



Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Emmy and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net







[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and italic
text by _underscores_.]




THOUGHTS

FOR

THE QUIET HOUR

Edited By D. L. Moody

[Illustration]

        Fleming H. Revell Company
        CHICAGO : NEW YORK : TORONTO
        _Publishers of Evangelical Literature_




        Copyrighted 1900
        by
        Fleming H. Revell Company




TO THE READER


One of the brightest signs of the times is that many Christians in our
Young People's Societies and churches are observing a "Quiet Hour"
daily. In this age of rush and activity we need some special call to go
apart and be alone with God for a part of each day. Any man or woman who
does this faithfully and earnestly cannot be more than twenty-four hours
away from God.

The selections given in this volume were first published in the monthly
issues of the "_Record of Christian Work_," and were found very helpful
for devotional purposes. They are also a mine of thoughts, to light up
the verses quoted. Being of permanent value, it has been thought
desirable to transfer them from the pages of the magazine to this
permanent volume.

May they have a helpful ministry, leading many into closer communion
with God!

                              [Illustration: D. L. Moody]




Index of Texts Quoted in This Volume.

        =Genesis=
         1: 4,         34
         2: 7,         36
         3: 3,         71
            9,          5
           24,        109
         4:15,        105
         6: 8,        128
        12: 1,         18
        13:12,        124
           15,         37
        16: 9,         94
        18:17,         96
        25: 8,     18, 28
           11,         68
        28:12,        102
           15,         60
           16,    69, 102
        32: 1,         24
           32,        119
        33: 1,        111


        =Exodus=
         2: 3,         32
         4:13,         32
        14:13,          6
           19,        112
        20: 3,         81
        24:18,         11
        28: 2,         12
        33:14,         88
        34: 2,         25


        =Numbers=
         9:23,         20
        11:14,         51
        13:27,         38
           28,         38


        =Deuteronomy=
         1: 2,         26
         4: 1,        102
        18:14,         80
        33:25,     63, 69


        =Joshua=
         4:21,         20
         5:14,         26
        23:11,          7
        24:15,        114


        =Judges=
         6:14,         78
         8:18,         38


        =I. Samuel=
         1:10,        128
           13,        128
           27,         50
           28,         50
         2: 3,         23
        12:24,         43


        =II. Samuel=
         5:19,         57
        22:36,         24


        =I. Kings=
         2:34,        106
         8:12,         94
           13,         94
        17: 3,         52
           10,        113


        =II. Kings=
         6:17,         11
        10: 5,         74
        25:30,    39, 113


        =I. Chronicles=
         4:23,         92


        =Job=
         5:17,        100


        =Psalms=
         5: 3,         12
        16:11,        110
        19:12,    74, 124
        21: 4,         90
        23: 2,         38
            3,         31
        25: 4,         12
        32: 8,         93
        34: 1,         51
           19,          6
        39: 3,         52
        55:22,         58
        62: 5,         40
        63: 1,         45
        65: 3,        112
        78:14,         91
        90: 1,        114
           12,         96
        91: 3,        104
            9,        119
           11,         98
        100:2,         95
        103:2,        122
            4,        122
           19,         53
        118:14,         6
        119:117,       72
        134: 1,        17
             3,        17
        145: 2,         9
            16,        17


        =Proverbs=
         4:18,         34
           23,         53
        11:25,        121
        13:25,         47
        16:32,         50
        27: 1,         21


        =Ecclesiastes=
        9:10,          78


        =Song of Solomon=
         1: 5,         57
            6,         37
         2: 3,         13
           15,         35
         3: 1,         30
         4:16,         70
         7:10,         57


        =Isaiah=
         6: 5,         51
        30:18,         19
        32:20,         72
        40: 8,        104
           31,     10, 31,
                   42, 80
        41:13,         43
           14,         21
        43: 2,        112
        48:10,         94
        49: 5,         14
           23,         44
        50:10,        105
        56: 2,         72


        =Jeremiah=
        18: 4,        113
        22:21,        104


        =Ezekiel=
        12: 8,         36
        34:26,         85
        36:37,         88
        37: 3,        101


        =Daniel=
         5: 1,        122
         6:20,         15
         9: 9,         89
        10: 8,        109


        =Hosea=
         6: 3,         18


        =Jonah=
         1:11,        125


        =Micah=
         7: 8,        100


        =Zechariah=
         4:10,    64, 116
        13: 1,         56


        =Malachi=
         3: 6,         85
           18,        123


        =Matthew=
         2:10,        100
           13,        106
         5:14,     45, 55
           16,        106
           45,         35
           48,         65
         6: 6,         95
           32,         75
           33,         30
         8: 6,         72
        10: 8,         68
           42,         52
        14:14,         81
           23,         81
           22,         59
        15:28,         44
        20:18,         92
           28,         93
        25:21,         59
           26,         59
           24-26,      44
        26:39,         15
           40,         40
        27:32,         54
        28:16,        107
           18,        107
           19,        107
           20,         41


        =Mark=
         2: 3,        122
         5:36,         99
         6:41,        123
         7:34,         46
        10:17,        120
        13:34,         22
        14:41,         65
           50,        121


        =Luke=
         2:10,        107
           13,        126
           14,        126
         5: 3,         77
            5,         85
         7: 5,         19
        10:29,        115
           39,         98
        14:10,        126
           11,         49
           27,         62
        16:10,          8
        24:16,         31
           18,         13
           31,         32
           34,         47


        =John=
         1: 4,         45
           36,         71
           37,         71
           45,         23
           46,         23
         2:3-5,    48, 76
           11,         91
         3: 8,         23
         4: 6,         67
            8,         67
           39,         67
           34,     40, 70
         6:57,         29
         8: 9,        110
           29,         27
        11: 9,         14
           21-24,      58
        12: 4,         68
            6,          6
        20:21,         56
           25,        124
           27,        124
           29,          9
        21: 3,         37
           10,         22
           12,         101


        =Acts=
         1: 3,         67
            4,     61, 97
            8,     28, 60
         2: 1,         61
            4,         61
           41,         47
         4:10,         64
           13,     79, 99
         6: 5,         20
         8:21,         64
        19:38,         94
        11:26,        123
        13: 2,         64
           47,         60
        14:8-10,       57
        17: 6,    63, 119
        20:19,         82
           24,        119
           28,         90
        27:23-25,      42


        =Romans=
         5: 3,         46
         6: 4,         15
         7:11,         75
         8:28,     11, 31
        13:11,         89
        15:13,         90


        =I. Corinthians=
         1: 7,         30
           28,         95
         3:10,         69
         7:32,         87
        10:12,         76
        11: 1,         82
        13:13,        124
        15:58,         46


        =II. Corinthians=
        1:21,       116
          22,       116
        13:5,       114
           17,       65


        =Galatians=
         1: 4,       55
         2:20,  96, 103,
                    115
         3:27,       58
         6: 2,   33, 39
            7,       25
            9,       88
           14,      127


        =Ephesians=
         1:13,         21
           17,        109
           18,        109
         2:10,     78, 84
           12,        120
           21,         16
         4:15,        113
          5:8,      7, 77
           15,         32


        =Philippians=
         1:21,         27
         2:12      39, 41,
                       73
           13,     39, 41,
                       73
         3:13,         24
           14,         24
         4: 6,         42
           12,         48
           13,     55, 63
           19,          8


        =Colossians=
         1:27,         96
         3: 2,     46, 78
            3,         75
           11,         16
           15,         87
           16,        118
           17,         54
           24,         87
         4: 2,     16, 76,
                      126


        =I. Thessalonians=
         5: 6,         66
            8,        103
           19,         27
           24,        118


        =I. Timothy=
         1:15,         73
           17,         73


        =II. Timothy=
         1:12,         61
         2: 3,         62
           12,     53, 86
           15,         60


        =Hebrews=
         4: 9,         13
         6:12,        125
           19,        128
         7:25,        127
        10: 5,         27
           19,         41
           22,         41
           32,    23, 118
        11: 7,         83
            8,         22
        12: 1,         79
            2,         79
            2,         14
            6,    47, 107,
                      117
        13: 5,        118


        =James=
         1: 2,          8
            4,         72
           23,        125
           25,        125
         4: 4,        127
           14,   123, 125


        =I. Peter=
         1:16,         96
           21,        121
           23,         86
         2: 5,         20
           21,         81
         5: 5,        111


        =II. Peter=
         1: 5,         70
           21,        121
         3:18,     44, 74


        =I. John=
         1: 7,         48
            9,         26
         2: 6,         18
           15,     17, 87
         3: 2,         91
         4:14,         88
           16,     61, 98
           18,         42
         5: 4,         97


        =Jude=
           21,         28


        =Revelation=
         1:10,       117
           11,       117
           17,        66
         2:10,       105
         3:19,        20
         4: 8,        30
         7: 9,        34
        22:12,         5
           14,       109




[Illustration: JANUARY]


=January 1st.=

     _Come up in the morning . . . and present thyself . . .
     to me in the top of the mount. Ex. xxxiv. 2._

My Father, I am coming. Nothing on the mean plain shall keep me away
from the holy heights. Help me to climb fast, and keep Thou my foot,
lest it fall upon the hard rock! At Thy bidding I come, so Thou wilt not
mock my heart. Bring with Thee honey from heaven, yea, milk and wine,
and oil for my soul's good, and stay the sun in his course, or the time
will be too short in which to look upon Thy face, and to hear Thy gentle
voice.

Morning on the mount! It will make me strong and glad all the rest of
the day so well begun.--_Joseph Parker._


=January 2nd.=

      _My reward is with me. Rev. xxii. 12._

We are to be rewarded, not only for work done, but for burdens borne,
and I am not sure but that the brightest rewards will be for those who
have borne burdens without murmuring. On that day He will take the lily,
that has been growing so long among thorns, and lift it up to be the
glory and wonder of all the universe; and the fragrance of that lily
will draw forth ineffable praises from all the hosts of heaven.--_Andrew
Bonar._


=January 3rd.=

      _Where art thou? Gen. iii. 9._

Art thou hiding thyself away from Him who would send thee forth to do
His own blessed work in His own way? Oh, let me say to thee this
morning, "The Lord hath need of thee." It may seem to be only a little
thing He has for you to do, but it is an important one. He has "need of
thee." Turn not thy back upon Him; put not thyself out of the way of
being employed by Him; do not begin by laying down laws for thyself as
to what thou wilt do and what thou wilt not do; but cry out from the
very depth of thy heart, "Here am I, send me,"--_W. Hay Aitken._


=January 4th.=

      _Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the
      Lord delivereth him out of them all. Psa. xxxiv. 19._

All the afflictions of the righteous open out into something glorious.
The prisoner is not merely delivered, but he finds an angel waiting for
him at the door. And with every deliverance comes a specific blessing.
One angel is named faith; another, love; another, joy; another,
longsuffering; another, gentleness; another, goodness; another,
meekness; another, temperance; another, peace. Each of these graces
says, "We have come out of great tribulation."--_G. Bowen._


=January 5th.=

      _The Lord is my . . . song. Psa. cxviii. 14._

Let us think of God Himself becoming our song. This is the fulness and
perfection of knowing God: so to know Him that He Himself becomes our
delight; so to know Him that praise is sweetest, and fullest, and
freshest, and gladdest, when we sing of Him. He who has learned this
blessed secret carries the golden key of heaven--nay, he hath fetched
heaven down to earth, and need not envy the angels now.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._


=January 6th.=

      _Fear ye not, stand still, and see the salvation of
      the Lord. Ex. xiv. 13._

Often God seems to place His children in positions of profound
difficulty--leading them into a wedge from which there is no escape;
contriving a situation which no human judgment would have permitted, had
it been previously consulted. The very cloud conducts them thither. You
may be thus involved at this very hour. It does seem perplexing and very
serious to the last degree; but it is perfectly right. The issue will
more than justify Him who has brought you hither. It is a platform for
the display of His almighty grace and power. He will not only deliver
you, but in doing so He will give you a lesson that you will never
forget; and to which, in many a psalm and song in after days, you will
revert. You will never be able to thank God enough for having done just
as He has.--_F. B. Meyer._


=January 7th.=

      _Now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of
      light. Eph. v. 8._

The influence we exert in the world is created by our relationship to
Jesus Christ; and our relationship to Jesus Christ is revealed by our
influence.--_Selected._


=January 8th.=

      _Take good heed therefore unto your souls. Josh.
      xxiii. 11._ (_Margin._)

Gold cannot be used for currency as long as it is mixed with the quartz
and rock in which it lies imbedded. So your soul is useless to God till
taken out from sin and earthliness and selfishness, in which it lies
buried. By the regenerating power of the Spirit you must be separated
unto Christ, stamped with His image and superscription, and made into a
divine currency, which shall bear His likeness among men. The Christian
is, so to speak, the circulating medium of Christ, the coin of the realm
by whom the great transactions of mercy and grace to a lost world are
carried on. As the currency stands for the gold, so does the Christian
stand for Christ, representing His good and acceptable will.--_A. J.
Gordon._


=January 9th.=

      _He that is faithful in that which is least, is
      faithful also in much. Luke xvi. 10._

The least action of life can be as surely done from the loftiest motive
as the highest and noblest. Faithfulness measures acts as God measures
them. True conscientiousness deals with our duties as God deals with
them. Duty is duty, conscience is conscience, right is right, and wrong
is wrong, whatever sized type they be printed in. "Large" and "small"
are not words for the vocabulary of conscience. It knows only two
words--right and wrong.--_Alex. McLaren._


=January 10th.=

      _My God shall supply all your need according to His
      riches in glory by Christ Jesus. Phil. iv. 19._

What a source--"God"! What a standard--"His riches in glory"! What a
channel--"Christ Jesus"! It is your sweet privilege to place _all your
need_ over against _His riches_, and lose sight of the former in the
presence of the latter. His exhaustless treasury is thrown open to you,
in all the love of His heart; go and draw upon it, in the artless
simplicity of faith, and you will never have occasion to look to a
creature-stream, or lean on a creature-prop.--_C. H. M._


=January 11th.=

      _Count it all joy when ye fall into divers
      temptations. James i. 2._

We cannot be losers by trusting God, for He is honored by faith, and
most honored when faith discerns His love and truth behind a thick cloud
of His ways and providence. Happy those who are thus tried! Let us only
be clear of unbelief and a guilty conscience. We shall hide ourselves in
the rock and pavilion of the Lord, sheltered beneath the wings of
everlasting love till all calamities be overpast.--_Selected._


=January 12th.=

      _Blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have
      believed. John xx. 29._

The seen are shadows: the substance is found in the unseen. . . . No
doubt, in Christ, the foundation of our faith is unseen; but so is that
of yonder tower that lifts its tall erect form among the waves over
which it throws a saving light. It appears to rest on the rolling
billows; but, beneath these, invisible and immovable, lies the solid
rock on which it stands secure; and when the hurricane roars above, and
breakers roar below, I could go calmly to sleep in that lone sea tower.
Founded on a rock, and safer than the proudest palace that stands on the
sandy, surf-beaten shore, it cannot be moved. Still less the Rock of
Ages! Who trusts in that is fit for death, prepared for judgment, ready
for the last day's sounding trumpet, since, "The Lord redeemeth the soul
of His servants, and none of them that trust in Him shall be
desolate."--_Guthrie._


=January 13th.=

      _Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much
      fruit. John xv. 8._

What a possibility, what an inspiration, that we can enhance the glory
of "our Father"! Our hearts leap at the thought.

How can this be done? By bearing "leaves,"--a _profession_ of love for
Him? No. By bearing _some_ fruit? No. "That ye bear _much_ fruit." In
the abundance of the yield is the joy, the glory of the husbandman. We
should, therefore, aim to be extraordinary, "hundred-fold" Christians,
satisfied with none but the largest yield. Our lives should be packed
with good deeds. Then at harvest time we can say, "Father, I have
glorified Thee on the earth!"--_W. Jennings._


=January 14th.=

      _Every day will I bless Thee; and I will praise Thy
      name for ever and ever. Psa. cxlv. 2._

There is a very beautiful device by which the Japanese are accustomed to
express their wishes for their friends. It is the figure of a drum in
which the birds have built their nest. The story told of it is that once
there lived a good king, so anxiously concerned for the welfare of his
people that at the palace gate he set a drum, and whoever had any wrong
to be redressed or any want, should beat the drum, and at once, by day
or night, the king would grant the suppliant an audience and relief. But
throughout the land there reigned such prosperity and contentment that
none needed to appeal for anything, and the birds built their nests
within it and filled it with the music of their song.

Such gracious access is granted to us even by the King of Heaven, and
day and night His ready hearing and His help are within the reach of all
that come to Him; but of all men most blessed are they who have found on
earth a blessedness in which all want is forgotten, and trust rests so
assured of safety in the Father's care that prayer gives place to
ceaseless praise. They _rejoice in the Lord alway_.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=January 15th.=

      _They shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall
      run, and not be weary; they shall walk, and not
      faint.--Isa. xl. 31._

This, my soul, is the triumph of thy being--to be able to _walk_ with
God! Flight belongs to the young soul; it is the _romance_ of religion.
To run without weariness belongs to the _lofty_ soul; it is the _beauty_
of religion. But to walk and not faint belongs to the _perfect_ soul; it
is the _power_ of religion.

Canst thou walk in white through the stained thoroughfares of men? Canst
thou touch the vile and polluted ones of earth and retain thy garments
pure? Canst thou meet in contact with the sinful and be thyself
undefiled? _Then_ thou hast surpassed the flight of the eagle!--_George
Matheson._


=January 16th.=

      _And Moses was in the mount forty days and forty
      nights. Ex. xxiv. 18._

The life of fellowship with God cannot be built up in a day. It begins
with the habitual reference of all to Him, hour by hour, as Moses did in
Egypt. But it moves on to more and longer periods of communion; and it
finds its consummation and bliss in days and nights of intercession and
waiting and holy intercourse.--_F. B. Meyer._


=January 17th.=

      _Elisha said, Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes that he
      may see. 2 Kings vi. 17._

This is the prayer we need to pray for ourselves and for one another,
"Lord, open our eyes that we may see"; for the world all around us, as
well as around the prophet, is full of God's horses and chariots,
waiting to carry us to places of glorious victory. And when our eyes are
thus opened, we shall see in all the events of life, whether great or
small, whether joyful or sad, a "chariot" for our souls. Everything that
comes to us becomes a chariot the moment we treat it as such; and, on
the other hand, even the smallest trial may be a Juggernaut car to crush
us into misery or despair if we so consider them. It lies with each of
us to choose which they shall be. It all depends, not upon what these
events are, but upon how we take them. If we lie down under them, and
let them roll over us and crush us, they become Juggernaut cars, but if
we climb up into them, as into a car of victory, and make them carry us
triumphantly onward and upward, they become the chariots of
God.--_Smith._


=January 18th.=

      _All things work together for good to them that love
      God. Rom. viii. 28._

In one thousand trials it is not five hundred of them that work for the
believer's good, but nine hundred and ninety-nine of them, AND ONE
BESIDE.--_George Mueller._


=January 19th.=

      _Thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron. Ex. xxviii.
      2._

Have we no garments of blue, and purple, and beautiful suggestiveness?
We have garments of praise; we are clothed with the Lord Jesus. And have
we no ornaments? The ornament of a meek and quiet spirit is, in the
sight of God, of great price. And have we no golden bells? We have the
golden bells of holy actions. Our words are bells, our actions are
bells, our purposes are bells. Whenever we move, our motion is thus
understood to be a motion towards holy places, holy deeds, holy
character.--_Joseph Parker._


=January 20th.=

      _My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O Lord; in
      the morning will I direct my prayer unto Thee, and
      will look up. Psa v. 3._

The morning is the gate of the day, and should be well guarded with
prayer. It is one end of the thread on which the day's actions are
strung, and should be well knotted with devotion. If we felt more the
majesty of life we should be more careful of its mornings. He who rushes
from his bed to his business and waiteth not to worship is as foolish as
though he had not put on his clothes, or cleansed his face, and as
unwise as though he dashed into battle without arms or armor. Be it ours
to bathe in the softly flowing river of communion with God, before the
heat of the wilderness and the burden of the way begin to oppress
us.--_Spurgeon._


=January 21st.=

      _Show me Thy ways, O Lord; teach me Thy paths. Psa.
      xxv. 4._

There is a path in which every child of God is to walk, and in which
alone God can accompany him.--_Denham Smith._


=January 22nd.=

      _There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of
      God. Heb. iv. 9._

How sweet the music of this first heavenly chime floating across the
waters of death from the towers of the New Jerusalem. Pilgrim, faint
under thy long and arduous pilgrimage, hear it! It is REST. Soldier,
carrying still upon thee blood and dust of battle, hear it! It is REST.
Voyager, tossed on the waves of sin and sorrow, driven hither and
thither on the world's heaving ocean of vicissitude, hear it! The haven
is in sight; the very waves that are breaking on thee seem to
murmur--"_So He giveth His beloved_ REST." It is the long-drawn sigh of
existence at last answered. The toil and travail of earth's protracted
week is at an end. The calm of its unbroken Sabbath is begun. Man, weary
man, has found at last the long-sought-for _rest_ in the bosom of his
God!--_Macduff._


=January 23rd.=

      _Under His shadow. Song of Sol. ii. 3._

Frances Ridley Havergal says: I seem to see four pictures suggested by
that: under the shadow of a rock in a weary plain; under the shadow of a
tree; closer still, under the shadow of His wing; nearest and closest,
in the shadow of His hand. Surely that hand must be the pierced hand,
that may oftentimes press us sorely, and yet evermore encircling,
upholding and shadowing!


