do I condemn thee; go, and sin no
+more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How many have an unholy pleasure in
+finding a brother in the wrong&mdash;blazing
+abroad his failings; administering rebuke, not
+in gentle forbearance and kindly expostulation,
+but with harsh and impatient severity!
+How beautifully did Jesus unite intense sensibility
+to sin, along with tenderest compassion
+for the sinner, showing in this that &ldquo;He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+knoweth our frame!&rdquo; Many a scholar needs
+gentleness in chastisement. The reverse
+would crush a sensitive spirit, or drive it to
+despair. Jesus tenderly &ldquo;considers&rdquo; the case
+of those He disciplines, &ldquo;tempering the wind
+to the shorn lamb.&rdquo; In the picture of the
+good shepherd bearing home the wandering
+sheep, He illustrated by parable what He had
+often and again taught by His own example.
+No word of needless harshness or upbraiding
+uttered to the erring wanderer! Ingratitude
+is too deeply felt to need rebuke! In silent
+love, &ldquo;He lays it on His shoulders rejoicing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! seek to mingle gentleness in all
+your rebukes; bear with the infirmities of
+others; make allowance for constitutional
+frailties; never say harsh things, if kind
+things will do as well; do not unnecessarily
+lacerate with recalling former delinquencies.
+In reproving another, let us rather feel how
+much we need reproof ourselves. &ldquo;Consider
+thyself,&rdquo; is a searching Scripture motto for
+dealing with an erring brother. Remember
+thy Lord&#8217;s method of silencing fierce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+accusation&mdash;&ldquo;Let him that is without sin cast the
+first stone.&rdquo; Moreover, anger and severity
+are not the successful means of reclaiming the
+backslider, or of melting the obdurate. Like
+the <i>smooth</i> stones with which David smote
+Goliath, <i>gentle</i> rebukes are generally the most
+powerful. The old fable of the traveller and
+his cloak has a moral here as in other things.
+The genial sunshine will effect its removal
+sooner than the rough tempest. It was said
+of Leighton, that &ldquo;he rebuked faults so
+mildly, that they were never repeated, not
+because the admonished were afraid, but
+ashamed to do so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Fourteenth_Day" id="Fourteenth_Day"></a>Fourteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t14.png"
+ alt="Fourteenth Day." title="Fourteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>ENDURANCE IN CONTRADICTION.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Who endured such contradiction of sinners against
+Himself.&rdquo;&mdash;Heb. xii. 3.</p>
+
+<p>What endurance was this! Perfect truth
+in the midst of error; perfect love in the
+midst of ingratitude and coldness; perfect
+rectitude in the midst of perjury, violence,
+fraud; perfect constancy in the midst of contumely
+and desertion; perfect innocence, confronting
+every debased form of depravity and
+guilt; perfect patience, encountering every
+species of gross provocation&mdash;&ldquo;oppressed and
+afflicted, He opened not His mouth!&rdquo; &ldquo;For
+my love&rdquo; (in return for my love), &ldquo;they are
+mine adversaries; <i>but</i>&rdquo; (see His endurance!&mdash;the
+only species of revenge of which His sinless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+nature was capable) &ldquo;<i>I give myself unto
+prayer!</i>&rdquo; (Ps. cix. 4.)</p>
+
+<p>Reader! &ldquo;let this mind be in you, which
+was also in Christ Jesus!&rdquo; The greatest test
+of an earthly soldier&#8217;s courage is <i>patient endurance</i>!
+The noblest trait of the spiritual
+soldier is the same. &ldquo;Having done all <i>to
+stand</i>,&rdquo; &ldquo;He <i>endured</i>, as seeing Him who is
+invisible!&rdquo; Beware of the angry recrimination,
+the hasty ebullition of temper. Amid
+unkind insinuations&mdash;when motives are misrepresented,
+and reputation assailed; when
+good deeds are ridiculed, kind intentions
+coldly thwarted and repulsed, chilling reserve
+manifested where you expected nothing but
+friendship&mdash;what a triumph over natural impulse
+to manifest a spirit of meek endurance!&mdash;like
+a rainbow, radiant with the hues of
+heaven, resting peacefully amid the storms of
+derision and &ldquo;the floods of ungodly men.&rdquo;
+What an opportunity of magnifying the &ldquo;sustaining
+grace of God!&rdquo; &ldquo;It is a small thing
+for me to be judged of you, or of man&#8217;s judgment;
+He that judgeth me is the Lord.&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+&ldquo;The Lord is on my side; I will not fear
+what man can do unto me.&rdquo; &ldquo;Blessed is the
+man that <i>endureth</i>.&rdquo; &ldquo;He that <i>endureth</i> to the
+end, the same shall be saved.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>If faithful to our God, we must expect to
+encounter contradiction in the same form
+which Jesus did&mdash;&ldquo;the contradiction of <i>sinners</i>.&rdquo;
+It has been well said, &ldquo;There is no cross of
+nails and wood erected now for the Christian,
+but there is one of words and looks which is
+never taken down.&rdquo; If believers are set as
+lights in the earth, lamps in the &ldquo;city of destruction,&rdquo;
+we know that &ldquo;he that doeth evil
+<i>hateth</i> the light.&rdquo; &ldquo;Marvel not, my brethren,
+if the world hate you!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Weary and faint ones, exposed to the shafts
+of calumny and scorn because of your fidelity
+to your God; encountering, it may be, the
+coldness and estrangement of those dear to
+you, who can not, perhaps, sympathize in the
+holiness of your walk and the loftiness of
+your aims, &ldquo;consider <i>Him</i> that endured such
+contradiction of sinners against Himself, <i>lest</i>
+ye be weary and faint in your minds!&rdquo; What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+is <i>your</i> &ldquo;contradiction&rdquo; to <i>His</i>? Soon your
+cross, whatever it be, will have an end.
+&ldquo;The seat of the scorner&rdquo; has no place in
+yonder glorious heaven, where all will be
+peace&mdash;no jarring note to disturb its blissful
+harmonies! Look forward to the great coronation-day
+of the Church triumphant,&mdash;the
+day of your divine Lord&#8217;s appearing, when
+motives and aims, now misunderstood, will be
+vindicated, wrongs redressed, calumnies and
+aspersions wiped away. Meanwhile, &ldquo;rejoice
+that you are counted worthy to suffer shame
+for His name.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Fifteenth_Day" id="Fifteenth_Day"></a>Fifteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t15.png"
+ alt="Fifteenth Day." title="Fifteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>PLEASING GOD.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I do always those things that please Him.&rdquo;&mdash;John, viii. 29.</p>
+
+<p>What a glorious motto for a man&mdash;&ldquo;<i>I live
+for God!</i>&rdquo; It is religion&#8217;s truest definition.
+It is the essence of angelic bliss&mdash;the motive-principle
+of angelic action; &ldquo;Ye ministers of
+His, that do His pleasure.&rdquo; The Lord of
+angels knew no higher, no <i>other</i> motive. It
+was, during His incarnation, the regulator
+and directory of His daily being. It supported
+Him amid the depressing sorrows of
+His woe-worn path. It upheld him in their
+awful termination in the garden and on the
+cross. For a moment, sinking human nature
+faltered under the load His Godhead sustained;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+but the thought of &ldquo;pleasing God&rdquo;
+nerved and revived Him. &ldquo;Not my will,
+but <i>Thine</i> be done.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is only when the love of God is shed
+abroad in the heart, that this animating desire
+to &ldquo;please Him&rdquo; can exist. In the holy
+bosom of Jesus, that love reigned paramount,
+admitting no rival&mdash;no competing affection.
+Though infinitely inferior in degree, it is the
+same impelling principle which leads His
+people still to link enjoyment with His service,
+and which makes consecration to Him
+of heart and life its own best recompense and
+reward. &ldquo;There is a gravitation,&rdquo; says one
+whose life was the holy echo of his words,
+&ldquo;in the moral as in the physical world.
+When love to God is habitually in the ascendant,
+or occupying the place of will, it gathers
+round it all the other desires of the soul as
+satellites, and whirls them along with it in its
+orbit round the center of attraction.&rdquo; (<i>Hewitson&#8217;s
+Life.</i>) Till the heart, then, be changed,
+the believer can not have &ldquo;this testimony
+that he <i>pleases God</i>.&rdquo; The world, self, sin&mdash;these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+be the gods of the unregenerate soul.
+And even <i>when</i> changed, alas that there
+should be so many ebbings and flowings in
+our tide of devotedness! Jesus could say,
+&ldquo;I do <i>always</i> those things that please the
+Father.&rdquo; Glory to God burned within His
+bosom like a living fire. &ldquo;Many waters
+could not quench it.&rdquo; His were no fitful and
+inconsistent frames and feelings, but the persistent
+habit of a holy life, which had the one
+end in view, from which it never diverged or
+deviated.</p>
+
+<p>Let it be so, in some lowly measure with
+us. Let God&#8217;s service not be the mere livery
+of high days,&mdash;of set times and seasons; but,
+like the alabaster box of ointment, let us ever
+be giving forth the fragrant perfume of holiness.
+Even when the shadows of trial are
+falling around us, let us &ldquo;pass through the
+cloud&rdquo; with the sustaining motive&mdash;&ldquo;All my
+wish, O God, is to please and glorify Thee!
+By giving or taking&mdash;by smiting or healing&mdash;by
+the sweet cup or the bitter&mdash;&lsquo;Father,
+glorify thy name!&rsquo;&rdquo; &ldquo;I don&#8217;t want to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+weary of God&#8217;s dealing with me,&rdquo; said Bickersteth,
+on his death-bed; &ldquo;I want to glorify
+Jesus in them, and to find Him more precious.&rdquo;
+Do I shrink from trials&mdash;duties&mdash;crosses&mdash;because
+involving hardships and self-denial,
+or because frowned on by the world? Let
+the thought of God&#8217;s approving countenance
+be enough. Let me dread no censure, if conscious
+of acting in accordance with <i>His</i> will.
+Let the Apostle&#8217;s monitory word determine
+many a perplexing path&mdash;&ldquo;If I please men,
+I am not the servant of Christ.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Sixteenth_Day" id="Sixteenth_Day"></a>Sixteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t16.png"
+ alt="Sixteenth Day." title="Sixteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>GRIEF AT SIN.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Being grieved for the hardness of their hearts.&rdquo;&mdash;Mark,
+iii. 5.</p>
+
+<p>On this one occasion only is the expression
+used with reference to Jesus&mdash;(what intensity
+of emotion does it denote, spoken of a
+sinless nature!)&mdash;&ldquo;He looked round on them
+<i>with anger</i>!&rdquo; Never did He grieve for Himself.
+His intensest sorrows were reserved for
+those who were tampering with their own
+souls, and dishonoring His God. The continual
+spectacle of moral evil, thrust on the gaze
+of spotless purity, made His earthly history
+one consecutive history of grief, one perpetual
+&ldquo;cross and passion.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the tears shed at the grave of Bethany,
+sympathy, doubtless, for the world&#8217;s myriad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+mourners, had its own share (the bereaved
+could not part with so precious a tribute in
+their hours of sadness), but a far more impressive
+cause was one undiscerned by the weeping
+sisters and sorrowing crowd; His knowledge
+of the deep and obdurate impenitence of those
+who were about to gaze on the mightiest of
+miracles, only to &ldquo;despise, and wonder, and
+perish.&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>Jesus wept!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;but His profoundest
+anguish was over resisted grace, abused privileges,
+scorned mercy. It was the Divine
+Artificer mourning over His shattered handiwork;
+the Almighty Creator weeping over
+His ruined world; God, the God-man, &ldquo;grieving&rdquo;
+over the Temple of the soul, a humiliating
+wreck of what once was made &ldquo;after His
+own image!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Can we sympathize in any respect with such
+exalted tears? Do we mourn for sin, our <i>own</i>
+sin&mdash;the deep insult which it inflicts on God&mdash;the
+ruinous consequences it entails on ourselves?
+Do we grieve at sin in <i>others</i>? Do
+we know any thing of &ldquo;vexing our souls,&rdquo;
+like righteous Lot, &ldquo;from day to day,&rdquo; with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+the world&#8217;s &ldquo;unlawful deeds,&rdquo; the stupid
+hardness and obduracy of the depraved heart,
+which resists alike the appliances of wrath and
+love, judgment and mercy? Ah! it is easy,
+in general terms, to condemn vice, and to
+utter harsh, severe, and cutting denunciations
+on the guilty: it is easy to pass uncharitable
+comments on the inconsistencies or follies of
+others: but to &ldquo;<i>grieve</i>&rdquo; as our Lord did, is a
+different thing; to mourn over the hardness
+of heart, and yet to have the burning desire
+to teach it better things; to hate, as He did,
+the sin, but, like Him also, to love the <i>sinner</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Reader! look specially to your own spirit.
+In one respect, the example of Jesus falls
+short of your case. He had no sin of His
+own to mourn over. He could only commiserate
+others. <i>Your</i> intensest grief must begin
+with <i>yourself</i>. Like the watchful Levite of
+old, be a guardian at the temple-gates of your
+own soul. Whatever be your besetting iniquity,
+your constitutional bias to sin, seek
+to guard it with wakeful vigilance. Grieve at
+the thought of incurring one passing shadow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+of displeasure from so kind and compassionate
+a Saviour. Let this be a holy preservative
+in your every hour of temptation, &ldquo;How
+can I do this great wickedness, and sin against
+God?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Grieve for a perishing world&mdash;a groaning
+creation fettered and chained in unwilling
+&ldquo;subjection to vanity.&rdquo; Do what you can,
+by effort, by prayer, to hasten on the hour of
+jubilee, when its ashy robes of sin and sorrow
+shall be laid aside, and, attired in the
+&ldquo;beauties of holiness,&rdquo; it shall exult in &ldquo;the
+glorious liberty of the sons of God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Seventeenth_Day" id="Seventeenth_Day"></a>Seventeenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t17.png"
+ alt="Seventeenth Day." title="Seventeenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>HUMILITY.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;He riseth from supper, and laid aside His garments;
+and took a towel and girded Himself. After that He
+poureth water into a basin, and began to wash the
+disciples&#8217; feet.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xiii. 4, 5.</p>
+
+<p>What a matchless picture of humility!
+At the very moment when His throne was in
+view; angel-anthems floating in His ear;
+the hour come &ldquo;when He was to depart out
+of this world;&rdquo; possessing a lofty consciousness
+of His peerless dignity, that &ldquo;He came
+<i>from</i> God and went <i>to</i> God;&rdquo; <span class="smcap">then</span> &ldquo;Jesus
+took a towel, and girded Himself, and began
+to wash the disciples&#8217; feet!&rdquo; All heaven was
+ready at that moment to cast their combined
+crowns at His feet. But the High and the
+Lofty One, inhabiting eternity, is on earth &ldquo;as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+one that serveth!&rdquo; &ldquo;That <i>infinite stoop</i>! it
+sinks all creature humiliation to nothing, and
+renders it impossible for a creature to <i>humble</i>
+himself.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Evans</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Humility follows Him, from His unhonored
+birthplace to His borrowed grave. It throws
+a subdued splendor over all He did. &ldquo;The
+poor in spirit,&rdquo;&mdash;the &ldquo;mourner,&rdquo;&mdash;the &ldquo;meek,&rdquo;&mdash;claim
+His first beatitudes. He was severe
+only to one class&mdash;those who looked down
+upon others. However He is employed;
+whether performing His works of miraculous
+power, or receiving angel-visitants, or taking
+little children in His arms, He stands forth
+&ldquo;clothed with humility.&rdquo; Nay, this humility
+becomes more conspicuous as He draws nearer
+glory. Before His death, He calls His disciples
+&ldquo;<i>Friends</i>;&rdquo; subsequently, it is &ldquo;<i>Brethren</i>,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;<i>Children</i>.&rdquo; How sad the contrast between
+the Master and His disciples! Two
+hours had not elapsed after He washed their
+feet, when &ldquo;there was a strife among them
+which should be the greatest!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Let the mental image of that lowly Redeemer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+be ever bending over us. His example
+may well speak in silent impressiveness,
+bringing us down from our pedestal of pride.
+There surely can be no labor of love too
+humiliating when <i>He</i> stooped so low. Let us
+be content to take the humblest place; not
+envious of the success or exaltation of another;
+not, &ldquo;like Diotrephes, loving pre&euml;minence;&rdquo;
+&ldquo;but willing to be thought little
+of;&rdquo; saying with the Baptist, with our eye on
+our Lord, &ldquo;He must increase, but I must
+decrease!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How much we have cause to be humble
+for! the constant cleaving of defilement to
+our souls; and even what is partially good in
+us, how mixed with imperfection, self-seeking,
+arrogance, vain-glory! A proud Christian is
+a contradiction in terms. The Seraphim of
+old (type of the Christian Church, and of
+believers) had six wings&mdash;<i>two</i> were for errands
+of love, but &ldquo;with <i>four</i> he <i>covered</i> himself!&rdquo;
+It has been beautifully said, &ldquo;You lie nearest
+the River of Life when you <i>bend</i> to it; you
+can not drink, but as you <i>stoop</i>.&rdquo; The corn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+of the field, as it ripens, bows its head; so the
+Christian, as he ripens in the Divine life, bends
+in this lowly grace. Christ speaks of His
+people as &ldquo;lilies&rdquo;&mdash;they are &ldquo;lilies of <i>the
+valley</i>,&rdquo; they can only grow in the shade!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Humble yourselves under the mighty
+hand of God.&rdquo; &ldquo;Go&rdquo; with what Rutherford
+calls &ldquo;a low sail.&rdquo; It is the livery of your
+blessed Master; the family badge&mdash;the family
+likeness. &ldquo;With this man will I dwell, even
+with him that is <i>humble</i>.&rdquo; Yes! the humble,
+sanctified heart is God&#8217;s <i>second Heaven</i>!</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Eighteenth_Day" id="Eighteenth_Day"></a>Eighteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t18.png"
+ alt="Eighteenth Day." title="Eighteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>PATIENCE.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter.&rdquo;&mdash;Isa.
+liii, 7.</p>
+
+<p>How great was the <i>patience</i> of Jesus! Even
+among His own disciples, how forbearingly
+He endured their blindness, their misconceptions
+and hardness of heart! Philip had been
+for three years with Him, yet he had &ldquo;not
+known Him!&rdquo;&mdash;all that time he had remained
+in strange and culpable ignorance of his Lord&#8217;s
+dignity and glory. See how tenderly Jesus
+bears with him; giving him nothing in reply
+for his confession of ignorance but unparalleled
+promises of grace! Peter, the honored and
+trusted, becomes a renegade and a coward.
+Justly might his dishonored Lord, stung with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+such unrequited love, have cut the unworthy
+cumberer down. But He spares him, bears
+with him, gently rebukes him, and loves him
+more than ever! See the Divine Sufferer in
+the terminating scenes of His own ignominy
+and woe. How patient!&mdash;&ldquo;As a sheep before
+her shearers is dumb, so He opened not His
+mouth.&rdquo; In these awful moments, outraged
+Omnipotence might have summoned twelve
+legions of angels and put into the hand of each
+a vial of wrath. But He submits in meek,
+majestic silence. Verily, in <i>Him</i> &ldquo;patience
+had her <i>perfect</i> work!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Think of this same patience with His Church
+and people since He ascended to glory. The
+years upon years He has borne with their
+perverse resistance of His grace, their treacherous
+ingratitude, their wayward wanderings,
+their hardness of heart and contempt of His
+holy word. Yet, behold the forbearing love
+of this Saviour of God! His hand of mercy
+is &ldquo;stretched out still!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Child of God! art thou now undergoing
+some bitter trial? The way of thy God, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+may be, all mystery; no footprints of love
+traceable in the checkered path; no light, in
+the clouds above; no ray in the dark future.
+<i>Be patient!</i> &ldquo;The Lord is good to them that
+<i>wait</i> for Him.&rdquo; &ldquo;They that <i>wait</i> on the Lord
+shall renew their strength!&rdquo; Or hast thou
+been long tossed on some bed of sickness&mdash;days
+of pain and nights of weariness appointed
+thee? <i>Be patient!</i> &ldquo;I trust this groaning,&rdquo;
+said a suffering saint, &ldquo;is not murmuring.&rdquo;
+God, by this very affliction, is nurturing within
+thee this beauteous grace which shone so
+conspicuously in the character of thy dear
+Lord. With Him it was a lovely <i>habit</i> of the
+soul. With thee, the &ldquo;tribulation&rdquo; which
+worketh &ldquo;patience&rdquo; is needful discipline. It
+is <i>good</i> for a man that he should both hope
+and quietly <i>wait</i> for the salvation of God.
+Art thou suffering some unmerited wrong or
+unkindness, exposed to harsh and wounding
+accusations, hard for flesh and blood to bear?
+<i>Be patient!</i> Beware of hastiness of speech or
+temper; remember how much evil may be
+done by a few inconsiderate words &rdquo;spoken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+unadvisedly with the lip.&rdquo; Think of Jesus
+standing before a human tribunal, in the
+silent submissiveness of conscious innocence
+and integrity. Leave thy cause with God.
