Sunday, May 18, 2025

Gems from May 21- 31, 2025

We hid as it were our faces from Him; He was despised, and we esteemed Him not.   Isaiah 53:3

Isaiah described how badly the Man of Sorrows was treated by His own people.  The prophet used the word despised twice in verse 3, listing seven points of the severe rejection He experienced.  Just as people would avoid any contact with a leper, so they were hiding their faces from Jesus the Messiah. "Thus saith the Lord, the Redeemer of Israel, and His Holy One, to Him whom man despises, to Him who the nation abhorreth, to a Servant of rulers, Kings shall see and arise, princes also shall worship, because of the Lord that is faithful and the Holy One of Israel, and He shall chose Thee".  (Isaiah 49:7)  just as in (Isaiah 52;13-15) recounts the bad treatment He received from the Jewish leaders, Isaiah 53:3 forms the conclusion of this great prophecy about Messiah's rejection.

Following are those seven points: 
Despised--this implies disrespect and rejecting God's thoughts.
Rejected--Left alone: people refused any contact with Him.
Man of Sorrows--His Name of much pain, suffering and anguish!
"Acquainted with Grief."
Hiding 
their faces, people were staying away from Him. 
Despised--a word mentioned the second time in the same verse; a distain implying hatred.
We esteemed Him not
This recaps how people evaluated Him.  For they had no room for Him.  Let's not forget that this text was penned about 800 years before the Messiah suffered and died.

Alfred E. Bouter

N.J. Hiebert - 9949

May 21

Whatsoever doth make manifest is light.  Ephesians 5:13

The light shows exactly what the true state of affairs is; and, therefore, until a man is in the light he does not know what he is; and he does not know God.  In fact, until a soul is brought into the light it really does not understand its true state before God.

Now, in the verse above you see this brought out.  We have elsewhere the wonderful statement, that, "Light is come into the world, and men love darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil."  (John 3:19).  Light comes first of all, in the Person of Christ, for, "In Him was light; and the life was the light of men.  And the light shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not" (John 1:4,5).

Now, that is a remarkable statement.  You see if you bring in natural light, into the darkness out goes the darkness.  If this room were in darkness, and someone turned on the light the darkness would vanish at once.  If you were in a coal-pit, and your light went out, you would be in darkness, and you could not estimate the relation of things.  What would be the natural way of letting you see where you were, and what your surroundings were?  Bring in the light; for, when the light comes in, away goes the darkness.

That is the truth regarding natural things; but in divine things the solemn thing is this, that although light comes, the darkness remains; for the darkness does not comprehend the light. (1 John 1:5)  But what is the light?  God--"God is Light, and in Him is no darkness at all. (1 John 1:5).  And what is the  darkness?  Man.  Man makes the darkness; the darkness is what his own state as a sinner is.  That constitutes the darkness, as we read, "For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord" (Ephesians 5:8). It is a wonderful moment when a man gets into the light, and becomes "Light in the Lord."  You will never get into the light, until you get to Christ.  
Seekers for Light -Dr.W. T. P. Wolston, 

N.J. Hiebert - 9950

May 22

The word of the Preacher, the son of David . . . Vanity of Vanities . . . all is vanity (emptiness).  What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?   Ecclesiastes 1:1-3.

"Therefore I hated life, (Ecclesiastes 2:17,19,21,23), yea, all my labour which I took under the sun," and "therefore I went about to cause my heart to despair of all my labour which I took under the sun."  For what is there in the labour itself?  Nothing that satisfies by itself.  It is only the anticipation of final satisfaction and enjoyment that can make up for the loss of quiet and ease now; prove that to be a vain hope, and the mere labour and planning night and day are indeed "empty vanity."

Thus much for labour "under the sun," with self for its object, and death for its limit.  Now for the contrast again in its refreshing beauty of the "new" as against the "old" "therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know your labour  is not in vain in the Lord." (1 Corinthians 15:58).  "All my labour is vanity" is the "groan" of the old, "for death with its terrors cuts me off from my labour and I leave it to a fool."  "No labour in vain" is the song of victory of the new, for resurrection with its glories but introduces me to the precious fruit of those labours, to be enjoyed forever.

Let us cherish this precious word, "not in vain," let us be indeed "persuaded" of it, and "embrace" it, not giving up our glorious heritage and going back to the mere human wisdom that Solomon the king possessed, and which only led then, as it must now and ever, to the groan of "vanity!"  But "not in vain" is ours.  No little one refreshed with even a up of cold water  (Matthew 10:42) but that soon the fruit of even that little labour of love shall meet its sweetest recompense in the smile, the approval, the praise of our Lord Jesus; and that shall make our hearts full to overflowing with bliss; as we there echo and re-echo our own word: it was indeed, "not in vain"
 F. C. Jennings  (with thanks - Bill Weiss)

N.J. Hiebert - 9951

May 23

Then came the officers to the chief priests and Pharisees; and they said unto them, Why have ye not brought Him?  The officers answered,  Never man spake like this Man.  John 7:45,46.

The only writing of our Lord was with His finger, and that in the loose sand of the ground  (John 8:6). Other men who spoke words, wrote in books to preserve to themselves a perpetual memorial of literary glory.  Not so the Son of God.  When He expired, forsaken on the cross, His words only remained sown on the hearts of men.  There the Holy Spirit, like the sun and the rain, made them bear fruit after His resurrection.

