Westminster Sermons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 331 pages of information about Westminster Sermons.

Westminster Sermons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 331 pages of information about Westminster Sermons.

But it is written again, “My soul waits for the Lord.”  Yes, if you can trust in the God who cannot change, you can afford to wait; you need not be impatient; as it is written—­“Fret not thyself, lest thou be moved to do evil;” and again—­“He that believeth shall not make haste.”  For God, in whom you trust, is not a man that He should lie, nor a son of man that He should repent.  Hath He promised, and shall He not do it?  His word is like the rain and dew, which fall from heaven, and return not to it again useless, but give seed to the sower and bread to the eater.  So is every man that trusteth in Him.  His kingdom, says the Lord, is as if a man should put seed into the ground, and sleep and wake, and the seed should grow up, he knoweth not how.  So the seed which we sow—­the seed of repentance, the seed of humility, the seed of sorrowful prayers for help—­it too shall take root, and grow, and bring forth fruit, we know not how, in the good time of God, who cannot change.  We may be sad; we may be weary; our eyes may wait and watch for the Lord as the Psalmist says; more than they that watch for the morning:  but it must be as those who watch for the morning, for the morning which must and will come, for the sun which will surely rise, and the day which will surely dawn, and the Saviour who will surely deliver, and the God who is merciful in this—­that He rewardeth every man according to his work.

“Oh trust in the Lord.  For with the Lord there is mercy, and with Him is plenteous redemption; and He shall deliver His people from all their sins.”

From their sins.  Not merely from the punishment of their sins; not always from the punishment of their sins in this life:  but, what is better far, from the sins themselves; from the sins which bring them into fresh and needless troubles; and which make the old troubles, which cannot now be escaped, intolerable.

From all their sins.  Not only from the great sins, which, if persisted in, will surely destroy both body and soul in hell:  but from the little sins which do so easily beset us; from little bad habits, tempers, lazinesses, weaknesses, ignorances, which hamper and hinder us all every day when we try to do our duty.  From all these will the Lord deliver us, by the blood of Christ, and by the inspiration of His Holy Spirit, that we may be able at last to say to children and friends, and all whom we love and leave behind us—­

“Oh taste and see that the Lord is gracious.  Blessed is the man that trusteth in Him.”

Yes.  This at least we may do—­Trust in our God, and thank God that we may do it; for if men may not do that, then is that true of them which Homer said of old—­that man is more miserable than all the beasts of the field.  For the animals look neither forward nor back.  They live but for the present moment; and pain and grief, being but for the moment, fall lightly upon them.  But we—­we who have the fearful power of looking back, and looking forward—­we who can feel regret and remorse for the past, anxiety and terror for the future—­to us at times life would be scarce worth having, if we had not a right to cry with all our hearts—­

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Westminster Sermons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.