+Let this be the only form of thy complaint,
+&ldquo;O God, I am oppressed; undertake Thou for
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In patience,&rdquo; then, &ldquo;possess ye your
+souls.&rdquo; Let it not be a grace for peculiar
+seasons, called forth on peculiar exigences;
+but an habitual frame manifested in the calm
+serenity of a daily walk;&mdash;placidity amid the
+little fretting annoyances of every-day life&mdash;a
+fixed purpose of the heart to wait upon God,
+and cast its every burden upon Him.</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Nineteenth_Day" id="Nineteenth_Day"></a>Nineteenth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t19.png"
+ alt="Nineteenth Day." title="Nineteenth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>SUBJECTION.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;As the Father gave me commandment, even so I
+do.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xiv. 31.</p>
+
+<p>Jesus as God-man had omnipotence slumbering
+in His arm. He had the hoarded
+treasures of eternity in His grasp. He had
+only to &ldquo;speak, and it was done.&rdquo; But, as an
+example to His people, His whole life on
+earth was one impressive act of subordination
+and dependence. At Nazareth He was
+&ldquo;subject to His parents.&rdquo; There He remained
+in studied obscurity, occupying for
+thirty years a lowly hut, willing to continue
+in a state of seclusion, till the Father&#8217;s summons
+called Him to His appointed work.</p>
+
+<p>At His baptism, sinless Himself, He gives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+this reason for receiving a sinner&#8217;s rite at a
+sinner&#8217;s hands&mdash;&ldquo;Suffer it to be so now, for
+thus it becometh Me to fulfill all righteousness.&rdquo;
+The same beautiful spirit of filial
+<i>subjection</i> shines conspicuous amid His acts of
+stupendous power. &ldquo;Jesus lifted up His eyes
+and said, Father, I thank Thee that Thou
+hast heard Me; and I know that Thou hearest
+Me always; but because of the people which
+stand by, I said it, that they may believe that
+Thou has sent Me.&rdquo; Even among His own
+disciples His language is, &ldquo;I am among you
+as He that serveth.&rdquo; With an act of submission
+He closed His pilgrimage and work of
+love. &ldquo;Father, into Thy hands I commend
+My spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>What an example to us, in all this, is our
+beloved Lord! Surely, if <i>He</i>, &ldquo;God only
+wise&rdquo;&mdash;the Self-existent One, to whom &ldquo;all
+power was committed;&rdquo;&mdash;the Sinless One,
+never liable to err, on whom &ldquo;the Spirit was
+poured without measure&rdquo;&mdash;if <i>He</i> manifested
+such habitual dependence on His heavenly
+Father, how earnestly ought <i>we</i>, weak, erring,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+fallible creatures, to seek to live every hour&mdash;every
+moment&mdash;as pensioners on God&#8217;s grace
+and love, following in all things His directing
+hand! As the servant has his eyes on his
+master, or the child on its parent, &ldquo;so should
+our eyes be on the Lord our God.&rdquo; Howsoever
+He speaks, be it ours with all docility to
+follow the voice, indorsing every utterance
+of providence, and every precept of Scripture,
+with our Lord&#8217;s own words, &ldquo;<i>This is the
+Father&#8217;s will!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Beware of self-dependence. The first step
+in spiritual declension is this: &ldquo;Let him that
+<i>thinketh he standeth</i>!&rdquo; The secret of real
+strength is this: &ldquo;<i>Kept</i> by the <i>power of
+God</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How it sweetens all our blessings, and alleviates
+all our sorrows, to regard both as emanations
+from a loving Father&#8217;s hand. Even
+if we should be, like the disciples of old,
+&ldquo;<i>constrained</i>&rdquo; to go into the ship; if all
+should be darkness and tempest, frowning
+providences&mdash;&ldquo;the wind contrary;&rdquo; how
+blessed to feel that in embarking on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+unquiet element, &ldquo;the Lord has bidden us!&rdquo;
+Paul could not speak even of taking an
+earthly journey, without the parenthesis (&ldquo;if
+the Lord will&rdquo;). How many trials, and sorrows,
+and <i>sins</i>, would it save us, if the same
+were the habitual regulator of our daily life!
+It would lead to calm contentment with our lot,
+hushing every disquieting suggestion with the
+thought that that lot, with all that is apparently
+adverse in it, was <i>ordained</i> for us. It would
+teach us not to be aspiring after <i>great</i> things,
+but humbly to wait the will and purposes of
+a wise Provider; not to go <i>before</i> our Heavenly
+Guide, but to <i>follow</i> Him, saying, in meek
+subjection, &ldquo;Lord, my heart is not haughty,
+nor mine eyes lofty, neither do I exercise myself
+in great matters, or in things too high for
+for me ... my soul is even as a weaned
+child!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twentieth_Day" id="Twentieth_Day"></a>Twentieth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t20.png"
+ alt="Twentieth Day." title="Twentieth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>NOT RETALIATING.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Who, when He was reviled, reviled not again.&rdquo;&mdash;1 Peter, ii. 23.</p>
+
+<p>What a common dictate of the fallen and
+regenerate heart to resent and recriminate!
+How alien to natural feeling to answer cutting
+taunts, and meet unmerited wrong with the
+Divine method the Gospel prescribes&mdash;&ldquo;Overcome
+evil with good!&rdquo; It was in the closing
+scenes of the Saviour&#8217;s humiliation, when,
+silent and unresenting, He stood &ldquo;dumb
+before His shearers,&rdquo; that this beautiful feature
+in His character was most wondrously
+manifested; but it beams forth, also, for our
+imitation in the ordinary and less prominent
+incidents of His pilgrimage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When He met Nathanael of Cana in Galilee,
+He found him clinging to an unreasonable
+prejudice&mdash;&ldquo;Can any good thing come out of
+Nazareth?&rdquo; The severe remark is allowed
+to pass unnoticed. Overlooking the unkind
+insinuation, the Saviour fixes on the favorable
+feature of his character, &ldquo;Behold an Israelite
+indeed, in whom is no guile!&rdquo; After His
+resurrection, He appears to His disciples.
+They were cowering in shame, half afraid to
+confront the glance of injured goodness. He
+breathes on them, and says, &ldquo;Peace be unto
+you!&rdquo; Peter was the one of all the rest who
+had most reason to dread estranged looks and
+upbraiding words; but a special message is
+sent to reassure that trembling spirit that there
+was no alienation in the unresentful Heart he
+had so deeply wounded; &ldquo;Go and tell the
+disciples ... and <i>Peter</i>!&rdquo; Even when
+Judas first revealed himself to his Lord as the
+betrayer, we believe it was not in bitter irony
+or rebuke, but in the fullness of pitying tenderness,
+that Jesus addressed him, &ldquo;Friend,
+wherefore art thou come?&rdquo; Tears and prayers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+were His only revenge on the city and scene
+of His murder. &ldquo;Beginning at Jerusalem,&rdquo;
+was the closing illustration of a spirit &ldquo;not
+of this world&rdquo;&mdash;a significant parting testimony
+that in the bosom that uttered it retaliation
+had no place.</p>
+
+<p>More than one of the disciples seem to have
+imbibed much of this &ldquo;mind&rdquo; of their Lord.
+&ldquo;We owe St. Paul,&rdquo; says Augustine, &ldquo;to the
+death of Stephen;&rdquo; &ldquo;they stoned Stephen ... and
+he kneeled down and cried
+with a loud voice, Lord! lay not this sin to
+their charge.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Take another example: The great Apostle
+of the Gentiles felt himself under a painful
+necessity faithfully to rebuke Peter in presence
+of the whole Church. He had <i>recorded</i> that
+rebuke, too, in one of his epistles. It was thus
+to be handed down to every age as a permanent
+and humiliating evidence of the wavering
+inconstancy of his fellow-laborer. Peter,
+doubtless, must have felt acutely the severity
+of the chastisement. Does he resent it? He,
+too, puts on record, long after, in one of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+own epistles a sentence regarding his Rebuker,
+but it is this&mdash;&ldquo;Our <i>beloved brother</i>
+Paul!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! when tempted to utter the harsh
+word, or give the cutting or hasty answer,
+seek to check yourself with the question, &ldquo;Is
+this the reply my Saviour would have given?&rdquo;
+If your fellow-men should prove unkind, inconsiderate,
+ungrateful, be it yours to refer the
+cause to God. Speak of the faults of others
+only in prayer; manifesting more sorrow for
+the sin of the censorious and unkind, than for
+the evil inflicted on yourselves. <i>Retaliate!</i>
+No such word should have a place in the
+Christian&#8217;s vocabulary. <i>Retaliate!</i> If I cherish
+such a spirit towards my brother, how can
+I meet that brother in heaven?&mdash;&ldquo;But ye
+have not so learned in Christ.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_first_Day" id="Twenty_first_Day"></a>Twenty-first Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t21.png"
+ alt="Twenty-first Day." title="Twenty-first Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>BEARING THE CROSS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;And He bearing His cross.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xix. 17.</p>
+
+<p>When did Jesus bear the cross? Not that
+moment alone, surely, when the bitter tree
+was placed on His shoulders, on the way to
+Golgotha. Its vision may be said to have
+risen before Him in His infant dreams in
+Bethlehem&#8217;s cradle; there, rather, its reality
+began; and He ceased not to carry it, till His
+work was finished, and the victory won! A
+<i>cloud</i>, of old, hovered over the mercy-seat in
+the tabernacle and temple. So it was with
+the Great Antitype&mdash;the living Mercy-Seat&mdash;He
+had ever a cloud of woe hanging over
+him. &ldquo;He <i>carried</i> our sorrows.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! dwell much and often under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+shadow of your Lord&#8217;s cross, and it will lead
+you to think lightly of your own! If <i>He</i>
+gave utterance to not one murmuring word,
+canst <i>thou</i> complain? &ldquo;If we were deeper
+students of his bitter anguish, we should think
+less of the ripplings of our waves, amidst His
+horrible tempest.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Evans.</i>) The saint&#8217;s cross
+assumes many and diverse shapes. Sometimes
+it is the bitter trial, the crushing pang of
+bereavement&mdash;desolate households, and aching
+hearts. Sometimes it is the crucifixion
+of sin, the determined battle with &ldquo;lusts
+which war against the soul.&rdquo; Sometimes it is
+the resistance of evil maxims and practices of
+a lying world; vindicating the honor of
+Christ, in the midst, it may be, of taunt, and
+obloquy, and shame. And as there are different
+crosses, so there are different ways of
+bearing them. To some, God says, &ldquo;put your
+shoulder to the burden; lift it up, and bear it
+on; work, and toil, and labor!&rdquo; To others,
+He says, &ldquo;Be still, bear it, and <i>suffer</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Believer! thy cross may be hard to endure;
+it may involve deep struggles&mdash;tears by day,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+watchings by night; bear it meekly, patiently,
+justifying God&#8217;s wisdom in laying it on. Rejoice
+in the assurance that He gives not one
+atom more of earthly trial than He sees to be
+really needful; not one redundant thorn
+pierces your feet. In the very bearing of the
+cross for <i>His</i> sake, there are mighty compensations.
+What new views of your Saviour&#8217;s
+love! His truth, His promises, His sustaining
+grace, His sufferings, His glory! What new
+filial nearness; increased delight in prayer;
+an inner sunshine when it is darkest without!
+The waves cover you, but underneath them
+all, are &ldquo;the everlasting arms!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Do not look out for a situation <i>without</i>
+crosses. Be not over anxious about &ldquo;smooth
+paths;&rdquo;&mdash;leaving your God, as Orpah did
+Naomi, just when the cross requires to be
+carried. Immoderate earthly enjoyments&mdash;unbroken
+earthly prosperity&mdash;write upon
+these, &ldquo;<i>Beware!</i>&rdquo; You may live to see them
+become your greatest trials!</p>
+
+<p>Remember the old saying, &ldquo;No cross, no
+crown.&rdquo; The sun of the saint&#8217;s life generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+struggles through &ldquo;weeping clouds.&rdquo; One of
+the loveliest passages of Scripture is that in
+which, the portals of heaven being opened, we
+overhear this dialogue between two ransomed
+ones&mdash;&ldquo;And one of the elders answered saying
+unto me, What are these which are arrayed
+in white robes, and whence came they?
+And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And
+he said to me, <i>These are they which came out of
+great tribulation!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_second_Day" id="Twenty_second_Day"></a>Twenty-second Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t22.png"
+ alt="Twenty-second Day." title="Twenty-second Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>HOLY ZEAL.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me up.&rdquo;&mdash;John,
+ii. 17.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Zeal, is a principle; enthusiasm is a feeling.
+The one is a spark of a sanguine temperament
+and overheated imagination. The other, a
+sacred flame kindled at God&#8217;s altar, and burning
+in God&#8217;s shrine.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Vaughan.</i>) Such was the
+holy, heavenly zeal of our Great Exemplar!
+His were no transient outbursts of ardor,
+which time cooled and difficulties impeded.
+His life was one indignant protest against sin;&mdash;one
+ceaseless current of undying love for
+souls, which all the malignity of foes, and unkindness
+of friends, could not for one moment
+divert from its course. Even when He rises<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+from the dead, and we imagine His work at an
+end, His zeal only meditates fresh deeds of
+love. &ldquo;Still His heart and His care,&rdquo; says
+Godwin, &ldquo;is upon doing more. Having now
+dispatched that great work on earth, He sends
+His disciples word that He is hastening to
+heaven as fast as He can, to do another.&rdquo;
+(John, xx. 17).</p>
+
+<p>Reader! do you know any thing of this
+zeal, which &ldquo;many waters could not quench&rdquo;?
+See that, like your Lord&#8217;s, it be steady, sober,
+consistent, undeviating. How many are, like
+the children of Ephraim, &ldquo;carrying bows&rdquo;&mdash;all
+zealous when zeal demands no sacrifice,
+but &ldquo;turning their backs in the day of battle!&rdquo;
+Others &ldquo;running well&rdquo; for a time, but gradually
+&ldquo;hindered,&rdquo; through the benumbing
+influences of worldliness, selfishness, and sin.
+Two disciples, apparently equally devoted and
+zealous, send through Paul, in one of his
+epistles, a conjoint Christian salutation&mdash;&ldquo;Luke
+and Demas greet you.&rdquo; A few years
+afterward, thus he writes from his Roman
+dungeon&mdash;&ldquo;Only <i>Luke</i> is with me,&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>Demas</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+hath <i>forsaken</i> me, having loved this present
+world!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>While zeal is commendable, remember the
+Apostle&#8217;s qualification, &ldquo;It is good to be
+zealously affected always in a <i>good</i> thing.&rdquo;
+There is in these days much base coin current,
+<i>called</i> &ldquo;zeal,&rdquo; which bears not the image and
+superscription of Jesus. There is zeal for
+church-membership and party; zeal for creeds
+and dogmas; zeal for figments and non-essentials.
+&ldquo;From such turn aside.&rdquo; Your Lord
+stamped with His example and approval no
+such counterfeits. <i>His</i> zeal was ever brought
+to bear on two objects, and two objects alone&mdash;<i>the
+glory of God</i> and <i>the good of man</i>. Be it
+so with <i>you</i>. Enter, first of all (as He did the
+earthly temple), the sanctuary of <i>your own
+heart</i>, with &ldquo;the scourge of small cords.&rdquo;
+Drive out every unhallowed intruder there.
+Do not suffer yourself to be deceived. Others
+may call such jealous searchings of spirit
+&ldquo;sanctimoniousness&rdquo; and &ldquo;enthusiasm.&rdquo; But
+remember, to be <i>almost saved</i>, is to be <i>altogether
+lost</i>!&mdash;to be zealous about every thing but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+&ldquo;the one thing needful,&rdquo; is an insult to God
+and your everlasting interests!</p>
+
+<p>Have a zeal for <i>others</i>. Dying myriads are
+around you. As a member of the Christian
+priesthood, it becomes you to rush in with
+your censer and incense between the living
+and the dead, &ldquo;that the plague may be
+stayed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Be it yours to say, &ldquo;Blessed Jesus! I am
+<i>Thine</i>!&mdash;Thine only!&mdash;Thine wholly!&mdash;Thine
+for ever! I am willing to follow Thee, and
+(if need be) to <i>suffer</i> for Thee. I am ready at
+Thy bidding to leave the homestead in the
+valley, and to face the cutting blasts of the
+mountain. Take me&mdash;use me for Thy glory.
+&lsquo;Lord! what wilt Thou have me to do?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_third_Day" id="Twenty_third_Day"></a>Twenty-third Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t23.png"
+ alt="Twenty-third Day." title="Twenty-third Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>BENEVOLENCE.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Who went about doing good.&rdquo;&mdash;Acts, x. 38.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Christ&#8217;s great end,&rdquo; says Richard Baxter,
+&ldquo;was to save men from their <i>sins</i>; but He
+delighted to save them from their <i>sorrows</i>.&rdquo;
+His heart bled for human misery. Benevolence
+brought Him from heaven; benevolence
+followed His steps wherever He went on earth.
+The journeys of the Divine Philanthropist
+were marked by tears of thankfulness, and
+breathings of grateful love. The helpless, the
+blind, the lame, the desolate, rejoiced at the
+sound of His footfall. Truly might it be said
+of Him, &ldquo;When the ear heard me, then it
+blessed me; and when the eye saw me, it
+gave witness to me.&rdquo; (Job, xxix. 11.) All<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+suffering hearts were a magnet to Jesus. It
+was not more His prerogative than His happiness
+to turn tears into smiles. One of the few
+pleasures which on earth gladdened the spirit
+of the &ldquo;Man of sorrows&rdquo; was the pleasure of
+<i>doing good</i>&mdash;soothing grief, and alleviating
+misery. Next to the joy of the widow of
+Nain when her son was restored, was the joy
+in the bosom of the Divine Restorer! He
+often went out of His way to be kind. A
+journey was not grudged, even if <i>one</i> aching
+spirit were to be soothed. (Mark, v. 1; John,
+iv. 4, 5.) Nor were his kindnesses dispensed
+through the intervention of others. They
+were all personal acts. His own hand healed.
+His own voice spake. His own footsteps
+lingered on the threshold of bereavement, or
+at the precincts of the tomb. Ah! had the
+princes of this world known the loving-tenderness
+and unselfishness of <i>that</i> heart, &ldquo;they
+would not have crucified the Lord of Glory&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>Reader! do you know any thing of such
+active benevolence? Have you never felt the
+<i>luxury</i> of doing good? Have you never felt,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+that in making <i>others</i> happy, you make <i>your
+self</i> so? that, by a great law of your being,
+enunciated by the Divine Patron and Pattern
+of Benevolence, &ldquo;it is more blessed to give
+than to receive&rdquo;? Has God enriched you
+with this world&#8217;s goods? Seek to view yourself
+as a consecrated medium for dispensing
+them to others. Beware alike of penurious
+hoarding and selfish extravagance. How sad
+the case of those whose lot God has made thus
+to abound with temporal mercies, who have
+gone to the grave unconscious of diminishing
+one drop of human misery, or making one of
+the world&#8217;s myriad aching hearts happier!
+How the example of <i>Jesus</i> rebukes the cold
+and calculating kindnesses&mdash;the mite-like
+offerings of many even of His own people!
+&ldquo;whose libation is not like His, from the brim
+of an overflowing cup, but from the bottom&mdash;from
+the <i>dregs</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>You may have little to give. Your sphere
+and means may be alike limited. But remember
+God can be as much glorified by the trifle
+saved from the earnings of poverty, as by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+splendid benefaction from the lap of plenty
+&ldquo;The Lord loveth a <i>cheerful</i> giver.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The nobler part of Christian benevolence
+is not vast largesses, munificent pecuniary
+sacrifices. &ldquo;<i>He went about</i> doing good.&rdquo; The
+merciful visit&mdash;the friendly word&mdash;the look
+of sympathy&mdash;the cup of cold water, the
+little unostentatious service&mdash;the giving without
+thought or hope of recompense&mdash;the
+kindly &ldquo;considering of the poor&rdquo;&mdash;anticipating
+their wants&mdash;studying their comforts;
+these are what God values and loves. They
+are &ldquo;loans&rdquo; to Himself&mdash;tributary streams to
+&ldquo;the river of <i>His</i> pleasure;&rdquo; they will be
+acknowledged at last as such&mdash;&ldquo;Ye did it
+unto <i>Me</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_fourth_Day" id="Twenty_fourth_Day"></a>Twenty-fourth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t24.png"
+ alt="Twenty-fourth Day." title="Twenty-fourth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>FIRMNESS IN TEMPTATION.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Jesus saith unto him, Get thee hence, Satan.&rdquo;&mdash;Matt.
+iv. 10.</p>
+
+<p>There is an awful intensity of meaning in
+the words, as applied to Jesus, &ldquo;He <i>suffered</i>,
+being tempted!&rdquo; Though incapable of sin,
+there was, in the refined sensibilities of His
+holy nature, that which made temptation unspeakably
+fearful. What must it have been
+to confront the Arch-traitor?&mdash;to stand face
+to face with the foe of His throne, and His
+universe? But the &ldquo;prince of this world&rdquo;
+came, and found &ldquo;nothing in Him.&rdquo; Billow
+after billow of Satanic violence spent their
+fury, in vain, on the Living Rock!</p>
+
+<p>Reader! you have still the same malignant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+enemy to contend with; assailing you in a
+thousand insidious forms; marvelously adapting
+his assaults to your circumstances, your
+temperament, your mental bias, your master-passion!
+There is no place where &ldquo;Satan&#8217;s seat&rdquo;
+is not; &ldquo;the whole world lieth in the Wicked
+one.&rdquo; (1 John, v. 19.) He has his whispers
+for the ear of childhood; hoary age is not
+inaccessible to his wiles. &ldquo;<i>All this will I give
+thee</i>&rdquo;&mdash;is still his bribe to deny Jesus and to
+&ldquo;mind earthly things.&rdquo; He will meet you
+in the crowd; he will follow you to the solitude;
+his is a sleepless vigilance!</p>
+
+<p>Are you bold in repelling him as your
+Master was? Are you ready with the retort
+to every foul suggestion, &ldquo;Get thee hence,
+Satan&rdquo;? Cultivate a tender sensitiveness
+about sin. The finest barometers are the
+most sensitive. Whatever be your besetting
+frailty&mdash;whatever bitter or baleful passion
+you are conscious aspires to the mastery&mdash;watch
+it, crucify it, &ldquo;nail it to your Lord&#8217;s
+cross.&rdquo; <i>You</i> may despise &ldquo;the day of small
+things&rdquo;&mdash;the Great Adversary does <i>not</i>. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+knows the power of <i>littles</i>; that little by
+little consumes and eats out the vigor of the
+soul. And once the retrograde movement in
+the spiritual life begins, who can predict where
+it may end? the going on &ldquo;from weakness to
+weakness,&rdquo; instead of &ldquo;from strength to
+strength.&rdquo; Make no compromises; never
+join in the ungodly amusement, or venture on
+the questionable path, with the plea, &ldquo;It does
+me no harm.&rdquo; The Israelites, on entering
+Canaan, instead of obeying the Divine injunction
+of extirpating their enemies, made a
+hollow truce with them. What was the result?