When the Lord Jesus died, His works were doubted; His disciples seemed hopeless, and His words appeared lost, like the seed of the harvest, in the cold ground during the frozen winter.  Peter had said, "Thou hast the words of eternal life," but those words were not written, and now Peter has denied Him in the presence of his enemies.  The officers testified, "Never man spake like this Man," but now they have seen Him answering not a word, "like a lamb dumb before her shearers, so He opened not His mouth."  All His friends were disappointed, and despaired when He was crucified. Who now would care about His words?  The tree is cut down; how can it now bear any fruit? 

No other person's words have been so cherished as the words of the Lord Jesus.  Yet His words lived!  Here then is one of the wonders in the words of Christ. They are imperishable words.  Passed away!  What has passed away?  The kings of earth have passed away.  Whatever opposition may arise to God and His Word shall surely pass away: for the Son of Man Who was Son of God, said, "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away." (Matthew 24:35)  Let the ages answer.  Bibles are more plentiful today than they have ever been.  The Words of the Lord Jesus are better known and loved by a greater multitude than ever before in the history of the world.  We add our simple testimony to the outspoken excuse of the Sanhedrin officers, "Never man spake like this Man."  
Leonard Sheldrake - A Plant of Renown    

N.J. Hiebert - 9952

May 24

". . . He left not Himself without witness, . . ."  Acts 14:17

Frances Ridley Havergal tells of her experience in the girls' school at Dusseldorf.  She went there soon after she had become a Christian and had confessed Christ.  Her heart  was very warm with love for her Saviour, and she was eager to speak for Him.  To her amazement, however, she soon learned that among the hundred girls in the school, she was the only Christian.  Her first thought was one of dismay--she could not confess Christ in that great company of worldly, non-Christian companions.  Her gentle sensitive heart shrank from a duty so difficult!

Her second thought, however, was that she could not refrain from confessing Christ.  She was the only one Christ had there, and she must be faithful!  "This was very bracing," she writes.  "I felt I must walk worthy of my calling for Christ's sake!  It brought me to a new and strong desire to bear witness for my Master.  It made me more watchful and earnest than ever before, for I knew that any slip in word or deed would bring discredit to my Lord and Master." 

She realized that she had in that school a mission to fulfill; that she was called to be Christ's witness there--His only witness--and that she dare not fail.  The Christian life cannot be a subterfuge (evasion).  It cannot be lived incognito (disguised).  There must be confession; a bold and clarion-like avowal that henceforth I am a soldier of the Lord!

Give a positive testimony!
God has put you where you are because He wants a witness just there.  
Mountain Trailways

"Just where you stand in the conflict, there is your place!
Just where you think you are useless, hide not your face!
God placed you there for a purpose, what e'er it be;
Think you He has chosen you for it: work loyally.  
  (Anon)

N.J. Hiebert - 9953

May 25

Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy.  Matthew 5:7

In my own life I am acutely aware that I am a roughhewn man.  Because of my rather tough, rough upbringing in a frontier environment, there are characteristics in my makeup which may seem harsh and unyielding.  But, despite this, my life has been deeply touched by the mercy of those who took the time to try and understand me--who cared enough to forgive so many faults and in mercy made me their friend.

Often these were people to whom I had shown no special kindness.  Their bestowal of mercy on me was something totally unexpected and undeserved.  Because of this, it has been a double delight.  More than that, it has been an enormous inspiration that lifted and challenged me to respond in a measure beyond my wildest dreams.  

Mercy does just that to people.  It excites and stimulates their hopes.  It reassures them that life can be beautiful.  It convinces them that there is good reason to carry on and push for better things if others care that much.  This all implies that if someone has extended mercy to me, surely I, in turn, can and must extend mercy to others. 

But, to really find the true source of inner inspiration for this sort of conduct, the Christian simply must look beyond his fellow man.  He must look away to the mercy of God our Father.  Nothing else in all the world will so humble us.  Nothing else will so move our stony spirits to extend mercy.  Nothing else will so powerfully induce us to do the proper thing in extending genuine mercy to our contemporaries.

"But God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ . . . for by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God."  (Ephesians 2:4,5,8)   
Songs of My Soul - W. Phillip Keller 

N.J. Hiebert - 9954

May 26

For He saith, I have heard thee in a time accepted, and in the day of salvation have I succoured thee: behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.  2 Corinthians 6:2

The story is told of a time during WW II when two allied battleships, had been at sea on maneuvers in heavy, foul weather for several days.  A sailor one particularly bad night was serving his watch when the visibility was so poor, that the captain remained on the bridge keeping an eye on all activities.  

The evening fell and shortly after another lookout on the huge ship reported to the captain, "Light, bearing on the starboard bow, Sir"!  The captain immediately responded, "Is it steady or moving astern?"  The reply came back almost immediately, "Steady, Captain".  

This was very bad news for it meant that battlement-ship group were on a danger collision course with that ship whose light had been spotted.  The Captain immediately ordered the signalman to "Signal that ship this message: 'We are on a collision course, advise you change your course, advise you change course twenty degrees.'" 

