Spurgeon...
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This Morning's Meditation
C. H. Spurgeon
"They go from strength to strength."—Psalm 84:7.
HEY go from strength to strength. There are various renderings of these words, but all of them contain the idea of progress.
Our own good
translation of the authorized version is enough for us this morning.
"They go from strength to strength." That is, they grow stronger and
stronger. Usually, if we are walking, we go from strength to weakness;
we start fresh and in good order for our journey, but by-and-by the road
is rough, and the sun is hot, we sit down by the wayside, and then
again painfully pursue our weary way. But the Christian pilgrim having
obtained fresh supplies of grace, is as vigorous after years of toilsome
travel and struggle as when he first set out. He may not be quite so
elate and buoyant, nor perhaps quite so hot and hasty in his zeal as he
once was, but he is much stronger in all that constitutes real power,
and travels, if more slowly, far more surely. Some gray-haired veterans
have been as firm in their grasp of truth, and as zealous in diffusing
it, as they were in their younger days; but, alas, it must be confessed
it is often otherwise, for the love of many waxes cold and iniquity
abounds, but this is their own sin and not the fault of the promise
which still holds good: "The youths shall faint and be weary, and the
young men shall utterly fall, but 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." Fretful
spirits sit down and trouble themselves about the future. "Alas!" say
they, "we go from affliction to affliction." Very true, O thou of little
faith, but then thou goest from strength to strength also. Thou shalt
never find a bundle of affliction which has not bound up in the midst of
it sufficient grace. God will give the strength of ripe manhood with
the burden allotted to full-grown shoulders.
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