+Years upon years of tedious warfare.
+&ldquo;They were scourges in their sides, and
+thorns in their eyes!&rdquo; It is quaintly but
+truthfully said by an old writer, &ldquo;The candle
+will never burn clear, while there is a <i>thief</i> in
+it. Sin indulged, in the conscience, is like
+Jonah in the ship, which causeth such a
+tempest, that the conscience is like a troubled
+sea, whose waters cannot rest.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Thomas
+Brooks</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Keep,&rdquo; then, &ldquo;thy heart with all diligence,&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+or, (as it is in the forcible original
+Hebrew,) &ldquo;keep thy heart <i>above all keeping</i>,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;for out of it are the issues of life.&rdquo; (Prov.
+iv. 23.) Let this ever be your preservative
+against temptation, &ldquo;How would <i>Jesus</i> have
+acted here? would <i>He</i> not have recoiled, like
+the sensitive plant, from the remotest contact
+with sin? Can <i>I</i> think of dishonoring Him
+by tampering with His enemy; incurring
+from His own lips the bitter reflection of injured
+love, &lsquo;I am wounded in the house of
+my friends&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He tells us the secret of our preservation
+and safety, &ldquo;Simon! Simon! Satan hath
+desired to have thee, that he might sift thee
+as wheat; <i>but I</i> have prayed for thee that thy
+faith fail not!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_fifth_Day" id="Twenty_fifth_Day"></a>Twenty-fifth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t25.png"
+ alt="Twenty-fifth Day." title="Twenty-fifth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>RECEIVING SINNERS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;This man receiveth sinners.&rdquo;&mdash;Luke, xv. 2.</p>
+
+<p>The ironical taunt of proud and censorious
+Pharisees formed the glory of Him who came,
+&ldquo;not to call the righteous, but sinners, to
+repentance.&rdquo; Publicans and outcasts; those
+covered with a deeper than any bodily leprosy&mdash;laid
+bare their wounds to the &ldquo;Great
+Physician;&rdquo; and as conscious guilt and timid
+penitence crept abashed and imploring to His
+feet, they found nothing but a forgiving and
+a gracious welcome!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His ways&rdquo; were not as &ldquo;man&#8217;s ways!&rdquo;
+The &ldquo;watchmen,&rdquo; in the Canticles, &ldquo;smote&rdquo;
+the disconsolate one seeking her lost Lord;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+they tore off her veil, mocking with chilling
+unkindness her anguished tears. Not so
+&ldquo;the Chief Shepherd and Bishop of souls.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;<i>This</i> man <i>receiveth</i> sinners&rdquo;! See Nicodemus,
+stealing under the shadows of night
+to elude observation&mdash;type of the thousand
+thousand who in every age have gone trembling
+in their night of sin and sorrow to this
+Heavenly Friend! Does Jesus punish his
+timidity by shutting His door against him,
+spurning him from His presence? &ldquo;He will
+not break the bruised reed, He will not quench
+the smoking flax!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And He is still the same! He who arrested
+a persecutor in his blasphemies, and tuned the
+lips of an expiring felon with faith and love,
+is at this hour standing, with all the garnered
+treasures of Redemption in His hand, proclaiming,
+&ldquo;Him that cometh unto Me, I will
+in no wise cast out&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>Are we from this to think lightly of sin?
+or, by example and conduct, to palliate and
+overlook its enormity? Not so; sin, <i>as</i> sin,
+can never be sufficiently stamped with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+brand of reprobation. But we must seek
+carefully to distinguish between the offence
+and the offender. Nothing should be done on
+our part, by word or deed, to mock the penitential
+sighings of a guilty spirit, or send the
+trembling outcast away, with the despairing
+feeling of &ldquo;<i>No hope</i>.&rdquo; &ldquo;This man receiveth
+sinners,&rdquo; and shall not <i>we</i>? Does <i>He</i> suffer
+the veriest dregs of human depravity to
+crouch unbidden at His feet, and to gaze on
+His forgiving countenance with the uplifted
+eye of hope, and shall <i>we</i> dare to deal out
+harsh, and severe, and crushing verdicts on an
+offending (it may be a <i>deeply</i> offending) brother?
+Shall we pronounce &ldquo;crimson&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;scarlet&rdquo; sins and sinners beyond the pale of
+mercy, when <i>Jesus</i> does not? Nay, rather,
+when wretchedness, and depravity, and backsliding
+cross our path, let it not be with the
+bitter taunt or the ironical retort that we bid
+them away. Let us bear, endure, remonstrate,
+deal tenderly. Jesus <i>did</i> so, Jesus <i>does</i> so!
+Ah! If we had within us His unconquerable
+love of souls; His yearning desire for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+everlasting happiness of sinners, we should be
+more frequently in earnest expostulation and
+affectionate appeal with those who have hitherto
+got no other than harsh thoughts and repulsive
+words. If this &ldquo;mind&rdquo; really were in
+us, &ldquo;which was also in Him,&rdquo; we should more
+frequently ask ourselves, &ldquo;Have I done all I
+<i>might</i> have done to pluck this brand from the
+burning! Have I remembered what grace
+<i>has</i> wrought, what grace <i>can</i> do?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Brethren, if any of you do err from the
+truth, and one convert him, let him know,
+that he which converteth the sinner from the
+error of his way shall save a soul from death,
+and shall hide a multitude of sins!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_sixth_Day" id="Twenty_sixth_Day"></a>Twenty-sixth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t26.png"
+ alt="Twenty-sixth Day." title="Twenty-sixth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>GUILELESSNESS.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Neither was guile found in His mouth.&rdquo;&mdash;1 Pet. ii. 22.</p>
+
+<p>How rare, and all the more beautiful because
+of its rarity, is a purely <i>guileless</i> spirit!
+A crystalline medium through which the
+transparent light of Heaven comes and goes;
+open, candid, just, honorable, sincere; scorning
+every unfair dealing, every hollow pretension,
+every narrow prejudice. Wherever such
+characters exist, they are like &ldquo;apples of gold
+in pictures of silver.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Such, in all the loveliness of sinless perfection,
+was the Son of God! His guilelessness
+shining the more conspicuously amid the artful
+and malignant subtlety alike of men and
+devils. Passing by manifold instances in the
+course of His ministry, look at its manifestation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+as the hour of His death approached.
+When, on the night of his apprehension, He
+confronts the assassin band, in meek majesty
+He puts the question, &ldquo;Whom seek ye?&rdquo;
+They say to Him, &ldquo;Jesus of Nazareth.&rdquo; In
+guileless innocence, He replies, &ldquo;I am He!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Art thou the King of the Jews?&rdquo; asks
+Pilate, a few hours after. An evasive answer
+might again have purchased immunity from
+suffering and indignity, but once more the lips
+which scorned the semblance of evasion reply,
+&ldquo;Thou sayest!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How He loved the same spirit in His
+people! &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said He, of Nathanael,
+&ldquo;an Israelite indeed, in whom is <i>no guile</i>!&rdquo;
+That upright man had, we may suppose, been
+day after day kneeling in prayer under his
+fig-tree, with an open and candid spirit&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="small" style="margin-left: 10%; margin-right:10%;">
+&ldquo;Musing on the law he taught,<br />
+And waiting for the Lord he loved.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>See how the Saviour honored him; setting
+His own Divine seal on the loveliness of this
+same spirit! Take one other example, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+the startling, saddening announcement is made
+to the disciples, &ldquo;One of you shall betray
+me;&rdquo; they do not accuse one another; they
+attempt to throw no suspicion on Judas; each
+in trembling apprehension suspects only his
+own treacherous heart, &ldquo;Lord, is it I?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How much of a different &ldquo;mind&rdquo; is there
+abroad! In the school of the world (this &ldquo;<i>painted</i>
+world&rdquo;), how much is there of what is called
+&ldquo;policy,&rdquo; double-dealing!&mdash;accomplishing its
+ends by tortuous means; outward, artificial
+polish, often only a cloak for baseness and
+selfishness!&mdash;in the daily interchange of business,
+one seeking to over-reach the other by
+wily arts; sacrificing principle for temporal
+advantage. There is nothing so derogatory
+to religion as aught allied to such a spirit
+among Christ&#8217;s people&mdash;any such blot on the
+&ldquo;living epistles.&rdquo; &ldquo;Ye are the light of the
+world.&rdquo; That world is a quick observer. It
+is sharp to detect inconsistencies&mdash;slow to forget
+them. The true Christian has been
+likened to an <i>anagram</i>&mdash;you ought to be able
+to read him up and down, every way!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Be all reality, no counterfeit. Do not pass
+for current coin what is base alloy. Let
+transparent honor and sincerity regulate all
+your dealings; despise all meanness; avoid
+the sinister motive, the underhand dealing;
+aim at that unswerving love of truth that
+would scorn to stoop to base compliances and
+unworthy equivocations; live more under the
+power of the purifying and ennobling influences
+of the gospel. Take its golden rule
+as the matchless directory for the daily transactions
+of life&mdash;&ldquo;Whatsoever ye would that
+men should do to you, do ye even so to
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_seventh_Day" id="Twenty_seventh_Day"></a>Twenty-seventh Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t27.png"
+ alt="Twenty-seventh Day." title="Twenty-seventh Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>ACTIVITY IN DUTY.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it
+is day; the night cometh, when no man can work.&rdquo;&mdash;John,
+ix. 4.</p>
+
+<p>How constant and unremitting was Jesus
+in the service of His Heavenly Father! &ldquo;He
+rose a great while before day;&rdquo; and, when His
+secret communion was over, His public work
+began. It mattered not to Him where He
+was: whether on the bosom of the deep, or a
+mountain slope&mdash;in the desert, or at a well-side&mdash;the
+&ldquo;gracious words&rdquo; ever &ldquo;proceeded
+out of His mouth.&rdquo; We find, on one touching
+occasion, exhausted nature sinking, after a
+day of unremitting duty; in crossing, in a
+vessel, the Lake of Tiberias&mdash;&ldquo;<i>He fell asleep</i>&rdquo;!
+(Matt. viii.) He redeemed every precious
+moment. His words to the Pharisee seem a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+<i>formula</i> for all, &ldquo;Simon, I have somewhat to
+say unto <i>thee</i>&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how our most unceasing activities pale
+into nothing before such an example as this!
+Would that we could remember that each of
+us has some great mission to perform for God,
+that religion is not a thing of dreamy sentimentalism,
+but of energetic practical action;
+moreover, that no trade, no profession, no
+position, however high or however humble in
+the scale of society, can disqualify for this life
+of Christian activity and usefulness! Who
+were the writers in the Bible? We have
+among them a King&mdash;a Lawgiver&mdash;a Herdsman&mdash;a
+Publican&mdash;a Physician! Nor is it
+to high spheres, or to great services only, that
+God looks. The widow&#8217;s mite and Mary&#8217;s
+&ldquo;alabaster box of ointment&rdquo; are recorded as
+examples for imitation by the Holy Ghost,
+while many more munificent deeds are passed
+by unrecorded. We believe that God says,
+regarding the attempt of many a humble
+Christian to serve Him by active duty, &ldquo;I
+saw that effort, that <i>feeble</i> effort to serve and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+glorify Me; it was the very <i>feebleness</i> of it I
+loved!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Did it never strike you, notwithstanding
+the <i>dignity</i> of Christ, and the <i>activity</i> of Christ,
+how little success comparatively He met with
+in His public work? We read of no <i>numerous</i>
+conversions; no Pentecostal revivals in the
+course of His ministry. May not this well
+encourage in the absence of great outward
+results? He sets up no higher standard than
+this&mdash;&ldquo;She hath done what she could.&rdquo; An
+artist may be <i>great</i> in painting a peasant as
+well as a king&mdash;<i>it is the way he does it</i>. Yes,
+and if laid aside from the <i>activities</i> of the
+Christian life, we can equally glorify God by
+<i>passive endurance</i>. &ldquo;Who am I,&rdquo; said Luther,
+when he witnessed the patience of a great
+sufferer; &ldquo;who am I? a wordy preacher in
+comparison with this great doer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! forget not the motive of our motto
+verse, &ldquo;<i>The night cometh!</i>&rdquo; Soon our tale
+shall be told; our little day is flitting fast, the
+shadows of night are falling. &ldquo;Our span
+length of time,&rdquo; as Rutherford says, &ldquo;will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+come to an inch.&rdquo; What if the eleventh hour
+should strike after having been &ldquo;all the day
+<i>idle</i>&rdquo;? A long lifetime of opportunities suffered
+to pass unemployed and unimproved,
+and absolutely <i>nothing</i> done for God! A
+judgment-day come&mdash;our golden moments
+squandered&mdash;our talents untraded on&mdash;our
+work undone&mdash;met at the bar of Heaven with
+the withering repulse, &ldquo;Inasmuch as ye did
+it <i>not</i>.&rdquo; &ldquo;The time we have lost,&rdquo; says
+Richard Baxter, &ldquo;can not be recalled; should
+we not then redeem and improve the little
+that remains? If a traveler sleep or trifle
+most of the day, he must travel so much the
+faster in the evening, or fall short of his
+journey&#8217;s end.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_eighth_Day" id="Twenty_eighth_Day"></a>Twenty-eighth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t28.png"
+ alt="Twenty-eighth Day." title="Twenty-eighth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>COMMITTING OUR WAY TO GOD.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;But committed himself to Him that judgeth
+righteously.&rdquo;&mdash;1 Peter, ii. 23.</p>
+
+<p>With what perfect and entire confidingness
+did Jesus commit Himself to his Heavenly
+Father&#8217;s guidance! He loved to call Him,
+&ldquo;My Father!&rdquo; There was music in that
+name, which enabled Him to face the most
+trying hour, and to drink the most bitter cup.
+The scoffing taunt arose at the scene of crucifixion:
+&ldquo;He trusted in God that He would
+deliver Him, let Him deliver Him!&rdquo; It failed
+to shake, for one moment, His unswerving
+confidence, even when the sensible tokens of
+the Divine presence were withdrawn; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+realized consciousness of God&#8217;s abiding love
+sustained Him still: &ldquo;My God! my God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How many a perplexity should we save
+ourselves by thus implicitly &ldquo;committing
+ourselves,&rdquo; as He did, to God! In seasons of
+darkness and trouble&mdash;when our way is shut
+up with thorns, to lift the confiding eye of
+faith to Him, and say, &ldquo;I am oppressed, undertake
+for me!&rdquo; How blessed to feel that
+He directs all that befalls us; that no contingencies
+can frustrate His plans; that the
+way he leads us is not only <i>a</i> &ldquo;right way,&rdquo;
+but, with all its briers and thorns&mdash;<i>its</i> tears
+and trials&mdash;it is <i>the</i> right way!</p>
+
+<p>The result of such an habitual staying ourselves
+on the Lord will be a deep, abiding
+<i>peace</i>; any ripple will only be on the surface&mdash;no
+more. It is the <i>bosom</i> of the ocean alone
+which the storm ruffles; all beneath is a
+serene, settled calm. So &ldquo;Thou wilt keep
+him, oh God, in perfect peace, whose mind is
+stayed on <i>Thee</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not
+want.&rdquo; I shall be content alike with what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+He appoints or withholds. I <i>can not</i> wrong
+that love with one shadow of suspicion! I
+have His own plighted promise of unchanging
+faithfulness, that &ldquo;all things work together for
+good to them that love Him!&rdquo; Often there
+are earthly sorrows hard to bear;&mdash;the unkind
+accusation, when it was least merited or expected;
+the estrangement of tried and trusted
+friends, the failure of cherished hopes, favorite
+schemes broken up, plans of usefulness demolished,
+the gourd breeding its own worm
+and withering. &ldquo;Commit thy cause and thy
+way to God!&rdquo; We little know what tenderness
+there is in the blast of the rough wind;
+what &ldquo;needs be&rdquo; are folded under the wings
+of the storm! &ldquo;All is well,&rdquo; because <i>all</i> is
+from <i>Him</i>. &ldquo;Events are God&#8217;s,&rdquo; says Rutherford;
+&ldquo;let Him sit at His own helm, that
+moderateth all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Christian! look back on your checkered
+path. How wondrously has He threaded you
+through the mazy way&mdash;disappointing your
+fears, realizing your hopes! Are evils looming
+through the mists of the future? Do not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+anticipate the trials of to-morrow, to aggravate
+those of to-day. Leave the morrow with Him,
+who has promised, by &ldquo;casting all your care
+on Him, to care for you.&rdquo; No affliction will
+be sent greater than you can bear. His voice
+will be heard stealing from the bosom of the
+threatening cloud, &ldquo;Be still, and know that I
+am God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>My Father!</i>&rdquo; With such a word, you can
+stretch out your neck for any yoke; as with
+Israel of old, He will make those very waves
+that may now be so threatening, a fenced wall
+on every side! &ldquo;Rest in the Lord, and wait
+patiently for Him.&rdquo; &ldquo;In <i>all</i> thy ways acknowledge
+Him, and He shall direct thy
+paths!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Twenty_ninth_Day" id="Twenty_ninth_Day"></a>Twenty-ninth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t29.png"
+ alt="Twenty-ninth Day." title="Twenty-ninth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>LOVE OF UNITY.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;That they all may be one.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xvii. 21.</p>
+
+<p>Surely there is nothing for which Christian
+churches have such cause to hang their
+harps on the willows, as the extent to which
+the Shibboleth of party is heard in the camp
+of the faithful&mdash;sectarianism rearing its &ldquo;untempered
+walls&rdquo; within the Temple gates!</p>
+
+<p>How different &ldquo;the mind of Jesus!&rdquo; Sent
+&ldquo;to the lost sheep of the house of Israel,&rdquo; He
+was never found disowning &ldquo;<i>other</i> sheep not
+of that fold.&rdquo; &ldquo;Them also will I bring,&rdquo; was
+an assertion continually illustrated by His
+deeds. Take one example: The woman of
+Samaria revealed what, alas! is too common
+in the world&mdash;a total absence of all real<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+religion, along with an ardent zeal for her
+sect. She was living in open sin; yet she was
+all alive to the nice distinction between a Jew
+and a Samaritan&mdash;between Mount Gerizim
+and Mount Zion: &ldquo;How is it that thou, being
+a Jew, askest drink of me, who am a woman
+of Samaria?&rdquo; Did Jesus sanction or reciprocate
+her sectarianism?&mdash;did He leave her
+bigotry unrebuked? Hear His reply&mdash;&ldquo;If
+thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is
+that saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou
+wouldst have asked of <i>Him</i>, and <i>He</i> would
+have given thee!&rdquo; <i>He</i> would have allowed
+no such narrow-minded exclusiveness to have
+interfered with the interchange of kindly civilities
+with a stranger. Nay, He would have
+given thee, better than all, the &ldquo;living water&rdquo;
+which &ldquo;springeth up to everlasting life!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How sad, that when the enemy is &ldquo;coming
+in like a flood&rdquo;&mdash;the ranks of Popery and infidelity
+linked in fatal and formidable confederacy&mdash;that
+the soldiers of Christ are forced
+to meet the assault with standards soiled and
+mutilated by internal feuds! &ldquo;Uniformity&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+there <i>may</i> not be, but &ldquo;unity,&rdquo; in the true
+sense of the word, there <i>ought</i> to be. We
+may be clad in different livery, but let us
+stand side by side, and rank by rank, fighting
+the battles of our Lord. We may be different
+branches of the seven golden candlesticks,
+varying and diversified in outward form and
+workmanship; but let us combine in &ldquo;showing
+forth the praises of Him&rdquo; who recognizes, as
+the one true &ldquo;churchmanship,&rdquo; fidelity in
+shining for His glory &ldquo;as lights in the world.&rdquo;
+How can we read the 13th chapter of 1st Corinthians,
+and then think of our divisions?
+&ldquo;How miserable,&rdquo; says Edward Bickersteth,
+&ldquo;would an hospital be, if each patient were to
+be so offended with his neighbor&#8217;s disease, as
+to differ with him on account of it, instead of
+trying to alleviate it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ah! if we had more real communion with
+our Saviour, should we not have more real
+communion with one another? If Christians
+would dip their arrows more in &ldquo;the balm of
+Gilead,&rdquo; would there not be fewer wounds in
+the body of Christ? &ldquo;How that word &lsquo;<i>toleration</i>&rsquo;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+is used amongst us,&rdquo; said one who drank
+deeper than most, of his Master&#8217;s spirit&mdash;&ldquo;how
+we <i>tolerate</i> one another&mdash;Dissenters <i>tolerate</i>
+Churchmen, and Churchmen <i>tolerate</i> Dissenters!
+Oh! hateful word! <span class="smcap">Tolerate</span> one
+for whom <i>Jesus</i> died! <i>Tolerate</i> one whom
+He bears upon His heart! <i>Tolerate</i> a temple
+of the living God! Oh! there ought to
+be <i>that</i> in the word which should make us
+feel <i>ashamed</i> before God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Thirtieth_Day" id="Thirtieth_Day"></a>Thirtieth Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t30.png"
+ alt="Thirtieth Day." title="Thirtieth Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>NOT OF THE WORLD.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;I am not of the world.&rdquo;&mdash;John, xvii. 14.</p>
+
+<p>In one sense it was <i>not</i> so. Jesus did not
+seek to maintain His holiness intact and unspotted
+by avoiding contact with the world.