After a short pause a signal from the light; "Most advisable for you to change your course twenty degrees."  The captain, tense because of the bad weather, snapped out another command; "Send: I'm the Captain of this ship.  'Change your course twenty degrees immediately!'"  A moment later a reply was received; "I'm a sea-man second-class, Sir.  Urgently advise that you had better change your course twenty degrees now."

By that time the Captain was furious.  He spat out another order; "Send: 'This is a US battleship.  Change your course twenty degrees now.'"  Almost instantly came back the flashing signal light, "I'm a light house.  Highly advise you change your course now."  Without further comment, signals or delay the battle-ship changed its course by twenty degrees.  
The Christian Shepherd- Doug Nicolet

N.J. Hiebert - 9955

May 27

THE LORD'S REQUEST

This do in remembrance of Me.  Luke 22:19

Thy parting word, Lord JESUS--"This do, remember Me,"
To those whom sorrow gathered that night so close to Thee;
By grace our hearts do listen to hear its echo still, 
It strikes a chord within us, and praise our hearts doth fill.

Thy parting word, Lord JESUS, has touched the deepest spring,
And wakes anew affections our waiting hearts within;
Thy parting word, when sorrow around Thy footsteps pressed,
When Satan, death, and judgment their fears to Thee addressed. 

Thy parting word, Lord JESUS, ere judgment on Thee broke,
Ere on Thy Holy Person came down that righteous stroke;
The wrath of God before Thee, while foes did gather round, 
There too Thy "friend' betrayed Thee.  And darkness did abound.

Thy parting word, Lord JESUS, before thou did endure
The being of God forsaken, our blessing to secure;
Oh grace beyond expression!  Which sought that we should be,
All through Thy time of absence, in death remembering Thee.

Thy parting word, Lord JESUS, we treasure in our heart,
And from the love which spoke it we never more can part:
Soon, Lord, Thou will receive us unto Thyself on high,
Till then we Thee remember, Who for our sins did die.   

The Remembrancer - G. W. F.

N.J. Hiebert - 9956

May 28

For our conversation (citizenship) is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ.  Philippians 3:20

I am a citizen of heaven sojourning on earth, not a citizen of earth journeying to heaven.  God help me never to lose my pilgrimage character.  It is so easy to drive down our tent- pegs in this world. I would sit loose to its attractions like someone once said "I wear this world like a loose garment."

I am not merely looking for something to happen but for Someone to come.  When I studied arithmetic, I remembered that the answers were in the back of the book.  No matter how I floundered among my problems, the correct solution was on the last page.

I have failed often in working out life's problems, and I dwell in the midst of a people who are hopelessly trying to to untangle the riddle of this present age.  But I am cheered by one unfailing certainty--there is a Book (Bible) that solves the enigma and the answer is in the back of the Book, "Behold I come quickly."  "Even so come Lord Jesus."  Revelation 22:7,20 

Vance Havner - That I May Know Him

'Tis the hope of His coming that gladdens my heart,
That drives away sadness and bids care depart; 
No dread of the morrow, no sorrow I see, 
For Jesus is coming, He's coming for me. 

And though clouds darken o'er me. Though storms may assail, 
With Jesus beside me, I'll weather the gale;
The storm is without me, no trouble within,
For Jesus my Saviour has cleansed me from sin. 

Mrs. A. R. Rule

N.J. Hiebert - 9957

May 29

And the patriarchs, moved with envy, sold Joseph into Egypt: but God was with him, and delivered him out of all his afflictions, and gave him favour and wisdom in the sight of Pharaoh king of Egypt; and he made him governor over Egypt and all his house.  Acts 7:9,10

Joseph, cut off from his own people in a strange land becomes a slave in the house of Potiphar; falsely accused by a wicked woman, and under the stigma of a great sin, he is cast into prison.  There treated with base ingratitude, he is left to languish, a forgotten man.  Suffering dishonour upon dishonour, his path is ever downward.  The clouds gather round him and his way grows darker, until apparently his sun has set in hopeless gloom.

But behind all that is apparent to nature, faith can discern the purpose of God to  exalt Joseph to a position of supremacy and glory.  If God is set upon the fulfillment of His purpose,  Satan will put forth every effort to thwart God's purpose.  Satan uses the wickedness of the brethren to banish Joseph from house and home; he uses Potiphar's wicked wife to bring Joseph into prison; and he uses Pharaoh's ungrateful butler to keep him there.

Every step in the downward path is an apparent triumph for Satan, and seems to make the fulfillment of God's purpose more remote.  To the natural view Satan's plans appear to prosper, and God's purposes suffer apparent defeat.

Faith, however, can discern the hand of God behind the wiles of Satan.  If Satan is using man to hinder God's purposes, God is using Satan to carry them out.  Every kind of agent is at God's disposal.  Angels, saints and sinners, the devil and his demons all serve to carry out God's plans.  The very elements--fire and hail, snow and vapours, and stormy wind--are "fulfilling His word"  (Psalm 148:8).  Nor is it otherwise with the circumstances of life, as we see in the story of Joseph.  The trials he passes through are preparing for the exercise of power in the day of his glory.  The service in the trials prepares for the right use of glory. 
 Hamilton Smith - Joseph   

N.J. Hiebert - 9958

May 30

Jonah 1:17 "Now the Lord had prepared a great fish."
Jonah 4:6   "And the Lord God prepared a gourd."
Jonah 4:7   "But God prepared a worm."
Jonah 4:8   "God prepared a vehement east wind."