=January 24th.=

      _He made as though He would have gone further. Luke
      xxiv. 28._

Is not God always acting thus? He comes to us by His Holy Spirit as He
did to these two disciples. He speaks to us through the preaching of the
Gospel, through the Word of God, through the various means of grace and
the providential circumstances of life; and having thus spoken, He makes
as though He would go further. If the ear be opened to His voice and
the heart to His Spirit, the prayer will then go up, "Lord, abide with
me." But if that voice makes no impression, then He passes on, as He has
done thousands of times, leaving the heart at each time harder than
before, and the ear more closed to the Spirit's call.--_F. Whitfield._


=January 25th.=

      _My God shall be my strength. Isa. xlix. 5._

Oh, do not pray for easy lives! Pray to be stronger men! Do not pray for
tasks equal to your powers; pray for powers equal to your tasks! Then
the doing of your work shall be no miracle. But you shall be a miracle.
Every day you shall wonder at yourself, at the richness of life which
has come in you by the grace of God.--_Phillips Brooks._


=January 26th.=

      _Despising the shame. Heb. xii. 2._

And how is that to be done? In two ways. Go up the mountain, and the
things in the plain will look very small; the higher you rise the more
insignificant they will seem. Hold fellowship with God, and the
threatening foes here will seem very, very unformidable. Another way is,
pull up the curtain and gaze on what is behind it. The low foot-hills
that lie at the base of some Alpine country may look high when seen from
the plain, as long as the snowy summits are wrapped in mist; but when a
little puff of wind comes and clears away the fog from the lofty peaks,
nobody looks at the little green hills in front. So the world's
hindrances and the world's difficulties and cares look very lofty till
the cloud lifts. But when we see the great white summits, everything
lower does not seem so very high after all. Look to Jesus, and that will
dwarf the difficulties.--_Alex. McLaren._


=January 27th.=

      _Are there not twelve hours in the day? John xi. 9._

The very fact of a Christian being here, and not in heaven, is a proof
that some work awaits him.--_William Arnot._


=January 28th.=

      _Not as I will, but as Thou wilt. Matt. xxvi. 39._

There are no disappointments to those whose wills are buried in the will
of God.--_Faber._


=January 29th.=

      _The living God. Dan. vi. 20._

How many times we find this expression in the Scriptures, and yet it is
just this very thing that we are so prone to lose sight of! We know it
is written "_the living God_"; but in our daily life there is scarcely
anything we practically so much lose sight of as the fact that God is
THE LIVING GOD; that He is now whatever He was three or four thousand
years since; that He has the same sovereign power, the same saving love
towards those who love and serve Him as ever He had, and that He will do
for them now what He did for others two, three, four thousand years ago,
simply because He is the living God, the unchanging One. Oh, how
therefore we should confide in Him, and in our darkest moments never
lose sight of the fact that He _is_ still and ever _will be_ THE LIVING
GOD!--_George Mueller._


=January 30th.=

      _Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into
      death; that like as Christ was raised up from the dead
      by the glory of the Father, even so we also should
      walk in newness of life. Rom. vi. 4._

That is the life we are called upon to live, and that is the life it is
our privilege to lead; for God never gives us a call without its being a
privilege, and He never gives us the privilege to come up higher without
stretching out to us His hand to lift us up. Come up higher and higher
into the realities and glories of the resurrection life, knowing that
your life is hid with Christ in God. Shake yourself loose of every
incumbrance, turn your back on every defilement, give yourself over
like clay to the hands of the potter, that He may stamp upon you the
fulness of His own resurrection glory, that you, beholding as in a
mirror the glory of the Lord, may be changed from glory to glory as by
the Spirit of the Lord.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=January 31st.=

      _Christ is all, and in all. Col. iii. 11._

        The _service_ of Christ is the _business_ of my life.
        The _will_ of Christ is the _law_ of my life.
        The _presence_ of Christ is the _joy_ of my life.
        The _glory_ of Christ is the _crown_ of my life.--_Selected._




[Illustration]


=February 1st.=

      _Continue in prayer. Col. iv. 2._

Dost thou want nothing? Then I fear thou dost not know thy poverty. Hast
thou no mercy to ask of God? Then may the Lord's mercy show thee thy
misery. A prayerless soul is a Christless soul. Prayer is the lisping of
the believing infant, the shout of the fighting believer, the requiem of
the dying saint falling asleep in Jesus.--_Spurgeon._


=February 2nd.=

      _In whom all the building, fitly framed together,
      groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord. Eph. ii. 21._

The life-tabernacle is a wondrous building; there is room for workers of
all kinds in the uprearing of its mysterious and glorious walls. If we
cannot do the greatest work, we may do the least. Our heaven will come
out of the realization of the fact that it was God's tabernacle we were
building, and under God's blessing that we were working.--_Joseph
Parker._


=February 3rd.=

      _Love not the world. 1 John ii. 15._

Love it not, and yet love it. Love it with the love of Him who gave His
Son to die for it. Love it with the love of Him who shed His blood for
it. Love it with the love of angels, who rejoice in its conversion. Love
it to do it good, giving your tears to its sufferings, your pity to its
sorrows, your wealth to its wants, your prayers to its miseries, and to
its fields of charity, and philanthropy, and Christian piety, your
powers and hours of labor. You cannot live without affecting it, or
being affected by it. You will make the world better, or it will make
you worse.

God help you by His grace and Holy Spirit so to live in the world as to
live above it, and look beyond it; and so to love it that when you leave
it, you may leave it better than you found it.--_Guthrie._


=February 4th.=

      _Thou openest thine hand, and satisfiest the desire of
      every living thing. Psa. cxlv. 16._

Desire, it is a dainty word! It were much that He should satisfy the
_need_, the _want_; but He goeth far beyond that. Pity is moved to meet
our need; duty may sometimes look after our wants; but to satisfy the
_desire_ implies a tender watchfulness, a sweet and gracious knowledge
of us, an eagerness of blessing. God is never satisfied until He has
satisfied our desires.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=February 5th.=

      _Ye servants of the Lord, which by night stand in the
      house of the Lord. . . . The Lord that made heaven and
      earth bless thee out of Zion. Psa. cxxxiv. 1, 3._

If I would know the love of my friend, I must see what it can do in the
winter. So with the divine love. It is very easy for me to worship in
the summer sunshine, when the melodies of life are in the air and the
fruits of life are on the tree. But let the song of the bird cease, and
the fruit of the tree fall; and will my heart still go on to sing? Will
I stand in God's house by night? Will I love Him in His own night? Will
I watch with Him even one hour in His Gethsemane? Will I help to bear
His cross up the Via Dolorosa? My love has come to Him in His
humiliation. My faith has found Him in His lowliness. My heart has
recognized His majesty through His mean disguise, and I know at last
that I desire not the gift, but the Giver. When I can stand in His house
by night, I have accepted Him for Himself alone.--_George Matheson._


=February 6th.=

      _He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so
      to walk even as He walked. 1 John ii. 6._

The preaching that this world needs most is the _sermons in shoes_ that
are walking with Jesus Christ.--_Selected._


=February 7th.=

      _Then shall we know, if we follow on to know the Lord.
      Hosea vi. 3._

The Lord has brought us into the pathway of the knowledge of Him, and
bids us pursue that path through all its strange meanderings until it
opens out upon the plain where God's throne is. Our life is a following
on to know the Lord. We marvel at some of the experiences through which
we are called to pass, but afterwards we see that they afforded us some
new knowledge of our Lord. . . . We have not to wait for some brighter
opportunity; but by improvement of the present are to build for
ourselves a bridge to that future.--_G Bowen._


=February 8th.=

      _Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred,
      and from thy father's house. Gen. xii. 1._

      _Abraham . . . was gathered to his people. Gen. xxv. 8._

After all communion we dwell as upon islands, dotted over a great
archipelago, each upon his little rock with the sea dashing between us;
but the time comes when, if our hearts are set upon that great Lord
whose presence makes us one, there shall be no more sea and all the
isolated rocks shall be parts of a great continent . . . If we cultivate
that sense of detachment from the present and of having our true
affinities in the unseen, if we dwell here as strangers because our
citizenship is in heaven, then death will not drag us away from our
associates nor hunt us into a lonely land, but will bring us where
closer bonds shall knit the "sweet societies" together, and the sheep
shall couch close by one another because all gathered round the one
Shepherd. Then many a tie shall be re-woven, and the solitary wanderer
meet again the dear ones whom he had "loved long since and lost
awhile."--_Alex. McLaren._


=February 9th.=

      _Therefore will the Lord wait, that He may be gracious
      unto you. Isa. xxx. 18._

This is God's way. In the darkest hours of the night His tread draws
near across the billows. As the day of execution is breaking, the angel
comes to Peter's cell. When the scaffold for Mordecai is complete, the
royal sleeplessness leads to a reaction in favor of the threatened race.

Ah, soul, it may have come to the worst with thee ere thou art
delivered; but thou wilt be! God may keep thee waiting, but He will ever
be mindful of His covenant, and will appear to fulfil His inviolable
word.--_F. B. Meyer._


=February 10th.=

      _He loveth our nation and he hath built us a
      synagogue. Luke vii. 5._

Marble and granite are perishable monuments, and their inscriptions may
be seldom read. _Carve your names on human hearts_; they alone are
immortal!--_Theodore Cuyler._


=February 11th.=

      _As many as I love I . . . chasten. Rev. iii. 19._

I once saw a dark shadow resting on the bare side of a hill. Seeking its
cause I saw a little cloud, bright as the light, floating in the clear
blue above. Thus it is with our sorrow. It may be dark and cheerless
here on earth; yet look above and you shall see it to be but a shadow of
His brightness whose name is Love.--_Dean Alford._


=February 12th.=

      _What means these stones? Josh. iv. 21._

      _Ye also as living stones. 1 Pet. ii. 5. (R. V.)_

There should be something so remarkable, so peculiar about the life and
conversation of a Christian that men should be compelled to ask, "What
does this mean?". . . . Is there anything in your character, words, and
habits of life so different from the world around you that men are
involuntarily compelled to ask themselves or others, "What does this
mean?" Not that there is to be a forced singularity, a peculiarity for
the sake of being peculiar; that were merely to copy the pharisaism of
ancient days. . . . Oh, that we might realize that this is the purpose
for which God sends us into the world, as He sent His only begotten
Son!--_S. A. Blackwood._


=February 13th.=

     _All . . . saw his face as it had been the face of an
     angel Acts vi. 15._

The face is made every day by its morning prayer, and by its morning
look out of windows which open upon heaven.--_Joseph Parker._


=February 14th.=

      _At the commandment of the Lord they rested in the
      tents, and at the commandment of the Lord they
      journeyed. Num. ix. 23._

This is the secret of peace and calm elevation. If an Israelite, in the
desert, had taken it into his head to make some movement independent of
Jehovah; if he took it upon him to move when the crowd was at rest, or
to halt while the crowd was moving, we can easily see what the result
would have been. And so it will ever be with us. If we move when we
ought to rest, or rest when we ought to move, we shall not have the
divine presence with us.--_C. H. M._


=February 15th.=

      _In whom also, after that ye believed, ye were sealed
      with that holy Spirit of promise. Eph. i. 13._

The Lord puts a seal upon His own, that everybody may know them. The
sealing in your case is the Spirit producing in you likeness to the
Lord. The holier you become, the seal is the more distinct and plain,
the more evident to every passer-by, for then will men take knowledge of
you that you have been with Jesus.--_Andrew Bonar._


=February 16th.=

      _Boast not thyself of to-morrow. Prov. xxvii. 1._

The only preparation for the morrow is the right use of to-day. The
stone in the hands of the builder must be put in its place and fitted to
receive another. The morrow comes for naught, if to-day is not heeded.
Neglect not the call that comes to thee this day, for such neglect is
nothing else than boasting thyself of to-morrow.--_G. Bowen._


=February 17th.=

      _I will help thee, saith the Lord. Isa. xli. 14._

O my soul, is not this enough? Dost thou need more strength than the
omnipotence of the united Trinity? Dost thou want more wisdom than
exists in the Father, more love than displays itself in the Son, or more
power than is manifest in the influences of the Spirit? Bring hither
thine empty pitcher! Surely this well will fill it. Haste, gather up
thy wants, and bring them here--thine emptiness, thy woes, thy needs.
Behold, this river of God is full for thy supply; what canst thou desire
beside? Go forth, my soul, in this thy might. The eternal God is thine
helper!--_Spurgeon._


=February 18th.=

      _To every man his work. Mark xiii. 34._

He does the most for God's great world who does the best in his own
little world.--_Selected._


=February 19th.=

      _Bring of the fish which ye have now caught. John xxi.
      10._

Why was this? Oh, the Lord wants us to minister to Him as well as to
receive from Him, and our service finds its true end when it becomes
food for our dear Lord. He was pleased to feed on their fish while they
were feeding on His. It was the double banquet of which He speaks in the
tender message of revelation, "I will sup with him, and he with
Me."--_A. B. Simpson._


=February 20th.=

      _By faith Abraham, when he was called to go out into a
      place which he should after receive for an
      inheritance, obeyed. Heb. xi. 8._

Whither he went, he knew not; it was enough for him to know that he went
with God. He leant not so much upon the promises as upon the Promiser.
He looked not on the difficulties of his lot, but on the King, eternal,
immortal, invisible, the only wise God, who had deigned to appoint his
course, and would certainly vindicate Himself. O glorious faith! This is
thy work, these are thy possibilities: contentment to sail with sealed
orders, because of unwavering confidence in the love and wisdom of the
Lord High Admiral: willinghood to rise up, leave all, and follow Christ,
because of the glad assurance that earth's best cannot bear comparison
with heaven's least.--_F. B. Meyer._


=February 21st.=

      _The Lord is a God of knowledge, and by Him actions
      are weighed. 1 Sam. ii. 3._

God does not _measure_ what we bring to Him. He _weighs_ it.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._


=February 22nd.=

      _After ye were illuminated ye endured a great fight of
      afflictions. Heb. x. 32._

Our boldness for God _before the world_ must always be the result of
individual dealing with God _in secret_. Our victories over self, and
sin, and the world, are always first fought where no eye sees but
God's. . . . If we have not these _secret_ conflicts, well may we not
have any _open_ ones. The _outward_ absence of conflict betrays the
_inward_ sleep of the soul.--_F. Whitfield._


=February 23d.=

      _Philip findeth Nathaniel and saith unto him, We have
      found Him of whom Moses in the law and the prophets
      did write. . . . Come and see. John i. 45, 46._

The next thing to knowing that "we have found Him" is to find someone
else, and say, "Come and see."--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=February 24th.=

      _The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest
      the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh
      and whither it goeth; so is every one that is born of
      the Spirit. John iii. 8._

We know that the wind listeth to blow where there is a vacuum. If you
find a tremendous rush of wind, you know that somewhere there is an
empty space. I am perfectly sure about this fact: if we could expel all
pride, vanity, self-righteousness, self-seeking, desire for applause,
honor, and promotion--if by some divine power we should be utterly
emptied of all that, the Spirit would come as a rushing mighty wind to
fill us.--_A. J. Gordon._


=February 25th.=

      _Thy gentleness hath made me great. 2 Sam. xxii. 36._

The gentleness of Christ is the comeliest ornament that a Christian can
wear.--_William Arnot._


=February 26th.=

      _Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met him.
      Gen. xxxii. 1._

It is in the path where God has bade us walk that we shall find the
angels around us. We may meet them, indeed, on paths of our own
choosing, but it will be the sort of angel that Balaam met, with a sword
in his hand, mighty and beautiful, but wrathful too; and we had better
not front him! But the friendly helpers, the emissaries of God's love,
the apostles of His grace, do not haunt the roads that we make for
ourselves.--_Alex. McLaren._


=February 27th.=

      _I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh
      unto the Father but by me. John xiv. 6._

Heaven often seems distant and unknown, but if He who made the road
thither is our guide, we need not fear to lose the way. We do not want
to see far ahead--only far enough to discern Him and trace His
footsteps. . . . They who follow Christ, even through darkness, will
surely reach the Father.--_Henry Van <DW18>._


=February 28th.=

      _Forgetting those things which are behind . . . I press
      toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of
      God in Christ Jesus. Phil. iii. 13, 14._

It is not by regretting what is irreparable that true work is to be
done, but by making the best of what we are. It is not by complaining
that we have not the right tools, but by using well the tools we have.
What we are, and where we are, is God's providential arrangement--God's
doing, though it may be man's misdoing. Life is a series of mistakes,
and he is not the best Christian who makes the fewest false steps. He is
the best who wins the most splendid victories by the retrieval of
mistakes.--_F. W. Robertson._




[Illustration: MARCH]


=March 1st.=

      _Come up in the morning . . . and present thyself unto
      me in the top of the mount. Ex. xxxiv. 2._

The morning is the time fixed for my meeting the Lord. This very word
_morning_ is as a cluster of rich grapes. Let me crush them, and drink
the sacred wine.

In the morning! Then God means me to be at my best in strength and hope.
I have not to climb in my weakness. In the night I have buried
yesterday's fatigue, and in the morning I take a new lease of energy.

Sweet morning! There is hope in its music. Blessed is the day whose
morning is sanctified! Successful is the day whose first victory was won
in prayer! Holy is the day whose dawn finds thee on the top of the
mount! Health is established in the morning. Wealth is won in the
morning. The light is brightest in the morning. "Wake, psaltery and
harp; I myself will awake early."--_Joseph Parker._


=March 2nd.=

      _Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
      Gal. vi. 7._

The most common actions of life, its every day and hour, are invested
with the highest grandeur, when we think how they extend their issues
into eternity. Our hands are now sowing seeds for that great harvest. We
shall meet again all we are doing and have done. The graves shall give
up their dead, and from the tombs of oblivion the past shall give up all
that it holds in keeping, to bear true witness for or against
us.--_Guthrie._


=March 3rd.=

      _There are eleven days' journey from Horeb, by the way
      of mount Seir, unto Kadesh-barnea. Deut. i. 2._

Eleven days, and yet it took them forty years! How was this? Alas! we
need not travel far for the answer. It is only too like ourselves. How
slowly we get over the ground! What windings and turnings! How often we
have to go back and travel over the same ground, again and again. We are
slow travelers because we are slow learners. Our God is a faithful and
wise, as well as a gracious and patient Teacher. He will not permit us
to pass cursorily over our lessons. Sometimes, perhaps, we think we have
mastered a lesson and we attempt to move on to another, but our wise
Teacher knows better, and He sees the need of deeper ploughing. He will
not have us mere theorists or smatterers; He will keep us, if need be,
year after year at our scales until we learn to sing.--=C. H. M.=


=March 4th.=

      _If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to
      forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
      unrighteousness. 1 John i. 9._

The same moment which brings the consciousness of sin ought to bring
also the confession of it and the consciousness of forgiveness.--_Smith._


=March 5th.=

      _As captain of the host of the Lord am I now come.
      Josh. v. 14._

Surely Israel might now face the foe with unwavering confidence, and
sing of victory even before the battle was gained. And so may the
Christian. It is to no conflict of uncertain issue that he advances; the
result of the battle is not doubtful. The struggle may be severe, the
warfare long; he may sometimes, like the pilgrim, be beaten to the
ground, and well-nigh lose his sword; but "though cast down" he is "not
destroyed." The Captain of salvation is on his side, and in the midst of
sharpest conflict he can say, "Thanks be unto God, who giveth us the
victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."--_S. A. Blackwood._


=March 6th.=

      _To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain. Phil. i.
      21._

Live in Christ, and you are in the suburbs of heaven. There is but a
thin wall between you and the land of praises. You are within one hour's
sailing of the shore of the new Canaan.--_William Rutherford._


=March 7th.=

      _He that sent me is with me; the Father hath not left
      me alone, for I do always those things that please
      Him. John viii. 29._

He who holds nearest communion with heaven can best discharge the duties
of everyday life.--_Selected._


=March 8th.=

      _Quench not the Spirit. 1 Thess. v. 19._

In order that you may not quench the Spirit, you must make it a constant
study to know what is the mind of the Spirit. You must discriminate with
the utmost care between His suggestions and the suggestions of your own
deceitful heart. You will keep in constant recollection what are the
offices of the Spirit as described by Christ in the Gospel of John. You
will be on your guard against impulsive movements, inconsiderate acts,
rash words. You will abide in prayer. Search the Word. Confess Christ on
all possible occasions. Seek the society of His people. Shrink from
conformity to the world, its vain fashions, unmeaning etiquette. Be
scrupulous in your reading. "What I say unto you, I say unto all,
watch!" "Have oil in your lamps." "Quench not the Spirit."--_Bowen._


=March 9th.=

     _When He cometh into the world, He saith, . . . A body
     hast Thou prepared me. Heb. x. 5._

This word of Christ must be adopted by each of His followers. Nothing
will help us to live in this world and keep ourselves unspotted but the
Spirit that was in Christ, that looked upon His body as prepared by God
for His service; that looks upon our body as prepared by Him too, that
we might offer it to Him. Like Christ, we too have a body in which the
Holy Spirit dwells. Like Christ, we too must yield our body, with every
member, every power, every action, to fulfil His will, to be offered up
to Him, to glorify Him. Like Christ, we must prove in our body that we
are holy to the Lord.--_Andrew Murray._


=March 10th.=

      _Full of [satisfied with] years. Gen. xxv. 8._

Scaffoldings are for buildings, and the moments and days and years of
our earthly lives are scaffolding. What are you building inside it? What
kind of a structure will be disclosed when the scaffolding is knocked
away? Days and years are ours, that they may give us what eternity
cannot take away--a character built upon the love of God in Christ, and
moulded into His likeness.

Has your life helped you to do that? If so, you have got the best out of
it, and your life is completed, whatever may be the number of its days.
Quality, not quantity, is the thing that determines the perfectness of a
life. Has your life this completeness?--_Alex. McLaren._


=March 11th.=

      _Keep yourselves in the love of God. Jude 21._

Fruit ripened in the sun is sweetest.--_Selected._


=March 12th.=

      _Ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is
      come upon you, and ye shall be witnesses unto Me. Acts
      i. 8._

Look at it! Think of it! A hundred and twenty men and women having no
patronage, no promise of any earthly favor, no endowment, no wealth--a
company of men and women having to get their living by common daily
toil, and busied with all the household duties of daily life--and yet
_they_ are to begin the conquests of Christianity! To them is entrusted
a work which is to turn the world upside down. None so exalted but the
influence of this lowly company shall reach to them, until the throne of
the Caesars is claimed for Christ. None so far off but the power of this
little band gathered in an upper room shall extend to them until the
whole world is knit into a brotherhood! Not a force is there on the
earth, either of men or devils, but they shall overcome it, until every
knee shall bow to their Master, and every tongue shall confess that He
is Lord.

A thing impossible, absurd, look at it as you will, until you admit
this--_they are to be filled with the Holy Ghost_. Then difficulties
melt into the empty air. Then there is no limit to their hopes, for
there is no limit to their power. Their strength is not only "as the
strength of ten," it is as the strength of the Almighty.

This is Christ's idea of Christianity; the idea not of man--it is
infinitely too sublime--the idea of God!--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=March 13th.=

      _He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same
      bringeth forth much fruit: for without Me ye can do
      nothing. John xv. 5._

Too much taken up with our work, we may forget our Master; it is
possible to have the hand full, and the heart empty. Taken up with our
Master we cannot forget our work; if the heart is filled with His love,
how can the hands not be active in His service?--_Adolphe Monod._


=March 14th.=

      _He that eateth Me, even he shall live by Me. John vi.
      57._

To feed on Christ is to get His strength into us to be our strength. You
feed on the corn field, and the strength of the corn field comes into
you, and is your strength. You feed on Christ, and then go and live
your life; and it is Christ in you that lives your life, that helps the
poor, that tells the truth, that fights the battles, and that wins the
crown.--_Phillips Brooks._


=Match 15th.=

      _I sought Him, but I found Him not. Song of Sol. iii.
      1._

Tell me where you lost the company of Christ, and I will tell you the
most likely place to find Him. Have you lost Christ in the closet by
restraining prayer? Then it is there you must seek and find Him. Did you
lose Christ by sin? You will find Him in no other way than by the giving
up of the sin, and seeking by the Holy Spirit to mortify the member in
which the lust doth dwell. Did you lose Christ by neglecting the
Scriptures? You must find Him in the Scriptures. It is a true proverb,
"Look for a thing where you dropped it; it is there." So look for Christ
where you lost Him, for He has not gone away.--_Spurgeon._


=March 16th.=

      _Come behind in no gift. 1 Cor. i. 7._

The Scripture gives four names to Christians, taken from the four
cardinal graces so essential to man's salvation: _Saints_ for their
holiness, _believers_ for their faith, _brethren_ for their love,
_disciples_ for their knowledge.--_Thomas Fuller._


=March 17th.=

      _They rest not day and night. Rev. iv. 8._

O blessed rest! When we rest not day and night, saying, "Holy, holy,
holy, Lord God Almighty!"--when we shall rest from sin, but not from
worship; from suffering and sorrow, but not from joy! O blessed day,
when I shall rest with God; when I shall rest in knowing, loving,
rejoicing, and praising; when my perfect soul and body shall together
perfectly enjoy the most perfect God; when God, who is love itself,
shall perfectly love me, and rest in His love to me, and I shall rest
in my love to Him; when He shall rejoice over me with joy, and joy over
me with singing, and I shall rejoice in Him!--=Baxter.=


=March 18th.=

      _They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their
      strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles;
      they shall run, and not be weary, and they shall walk,
      and not faint. Isa. xl. 31._

The eagle that soars in the upper air does not worry itself as to how it
is to cross rivers.--_Selected._


=March 19th.=

      _Their eyes were holden. Luke xxiv. 16._

      _Their eyes were opened. Luke xxiv. 31._

There is much precious significance in this. The Lord is often present
in our lives in things that we do not dream possess any significance. We
are asking God about something which needs His mighty working, and the
very instrument by which He is to work is by our side, perhaps for weeks
and months and years all unrecognized, until suddenly, some day it grows
luminous and glorious with the very presence of the Lord, and becomes
the mighty instrument of His victorious working. He loves to show His
hand through the unexpected. Often he keeps us from seeing His way until
just before He opens it, and then, immediately that it is unfolded, we
find that He was walking by our side in the very thing, long before we
even suspected its meaning.--_A. B. Simpson._


=March 20th.=

      _All things work together for good to them that love
      God. Rom. viii. 28._

If our circumstances find us in God, we shall find God in all our
circumstances.--_Selected._


=March 21st.=

      _He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for His
      name's sake. Ps. xxiii. 3._

He always has a purpose in His leading. He knows where the bits of green
pasture are, and He would lead His flock to these. The way may be rough,
but it is the right way to the pasture. "Paths of righteousness" may not
be straight paths; but they are paths that lead somewhere--to the right
place. Many desert paths are illusive. They start out clear and plain,
but soon they are lost in the sands. They go nowhere. But the paths of
righteousness have a goal to which they unerringly lead.--_J. R.
Miller._


=March 22nd.=

      _And he said, O my Lord, send, I pray thee, by the
      hand of him whom thou wilt send. Ex. iv. 13._

It was a very grudging assent. It was as much as to say, "Since Thou art
determined to send me and I must undertake the mission, then let it be
so; but I would that it might have been another, and I go because I am
compelled." So often do we shrink back from the sacrifice or obligation
to which God calls us, that we think we are going to our doom. We seek
every reason for evading the divine will, little realizing that He is
forcing us out from our quiet homes into a career which includes, among
other things, the song of victory on the banks of the Red Sea; the two
lonely sojourns for forty days in converse with God; the shining face;
the vision of glory; the burial by the hand of Michael; and the supreme
honor of standing beside the Lord on the Transfiguration mount.--_F. B.
Meyer._


=March 23rd.=

      _See then that ye walk circumspectly. Eph. v. 15._

There is no such thing as negative influence. We are all positive in the
place we occupy, making the world better or making it worse.--_T. DeWitt
Talmage._


=March 24th.=

      _She took for him an ark of bulrushes . . . and she laid
      it in the flags by the river's brink. Ex. ii. 3._

The mother of Moses laid the ark in the flags by the river's brink. Ay,
but before doing so, she laid it on the heart of God! She could not have
laid it so courageously upon the Nile, if she had not first devoutly
laid it upon the care and love of God.