+He mingled familiarly in its busy crowds.
+He frowned on none of its innocent enjoyments;
+He fostered, by His example, no love
+of seclusion; He gave no warrant or encouragement
+to mortified pride, or disappointed
+hopes, to rush from its duties; yet, with all
+this, what a halo of heavenliness encircled
+His pathway through it! &ldquo;I am from above,&rdquo;
+was breathed in His every look, and word,
+and action, from the time when He lay in the
+slumbers of guileless infancy in His Bethlehem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+cradle, until He said, &ldquo;I leave the world,
+and go to my Father!&rdquo; He had moved uncontaminated
+through its varied scenes, like
+the sunbeam, which, whatever it touches, remains
+as unsullied, as when it issues from
+its great fountain.</p>
+
+<p>But though Himself in His sinless nature
+&ldquo;unconquerable&rdquo; by temptation&mdash;immutably
+secure from the world&#8217;s malignant influences,
+it is all worthy of note, as an example to us,
+that He never unnecessarily braved these.
+He knew the seducing spell that same world
+would exercise on His people, of whom, with
+touching sympathy, He says, &ldquo;<i>These</i> are in
+the world!&rdquo; He knew the <i>many</i> who would
+be involved and ensnared in its subtle worship,
+who, &ldquo;minding earthly things, would
+seek to slake their thirst at polluted streams!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! the great problem you have to
+solve, Jesus has solved for you&mdash;to be &ldquo;<i>in</i> the
+world, and yet not <i>of</i> it.&rdquo; To abandon it,
+would be a dereliction of duty. It would be
+servants deserting their work; soldiers flying
+from the battle-field. <i>Live</i> in it, that while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+you live, the world, may feel the better
+for you. <i>Die</i>, that <i>when</i> you die, the world,
+the <i>Church</i>, may feel your loss, and cherish
+your example! On its cares and duties,
+its trusts and responsibilities, its employments
+and enjoyments, inscribe the motto,
+&ldquo;The world passeth away!&rdquo; Beware of
+every thing in it that would tend to deaden
+spirituality of heart; unfitting the mind for
+serious thought, lowering the standard of
+Christian duty, and inducing a perilous conformity
+to its false manners, habits, tastes,
+and principles. As the best antidote to the
+love of the world, let the inner <i>vacuum</i> of
+the heart be filled with the love of God.
+Seek to feel the nobility of your regenerated
+nature; that you have a nobler heritage to
+care for than the transitory glories which encircle
+&ldquo;an indivisible point, a fugitive atom.&rdquo;
+How can I mix with the potsherds of the
+earth? Once, &ldquo;I lay among the pots;&rdquo; now,
+I am &ldquo;like a dove, whose wings are covered
+with silver, and her feathers with yellow
+gold!&rdquo; &ldquo;Stranger&mdash;pilgrim&mdash;sojourner&rdquo; &ldquo;my
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+<i>citizenship</i> is in heaven!&rdquo; Why covet tinsel
+honors and glories? Why be solicitous about
+the smiles of that which knew not (nay,
+which frowned on) its Lord? &ldquo;Paul calls it,&rdquo;
+says an old writer, &ldquo;<i>schema</i> (a mathematical
+figure), which is a mere <i>notion</i>, and nothing in
+substance.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Thomas Brooks.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>Live above its corroding cares and anxieties;
+remembering the description Jesus gives of
+His own true people; &ldquo;They are not of the
+world, even as I am not of the world!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<h2 class="hidden"><a name="Thirty_first_Day" id="Thirty_first_Day"></a>Thirty-first Day.</h2>
+<img src="images/t31.png"
+ alt="Thirty-first Day." title="Thirty-first Day." />
+</div>
+
+<h4>CALMNESS IN DEATH.</h4>
+
+<p class="biblequote">&ldquo;Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit.&rdquo;&mdash;Luke,
+xxiii. 46.</p>
+
+<p>In the death of Jesus, there were elements
+of fearfulness, which the believer can know
+nothing of. It was with Him the execution of
+a penal sentence. The sins of an elect world
+were bearing him down! The very voice of
+His God was giving the tremendous summons,
+&ldquo;Awake, O sword, against my shepherd!&rdquo;
+Yet His was a death of <i>peace</i>, nay, of <i>triumph</i>!
+Ere He closed His eyes, light broke through
+the curtains of thick darkness. In the calm
+composure of filial confidence He breathed
+away His soul&mdash;&ldquo;Father, into Thy hands I
+commend My spirit!&rdquo; What was the secret<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+of such tranquillity? This is His own key to
+it&mdash;&ldquo;I have glorified Thee on the earth; I have
+finished the work which Thou gavest me to do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reader! will it be so with <i>you</i> at a dying
+hour? will <i>your</i> &ldquo;work&rdquo; be done? Have
+you already fled to Jesus? Are you reposing
+in Him as your only Saviour, and following
+Him as your only pattern? Then&mdash;let death
+overtake you when it may&mdash;you will have
+nothing to do <i>but to die</i>! The grave will be
+irradiated with His presence and smile. He
+will be standing there as He did by His own
+tomb of old, pointing to yours, tenanted with
+angel forms, nay, Himself as the &ldquo;Precursor,&rdquo;
+showing you &ldquo;<i>the path of life!</i>&rdquo; There can
+be no true peace till the fear of death be conquered
+by the sense of sin forgiven, through
+&ldquo;the blood of the Cross.&rdquo; &ldquo;Not till then,&rdquo; as
+one has it, &ldquo;will you be able to be a quiet
+spectator of the open grave at the bottom of
+the hill which you are soon to descend.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;The sting of death is <i>sin</i>, but thanks be to
+God who giveth us the victory through the
+Lord Jesus Christ!&rdquo;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Seek now to live in the enjoyment of
+greater filial nearness to your covenant God;
+and thus, when the hour of departure <i>does</i>
+come, you will be able, without irreverence,
+to take the very words of your dying Lord,
+and make them your own&mdash;&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Father!</span> into
+Thy hands I commend my spirit.&rdquo; <span class="smcap">Father!</span>
+It is going <span class="smcap lowercase">HOME!</span> the heart of the child leaping
+at the thought of the paternal roof, and
+the paternal welcome! &ldquo;Son, thou art ever
+with me, and all that I have is thine!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is said of Archbishop Leighton, that he
+&ldquo;was always happiest when, from the shaking
+of the prison-doors, he was led to hope that
+some of those brisk blasts would throw them
+open, and give him the release he coveted.&rdquo;
+Christian! can you dread <i>that</i> which your
+Saviour has already vanquished? <i>Death!</i> It
+is as the angel to Peter, breaking the dungeon-doors,
+and leading to open day; it is going to
+the world of your birthright, and leaving the
+one of your exile; &ldquo;it is the soldier at night-fall,
+lying down in his tent in peace, waiting
+the morning to receive his laurels.&rdquo; Oh! to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+be ever living in a state of holy preparation!
+the mental eye gazing on the vista-view of an
+opening Heaven! feeling that <i>every moment</i> is
+bringing us nearer and nearer that happy
+<i>Home</i>! soon to be within reach of the
+Heavenly threshold, in sight of the Throne!
+soon to be bending in adoring rapture with
+the Church triumphant&mdash;bathing in floods of
+infinite glory&mdash;&ldquo;LIKE HIM,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;seeing <span class="smcap">Him</span>
+<i>as He is</i>,&rdquo; and that <i>for Ever and Ever</i>!</p>
+
+<p class="arm">&ldquo;AND EVERY MAN THAT HATH THIS HOPE IN HIM PURIFIETH
+HIMSELF, EVEN AS HE IS PURE!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<p class="hidden center">Leaving us AN EXAMPLE that we should follow HIS STEPS. 1 Peter, ii. 21.</p>
+<img src="images/quote2.png"
+ alt="Leaving us AN EXAMPLE that we should follow HIS STEPS. 1 Peter, ii. 21."
+ title="Leaving us AN EXAMPLE that we should follow HIS STEPS. 1 Peter, ii. 21." />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mind of Jesus
+
+Author: John R. Macduff
+
+Release Date: April 5, 2009 [EBook #28507]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIND OF JESUS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Heiko Evermann, Nigel Blower and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+Minor punctuation inconsistencies have been silently corrected.
+
+Title page: "MEMORIES OF OF GENNESARET" changed to "MEMORIES OF GENNESARET"
+p9: Verse number "2." added to "Mark, viii." for consistency
+p23: "brethern" changed to "brethren"
+p106: "vail" changed to "veil"
+p124: duplicate word "one" removed
+p126: "the its great fountain" changed to "its great fountain"
+p128: "frowed" changed to "frowned"
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ MIND OF JESUS.
+
+
+ BY
+ JOHN R. MACDUFF, D.D.
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "MORNING AND NIGHT WATCHES,"
+"THE WORDS OF JESUS," "FAMILY PRAYER,"
+"FOOTSTEPS OF ST. PAUL," "MEMORIES OF
+GENNESARET," "BOW IN THE CLOUD," "STORY
+OF BETHLEHEM," ETC.
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS,
+ No. 530 BROADWAY.
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+The Mind of Jesus.
+
+
+THE MIND OF JESUS! What a study is this! To attain a dim reflection of
+it, is the ambition of angels--higher they can not soar. "To be
+conformed to the image of His Son!"--it is the end of God in the
+predestination of His Church from all eternity. "We shall be like
+Him!"--it is the Bible picture of _heaven_!
+
+In a former little volume, we pondered some of the gracious _Words_
+which proceeded out of the mouth of Jesus. In the present, we have a few
+faint lineaments of that holy _Character_ which constituted the living
+exposition and embodiment of His precepts.
+
+But how lofty such a standard! How all creature-perfection shrinks
+abashed and confounded before a Divine portraiture like this! He is the
+true "Angel standing in the sun," who alone projects no shadow; so
+bathed in the glories of Deity that likeness to Him becomes like the
+light in which He is shrouded--"no man can approach unto it." May we
+not, however, seek at least to approximate, though we can not adequately
+resemble? It is impossible on earth to associate with a fellow-being
+without getting, in some degree, assimilated to him. So, the more we
+study "the Mind of Christ," the more we are in His company--holding
+converse with Him as our best and dearest friend--catching up his holy
+looks and holy deeds--the more shall we be "transformed into the same
+image."
+
+"Consider," says the Great Apostle (literally '_gaze_ on') "Christ
+Jesus" (Heb. iii. 1). Study feature by feature, lineament by lineament,
+of that Peerless Exemplar. "_Gaze_" on the Sun of Righteousness, till,
+like gazing long on the natural sun, you carry away with you, on your
+spiritual vision, dazzling images of His brightness and glory. Though He
+be the Archetype of all goodness, remember He is no shadowy
+model--though the Infinite Jehovah, He was "the _Man_ Christ Jesus."
+
+We must never, indeed, forget that it is not the _mind_, but the _work_
+of Immanuel, which lies at the foundation of a sinner's hope. He must be
+known as a _Saviour_, before He is studied as an _Example_. His doing
+and dying is the center jewel, of which all the virtues of His holy life
+are merely the setting. But neither must we overlook the Scripture
+obligation to walk in His footsteps and imbibe His Spirit, for "if any
+man have not the _Spirit of Christ_, he is _none of His_!"
+
+Oh, that each individual Christian were more Saviour-like! that, in the
+manifestation of a holy character and heavenly demeanor, it might be
+said in some feeble measure of the faint and imperfect reflection--"Such
+was _Jesus_!"
+
+How far short we are of such a criterion, mournful experience can
+testify. But it is at least comforting to know that there is a day
+coming, when, in the full vision and fruition of the Glorious Original,
+the exhortation of our motto-verse will be needed no more; when we shall
+be able to say, in the words of an inspired apostle,
+
+ "We _have_ the MIND OF CHRIST!"
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+
+ PAGE
+The Mind of Jesus 3
+Compassion 9
+Resignation in Trial 13
+Devotedness to God 17
+Forgiveness of Injuries 21
+Meekness 25
+Thankfulness 29
+Unselfishness 33
+Submission to God's Word 37
+Prayerfulness 41
+Love to the Brethren 45
+Sympathy 49
+Fidelity in Rebuke 53
+Gentleness in Rebuke 57
+Endurance of Contradiction 61
+Pleasing God 65
+Grief at Sin 69
+Humility 73
+Patience 77
+Subjection 81
+Not Retaliating 85
+Bearing the Cross 89
+Holy Zeal 93
+Benevolence 97
+Firmness in Temptation 101
+Receiving Sinners 105
+Guilelessness 109
+Activity in Duty 113
+Committing our Way to God 117
+Love of Unity 121
+Not of the World 125
+Calmness in Death 129
+
+
+
+
+ Let
+
+ THIS MIND
+
+ Be in you,
+
+ Which was also in
+
+ Christ Jesus.
+
+
+
+
+First Day.
+
+COMPASSION.
+
+ "I have compassion on the multitude."--Mark, viii. 2.
+
+
+What a pattern to His people, the tender _compassion_ of Jesus! He found
+the world He came to save a moral Bethesda. The wail of suffering
+humanity was every where borne to His ear. It was His delight to walk
+its porches, to pity, relieve, comfort, save! The faintest cry of misery
+arrested His footsteps--stirred a ripple in this fountain of Infinite
+Love. Was it a _leper_,--that dreaded name which entailed a life-long
+exile from friendly looks and kindly words? There was _One_, at least,
+who had tones and deeds of tenderness for the outcast. "_Jesus_, being
+moved with compassion, put forth His hand, and _touched_ him." Was it
+some blind beggars on the Jericho highway, groping in darkness, pleading
+for help? "_Jesus_ stood still, and had compassion on them, and touched
+their eyes!" Was it the speechless pleadings of a widow's tears at the
+gate of Nain, when she followed her earthly pride and prop to the grave?
+"When the _Lord_ saw her, He had compassion on her, and said, Weep not!"
+Even when He rebukes, the bow of compassion is seen in the cloud, or
+rather, that cloud, as it passes, dissolves in a rain-shower of mercy.
+He pronounces Jerusalem "_desolate_," but the doom is uttered amid a
+flood of anguished sorrow!
+
+Reader! do the compassionate words and deeds of a tender Saviour find
+any feeble echo and transcript in yours? As you traverse in thought the
+wastes of human wretchedness, does the spectacle give rise, not to the
+mere emotional feeling which weeps itself away in sentimental tears, but
+to an earnest desire to _do something_ to mitigate the sufferings of
+woe-worn humanity? How vast and world-wide the claims on your
+compassion!--now near, now at a distance--the unmet and unanswered cry
+of perishing millions abroad--the heathendom which lies unsuccored at
+your own door--the public charity languishing--the mission staff dwarfed
+and crippled from lack of needful funds--a suffering district--a
+starving family--a poor neighbor--a helpless orphan--it may be, some
+crowded hovel, where misery and vice run riot--or some lonely sick
+chamber, where the dim lamp has been wasting for dreary nights--or some
+desolate home which death has entered, where "Joseph is not, and Simeon
+is not," and where some sobbing heart, under the tattered garb of
+poverty, mourns, unsolaced and unpitied, its "loved and lost." Are there
+none such within your reach, to whom a trifling pittance would be as an
+angel of mercy? How it would hallow and enhance all you possess, were
+you to seek to live as almoner of Jehovah's bounties! If He has given
+you of this world's substance, remember it is bestowed, not to be
+greedily hoarded or lavishly squandered. Property and wealth are
+talents to be traded on and laid out for the good of others--sacred
+trusts, not selfishly to be _enjoyed_, but generously to be _employed_.
+
+"The poor are the representatives of Jesus, their wants He considers as
+His own," and He will recompense accordingly. The feeblest expression of
+Christian pity and love, though it be but the widow's mite, or the cup
+of cold water, or the kindly look and word when there is neither mite
+nor cup to give, yet, if done in _His_ name, it is entered in the "book
+of life" as a "loan to the Lord;" and in that day when "the books are
+opened," the loan will be paid back with usury.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Second Day.
+
+RESIGNATION IN TRIAL.
+
+ "Not my will, but Thine be done!"--Luke, xxii. 42.
+
+
+Where was there ever resignation like this! The life of Jesus was one
+long martyrdom. From Bethlehem's manger to Calvary's cross, there was
+scarce one break in the clouds; these gathered more darkly and ominously
+around Him till they burst over His devoted head as He uttered His
+expiring cry. Yet throughout this pilgrimage of sorrow no murmuring
+accent escaped His lips. The most suffering of all suffering lives was
+one of uncomplaining submission.
+
+"Not _my_ will, but _Thy_ will," was the motto of this wondrous Being!
+When He came into the world He thus announced His advent, "Lo, I come, I
+delight to do _Thy will_, O my God!" When He left it, we listen to the
+same prayer of blended agony and acquiescence, "O my Father, if it be
+possible let this cup pass from me! _Nevertheless_ not as _I will_, but
+as _Thou wilt_."
+
+Reader! is this mind also in _you_? Ah, what are your trials compared to
+His! What the ripples in your tide of woe, compared to the waves and
+billows which swept over him! If He, the spotless Lamb of God, "murmured
+not," how can _you_ murmur? _His_ were the sufferings of a bosom never
+once darkened with the passing shadow of guilt or sin. _Your_ severest
+sufferings are deserved, yea, infinitely less _than_ deserved! Are you
+tempted to indulge in hard suspicions, as to God's faithfulness and
+love, in appointing some peculiar trial? Ask yourself, Would Jesus have
+done _this_? Should _I_ seek to pry into "the deep things of God," when
+_He_, in the spirit of a weaned child, was satisfied with the solution,
+"_Even so, Father, for so it seems good in Thy sight_"?
+
+"Even so, _Father_!" Afflicted one! "tossed with tempest, and not
+comforted," take that _word_ on which thy Lord pillowed His suffering
+head, and make it, as He did, the secret of thy resignation.
+
+The sick child will take the bitterest draught from a _father's_ hand.
+"This cup which Thou, O God, givest me to drink, shall I not drink it?"
+Be it mine to lie passive in the arms of Thy chastening love, exulting
+in the assurance that all Thy appointments, though sovereign, are never
+arbitrary, but that there is a gracious "need be" in them all. "My
+Father!" my Covenant God! the God who _spared not Jesus_! It may well
+hush every repining word.
+
+Drinking deep of his sweet spirit of submission, you will be able thus
+to meet, yea, even to welcome, your sorest cross, saying, "Yes, Lord,
+all _is_ well, just because it is Thy blessed will. Take me, use me,
+chasten me, as seemeth good in Thy sight. My will is resolved into
+Thine. This trial is dark; I can not see the 'why and the wherefore' of
+it--but 'not my will, but Thy will!' The gourd is withered; I can not
+see the reason of so speedy a dissolution of the loved earthly shelter;
+sense and sight ask in vain why these leaves of earthly refreshment have
+been doomed so soon to droop in sadness and sorrow. But it is enough.
+'The Lord prepared the worm;' 'not _my_ will, but _Thy_ will!'"
+
+Oh, how does the stricken soul honor God by thus being _dumb_ in the
+midst of dark and perplexing dealings, recognizing in these, part of the
+needed discipline and training for a sorrowless, sinless, deathless
+world; regarding every trial as a link in the chain which draws it to
+heaven, where the whitest robes will be found to be those here baptized
+with suffering, and bathed in tears!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Third Day.
+
+DEVOTEDNESS TO GOD.
+
+ "Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's business?"--
+ Luke, ii. 49.
+
+
+"My meat and my drink are to do the will of Him that sent me, and to
+finish His work." That _one_ object brought Jesus from heaven--that
+_one_ object he pursued with unflinching, undeviating constancy, until
+He could say, "It is finished."
+
+However short man comes of _his_ "chief end," "Glory to God in the
+highest" was the motive, the rule, and exponent of every act of that
+wondrous life. With us, the magnet of the soul, even when truest, is
+ever subject to partial oscillations and depressions, trembling at times
+away from its great attraction-point. _His_ never knew one tremulous
+wavering from its all-glorious center. With Him there were no ebbs and
+flows, no fits and starts. He could say, in the words of that prophetic
+psalm which speaks so preeminently of Himself, "I have set the Lord
+_always_ before me!"
+
+Reader! do you feel that in some feeble measure this lofty life-motto of
+the sinless Son of God is written on your home and heart, regulating
+your actions, chastening your joys, quickening your hopes, giving energy
+and direction to your whole being, subordinating all the affections of
+your nature to their high destiny? With pure and unalloyed motives, with
+a single eye, and a single aim, can you say, somewhat in the spirit of
+His brightest follower, "This _one_ thing I do"? Are you ready to regard
+all you have--rank, name, talents, riches, influence,
+distinctions--valuable, only so far as they contribute to promote the
+glory of Him who is "first and last, and all in all"? Seek to feel that
+your heavenly Father's is not only _a_ business; but _the_ business of
+life. "Whose I am, and whom I serve,"--let this be the superscription
+written on your thoughts and deeds, your employments and enjoyments,
+your sleeping and waking. Be not, as the fixed stars, cold and distant;
+but be ever bathing in the sunshine of conscious nearness to Him who is
+the sun and center of all happiness and joy.
+
+Each has some appointed work to perform, some little niche in the
+spiritual temple to occupy. Yours may be no splendid services, no
+flaming or brilliant actions to blaze and dazzle in the eye of man. It
+may be the quiet, unobtrusive inner work, the secret prayer, the
+mortified sin, the forgiven injury, the trifling act of self-sacrifice
+for God's glory and the good of others, of which no eye but the Eye
+which seeth in secret is cognizant. It matters not how _small_.