We cannot leave the subject of what God prepared for Jonah, without mention of another place specially prepared by the Lord Himself, which we doubt not Jonah will also share.  The Lord Jesus said: "In My Father's house are many mansions (abodes)...I go to prepare a place for you." John 14:2

When at home in the Father's house, we look back over the wilderness pathway, we will then recognize many a thing and many a circumstance that the Lord has specially prepared for us.  I suppose that Jonah did not realize at the time that the great fish and the gourd and the worm and the sultry wind had each in turn been specially prepared for him.  He thought they had just "happened".

We believe it was Jonah's own hand that wrote the little book that bears his name, for we cannot suppose it was any other: it would not be like Jonah's Master to allow another servant to so openly disclose the faults and failings of a fellow-servant.  If this be so, we may see how deeply Jonah learned, before the end of his journey to take all things from the hand of God; and what gratitude must have risen up in his heart at the tender care of his God for him.  Who else would take the trouble specially to prepare a worm on purpose for him, to teach him a greatly needed lesson? 

So, I suppose, at the end of our journey, when we reach the place our Lord has prepared for us, our hearts will rise up in gratitude, not alone for that prepared place, but for all His tender care along the way, for the worms, or what we now term the "misfortunes", as well as for the gourds, or what we now call the "blessings"--both alike, are specially prepared for us.  (Psalm 78:72)  
Jonah - G. C.  Willis

N.J. Hiebert - 9959

May 31

AND CAN IT BE THAT I SHOULD GAIN?

Unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood.  Revelation 1:5

Can any believer contemplate the "amazing love" of Calvary without sharing the awe and wonder of the questions in this hymn by Charles Wesley?  Written a short time after his heart-warming Aldersgate experience on May 20,1738, this song of grateful adoration for God's great plan of redemption has been one of the most deeply moving and treasured hymns for more than two hundred years.

Even though he had a strict religious training in his youth, education at Oxford University and missionary service in the new colony of Georgia, Charles Wesley had no peace or joy in his heart and life.  Returning to London after a discouraging time in America, he met with a group of Moravians in the Aldersgate Hall and came to realize that "Salvation is by faith alone".  In his journal entry for May 20, he wrote, "At midnight I gave myself to Christ, assured that I was safe, whether sleeping or waking.  I had the continual experience of His power to overcome all temptation, and I confessed with joy and surprise that He was able to do exceeding abundantly above what I can ask or think."

In this spirit of joyous enthusiasm, Charles began to write new hymns with increased fervour.  He traveled throughout Great Britain with his older brother John a quarter of a million miles, mostly on horseback, leading great crowds in singing his hymns in massive outdoor services of forty thousand people.  With every new spiritual experience or thought that crossed Charles's mind a new hymn was born.  Even on his death bed it is said that he dictated to his wife a final hymn of praise to the Lord he had loved so intimately and served so effectively. 
 Kenneth W. Osbeck

And can it be that I should gain an interest the Saviour's blood?
Died He for me who caused His pain? for me, who Him to death pursued?
Amazing love! how can it be that Thou, my Lord should die for me.

He left His Father's throne above, so free, so infinite His grace!
Emptied Himself of all but love, and bled for Adam's helpless race.
'Tis mercy all, immense and free; for O my God, it found out me.   

Long my imprisoned spirit lay fast bound in sin and nature's night;
Thine eye defused a quickening ray, I woke, the dungeon flamed with light;
My chains fell off, my heart was free; I rose, went forth and followed Thee.

No condemnation now I dread; Jesus, and all in Him is mine!
Alive in Him, my living head, and clothed in righteousness divine,
Bold I approach the eternal throne, and claim the crown, through Christ my own,


N.J. Hiebert - 9960

June 1

BACK TO THE FOLD

What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he loose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness,  and go after that which is lost, until he find it?  Luke 15:3 

'Twas a sheep, not a lamb, that went astray
In the parable Jesus told, 
A grown up sheep that wandered away
From the ninety and nine in the fold.

Out on the hillside, out in the cold,
'Twas a sheep the Good Shepherd sought,
Borne on His shoulders and back to the fold,
The sheep the Good Shepherd brought.

Why for the sheep should we earnestly long
And as earnestly hope and pray?
Because there is danger, if they go wrong
They may lead the lambs astray.

Lambs will follow the sheep, you know
Wherever the sheep may stray,
If the sheep go wrong, it won't be long
'Till the lambs are as wrong as they.

So for the sheep let us earnestly pray, 
For the sake of the lambs today,
If the lambs are lost, what a terrible cost
Some sheep will have to pay.

Mrs. Furstenfeld

N.J. Hiebert - 9961

June 2

Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.   Matthew 11:28 
Rise, let us be going.  Matthew 26:46


RESTING AND ROUSING

He rests us and He rouses us.  This nervous age keeps going with pills to put it to sleep and pills to keep it awake.  From sedative to stimulant our generation lives by "shots in the arm".  We both rest and rouse our jaded selves artificially.