We are often surprised at the outward calmness of men who are called
upon to do unpleasant and most trying deeds; but could we have seen them
in secret, we should have known the moral preparation which they
underwent before coming out to be seen by men. Be right in the
sanctuary, if you would be right in the market-place. Be steadfast in
prayer, if you would be calm in affliction. Start your race from the
throne of God itself, if you would run well, and win the prize.--_Joseph
Parker._


=March 25th.=

      _Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law
      of Christ. Gal. vi. 2._

By lifting the burdens of others we lose our own.--_Selected._


=March 26th.=

      _I have finished the work which Thou gavest Me to do.
      John xvii. 4._

Was the work of the Master indeed done? Was not its heaviest task yet to
come? He had not yet met the dread hour of death. Why did He say that
His work was done? It was because He knew that, when the will is given,
the battle is ended. He was only in the shadows of the garden; but to
conquer these shadows was already to conquer all. He who has willed to
die has already triumphed over death. All that remains to Him is but the
outer husk, the shell.

The cup which our Father giveth us to drink is a cup for the will. It is
easy for the lips to drain it when once the heart has accepted it. Not
on the heights of Calvary, but in the shadows of Gethsemane is the cup
presented; the act is easy after the choice. The real battle-field is
in the silence of the spirit. Conquer there, and thou art
crowned.--_George Matheson._


=March 27th.=

      _A great multitude . . . stood before the throne. Rev.
      vii. 9._

A _station on the feet_ in front of the throne in _heaven_ is the effect
of being often _on the knees_ before the throne on _earth_.--_Selected._


=March 28th.=

      _God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided
      the light from the darkness. Gen. i. 4._

No sooner is there a good thing in the world than a _division is
necessary_. Light and darkness have no communion; God has divided them,
let us not confound them. Sons of light must not have fellowship with
deeds, doctrines, or deceits of darkness. The children of the day must
be sober, honest, and bold in their Lord's work, leaving the works of
darkness to those who shall dwell in it forever.

We should by our distinct separation from the world divide the light
from the darkness. In judgment, in action, in hearing, in teaching, in
association, we must discern between the precious and the vile, and
maintain the great distinction which the Lord made upon the world's
first day.

O Lord Jesus, be Thou our light throughout the whole of this day, for
Thy light is the light of men.--_Spurgeon._


=March 29th.=

      _The path of the just is as the shining light, that
      shineth more and more unto the perfect day. Prov. iv.
      18._

Have I begun this path of heavenly love and knowledge now? Am I
progressing in it? Do I feel some dawnings of the heavenly light,
earnests and antepasts of the full day of glory? Let all God's dealings
serve to quicken me in my way. Let every affection it may please Him to
send, be as the moving pillar-cloud of old, beckoning me to move my tent
onward, saying, "Arise ye and depart, for this is not your rest." Let me
be often standing now on faith's lofty eminences, looking for "the day
of God"--the rising sun which is to set no more in weeping clouds.
Wondrous progression! How will all earth's learning, its boasted
acquirements and eagle-eyed philosophy sink into the lispings of very
infancy in comparison with this manhood of knowledge! Heaven will be the
true "_Excelsior_," its song, "_a song of degrees_," Jesus leading His
people from height to height of glory, and saying, as He said to
Nathaniel, "_Thou shalt see GREATER things than these!_"--_Macduff._


=March 30th.=

      _Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the
      vineyards; for our vineyards are in blossom. Song of
      Sol. ii. 15. (R. V.)_

How numerous the little foxes are! Little compromises with the world;
disobedience to the still, small voice in little things; little
indulgences of the flesh to the neglect of duty; little strokes of
policy; doing evil in little things that good may come; and the beauty,
and the fruitfulness of the vine are sacrificed!--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=March 31st.=

      _The children of your Father which is in heaven. Matt.
      v. 45._

The best name by which we can think of God is Father. It is a loving,
deep, sweet, heart-touching name, for the name of father is in its
nature full of inborn sweetness and comfort. Therefore, also, we must
confess ourselves children of God, for by this name we deeply touch our
God, since there is not a sweeter sound to the father than the voice of
the child.--_Martin Luther._




[Illustration: APRIL]



=April 1st.=

      _In the morning came the word of the Lord unto me.
      Ezek. xii. 8._

A quiet hour spent alone with God at the beginning of the day is the
best beginning for the toils and cares of active business. A brief
season of prayer, looking above for wisdom and grace and strength, and
seeking for an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, helps us to carry our
religion into the business of the day. It brings joy and peace within
the heart. And as we place all our concerns in the care and keeping of
the Lord, faithfully striving to do His will, we have a joyful trust
that however dark or discouraging events may appear, our Father's hand
is guiding everything, and will give the wisest direction to all our
toils.--_Selected._


=April 2nd.=

      _The Lord God formed man out of the dust of the
      ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of
      life; and man became a living soul. Gen. ii. 7._

And so this soul of mine is a compound of two worlds--dust and deity! It
touches the boundary line of two hemispheres. It is allied on one side
to the divine; on the other, to the beast of the field. Its beginning is
from beneath, but its culmination is from above; it is started from the
dust of the ground, but it is finished in the breath of God.

My soul, art thou living up to thy twofold origin? Art thou remembering
thy double parentage, and therefore thy double duty? Thou hast a duty to
thy God, for His breath is in thee; thou hast a duty to the earth, for
out of it wast thou taken.--_George Matheson._


=April 3rd.=

      _Always rejoicing. 2 Cor. vi. 10._

No Christian can ever know what is meant by those two little words,
"always rejoicing," but the Christian who takes up his cross and follows
Jesus.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=April 4th.=

      _All the land which thou seest, to thee will I give
      it, and to thy seed forever. Gen. xiii. 15._

God's promises are ever on the ascending scale. One leads up to another,
fuller and more blessed than itself. In Mesopotamia God said, "I will
show thee the land." At Bethel, "This is the land." Here, "I will give
thee all the land, and children innumerable as the grains of sand." And
we shall find even these eclipsed.

It is thus that God allures us to saintliness. Not giving anything till
we have dared to act--that He may test us. Not giving everything at
first--that He may not overwhelm us. And always keeping in hand an
infinite reserve of blessing. Oh, the unexplored remainders of God!
Whoever saw His last star?--_F. B. Meyer._


=April 5th.=

      _That night they caught nothing. John xxi. 3._

God may let the sinful world succeed in their forbidden schemes, but,
blessed be His name, He does not allow His chosen ones to prosper in the
path which leads them out of His holy will! He has a storm to send after
every Jonah, and an empty net for every unbelieving and inconsistent
Simon.--_A. B. Simpson._


=April 6th.=

      _They made me keeper of the vineyards; but mine own
      vineyard have I not kept. Song of Sol. i. 6._

Our attention is here drawn to a danger which is preeminently one of
this day: the intense activity of our times may lead to zeal in service
_to the neglect of personal communion_; but such neglect will not only
lessen the value of the service, but tend to incapacitate us for the
highest service.--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=April 7th.=

      _We came unto the land whither thou sentest us . . . we
      saw the children of Anak there. Num. xiii. 27, 28._

It is when we are in the way of _duty_ that we find _giants_. It was
when Israel was going _forward_ that the giants appeared. When they
turned back into the wilderness they found none.--_Selected._


=April 8th.=

      _Each one resembled the children of a king. Judg.
      viii. 18._

Frances Ridley Havergal says: "If the King is indeed near of kin to us,
the royal likeness will be recognizable."


=April 9th.=

      _He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: He
      leadeth me beside the still waters. Psa. xxiii. 2._

This suggests the rest into which our Good Shepherd leads His flock.
Life is not all toil. God gives us many quiet resting-places in our
pilgrim way.

Night is one of these, when, after the day's toil, struggle, and
exhaustion, we are led aside, and the curtains are drawn to shut out the
noise, and He giveth His beloved sleep, in sleep giving the wonderful
blessings of renewal. The Sabbath is another of these quiet
resting-places. God would have us drop our worldly tasks, and have a day
for the refreshing of both body and soul. . . . Friendship's trysts are
also quiet resting-places, where heart may commune with heart, where
Jesus comes, too, unseen, and gives His blessing. All ordinances of
Christian worship--seasons of prayer and devotion, hours of communion
with God--are quiet resting-places.

Far more than we are apt to realize do we need these silent times in our
busy life, needing them all the more the busier the life may be.--_J. R.
Miller._


=April 10th.=

      _A daily rate for every day. 2 Kings xxv. 30._

One staff aids a traveler, but a bundle of staves is a heavy
burden.--_Spurgeon._


=April 11th.=

      _Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law
      of Christ. Gal. vi. 2._

However perplexed you may at any hour become about some question of
truth, one refuge and resource is always at hand: you can do something
for some one beside yourself. At the times when you cannot see God,
there is still open to you this sacred possibility, to _show_ God: for
it is the love and kindness of human hearts through which the divine
reality comes home to men, whether they name it or not. Let this
thought, then, stay with you: there may be times when you cannot _find_
help, but there is no time when you cannot _give_ help.--_George
Merriam._


=April 12th.=

      _Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling:
      for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to
      do of His good pleasure. Phil. ii. 12, 13._

It is not your business and mine to study whether we shall get to
heaven, or even to study whether we shall be good men; it is our
business to study how we shall come into the midst of the purposes of
God and have the unspeakable privilege in these few years of doing
something of His work.--_Phillips Brooks._


=April 13th.=

      _God . . . hath shined in our hearts, to give the light
      of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
      Jesus Christ. 2 Cor. iv. 6._

Christian! rest not until thou knowest the full, the unbroken shining of
God in thy heart. To this end, yield to every stirring of it that shows
thee some unconquered and perhaps unconquerable evil. Just bring it to
the light; let the light shine upon it, and shine it out. Wait upon the
Lord more than watchers for the morning, for "the path of the just is as
the shining light, shining more and more unto the perfect day." Count
upon it that God wants to fill thee with the light of His glory: wait on
Him more than watchers for the morning. "Wait, I say, on the
Lord."--_Andrew Murray._


=April 14th.=

      _My soul, wait thou only upon God. Psa. lxii. 5._

Did it ever occur to you that if you do not hear God's answer to prayer,
it may be not because He is dumb, but because you are deaf; not because
He has no answer to give, but because you have not been listening for
it? We are so busy with our service, so busy with our work, and
sometimes so busy with our praying, that it does not occur to us to stop
our own talking and listen if God has some answer to give us with "the
still small voice"; to be passive, to be quiet, to do nothing, say
nothing, in some true sense think nothing; simply to be receptive and
waiting for the voice. "Wait thou only upon God," says the Psalmist; and
again "Wait on the Lord."--_Selected._


=April 15th.=

      _Could ye not watch with me one hour? Matt. xxvi. 40._

        Oh! ye who sigh and languish, and mourn your lack of power,
        Heed ye this gentle whisper, "Could ye not watch one hour?"
        To fruitfulness and blessing, there is no "royal road";
        The power for holy service is intercourse with God.
                                                    --_Selected._


=April 16th.=

      _My meat is to do the will of Him that sent me. John
      iv. 34._

Seek your life's nourishment in your life's work.--_Phillips Brooks._


=April 17th.=

      _It is God which worketh in you, both to will and to
      do of His good pleasure. Phil. ii. 13._

Full salvation is to realize that everything we see in Christ, our
Example, may be ours, not by imitation, but by reproduction.--_Selected._


=April 18th.=

      _Lo, I am with you all the days. Matt, xxviii. 20. (R.
      V., margin.)_

"ALL THE DAYS"--in winter days, when joys are fled; in sunless days,
when the clouds return again and again after rain; in days of sickness
and pain; in days of temptation and perplexity, as much as in days when
the heart is as full of joy as the woodlands in spring are full of song.
That day never comes when the Lord Jesus is not at the side of His
saints. Lover and friend may stand afar, but He walks with them through
the fires; He fords with them the rivers; He stands by them when face to
face with the lion. We can never be alone. We must always add His
resources to our own when making our calculations.--_F. B. Meyer._


=April 19th.=

      _Having . . . boldness to enter into the holiest by the
      blood of Jesus . . . let us draw near with a true heart.
      Heb. x. 19, 22._

Oh, the glory of the message! For fifteen centuries Israel had a
sanctuary with a Holiest of All, into which, under pain of death, no one
might enter. Its one witness was: Man cannot dwell in God's presence;
cannot abide in His fellowship. And now how changed is all! As then the
warning sounded: "No admittance! enter not!" so now the call goes forth:
"Enter in! the veil is rent; the Holiest is open; God waits to welcome
you to His bosom; henceforth you are to live with Him." This is the
message. Child! thy Father longs for thee to enter, to dwell, and to go
out no more forever.--_Andrew Murray._


=April 20th.=

      _There stood by me this night the angel of God . . .
      saying, Fear not, Paul. . . . God hath given thee all
      them that sail with thee. Wherefore . . . be of good
      cheer: for I believe God, that it shall be even as it
      was told me. Acts xxvii. 23, 24, 25._

An active faith can give thanks for a promise, though it be not yet
performed; knowing that God's bonds are as good as ready
money.--_Matthew Henry._


=April 21st.=

      _In everything by prayer and supplication, with
      thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto
      God. Phil, iv. 6._

The natural temptation with every difficulty is to plan for it, to put
it out of the way yourself; but stop short with all your planning, your
thinking, your worry, and talk to Him! "Cast thy burden upon the Lord,
and He shall sustain thee." You may not always be able to do this in a
moment or two. Then keep on with supplication until you know He has it,
and prayer becomes praise. Rest, trust, and wait, and see how He does
that which you wanted to do, and had so much care about. "Stand still
and see the salvation of the Lord."--_A. E. Funk._


=April 22nd.=

      _They that wait upon the Lord shall . . . mount up with
      wings as eagles. Isa. xl. 31._

All creatures that have wings can escape from every snare that is set
for them, if only they will fly high enough; and the soul that uses its
wings can always find a sure "way to escape" from all that can hurt or
trouble it.--_Smith._


=April 23rd.=

      _Perfect love casteth out fear. 1 John iv. 18._

Fear and love rise up in antagonism to each other as motives in life,
like those two mountains from which respectively the blessings and
curses of the old law were pronounced--the Mount of Cursing all barren,
stony, without verdure and without water; the Mount of Blessing green
and bright with many a flower, and blessed with many a trickling rill.
Fear is barren. Love is fruitful. The one is a slave, and its work is
little worth. The other is free, and its deeds are great and precious.
From the blasted summit of the mountain which gendereth to bondage may
be heard the words of the law; but the power to keep all these laws must
be sought on the sunny hill where liberty dwells in love and gives
energy to obedience. Therefore, if you would use in your own life the
highest power that God has given us for our growth in grace, draw your
arguments, not from fear, but from love.--_Alex. McLaren._


=April 24th.=

      _The love of Christ constraineth us. 2 Cor. v. 14._

The love of Christ is too large for any heart to hold it. It will
overflow into others' hearts: it will give itself out, give itself away,
for the enriching of other lives. The heart of Christ is a costly thing
for any one to have. It will lead those who have it where it led Him. If
it cost Him the cross, it will cost them no less.--_J. M. Campbell._


=April 25th.=

      _I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand, saying
      unto thee, Fear not, I will help thee. Isa. xli. 13._

Don't try to hold God's hand; let Him hold yours. Let Him do the
_holding_, and you do the _trusting_.--_H. W. Webb Peploe._


=April 26th.=

      _Consider how great things He hath done for you. 1
      Sam. xii. 24._

Look back on all the way the Lord your God has led you. Do you not see
it dotted with ten thousand blessings in disguise? Call to mind the
needed succor sent at the critical moment; the right way chosen for you,
in stead of the wrong way you had chosen for yourself; the hurtful
thing to which your heart so fondly clung, removed out of your path; the
breathing-time granted, which your tried and struggling spirit just at
the moment needed. Oh, has not Jesus stood at your side when you knew it
not? Has not Infinite Love encircled every event with its everlasting
arms, and gilded every cloud with its merciful lining? Oh, retrace your
steps, and mark His footprint in each one! Thank Him for them all, and
learn the needed lesson of leaning more simply on Jesus.--_F.
Whitfield._


=April 27th.=

     _He . . . said . . . I . . . hid thy talent in the
     earth. . . . His Lord answered and said unto him, Thou
     wicked and slothful servant. Matt. xxv. 24-26._

Between the great things we cannot do and the small things we will not
do, the danger is that we shall do nothing.--_Monod._


=April 28th.=

      _To Him be glory both now and forever. 2 Pet. iii.
      18._

Believer, you are anticipating the time when you shall join the saints
above in ascribing all glory to Jesus; but are you glorifying Him _now_?
The apostle's words are, "To Him be glory both _now_ and forever."--_C.
H. Spurgeon._


=April 29th.=

      _Thou shall know that I am the Lord: for they shall
      not be ashamed that wait for me. Isa. xlix. 23._

J. Hudson Taylor says: "Quiet waiting before God could save from many a
mistake and from many a sorrow."


=April 30th.=

      _Be it unto thee even as thou wilt. Matt. xv. 28._

Oh, the victories of prayer! They are the mountain-tops of the Bible.
They take us back to the plains of Mamre, to the fords of Peniel, to
the prison of Joseph, to the triumphs of Moses, to the transcendent
victories of Joshua, to the deliverances of David, to the miracles of
Elijah and Elisha, to the whole story of the Master's life, to the
secret of Pentecost, to the key-note of Paul's unparalleled ministry, to
the lives of saints and the deaths of martyrs, to all that is most
sacred and sweet in the history of the Church and the experience of the
children of God. And when, for us, the last conflict shall have passed,
and the footstool of prayer shall have given place to the harp of
praise, the spots of time that shall be gilded with the most celestial
and eternal radiance, shall be those, often linked with deepest sorrow
and darkest night, over which we have the inscription, "Jehovah-Shammah:
The Lord was there!"--_A. B. Simpson._




[Illustration: MAY]


=May 1st.=

      _Thou art my God: early will I seek Thee. Psa. lxiii.
      1._

In a world where there is so much to ruffle the spirit's plumes, how
needful that entering into the secret of God's pavilion, which will
alone bring it back to composure and peace! In a world where there is so
much to sadden and depress, how blessed the communion with Him in whom
is the one true source and fountain of all true gladness and abiding
joy! In a world where so much is ever seeking to unhallow our spirits,
to render them common and profane, how high the privilege of
consecrating them anew in prayer to holiness and to God.--_Archbishop
Trench._


=May 2nd.=

      _In Him was life; and the life was the light of men.
      John i. 4. Ye are the light of the world. Matt. v.
      14._

In the light we can walk and work. We walk in the light and become
entirely children of light. We let our light, the light of God, shine,
so that men may see our good works, and glorify our Father in heaven.
Gently, silently, lovingly, unceasingly, we give ourselves to transmit
the light and the love God so unceasingly shines into us. Our one work
is to wait, and admit, and then transmit the light of God in
Christ.--_Andrew Murray._


=May 3d.=

      _Be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the
      work of the Lord. 1 Cor. xv. 58._

Activity in doing good is one recipe for being cheerful Christians; it
is like exercise to the body, and it keeps the soul in health.--_Bishop
Ryle._


=May 4th.=

      _Looking up to heaven He sighed. Mark vii. 34._

Too often we sigh and look within; Jesus sighed and looked without. We
sigh, and look down; Jesus sighed, and looked up. We sigh, and look to
earth; Jesus sighed, and looked to heaven. We sigh, and look to man;
Jesus sighed, and looked to God.--_Stork._


=May 5th.=

      _We glory in tribulations. Rom. v. 3._

Have you ever thought that some day you will never have anything to try
you or anybody to vex you again?--_A. B. Simpson._


=May 6th.=

      _Set your affection on things above, not on things on
      the earth. Col. iii. 2._

He who has his affections set on things above is like one who hangs on
by the skies; and, having a secure hold of these, could say, though he
saw the world roll away from beneath his feet, "My heart is fixed; my
heart is fixed; O Lord, I will sing and give praise!"--_Guthrie._


=May 7th.=

      _The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon.
      Luke xxiv. 34._

      _They . . . gladly received (Peter's) word; and the
      same day there were added unto them about three
      thousand souls. Acts ii. 41._

Before the Lord can use us in His service we must have close individual
dealing with Himself. He always will have to do in _secret_ with that
soul that He intends to use in blessing others.

Do you want to speak for Jesus to those around you? Then you must go to
Jesus Himself for your message. What you say _for_ Jesus must be got
_from_ Jesus.

Oh, how much breath falls powerless on every side because it has not
been inhaled in the sanctuary! We want more secret dealing with the
living God. We run without being sent: we speak before God has spoken to
us: no wonder we so often fail. Oh, what secret prayer and what
heart-searching discipline the heart needs before God can use it!--_F.
Whitfield._


=May 8th.=

      _The righteous eateth to the satisfying of his soul.
      Prov. xiii. 25._

Christ must satisfy; then, if we are not satisfied, it must be because
we are not feeding on Him wholly and only. The fault is not in the
provision which is made.--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=May 9th.=

      _Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth. Heb. xii. 6._

It has been well said that "earthly cares are a heavenly discipline,"
but they are even something better than discipline; they are God's
chariots, sent to take the soul to its high places of triumph. In the
Canticles we are told of "a chariot paved with love." We cannot always
see the love lining to our own particular chariot--it often looks very
unlovely; but every chariot sent by God must necessarily be paved with
love, since God is love. It is His love, indeed, that sends the chariot.