+Remember, with Him, motive dignifies action. It is not _what_ we do, but
+_how_ we do it. He can be glorified in _little_ things as well as
+_great_ things, and by nothing more than the daily walk, the daily
+life.
+
+Beware of any thing that would interfere with a surrender of heart and
+soul to His service--worldly entanglements, indulged sin, an uneven
+walk, a divided heart, nestling in creature comforts, shrinking from the
+cross. How many hazard, if they do not make shipwreck, of their eternal
+hopes by becoming _idlers_ in the vineyard; lingerers, like Lot;
+world-lovers, like Demas; "do-nothing Christians," like the inhabitants
+of Meroz! The command is, "Go, work!" _Words_ tell what you _should_ be;
+_deeds_ tell what you _are_. Let those around you see there is a reality
+in walking _with_ God, and working _for_ God!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fourth Day.
+
+FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
+
+ "Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they
+ do."--Luke, xxiii. 34.
+
+
+Many a death-struggle has been made to save a friend. A dying Saviour
+gathers up His expiring breath to plead for His foes! At the climax of
+His own woe, and of human ingratitude--man-forsaken, and
+God-deserted--His faltering voice mingles with the shout of His
+murderers,--"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do!" Had
+the faithless Peter been there, could he have wondered at the reply to a
+former question,--"Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and
+I forgive him,--till seven times?" Jesus said unto him, "I say not unto
+thee, Until seven times; but, Until seventy times seven." (Matt. xviii.
+21.)
+
+Superiority to insult and ignominy, with some, proceeds from a callous
+and indifferent temperament,--a cold, phlegmatic, stoical insensibility,
+alike to kindness or unkindness. It was not so with Jesus. The tender
+sensibilities of His holy nature rendered Him keenly sensible to
+ingratitude and injury, whether this was manifested in the malice of
+undisguised enmity, or the treachery of trusted friendship. Perhaps to a
+noble nature the latter of these is the more deeply wounding. Many are
+inclined to forgive an open and unmasked antagonist, who are not so
+willing to forget or forgive heartless faithfulness, or unrequited love.
+But see, too, in this respect, the conduct of the blessed Redeemer! Mark
+how He deals with His own disciples who had basely forsaken him and
+fled, and that, too, in the hour He most needed their sympathy. No
+sooner does He rise from the dead than He hastens to disarm their fears
+and to assure them of an unaltered and unalterable affection. "Go tell
+_my brethren_," is the first message He sends; "_Peace be unto you_," is
+the salutation at the first meeting; "_Children!_" is the word with
+which He first greets them on the shores of Tiberias. Even Joseph, (the
+Old Testament type and pattern of generous forgiveness,) when he makes
+himself known to his brethren, recalls the bitter thought, "Whom ye sold
+into Egypt." The true Joseph, when _He_ reveals Himself to His
+disciples, buries in oblivion the memory of by-gone faithlessness. He
+_meets_ them with a benediction. He _leaves_ them at His ascension with
+the same--"He lifted up His hands and blessed them!"
+
+Reader! follow in all this the spirit of your Lord and Master. In rising
+from the study of His holy example, seek to feel that with you there
+shall be no such name, no such word, as _enemy_! Harbor no resentful
+thought, indulge in no bitter recrimination. Surrender yourself to no
+sullen fretfulness. Let "the law of kindness" be in your heart. Put the
+best construction on the failings of others Make no injurious comments
+on their frailties; no uncharitable insinuations. "Consider thyself,
+lest thou also be tempted." When disposed at any time to cherish an
+unforgiving spirit towards a brother, think, if thy God had retained His
+anger for ever, where wouldst thou have been? If _He_, the Infinite One,
+who might have spurned thee for ever from His presence, hath had
+patience with thee, and forgiven thee _all_, wilt _thou_, on account of
+some petty grievance which thy calmer moments would pronounce unworthy
+of a thought, indulge in the look of cold estrangement, the unrelenting
+word, or unforgiving deed? "If any man have a quarrel against any, even
+as Christ forgave you, so also do ye."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fifth Day.
+
+MEEKNESS.
+
+ "I am meek and lowly in heart."--Matt. xi. 29.
+
+
+There is often a beautiful blending of majesty and humility, magnanimity
+and lowliness, in great minds. The mightiest and holiest of all Beings
+that ever trod our world was the meekest of all. The Ancient of Days was
+as the "infant of days." He who had listened to nothing but
+angel-melodies from all eternity, found, while on earth, melody in the
+lispings of an infant's voice, or in an outcast's tears! No wonder an
+innocent _lamb_ was His emblem, or that the annointing Spirit came down
+upon Him in the form of the gentle _dove_. He had the wealth of worlds
+at His feet. The hosts of heaven had only to be summoned as His
+retinue. But all the pageantry of the world, all its dreams of carnal
+glory, had, for Him, no fascination. The Tempter, from a
+mountain-summit, showed Him a wide scene of "splendid misery;" but He
+spurned alike the thought and the adversary away! John and James would
+call down fire from heaven on a Samaritan village; He rebukes the
+vengeful suggestion! Peter, on the night of the betrayal, cuts off the
+ear of an assassin; the intended Victim, again, only challenges His
+disciple, and heals His enemy!
+
+Arraigned before Pilate's judgment-seat, how meekly He bears nameless
+wrongs and indignities! Suspended on the cross--the execrations of the
+multitude are rising around, but He hears as though He heard them not;
+they extract no angry look, no bitter word--"Behold the _Lamb_ of God!"
+Need we wonder that "meekness" and "poverty of spirit" should stand
+foremost in His own cluster of beatitudes; that He should select _this_
+among all His other qualities for the peculiar study and imitation of
+His disciples, "Learn of Me, _for_ I am _meek_;" or that an apostle
+should exhort "by the _meekness_ and _gentleness_ of Christ!"
+
+How different the world's maxims, and His! The _world's_--"Resent the
+affront, vindicate honor!" _His_--"Overcome evil with good!" _The
+world's_--"Only let it be when for your _faults_ ye are buffeted that ye
+take it patiently." _His_--"When ye do _well_ and suffer for it, ye take
+it patiently, _this_ is acceptable with God." (1 Pet. ii. 20.)
+
+Reader! strive to obtain, like your adorable Lord, this "ornament of a
+meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight of God, is of great price."
+Be "clothed" with gentleness and humility. Follow not the world's
+fleeting shadows that mock you as you grasp them. If always
+aspiring--ever soaring on the wing--you are likely to become
+discontented, proud, selfish, time-serving. In whatever position of life
+God has placed you, be satisfied. What! ambitious to be on a pinnacle of
+the temple--a higher place in the Church, or in the world?--Satan might
+hurl you down! "Be not high-minded, but fear." And with respect to
+others, honor their gifts, contemplate their excellences only to imitate
+them. Speak kindly, act gently, "condescend to men of low estate."
+
+Be assured, no happiness is equal to that enjoyed by the "_meek
+Christian_." He has within him a perpetual inner sunshine, a perennial
+well-spring of peace. Never ruffled and fretted by real or imagined
+injuries, he puts the best construction on motives and actions, and by a
+gentle answer to unmerited reproach often disarms wrath.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Sixth Day.
+
+THANKFULNESS.
+
+ "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth."--Matt. xi. 25.
+
+A thankful spirit pervaded the entire life of Jesus, and surrounded with
+a heavenly halo His otherwise darkened path. In moments we least expect
+to find it, this beauteous ray breaks through the gloom. In instituting
+the memorial of His _death_, He "_gave thanks_!" Even in crossing the
+Kedron to Gethsemane, "He sang an hymn!"
+
+We know in seasons of deep sorrow and trial that every thing wears a
+gloomy aspect. Dumb Nature herself to the burdened spirit seems as if
+she partook in the hues of sadness. The life of Jesus was one
+continuous experience of privation and woe--a "Valley of Baca," from
+first to last; yet, amid accents of plaintive sorrow, there are ever
+heard subdued undertones of _thankfulness_ and joy!
+
+Ah, if He, the suffering "Man of sorrows," could, during a life of
+unparalleled woe, lift up His heart in grateful acknowledgment to His
+Father in heaven, how ought the lives of those to be one perpetual "hymn
+of thankfulness," who are from day to day and hour to hour (for all they
+have, both temporally and spiritually) pensioners on God's bounty and
+love!
+
+Reader! cultivate this thankful spirit; it will be to thee a perpetual
+feast. There is, or ought to be, with us no such thing as _small_
+mercies; all are _great_, because the least are undeserved. Indeed, a
+really thankful heart will extract motive for gratitude from every
+thing, making the most even of scanty blessings. St. Paul, when in his
+dungeon at Rome, a prisoner in chains, is heard to say, "I have _all_,
+and abound!"
+
+Guard, on the other hand, against that spirit of continual fretting and
+moping over fancied ills; that temptation to exaggerate the real or
+supposed disadvantages of our condition, magnifying the trifling
+inconveniences of every-day life into enormous evils. Think, rather, how
+much we have to be thankful for. The world in which we live, in spite of
+all the scars of sin and suffering upon it, is a happy world. It is not,
+as many would morbidly paint it, flooded with tears and strewn with
+wrecks, plaintive with a perpetual dirge of sorrow. True, the
+"Everlasting Hills" are in glory, but there are numberless eminences of
+grace, and love, and mercy below; many green spots in the lower valley,
+_many more than we deserve_!
+
+God will reward a thankful spirit. Just as on earth, when a man receives
+with gratitude what is given, we are more disposed to give again, so
+also, "the _Lord_ loveth" a cheerful "receiver," as well as a cheerful
+"giver."
+
+Let ours, moreover, be a _Gospel_ thankfulness. Let the incense of a
+grateful spirit rise not only to the Great Giver of all good, but to our
+Covenant God in Christ. Let it be the spirit of the child exulting in
+the bounty and beneficence of his _Father's_ house and home! "Giving
+_thanks_ always for all things unto God and _the Father_, in the name of
+our Lord Jesus Christ!"
+
+While the sweet melody of gratitude vibrates through every successive
+moment of our daily being, let love to our adorable Redeemer show for
+_whom_ and for _what_ it is we reserve our notes of loftiest and most
+fervent praise. Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable gift!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Seventh Day.
+
+UNSELFISHNESS.
+
+ "For even Christ pleased not Himself."--Rom. xv. 8.
+
+
+Too legibly are the characters written on the fallen heart and a fallen
+world--"All seek their own!" Selfishness is the great law of our
+degenerated nature. When the love of God was dethroned from the soul,
+self vaulted into the vacant seat, and there, in some one of its Proteus
+shapes, continues to reign.
+
+Jesus stands out for our imitation a grand solitary exception in the
+midst of a world of selfishness. His entire life was one abnegation of
+self; a beautiful living embodiment of that charity which "seeketh not
+her own." He who for others turned water into wine, and provided a
+miraculous supply for the fainting thousands in the wilderness, exerted
+no such miraculous power for His own necessities. During His forty days'
+temptation, no table did He spread for Himself, no booth did He rear for
+his unpillowed head. Twice do we read of Him shedding tears--on neither
+occasion were they for Himself. The approach of His cross and passion,
+instead of absorbing Him in His own approaching suffering, seemed only
+to elicit new and more gracious promises to His people. When His enemies
+came to apprehend Him, His only stipulation was for His disciples'
+release--"Let these go their way." In the very act of departure, with
+all the boundless glories of eternity in sight, _they_ were still all
+His care.
+
+Ah, how different is the spirit of the world! With how many is day after
+day only a new oblation to that idol which never darkened with its
+shadow His Holy heart; pampering their own wishes; "envying and grieving
+at the good of a neighbor;" unable to brook the praise of a rival;
+establishing their own reputation on the ruins of another; thus
+engendering jealousy, discontent, peevishness, and every kindred unholy
+passion.
+
+"But ye have not so learned Christ!" Reader! have you been sitting at
+the feet of Him who "pleased not Himself"? Are you "dying daily;"--dying
+to self as well as to sin? Are you animated with _this_ as the high end
+and aim of existence--to lay out your time, and talents, and
+opportunities, for God's glory, and the good of your fellow-men; not
+seeking your own interests, but rather ceding these, if, by doing so,
+another will be made happier, and your Saviour honored? You may not have
+it in your power to manifest this "mind of Jesus" on a great scale, by
+enduring great sacrifices; nor is this required. His denial of self had
+about it no repulsive austerity; but you can evince its holy influence
+and sway by innumerable little offices of kindness and good-will; taking
+a generous interest in the welfare and pursuits of others, or engaging
+and cooperating in schemes for the mitigation of human misery.
+
+Avoid _ostentation_--another repulsive form of self. Be willing to be in
+the shade; sound no trumpet before you. The evangelist Matthew made a
+great feast, which was graced by the presence of Jesus; in his Gospel he
+says not one word about it!
+
+Seek to live more constantly and habitually under the constraining
+influence of the love of Jesus. Selfishness withers and dies beneath
+Calvary.
+
+Ah, believer! if Christ had "pleased Himself," where wouldst _thou_ have
+_been_ this day?
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eighth Day.
+
+SUBMISSION TO GOD'S WORD.
+
+ "Jesus said unto him, It is written."--Matt. iv. 7.
+
+
+We can not fail to be struck, in the course of the Saviour's public
+teaching, with His constant appeal to the word of God. While, at times,
+He utters, in His own name, the authoritative behest, "Verily, verily, I
+say unto you," He as often thus introduces some mighty work, or gives
+intimation of some impending event in His own momentous life, "These
+things must come to pass, that _the Scriptures be fulfilled, which
+saith_." He commands His people to "search the Scriptures;" but He sets
+the example by searching and submitting to them Himself. Whether he
+drives the money-changers from their sacrilegious traffic in the
+temple, or foils his great adversary on the mount of temptation, he does
+so with the same weapon, "_It is written._" When He rises from the
+grave, the theme of His first discourse is one impressive tribute to the
+value and authority of the same sacred oracles. The disciples on the
+road to Emmaus listen to nothing but a _Bible lesson_. "He expounded
+unto them in all _the Scriptures_ the things concerning Himself."
+
+How momentous the instruction herein conveyed! The necessity of the
+absolute subjection of the mind to God's written Word--making churches,
+creeds, ministers, books, religious opinion, all subordinate and
+subservient to this--"How readest thou?" rebuking the philosophy,
+falsely so called, that would distort the plain statements of
+Revelation, and bring them to the bar of proud Reason.
+
+If an infallible Redeemer, "a law to Himself," was submissive in all
+respects to the "_written_ law," shall fallible man refuse to sit with
+the teachableness of a little child, and listen to the Divine message?
+There may be, there _is_, in the Bible, what reason staggers at: "we
+have nothing to draw with, and the well is deep." But, "_Thus saith the
+Lord_," is enough. Faith does not first ask what the bread is made of,
+but _eats_ it. It does not analyse the components of the living stream,
+but with joy draws the water from "the wells of salvation."
+
+Reader! take that Word as "the lamp to thy feet, and the light to thy
+path." In days when false lights are hung out, there is the more need of
+keeping the eye steadily fixed on the unerring beacon. Make the Bible
+the arbiter in all difficulties--the ultimate court of appeal. Like
+Mary, "sit at the feet of Jesus," willing only to learn of Him. How many
+perplexities it would save you! how many fatal steps in life it would
+prevent--how many tears! "It is a great matter," says the noblest of
+modern Christian philosophers, "when the mind dwells on any passage of
+Scripture, just to think _how true it is_." (_Chalmers' Life_).
+
+In every dubious question, when the foot is trembling on debatable
+ground, knowing not whether to advance or recede, make this the final
+criterion, "What saith the Scripture?" The world may remonstrate--erring
+friends may disapprove--Satan may tempt--ingenious arguments may explain
+away; but, with our finger on the revealed page, let the words of our
+Great Example be ever a Divine formula for our guidance:--"_This_
+commandment have I received of my Father!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Ninth Day.
+
+PRAYERFULNESS.
+
+ "He continued all night in prayer to God."--Luke, vi. 12.
+
+
+We speak of _this_ Christian and _that_ Christian as "a man of prayer."
+Jesus was emphatically so. The Spirit was "poured upon Him without
+measure," yet--_He prayed_! He was incarnate wisdom, "needing not that
+any should teach Him." He was infinite in His power, and boundless in
+His resources, yet--_He prayed_! How deeply sacred the prayerful
+memories that hover around the solitudes of Olivet and the shores of
+Tiberias! He seemed often to turn night into day to redeem moments for
+prayer, rather than lose the blessed privilege.
+
+We are rarely, indeed, admitted into the solemnities of His inner life.
+The veil of night is generally between us and the Great High Priest,
+when He entered "the holiest of all;" but we have enough to reveal the
+depth and fervor, the tenderness and confidingness of this blissful
+intercommunion with His heavenly Father. No morning dawns without His
+fetching fresh manna from the mercy-seat. "He wakeneth morning by
+morning; He wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned." (Isa. l. 4).
+Beautiful description!--a praying Redeemer, wakening, as if at early
+dawn, the ear of His Father, to get fresh supplies for the duties and
+the trials of the day! All His public acts were consecrated by
+prayer,--His baptism, His transfiguration, His miracles, His agony, His
+death. He breathed away His spirit in prayer. "His last breath," says
+Philip Henry, "was praying breath."
+
+How sweet to think, in holding communion with God--_Jesus_ drank of this
+very brook! He consecrated the bended knee and the silent chamber. He
+refreshed His fainting spirit at the same great Fountain-head from which
+it is life for us to draw and death to forsake.
+
+Reader! do you complain of your languid spirit, your drooping faith,
+your fitful affections, your lukewarm love? May you not trace much of
+what you deplore to an unfrequented chamber? The treasures are locked up
+from you, because you have suffered the key to rust; the hands hang down
+because they have ceased to be uplifted in prayer. Without prayer!--It
+is the pilgrim without a staff--the seaman without a compass--the
+soldier going unarmed and unharnessed to battle.
+
+Beware of encouraging what indisposes to prayer--going to the audience
+chamber with soiled garments, the din of the world following you, its
+distracting thoughts hovering unforbidden over your spirit. Can you
+wonder that the living water refuses to flow through obstructed
+channels, or the heavenly light to pierce murky vapors!
+
+On earth, fellowship with a lofty order of minds imparts a certain
+nobility to the character; so, in a far higher sense, by communion with
+God you will be transformed into His image, and get assimilated to His
+likeness. Make every event in life a reason for fresh going to Him. If
+difficulted in duty, bring it to the test of prayer. If bowed down with
+anticipated trial,--"fearing to enter the cloud,"--remember Christ's
+preparation, "Sit ye here while I go and _pray_ yonder."
+
+Let prayer consecrate every thing--your time, talents, pursuits,
+engagements, joys, sorrows, crosses, losses. By it, rough paths will be
+made smooth, trials disarmed of their bitterness, enjoyments hallowed
+and refined, the bread of the world turned into angels' food. "It is in
+the closet," says Payson, "the battle is lost or won!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Tenth Day.
+
+LOVE TO THE BRETHREN.
+
+ "And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us."--Eph. v. 2.
+
+
+"Jesus," says a writer, "came from heaven on the wings of love." It was
+the element in which he moved and walked. He sought to baptize the world
+afresh with it. When we find Him teaching us by love to vanquish an
+_enemy_, we need not wonder at the tenderness of His appeals to the
+_brethren_ to "love one another." Like a fond father impressing his
+children, how the Divine Teacher lingers over the lesson, "This is _My_
+commandment!"
+
+If selfishness had guided His actions, we might have expected him to
+demand all His people's love for himself. But He claims no such
+monopoly. He not only encourages mutual affection, but He makes it the
+badge of discipleship! He gives them at once its measure and motive.
+"Love one another, as I have loved you!" What a love was that!--it
+reached to the lowliest and humblest,--"Inasmuch as ye did it to the
+_least_ of these, ye did it unto _Me_."
+
+Ah! if such was the Elder Brother's love to His younger brethren, what
+should the love of these younger brothers be for one another! How
+humbling that there should be so much that is sadly and strangely unlike
+the spirit which our blessed Master sought to inculcate alike by precept
+and example! Individual Christians, why these bitter estrangements,
+these censorious words, these harsh judgments, this want of kind
+consideration of the feelings and failings of those who may differ from
+you? Why are your friendships so often like the summer brook, soon
+dried? You hope, ere long, to meet in glory. Doubtless when you enter on
+that "sabbath of love," many a greeting will be this, "Alas! my
+brother, that on earth I did not love thee more!"
+
+Do you see the image of God in a professing believer? It is your duty to
+love him for the sake of that image. No church, no outward livery, no
+denominational creed, should prevent your owning and claiming him as a
+fellow-pilgrim and fellow-heir. It has been said of a portrait, however
+poor the painting, however unfinished the style, however faulty the
+touches, however coarse and unseemly the frame, yet if the _likeness_ be
+faithful, we overlook many subordinate defects. So it is with the
+Christian: however plain the exterior, however rough the setting, or
+even manifold the blemishes still found cleaving to a
+partially-sanctified nature, yet if the Redeemer's _likeness_ be feebly
+and faintly traced there, we should love the copy for the sake of the
+Divine Original. There may be other bonds of association and intercourse
+linking spirit with spirit; family ties, mental congenialities,
+intellectual tastes, philanthropic pursuits; but that which ought to
+take the precedence of all, is the love of God's image in the brethren.
+What will heaven be but this love perfected--loving Christ, and beloved
+by those who love Him?