But all we need for both purposes is found in Jesus.  He give us peace.  "Rest in the Lord." (Psalm 37:7) is God's prescription.  We can rest in Him when we cease from our own feverish works and rest in HIs finished work.

And He rouses us.  "Be not drunk with wine wherein is excess, but be filled with the Spirit." (Ephesians 5:18)  There you have the world's false stimulant and Divine stirring of the Spirit.  "Stir up the gift of God"  (2 Timothy 1:6-7) means kindling the Fire within us, although the coals may be covered with ashes.  Alas, "there is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of Thee."   (Isaiah 64:7) 

Whether you need resting or rousing, He does both.  But we cooperate as we rest in Him or rouse ourselves to do His bidding.

Day by Day with Vance Havner  (1901-1986)

Come unto Me, it is the Saviour's voice - the Lord of life, who bids thy heart rejoice;
O weary heart, with heavy cares oppressed, come unto Me, and I will give you rest. 

Nate Norton 

N.J. Hiebert - 9962

June 3

Friday, May 9, 2025

Gems from May 11- 20, 2025

And thine age shall be clearer than the noonday; thou shalt shine forth, thou shalt be as the morning.  Job 11:17 

I suppose nobody ever naturally did like the idea of getting older, after he had at least left school.  There is a sense of oppression and depression about it.  The irresistible, inevitable onward march of moments and years without the possibility of one instant's pause--a march that even while on the uphill side of life is leading to the downhill side--casts an autumn-like shadow over many a spring-birthday.  But surely the Bible gives us the bright side of everything.

In this case it gives three bright sides of a fact which, without it, could not help being gloomy.  First, it opens the sure prospect of increasing brightness to those who have begun to walk in the light.  Even if the sun of our life has reached the apparent zenith and we have known a very noonday of mental and spiritual being, it is no poetic western shadows that are to lengthen upon our way but "our age is to be clearer than the noonday."

The second bright side is increasing fruitfulness.  Do not let us confuse between works and fruit.  Even when we come to the days when "the strong men shall bow themselves," (Ecclesiastes 12:3) there may be more pleasant fruits for our Master, riper, fuller, and sweeter than ever before.  For "they shall still bring forth fruit in old age." The third bright side is the brightest of all, "even to your old age, I am He" . . . "even to hoar hairs will I carry you." For we shall always be His little children and doubtless He will always be our Father.  The rush of years cannot touch this.   
Edges of His Way -- Amy Carmichael


Come nearer, Sun of Righteousness! that we, whose swift short hours of day so swiftly run,
So overflowed with love and light may be, so lost in glory of the nearing Sun,
That not our light, but Thine, the world may see, new praise to Thee through our poor lives be won.
 - Frances Ridley Havergal.

N.J. Hiebert - 9939

May 11

Lord, increase our faith.  Luke 17:5 

Faith is not clinging - it is letting go.

A traveller upon a lonely road was attacked by bandits who robbed him of all he had.  They then led him into the depths of the forest.  There in the darkness they tied a rope to the limb of a great tree, and bade him catch hold of the end of it, swinging him out into the darkness of surrounding space, they told him he was hanging over the brink of a giddy precipice. The moment he let go he would be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.  And then they left him.  His soul was filled with horror at the awful doom impending. 

He clutched despairingly the end of the swaying rope.  But each dreadful moment only made his fate more sure.  His strength steadily failed.  At last he could hold on no longer.  The end had come.  His clenched fingers relaxed their convulsive grip. 

He fell - six inches, to the solid earth at his feet!  It was only a ruse of the robbers to gain time in escaping.  And when he let go it was not to death, but to the safety which had been waiting him through all his time of terror.

Clutching will not save anyone from his hopelessness.  It is only Satan's trick to keep you from being afforded security and peace in the solid promises of God.  And all the while you are swinging over the supposed precipice of fear and mistrust.  Let go!  It is God's plan that you fall - not to defeat, but into His arms, the solid rock. 

As soon as  you recognize your sheer helplessness and your failing strength, you let go; and falling upon Him, your fear goes, your mistrust goes, and the blessed assurance comes forever.  For He - not your clinging but - "He shall save His people from their sins."  (Matthew 1:21)  
Streams in the Desert

N.J. Hiebert - 9940

May 12

He restoreth my soul.  Psalm 23:3

There is a scene in the life of the apostle Peter which beautifully illustrates this.  The sifting process of which our Lord had warned him, but to which he paid little attention, had been carried out; and as a result Peter had denied his Master with oaths and curses.  One can imagine the remorse which would fill his mind when he realized what he had done: the tendency would be to throw up utterly his new discipleship.

And here we would point out the meaning of a scripture, which is frequently misquoted.  Our Lord had said, "I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not," not "that thou mayest fail not."  The failure was evidently the only method by which Peter could be robbed of his self-confidence.  But the danger was that, having fallen, he would give way to despair, and it was to obviate this that our Lord's intercession was exercised on his behalf.

Well, just at the time of Peter's great denial, "the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter.  And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how he had said unto him, 'before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice' And Peter went out out and wept bitterly" (Luke  22:61,62). "Peter called to mind the word that Jesus said unto him . . . and when he thought thereon, he wept" (Mark 14:72).

