| KING DAVID'S USE OF HIS BIBLE
			
												David said, "Princes also did sit and speak against me; but Thy 
			servant did meditate in Thy statutes. Thy testimonies are also my 
			delight and my counsellors." (Psalm 119:23, 24) 
 What a picture! Evil men are plotting against him, digging a pit for 
			him, gnashing on him with their teeth, but he sits quietly 
			meditating on God's statutes. These statutes are his counsellors. He 
			talks over his affairs with them and finds out what they have to 
			say. Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and Moses and Joshua are his 
			advisers. To be sure they are dead, but they live more vitally in 
			the truths they spoke and exemplified than they did in their bodies.
 
 Paul says in writing to the Romans, "Whatsoever things were written 
			aforetime were written for our learning; that we through patience 
			and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." (Rom. 15:4.) David 
			discovered this blessed secret for himself, and although his Bible 
			was much more limited than ours, he made glorious use of it. Here 
			are some of the blessings he got from it:
 
 1 Wisdom and understanding. We are very foolish and shortsighted, 
			but the wisdom and foresight of God are at the disposal of our 
			faith. David says, "Thou, through Thy commandments hast made me 
			wiser than mine enemies; for they are ever with me. I have more 
			understanding than all my teachers; for Thy testimonies are my 
			meditation. I understand more than the ancients, because I keep Thy 
			precepts." I have often been amazed and delighted at the keen 
			insight and uncommon common sense of otherwise ignorant and 
			illiterate men and women who have been full of the Holy Ghost, and 
			who were lovers and diligent students of their Bibles. They have 
			more wisdom than their teachers, and easily outwit and confound all 
			their enemies. Paul in writing to Timothy said, "The Holy Scriptures 
			are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in 
			Christ Jesus." (2 Tim. 3:15.)
 
 2. Joy. "The joy of the Lord is your strength," said Nehemiah.
 
 "But how am I to get this joy?" you ask. By receiving the Lord of 
			joy Himself into your heart, which you do by hearty faith in what He 
			says. Once upon a time my wife said "Yes," and because I believed 
			and acted upon my faith, that filled me with joy that has been 
			increasing for years. God has said great things, given us "exceeding 
			great and precious promises." If we believe them and act upon our 
			faith He will come into our lives and our joy shall be full. (1 John 
			1:4.) Hear David: "I have rejoiced in the way of Thy testimonies as 
			much as in all riches." "I rejoice at Thy Word, as one that findeth 
			great spoil."
 
 The Word of God was the well of salvation from which David drew 
			water with joy. There is the outer shell of the letter and the inner 
			kernel of spirit and life in the Word of God. Those who have learned 
			the secret of getting at the kernel in a text and hearing the 
			whisper of the voice of Jesus in it, and have caught the flash of 
			the love-light and tender sympathy of His eye through it, will 
			understand David's joy.
 
 3. Hope. Faith has to do with the present, hope with the future. 
			Many a man fails, not because of the present trouble, but because 
			the future looks dark and his hope fails, and in discouragement he 
			casts away his shield of faith and gives up the fight. Well does 
			Paul name hope as one of the three divine graces. He who wins in the 
			battle of life must "hope to the end." During the darkest days of 
			the Revolution, Washington never lost hope. Amid the awful suspense 
			and uncertainties of the Civil War, Lincoln remained confident and 
			hoped on. And so it was with David. He passed through dark hours. 
			Taken from the quiet, sheltered life of a shepherd, he was placed in 
			a palace and made son-in-law to the king, only to be hated and 
			hunted for his life for years, while his wife was given to another. 
			His own people murmured against him and would have stoned him. His 
			own son rebelled against him and sought his life, until in the agony 
			and perplexity of his soul he cried out, "All Thy waves and Thy 
			billows have gone over me."
 
 But then he remembered God's promises and cried out again, "Remember 
			Thy word unto Thy servant, upon which Thou hast caused me to hope." 
			My soul fainteth for Thy salvation; but I hope in Thy word," and 
			then he questions and assures his soul, "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."
 
 4. Comfort. The idea of comfort in the Bible is not simply to 
			soothe, but to aid, strengthen, inspire and encourage. And when God 
			comforts us He draws nigh to us and draws us nigh to Himself, and 
			wipes away our tears and assures and strengthens our hearts and 
			fills us with a sense of His presence and almighty sufficiency, 
			until our poor little fears and sorrows vanish and a great calm, a 
			river of joy, and a holy courage take possession of our souls. In 
			youth we start out strong and defiant, asking only a platform on 
			which to display and prove our powers, but sooner or later we each 
			come to that pathetic spot where our heads droop and our hearts fail 
			and we want comfort. It was so with Paul, and he cries out, "Blessed 
			be God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of 
			mercies and the God of all comfort, who comforteth us in all our 
			tribulations.... For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so 
			our consolation also aboundeth by Christ." And even our blessed Lord 
			Himself was strengthened by an angel in the days of His flesh. (Matt 
			22:43.)
 
 Shall we not follow David in his diligent study of God's truth, and 
			shall we not thank God for His immeasurable and unspeakable gift, 
			and prize as never before the infinite treasure He has bestowed upon 
			us in His Word?
 
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