+
+Reader! seek to love _Him_ more, and you will love His people more. John
+had more love than the other disciples. Why? He drank deepest of the
+love within that Bosom on which he delighted to lean, every beat of
+which was love. "Walk," then, "in love!" Let it be the very foot-road
+you tread; let your way to heaven be paved with it. Soon shall we come
+to look within the portal. Then shall every jarring and dissonant note
+be merged into the sublime harmonies of "the new heavens and the new
+earth," and we shall all "see eye to eye!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eleventh Day.
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+ "Jesus wept."--John, xi. 35.
+
+
+It is an affecting thing to see a Great man in tears! "_Jesus wept!_" It
+was ever His delight to tread in the footsteps of sorrow--to heal the
+broken-hearted--turning aside from His own path of suffering to "weep
+with those that weep."
+
+_Bethany!_ That scene, that _word_, is a condensed volume of consolation
+for yearning and desolate hearts. What a majesty in those tears! He had
+just been discoursing on Himself as the Resurrection and the Life--the
+next moment He is a Weeping Man by a human grave, melted in anguished
+sorrow at a bereaved one's side! Think of the funeral at the gate of
+Nain, reading its lesson to dejected myriads--"Let thy widows trust in
+me!" Think of the farewell discourse to His disciples, when, muffling
+all His own foreseen and anticipated sorrows, He thought only of
+soothing and mitigating theirs! Think of the affecting pause in that
+silent procession to Calvary, when He turns round and stills the sobs of
+those who are tracking His steps with their weeping! Think of that
+wondrous epitome of human tenderness, just ere His eyes closed in their
+sleep of agony--in the mightiest crisis of all time--when filial love
+looked down on an anguished mother, and provided her a son and a home!
+
+Ah, was there ever sympathy like this! Son! Brother! Kinsman! Saviour!
+all in one! The majesty of Godhead almost lost in the tenderness of a
+Friend. But so it _was_, and so it is. The heart of the now enthroned
+King beats responsive to the humblest of His sorrow-stricken people. "I
+am poor and needy, yet the Lord _carries me on His heart_!" (margin.)
+
+Let us "go and do likewise." Let us be ready, like our Lord, to follow
+the beck of misery,--"to deliver the needy when he crieth, the poor
+also, and him that hath no helper." Sympathy costs but little. Its
+recompense and return are great, in the priceless consolation it
+imparts. Few there are who undervalue it. Look at Paul--the weary, jaded
+prisoner,--chained to a soldier--recently wrecked, about to stand before
+Caesar. He reaches Appii Forum and the Three Taverns, dejected and
+depressed. Brethren come from Rome, a distance of sixty miles, to offer
+their _sympathy_. The aged man is cheered! His spirit, like Jacob's,
+"revived!" "He thanked God, and took courage!"
+
+Reader! let "this mind," this holy, Christ-like _habit_ be in you, which
+was also in your adorable Master. Delight, when opportunity occurs, to
+frequent the house of mourning--to bind up the widow's heart, and to dry
+the orphan's tears. If you can do nothing else, you can whisper into the
+ear of disconsolate sorrow those majestic solaces, which, rising first
+in the graveyard of Bethany, have sent their undying echoes through the
+world, and stirred the depths of ten thousand hearts. "Exercise your
+souls," says Butler, "in a loving sympathy with sorrow in every form.
+Soothe it, minister to it, succor it, revere it. It is the relic of
+Christ in the world, an image of the Great Sufferer, a shadow of the
+cross. It is a holy and venerable thing."
+
+Jesus Himself "_looked_ for some to take _pity_, but there was _none_;
+and for comforters, but He found _none_!" It shows how even _He_ valued
+sympathy, and that, too, in its commonest form of "_pity_," though an
+ungrateful World denied it.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twelfth Day.
+
+FIDELITY IN REBUKE.
+
+ "The Lord turned and looked upon Peter."--Luke, xxii. 61.
+
+
+Jesus never spake one unnecessarily harsh or severe word. He had a
+Divine sympathy for the frailties and infirmities of a tried, and
+suffering, and tempted nature in others. He was forbearing to the
+ignorant, encouraging to the weak, tender to the penitent, loving to
+all,--yet how faithful was He as "the Reprover of sin!" Silent under His
+own wrongs, with what burning invectives did He lay bare the Pharisees'
+masked corruption and hypocrisy! When His Father's name and temple were
+profaned, how did He sweep, with an avenging hand, the mammon-crowd
+away, replacing the superscription, "Holiness to the Lord," over the
+defiled altars!
+
+Nor was it different with His own disciples. With what fidelity, when
+rebuke was needed, did He administer it: the withering reprimand
+conveyed sometimes by an impressive _word_ (Matt. xvi. 23); sometimes by
+a silent _look_ (Luke, xxii. 61). "Faithful always were the wounds of
+_this_ Friend."
+
+Reader! art thou equally faithful with thy Lord in rebuking evil; not
+with "the wrath of man, which worketh not the righteousness of God," but
+with a holy jealousy of His glory, feeling, with the sensitive honor of
+"the good soldier of Jesus Christ," that an affront offered to Him is
+offered to thyself? The giving of a wise reproof requires much Christian
+prudence and delicate discretion. It is not by a rash and inconsiderate
+exposure of failings that we must attempt to reclaim an erring brother.
+But neither, for the sake of a false peace, must we compromise fidelity;
+even friendship is too dearly purchased by winking at sin. Perhaps, when
+Peter was led to call the Apostle who honestly reproved him, "Our
+beloved brother Paul," in nothing did he love his rebuker more, than for
+the honest boldness of his Christian reproof. If Paul had, in that
+crisis of the Church, with a timidity unworthy of him, evaded the
+ungracious task, what, humanly speaking, might have been the result?
+
+How often does a seasonable reprimand, a faithful caution, save a
+lifetime of sin and sorrow! How many a death-bed has made the
+disclosure, "That kind warning of my friend put an arrest on my career
+of guilt; it altered my whole being; it brought me to the cross, touched
+my heart, and, by God's grace, saved my soul!" On the other hand, how
+many have felt, when death has put his impressive seal on some close
+earthly intimacy, "This friend, or that friend,--I might have spoken a
+solemn word to him; but now he is no more; the opportunity is lost,
+never to be recalled!"
+
+Reader! see that you act not the spiritual coward. When tempted to sit
+silent when the name of God is slighted or dishonored, think, _would
+Jesus have done so_?--would _He_ have allowed the oath to go
+unrebuked--the lie to be uttered unchallenged--the Sabbath with impunity
+to be profaned? Where there is a natural diffidence which makes you
+shrink from a more bold and open reproof, remember much may be done to
+discountenance sin, by the silent holiness of demeanor which refuses to
+smile at the unholy allusion or ribald jest. "A word spoken in due
+season, how good is it!" "Speak gently," yet speak faithfully: "be
+pitiful--be courteous:" yet "quit you like men; be strong!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirteenth Day.
+
+GENTLENESS IN REBUKE.
+
+ "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?"--John, xxi. 15.
+
+
+No word here of the erring disciple's past faithlessness;--his guilty
+cowardice--_unmentioned_;--his base denial--his oaths--and curses, and
+treacherous desertion--all _unmentioned_! The memory of a threefold
+denial is _suggested_, and no more, by the threefold question of
+unutterable tenderness, "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?" When
+Jesus finds His disciples sleeping at the gate of Gethsemane, He rebukes
+them; but how is the rebuke disarmed of its poignancy by the merciful
+apology which is added--"The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is
+weak!" How different from _their_ unkind insinuation regarding _Him_,
+when, in the vessel on Tiberias, "He was asleep"--"Master carest thou
+not that we perish!" The woman of Samaria is full of earthliness,
+carnality, sectarianism, guilt. Yet how gently the Saviour speaks to
+her--how forbearingly, yet faithfully. He directs the arrow of
+conviction to that seared and hardened conscience, till He lays it
+bleeding at His feet! Truly, "He will not break the bruised reed--He
+will not quench the smoking flax." By "the _goodness_ of God," He would
+lead to repentance. When others are speaking of merciless violence, He
+can dismiss the most guilty of profligates with the words, "Neither do I
+condemn thee; go, and sin no more."
+
+How many have an unholy pleasure in finding a brother in the
+wrong--blazing abroad his failings; administering rebuke, not in gentle
+forbearance and kindly expostulation, but with harsh and impatient
+severity! How beautifully did Jesus unite intense sensibility to sin,
+along with tenderest compassion for the sinner, showing in this that
+"He knoweth our frame!" Many a scholar needs gentleness in
+chastisement. The reverse would crush a sensitive spirit, or drive it to
+despair. Jesus tenderly "considers" the case of those He disciplines,
+"tempering the wind to the shorn lamb." In the picture of the good
+shepherd bearing home the wandering sheep, He illustrated by parable
+what He had often and again taught by His own example. No word of
+needless harshness or upbraiding uttered to the erring wanderer!
+Ingratitude is too deeply felt to need rebuke! In silent love, "He lays
+it on His shoulders rejoicing."
+
+Reader! seek to mingle gentleness in all your rebukes; bear with the
+infirmities of others; make allowance for constitutional frailties;
+never say harsh things, if kind things will do as well; do not
+unnecessarily lacerate with recalling former delinquencies. In reproving
+another, let us rather feel how much we need reproof ourselves.
+"Consider thyself," is a searching Scripture motto for dealing with an
+erring brother. Remember thy Lord's method of silencing fierce
+accusation--"Let him that is without sin cast the first stone."
+Moreover, anger and severity are not the successful means of reclaiming
+the backslider, or of melting the obdurate. Like the _smooth_ stones
+with which David smote Goliath, _gentle_ rebukes are generally the most
+powerful. The old fable of the traveller and his cloak has a moral here
+as in other things. The genial sunshine will effect its removal sooner
+than the rough tempest. It was said of Leighton, that "he rebuked faults
+so mildly, that they were never repeated, not because the admonished
+were afraid, but ashamed to do so."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fourteenth Day.
+
+ENDURANCE IN CONTRADICTION.
+
+ "Who endured such contradiction of sinners against Himself."--
+ Heb. xii. 3.
+
+
+What endurance was this! Perfect truth in the midst of error; perfect
+love in the midst of ingratitude and coldness; perfect rectitude in the
+midst of perjury, violence, fraud; perfect constancy in the midst of
+contumely and desertion; perfect innocence, confronting every debased
+form of depravity and guilt; perfect patience, encountering every
+species of gross provocation--"oppressed and afflicted, He opened not
+His mouth!" "For my love" (in return for my love), "they are mine
+adversaries; _but_" (see His endurance!--the only species of revenge of
+which His sinless nature was capable) "_I give myself unto prayer!_"
+(Ps. cix. 4.)
+
+Reader! "let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus!" The
+greatest test of an earthly soldier's courage is _patient endurance_!
+The noblest trait of the spiritual soldier is the same. "Having done all
+_to stand_," "He _endured_, as seeing Him who is invisible!" Beware of
+the angry recrimination, the hasty ebullition of temper. Amid unkind
+insinuations--when motives are misrepresented, and reputation assailed;
+when good deeds are ridiculed, kind intentions coldly thwarted and
+repulsed, chilling reserve manifested where you expected nothing but
+friendship--what a triumph over natural impulse to manifest a spirit of
+meek endurance!--like a rainbow, radiant with the hues of heaven,
+resting peacefully amid the storms of derision and "the floods of
+ungodly men." What an opportunity of magnifying the "sustaining grace of
+God!" "It is a small thing for me to be judged of you, or of man's
+judgment; He that judgeth me is the Lord." "The Lord is on my side; I
+will not fear what man can do unto me." "Blessed is the man that
+_endureth_." "He that _endureth_ to the end, the same shall be saved."
+
+If faithful to our God, we must expect to encounter contradiction in the
+same form which Jesus did--"the contradiction of _sinners_." It has been
+well said, "There is no cross of nails and wood erected now for the
+Christian, but there is one of words and looks which is never taken
+down." If believers are set as lights in the earth, lamps in the "city
+of destruction," we know that "he that doeth evil _hateth_ the light."
+"Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you!"
+
+Weary and faint ones, exposed to the shafts of calumny and scorn because
+of your fidelity to your God; encountering, it may be, the coldness and
+estrangement of those dear to you, who can not, perhaps, sympathize in
+the holiness of your walk and the loftiness of your aims, "consider
+_Him_ that endured such contradiction of sinners against Himself, _lest_
+ye be weary and faint in your minds!" What is _your_ "contradiction" to
+_His_? Soon your cross, whatever it be, will have an end. "The seat of
+the scorner" has no place in yonder glorious heaven, where all will be
+peace--no jarring note to disturb its blissful harmonies! Look forward
+to the great coronation-day of the Church triumphant,--the day of your
+divine Lord's appearing, when motives and aims, now misunderstood, will
+be vindicated, wrongs redressed, calumnies and aspersions wiped away.
+Meanwhile, "rejoice that you are counted worthy to suffer shame for His
+name."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Fifteenth Day.
+
+PLEASING GOD.
+
+ "I do always those things that please Him."--John, viii. 29.
+
+
+What a glorious motto for a man--"_I live for God!_" It is religion's
+truest definition. It is the essence of angelic bliss--the
+motive-principle of angelic action; "Ye ministers of His, that do His
+pleasure." The Lord of angels knew no higher, no _other_ motive. It was,
+during His incarnation, the regulator and directory of His daily being.
+It supported Him amid the depressing sorrows of His woe-worn path. It
+upheld him in their awful termination in the garden and on the cross.
+For a moment, sinking human nature faltered under the load His Godhead
+sustained; but the thought of "pleasing God" nerved and revived Him.
+"Not my will, but _Thine_ be done."
+
+It is only when the love of God is shed abroad in the heart, that this
+animating desire to "please Him" can exist. In the holy bosom of Jesus,
+that love reigned paramount, admitting no rival--no competing affection.
+Though infinitely inferior in degree, it is the same impelling principle
+which leads His people still to link enjoyment with His service, and
+which makes consecration to Him of heart and life its own best
+recompense and reward. "There is a gravitation," says one whose life was
+the holy echo of his words, "in the moral as in the physical world. When
+love to God is habitually in the ascendant, or occupying the place of
+will, it gathers round it all the other desires of the soul as
+satellites, and whirls them along with it in its orbit round the center
+of attraction." (_Hewitson's Life._) Till the heart, then, be changed,
+the believer can not have "this testimony that he _pleases God_." The
+world, self, sin--these be the gods of the unregenerate soul. And even
+_when_ changed, alas that there should be so many ebbings and flowings
+in our tide of devotedness! Jesus could say, "I do _always_ those things
+that please the Father." Glory to God burned within His bosom like a
+living fire. "Many waters could not quench it." His were no fitful and
+inconsistent frames and feelings, but the persistent habit of a holy
+life, which had the one end in view, from which it never diverged or
+deviated.
+
+Let it be so, in some lowly measure with us. Let God's service not be
+the mere livery of high days,--of set times and seasons; but, like the
+alabaster box of ointment, let us ever be giving forth the fragrant
+perfume of holiness. Even when the shadows of trial are falling around
+us, let us "pass through the cloud" with the sustaining motive--"All my
+wish, O God, is to please and glorify Thee! By giving or taking--by
+smiting or healing--by the sweet cup or the bitter--'Father, glorify thy
+name!'" "I don't want to be weary of God's dealing with me," said
+Bickersteth, on his death-bed; "I want to glorify Jesus in them, and to
+find Him more precious." Do I shrink from
+trials--duties--crosses--because involving hardships and self-denial, or
+because frowned on by the world? Let the thought of God's approving
+countenance be enough. Let me dread no censure, if conscious of acting
+in accordance with _His_ will. Let the Apostle's monitory word determine
+many a perplexing path--"If I please men, I am not the servant of
+Christ."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Sixteenth Day.
+
+GRIEF AT SIN.
+
+ "Being grieved for the hardness of their hearts."--Mark, iii. 5.
+
+
+On this one occasion only is the expression used with reference to
+Jesus--(what intensity of emotion does it denote, spoken of a sinless
+nature!)--"He looked round on them _with anger_!" Never did He grieve
+for Himself. His intensest sorrows were reserved for those who were
+tampering with their own souls, and dishonoring His God. The continual
+spectacle of moral evil, thrust on the gaze of spotless purity, made His
+earthly history one consecutive history of grief, one perpetual "cross
+and passion."
+
+In the tears shed at the grave of Bethany, sympathy, doubtless, for the
+world's myriad mourners, had its own share (the bereaved could not part
+with so precious a tribute in their hours of sadness), but a far more
+impressive cause was one undiscerned by the weeping sisters and
+sorrowing crowd; His knowledge of the deep and obdurate impenitence of
+those who were about to gaze on the mightiest of miracles, only to
+"despise, and wonder, and perish." "_Jesus wept!_"--but His profoundest
+anguish was over resisted grace, abused privileges, scorned mercy. It
+was the Divine Artificer mourning over His shattered handiwork; the
+Almighty Creator weeping over His ruined world; God, the God-man,
+"grieving" over the Temple of the soul, a humiliating wreck of what once
+was made "after His own image!"
+
+Can we sympathize in any respect with such exalted tears? Do we mourn
+for sin, our _own_ sin--the deep insult which it inflicts on God--the
+ruinous consequences it entails on ourselves? Do we grieve at sin in
+_others_? Do we know any thing of "vexing our souls," like righteous
+Lot, "from day to day," with the world's "unlawful deeds," the stupid
+hardness and obduracy of the depraved heart, which resists alike the
+appliances of wrath and love, judgment and mercy? Ah! it is easy, in
+general terms, to condemn vice, and to utter harsh, severe, and cutting
+denunciations on the guilty: it is easy to pass uncharitable comments on
+the inconsistencies or follies of others: but to "_grieve_" as our Lord
+did, is a different thing; to mourn over the hardness of heart, and yet
+to have the burning desire to teach it better things; to hate, as He
+did, the sin, but, like Him also, to love the _sinner_!
+
+Reader! look specially to your own spirit. In one respect, the example
+of Jesus falls short of your case. He had no sin of His own to mourn
+over. He could only commiserate others. _Your_ intensest grief must
+begin with _yourself_. Like the watchful Levite of old, be a guardian at
+the temple-gates of your own soul. Whatever be your besetting iniquity,
+your constitutional bias to sin, seek to guard it with wakeful
+vigilance. Grieve at the thought of incurring one passing shadow of
+displeasure from so kind and compassionate a Saviour. Let this be a holy
+preservative in your every hour of temptation, "How can I do this great
+wickedness, and sin against God?"
+
+Grieve for a perishing world--a groaning creation fettered and chained
+in unwilling "subjection to vanity." Do what you can, by effort, by
+prayer, to hasten on the hour of jubilee, when its ashy robes of sin and
+sorrow shall be laid aside, and, attired in the "beauties of holiness,"
+it shall exult in "the glorious liberty of the sons of God!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Seventeenth Day.
+
+HUMILITY.
+
+ "He riseth from supper, and laid aside His garments; and took a
+ towel and girded Himself. After that He poureth water into a basin,
+ and began to wash the disciples' feet."--John, xiii. 4, 5.
+
+
+What a matchless picture of humility! At the very moment when His throne
+was in view; angel-anthems floating in His ear; the hour come "when He
+was to depart out of this world;" possessing a lofty consciousness of
+His peerless dignity, that "He came _from_ God and went _to_ God;" THEN
+"Jesus took a towel, and girded Himself, and began to wash the
+disciples' feet!" All heaven was ready at that moment to cast their
+combined crowns at His feet. But the High and the Lofty One, inhabiting
+eternity, is on earth "as one that serveth!" "That _infinite stoop_! it
+sinks all creature humiliation to nothing, and renders it impossible for
+a creature to _humble_ himself."--(_Evans_).
+
+Humility follows Him, from His unhonored birthplace to His borrowed
+grave. It throws a subdued splendor over all He did. "The poor in
+spirit,"--the "mourner,"--the "meek,"--claim His first beatitudes. He
+was severe only to one class--those who looked down upon others. However
+He is employed; whether performing His works of miraculous power, or
+receiving angel-visitants, or taking little children in His arms, He
+stands forth "clothed with humility." Nay, this humility becomes more
+conspicuous as He draws nearer glory. Before His death, He calls His
+disciples "_Friends_;" subsequently, it is "_Brethren_," "_Children_."
+How sad the contrast between the Master and His disciples! Two hours had
+not elapsed after He washed their feet, when "there was a strife among
+them which should be the greatest!"
+
+Let the mental image of that lowly Redeemer be ever bending over us.
+His example may well speak in silent impressiveness, bringing us down
+from our pedestal of pride. There surely can be no labor of love too
+humiliating when _He_ stooped so low. Let us be content to take the
+humblest place; not envious of the success or exaltation of another;
+not, "like Diotrephes, loving preeminence;" "but willing to be thought
+little of;" saying with the Baptist, with our eye on our Lord, "He must
+increase, but I must decrease!"
+
+How much we have cause to be humble for! the constant cleaving of
+defilement to our souls; and even what is partially good in us, how
+mixed with imperfection, self-seeking, arrogance, vain-glory! A proud
+Christian is a contradiction in terms. The Seraphim of old (type of the
+Christian Church, and of believers) had six wings--_two_ were for
+errands of love, but "with _four_ he _covered_ himself!" It has been
+beautifully said, "You lie nearest the River of Life when you _bend_ to
+it; you can not drink, but as you _stoop_." The corn of the field, as
+it ripens, bows its head; so the Christian, as he ripens in the Divine
+life, bends in this lowly grace. Christ speaks of His people as
+"lilies"--they are "lilies of _the valley_," they can only grow in the
+shade!
+
+"Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God." "Go" with what
+Rutherford calls "a low sail." It is the livery of your blessed Master;
+the family badge--the family likeness. "With this man will I dwell, even
+with him that is _humble_." Yes! the humble, sanctified heart is God's
+_second Heaven_!
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Eighteenth Day.