Look upon your chastenings, then, no matter how grievous they may be for
the present, as God's chariots, sent to carry your souls into the "high
places" of spiritual achievement and uplifting, and you will find that
they are, after all, "paved with love."--_Smith._


=May 10th.=

      _The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from
      all sin. 1 John i. 7._

Learn a lesson from the eye of the miner, who all day long is working
amid the flying coal dust. When he emerges in the light of day his face
may be grimy enough; but his eyes are clear and lustrous, because the
fountain of tears in the lachrymal gland is ever pouring its gentle
tides over the eye, cleansing away each speck of dust as soon as it
alights.

Is not this the miracle of cleansing which our spirits need in such a
world as this? And this is what our blessed Lord is prepared to do for
us by His cleansing blood, if only we will trust Him.--_F. B. Meyer._


=May 11th.=

      _Whatsoever He sayeth unto you, do it. John ii. 5._

Florence Nightingale said: "If I could give you information of my life,
it would be to show how a woman of very ordinary ability has been led by
God in strange and unaccustomed paths to do in His service what He has
done in her. And if I could tell you all, you would see how God has done
all, and I nothing. I have worked hard, very hard, that is all; and I
have never refused God anything."


=May 12th.=

      _I know how to abound. Phil. iv. 12._

It is a dangerous thing to be prosperous. The crucible of adversity is
a less severe trial to the Christian than the refining-pot of
prosperity. It needs more than human skill to carry the brimming cup of
mortal joy with a steady hand; yet Paul had learned that skill, for he
declares, "In all things I am instructed both to be full and to be
hungry." When we have much of God's providential mercies it often
happens that we have but little of God's grace; satisfied with earth, we
are content to do without heaven. Rest assured, it is harder to know how
to be full than it is to know how to be hungry, so desperate is the
tendency of human nature to pride and forgetfulness of God. Take care
that you ask in your prayers that God would teach you "how to be
full."--_Spurgeon._


=May 13th.=

      _Whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased; and he
      that humbleth himself shall be exalted. Luke xiv. 11._

. . . If you ask the way to the crown--'tis by the cross; to the
mountain--'tis by the valley; to exaltation 'tis he that humbleth
himself.--_J. H. Evans._


=May 14th.=

      _For their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also
      might be sanctified through the truth. John xvii. 19._

Do you remember, when Jesus was sitting with His disciples at the last
supper, how He lifted up His voice and prayed, and in the midst of His
prayer there came these wondrous words: "For their sakes I sanctify
myself, that they also might be sanctified"? Is there anything in all
the teachings that man has had from the lips of God that is nobler, that
is more far-reaching than that--to be my best not simply for my own
sake, but for the sake of the world? You can help your fellow-men--you
must help your fellow-men; but the only way you can help them is by
being the noblest and the best man that it is possible for you to
be.--_Phillips Brooks._


=May 15th.=

      _He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty;
      and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a
      city. Prov. xvi. 32._

More dear in the sight of God and His angels than any other conquest is
the conquest of self, which each man, with the help of heaven, can
secure for himself.--_Dean Stanley._


=May 16th.=

      _For this child I prayed, and the Lord hath given me
      my petition which I asked of Him: therefore also I
      have lent him to the Lord; as long as he liveth he
      shall be lent to the Lord. 1 Sam. i. 27, 28._

God sometimes bestows gifts just that love may have something to
renounce. The things that He puts into our hands are possibly put there
that we may have the opportunity of showing what is in our heart. Oh,
that there were in us a fervor of love that would lead us to examine
everything that belongs to us, to ascertain how it might be made a means
of showing our affection to Christ!--_George Bowen._


=May 17th.=

      _Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His
      righteousness, and all these things shall be added
      unto you. Matt. vi. 33._

We need have only one care, that we put the first thing
first--faithfulness to God. Then all else we need for both worlds will
be supplied. God will never fail us; but we forget, sometimes, in our
rejoicing over such an assurance, that we must fulfil our part if we
would claim the divine promise.

It will not always be easy. To-morrow it may mean a distasteful task, a
disagreeable duty, a costly sacrifice for one who does not seem worthy.
Life is full of sore testings of our willingness to follow the Good
Shepherd. We have not the slightest right to claim this assurance unless
we have taken Christ as the guide of our life.--_J. R. Miller._


=May 18th.=

      _His praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psa.
      xxxiv. 1._

Let not thy praises be transient--a fit of music, and then the
instrument hung by the wall till another gaudy day of some remarkable
providence makes thee take it down. God comes not guestwise to His
saints' house, but to dwell with them. David took this up for a life
work: "As long as I live, I will praise thee."--_Gurnall._


=May 19th.=

      _I am not able to bear all this people alone, because
      it is too heavy for me. Num. xi. 14._

It is most needful for all servants of Christ to remember that whenever
the Lord places a man in a position of responsibility, He will both fit
him for it and maintain him in it.

It is, of course, another thing altogether if a man will rush unsent
into any field of work, or any post of difficulty or danger. In such a
case we may assuredly look for a thorough breakdown, sooner or later.
But when God calls a man to a certain position, He will endow him with
the needed grace to occupy it.

This holds good in every case. We can never fail if we only cling to the
living God. We can never run dry if we are drawing from the fountain.
Our tiny springs will soon dry up; but our Lord Jesus Christ declares,
"He that believeth in Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly
shall flow rivers of living water."--_C. H. M._


=May 20th.=

      _Then said I, Woe is me, for I am undone: because I am
      a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a
      people of unclean lips; for mine eyes have seen the
      King, the Lord of hosts. Isa. vi. 5._

It is not the sight of our sinful heart that humbles us; it is a sight
of Jesus Christ. I am undone because mine eyes have seen the
King.--_Andrew A. Bonar._


=May 21st.=

      _While I was musing the fire burned. Psa. xxxix. 3._

My soul, if thou wouldst muse more, the fire would burn more. Why dost
thou not retire oftener with thyself? Thou wouldst be better fitted for
the world if thou wert less worldly. If thou hadst more heavenly fire
thou wouldst have more earthly power.

Is there no secret pavilion into which thou canst go and warm thyself?
Is there no holy of holies where thou canst catch a glow of impulse that
will make thee strong? Is it not written of the Son of Man that "as He
_prayed_ the fashion of His countenance was altered"? Yes; it was from
His prayer that His transfigured glory came. It was from the glow of His
heart that there issued the glow of His countenance. It was when He was
musing that the fire kindled.

O my soul, wouldst thou have thy life glorified, beautified,
transfigured to the eyes of men? Get thee up into the secret place of
God's pavilion, where the fires of love are burning. Thy life shall
shine gloriously to the dwellers on the plain. Thy prayers shall be
luminous; they shall light thy face like the face of Moses when he wist
not that it shone. Thy words shall be burning; they will kindle many a
heart journeying on the road to Emmaus. Thy path shall be lambent; when
thou hast prayed in Elijah's solitude thou shalt have Elijah's chariot
of fire.--_George Matheson._


=May 22nd.=

      _Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these
      little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a
      disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in nowise
      lose his reward. Matt. x. 42._

We are in danger of looking too far for opportunities of doing good and
communicating. In reaching for rhododendrons we trample down the
daisies.--_Selected._


=May 23rd.=

      _Hide thyself by the brook. 1 Kings xvii. 3._

Not by the _river_, but by the _brook_. The river would always contain
an abundant supply, but the brook might dry up at any moment.

What does this teach us? God does not place His people in luxuriance
here. The world's abundance might withdraw their affections from Him. He
gives them not the river, but the brook. The brook may be running
to-day, to-morrow it may be dried up.

And wherefore does God act thus? To teach us that we are not to rest in
His gifts and blessings, but in Himself. This is what our hearts are
always doing--resting in the gift, instead of the Giver. Therefore God
cannot trust us by the river, for it unconsciously takes up His place in
the heart. It is said of Israel that when they were full they forgot
God.--_F. Whitfield._


=May 24th.=

      _His kingdom ruleth over all. Psa. ciii. 19._

_His kingdom ruleth over all_--therefore thou canst find nothing which
is not matter for praise, since there is nothing which is not the matter
of thy Lord's gracious permission, or planning, or control. _Over
all_--nowhere canst thou step outside His realm, nor in anything get
beyond His care and government. _Over all_--therefore take all as from
God; hold all as from God; and by thy gratitude give all back to God
again, and thus complete the circle, making Him the Alpha and Omega, the
Beginning and the Ending of all things.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=May 25th.=

      _If we suffer we shall also reign with Him. 2 Tim. ii.
      12._

The highest bidder for the crown of glory is the lowliest wearer of the
cross of self-denial.--_A. J. Gordon._


=May 26th.=

      _Keep thy heart with all diligence: for out of it are
      the issues of life. Prov. iv. 23._

He who would keep his heart pure and holy, must plant a sentinel at
every avenue by which sin may find access there, guarding against none
more than the "little" sins, as they are called.

The man of God has his _eyes_ to keep, and so Job said, "I have made a
covenant with mine eyes"--his _tongue_, and hence the exhortation, "Keep
thy tongue from evil, and thy lips from speaking guile"--his _ears_, and
hence the warning, "Cease, my son, to hear the instruction that causeth
to err"--his _feet_, and hence David says, "I have refrained my feet
from every evil way, that I might keep Thy word." And since there is no
gate of the five senses by which the enemy may not come in like a flood,
unless the Spirit lift up a standard against him, we have need to guard
every port, and write over every portal, "Here there entereth nothing to
hurt or to defile."--_Guthrie._


=May 27th.=

      _Whatsoever ye do, . . . do all in the name of the Lord
      Jesus. Col. iii. 17._

Do little things as if they were great, because of the majesty of the
Lord Jesus Christ, who dwells in thee; and do great things as if they
were little and easy, because of His omnipotence.--_Pascal._


=May 28th.=

      _Him they compelled to bear His cross. Matt. xxvii.
      32._

There are many Christians of whom this is true. They are compelled to
bear the cross, but how does it come? It comes by their running away
from it. They make up their minds they won't have Christ's cross; and
they find when the cross does come that it comes in a more terrible
form, with a more crushing weight than ever it would have come had they
only been content to submit themselves to the divine direction; for the
cross has to come to all who are to be prepared for glory
hereafter.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=May 29th.=

      _Our Lord Jesus Christ . . . gave Himself for our sins
      that He might deliver us from this present evil world.
      Gal. i. 4._

Attachment to Christ is the only secret of detachment from the
world.--_A. J. Gordon._


=May 30th.=

      _Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on
      an hill cannot be hid. Matt. v. 14._

Lamps do not talk, but they do shine. A lighthouse sounds no drum, it
beats no gong; and yet far over the waters its friendly spark is seen by
the mariner. So let your actions shine out your religion. Let the main
sermon of your life be illustrated by all your conduct.--_Spurgeon._


=May 31st.=

      _Without me ye can do nothing. John xv. 5._

      _I can do all things, through Christ which
      strengtheneth me. Phil. iv. 13._

Apart from Him we can do nothing. Whilst we are abiding in Him nothing
is impossible. The one purpose of our life should therefore be to remain
in living and intense union with Christ, guarding against everything
that would break it, employing every means of cementing and enlarging
it. And just in proportion as we do so, we shall find His strength
flowing into us for every possible emergency. We may not feel its
presence; but we shall find it present whenever we begin to draw on it.
There is no temptation which we cannot master; no privation which we
cannot patiently bear; no difficulty with which we cannot cope; no work
which we cannot perform; no confession or testimony which we cannot
make, if only our souls are living in healthy union with Jesus Christ;
for as our day or hour, so shall our strength be.--_F. B. Meyer._




[Illustration: JUNE]


=June 1st.=

      _As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. John
      xx. 21._

We should never leave our room until we have seen the face of our dear
Master, Christ, and have realized that we are being sent forth by Him to
do His will, and to finish the work which He has given us to do. He who
said to His immediate followers, "As my Father hath sent me, even so
send I you," says as much to each one of us, as the dawn summons us to
live another day. We should realize that we are as much sent forth by
Him as the angels who "do His commandments, hearkening unto the voice of
His word." There is some plan for each day's work, which He will unfold
to us, if only we will look up to Him to do so; some mission to fulfil;
some ministry to perform; some lesson patiently to learn, that we may be
able to "reach others also." As to our plans we need not be anxious;
because He who sends us forth is responsible to make the plan, according
to His infinite wisdom; and to reveal it to us, however dull and stupid
our faculties may be. And as to our sufficiency, we are secure of having
all needful grace; because He never sends us forth, except He first
breathes on us and says, "Receive ye the Holy Ghost." There is always a
special endowment for special power.--_F. B. Meyer._


=June 2nd.=

      _A fountain . . . for sin and for uncleanness. Zech.
      xiii. 1._

You that have faith in the Fountain, _frequent it_. Beware of two errors
which are very natural and very disastrous. Beware of thinking any sin
too great for it; beware of thinking any sin too small. There is not a
sin so little, but it may be the germ of everlasting perdition; there is
not a sin so enormous, but a drop of atoning blood will wash it away as
utterly as if it were drowned in the depths of the sea.--_James
Hamilton._


=June 3rd.=

      _I am black . . . as the tents of Kedar. Song of Sol. i.
      5._

      _I am my beloved's, and his desire is toward me. Song
      of Sol. vii. 10._

Nothing humbles the soul like sacred and intimate communion with the
Lord; yet there is a sweet joy in feeling that _He_ knows _all_, and,
notwithstanding, loves us still.--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=June 4th.=

      _David enquired of the Lord. 2 Sam. v. 19._

Christian, if thou wouldst know the path of duty, take God for thy
compass; if thou wouldst steer thy ship through the dark billows, put
the tiller into the hand of the Almighty. Many a rock might be escaped
if we would let our Father take the helm; many a shoal or quicksand we
might well avoid if we would leave it to His sovereign will to choose
and to command. The Puritan said, "As sure as ever a Christian carves
for himself he'll cut his own fingers." "I will instruct thee and teach
thee in the way which thou shalt go," is God's promise to His people.
Let us, then, take all our perplexities to Him and say, "Lord, what wilt
thou have me to do?" Leave not thy chamber this morning without
_enquiring of the Lord_.--_Spurgeon._


=June 5th.=

      _A certain man . . . who never had walked . . . heard
      Paul speak: who . . . perceiving that he had faith to
      be healed, said . . . Stand upright on thy feet. And he
      leaped and walked. Acts xiv. 8, 9, 10._

Where true faith is, it will induce obedience and where it does induce
obedience, it will always, in one form or another, bring a
blessing.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=June 6th.=

      _Then said Martha unto Jesus, Lord . . . I know that
      . . . whatsoever thou wilt ask of God, God will give it
      thee. Jesus saith unto her, Thy brother shall rise
      again. Martha saith unto Him, I know that he shall
      rise again in the resurrection at the last day. John
      xi. 21, 22, 23, 24._

Beware, in your prayer, above everything, of limiting God, not only by
unbelief, but by fancying that you know what He can do. Expect
unexpected things, _above all that_ we ask or think. Each time you
intercede, be quiet first and worship God in His glory. Think of what He
can do, of how He delights to hear Christ, of your place in Christ; and
expect great things.--_Andrew Murray._


=June 7th.=

      _As many of you as have been baptized into Christ have
      put on Christ. Gal. iii. 27._

Not simply the righteousness of our Savior, not simply the beauty of His
holiness or the graces of His character, are we to put on as a garment.
The Lord Himself is our vesture. Every Christian is not only a
Christ-bearer but a Christ-wearer. We are so to enter into Him by
communion, to be so endued with His presence, and embued with His Spirit
that men shall see Him when they behold us, as they see our garments
when they look upon our bodies.--=A. J. Gordon.=


=June 8th.=

      _Thou shalt never wash my feet. John xiii. 8._

Whatever hinders us from receiving a blessing that God is willing to
bestow upon us is not humility, but the mockery of it. A genuine
humility will ever feel the need of the largest measures of grace, and
will be perfected just in the degree in which that grace is bestowed.
The truly humble man will seek to be filled with all the fulness of God,
knowing that when so filled there is not the slightest place for pride
or for self.--_George Bowen._


=June 9th.=

      _Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and He shall sustain
      thee. Psa. lv. 22._

He that taketh his own cares upon himself loads himself with an uneasy
burden. The fear of what _may_ come, expectation of what _will_ come,
desire of what will _not_ come, and the inability to redress all these,
must needs bring him continual torment. _I_ will cast my cares upon
_God_: He hath bidden me. They cannot hurt Him: He can redress
them.--_Hall._


=June 10th.=

     _Well done, good and faithful servant. . . . Thou
     wicked and slothful servant. Matt. xxv. 21, 26._

God holds us responsible not for what we _have_, but for what we _might
have_; not for what we _are_, but for what we _might_ be.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._


=June 11th.=

      _Jesus constrained His disciples to get into a ship.
      Matt. xiv. 22._

Jesus _constrained_ them to go! One would think that if ever there was
the certain promise of success in a mission, it was here. Surely, here,
if anywhere, a triumphant issue might have been confidently predicted;
and yet here, more than anywhere, there was seeming failure. He sent
them out on a voyage, and they met such a storm as they had never yet
experienced.

Let me ponder this, for it has been so with me, too. I have sometimes
felt myself impelled to act by an influence which seemed above
me--constrained to put to sea. The belief that I was constrained gave me
confidence, and I was sure of a calm voyage. But the result was outward
failure. The calm became a storm; the sea raged, the winds roared, the
ship tossed in the midst of the waves, and my enterprise was wrecked ere
it could reach the land.

Was, then, my divine command a delusion?

Nay; nor yet was my mission a failure. He did send me on that voyage,
but He did not send me for _my_ purpose. He had one end and I had
another. My end was the outward calm; His was my meeting with the storm.
My end was to gain the harbor of a material rest; His was to teach me
there is a rest even on the open sea.--_George Matheson._


=June 12th.=

      _Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman
      that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the
      word of truth. 2 Tim. ii. 15._

Have thy tools ready; God will find thee work.--_Charles Kingsley._


=June 13th.=

      _Come out from among them, and be ye separate. 2 Cor.
      vi. 17._

With all the world in his choice, God placed His ancient people in a
very remarkable situation. On the north they were walled in by the snowy
ranges of Lebanon; a barren desert formed their eastern boundary; far to
the south stretched a sterile region, called the howling wilderness;
while the sea--not then, as now, the highway of the nations,
facilitating rather than impeding intercourse--lay on their west,
breaking on a shore that had few harbors and no navigable rivers to
invite the steps of commerce.

May we not find a great truth in the very position in which God placed
His chosen people? It certainly teaches us that to be holy, or
sanctified, we must be a separate people--living in the world, but not
of it--as oil, that may be mixed, but cannot be combined with
water.--_Guthrie._


=June 14th.=

      _I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places
      whither thou goest, and will bring thee again into
      this land. Gen. xxviii. 15._

"With thee," companionship; "Keep thee," guardianship; "Bring thee,"
guidance.


=June 15th.=

      _I have set thee . . . that thou shouldst be for
      salvation unto the ends of the earth. Acts xiii. 47._

      _Ye shall be witnesses unto me . . . unto the uttermost
      parts of the earth. Acts i. 8._

Men are questioning now, as they never have questioned before, whether
Christianity is, indeed, the true religion which is to be the salvation
of the world. Christian men, it is for us to give our bit of answer to
that question. It is for us, in whom the Christian church is at this
moment partially embodied, to declare that Christianity, that the
Christian faith, the Christian manhood can do that for the world which
the world needs.

You ask, "What can I do?"

You can furnish one Christian life. You can furnish a life so faithful
to every duty, so ready for every service, so determined not to commit
every sin, that the great Christian church shall be the stronger for
your living in it, and the problem of the world be answered, and a
certain great peace come into this poor, perplexed, phase of our
humanity as it sees that new revelation of what Christianity
is.--_Phillips Brooks._


=June 16th.=

      _I know whom I have believed. 2 Tim. i. 12._

Personal acquaintance with Christ is a living thing. Like a tree that
uses every hour for growth, it thrives in sunshine, it is refreshed by
rain--even the storm drives it to fasten its grip more firmly in the
earth for its support. So, troubled heart, in all experience, say, "This
comes that I may make closer acquaintance with my Lord."--_Selected._


=June 17th.=

      _Wait for the promise of the Father. Acts i. 4._

      _When the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were
      all with one accord in one place . . . and they were
      all filled with the Holy Ghost. Acts ii. 1, 4._

Obedience to a divine prompting transforms it into a permanent
acquisition.--_F. B. Meyer._


=June 18th.=

      _We have known and believed the love that God hath to
      us. 1 John iv. 16._

The secret of walking closely with Christ, and working successfully for
Him, is to fully realize that we are His beloved. Let us but feel that
He has set His heart upon us, that He is watching us from those heavens
with tender interest, that He is working out the mystery of our lives
with solicitude and fondness, that He is following us day by day as a
mother follows her babe in his first attempt to walk alone, that He has
set His love upon us, and, in spite of ourselves, is working out for us
His highest will and blessing, as far as we will let Him, and then
nothing can discourage us. Our hearts will glow with responsive love.
Our faith will spring to meet His mighty promises, and our sacrifices
shall become the very luxuries of love for one so dear. This was the
secret of John's spirit. "We have known and believed the love that God
hath to us." And the heart that has fully learned this has found the
secret of unbounded faith and enthusiastic service.--_A. B. Simpson._


=June 19th.=

      _Endure . . . as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. 2 Tim.
      ii. 3._

Life is not victory, but battle. Be patient a little longer. By and by,
each in his turn, we shall hear the sunset gun.--_Selected._


=June 20th.=

      _Whosoever doth not bear his cross and come after me,
      cannot be my disciple. Luke xiv. 27._

There is always the shadow of the cross resting upon the Christian's
path. Is that a reason why you should avoid or not undertake the duty?
Have you made up your mind that you will follow your Master everywhere
else, save when he ascends the path that leads to the cross? Is that
your religion? The sooner you change it, the better. The religion of the
Lord Jesus Christ is the religion of the cross, and unless we take up
our cross, we can never follow Him.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=June 21st.=

      _These . . . have turned the world upside down. Acts
      xvii. 6._

The serene beauty of a holy life is the most powerful influence in the
world next to the might of God.--_Pascal._


=June 22nd.=

      _What I do thou knowest not now; but thou shalt know
      hereafter. John xiii. 7._

God keeps a school for His children here on earth and one of His best
teachers is Disappointment. My friend, when you and I reach our Father's
house, we shall look back and see that the sharp-voiced, rough; visaged
teacher, Disappointment, was one of the best guides to train us for it.
He gave us hard lessons; he often used the rod; he often led us into
thorny paths; he sometimes stripped off a load of luxuries; but that
only made us travel the freer and the faster on our heavenward way. He
sometimes led us down into the valley of the death-shadow; but never did
the promises read so sweetly as when spelled out by the eye of faith in
that very valley. Nowhere did he lead us so often, or teach us such
sacred lessons, as at the cross of Christ. Dear, old, rough-handed
teacher! We will build a monument to thee yet, and crown it with
garlands, and inscribe on it: _Blessed be the memory of
Disappointment!_--_Theodore Cuyler._


=June 23rd.=

      _As thy days, so shall thy strength be. Deut. xxxiii.
      25._

      _I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth
      me. Phil. iv. 13._

He will not impose upon you one needless burden. He will not exact more
than He knows your strength will bear. He will ask no Peter to come to
Him on the water, unless He impart at the same time strength and support
on the unstable waves. He will not ask you to draw water if the well is
too deep, or to withdraw the stone if too heavy. But neither at the
same time will He admit as an impossibility that which, as a free and
responsible agent, it is in your power to avert. He will not regard as
your misfortune what is your crime.--_Macduff._


=June 24th.=

      _Thy heart is not right in the sight of God. Acts
      viii. 21._

The worst of all mockeries is a religion that leaves the heart
unchanged: a religion that has _everything_ but the love of Christ
enshrined in the soul.--_F. Whitfield._


=June 25th.=

      _The Holy Ghost said, Separate me Barnabas and Saul
      for the work whereunto I have called them. Acts xiii.
      2._

We have such a nice little quiet, shady corner in the vineyard, down
among the tender grapes, with such easy little weedings and waterings to
attend to. And then the Master comes and draws us out into the thick of
the work, and puts us in a part of the field where we never should have
thought of going, and puts larger tools into our hands, that we may do
more at a stroke. And we know we are not sufficient for these things,
and the very tools seem too heavy for us, and the glare too dazzling and
the vines too tall. Ah! but would we dally, go back? He would not be in
the shady corner with us now; for when He put us forth He went before
us, and it is only by closer following that we can abide with
Him.--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=June 26th.=

      _Small things. Zech. iv. 10._

It is the little words you speak, the little thoughts you think, the
little things you do or leave undone, the little moments you waste or
use wisely, the little temptations which you yield to or overcome--the
little things of every day that are making or marring your future
life.--_Selected._


=June 27th.=

      _Be perfect, be of good comfort. 2 Cor. xiii. 11._

A glance at the words is enough to make us feel how contradictory they
are. _Be perfect_--that is a word that strikes us with despair; at once
we feel how far away we are from our own poor ideal, and alas! how much
further from God's ideal concerning us. _Be of good comfort_--ah, that
is very different! That seems to say, "Do not fret; do not fear. If you
are not what you would be, you must be thankful for what you are."