That word penetrated Peter's soul, broke up the fountains of his heart, and drew forth floods of penitential tears.  When he meant his best he found out what a wicked heart he had; and when he did his worst he found out what a blessed heart Christ had. How often in times of soul declension do we experience equally tender treatment from our gracious God! 

Pearl of Psalms - George Henderson

N.J. Hiebert - 9941

May 13

My heart is inditing (welling forth with) a good matter: I speak of the things which I have made (composed) touching the king.  Psalm 45:1

This is worship.  Notice its focus: not so much what He has done, but what He is--His intrinsic worth.  Are we able to enter into this kind of appreciation of Him?  Listen again to that divine acclamation, "This is My beloved Son in whom I am well pleased." (Matthew 3:17)  

This was true before the Lord Jesus had done anything that man could see.  It was true before His incarnation.  Throughout eternity past all God's delights were centered in the Son.  To illustrate further, let us consider another portion--Psalm 95:

"O come, let us sing unto the Lord:
Let us make a joyful noise to the Rock of our salvation.
Let us come before His presence with thanksgiving,
And make a joyful noise unto Him with Psalms."

Why?
"For the Lord is a great God,"
"O come, let us worship and bow down:"

Why?
"For He is our God."


Worship is not a product of the mind or will, but the gushings forth of the soul that has been set in awe by the presence and knowledge of Him Who is worshipped.  It is the irrepressible response of the heart brought into an awareness of His matchless worth and incomparable.  
H. B. Duncanson      

Worship, honour, praise, and glory, would we render unto Thee;
Heights unsearched and depths unfathomed in Thy wondrous love we see.
All Thy glory shines transcendent in the Person of the Son,
Jesus Christ, Thy Well-Beloved, Who redemption's glory won.
  E. H. Chater

N.J. Hiebert -  9942

May 14

And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting.  And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them.  Acts 2:2,3

In Acts 2, the Holy Spirit, as a rushing mighty wind, enters into the house; cloven tongues as of fire sit  upon its occupants.  This is the Lord adopting this house.  The house was now a living house, and the Lord personally enters it, bringing with Him His gifts, symbolized by the cloven fiery tongues. 

The Spirit speaks as soon as He has entered it through the vessels which He had now filled.  He speaks of the wonderful works of God.  He speaks not of what man was required to do, but of what God had already done in behalf of man.  The ministry, death, resurrection, and glory of the Saviour of men are among "the wonderful works of God," (Acts 2:11) which the Spirit through His vessels was rehearsing in grace to sinners. 

This is what the Lord of the temple was now doing.  He was speaking of what He, the God of salvation, had already done.  Surely it is very fitting that the Blessed One should be worshipped by our sacrifices of praise.

There is a disposition in some of us to keep the Lord before as the One Who is a Heavenly Stranger and has been rejected and cast out here.  All this is surely so.  It is good and healthful for the soul to have this sense of things upon it.  But if this becomes the exclusive or even predominate thought, it will tend to legality and a spirit of bondage and fear. 

We must rather cherish a disposition or tendency in our souls to know Christ in the grace which He is ministering to us, in the love that He has declared He has to us, in the eternal security which His blood imparts to our condition, and the sure and bright blessedness He is preparing for us.   
J. G. Bellett

N.J. Hiebert - 9943

May 15

Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines. Song of Solomon 2:15

Little foxes pose a big threat to vineyards. They'll either chew off the new shoots or eat the fruit itself.  What "little foxes" are preventing spiritual fruit in our lives?  A "little sleep, a little slumber" -- be on guard against spiritual laziness (Proverbs 6:10).  A "little folly"-- one foolish deed could mar an otherwise honourable testimony (Ecclesiastes 10:1); a "little leaven" -- sin that is ignored will spread like a cancer in my life (1 Corinthians 5:6); that "little member" in our mouth can cause fiery destruction (James 3:5); "little faith" -- not taking God at His Word (Matthew 6:30) and little love, the result of lightly esteeming our forgiveness (Luke 7:47).  May we deal with those little foxes before they spoil our fruit.   Brian Cretney

Christian, walk carefully, danger is near; 
On in thy journey with trembling and fear.
Snares from without and temptations within,
Seek to entice thee once more into sin.

Christian, walk cheerfully thro' the fierce storm,
Dark tho' the sky with its threat of alarm;
Soon will the clouds and the tempest be o'er,
Then with thy Saviour thou'lt rest evermore.

Christian, walk prayerfully, oft wilt thou fall
If thou forget on thy Saviour to call;
Safe shalt thou walk thro' each trail and care,
If thou art clad in the armour of prayer. 

Christian, walk hopefully, sorrow and pain
Cease when the haven of rest thou shalt gain;
Then from the lips of the Judge, thy reward:
"Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."
  
 G. C. Stebbins
  
N.J. Hiebert - 9944

May 16

But he (Stephen), being full of the Holy Ghost, looked up steadfastly into heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God, and said, Behold, I see the heavens opened.  Acts 7:55,56 

Here we find Stephen, a man on earth indwelt by the Holy Spirit and drawing all his resources from a Man in the glory.  He "looked up steadfastly into heaven."  A man on earth full of the Hoy Spirit looks up!  He is not marked by looking within or looking around.  To look within is to be depressed, to look around is to be confused but to look up is to see no one but Jesus.  Stephen fixed his eyes on another scene and refused to be distracted by the evil of this world or to be detained by its attractions.