+
+PATIENCE.
+
+ "He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter."--Isa. liii, 7.
+
+
+How great was the _patience_ of Jesus! Even among His own disciples, how
+forbearingly He endured their blindness, their misconceptions and
+hardness of heart! Philip had been for three years with Him, yet he had
+"not known Him!"--all that time he had remained in strange and culpable
+ignorance of his Lord's dignity and glory. See how tenderly Jesus bears
+with him; giving him nothing in reply for his confession of ignorance
+but unparalleled promises of grace! Peter, the honored and trusted,
+becomes a renegade and a coward. Justly might his dishonored Lord, stung
+with such unrequited love, have cut the unworthy cumberer down. But He
+spares him, bears with him, gently rebukes him, and loves him more than
+ever! See the Divine Sufferer in the terminating scenes of His own
+ignominy and woe. How patient!--"As a sheep before her shearers is dumb,
+so He opened not His mouth." In these awful moments, outraged
+Omnipotence might have summoned twelve legions of angels and put into
+the hand of each a vial of wrath. But He submits in meek, majestic
+silence. Verily, in _Him_ "patience had her _perfect_ work!"
+
+Think of this same patience with His Church and people since He ascended
+to glory. The years upon years He has borne with their perverse
+resistance of His grace, their treacherous ingratitude, their wayward
+wanderings, their hardness of heart and contempt of His holy word. Yet,
+behold the forbearing love of this Saviour of God! His hand of mercy is
+"stretched out still!"
+
+Child of God! art thou now undergoing some bitter trial? The way of thy
+God, it may be, all mystery; no footprints of love traceable in the
+checkered path; no light, in the clouds above; no ray in the dark
+future. _Be patient!_ "The Lord is good to them that _wait_ for Him."
+"They that _wait_ on the Lord shall renew their strength!" Or hast thou
+been long tossed on some bed of sickness--days of pain and nights of
+weariness appointed thee? _Be patient!_ "I trust this groaning," said a
+suffering saint, "is not murmuring." God, by this very affliction, is
+nurturing within thee this beauteous grace which shone so conspicuously
+in the character of thy dear Lord. With Him it was a lovely _habit_ of
+the soul. With thee, the "tribulation" which worketh "patience" is
+needful discipline. It is _good_ for a man that he should both hope and
+quietly _wait_ for the salvation of God. Art thou suffering some
+unmerited wrong or unkindness, exposed to harsh and wounding
+accusations, hard for flesh and blood to bear? _Be patient!_ Beware of
+hastiness of speech or temper; remember how much evil may be done by a
+few inconsiderate words "spoken unadvisedly with the lip." Think of
+Jesus standing before a human tribunal, in the silent submissiveness of
+conscious innocence and integrity. Leave thy cause with God. Let this be
+the only form of thy complaint, "O God, I am oppressed; undertake Thou
+for me!"
+
+"In patience," then, "possess ye your souls." Let it not be a grace for
+peculiar seasons, called forth on peculiar exigences; but an habitual
+frame manifested in the calm serenity of a daily walk;--placidity amid
+the little fretting annoyances of every-day life--a fixed purpose of the
+heart to wait upon God, and cast its every burden upon Him.
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Nineteenth Day.
+
+SUBJECTION.
+
+ "As the Father gave me commandment, even so I do."--John, xiv. 31.
+
+
+Jesus as God-man had omnipotence slumbering in His arm. He had the
+hoarded treasures of eternity in His grasp. He had only to "speak, and
+it was done." But, as an example to His people, His whole life on earth
+was one impressive act of subordination and dependence. At Nazareth He
+was "subject to His parents." There He remained in studied obscurity,
+occupying for thirty years a lowly hut, willing to continue in a state
+of seclusion, till the Father's summons called Him to His appointed
+work.
+
+At His baptism, sinless Himself, He gives this reason for receiving a
+sinner's rite at a sinner's hands--"Suffer it to be so now, for thus it
+becometh Me to fulfill all righteousness." The same beautiful spirit of
+filial _subjection_ shines conspicuous amid His acts of stupendous
+power. "Jesus lifted up His eyes and said, Father, I thank Thee that
+Thou hast heard Me; and I know that Thou hearest Me always; but because
+of the people which stand by, I said it, that they may believe that Thou
+has sent Me." Even among His own disciples His language is, "I am among
+you as He that serveth." With an act of submission He closed His
+pilgrimage and work of love. "Father, into Thy hands I commend My
+spirit."
+
+What an example to us, in all this, is our beloved Lord! Surely, if
+_He_, "God only wise"--the Self-existent One, to whom "all power was
+committed;"--the Sinless One, never liable to err, on whom "the Spirit
+was poured without measure"--if _He_ manifested such habitual dependence
+on His heavenly Father, how earnestly ought _we_, weak, erring,
+fallible creatures, to seek to live every hour--every moment--as
+pensioners on God's grace and love, following in all things His
+directing hand! As the servant has his eyes on his master, or the child
+on its parent, "so should our eyes be on the Lord our God." Howsoever He
+speaks, be it ours with all docility to follow the voice, indorsing
+every utterance of providence, and every precept of Scripture, with our
+Lord's own words, "_This is the Father's will!_"
+
+Beware of self-dependence. The first step in spiritual declension is
+this: "Let him that _thinketh he standeth_!" The secret of real strength
+is this: "_Kept_ by the _power of God_!"
+
+How it sweetens all our blessings, and alleviates all our sorrows, to
+regard both as emanations from a loving Father's hand. Even if we should
+be, like the disciples of old, "_constrained_" to go into the ship; if
+all should be darkness and tempest, frowning providences--"the wind
+contrary;" how blessed to feel that in embarking on the unquiet
+element, "the Lord has bidden us!" Paul could not speak even of taking
+an earthly journey, without the parenthesis ("if the Lord will"). How
+many trials, and sorrows, and _sins_, would it save us, if the same were
+the habitual regulator of our daily life! It would lead to calm
+contentment with our lot, hushing every disquieting suggestion with the
+thought that that lot, with all that is apparently adverse in it, was
+_ordained_ for us. It would teach us not to be aspiring after _great_
+things, but humbly to wait the will and purposes of a wise Provider; not
+to go _before_ our Heavenly Guide, but to _follow_ Him, saying, in meek
+subjection, "Lord, my heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty, neither
+do I exercise myself in great matters, or in things too high for for me
+... my soul is even as a weaned child!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twentieth Day.
+
+NOT RETALIATING.
+
+ "Who, when He was reviled, reviled not again."--1 Peter, ii. 23.
+
+
+What a common dictate of the fallen and regenerate heart to resent and
+recriminate! How alien to natural feeling to answer cutting taunts, and
+meet unmerited wrong with the Divine method the Gospel
+prescribes--"Overcome evil with good!" It was in the closing scenes of
+the Saviour's humiliation, when, silent and unresenting, He stood "dumb
+before His shearers," that this beautiful feature in His character was
+most wondrously manifested; but it beams forth, also, for our imitation
+in the ordinary and less prominent incidents of His pilgrimage.
+
+When He met Nathanael of Cana in Galilee, He found him clinging to an
+unreasonable prejudice--"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" The
+severe remark is allowed to pass unnoticed. Overlooking the unkind
+insinuation, the Saviour fixes on the favorable feature of his
+character, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!" After His
+resurrection, He appears to His disciples. They were cowering in shame,
+half afraid to confront the glance of injured goodness. He breathes on
+them, and says, "Peace be unto you!" Peter was the one of all the rest
+who had most reason to dread estranged looks and upbraiding words; but a
+special message is sent to reassure that trembling spirit that there was
+no alienation in the unresentful Heart he had so deeply wounded; "Go and
+tell the disciples ... and _Peter_!" Even when Judas first revealed
+himself to his Lord as the betrayer, we believe it was not in bitter
+irony or rebuke, but in the fullness of pitying tenderness, that Jesus
+addressed him, "Friend, wherefore art thou come?" Tears and prayers
+were His only revenge on the city and scene of His murder. "Beginning at
+Jerusalem," was the closing illustration of a spirit "not of this
+world"--a significant parting testimony that in the bosom that uttered
+it retaliation had no place.
+
+More than one of the disciples seem to have imbibed much of this "mind"
+of their Lord. "We owe St. Paul," says Augustine, "to the death of
+Stephen;" "they stoned Stephen ... and he kneeled down and cried with a
+loud voice, Lord! lay not this sin to their charge."
+
+Take another example: The great Apostle of the Gentiles felt himself
+under a painful necessity faithfully to rebuke Peter in presence of the
+whole Church. He had _recorded_ that rebuke, too, in one of his
+epistles. It was thus to be handed down to every age as a permanent and
+humiliating evidence of the wavering inconstancy of his fellow-laborer.
+Peter, doubtless, must have felt acutely the severity of the
+chastisement. Does he resent it? He, too, puts on record, long after, in
+one of his own epistles a sentence regarding his Rebuker, but it is
+this--"Our _beloved brother_ Paul!"
+
+Reader! when tempted to utter the harsh word, or give the cutting or
+hasty answer, seek to check yourself with the question, "Is this the
+reply my Saviour would have given?" If your fellow-men should prove
+unkind, inconsiderate, ungrateful, be it yours to refer the cause to
+God. Speak of the faults of others only in prayer; manifesting more
+sorrow for the sin of the censorious and unkind, than for the evil
+inflicted on yourselves. _Retaliate!_ No such word should have a place
+in the Christian's vocabulary. _Retaliate!_ If I cherish such a spirit
+towards my brother, how can I meet that brother in heaven?--"But ye have
+not so learned in Christ."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-first Day.
+
+BEARING THE CROSS.
+
+ "And He bearing His cross."--John, xix. 17.
+
+
+When did Jesus bear the cross? Not that moment alone, surely, when the
+bitter tree was placed on His shoulders, on the way to Golgotha. Its
+vision may be said to have risen before Him in His infant dreams in
+Bethlehem's cradle; there, rather, its reality began; and He ceased not
+to carry it, till His work was finished, and the victory won! A _cloud_,
+of old, hovered over the mercy-seat in the tabernacle and temple. So it
+was with the Great Antitype--the living Mercy-Seat--He had ever a cloud
+of woe hanging over him. "He _carried_ our sorrows."
+
+Reader! dwell much and often under the shadow of your Lord's cross, and
+it will lead you to think lightly of your own! If _He_ gave utterance to
+not one murmuring word, canst _thou_ complain? "If we were deeper
+students of his bitter anguish, we should think less of the ripplings of
+our waves, amidst His horrible tempest."--(_Evans._) The saint's cross
+assumes many and diverse shapes. Sometimes it is the bitter trial, the
+crushing pang of bereavement--desolate households, and aching hearts.
+Sometimes it is the crucifixion of sin, the determined battle with
+"lusts which war against the soul." Sometimes it is the resistance of
+evil maxims and practices of a lying world; vindicating the honor of
+Christ, in the midst, it may be, of taunt, and obloquy, and shame. And
+as there are different crosses, so there are different ways of bearing
+them. To some, God says, "put your shoulder to the burden; lift it up,
+and bear it on; work, and toil, and labor!" To others, He says, "Be
+still, bear it, and _suffer_!"
+
+Believer! thy cross may be hard to endure; it may involve deep
+struggles--tears by day, watchings by night; bear it meekly, patiently,
+justifying God's wisdom in laying it on. Rejoice in the assurance that
+He gives not one atom more of earthly trial than He sees to be really
+needful; not one redundant thorn pierces your feet. In the very bearing
+of the cross for _His_ sake, there are mighty compensations. What new
+views of your Saviour's love! His truth, His promises, His sustaining
+grace, His sufferings, His glory! What new filial nearness; increased
+delight in prayer; an inner sunshine when it is darkest without! The
+waves cover you, but underneath them all, are "the everlasting arms!"
+
+Do not look out for a situation _without_ crosses. Be not over anxious
+about "smooth paths;"--leaving your God, as Orpah did Naomi, just when
+the cross requires to be carried. Immoderate earthly
+enjoyments--unbroken earthly prosperity--write upon these, "_Beware!_"
+You may live to see them become your greatest trials!
+
+Remember the old saying, "No cross, no crown." The sun of the saint's
+life generally struggles through "weeping clouds." One of the loveliest
+passages of Scripture is that in which, the portals of heaven being
+opened, we overhear this dialogue between two ransomed ones--"And one of
+the elders answered saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in
+white robes, and whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir, thou
+knowest. And he said to me, _These are they which came out of great
+tribulation!_"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-second Day.
+
+HOLY ZEAL.
+
+ "The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me up."--John, ii. 17.
+
+
+"Zeal, is a principle; enthusiasm is a feeling. The one is a spark of a
+sanguine temperament and overheated imagination. The other, a sacred
+flame kindled at God's altar, and burning in God's
+shrine."--(_Vaughan._) Such was the holy, heavenly zeal of our Great
+Exemplar! His were no transient outbursts of ardor, which time cooled
+and difficulties impeded. His life was one indignant protest against
+sin;--one ceaseless current of undying love for souls, which all the
+malignity of foes, and unkindness of friends, could not for one moment
+divert from its course. Even when He rises from the dead, and we
+imagine His work at an end, His zeal only meditates fresh deeds of love.
+"Still His heart and His care," says Godwin, "is upon doing more. Having
+now dispatched that great work on earth, He sends His disciples word
+that He is hastening to heaven as fast as He can, to do another." (John,
+xx. 17).
+
+Reader! do you know any thing of this zeal, which "many waters could not
+quench"? See that, like your Lord's, it be steady, sober, consistent,
+undeviating. How many are, like the children of Ephraim, "carrying
+bows"--all zealous when zeal demands no sacrifice, but "turning their
+backs in the day of battle!" Others "running well" for a time, but
+gradually "hindered," through the benumbing influences of worldliness,
+selfishness, and sin. Two disciples, apparently equally devoted and
+zealous, send through Paul, in one of his epistles, a conjoint Christian
+salutation--"Luke and Demas greet you." A few years afterward, thus he
+writes from his Roman dungeon--"Only _Luke_ is with me," "_Demas_ hath
+_forsaken_ me, having loved this present world!"
+
+While zeal is commendable, remember the Apostle's qualification, "It is
+good to be zealously affected always in a _good_ thing." There is in
+these days much base coin current, _called_ "zeal," which bears not the
+image and superscription of Jesus. There is zeal for church-membership
+and party; zeal for creeds and dogmas; zeal for figments and
+non-essentials. "From such turn aside." Your Lord stamped with His
+example and approval no such counterfeits. _His_ zeal was ever brought
+to bear on two objects, and two objects alone--_the glory of God_ and
+_the good of man_. Be it so with _you_. Enter, first of all (as He did
+the earthly temple), the sanctuary of _your own heart_, with "the
+scourge of small cords." Drive out every unhallowed intruder there. Do
+not suffer yourself to be deceived. Others may call such jealous
+searchings of spirit "sanctimoniousness" and "enthusiasm." But remember,
+to be _almost saved_, is to be _altogether lost_!--to be zealous about
+every thing but "the one thing needful," is an insult to God and your
+everlasting interests!
+
+Have a zeal for _others_. Dying myriads are around you. As a member of
+the Christian priesthood, it becomes you to rush in with your censer and
+incense between the living and the dead, "that the plague may be
+stayed!"
+
+Be it yours to say, "Blessed Jesus! I am _Thine_!--Thine only!--Thine
+wholly!--Thine for ever! I am willing to follow Thee, and (if need be)
+to _suffer_ for Thee. I am ready at Thy bidding to leave the homestead
+in the valley, and to face the cutting blasts of the mountain. Take
+me--use me for Thy glory. 'Lord! what wilt Thou have me to do?'"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-third Day.
+
+BENEVOLENCE.
+
+ "Who went about doing good."--Acts, x. 38.
+
+
+"Christ's great end," says Richard Baxter, "was to save men from their
+_sins_; but He delighted to save them from their _sorrows_." His heart
+bled for human misery. Benevolence brought Him from heaven; benevolence
+followed His steps wherever He went on earth. The journeys of the Divine
+Philanthropist were marked by tears of thankfulness, and breathings of
+grateful love. The helpless, the blind, the lame, the desolate, rejoiced
+at the sound of His footfall. Truly might it be said of Him, "When the
+ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me, it gave
+witness to me." (Job, xxix. 11.) All suffering hearts were a magnet to
+Jesus. It was not more His prerogative than His happiness to turn tears
+into smiles. One of the few pleasures which on earth gladdened the
+spirit of the "Man of sorrows" was the pleasure of _doing
+good_--soothing grief, and alleviating misery. Next to the joy of the
+widow of Nain when her son was restored, was the joy in the bosom of the
+Divine Restorer! He often went out of His way to be kind. A journey was
+not grudged, even if _one_ aching spirit were to be soothed. (Mark, v.
+1; John, iv. 4, 5.) Nor were his kindnesses dispensed through the
+intervention of others. They were all personal acts. His own hand
+healed. His own voice spake. His own footsteps lingered on the threshold
+of bereavement, or at the precincts of the tomb. Ah! had the princes of
+this world known the loving-tenderness and unselfishness of _that_
+heart, "they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory"!
+
+Reader! do you know any thing of such active benevolence? Have you never
+felt the _luxury_ of doing good? Have you never felt, that in making
+_others_ happy, you make _your self_ so? that, by a great law of your
+being, enunciated by the Divine Patron and Pattern of Benevolence, "it
+is more blessed to give than to receive"? Has God enriched you with this
+world's goods? Seek to view yourself as a consecrated medium for
+dispensing them to others. Beware alike of penurious hoarding and
+selfish extravagance. How sad the case of those whose lot God has made
+thus to abound with temporal mercies, who have gone to the grave
+unconscious of diminishing one drop of human misery, or making one of
+the world's myriad aching hearts happier! How the example of _Jesus_
+rebukes the cold and calculating kindnesses--the mite-like offerings of
+many even of His own people! "whose libation is not like His, from the
+brim of an overflowing cup, but from the bottom--from the _dregs_!"
+
+You may have little to give. Your sphere and means may be alike limited.
+But remember God can be as much glorified by the trifle saved from the
+earnings of poverty, as by the splendid benefaction from the lap of
+plenty "The Lord loveth a _cheerful_ giver."
+
+The nobler part of Christian benevolence is not vast largesses,
+munificent pecuniary sacrifices. "_He went about_ doing good." The
+merciful visit--the friendly word--the look of sympathy--the cup of cold
+water, the little unostentatious service--the giving without thought or
+hope of recompense--the kindly "considering of the poor"--anticipating
+their wants--studying their comforts; these are what God values and
+loves. They are "loans" to Himself--tributary streams to "the river of
+_His_ pleasure;" they will be acknowledged at last as such--"Ye did it
+unto _Me_."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-fourth Day.
+
+FIRMNESS IN TEMPTATION.
+
+ "Jesus saith unto him, Get thee hence, Satan."--Matt. iv. 10.
+
+
+There is an awful intensity of meaning in the words, as applied to
+Jesus, "He _suffered_, being tempted!" Though incapable of sin, there
+was, in the refined sensibilities of His holy nature, that which made
+temptation unspeakably fearful. What must it have been to confront the
+Arch-traitor?--to stand face to face with the foe of His throne, and His
+universe? But the "prince of this world" came, and found "nothing in
+Him." Billow after billow of Satanic violence spent their fury, in vain,
+on the Living Rock!
+
+Reader! you have still the same malignant enemy to contend with;
+assailing you in a thousand insidious forms; marvelously adapting his
+assaults to your circumstances, your temperament, your mental bias, your
+master-passion! There is no place where "Satan's seat" is not; "the
+whole world lieth in the Wicked one." (1 John, v. 19.) He has his
+whispers for the ear of childhood; hoary age is not inaccessible to his
+wiles. "_All this will I give thee_"--is still his bribe to deny Jesus
+and to "mind earthly things." He will meet you in the crowd; he will
+follow you to the solitude; his is a sleepless vigilance!
+
+Are you bold in repelling him as your Master was? Are you ready with the
+retort to every foul suggestion, "Get thee hence, Satan"? Cultivate a
+tender sensitiveness about sin. The finest barometers are the most
+sensitive. Whatever be your besetting frailty--whatever bitter or
+baleful passion you are conscious aspires to the mastery--watch it,
+crucify it, "nail it to your Lord's cross." _You_ may despise "the day
+of small things"--the Great Adversary does _not_. He knows the power of
+_littles_; that little by little consumes and eats out the vigor of the
+soul. And once the retrograde movement in the spiritual life begins, who
+can predict where it may end? the going on "from weakness to weakness,"
+instead of "from strength to strength." Make no compromises; never join
+in the ungodly amusement, or venture on the questionable path, with the
+plea, "It does me no harm." The Israelites, on entering Canaan, instead
+of obeying the Divine injunction of extirpating their enemies, made a
+hollow truce with them. What was the result? Years upon years of tedious
+warfare. "They were scourges in their sides, and thorns in their eyes!"
+It is quaintly but truthfully said by an old writer, "The candle will
+never burn clear, while there is a _thief_ in it. Sin indulged, in the
+conscience, is like Jonah in the ship, which causeth such a tempest,
+that the conscience is like a troubled sea, whose waters cannot
+rest."--(_Thomas Brooks_.)
+
+"Keep," then, "thy heart with all diligence," or, (as it is in the
+forcible original Hebrew,) "keep thy heart _above all keeping_," "for
+out of it are the issues of life." (Prov. iv. 23.) Let this ever be your
+preservative against temptation, "How would _Jesus_ have acted here?
+would _He_ not have recoiled, like the sensitive plant, from the
+remotest contact with sin? Can _I_ think of dishonoring Him by tampering
+with His enemy; incurring from His own lips the bitter reflection of
+injured love, 'I am wounded in the house of my friends'?"