Now the question is this--How can these two be reconciled?

It is only the religion of Jesus Christ that reconciles them. He stands
in our midst, and with the right hand of His righteousness He pointeth
us upward, and saith, "Be perfect." There is no resting-place short of
that. Yet with the left hand of His love He doth encompass us, as He
saith, "Soul, be of good comfort; for that is what I came to do for
thee."--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=June 28th.=

      _Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is
      in heaven is perfect. Matt. v. 48._

Seeking the aid of the Holy Spirit, let us aim at perfection. Let every
day see some sin crucified, some battle fought, some good done, some
victory won; let every fall be followed by a rise, and every step gained
become, not a resting-place, but a new starting-point for further and
higher progress.--_Guthrie._


=June 29th.=

      _Sleep on now, and take your rest. Mark xiv. 41._

Never did that sacred opportunity to watch with Christ return to His
disciples. Lost then, it was lost forever. And now when Jesus is still
beholding the travail of His soul in the redemption of the world, if you
fail to be with Him watching for souls as they that must give account,
remember that the opportunity will never return. "Watch, therefore,"
says your Lord, "lest coming suddenly, He may find you sleeping."--_A.
J. Gordon._


=June 30th.=

      _Let us not sleep, as do others. 1 Thess. v. 6._

There are many ways of promoting Christian wakefulness. Among the rest,
let me strongly advise Christians to converse together concerning the
ways of the Lord. Christian and Hopeful, as they journeyed towards the
Celestial City, said to themselves:

"To prevent drowsiness in this place, let us fall into good discourse."

Christians who isolate themselves and walk alone are very liable to grow
drowsy. Hold Christian company, and you will be kept wakeful by it, and
refreshed and encouraged to make quicker progress in the road to
heaven.--_Spurgeon._




[Illustration: JULY]


=July 1st.=

      _He laid His right hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear
      not. Rev. i. 17._

One of Wellington's officers, when commanded to go on some perilous
duty, lingered a moment as if afraid, and then said:

"Let me have one clasp of your all-conquering hand before I go; and then
I can do it."

Seek the clasp of Christ's hand before every bit of work, every hard
task, every battle, every good deed. Bend your head in the dewy
freshness of every morning, ere you go forth to meet the day's duties
and perils, and wait for the benediction of Christ, as He lays His hands
upon you. They are hands of blessing. Their touch will inspire you for
courage and strength and all beautiful and noble living.--_J. R.
Miller._


=July 2nd.=

      _Being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the
      things pertaining to the kingdom of God. Acts i. 3._

This lingering for forty days is the crowning proof of Christ's tender
regard for His little flock. He who had laid down His life for them is
loath to leave them. Though they had forsaken Him, and doubted Him, they
had not wearied, much less had they worn out, His love. He stays to look
again, and yet again, and yet again, upon them, as if turning back and
lingering to bless them. It is all of a piece with His life of love.
Everywhere He meets them without a touch of upbraiding, without
recalling a single memory of all His bitter suffering, revealing Himself
to the disciples with a tenderness and blessedness indescribably
beautiful.

How can He go till He has healed the Magdalene's broken heart? He must
linger till poor Peter can venture near to have his forgiveness assured.
He must stay to strengthen Thomas' faith. He must tarry with them till
He has made them feel that He is just the same friendly, brotherly Jesus
that He has ever been, caring for them in their work, watching them with
a yearning pity, stooping to kindle a fire for their warmth, and to cook
the fish for their meal, and then to bid them come and dine.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._


=July 3rd.=

      _Jesus, . . . being wearied with His journey, sat thus
      on the well. . . . (For His disciples were gone away unto
      the city to buy meat.) . . . And many of the Samaritans
      of that city believed on Him for the saying of the
      woman, which testified, He told me all that ever I
      did. John iv. 6, 8, 39._

The bits of wayside work are very sweet. Perhaps the odd bits, when
all is done, will really come to more than the seemingly greater
pieces! . . . It is nice to know that the King's servants are always
really on duty, even while some can only stand and wait.--_Frances
Ridley Havergal._


=July 4th.=

      _Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you . . .
      let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be
      afraid. John xiv. 27._

Dark hours come to us all; and if we have no clew to a peace that can
pass unbroken through their murky gloom, we shall be in a state of
continual dread. Any stone flung by a chance passer-by may break the
crystal clearness of the Lake of Peace and send disturbing ripples
across it, unless we have learnt to trust in the perpetual presence of
Him who can make and keep a "great calm" within the soul. Only let
nothing come to you which you shall not instantly hand over to Him--all
petty worries, all crushing difficulties, all inability to believe.--_F.
B. Meyer._


=July 5th.=

      _Isaac dwelt by the well Lahai-roi. Gen. xxv. 11._

Isaac dwelt there, and made the well of the living and all-seeing God
his constant source of supply. The usual tenor of a man's life, the
_dwelling_ of his soul, is the true test of his state. Let us learn to
live in the presence of the living God. Let us pray the Holy Spirit that
this day, and every other day, we may feel, "Thou God seest me." May the
Lord Jehovah be as a well to us, delightful, comforting, unfailing,
springing up unto eternal life. The bottle of the creature cracks and
dries up, but the well of the Creator never fails. Happy is he who
dwells at the well, and so has abundant and constant supplies near at
hand! Glorious Lord, constrain us that we may never leave Thee, but
dwell by the well of the living God!--_Spurgeon._


=July 6th.=

      _Judas Iscariot . . . was a thief, and had the bag, and
      bore what was put therein. John xii. 4, 6._

      _Freely ye have received, freely give. Matt. x. 8._

Ah, but if we should go thoroughly into this matter, should we not
probably find that many of us are guilty, in some modified and yet
sufficiently alarming sense, of treachery to the poor? Are we not, some
of us, sent to them with benefactions which never reach them, and are
only unconscious of guilt because so long accustomed to look upon the
goods as bestowed on us, whereas the light of God's word would plainly
reveal upon those goods the names of the poor and needy?--_George
Bowen._


=July 7th.=

      _Let every man take heed how he buildeth. 1 Cor. iii.
      10._

Our business is not to build quickly, but to build upon a right
foundation, and in a right spirit. Life is more than a mere competition
as between man and man; it is not who can be done first, but who can
work best; it is not who can rise highest in the shortest time, but who
is working most patiently and lovingly in accordance with the designs of
God.--_Joseph Parker._


=July 8th.=

      _As thy days, so shall thy strength be. Deut. xxxiii.
      25._

No day without its duty; no duty without strength to perform
it.--_Selected._


=July 9th.=

      _Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not.
      Gen. xxviii. 16._

"Surely the Lord was in this place, and I knew it not." My soul, this is
also thine experience! How often hast thou said in thy sorrow, "Verily
thou art a God that hidest Thyself!" How often hast thou slept for very
heaviness of heart, and desired not to wake again! And when thou didst
wake again, lo, the darkness was all a dream! Thy vision of yesterday
was a delusion. God had been with thee all the night with that radiance
which has no need of the sun.

O my soul, it is not only after the future thou must aspire; thou must
aspire to see the glory of thy past. Thou must find the glory of that
way by which thy God has led thee, and be able even of thy sorrow to
say, "This was the gate of heaven!"--_George Matheson._


=July 10th.=

      _My meat is to do the will of Him that sent me. John
      iv. 34._

The real secret of an unsatisfied life lies too often in an
unsurrendered will.--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=July 11th.=

      _Giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue. 2
      Pet. i. 5._

You will find it less easy to unroot faults than to choke them by
gaining virtues. Do not think of your faults, still less of others'
faults; in every person who comes near you look for what is good and
strong; honor that; rejoice in it, and, as you can, try to imitate it;
and your faults will drop off, like dead leaves, when their time
comes.--_John Ruskin._


=July 12th.=

      _Awake, O north wind; and come, thou south; blow upon
      my garden, that the spices thereof may flow out. Song
      of Sol. iv. 16._

Sometimes God sends severe blasts of trial upon His children to develop
their graces. Just as torches burn most brightly when swung violently to
and fro; just as the juniper plant smells sweetest when flung into the
flames; so the richest qualities of a Christian often come out under the
north wind of suffering and adversity. Bruised hearts often emit the
fragrance that God loveth to smell. Almost every true believer's
experience contains the record of trials which were sent for the purpose
of shaking the spice tree.--_Theodore Cuyler._


=July 13th.=

      _Awake, O north wind; and come, thou south; blow upon
      my garden, that the spices thereof may flow out. Song
      of Sol. iv. 16._

There are two winds mentioned in this beautiful prayer. God may send
either or both, as seemeth Him good. He may send the north wind of
conviction, to bring us to repentance, or He may send the south wind of
love, to melt us into gratitude and holy joy. If we often require the
sharp blasts of trial to develop our graces, do we not also need the
warm south breezes of His mercy? Do we not need the new sense of
Christ's presence in our hearts and the joys of the Holy Ghost? Do we
not need to be melted, yes, to be overpowered by the love of
Jesus?--_Theodore Cuyler._


=July 14th.=

      _Behold the man! John xix. 5._

"Behold the man!" was Pilate's jeer. That is what all the ages have been
doing since, and the vision has grown more and more glorious. As they
have looked, the crown of thorns has become a crown of golden radiance,
and the cast-off robe has glistened like the garments He wore on the
night of the transfiguration. Martyrs have smiled in the flames at that
vision. Sinners have turned at it to a new life. Little children have
seen it, and have had awakened by it dim recollections of their
heaven-home. Toward it the souls of men yearn ever.--_Robert E. Speer._


=July 15th.=

      _He (John) saith, Behold the Lamb of God! And the two
      disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus.
      John i. 36, 37._

To be a Christian means to know the presence of a true personal Christ
among us, and to follow.--_Phillips Brooks._


=July 16th.=

      _Ye shall not eat of it. Gen. iii. 3._

The Sin of Paradise was eating the tree of knowledge before the tree of
life. Life must ever be first. Knowing and not being, hearing and not
doing, admiring and not possessing, all are light without
life.--_Selected._


=July 17th.=

      _Let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be
      perfect and entire, wanting nothing. James i. 4._

Are you where God would have you be? If not, come out, and at once, for
you certainly ought not to be there. If you are, then be afraid to
complain of circumstances which God has ordained on purpose to work out
in you the very image and likeness of His Son.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=July 18th.=

      _Sow beside all waters. Isa. xxxii. 20._

Never mind whereabouts your work is. Never mind whether it be visible or
not. Never mind whether your name is associated with it. You may never
see the issues of your toils. You are working for eternity. If you
cannot see results here in the hot working day, the cool evening hours
are drawing near, when you may rest from your labors and then they will
follow you. So do your duty, and trust God to give the seed you sow "a
body as it hath pleased Him,"--_Alex. McLaren._


=July 19th.=

      _Hold thou me up, and I shall be safe. Psa. cxix.
      117._

Do not spoil the chime of this morning's bells by ringing one half a
peal! Do not say, "Hold thou me up," and stop there, or add, "But all
the same I shall stumble and fall!" Finish the peal with God's own
music, the bright words of faith that He puts into your mouth: "Hold
thou me up, _and I shall be safe!_"--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=July 20th.=

      _Lord, my servant lieth at home sick of the palsy.
      Matt. viii. 6._

We, in this age of the church, are in the position of that sick servant
at Capernaum. To the eye of sense we are separated from the Savior. We
see Him not--we can touch Him not--the hand cannot steal amid the crowd
to catch His garment hem--we cannot hear His loved footsteps as of old
on our threshold; but faith penetrates the invisible; the
messenger--prayer--meets Him in the streets of the New Jerusalem; and
faith and prayer together, the twin delegates from His church below, He
has never yet sent empty away.--_Macduff._


=July 21st.=

      _Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling:
      for it is God which worketh in you, both to will and
      to do of His good pleasure. Phil. ii. 12, 13._

What a staggering weight of thought is excited by these words! Stay, my
soul, and wonder that the Eternal God should stoop to work within thy
narrow limits. Is it not a marvel indeed, that He, whom the heavens
cannot contain, and in whose sight they are not clean, should trouble
Himself to work on such material, so unpromising, and amidst
circumstances so uncongenial?

How careful should we be to make Him welcome, and to throw no hindrance
in His way! How eager to garner up all the least movements of His
gracious operation, as the machinist conserves the force of his engine;
and as the goldsmith, with miserly care, collects every flake of gold
leaf! Surely we shall be sensible of the _fear_ of holy reverence and
the _trembling_ of eager anxiety; as we "work out," into daily act and
life, all that God our Father is "working in."--_F. B. Meyer._


=July 22nd.=

     _. . . Sinners of whom I am chief. . . . Now unto the
     King, eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God,
     be honor and glory for ever and ever. Amen. 1 Tim. i.
     15, 17._

Only those who have struck the deepest note of penitence can reach the
highest note of praise.--_A. J. Gordon._


=July 23rd.=

      _Blessed is the man . . . that keepeth the Sabbath. Isa.
      lvi. 2._

The Sabbath is the savings-bank of human life, into which we deposit one
day in seven to be repaid in the autumn of life with compound
interest.--_Selected._


=July 24th.=

      _Cleanse thou me from secret faults. Psa. xix. 12._

The world wants men who are saved from secret faults. The world can put
on an outside goodness and go very far in uprightness and morality, and
it expects that a Christian shall go beyond it, and be free from secret
faults. A little crack will spoil the ring of the coin. . . . The world
expects, and rightly, that the Christian should be more gentle, and
patient, and generous, than he who does not profess to be a disciple of
the Lord Jesus. For the sake of those who take their notion of religion
from our lives, we need to put up this prayer earnestly, "Cleanse thou
me from secret faults."--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=July 25th.=

      _Do thou that which is good. 2 Kings x. 5._

Keep as few good intentions hovering about as possible. They are like
ghosts haunting a dwelling. The way to lay them is to find bodies for
them. When they are embodied in substantial deeds they are no longer
dangerous.--_William Arnot._


=July 26th.=

      _Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and
      Savior, Jesus Christ. 2 Pet. iii. 18._

Grace has its dawn as well as day; grace has its green blade, and
afterwards its ripe corn in the ear; grace has its babes and its men in
Christ. With God's work there, as with all His works, "in all places of
His dominion," progress is both the prelude and the path to perfection.
Therefore we are exhorted to grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, to go on to perfection, saying with Paul,
"I count not myself to have apprehended; but this one thing I do,
forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those
things which are before, I press towards the mark for the prize of the
high calling of God in Christ Jesus."--_Guthrie._


=July 27th.=

      _Sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived,
      and by it slew me. Rom. vii. 11._

Christian, beware how thou thinkest lightly of sin. Take heed lest thou
fall by little and little. Sin, a _little_ thing? Is it not a poison?
Who knows its deadliness? Sin, a little thing? Do not the little foxes
spoil the grapes? Doth not the tiny coral insect build a rock which
wrecks a navy? Do not little strokes fell lofty oaks? Will not continual
droppings wear away stones? Sin, a little thing? It girded the
Redeemer's head with thorns, and pierced His heart! It made _Him_ suffer
anguish, bitterness and woe. Could you weigh the least sin in the scales
of eternity, you would fly from it as from a serpent, and abhor _the
least appearance of evil_. Look upon all sin as that which crucified the
Savior, and you will see it to be "exceeding sinful."--_Spurgeon._


=July 28th.=

      _Your heavenly Father knoweth. Matt. vi. 32._

The Master judges by the result, but our Father judges by the effort.
Failure does not always mean fault. He knows how much things cost, and
weighs them where others only measure. Your Father! Think how great
store His love sets by the poor beginnings of the little ones, clumsy
and unmeaning as they may be to others. All this lies in this blessed
relationship, and infinitely more. Do not fear to take it all as your
own.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=July 29th.=

      _Ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God.
      Col. iii. 3._

It is neither talent, nor power, nor gifts that do the work of God, but
it is that which lies within the power of the humblest; it is the
simple, earnest life hid with Christ in God.--_F. W. Robertson._


=July 30th.=

      _The mother of Jesus saith unto Him, They have no
      wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do
      with thee? Mine hour is not yet come. His mother saith
      unto the servants, Whatsoever He saith unto you, do
      it. John ii. 3, 4, 5._

In asking for temporal blessings, true wisdom lies in putting the matter
into the Lord's hand, and leaving it there. He knows our sorrows, and,
if He sees it is good for us that the water should be turned into wine,
He will do it. It is not for us to dictate: He sees what is best for us.
When we ask for prosperity, perhaps the thing which we should have is
trial. When we want to be relieved of a "thorn in the flesh," He knows
what we should have is an apprehension of the fact that His grace is
sufficient for us. So we are put into His school, and have to learn the
lessons He has to teach us.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=July 31st.=

      _Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he
      fall. 1 Cor x. 12._

Angels fell in heaven, Adam in paradise, Peter in Christ's
presence.--_Theophilus Polwheile._




[Illustration: AUGUST]


=August 1st.=

      _Continue in prayer. Col. iv. 2._

The greatest and the best talent that God gives to any man or woman in
this world is the talent of prayer. And the best usury that any man or
woman brings back to God when He comes to reckon with them at the end
of this world is a life of prayer. And those servants best put their
Lord's money to the exchangers who rise early and sit late, as long as
they are in this world, ever finding out, and ever following after
better and better methods of prayer, and ever forming more secret, more
steadfast, and more spiritually fruitful habits of prayer, till they
literally pray without ceasing, and till they continually strike out
into new enterprises in prayer, and new achievements, and new
enrichments.--_Alex. Whyte._


=August 2nd.=

      _He entered into one of the ships . . . and . . . sat
      down. Luke v. iii._

When Jesus sits in the ship everything is in its right place. The cargo
is in the hold, _not in the heart_. Cares and gains, fears and losses,
yesterday's failure and today's success do not thrust themselves in
between us and His presence. The heart cleaves to _Him_. "Goodness and
mercy shall _follow_ me," sang the psalmist. Alas, when the goodness and
mercy come before us, and our blessings shut Jesus from view! Here is
the blessed order--the Lord ever first, I following Him, His goodness
and mercy following me.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=August 3rd.=

      _Now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of
      light. Eph. v. 8._

We do not realize the importance of the unconscious part of our life
ministry. It goes on continually. In every greeting we give to another
on the street, in every moment's conversation, in every letter we write,
in every contact with other lives, there is a subtle influence that goes
from us that often reaches further, and leaves a deep impression than
the things themselves that we are doing at the time. It is not so much
what we _do_ in this world as what we _are_, that tells in spiritual
results and impressions.--_J. R. Miller._


=August 4th.=

      _Created in Christ Jesus unto good works. Eph. ii.
      10._

Let us ask Him to work in us to _will_ those good works, so that our
_will_, without being impaired in its free operation, may be permeated
and moulded by His will, just as light suffuses the atmosphere without
displacing it. And let us also expect that He will infuse into us
sufficient strength that we may be able to _do_ His will unto all
pleasing. Thus, day by day, our life will be a manifestation of those
holy volitions and lovely deeds which shall attest the indwelling and
inworking of God. And men shall see our good works, and glorify our
Father which is in heaven.--_F. B. Meyer._


=August 5th.=

      _Go in this thy might . . . have not I sent thee? Judges
      vi. 14._

God never leaves His child to fail when in the path of
obedience.--_Theodore Cuyler._


=August 6th.=

      _Set your affection on things above, not on things on
      the earth. Col. iii. 2._

      _Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy
      might. Eccles. ix. 10._

If we are to live separate from the world, how, since men only do well
what they do with a will, are we, with affections fixed on things above,
to perform aright the secular, ordinary duties of life? If our hearts
are engrossed with heavenly things, how are we to obey this other, and
equally divine, commandment, "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it
with thy might"?

The two are perfectly consistent. Man standing between the celestial and
terrestrial worlds is related to both; and resembling neither a flower,
which, springing from the dust and returning to it, belongs altogether
to the earth, nor a star which, shining far remote from its lower
sphere, belongs altogether to the heavens, our hearts may be fitly
likened to the rainbow that, rising into heaven but resting on earth,
is connected both with the clods of the valley and the clouds of the
sky.--_Guthrie._


=August 7th.=

      _Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth
      so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the
      race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus. Heb.
      xii. 1, 2._

Think, as you sit here, of anything that you are doing that is wrong, of
any habit of your life, of your self-indulgence, or of that great,
pervasive habit of your life which makes you a creature of the present
instead of the eternities, a creature of the material earth instead of
the glorious skies. Ask yourself of any habit that belongs to your own
personal life, and bring it face to face with Jesus Christ.--_Phillips
Brooks._


=August 8th.=

      _They took knowledge of them, that they had been with
      Jesus. Acts iv. 13._

If I think of the world, I get the impress of the world; if I think of
my trials and sorrows, I get the impress of my trials and sorrows; if I
think of my failures, I get the impress of my failures; if I think of
Christ, I get the impress of Christ.--_Selected._


=August 9th.=

      _Ye call me Teacher, and Lord: and ye say well; for so
      I am. John xiii. 13. (R. V. margin)._

How wonderful a Teacher we have! Sometimes we seek Him in the house, but
He is not there. We go forth seeking Him and find Him perhaps in the
wilderness or on a mountain praying, or leading some poor blind man by
the hand, or eating with publicans or sinners, or asleep in a storm or
conversing with a Samaritan woman, or surrounded by wrathful men, or
bearing a cross. It is not merely His words that instruct. His place,
His occupation, His companions, His environment, His garment, His
silence, His submission--all teem with instruction. And they that learn
of Him are made like unto Him.--_George Bowen._


=August 10th.=

      _The Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the
      world. 1 John iv. 14._

It is a sweet thought that Jesus Christ did not come forth without His
Father's permission, authority, consent, and assistance. He was sent of
the Father that He might be the Savior of men. . . . Didst thou ever
consider the depth of love in the heart of Jehovah, when God the Father
equipped His Son for the great enterprise of mercy? If not, be this thy
day's meditation. The _Father_ sent Him! Contemplate that subject. Think
how Jesus works what the _Father_ wills. In the wounds of the dying
Savior see the love of the great I AM. Let every thought of Jesus be
also connected with the eternal, ever-blessed God.--_Spurgeon._


=August 11th.=

      _They that wait upon the Lord shall change their
      strength. Isa. xl. 31. (R. V.)_

        Lord, what a change within us one short hour
        Spent in Thy presence will prevail to make!
        What heavy burdens from our bosoms take!
        What parched grounds refresh as with a shower!
        We kneel--and all around us seems to lower.
        We rise--and all the distant and the near
        Stand forth in sunny outline, brave and clear.
        We kneel--how weak: we rise--how full of power.