Looking up into heaven, Stephen "Saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God." Everything in this world speaks of the glory of man, but Stephen looked into a scene where everything speaks of the glory of God.  He sees a Man in the glory.  All other men have come short of the glory of God, but this Man, Christ Jesus, who  came into the world in circumstances of weakness and poverty, now holds in heaven the place of highest power and glory.  

Furthermore, Stephen could say, "I see the heavens opened."  Unrolled before his vision, he finds a heavenly scene.  But he sees more; he sees that the heavens are opened so that the glory and power of the Man in heaven is at the disposal of a man on earth.  The Lord Jesus has gone back to heaven to occupy a place of supreme power, but He has left the heavens open behind Him so that all the love and power and grace of the Man in heaven may stream down upon a man on earth.

In Stephen, we see the  practical results that flow from an individual believer being controlled by the Holy Spirit on earth and drawing his resources from Christ in heaven.  This is still God's thought for His people today.  
Hamilton Smith

N.J. Hiebert - 9945

May 17

Thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.  Isaiah 58:11.

A garden does not water itself; it is watered.  A spring does not fill itself; it is filled from unseen sources.

"Thus said the Lord that made thee, . . . Fear not, . . . for I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and  floods upon the dry ground."  (Isaiah 44:2,3).  The gardens which we have made and loved we do not leave to die of thirst.  Once I made a garden.  I cared for it as long as I could, and then gave it to someone else.  But that one forgot to water it, or did not give it enough water.  One day I saw it.  I can feel again the little sharp pang that went through me as I saw the drooping leaves and dried-up buds; and I remember thinking, "If only she had made that garden herself, she would have cared more for it."

And this is just a tiny picture of what is meant by such words as, "Fear not, . . .for I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground." Never, never does our great Gardener give His gardens away (as I gave mine).  He who made us waters--pours floods of waters on us when we are thirsty.  And all this means we shall never be dried up.

Does it seem as though you were not being watered, as though the springs were not bubbling up?  Sometimes when we feel so, we do everything but call upon the Lord.  We think sadly about our dryness; perhaps we read helpful books, and even speak of it to others, hoping that they will act as watering cans to our dryness.  David did something better: "In my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried to my God: and He did hear my voice, out of His temple, and my cry did enter into His ears." (2 Samuel 22:7).

"If thou knewest Who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldest have asked of Him, and He would have given thee living water." (John 4:10) 
   Amy Carmichael

N.J. Hiebert - 9946

May 18

Blessed is he that waiteth.  Daniel 12:12

It may seem an easy thing to wait, but it is one of the postures which a Christian soldier learns not without years of teaching.  Marching and quick-marching are much easier to God's warriors than standing still.

There are hours of perplexity when the most willing spirit, anxiously desirous to serve the Lord, knows not what part to take.  Then what shall it do?  Vex itself by despair? Fly back in cowardice, turn to the right hand in fear, or rush forward in presumption?

No, but simply wait.  Wait in prayer, however.  Call upon God and spread the case before Him; tell Him your difficulty, and plead His promise of aid.

Wait in faith.  Express your un-staggering confidence in Him.  Believe that if He keep you tarrying even till midnight, yet He will come at the right time; the vision shall come, and shall not tarry.

Wait in quiet patience.  Never murmur against the second cause, as the children of Israel did against Moses.  Accept the case as it is, and put it as it stands, simply and with your whole heart, without any self-will, into the hand of God, saying,  "Now, Lord, not my will, but Thine be done.  I know not what to do; I am brought to extremities; but I wait until Thou shalt cleave the floods, or drive back my foes.  Help me to wait, if Thou keep me many a day, for my heart is fixed upon Thee, O God, and my spirit waits for Thee in conviction that Thou will yet be my joy and my salvation, my refuge and my strong tower."


Wait, patiently wait, God never is late;
Thy budding plans are in thy Father's holding,
And only wait His grand divine unfolding.
Then wait, wait, patiently wait. 

Morning by Morning

N.J. Hiebert - 9947

May 19

My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations; Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. James 1:2,3
And not only so, but we glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulations worketh patience.  Romans 5:3


Endurance is so precious, and of such inestimable value, that we may count it all joy when we fall into these trials, because we know that they work endurance.  "But let patience (endurance) have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire (complete) wanting (lacking) nothing." (James 1:4)  And (Romans 5:3).  Yes, Endurance works experience.


"His love in times past forbids us to think
He'll leave us at last, in trouble to sink."   


This is experience, and it was endurance taught it.  Do you think Shammah would have missed the experience he gained by that fight in the lentil field? (2 Samuel  23:11,12)  Never!  And when we get Home, we will see that some of these hard places on the road were the bits we would not have missed for anything.  They worked Endurance.

The first mark of a true servant of God is "Endurance".  "In all things approving ourselves as the ministers of God (servants) in much patience (endurance)" (2 Corinthians 6:4).  The false servant, the hireling, fled when he saw the wolf coming; but the Good Shepherd remained behind (John 10:12,13).  He endured. 

