posted by Phil Johnson
The PyroManiacs normally devote space at the beginning of each week to highlights from The Spurgeon Archive.
This week's entry is about four days late, but it's a good and thought- provoking one, especially fitting for this time of year. This is from a sermon titled "A Golden Prayer," originally preached 30 December 1877 at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, London. Spurgeon's text that morning was John 12:28"Father, glorify thy name.":
ow, brethren, concerning this next year upon which we are entering, I hope it will be a year of happiness to you,I very emphatically wish you all a Happy New Year,but nobody can be confident that it will be a year free from trouble.
On the contrary, you may be pretty confident that it will not be so, for man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward.
We have each, beloved friends, some dear faces in which we rejoice, may they long smile upon us: but remember each one of these may be an occasion of sorrow during the next year, for we have neither an immortal child, nor an immortal husband, nor an immortal wife, nor an immortal friend, and therefore some of these may die within the year.
Moreover the comforts with which we are surrounded may take to themselves wings before another year shall fulfill its months. Earthly joys are as if they were all made of snow, they melt even as the hoar frost, and are gone before we conclude our thanksgiving for their coming. It may be you will have a year of drought and shortness of bread; years lean and ill-favored may be your portion.
Ay, and yet more, perhaps during the year which has almost dawned you may have to gather up your feet in the bed and die, to meet your father’s God.
Well now, concerning this approaching year and its mournful possibilities, shall we grow gloomy and desponding? Shall we wish we had never been born or ask that we may die? By no means. Shall we on the other hand grow frivolous and laugh at all things? No, that were ill-becoming in heirs of God.
What shall we do? We will breathe this prayer, "Father, glorify thy name." That is to say, if I must lose my property, glorify thy name by my poverty; if I must be bereaved, glorify thy name in my sorrows; if I must die, glorify thy name in my departure.
Now, when you pray in that fashion, your conflict is over, no outward fright nor inward fear remains if that prayer rises from the heart, you have now cast aside all gloomy forebodings, and you can thoughtfully and placidly pursue your way into the unknown to-morrow.
1 comment:
Great words from a great man of God. Thanks! This is a timely post as there is familiar insight here into some family matters for my wife. It seems Spurgeon always speaks in so many ways. Truly he was a man anointed by the Spirit of God. What a great prayer to pray as well.
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