        Why, therefore, should we do ourselves this wrong
        Or others--that we are not always strong;
        That we are ever overborne with care;
        That we should ever weak or heartless be,
        Anxious or troubled, while with _us_ is prayer,
        And joy and strength and courage are with _Thee_?
                                       --_Archbishop Trench._


=August 12th.=

      _As for thee, the Lord thy God hath not suffered thee
      so to do. Deut. xviii. 14._

What a stepping-stone! We give thanks, often with a tearful, doubtful
voice, for our spiritual mercies _positive_; but what an almost infinite
field there is for mercies _negative_! We cannot even imagine all that
God has suffered us _not_ to do, _not_ to be.--_Frances Ridley
Havergal._


=August 13th.=

     _Jesus went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was
     moved with compassion toward them, and He healed their
     sick. . . . And when He had sent the multitudes away,
     He went up into a mountain apart to pray: and when the
     evening was come He was there alone. Matt. xiv. 14, 23._

Do we, like Him, combine the two great elements of human character? Are
our _public_ duties, the cares, and business, and engrossments of the
world, finely tempered and hallowed by a _secret_ walk with God? If the
world were to follow us from its busy thoroughfares, would it trace us
to our family altars and our closet devotions?

Action and meditation are the two great components of Christian life,
and the perfection of the religious character is to find the two in
unison and harmony.--_Macduff._


=August 14th.=

      _Leaving you an example, that ye should follow His
      steps. 1 Pet. ii. 21. (R. V.)_

I have long since ceased to pray, "Lord Jesus, have compassion on a lost
world!" I remember the day and the hour when I seemed to hear the Lord
rebuking me for making such a prayer. He seemed to say to me, "I have
had compassion upon a lost world, and now it is for you to have
compassion."--_A. J. Gordon._


=August 15th.=

      _Thou shalt have no other gods before me. Ex. xx. 3._

If you find yourself beginning to love any pleasure better than your
prayers, any book better than your Bible, any house better than God's,
any table better than the Lord's, any person better than your Savior,
any one better than your soul, a present indulgence better than the hope
of heaven--take alarm!--_Guthrie._


=August 16th.=

      _Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ. 1
      Cor. xi. 1._

When in the Mexican war the troops were wavering, a general rose in his
stirrups and dashed into the enemy's line, shouting, "Men, follow!"
They, seeing his courage and disposition, dashed on after him, and
gained the victory.

What men want to rally them for God is an example to lead them. All your
commands to others to advance amount to nothing so long as you stay
behind. To effect them aright, you need to start for heaven yourself,
looking back only to give the stirring cry of "Men, follow!"--_T. DeWitt
Talmage._


=August 17th.=

      _Serving the Lord with all humility of mind. Acts xx.
      19._

There is a legend of an artist who long sought for a piece of
sandalwood, out of which to carve a Madonna. He was about to give up in
despair, leaving the vision of his life unrealized, when in a dream he
was bidden to carve his Madonna from a block of oak wood, which was
destined for the fire. He obeyed, and produced a masterpiece from a log
of common fire-wood.

Many of us lose great opportunities in life by waiting to find
sandalwood for our carvings, when they really lie hidden in the common
logs that we burn.--_Orison Swett Marden._


=August 18th.=

      _My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is
      made perfect in weakness. 2 Cor. xii. 9._

God's way of answering His people's prayers is not by removing the
pressure, but by increasing their strength to bear it. The pressure is
often the fence between the narrow way of life and the broad road to
ruin; and if our Heavenly Father were to remove it, it might be at the
sacrifice of heaven. Oh, if God had removed that thorny fence in answer,
often to earnest prayers, how many of us would now be castaways! How the
song of many a saint now in glory would be hushed! How many a harp would
be unstrung! How many a place in the mansions of the redeemed would be
unfilled! If God answered all the prayers we put up to heaven, we should
need no other scourge. Blessed it is that we have One who is too loving
to grant what we too often so rashly ask.--_F. Whitfield._


=August 19th.=

      _Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear
      fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine, no more
      can ye, except ye abide in me. John xv. 4._

From moment to moment, and from hour to hour, the inner nature of man is
to be continuously sustained with the life of God. Only as I am
constantly receiving His fulness into my emptiness am I really living in
the true, full, deep sense of the word, that life of eternity, which is
my privilege now, and will be my glory hereafter.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=August 20th.=

      _By faith Noah . . . prepared an ark to the saving of
      his house. Heb. xi. 7._

What a humble, what a modest sphere for the exercise of faith! One would
have said that the purpose was quite disproportionate to the work. The
ark was a great undertaking, but what was it undertaken for? To save his
own family. Is so narrow a sphere worthy to be the object of faith? Is
so commonplace a scene as the life of the family circle fit to be a
temple for the service of God? . . . My soul, when thou hast finished
thy prayers and ended thy meditations, do not say that thou hast left
the house of God. God's house shall to thee be everywhere, and thine own
house shall be a part of it. Thou shalt feel that all the duties of
this place are consecrated; that it is none other than the house of God
and one of the gates to heaven. Thou shalt feel that every one of its
duties is an act of high communion. Therefore be it thine to make thy
house _His_ house. Be it thine to consecrate each word and look and deed
in the social life of home. Be it thine to build thine ark of refuge for
the wants of common day; verily, thy labor of love shall be called an
act of faith.--_George Matheson._


=August 21st.=

      _We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto
      good works which God hath before ordained that we
      should walk in them. Eph. ii. 10._

No man is born into the world whose work is not born with him. There is
always work, and tools to work withal, for those who will.--_J. B.
Lowell._


=August 22nd.=

      _He . . . began to wash the disciples' feet. John xiii.
      5._

We forget that Jesus Christ is the same to-day, when He is sitting on
the throne, as He was yesterday, when He trod the pathway of our world.
And in this forgetfulness how much we miss! What He was, that He is.
What He said, that He says. The Gospels are simply specimens of the life
that He is ever living; they are leaves torn out of the diary of His
unchangeable Being. To-day He is engaged in washing the feet of His
disciples, soiled with their wilderness journeyings. Yes, that charming
incident is having its fulfilment in thee, my friend, if only thou dost
not refuse the lowly loving offices of Him whom we call Master and Lord,
but who still girds Himself and comes forth to serve. And we must have
this incessant cleansing if we would keep right. It is not enough to
look back to a certain hour when we first knelt at the feet of the Son
of God for pardon; and heard Him say, "Thy sins, which are many, are all
forgiven." We need daily, hourly cleansing--from daily, hourly sin.--_F.
B. Meyer._


=August 23rd.=

      _I am the Lord, I change not. Mal. iii. 6._

Our hope is not hung upon such untwisted thread as "I imagine so," or
"it is likely"; but the cable, the strong rope of our fastened anchor,
is the oath and promise of Him who is eternal verity. Our salvation is
fastened with God's own hand and Christ's own strength to the strong
stake of God's unchanging nature.--_William Rutherford._


=August 24th.=

      _I will cause the shower to come down in his season;
      there shall be showers of blessing. Ezek. xxxiv. 26._

What is thy _season_ this morning? Is it the season of drought? Then
that is the season for showers. Is it a season of great heaviness and
black clouds? Then that is the season for showers. "As thy days so shall
thy strength be." "I will give thee _showers_ of blessing." The word is
in the plural. All kinds of blessings God will send. All God's blessings
go together, like links in a golden chain. If He gives converting grace,
He will also give comforting grace. He will send "showers of blessings."
Look up to-day, O parched plant, and open thy leaves and flowers for a
heavenly watering.--_Spurgeon._


=August 25th.=

      _Nevertheless, at thy word. Luke v. 5._

Oh, what a blessed formula for us! This path of mine is dark,
mysterious, perplexing; _nevertheless, at Thy word_ I will go forward.
This trial of mine is cutting, sore for flesh and blood to bear. It is
hard to breathe through a broken heart, Thy will be done. But,
_nevertheless, at Thy word_ I will say, Even so, Father! This besetting
habit, or infirmity, or sin of mine, is difficult to crucify. It has
become part of myself--a second nature; to be severed from it would be
like the cutting off of a right hand, or the plucking out of a right
eye; _nevertheless, at Thy word_ I will lay aside every weight; this
idol I will utterly abolish. This righteousness of mine it is hard to
ignore; all these virtues, and amiabilities, and natural graces, it is
hard to believe that they dare not in any way be mixed up in the matter
of my salvation; and that I am to receive all from first to last as the
gift of God, through Jesus Christ my Lord. _Nevertheless, at Thy word_ I
will count all but loss for the excellency of His knowledge.--_Macduff._


=August 26th.=

      _If we suffer, we shall also reign with Him. 2 Tim.
      ii. 12._

The photographer must have a negative, as he calls it, in order to
furnish you with a picture. Now, the earthly cross is the negative from
which the heavenly crown is to be made; the suffering and sorrow of the
present time determining the glory, honor and immortality of the life to
come.--_A. J. Gordon._


=August 27th.=

      _The word of God, which liveth and abideth forever. 1
      Pet. i. 23._

The Word abideth. The Jew hated it--but it lived on, while the veil was
torn away from the shrine which the Shekinah had forsaken, and while
Jerusalem itself was destroyed. The Greek derided it--but it has seen
his philosophy effete and his Acropolis in ruins. The Romans threw it
into the flames--but it rose from its ashes, and swooped down upon the
falling eagle. The reasoner cast it into the furnace, which his own
negligence had heated "seven times hotter than its wont"--but it came
out without the smell of fire. The formalist fastened serpents around it
to poison it--but it shook them off and felt no harm. The infidel cast
it overboard in a tempest of sophistry and sarcasm--but it rode
gallantly upon the crest of the proud waters. And it is living
still--yet heard in the loudest swelling of the storm--it has been
speaking all the while--it is speaking now!--_Punshon._


=August 28th.=

      _Let the peace of God rule in your hearts. Col. iii.
      15._

Years ago one of our fleets was terribly shattered by a violent
gale--but it was found that some of the ships were unaffected by its
violence. They were in what mariners call "the eye of the storm." While
all around was desolation, they were safe. So it is with him who has the
peace of God in his heart.--_Pilkington._


=August 29th.=

      _Ye serve the Lord Christ. Col. iii. 24._

Our business as Christians is to serve the Lord in every business of
life.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=August 30th.=

      _Love not the world, neither the things that are in
      the world. 1 John ii. 15._

If you will go to the banks of a little stream, and watch the flies that
come to bathe in it, you will notice that, while they plunge their
_bodies_ into the water, they keep their _wings_ high out of the water;
and, after swimming about a little while, they fly away with their wings
unwet through the sunny air. Now, that is the lesson for us. Here we are
immersed in the cares and business of the world; but let us keep the
wings of our soul, our faith and our love, out of the world, that, with
these unclogged, we may be ready to take our flight to heaven.--_J.
Inglis._


=August 31st.=

      _I would have you without carefulness. 1 Cor. vii.
      32._

Do not look forward to the changes and chances of this life in fear.
Rather look to them with full hope that, as they arise, God, whose you
are, will deliver you out of them. He has kept you hitherto--do you but
hold fast to His dear hand, and He will lead you safely through all
things; and when you cannot stand, He will bear you in His arms. Do not
look forward to what may happen to-morrow. The same everlasting Father
who cares for you to-day will take care of you to-morrow, and every day.
Either He will shield you from suffering, or He will give you unfailing
strength to bear it. Be at peace then, and put aside all anxious
thoughts and imaginations.--_Francis de Sales._




[Illustration: September]


=September 1st.=

      _Thus saith the Lord God, I will yet for this be
      inquired of by the house of Israel, to do it for them.
      Ezek. xxxvi. 37._

Prayer is the forerunner of mercy. Turn to sacred history and you will
find that scarcely ever did a great mercy come to this world unheralded
by supplication. Prayer is always the preface to blessing. It goes
before the blessing _as the blessing's shadow_. When the sunlight of
God's mercies rises upon our necessities it casts the shadow of prayer
far down upon the plain. Or, to use another illustration, when God piles
up a hill of mercies He Himself shines behind them, and He casts on our
spirits the shadow of prayer so that we may rest certain, if we are much
in prayer, our pleadings are the shadows of mercy. Prayer is thus
connected with the blessing to show us the value of it.--_Spurgeon._


=September 2nd.=

      _Let us not be weary in well doing, for in due season
      we shall reap if we faint not. Gal. vi. 9._

The hours of this present life are the ages in embryo of the life to
come.--_A. J. Gordon._


=September 3rd.=

      _My presence shall go with thee. Ex. xxxiii. 14._

We should never leave our prayer closets in the morning without having
concentrated our thoughts deeply and intensely on the fact of the actual
presence of God there with us, encompassing us, and filling the room as
literally as it fills heaven itself. It may not lead to any distinct
results at first, but, as we make repeated efforts to realize the
presence of God, it will become increasingly real to us. And, as the
habit grows upon us, when alone in a room, or when treading the sward of
some natural woodland temple, or when pacing the stony street--in the
silence of night, or amid the teeming crowds of daylight--we shall often
find ourselves whispering the words, "Thou art near; thou art here, O
Lord."--_F. B. Meyer._


=September 4th.=

      _To the Lord our God belong mercies and forgiveness.
      Dan. ix. 9._

As a spring lock closes itself, but cannot be unlocked without a key, so
we ourselves may run into sin, but cannot return without the key of
God's grace.--_Cawdray._


=September 5th.=

      _It is high time to awake out of sleep. Rom. xiii.
      11._

I have heard of a painter who loved to work by the morning light. He
said that the colors were better understood by the light of the early
day, and so he was wont to be in his studio waiting for the rising of
the sun. Then every moment it grew lighter, and he found he could
accomplish things which he could not reach if he waited till the day had
advanced.

Is there not work waiting for us--work that no one else can do--work,
too, that the Master has promised to help us perform? Shall He come and
find that we still sleep? Or shall the Son of Righteousness, when He
appears, find us waiting, as that painter waited, looking and longing
for the first gleam of day? Surely those of us who thus wait on the Lord
shall renew our strength, and, eagle-like, rise to greet the
Sun.--_Thomas Champness._


=September 6th.=

      _The church of God, which He hath purchased with His
      own blood. Acts xx. 28._

Surely He may do what He will with His own. The price He has paid to
make them His own is a sufficient guarantee that He will never make
light of anything in which their welfare is at all concerned. We are
precious to Him by the virtue of the blood which He has shed for us, and
for Him to be found at any time wanting in solicitude for our happiness
would be for Him to treat that blood of His as the sinners of this world
treat it. The persuasion of Christ's love must be graven in our hearts
so deeply that no semblance of indifference on His part will ever make
the slightest impression upon us. This is the victory which overcometh
the world.--_George Bowen._


=September 7th.=

      _The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in
      believing, that ye may abound in hope, through the
      power of the Holy Ghost. Rom. xv. 13._

In spiritual as in earthly things there is great strength in hope, and,
therefore, God's people are carefully to cultivate that grace. A
well-grounded hope that, having been made new creatures in Jesus Christ,
we are His; that with our names, though unknown to fame, written in the
Book of Life, we have grace in possession and heaven in prospect; that
after a few more brief years, pure as the angels that sing before the
throne, we shall be brought with gladness into the palace of the King,
to be like Christ and with Christ, seeing Him eye to eye and face to
face--such hopes are powerful springs of action.--_Guthrie._


=September 8th.=

      _He asked life of Thee, and Thou gavest it him, even
      length of days or ever and ever. Psa. xxi. 4._

When poor men make requests of us we usually answer them as the echo
does the voice--the answer cuts off half the petition. We shall seldom
find among men Jael's courtesy, giving milk to those that ask water,
except it be as this was, an entangling benefit, the better to introduce
a mischief. There are not many Naamans among us, that, when you beg of
them one talent, will force you to take two; but God's answer to our
prayers is like a multiplying glass, which renders the request much
greater in the answer than it was in the prayer.--_Bishop Reynolds._


=September 9th.=

      _This beginning of miracles did Jesus. John ii. 11._

It was out of the common thing that the precious thing was brought; and
it is out of the common things of daily life, presented obediently to
Jesus and laid at His feet, that He brings His own glorious gifts, so
that our whole lives become one great sacrament.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=September 10th.=

      _In the daytime . . . He led them with a cloud, and all
      the night with a light of fire. Psa. lxxviii. 14._

My day is my prosperity; it is the time when the sun of fortune is
bright above me, and, therefore, it is the time when I need a shade. If
my sunshine were not chequered I would forget Thee, O my God.

But I have nights to meet as well as days. The night is my adversity; it
is the time when the sun of fortune has gone down behind the hills, and
I am left alone, and then it is, O my Father, that I need the light of
Thy fire! My light of fire for the night is the vision of Calvary--the
vision of Thy love in the Cross. I need the light of Thy fire "_all_ the
night."--_George Matheson._


=September 11th.=

      _Now are we the sons of God: and it doth not yet
      appear what we shall be; but we know that when He
      shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see
      Him as He is. 1 John iii. 2._

"Now are we the sons of God." That is the pier upon one side of the
gulf. "It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but when He shall appear
we shall be like Him." That is the pier on the other. How are the two to
be connected? There is only one way by which the present sonship will
blossom and fruit into the future perfect likeness, and that is, if we
throw across the gulf, by God's help day by day, the bridge of growing
likeness to Himself, and purity therefrom.--_Alex. McLaren._


=September 12th.=

      _Behold, we go up to Jerusalem. Matt. xx. 18._

Never had there been such a going up to Jerusalem as that which Jesus
here proposes to His disciples. He goes up voluntarily. The act was not
enforced by any external compulsion. Jerusalem might at this time have
been avoided. It was deliberately sought. It was a going up to a triumph
to be reached through defeat, a coronation to be attained through
ignominy and humiliation.

O believer, in your walk through the world to-day, be strengthened, be
comforted, be inspired, by the spectacle of the Captain of your
salvation thus going up to Jerusalem! And remember, in all those
apparently _downward_ passages of life, where sorrow, and it may be
death, lie before you, that all such descents, made or endured in the
Spirit of Jesus, are really _upgoing_ steps, leading you to the mount of
God and the resurrection glory.--_J. B. Stratton._


=September 13th.=

      _These were the potters, and those that dwelt among
      plants and hedges: there they dwelt with the king for
      his work. 1 Chron. iv. 23._

Anywhere and everywhere we may dwell "with the King for His work." We
may be in a very unlikely or unfavorable place for this; it may be in a
little country life, with little enough to be seen of the "goings" of
the King around us; it may be among hedges of all sorts, hindrances in
all directions; it may be, furthermore, with our hands full of all
manner of pottery for our daily task. No matter! The King who placed us
"there" will come and dwell there with us; the hedges are all right, or
He would soon do away with them; and it does not follow that what seems
to hinder our way may not be for its very protection; and as for the
pottery, why, this is just exactly what He has seen fit to put into our
hands, and therefore it is, for the present, "His work."--_Frances
Ridley Havergal._


=September 14th.=

      I will instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which
      thou shalt go; _I will guide thee with mine eye. Psa.
      xxxii. 8._

When God does the directing, our life is useful and full of promise,
whatever it is doing; and discipline has its perfecting work.--_H. E.
Cobb._


=September 15th.=

      _The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to
      minister, and to give His life a ransom for many.
      Matt. xx. 28._

We are so to surrender ourselves to Christ that this great purpose of
His coming shall claim and possess the whole life. We are to live, like
God, to bless others. This is His will, His purpose concerning us. This
is what His power waits to do for us. And this too, is the claim of His
great love upon us.

Do not sigh a poor assent to the truth of it, and then pass by
neglectfully on the other side. Do not think about it and pray about it
without even a passing hope that the prayer will be answered. Do not
gather yourself up in great resolutions to be good and useful. Kneel in
sight of the Crucified. In the cross of Christ spell out His great
purpose and yearning love to men. Let the heart feel all the might of
the appeal that comes to us from those torn hands and feet and bleeding
brow, from all the dreadful shame and agony of our dear Lord. And,
bought and bound by all this, surrender yourself to Him for His great
purpose. Take Him as your strength for this life-work.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._


=September 16th.=

      _Jesus . . . went about doing good. Acts x. 38._

The finest of all fine arts is the art of doing good; and yet it is the
least cultivated.--_T. DeWitt Talmage._


=September 17th.=

      _And the angel of the Lord said unto her [Hagar],
      Return to thy mistress, and submit thyself under her
      hands. Gen. xvi. 9._

SUBMISSION is a great Christian law, but we find it early in Genesis,
early in the history of mankind, and angel-given.--_Selected._


=September 18th.=

      _Then spake Solomon . . . I have surely built thee an
      house to dwell in. 1 Kings viii. 12, 13._

Solomon, the prince of peace, alone could build the temple. If we would
be soul-winners and build up the church, which is God's temple, let us
note this; not by discussion nor by argument, but by lifting up Christ
shall we draw men unto Him.--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=September 19th.=

      _I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction. Isa.
      xlviii. 10._

Does not the word come like a soft shower, assuaging the fury of the
flame? Yea, is it not an asbestos armor, against which the heat hath no
power? Let affliction come--God has chosen me. Poverty, thou mayest
stride in at my door--but God is in the house already, and He has chosen
me. Sickness, thou mayest intrude, but I have a balsam ready--God has
chosen me. Whatever befalls me in this vale of tears I know that He has
"chosen" me. Fear not, Christian; Jesus is with thee. In all thy fiery
trials His presence is both thy comfort and safety. He will never leave
one whom He has chosen for His own. "Fear not, for I am with thee," is
His sure word of promise to His chosen ones in the "furnace of
affliction."--_Spurgeon._


=September 20th.=

      _Base things of the world and things which are
      despised hath God chosen. 1 Cor. i. 28._

In some of the great halls of Europe may be seen pictures not painted
with the brush, but mosaics, which are made up of small pieces of stone,
glass, or other material. The artist takes these little pieces, and,
polishing and arranging them, he forms them into the grand and beautiful
picture. Each individual part of the picture may be a little worthless
piece of glass or marble or shell; but, with each in its place, the
whole constitutes the masterpiece of art.