Endurance was also the first sign of an Apostle.  "The signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all appearance (endurance) . . ."  (2 Corinthians 12:12)  

Hid Treasures - G. Christopher Willis 

N.J. Hiebert - 9948

May 20

We hid as it were our faces from Him; He was despised, and we esteemed Him not.   Isaiah 53:3

Isaiah described how badly the Man of Sorrows was treated by His own people.  The prophet used the word despised twice in verse 3, listing seven points of the severe rejection He experienced.  Just as people would avoid any contact with a leper, so they were hiding their faces from Jesus the Messiah. "Thus saith the Lord, the Redeemer of Israel, and His Holy One, to Him whom man despises, to Him who the nation abhorreth, to a Servant of rulers, Kings shall see and arise, princes also shall worship, because of the Lord that is faithful and the Holy One of Israel, and He shall chose Thee".  (Isaiah 49:7)  just as in (Isaiah 52;13-15) recounts the bad treatment He received from the Jewish leaders, Isaiah 53:3 forms the conclusion of this great prophecy about Messiah's rejection.

Following are those seven points: 
Despised--this implies disrespect and rejecting God's thoughts.
Rejected--Left alone: people refused any contact with Him.
Man of Sorrows--His Name of much pain, suffering and anguish!
"Acquainted with Grief."
Hiding 
their faces, people were staying away from Him. 
Despised--a word mentioned the second time in the same verse; a distain implying hatred.
We esteemed Him not
This recaps how people evaluated Him.  For they had no room for Him.  Let's not forget that this text was penned about 800 years before the Messiah suffered and died.

Alfred E. Bouter

N.J. Hiebert - 9949

May 21

Whatsoever doth make manifest is light.  Ephesians 5:13

The light shows exactly what the true state of affairs is; and, therefore, until a man is in the light he does not know what he is; and he does not know God.  In fact, until a soul is brought into the light it really does not understand its true state before God.

Now, in the verse above you see this brought out.  We have elsewhere the wonderful statement, that, "Light is come into the world, and men love darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil."  (John 3:19).  Light comes first of all, in the Person of Christ, for, "In Him was light; and the life was the light of men.  And the light shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not" (John 1:4,5).

Now, that is a remarkable statement.  You see if you bring in natural light, into the darkness out goes the darkness.  If this room were in darkness, and someone turned on the light the darkness would vanish at once.  If you were in a coal-pit, and your light went out, you would be in darkness, and you could not estimate the relation of things.  What would be the natural way of letting you see where you were, and what your surroundings were?  Bring in the light; for, when the light comes in, away goes the darkness.

That is the truth regarding natural things; but in divine things the solemn thing is this, that although light comes, the darkness remains; for the darkness does not comprehend the light. (1 John 1:5)  But what is the light?  God--"God is Light, and in Him is no darkness at all. (1 John 1:5).  And what is the  darkness?  Man.  Man makes the darkness; the darkness is what his own state as a sinner is.  That constitutes the darkness, as we read, "For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord" (Ephesians 5:8). It is a wonderful moment when a man gets into the light, and becomes "Light in the Lord."  You will never get into the light, until you get to Christ.  
Seekers for Light -Dr.W. T. P. Wolston, 

N.J. Hiebert - 9950

May 22

The word of the Preacher, the son of David . . . Vanity of Vanities . . . all is vanity (emptiness).  What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?   Ecclesiastes 1:1-3.

"Therefore I hated life, (Ecclesiastes 2:17,19,21,23), yea, all my labour which I took under the sun," and "therefore I went about to cause my heart to despair of all my labour which I took under the sun."  For what is there in the labour itself?  Nothing that satisfies by itself.  It is only the anticipation of final satisfaction and enjoyment that can make up for the loss of quiet and ease now; prove that to be a vain hope, and the mere labour and planning night and day are indeed "empty vanity."

Thus much for labour "under the sun," with self for its object, and death for its limit.  Now for the contrast again in its refreshing beauty of the "new" as against the "old" "therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know your labour  is not in vain in the Lord." (1 Corinthians 15:58).  "All my labour is vanity" is the "groan" of the old, "for death with its terrors cuts me off from my labour and I leave it to a fool."  "No labour in vain" is the song of victory of the new, for resurrection with its glories but introduces me to the precious fruit of those labours, to be enjoyed forever.

Let us cherish this precious word, "not in vain," let us be indeed "persuaded" of it, and "embrace" it, not giving up our glorious heritage and going back to the mere human wisdom that Solomon the king possessed, and which only led then, as it must now and ever, to the groan of "vanity!"  But "not in vain" is ours.  No little one refreshed with even a up of cold water  (Matthew 10:42) but that soon the fruit of even that little labour of love shall meet its sweetest recompense in the smile, the approval, the praise of our Lord Jesus; and that shall make our hearts full to overflowing with bliss; as we there echo and re-echo our own word: it was indeed, "not in vain"
 F. C. Jennings  (with thanks - Bill Weiss)

N.J. Hiebert - 9951

May 23

Gems from August 1- 4, 2025

The Lord is my portion, saith my soul; therefore will I hope in Him.  The Lord is good unto them that wait for Him, to the soul that seeketh...