+
+He tells us the secret of our preservation and safety, "Simon! Simon!
+Satan hath desired to have thee, that he might sift thee as wheat; _but
+I_ have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-fifth Day.
+
+RECEIVING SINNERS.
+
+ "This man receiveth sinners."--Luke, xv. 2.
+
+
+The ironical taunt of proud and censorious Pharisees formed the glory of
+Him who came, "not to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance."
+Publicans and outcasts; those covered with a deeper than any bodily
+leprosy--laid bare their wounds to the "Great Physician;" and as
+conscious guilt and timid penitence crept abashed and imploring to His
+feet, they found nothing but a forgiving and a gracious welcome!
+
+"His ways" were not as "man's ways!" The "watchmen," in the Canticles,
+"smote" the disconsolate one seeking her lost Lord; they tore off her
+veil, mocking with chilling unkindness her anguished tears. Not so "the
+Chief Shepherd and Bishop of souls." "_This_ man _receiveth_ sinners"!
+See Nicodemus, stealing under the shadows of night to elude
+observation--type of the thousand thousand who in every age have gone
+trembling in their night of sin and sorrow to this Heavenly Friend! Does
+Jesus punish his timidity by shutting His door against him, spurning him
+from His presence? "He will not break the bruised reed, He will not
+quench the smoking flax!"
+
+And He is still the same! He who arrested a persecutor in his
+blasphemies, and tuned the lips of an expiring felon with faith and
+love, is at this hour standing, with all the garnered treasures of
+Redemption in His hand, proclaiming, "Him that cometh unto Me, I will in
+no wise cast out"!
+
+Are we from this to think lightly of sin? or, by example and conduct, to
+palliate and overlook its enormity? Not so; sin, _as_ sin, can never be
+sufficiently stamped with the brand of reprobation. But we must seek
+carefully to distinguish between the offence and the offender. Nothing
+should be done on our part, by word or deed, to mock the penitential
+sighings of a guilty spirit, or send the trembling outcast away, with
+the despairing feeling of "_No hope_." "This man receiveth sinners," and
+shall not _we_? Does _He_ suffer the veriest dregs of human depravity to
+crouch unbidden at His feet, and to gaze on His forgiving countenance
+with the uplifted eye of hope, and shall _we_ dare to deal out harsh,
+and severe, and crushing verdicts on an offending (it may be a _deeply_
+offending) brother? Shall we pronounce "crimson" and "scarlet" sins and
+sinners beyond the pale of mercy, when _Jesus_ does not? Nay, rather,
+when wretchedness, and depravity, and backsliding cross our path, let it
+not be with the bitter taunt or the ironical retort that we bid them
+away. Let us bear, endure, remonstrate, deal tenderly. Jesus _did_ so,
+Jesus _does_ so! Ah! If we had within us His unconquerable love of
+souls; His yearning desire for the everlasting happiness of sinners, we
+should be more frequently in earnest expostulation and affectionate
+appeal with those who have hitherto got no other than harsh thoughts and
+repulsive words. If this "mind" really were in us, "which was also in
+Him," we should more frequently ask ourselves, "Have I done all I
+_might_ have done to pluck this brand from the burning! Have I
+remembered what grace _has_ wrought, what grace _can_ do?"
+
+"Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert him, let
+him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way
+shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of sins!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-sixth Day.
+
+GUILELESSNESS.
+
+ "Neither was guile found in His mouth."--1 Pet. ii. 22.
+
+
+How rare, and all the more beautiful because of its rarity, is a purely
+_guileless_ spirit! A crystalline medium through which the transparent
+light of Heaven comes and goes; open, candid, just, honorable, sincere;
+scorning every unfair dealing, every hollow pretension, every narrow
+prejudice. Wherever such characters exist, they are like "apples of gold
+in pictures of silver."
+
+Such, in all the loveliness of sinless perfection, was the Son of God!
+His guilelessness shining the more conspicuously amid the artful and
+malignant subtlety alike of men and devils. Passing by manifold
+instances in the course of His ministry, look at its manifestation as
+the hour of His death approached. When, on the night of his
+apprehension, He confronts the assassin band, in meek majesty He puts
+the question, "Whom seek ye?" They say to Him, "Jesus of Nazareth." In
+guileless innocence, He replies, "I am He!" "Art thou the King of the
+Jews?" asks Pilate, a few hours after. An evasive answer might again
+have purchased immunity from suffering and indignity, but once more the
+lips which scorned the semblance of evasion reply, "Thou sayest!"
+
+How He loved the same spirit in His people! "Behold," said He, of
+Nathanael, "an Israelite indeed, in whom is _no guile_!" That upright
+man had, we may suppose, been day after day kneeling in prayer under his
+fig-tree, with an open and candid spirit--
+
+ "Musing on the law he taught,
+ And waiting for the Lord he loved."
+
+See how the Saviour honored him; setting His own Divine seal on the
+loveliness of this same spirit! Take one other example, when the
+startling, saddening announcement is made to the disciples, "One of you
+shall betray me;" they do not accuse one another; they attempt to throw
+no suspicion on Judas; each in trembling apprehension suspects only his
+own treacherous heart, "Lord, is it I?"
+
+How much of a different "mind" is there abroad! In the school of the
+world (this "_painted_ world"), how much is there of what is called
+"policy," double-dealing!--accomplishing its ends by tortuous means;
+outward, artificial polish, often only a cloak for baseness and
+selfishness!--in the daily interchange of business, one seeking to
+over-reach the other by wily arts; sacrificing principle for temporal
+advantage. There is nothing so derogatory to religion as aught allied to
+such a spirit among Christ's people--any such blot on the "living
+epistles." "Ye are the light of the world." That world is a quick
+observer. It is sharp to detect inconsistencies--slow to forget them.
+The true Christian has been likened to an _anagram_--you ought to be
+able to read him up and down, every way!
+
+Be all reality, no counterfeit. Do not pass for current coin what is
+base alloy. Let transparent honor and sincerity regulate all your
+dealings; despise all meanness; avoid the sinister motive, the underhand
+dealing; aim at that unswerving love of truth that would scorn to stoop
+to base compliances and unworthy equivocations; live more under the
+power of the purifying and ennobling influences of the gospel. Take its
+golden rule as the matchless directory for the daily transactions of
+life--"Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to
+them."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-seventh Day.
+
+ACTIVITY IN DUTY.
+
+ "I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is day; the
+ night cometh, when no man can work."--John, ix. 4.
+
+
+How constant and unremitting was Jesus in the service of His Heavenly
+Father! "He rose a great while before day;" and, when His secret
+communion was over, His public work began. It mattered not to Him where
+He was: whether on the bosom of the deep, or a mountain slope--in the
+desert, or at a well-side--the "gracious words" ever "proceeded out of
+His mouth." We find, on one touching occasion, exhausted nature sinking,
+after a day of unremitting duty; in crossing, in a vessel, the Lake of
+Tiberias--"_He fell asleep_"! (Matt. viii.) He redeemed every precious
+moment. His words to the Pharisee seem a _formula_ for all, "Simon, I
+have somewhat to say unto _thee_"!
+
+Oh, how our most unceasing activities pale into nothing before such an
+example as this! Would that we could remember that each of us has some
+great mission to perform for God, that religion is not a thing of dreamy
+sentimentalism, but of energetic practical action; moreover, that no
+trade, no profession, no position, however high or however humble in the
+scale of society, can disqualify for this life of Christian activity and
+usefulness! Who were the writers in the Bible? We have among them a
+King--a Lawgiver--a Herdsman--a Publican--a Physician! Nor is it to high
+spheres, or to great services only, that God looks. The widow's mite and
+Mary's "alabaster box of ointment" are recorded as examples for
+imitation by the Holy Ghost, while many more munificent deeds are passed
+by unrecorded. We believe that God says, regarding the attempt of many a
+humble Christian to serve Him by active duty, "I saw that effort, that
+_feeble_ effort to serve and glorify Me; it was the very _feebleness_
+of it I loved!"
+
+Did it never strike you, notwithstanding the _dignity_ of Christ, and
+the _activity_ of Christ, how little success comparatively He met with
+in His public work? We read of no _numerous_ conversions; no Pentecostal
+revivals in the course of His ministry. May not this well encourage in
+the absence of great outward results? He sets up no higher standard than
+this--"She hath done what she could." An artist may be _great_ in
+painting a peasant as well as a king--_it is the way he does it_. Yes,
+and if laid aside from the _activities_ of the Christian life, we can
+equally glorify God by _passive endurance_. "Who am I," said Luther,
+when he witnessed the patience of a great sufferer; "who am I? a wordy
+preacher in comparison with this great doer."
+
+Reader! forget not the motive of our motto verse, "_The night cometh!_"
+Soon our tale shall be told; our little day is flitting fast, the
+shadows of night are falling. "Our span length of time," as Rutherford
+says, "will come to an inch." What if the eleventh hour should strike
+after having been "all the day _idle_"? A long lifetime of opportunities
+suffered to pass unemployed and unimproved, and absolutely _nothing_
+done for God! A judgment-day come--our golden moments squandered--our
+talents untraded on--our work undone--met at the bar of Heaven with the
+withering repulse, "Inasmuch as ye did it _not_." "The time we have
+lost," says Richard Baxter, "can not be recalled; should we not then
+redeem and improve the little that remains? If a traveler sleep or
+trifle most of the day, he must travel so much the faster in the
+evening, or fall short of his journey's end."
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-eighth Day.
+
+COMMITTING OUR WAY TO GOD.
+
+ "But committed himself to Him that judgeth righteously."--
+ 1 Peter, ii. 23.
+
+
+With what perfect and entire confidingness did Jesus commit Himself to
+his Heavenly Father's guidance! He loved to call Him, "My Father!" There
+was music in that name, which enabled Him to face the most trying hour,
+and to drink the most bitter cup. The scoffing taunt arose at the scene
+of crucifixion: "He trusted in God that He would deliver Him, let Him
+deliver Him!" It failed to shake, for one moment, His unswerving
+confidence, even when the sensible tokens of the Divine presence were
+withdrawn; the realized consciousness of God's abiding love sustained
+Him still: "My God! my God!"
+
+How many a perplexity should we save ourselves by thus implicitly
+"committing ourselves," as He did, to God! In seasons of darkness and
+trouble--when our way is shut up with thorns, to lift the confiding eye
+of faith to Him, and say, "I am oppressed, undertake for me!" How
+blessed to feel that He directs all that befalls us; that no
+contingencies can frustrate His plans; that the way he leads us is not
+only _a_ "right way," but, with all its briers and thorns--_its_ tears
+and trials--it is _the_ right way!
+
+The result of such an habitual staying ourselves on the Lord will be a
+deep, abiding _peace_; any ripple will only be on the surface--no more.
+It is the _bosom_ of the ocean alone which the storm ruffles; all
+beneath is a serene, settled calm. So "Thou wilt keep him, oh God, in
+perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on _Thee_!"
+
+"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want." I shall be content alike
+with what He appoints or withholds. I _can not_ wrong that love with
+one shadow of suspicion! I have His own plighted promise of unchanging
+faithfulness, that "all things work together for good to them that love
+Him!" Often there are earthly sorrows hard to bear;--the unkind
+accusation, when it was least merited or expected; the estrangement of
+tried and trusted friends, the failure of cherished hopes, favorite
+schemes broken up, plans of usefulness demolished, the gourd breeding
+its own worm and withering. "Commit thy cause and thy way to God!" We
+little know what tenderness there is in the blast of the rough wind;
+what "needs be" are folded under the wings of the storm! "All is well,"
+because _all_ is from _Him_. "Events are God's," says Rutherford; "let
+Him sit at His own helm, that moderateth all."
+
+Christian! look back on your checkered path. How wondrously has He
+threaded you through the mazy way--disappointing your fears, realizing
+your hopes! Are evils looming through the mists of the future? Do not
+anticipate the trials of to-morrow, to aggravate those of to-day. Leave
+the morrow with Him, who has promised, by "casting all your care on Him,
+to care for you." No affliction will be sent greater than you can bear.
+His voice will be heard stealing from the bosom of the threatening
+cloud, "Be still, and know that I am God!"
+
+"_My Father!_" With such a word, you can stretch out your neck for any
+yoke; as with Israel of old, He will make those very waves that may now
+be so threatening, a fenced wall on every side! "Rest in the Lord, and
+wait patiently for Him." "In _all_ thy ways acknowledge Him, and He
+shall direct thy paths!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Twenty-ninth Day.
+
+LOVE OF UNITY.
+
+ "That they all may be one."--John, xvii. 21.
+
+
+Surely there is nothing for which Christian churches have such cause to
+hang their harps on the willows, as the extent to which the Shibboleth
+of party is heard in the camp of the faithful--sectarianism rearing its
+"untempered walls" within the Temple gates!
+
+How different "the mind of Jesus!" Sent "to the lost sheep of the house
+of Israel," He was never found disowning "_other_ sheep not of that
+fold." "Them also will I bring," was an assertion continually
+illustrated by His deeds. Take one example: The woman of Samaria
+revealed what, alas! is too common in the world--a total absence of all
+real religion, along with an ardent zeal for her sect. She was living
+in open sin; yet she was all alive to the nice distinction between a Jew
+and a Samaritan--between Mount Gerizim and Mount Zion: "How is it that
+thou, being a Jew, askest drink of me, who am a woman of Samaria?" Did
+Jesus sanction or reciprocate her sectarianism?--did He leave her
+bigotry unrebuked? Hear His reply--"If thou knewest the gift of God, and
+who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldst have asked
+of _Him_, and _He_ would have given thee!" _He_ would have allowed no
+such narrow-minded exclusiveness to have interfered with the interchange
+of kindly civilities with a stranger. Nay, He would have given thee,
+better than all, the "living water" which "springeth up to everlasting
+life!"
+
+How sad, that when the enemy is "coming in like a flood"--the ranks of
+Popery and infidelity linked in fatal and formidable confederacy--that
+the soldiers of Christ are forced to meet the assault with standards
+soiled and mutilated by internal feuds! "Uniformity" there _may_ not
+be, but "unity," in the true sense of the word, there _ought_ to be. We
+may be clad in different livery, but let us stand side by side, and rank
+by rank, fighting the battles of our Lord. We may be different branches
+of the seven golden candlesticks, varying and diversified in outward
+form and workmanship; but let us combine in "showing forth the praises
+of Him" who recognizes, as the one true "churchmanship," fidelity in
+shining for His glory "as lights in the world." How can we read the 13th
+chapter of 1st Corinthians, and then think of our divisions? "How
+miserable," says Edward Bickersteth, "would an hospital be, if each
+patient were to be so offended with his neighbor's disease, as to differ
+with him on account of it, instead of trying to alleviate it!"
+
+Ah! if we had more real communion with our Saviour, should we not have
+more real communion with one another? If Christians would dip their
+arrows more in "the balm of Gilead," would there not be fewer wounds in
+the body of Christ? "How that word '_toleration_' is used amongst us,"
+said one who drank deeper than most, of his Master's spirit--"how we
+_tolerate_ one another--Dissenters _tolerate_ Churchmen, and Churchmen
+_tolerate_ Dissenters! Oh! hateful word! TOLERATE one for whom _Jesus_
+died! _Tolerate_ one whom He bears upon His heart! _Tolerate_ a temple
+of the living God! Oh! there ought to be _that_ in the word which should
+make us feel _ashamed_ before God!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirtieth Day.
+
+NOT OF THE WORLD.
+
+ "I am not of the world."--John, xvii. 14.
+
+
+In one sense it was _not_ so. Jesus did not seek to maintain His
+holiness intact and unspotted by avoiding contact with the world. He
+mingled familiarly in its busy crowds. He frowned on none of its
+innocent enjoyments; He fostered, by His example, no love of seclusion;
+He gave no warrant or encouragement to mortified pride, or disappointed
+hopes, to rush from its duties; yet, with all this, what a halo of
+heavenliness encircled His pathway through it! "I am from above," was
+breathed in His every look, and word, and action, from the time when He
+lay in the slumbers of guileless infancy in His Bethlehem cradle, until
+He said, "I leave the world, and go to my Father!" He had moved
+uncontaminated through its varied scenes, like the sunbeam, which,
+whatever it touches, remains as unsullied, as when it issues from its
+great fountain.
+
+But though Himself in His sinless nature "unconquerable" by
+temptation--immutably secure from the world's malignant influences, it
+is all worthy of note, as an example to us, that He never unnecessarily
+braved these. He knew the seducing spell that same world would exercise
+on His people, of whom, with touching sympathy, He says, "_These_ are in
+the world!" He knew the _many_ who would be involved and ensnared in its
+subtle worship, who, "minding earthly things, would seek to slake their
+thirst at polluted streams!"
+
+Reader! the great problem you have to solve, Jesus has solved for
+you--to be "_in_ the world, and yet not _of_ it." To abandon it, would
+be a dereliction of duty. It would be servants deserting their work;
+soldiers flying from the battle-field. _Live_ in it, that while you
+live, the world, may feel the better for you. _Die_, that _when_ you
+die, the world, the _Church_, may feel your loss, and cherish your
+example! On its cares and duties, its trusts and responsibilities, its
+employments and enjoyments, inscribe the motto, "The world passeth
+away!" Beware of every thing in it that would tend to deaden
+spirituality of heart; unfitting the mind for serious thought, lowering
+the standard of Christian duty, and inducing a perilous conformity to
+its false manners, habits, tastes, and principles. As the best antidote
+to the love of the world, let the inner _vacuum_ of the heart be filled
+with the love of God. Seek to feel the nobility of your regenerated
+nature; that you have a nobler heritage to care for than the transitory
+glories which encircle "an indivisible point, a fugitive atom." How can
+I mix with the potsherds of the earth? Once, "I lay among the pots;"
+now, I am "like a dove, whose wings are covered with silver, and her
+feathers with yellow gold!" "Stranger--pilgrim--sojourner" "my
+_citizenship_ is in heaven!" Why covet tinsel honors and glories? Why be
+solicitous about the smiles of that which knew not (nay, which frowned
+on) its Lord? "Paul calls it," says an old writer, "_schema_ (a
+mathematical figure), which is a mere _notion_, and nothing in
+substance."--(_Thomas Brooks._)
+
+Live above its corroding cares and anxieties; remembering the
+description Jesus gives of His own true people; "They are not of the
+world, even as I am not of the world!"
+
+ "ARM YOURSELVES LIKEWISE WITH THE SAME MIND."
+
+
+
+
+Thirty-first Day.
+
+CALMNESS IN DEATH.
+
+ "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit."--Luke, xxiii. 46.
+
+
+In the death of Jesus, there were elements of fearfulness, which the
+believer can know nothing of. It was with Him the execution of a penal
+sentence. The sins of an elect world were bearing him down! The very
+voice of His God was giving the tremendous summons, "Awake, O sword,
+against my shepherd!" Yet His was a death of _peace_, nay, of _triumph_!
+Ere He closed His eyes, light broke through the curtains of thick
+darkness. In the calm composure of filial confidence He breathed away
+His soul--"Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit!" What was the
+secret of such tranquillity? This is His own key to it--"I have
+glorified Thee on the earth; I have finished the work which Thou gavest
+me to do."
+
+Reader! will it be so with _you_ at a dying hour? will _your_ "work" be
+done? Have you already fled to Jesus? Are you reposing in Him as your
+only Saviour, and following Him as your only pattern? Then--let death
+overtake you when it may--you will have nothing to do _but to die_! The
+grave will be irradiated with His presence and smile. He will be
+standing there as He did by His own tomb of old, pointing to yours,
+tenanted with angel forms, nay, Himself as the "Precursor," showing you
+"_the path of life!_" There can be no true peace till the fear of death
+be conquered by the sense of sin forgiven, through "the blood of the
+Cross." "Not till then," as one has it, "will you be able to be a quiet
+spectator of the open grave at the bottom of the hill which you are soon
+to descend." "The sting of death is _sin_, but thanks be to God who
+giveth us the victory through the Lord Jesus Christ!"
+
+Seek now to live in the enjoyment of greater filial nearness to your
+covenant God; and thus, when the hour of departure _does_ come, you will
+be able, without irreverence, to take the very words of your dying Lord,
+and make them your own--"FATHER! into Thy hands I commend my spirit."
+FATHER! It is going HOME! the heart of the child leaping at the thought
+of the paternal roof, and the paternal welcome! "Son, thou art ever with
+me, and all that I have is thine!"
+
+It is said of Archbishop Leighton, that he "was always happiest when,
+from the shaking of the prison-doors, he was led to hope that some of
+those brisk blasts would throw them open, and give him the release he
+coveted." Christian! can you dread _that_ which your Saviour has already
+vanquished? _Death!_ It is as the angel to Peter, breaking the
+dungeon-doors, and leading to open day; it is going to the world of your
+birthright, and leaving the one of your exile; "it is the soldier at
+night-fall, lying down in his tent in peace, waiting the morning to
+receive his laurels." Oh! to be ever living in a state of holy
+preparation! the mental eye gazing on the vista-view of an opening
+Heaven! feeling that _every moment_ is bringing us nearer and nearer
+that happy _Home_! soon to be within reach of the Heavenly threshold, in
+sight of the Throne! soon to be bending in adoring rapture with the
+Church triumphant--bathing in floods of infinite glory--"LIKE
+HIM,"--"seeing HIM _as He is_," and that _for Ever and Ever_!
+
+ "AND EVERY MAN THAT HATH THIS HOPE IN HIM PURIFIETH HIMSELF,
+ EVEN AS HE IS PURE!"
+
+
+
+
+ Leaving us
+
+ AN EXAMPLE
+
+ that we should follow
+
+ HIS STEPS.
+
+
+ 1 Peter, ii. 21.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mind of Jesus, by John R. Macduff
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