So I think it will be with humanity in the hands of the great Artist.
God is picking up the little worthless pieces of stone and brass that
might be trodden under foot unnoticed, and is making of them His great
masterpiece.--_Bishop Simpson._


=September 21st.=

      _Serve the Lord with gladness; come before His
      presence with singing. Psa. c. 2._

God wants our life to be a song. He has written the music for us in His
Word and in the duties that come to us in our places and relations in
life. The things we ought to do are the notes set upon the staff. To
make our life beautiful music we must be obedient and submissive. Any
disobedience is the singing of a false note, and yields discord.--_J. R.
Miller._


=September 22nd.=

      _When thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when
      thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father, which is
      in secret. Matt. vi. 6._

This is faith's stronghold; here she weapons herself for the daily
conflict. Silence in that closet of prayer bespeaks death throughout all
the house. When that door is suffered to rust on its hinges, and that
chamber is deserted, then the heart-house is soon retaken by Satan, and
evil spirits come in and dwell there.--_Theodore Cuyler._


=September 23rd.=

      _Be ye holy; for I am holy. 1 Pet. i. 16._

The highway of holiness is along the commonest road of life--along your
very way. In wind and rain, no matter how it beats--it is only going
hand in hand with Him.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=September 24th.=

      _And the Lord said, Shall I hide from Abraham that
      thing which I do? Gen. xviii. 17._

Abraham, in communion with God, knew long before Lot, in Sodom, of the
destruction of that city. Oh for more communion!--_Selected._


=September 25th.=

      _The life which I now live in the flesh. Gal. ii. 20._

I expect to pass through this world but once--therefore, if there be any
kindness I can show or any good thing I can do to any fellow human
being, let me do it now; let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not
pass this way again.--_Marcus Aurelius._


=September 26th.=

      _So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our
      hearts unto wisdom. Psa. xc. 12._

Every day is a little life; and our whole life is but a day repeated:
whence it is that old Jacob numbers his life by days; and Moses desires
to be taught this point of holy arithmetic--to number not his years, but
his days. Those, therefore, that dare lose a day, are dangerously
prodigal; those that dare misspend it, desperate.--_Bishop Hall._


=September 27th.=

      _Christ in you the hope of glory. Col. i. 27._

Religion is not the simple fire-escape that you build in anticipation of
a possible danger, upon the outside of your dwelling, and leave there
until danger comes. You go to it some morning when a fire breaks out in
your house, and the poor old thing that you built up there, and thought
that you could use some day, is so rusty and broken, and the weather has
so beaten upon it and the sun so turned its hinges, that it will not
work. That is the condition of a man who has built himself what seems a
creed of faith, a trust in God in anticipation of the day when danger is
to overtake him, and has said to himself, I am safe, for I will take
refuge in it then. But religion is the house in which we live, it is the
table at which we sit, it is the fireside at which we draw near, the
room that arches its graceful and familiar presence over us; it is the
bed on which we lie and think of the past, and anticipate the future,
and gather our refreshment.--_Phillips Brooks._


=September 28th.=

      _Wait for the promise of the Father. Acts i. 4._

Tarry at a promise till God meets you there. He always returns by way of
His promises.--_Selected._


=September 29th.=

      _This is the victory that overcometh the world, even
      our faith. 1 John v. 4._

The world conquers me when it succeeds in hindering me from seeing,
loving, holding communion with, and serving my Father, God. I conquer it
when I lay my hand upon it and force it to help me to get nearer Him, to
get more like Him, to think oftener of Him, to do His will more gladly
and more constantly. The one victory over the world is to bend it to
serve me in the highest things--the attainment of a clearer vision of
the divine nature, the attainment of a deeper love to God Himself, and a
more glad consecration and service to Him. That is the victory--when you
can make the world a ladder to lift you to God. When the world comes
between you and God as an obscuring screen, it has conquered you. When
the world comes between you and God as a transparent medium you have
conquered it. To win victory is to get it beneath your feet and stand
upon it, and reach up thereby to God.--_Alex. McLaren._


=September 30th.=

      _He shall give His angels charge over thee to keep
      thee in all thy ways. Psa. xci. 11._

Count no duty too little, no round of life too small, no work too low,
if it come in thy way, since God thinks so much of it as to send His
angels to guard thee in it.--_Mark Guy Pearse._




[Illustration: October]


=October 1st.=

      _At Jesus' feet. Luke x. 39._

At Jesus' feet--that is our place of privilege and of blessing, and here
it is that we are to be educated and fitted for the practical duties of
life. Here we are to renew our strength while we wait on Him, and to
learn how to mount on wings as eagles; and here we are to become
possessed of that true knowledge which is power. Here we are to learn
how real work is to be done, and to be armed with the true motive power
to do it. Here we are to find solace amidst both the trials of work--and
they are not few--and the trials of life in general; and here we are to
anticipate something of the blessedness of heaven amidst the days of
earth; for to sit at His feet is indeed to be in heavenly places, and to
gaze upon His glory is to do what we shall never tire of doing
yonder.--_W. Hay Aitken._


=October 2nd.=

      _God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in
      God, and God in him. 1 John iv. 16._

_God is love_; and it is good, as it is true, to think that every
sun-ray that touches the earth has the sun at the other end of it; so
every bit of love upon God's earth has God at the other end of
it.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


_October 3rd._

      _They took knowledge of them that they had been with
      Jesus. Acts iv. 13._

A Christian should be a striking likeness of Jesus Christ. You have read
lives of Christ, beautifully and eloquently written, but the best life
of Christ is His living biography, written out in the words and actions
of His people. If we were what we profess to be, and what we should be,
we would be pictures of Christ; yea, such striking likenesses of Him
that the world would not have to hold us up by the hour together, and
say, "Well, it seems somewhat of a likeness": but they would, when they
once beheld us, exclaim, "He has been with Jesus; he has been taught of
Him; he is like Him; he has caught the very idea of the holy Man of
Nazareth, and he works it out in his life and every day
actions."--_Spurgeon._


=October 4th.=

      _Be not afraid, only believe. Mark v. 36._

Be not downcast if difficulties and trials surround you in your heavenly
life. They may be purposely placed there by God to train and discipline
you for higher developments of faith. If He calls you to "toiling in
rowing," it may be to make you the hardier seaman, to lead you to lift
up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees, and, above all, to
drive you to a holier trust in Him who has the vessel and its destinies
in His hand, and who, amid gathering clouds and darkened horizon and
crested billows is ever uttering the mild rebuke to our
misgivings--"Said I not unto thee, if thou wouldest believe, thou
shouldst see the glory of God."--_Macduff._


=October 5th.=

      _Happy is the man whom God correcteth. Job v. 17._

Happy, because the correction is designed to bring him into paths of
blessedness and peace.

Happy, because there is no unnecessary severity in it.

Happy, because the chastisement is not so much against us, as against
our most cruel enemies--our sins.

Happy, because we have abundant words of consolation.

Happy, because whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth.

Happy, because our light affliction is but for a moment.--_George
Bowen._


=October 6th.=

      _When they saw the star they rejoiced with exceeding
      great joy. Matt. ii. 10._

We who look for Jesus ought to be joyful; it is no credit to our Lord
when we look as though we were seeking His grave. The dull looks of
Christ's followers have injured Him in the sight of the world. Let us,
then, smile as we go, for we have the star if we will look up and put
ourselves in the right path.--_Thos. Champness._


=October 7th.=

      _When I sit in darkness the Lord shall be a light unto
      me. Micah vii. 8._

If you are willing to choose the seeming darkness of faith instead of
the illumination of reason, wonderful light will break out upon you from
the Word of God.--_A. J. Gordon._


=October 8th.=

      _I (Daniel) was left alone, and saw this great vision.
      Dan. x. 8._

Solitude is the antechamber of God; only one step more and you can be
in His immediate presence.--_Landor._


=October 9th.=

      _Come and dine. John xxi. 12._

This morning the voice of the Beloved of our soul is heard giving us His
invitation.

"Children," He asks, "have ye any meat?"

We answer, "No; of ourselves we have nothing but hunger and starvation.
O God, we cannot feed ourselves!"

Then it is that His own sweet voice replies, "Come and dine!"--_W. Hay
Aitken._


=October 10th.=

      _O Lord God, Thou knowest! Ezek. xxxvii. 3._

Here is the response of faith. "Thou knowest!"--what a pillow for the
heart to repose upon! "Thou knowest!"--what few but comprehensive words
to sum up and express the heart's difficulties and perplexities and
trials. "Thou knowest!"--what an inexpressibly sweet resting-place in
the midst of life's tumultuous heavings; in the midst of a sea that
knows no calm; in the midst of a scene in which tossings to and fro are
the hourly history! What an answer they contain for every heart that can
find no words to express its big emotions; for a heart whose sorrows are
too deep for language to find its way to God! Oh, that they were ever
uppermost in the soul, as the response to every difficulty in our path!
They are God's answer to everything we cannot fathom; God's answer for
our hearts to rest upon, and our lips to utter, when every way is hedged
up so that we cannot pass. "O Lord God, thou knowest!" Rest here,
believer. Lean thy soul on these words. Repose calmly on the bosom of
thy God, and carry them with thee into every scene of life. "O Lord God,
thou knowest."--_F. Whitfield._


=October 11th.=

      _Behold, a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of
      it reached to heaven. Gen. xxviii. 12._

Think of that mystic ladder, which descends from the throne of God to
the spot, however lowly, where you may be. It may be a moorland waste; a
humble cottage; a ship's cabin; a settler's hut; a bed of pain; but
Jesus Christ finds you out, and comes just where you are. The one pole
of this ladder is the gold of His deity; the other is the silver of His
manhood; the rungs are the series of events from the cradle of Bethlehem
to the right hand of power, where He sits. That ladder sways beneath a
weight of blessing for you. Oh, that you would send away your burdens of
sin, and care, and fear, by the hands of the ascending angels of prayer
and faith!--so as to be able to receive into your heart the trooping
angels of peace, and joy, and love, and glory.--_F. B. Meyer._


=October 12th.=

      _Surely God is in this place, and I knew it not. Gen.
      xxviii. 16._

        The Parish Priest, of austerity,
          Climbed up in the high church steeple
        To be nearer God, that he might hand
          His word down to the people.
        And in sermon script he daily wrote
          What he thought was sent from heaven;
        And he dropped it down on the people's heads
          Two times one day in seven.
        In his age God said, "Come down and die."
          And he cried out from the steeple:
        "Where art thou, Lord?" And the Lord replied:
          "Down here among My people."--_Selected._


=October 13th.=

      _Now therefore, hearken, O Israel, unto the statutes
      and unto the judgments which I teach you, for to do
      them, that ye may live, and go in and possess the land
      which the Lord God of your fathers giveth you. Deut.
      iv. 1._

"Hearken" and "do," that ye may "live" and "possess." This is a
universal and abiding principle. It was true for Israel, and it is true
for us. The pathway of life and the true secret of possession is simple
obedience to the holy commandments of God. We see this all through the
inspired volume, from cover to cover. God has given us His Word, not to
speculate upon it or discuss it, but that we may obey it. And it is as
we, through grace, yield a hearty and happy obedience to our Father's
statutes and judgments, that we tread the bright pathway of life, and
enter into the reality of all that God has treasured up for us in
Christ.--_C. H. M._


=October 14th.=

      _I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the
      life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith
      of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for
      me. Gal. ii. 20._

The man who lives in God knows no life except the life of
God.--_Phillips Brooks._


=October 15th.=

      _Let us who are of the day be sober, putting on the
      breastplate of faith and love, and for a helmet, the
      hope of salvation. 1 Thess. v. 8._

_Faith, love, hope_--these three form the defensive armor that guards
the soul; and these three make self-control possible. Like a diver in
his dress who is let down to the bottom of the wild, far-weltering
ocean, a man whose heart is girt by faith and charity, and whose head is
covered with the helmet of hope, may be dropped down into the wildest
sea of temptation and of worldliness, and yet will walk dry and unharmed
through the midst of its depths, and breathe air that comes from a world
above the restless surges. _Faith_ will bring you into communication
with all the power of God. _Love_ will lead you into a region where all
the temptations round you will be touched as by Ithuriel's spear, and
will show their own foulness. And _Hope_ will turn away your eyes from
looking at the tempting splendor around, and fix them upon the glories
that are above. And so the reins will come into your hands in an
altogether new manner, and you will be able to be king over your own
nature in a fashion that you did not dream of before, if only you will
trust in Christ and love Him, and fix your desires on the things above.
Then you will be able to govern yourself, when you let Christ govern
you.--_Alex. McLaren._


=October 16th.=

      _The word of our God shall stand forever. Isa. xl. 8._

The Word of God is the water of life; the more ye lave it forth, the
fresher it runneth. It is the fire of God's glory; the more ye blow it,
the clearer it burneth. It is the corn of the Lord's field; the better
ye grind it, the more it yieldeth. It is the bread of heaven; the more
it is broken and given forth, the more it remaineth. It is the sword of
the Spirit; the more it is scoured, the brighter it shineth.--_Bishop
Jewel._


=October 17th.=

      _I spake unto thee in thy prosperity. Jer. xxii. 21._

We shade our eyes with the hand to shut out the glare of the strong
daylight when we want to see far away. God thus puts, as it were, His
hand upon our brows, and tempers the glow of prosperity, that we may
take in the wider phases of His goodness. It is a common experience
that, looking out from the gloom of some personal affliction, men have
seen for the first time beyond the earth plane, and caught glimpses of
the Beulah Land. Let us not shrink from the Hand which we know is heavy
only with blessing.--_Ludlow._


=October 18th.=

      _Surely He shall deliver thee from the snare of the
      fowler. Psa. xci. 3._

_He shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler._ That is, from the
little things, the hidden traps and nets that are set for us. Great sins
frighten where little snares entangle. It is easier to escape the
huntsman's arrow than the crafty lure.

And where are they not set? Riches and poverty, sickness and strength,
prosperity and adversity, friendship and loneliness, the work and the
want of it--each has its snare, wherein not only are the unwary caught,
but the wise and the watchful sometimes fall a prey. Little things, mere
threads, hardly worth guarding against--yet they are strong enough to
hold us and hinder us, and may be the beginning of our destruction.--_Mark
Guy Pearse._


=October 19th.=

      _The Lord set a mark upon Cain. Gen. iv. 15._

We speak of the mark of Cain as if it was the mark of a curse. In
reality it was the mark of God's mercy, a defence against his
enemies.--_D. J. Burrell._


=October 20th.=

      _Who is among you that feareth the Lord . . . that
      walketh in darkness, and hath no light? Let him trust
      in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God. Isa.
      l. 10._

"In fierce storms," said an old seaman, "we can do but one thing, there
is only one way; we must put the ship in a certain position and keep her
there."

This, Christian, is what you must do. Sometimes, like Paul, you can see
neither sun nor stars, and no small tempest lies on you; and then you
can do but one thing; there is only one way. Reason cannot help you.
Past experiences give you no light. Even prayer fetches no consolation.
Only a single course is left. You must put your soul in one position and
keep it there. You must stay upon the Lord; and, come what may--winds,
waves, cross seas, thunder, lightning, frowning rocks, roaring
breakers--no matter what, you must lash yourself to the helm, and hold
fast your confidence in God's faithfulness, His covenant engagement, His
everlasting love in Christ Jesus.--_Richard Fuller._


=October 21st.=

      _Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a
      crown of life. Rev. ii. 10._

There is a heaven at the end of every faithful Christian's
journey.--_Cuyler._


=October 22nd.=

      _Flee into Egypt. Matt. ii. 13._

Why? Because there is a cruel king who will seek the young child's life.

Is Christ born in thee? Is thy life like that manger--precious as a
casket, because of what it holds? Then have a care; for, craftier and
more unscrupulous than Herod, the destroyer of souls will seek to
destroy thee.

There is a day coming when they shall say, "They are dead which sought
the young child's life." Grace shall survive the foe, and we shall yet
return to enjoy the comforts of life, with no Herod to threaten us.
After all, it is sin which is short-lived, for goodness shall flourish
when the evil one is chained up for ever.--_Thos. Champness._


=October 23rd.=

      _As my lord the king hath said, so will thy servant
      do. 1 Kings ii. 38._

There is something infinitely better than doing a great thing for God,
and the infinitely better thing is to be where God wants us to be, to do
what God wants us to do, and to have no will apart from His.--_G.
Campbell Morgan._


=October 24th.=

      _Let your light so shine before men, that they may see
      your good works, and glorify your Father which is in
      heaven. Matt. v. 16._

They say the world has an eagle eye for anything inconsistent, an eye
sharp to discover the vagaries and inconsistencies in the defaulty and
the unworthy. It has an eagle eye; but the eagle winks before the sun,
and the burning iris of its eye shrinks abashed before the unsullied
purity of noon. Let your light so shine before men, that others, awed
and charmed by the consistency of your godly life, may come to enquire,
and to say you have been with Jesus.--_Punshon._


=October 25th.=

      _The eleven disciples went . . . into a mountain where
      Jesus had appointed them . . . Jesus came and spake
      unto them saying . . . Go ye and teach all nations.
      Matt. xxviii. 16, 18, 19._

The considerable actions in the world have usually very small
beginnings. Of a few letters, how many thousand words are made! Of ten
figures, how many thousand numbers! A point is the beginning of all
geometry. A little stone flung into a pond makes a little circle, then a
greater, till it enlarges itself to both the sides. So from small
beginnings God doth cause an efflux through the whole world.--_Charnock._


=October 26th.=

      _Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which
      shall be to all people. Luke ii. 10._

It is true that these good tidings of great joy were to be "for all
people," but not _first_. The message falls on our own ears, and is
first for our own souls.

Oh, ponder this well! Take all God's truths home _first_ to thine own
heart. Ask in earnest prayer that the Spirit may write them with the pen
of heaven on thine own conscience. Then wilt thou be a vessel fitted for
the Master's use, and carry His message with spiritual power to the
souls of others.--_F. Whitfield._


=October 27th.=

      _Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth. Heb. xii. 6._

Earthly prosperity is no sign of the special love of heaven: nor are
sorrow and care any mark of God's disfavor, but the reverse. God's love
is robust, and true, and eager--not for our comfort, but for our lasting
blessedness; it is bent on achieving this, and it is strong enough to
bear misrepresentation and rebuke in its attempts to attune our spirits
to higher music. It therefore comes instructing us. Let us enter
ourselves as pupils in the school of God's love. Let us lay aside our
own notions of the course of study; let us submit ourselves to be led
and taught; let us be prepared for any lessons that may be given from
the blackboard of sorrow: let us be so assured of the inexhaustible
tenacity of His love as to dare to trust Him, though He slay us. And let
us look forward to that august moment when He will give us a reason for
all life's discipline, with a smile that shall thrill our souls with
ecstasy, and constrain sorrow and sighing to flee away forever.--_F. B.
Meyer._


=October 28th.=

      _Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, He
      will give it you. John xvi. 23._

Prayer must be based upon promise, but, thank God, His promises are
always broader than our prayers! No fear of building inverted pyramids
here, for Jesus Christ is the foundation.--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=October 29th.=

      _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, and to wipe them with the towel
      wherewith He was girded. John xiii. 4, 5._

Acts are common and mean because they are ordinarily expressive of the
common and mean thoughts of men. Let us not accuse the acts that make up
our daily life of meanness, but our ignoble souls that reveal themselves
so unworthily through those acts. The same act may successively mount up
through every intermediate stage from the depth of unworthiness to a
transcendent height of excellence, according to the soul that is
manifested by it. One of the glorious ends of our Lord's incarnation was
that He might propitiate us with the details of life, so that we should
not disdain these as insignificant, but rather disdain ourselves for our
inability to make these details interpreters of a noble nature. Oh, let
us then look with affectionateness and gratitude upon the daily details
of life, seeing the sanctifying imprint of the hand of Jesus upon them
all!--_George Bowen._


=October 30th.=

      _He placed . . . cherubims, and a flaming sword . . .
      to keep the way of the tree of life. Gen. iii. 24._

      _Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they
      may have right to the tree of life. Rev. xxii. 14._

How remarkable and how beautiful it is that the last page of the
Revelation should come bending round to touch the first page of Genesis.
The history of man began with angels with frowning faces and flaming
swords barring the way to the Tree of Life. It ends with the guard of
cherubim withdrawn; or rather, perhaps, sheathing their swords and
becoming guides to the no longer forbidden fruit, instead of being its
guards. That is the Bible's grand symbolical way of saying that all
between--the sin, the misery, the death--is a parenthesis. God's purpose
is not going to be thwarted. The end of His majestic march through
history is to be men's access to the Tree of Life, from which, for the
dreary ages--that are but as a moment in the great eternities--they were
barred out by their sin,--_Alex. McLaren._


=October 31st.=

      _That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
      glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and
      revelation in the knowledge of Him: the eyes of your
      understanding being enlightened. Eph. i. 17, 18._

We were coming down a mountain in Switzerland one evening, when a black
thunder-storm blotted out the day, and all things were suddenly plunged
into darkness. We could only dimly see the narrow, dusty footpaths, and
the gloomy sides that were swallowed up in deeper gloom. What, then, of
the majesty all about us, heights, and depths, and wonders? All was
darkness. Then came the lightning--not flashes, but the blazing of the
whole sky, incessant, and on every side. What recesses of glory we gazed
into! What marvels of splendor shone out of the darkness!

Think how with us, in us, is One who comes to make the common, dusty
ways of life resplendent, illuminating our dull thoughts by the light of
the glory of God; clearing the vision of the soul, and then revealing
the greatness of the salvation that is ours in Christ.--_Mark Guy
Pearse._




[Illustration: November]


=November 1st.=

      _Jesus was left alone, and the woman standing in the
      midst. John viii. 9._

Alone with Jesus! What a sweet and holy spot! What a blessed refuge to
which the soul may betake itself from the charges of Satan, the
accusations of the world, and the sorrows of life! Sweet spot for the
heart to unfold itself, to tell its hidden tale in the ear of Infinite
love, tenderness, and compassion!

Alone with Jesus! How different a front would Christianity present to
the world if the Lord's people were oftener there! What humility, and
gentleness, and love, would characterize all their dealings! What
holiness stamped on the very brow, that all might read! What few
judgments passed on others, how many more on ourselves! What calmness
and resignation and joyful submission to all the Lord's dealings!

Be much "alone with Jesus!" Then will the passage to glory be one of
sunshine, whether it be through the portals of the grave or through the
clouds of heaven.--_F. Whitfield._


=November 2nd.=

      _Thou wilt shew me the path of life: in Thy presence
      is fullness of joy; at Thy right hand there are
      pleasures for evermore. Psa. xvi. 11._

The man who walks along the path of life lives in the presence of the
joy-giving God. Just in so far as he is true to that path of life, and
wanders neither to the right hand nor to the left, his joy becomes
deeper, nay! he becomes partaker of that very fullness of joy in which
God Himself lives, and moves, and has His being. And while such is his
experience in the midst of all the trials of life, he has also the
privilege of looking forward to grander things yet in store for him,
when that higher world shall be reached, and the shadows of time have
passed away forever. "At Thy right hand," exclaims the psalmist, "there
are pleasures for evermore."--_W. Hay Aitken._


=November 3rd.=

      _Be clothed with humility. 1 Pet. v. 5._

Is it not one of the difficulties of church work that we have more
officers than men? We need more of the rank and file, who are willing to
march anywhere, and to do the lowliest of tasks. We shall succeed in
doing greater things when we are all of us willing to be subject. It is
the bayonet rather than the gold lace which is wanted when the enemy is
to be subdued.--_Thomas Champness._


=November 4th.=

      _Jacob lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold,
      Esau came, and with him four hundred men. Gen. xxxiii.
      1._

Do not lift up your eyes and look for Esaus. Those who look for troubles
will not be long without finding trouble to look at. Lift them
higher--to Him from whom our help cometh. Then you will be able to meet
your troubles with an unperturbed spirit. Those who have seen the face
of God need not fear the face of man that shall die. To have power with
God is to have power over all the evils that threaten us.--_F. B.
Meyer._


=November 5th.=

      _Let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the
      flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of
      God. 2 Cor. vii. 1._

The Tree of Life, according to some of the old rabbinical legends,
lifted its branches, by an indwelling motion, high above impure hands
that were stretched to touch them; and until our hands are cleansed
through faith in Jesus Christ, its richest fruit hangs unreachable,
golden above our heads. The fullness of the life of heaven is only
granted to those who, drawing near Jesus Christ by faith on earth, have
thereby cleansed themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and
spirit.--_Alex. McLaren._


=November 6th.=

      _The pillar of the cloud went from before their face,
      and stood behind them. Ex. xiv. 19._

It is not always guidance that we most need. Many of our dangers come
upon us from behind. They are stealthy, insidious, assaulting us when we
are unaware of their nearness. The tempter is cunning and shrewd. He
does not meet us full front. It is a comfort to know that Christ comes
behind us when it is there we need the protection.--_J. R. Miller._


=November 7th.=

      _Iniquities prevail against me: as for our
      transgressions, Thou shall purge them away. Psa. lxv.
      3._

There is much earnest religion that lives in the dreary compass of these
first four words, "Iniquities prevail against me," and never gets a
glimpse beyond it. But do not put a full stop there. Fetch in One who
can help. "As for our transgressions, THOU shalt purge them away." The
moment we bring the Lord in, that moment defeat is turned to triumphant
deliverance!

Write that up in golden letters--THOU! And do not find in this word only
a trembling hope, or a wondering wish. Listen to its full
assurance--THOU SHALT!

There is but one result that can warrant the agony of Calvary; there is
but one result that can satisfy either our blessed Savior or ourselves;
and that is our being conquerors over sin.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=November 8th.=

      _Speaking the truth in love. Eph. iv. 15._

The best way of eradicating error is to publish and practice truth.--_W.
Arnot._


=November 9th.=

      _So he arose, and went to Zarephath. 1 Kings xvii.
      10._

Let it be equally said of you to whatever duty the Lord may call you
away, "He arose and went." Be the way ever so laborious or dangerous,
still arise, like Elijah, and go. Go cheerfully, in faith, keeping your
heart quietly dependent on the Lord, and in the end you will surely
behold and sing of His goodness. Though tossed on a sea of troubles you
may anchor on the firm foundation of God, which standeth sure. You have
for your security His exceeding great and precious promises, and may say
with the psalmist, "Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou
disquieted within me? Hope thou in God, for I shall yet praise Him who
is the health of my countenance, and my God."--_F. W. Krummacher._


=November 10th.=

      _A daily rate for every day. 2 Kings xxv. 30._

The acts of breathing which I performed yesterday will not keep me alive
to-day; I must continue to breathe afresh every moment, or animal life
ceases. In like manner yesterday's grace and spiritual strength must be
renewed, and the Holy Spirit must continue to breathe on my soul from
moment to moment in order to my enjoying the consolations, and to my
working the works of God.--_Toplady._


=November 11th.=

      _And when the vessel that he made of the clay was
      marred in the hand of the potter, he made it again
      another vessel, as seemed good to the potter to make
      it. Jer. xviii. 4. (R. V.)_

God's fairest, highest place of service in the land that lies beyond
will be filled by the men and women who have been broken upon the wheel
on earth.--_G. Campbell Morgan._


=November 12th.=

      _Examine yourselves. 2 Cor. xiii. 5._

If your state be good, searching into it will give you that comfort of
it. If your state be bad, searching into it cannot make it worse; nay,
it is the only way to make it better, for conversion begins with
conviction.--_Bishop Hopkins._


=November 13th.=

      _Choose you this day whom ye will serve. Josh. xxiv.
      15._

CHOICE AND SERVICE--these were demanded of the Israelites; these are
demanded of you, these only. Choice and service--in these are the whole
of life.--_Mark Hopkins._


=November 14th.=

      _Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all
      generations. Psa. xc. 1._

You cannot detain the eagle in the forest. You may gather around him a
chorus of the choicest birds; you may give him a perch on the goodliest
pine; you may charge winged messengers to bring him choicest dainties;
but he will spurn them all. Spreading his lordly wings, and with his eye
on the Alpine cliff, he will soar away to his own ancestral halls amid
the munitions of rocks and the wild music of tempest and waterfall.

The soul of man, in its eagle soarings, will rest with nothing short of
the Rock of Ages. Its ancestral halls are the halls of heaven. Its
munitions of rocks are the attributes of God. The sweep of its majestic
flight is Eternity! "Lord, THOU hast been our dwelling place in all
generations!"--_Macduff._


=November 15th.=

      _He hath said. Heb. xiii. 5._

If we can only grasp these words of faith, we have an all-conquering
weapon in our hand. What doubt is there that will not be slain by this
two-edged sword? What fear is there which shall not fall smitten with a
deadly wound before this arrow from the bow of God's covenant? "He hath
said!" Yes; whether for delight in our quietude, or for strength in our
conflict, "He hath said!" must be our daily resort.

Since "He hath said" is the source of all wisdom, and the fountain of
all comfort, let it dwell in you richly, as "a well of water, springing
up unto everlasting life." So shall you grow healthy, strong, and happy,
in the divine life.--_Spurgeon._


=November 16th.=

      _Not I, but Christ liveth in me. Gal. ii. 20._

The wonder of the life in Jesus is this--and you will find it so, and
you have found it so, if you have ever taken your New Testament and
tried to make it the rule of your daily life--that there is not a single
action that you are called upon to do of which you need be, of which you
will be, in any serious doubt for ten minutes as to what Jesus Christ,
if He were here, Jesus Christ being here, would have you do under those
circumstances and with the material upon which you are called to act.
The soul that takes in Jesus' word, the soul that through the words of
Jesus enters into the very person of Jesus, the soul that knows Him as
its daily presence and its daily law--it never hesitates.--_Phillips
Brooks._


=November 17th.=

      _Who is my neighbor? Luke x. 29._

"Who is thy neighbor?" It is the sufferer, wherever, whoever, whatsoever
he be. Wherever thou hearest the cry of distress, wherever thou seest
anyone brought across thy path by the chances and changes of life (that
is, by the Providence of God), whom it is in thy power to help--he,
stranger or enemy though he be--_he_ is thy neighbor.--_A. P. Stanley._


=November 18th.=

      _He which stablisheth us . . . in Christ, and hath
      anointed us, is God; who hath also sealed us, and
      given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts. 2 Cor.
      i. 21, 22._

When a Christian is "sealed" by the Holy Ghost, "sealed" as the property
of his Master, there will be no need to ask, "Whose image and
superscription is this" upon the "sealed" one? The King's, of course.
Anyone can see the image.

Of what use is a "seal" if it cannot be seen?

Is the King's image visibly, permanently, stamped upon us? It is on
every Spirit-filled, "sealed" believer.--_John McNeil._


=November 19th.=

      _They shall rejoice, and shall see the plummet in the
      hand of Zerubbabel. Zech. iv. 10._

It is joy to the Christian to know that the plummet is now in the hands
of our great Zerubbabel, and that when He comes forth, the world's
misrule shall be over. The false standards and false estimates of men
shall be swept away. The standards of "expediency," of "conscience," of
"every man thinking as he likes, if he is only _sincere_"--these, and
all similar refuges of lies shall be like a spider's web. The measure of
all things will be Christ, and Christ the Measurer of all things.

How everything will be reversed! What a turning upside down of all that
now exists!

Blessed day, and longed for--the world's great jubilee, the earth's
long-looked-for Sabbath, groaning creation's joy, and nature's calm
repose! Who would not cry, "Come, Lord Jesus, and end this troubled
dream! Shatter the shadows of the long, dark night of sin and sorrow,
sighing and tears, despair and death!"--_F. Whitfield._


=November 20th.=

      _In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of
      good cheer; I have overcome the world. John xvi. 33._

Tribulation is God's threshing--not to destroy us, but to get what is
good, heavenly, and spiritual in us separated from what is wrong,
earthly, and fleshly. Nothing less than blows of pain will do this. The
evil clings so to the good, the golden wheat of goodness in us is so
wrapped up in the strong chaff of the old life that only the heavy flail
of suffering can produce the separation.--_J. R. Miller._


=November 21st.=

      _I . . . heard behind me a great voice, as of a trumpet,
      saying . . . Write. Rev. i. 10, 11._

It is very sweet to note that a voice from heaven said to John, "Write."
Does not that voice come to us? Are there not those who would taste the
joys of heaven if we wrote them words of forgiveness and affection? Are
there not others who would dry their tears if we would remind them of
past joys, when we were poor as they are now? Nay, could not some, who
read these plain words, place inside the envelope something bearing
their signature which would make the widow's heart dance for joy?

What is our pen doing? Is it adding joy to other men's lives? If so,
then angels may tune their harps when we sit at our desk. They are sent
to minister to the heirs of salvation, and would be glad to look upon
our pen as writing music for them to sing, because what we write makes
their client's joy to be full.--_Thomas Champness._


=November 22nd.=

      _Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth. Heb. xii. 6._

We should ever bear in mind that the discipline of our heavenly Father's
hand is to be interpreted in the light of our Father's countenance; and
the deep mysteries of His moral government to be contemplated through
the medium or His tender love.--_Selected._


=November 23rd.=

      _Faithful is He that calleth you, who also will do it.
      1 Thess. v. 24._

Earthly faithfulness is possible only by the reception of heavenly
gifts. As surely as every leaf that grows is mainly water that the plant
has got from the clouds, and carbon that it has got out of the
atmosphere, so surely will all our good be mainly drawn from heaven and
heaven's gifts. As certainly as every lump of coal that you put upon
your fire contains in itself sunbeams that have been locked up for all
these millenniums that have passed since it waved green in the forest,
so certainly does every good deed embody in itself gifts from above. And
no man is pure except by impartation; and every good thing and every
perfect thing cometh from the Father of lights.--_Alex. McLaren._


=November 24th.=

      _Singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. Col.
      iii. 16._

Remember your life is to be a singing life. This world is God's grand
cathedral for you. You are to be one of God's choristers, and there is
to be a continual eucharistic sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving going
up from your heart, with which God shall be continually well pleased.
And there should be not only the offering of the lips, but the surrender
of the life with joy. Yes, with _joy_, and not with _constraint_. Every
faculty of our nature should be presented to Him in gladsome service,
for the Lord Jehovah is my song as well as my strength.--_W. Hay
Aitken._


=November 25th.=

      _Call to remembrance the former days. Heb. x. 32._

_The former days_--times of trial, conflict, discouragement, temptation.
Did we oftener call these to remembrance, with how much more delight
would we make the covert of God's faithfulness our refuge, exclaiming
with the psalmist, "Because Thou hast been my help, therefore in the
shadow of Thy wings will I rejoice."--_R. Fuller._


=November 26th.=

      _The Lord . . . thy habitation. Psa. xci. 9._

We go home without arrangement. We plan our visits, and then go home
because they are over. Duty, want, a host of things, lead us forth
elsewhere; but the heart takes us home. Blessed, most blessed is he
whose thoughts pass up to God, not because they are driven like a
fisherman's craft swept by the fierceness of the storm, not because they
are forced by want or fear, not because they are led by the hand of
duty, but because God is in his habitation and his home. Loosed from
other things, the thoughts go home for rest.

In God the blessed man finds the love that welcomes. There is the sunny
place. There care is loosed and toil forgotten. There is the joyous
freedom, the happy calm, the rest, and renewing of our strength--at home
with God.--_Mark Guy Pearse._


=November 27th.=

      _These have turned the world upside down. Acts xvii.
      6._

      _None of these things move me. Acts xx. 24._

The men that move the world are the ones who do not let the world move
them.--_Selected._


=November 28th.=

      _He touched the hollow of Jacob's thigh in the sinew
      that shrank. Gen. xxxii. 32._

Whatever it is that enables a soul, whom God designs to bless, to stand
out against Him, God will touch. It may be the pride of wealth, or of
influence, or of affection; but it will not be spared--God will touch
it. It may be something as _natural_ as a sinew; but if it robs a man of
spiritual blessing God will touch it. It may be as _small_ a thing as a
sinew; but its influence in making a man strong in his resistance of
blessing will be enough to condemn it--and God will touch it. And
beneath that touch it will shrink and shrivel, and you will limp to the
end of life.

Remember that the sinew never shrinks save beneath the touch of the
angel hand--the touch of tender love.--_F. B. Meyer._


=November 29th.=

      _With God all things are possible. Mark x. 27._

Unbelief says, "How can such and such things be?" It is full of "hows";
but faith has one great answer to the ten thousand "hows," and that
answer is--GOD!--_C. H. M._


=November 30th.=

      _Ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath
      said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them. 2 Cor.
      vi. 16._

These temples were reared for Him. Let Him fill them so completely that,
like the oriental temple of glass in the ancient legend, the temple
shall not be seen, but only the glorious sunlight, which not only shines
into it, but through it, and the transparent walls are all unseen.--_A.
B. Simpson._




[Illustration: DECEMBER]


=December 1st.=

      _Without Christ. Eph. ii. 12._

Without a hope to cheer, a Pilot to steer, a Friend to counsel, grace to
sustain, heaven to welcome us, and God to console!--_Selected._


=December 2nd.=

      _When I am weak, then am I strong. 2 Cor. xii. 10._

This is God's way. We advance by going backwards, we become strong by
becoming weak, we become wise by being fools.--_F. Whitfield._


=December 3rd.=

      _Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy
      Ghost. 2 Pet. i. 21._

The Bible is the writing of the living God. Each letter was penned with
an almighty finger. Each word in it dropped from the everlasting lips.
Each sentence was dictated by the Holy Spirit. Albeit that Moses was
employed to write his histories with his fiery pen, God guided that pen.
It may be that David touched his harp, and let sweet psalms of melody
drop from his fingers; but God moved his hands over the living strings
of his golden harp. Solomon sang canticles of love and gave forth words
of consummate wisdom; but God directed his lips, and made the preacher
eloquent. If I follow the thundering Nahum, when his horses plough the
waters; or Habakkuk, when he sees the tents of Cushan in affliction; if
I read Malachi, when the earth is burning like an oven; if I turn to the
smooth page of John, who tells of love; or the rugged chapters of Peter,
who speaks of fire devouring God's enemies; if I turn aside to Jude, who
launches forth anathemas upon the foes of God--everywhere I find God
speaking; it is God's voice, not man's; the words are God's words; the
words of the Eternal, the Invisible, the Almighty, the Jehovah of ages.
This Bible is God's Bible; and when I see it, I seem to hear a voice
springing up from it, saying, "I am the Book of God. Man, read me. I am
God's writing. Study my page, for I was penned by God. Love me, for He
is my Author, and you will see Him visible and manifest
everywhere."--_Spurgeon._


=December 4th.=

      _They all forsook Him, and fled. Mark xiv. 50._

Separation never comes from His side.--_J. Hudson Taylor._


=December 5th.=

      _Belshazzar the king made a great feast. Dan. v. 1._

There was one Guest not invited, but He came, and the work of His finger
glowed upon the wall.--_Selected._


=December 6th.=

      _He that watereth shall be watered also himself. Prov.
      xi. 25._

The effective life and the receptive life are one. No sweep of arm that
does some work for God but harvests also some more of the truth of God,
and sweeps it into the treasury of life.--_Phillips Brooks._


=December 7th.=

      _And they came unto Him, bringing one sick of the
      palsy. Mark ii. 3._

Had it not been for the palsy, this man might never have seen
Christ!--_Selected._


=December 8th.=

      _Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His
      benefits . . . who crowneth thee with loving kindness
      and tender mercies. Ps. ciii. 2, 4._

We talk about the telescope of faith, but I think we want even more the
microscope of watchful and grateful love. Apply this to the little bits
of our daily lives, in the light of the Spirit, and how wonderfully they
come out!--_Frances Ridley Havergal._


=December 9th.=

      _When thou passest through the waters I will be with
      thee. Is. xliii. 2._

God's presence in the trial is much better than exemption from the
trial. The sympathy of His heart with us is sweeter far than the power
of His hand for us.--_Selected._


=December 10th.=

      _Then shall ye discern between the righteous and the
      wicked. Mal. iii. 18._

Said Anne of Austria to Cardinal Richelieu: "God does not pay at the end
of every week, but He pays at last!"--_Selected._


=December 11th.=

      _What is your life? It is even a vapor, that appeared
      for a little time, and then vanisheth away. James iv.
      14._

        "Only one life; 'twill soon be past--
        And only what's done for Christ will last."--_Selected._


=December 12th.=

      _He (Jesus) . . . looked up to heaven. Mark vi. 41._

In working for God, first look to heaven. It is a grand plan. Over and
over again our Lord Jesus Christ looked to heaven and said, "Father."
Let us imitate Him; although standing on the earth, let us have our
conversation in heaven. Before you go out, if you would feed the world,
if you would be a blessing in the midst of spiritual dearth and famine,
lift up your head to heaven. Then your very face will shine, your very
garments will smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory
palaces where you have been with your God and Savior. There will be
stamped upon you the dignity and power of the service of the Most High
God.--_McNeil._


=December 13th.=

      _The disciples were called Christians first in
      Antioch. Acts xi. 26._

This name suggests that the clear impression made by our character, as
well as by our words, should be that we belong to Jesus Christ. He
should manifestly be the center and the guide, the impulse and the
pattern, the strength and reward, of our lives. We are Christians. That
should be plain for all folks to see, whether we speak or be silent.

Is it so with you?--_Alex. McLaren._


=December 14th.=

      _Having therefore these promises. 2 Cor. vii. 1._

The forests in summer days are full of birds' nests. They are hidden
among the leaves. The little birds know where they are; and when a storm
arises, or when night draws on, they fly, each to his own nest. So the
promises of God are hidden in the Bible, like nests in the great
forests; and thither we should fly in any danger or alarm, hiding there
in our soul's nest until the storm be overpast. There are no castles in
this world so impregnable as the words of Christ.--_J. R. Miller._


=December 15th.=

      _Now abideth faith, hope, love, these three; but the
      greatest of these is love. 1 Cor. xiii. 13. (R. V.)_

Love is the greatest thing that God can give us: for Himself is Love;
and it is the greatest thing we can give to God: for it will give
ourselves, and carry with it all that is ours.--_Jeremy Taylor._


=December 16th.=

     _He (Thomas) . . . said, Except I shall see . . . I
     will not believe. . . . Jesus . . . said . . . Be not
     faithless, but believing. John xx. 25, 27._

Every doubt in the heart of a Christian is a dishonor done to the Word
of God, and the sacrifice of Christ.--_Selected._


=December 17th.=

      _Lot . . . pitched his tent toward Sodom. Gen. xiii.
      12._

And soon Lot moved into Sodom; and before long Sodom moved into
him.--_Theodore Cuyler._


=December 18th.=

      _Cleanse Thou me from secret faults. Psa. xix. 12._

The world needs men who are free from secret faults. Most men are free
from gross, public faults.--_Selected._


=December 19th.=

      _A hearer of the word . . . a doer of the work. Jas. i.
      23, 25._

Religion may be learned on Sunday, but it is lived in the week-day's
work. The torch of religion may be lit in the church, but it does its
burning in the shop and on the street. Religion seeks its life in
prayer, but it lives its life in deeds. It is planted in the closet, but
it does its growing out in the world. It plumes itself for flight in
songs of praise, but its actual flights are in works of love. It
resolves and meditates on faithfulness as it reads its Christian lesson
in the Book of Truth, but "faithful is that faithful does." It puts its
armor on in all the aids and helps of the sanctuary as its
dressing-room, but it combats for the right, the noble, and the good in
all the activities of practical existence, and its battle ground is the
whole broad field of life.--_John Doughty._


=December 20th.=

      _Ye know not what shall be on the morrow. James iv.
      14._

"To-morrow" is the devil's great ally--the very Goliath in whom he
trusts for victory. "Now" is the stripling sent forth against him. . . .
The world will freely agree to be Christians to-morrow if Christ will
permit them to be worldly to-day.--_William Arnot._


=December 21st.=

      _The sea wrought, and was tempestuous. Jonah i. 11._

Sin in the soul is like Jonah in the ship. It turns the smoothest water
into a tempestuous sea.--_Selected._


=December 22nd.=

      _Be not doubtful, but followers of them also, through
      faith and patience, inherit the promises. Heb. vi.
      12._

God makes a promise. Faith believes it. Hope anticipates it. Patience
quietly awaits it.--_Selected._


=December 23rd.=

      _Go and sit down in the lowest room. Luke xiv. 10._

He who is willing to take the lowest place will always find sitting
room; there is no great crush for the worst places. There is nothing
like the jostling at the back there is at the front; so if we would be
comfortable, we shall do well to keep behind.--_Thomas Champness._


=December 24th.=

      _Continue in prayer. Col. iv. 2._

Our prayers often resemble the mischievous tricks of town children, who
knock at their neighbor's houses and then run away; we often knock at
heaven's door and then run off into the spirit of the world; instead of
waiting for entrance and answer, we act as if we were afraid of having
our prayers answered.--_Williams._


=December 25th.=

      _A multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and
      saying, Glory to God in the highest. Luke ii. 13, 14._

Angels had been present on many august occasions, and they had joined in
many a solemn chorus to the praise of their Almighty Creator. They were
present at the creation: "The morning stars sang together, and all the
sons of God shouted for joy." They had seen many a planet fashioned
between the palms of Jehovah, and wheeled by His eternal hands through
the infinitude of space. They had sung solemn songs over many a world
which the Great One had created. We doubt not, they had often chanted,
"Blessing and honor, and glory, and majesty, and power, and dominion,
and might, be unto Him that sitteth on the throne," manifesting Himself
in the work of creation. I doubt not, too, that their songs had gathered
force through ages. As when first created, their first breath was song,
so when they saw God create new worlds, then their song received another
note; they rose a little higher in the gamut of adoration. But this
time, when they saw God stoop from His throne and become a babe hanging
upon a woman's breast, they lifted their notes higher still; and
reaching to the uttermost stretch of angelic music, they gained the
highest notes of the divine scale of praise and they sang, "Glory to God
_in the highest_," for higher in goodness they felt God could not go.
Thus their highest praise they gave to Him in the highest act of His
Godhead.--_Spurgeon._


=December 26th.=

      _God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of
      our Lord Jesus Christ. Gal. vi. 14._

The cross is the great center of God's moral universe! To this center
God ever pointed, and the eye of faith ever looked forward, until the
Savior came. And now we must ever turn to that cross as the center of
all our blessing, and the basis of all our worship, both on earth and in
heaven--in time and throughout all eternity.


=December 27th.=

      _He ever liveth. Heb. vii. 25._

It is our hope for ourselves, and for His truth, and for mankind. Men
come and go. Leaders, teachers, thinkers, speak and work for a season,
and then fall silent and impotent. He abides. They die, but He lives.
They are lights kindled, and therefore, sooner or later quenched, but He
is the true Light from which they draw all their brightness, and He
shines for evermore.--_Alex. McLaren._


=December 28th.=

      _The friendship of the world is enmity with God. James
      iv. 4._

It is like the ivy with the oak. The ivy may give the oak a grand,
beautiful appearance, but all the while it is feeding on its vitals. Are
we compromising with the enemies of God? Are we being embraced by the
world by its honors, its pleasures, its applause? This may add to us in
the world's estimation, but our strength becomes lost.--_Denham Smith._


=December 29th.=

      _She (Hannah) . . . prayed unto the Lord, and wept sore
      . . . she spake in her heart. 1 Sam. i. 10, 13._

For real business at the mercy-seat give me a home-made prayer, a prayer
that comes out of the depths of my heart, not because I invented it, but
because God the Holy Ghost, put it there, and gave it such living force
that I could not help letting it out. Though your words are broken, and
your sentences disconnected, if your desires are earnest, if they are
like coals of juniper, burning with a vehement flame, God will not mind
how they find expression. If you have no words, perhaps you will pray
better without them than with them. There are prayers that break the
backs of words; they are too heavy for any human language to
carry.--_Spurgeon._


=December 30th.=

      _Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Gen. vi.
      8._

Noah found grace in the same way that Paul obtained mercy (1 Tim. 1:
16), namely, by mercy's taking hold of him.--_Selected._


=December 31st.=

      _Which hope we have as an anchor to the soul. Heb. vi.
      19._

Anchor to the throne of God, and then shorten the rope!--_Selected._

       *       *       *       *       *

Transcriber's Notes:

Obvious punctuation errors repaired.


Page 4, there was a reference "11:10" listed under Ephesians. As
Ephesians doesn't have eleven chapters, the transcriber checked page 78.
Ephesians 2, written as ii, is on page 78 and is already listed under
Ephesians. The reference to 11:10 being on page 78 was removed.

Page 4, "I." added to "Thessalonians".

Pge 24, "regetting" changed to "regretting" (by regretting what is)

Page 63, "Jnue" changed to "June" (June 22nd)

Page 64, "closee" changed to "closer" (by closer following)

Page 110, "porals" changed to "portals" (portals of the grave)





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Thoughts for the Quiet Hour, by Various

*** 