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 Day 1 
	
	"Wait on the Lord" 
	(Ps. xxvii. 14). 
	
	How often this is 
	said in the Bible, how little understood! It is what the old monk calls the 
	"practice of the presence of God." It is the habit of prayer. It is the 
	continued communion that not only asks, but receives. People often ask us to 
	pray for them and we have to say, "Why, God has answered our prayer for you, 
	and you must now take the answer. It is awaiting you, and you must take it 
	by waiting on the Lord." 
	
	This it is that 
	renews the strength, until we mount up with wings as eagles, run and are not 
	weary, walk and are not faint. Our hearts are too vast to take in His 
	fulness at a single breath. We must live in the atmosphere of His presence 
	till we absorb His very life. This is the secret of spiritual depth and 
	rest, of power and fulness, of love and prayer, of hope and holy usefulness. 
	"Wait, I say, on the Lord." 
				
				
				I am waiting in 
	communion at the blessed mercy seat,
				
				I 
	am waiting, sweetly waiting, on the Lord;
				
				I 
	am drinking, of His fulness; I am sitting at His feet;
				
				I 
	am hearkening to the whispers of His word.
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 Day 2 
	
	"That good thing 
	which was committed unto thee keep by the Holy Ghost" (II. Tim. i. 14). 
	
	God gives to us a 
	power within which will hold our hearts in victory and purity. "That good 
	thing which was committed unto thee, keep by the Holy Ghost which dwelleth 
	in us." It is the Holy Ghost; and when any thought or suggestion of evil 
	arises in our breast, the quick conscience can instantly call upon the Holy 
	Ghost to drive it out, and He will expel it at the command of faith or 
	prayer, and keep us as pure as we are willing to be kept. But when the will 
	surrenders and consents to evil, the Holy Ghost will not expel it. God, 
	then, requires us to stand in holy vigilance, and He will do exceeding 
	abundantly for us as we hold fast that which is good, and He will also be in 
	us a spirit of vigilance, showing us the evil and enabling us to detect it, 
	and to bring it to Him for expulsion and destruction. 
				
				
				"O Spirit of Jesus 
	fill us until we shall have room only for Thee!"
				
				
				O, come as the 
	heart-searching fire,
				
				O, 
	come as the sin-cleansing flood;
				
				Consume 
	us with holy desire,
				
				And 
	fill with the fulness of God.
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 Day 3 
	
	"Now no chastening 
	for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous; nevertheless afterward" 
	(Heb. xii. 11). 
	
	God seems to love 
	to work by paradoxes and contraries. In the transformations of grace, the 
	bitter is the base of the sweet, night is the mother of day, and death is 
	the gate of life. 
	
	Many people are 
	wanting power. Now, how is power produced? The other day we passed the great 
	works where the trolley engines are supplied with electricity. We heard the 
	hum and roar of countless wheels, and we asked our friend, "How do they make 
	the power?" "Why," he said, "just by the revolution of those wheels and the 
	friction they produce. The rubbing creates the electric current." 
	
	It is very simple, 
	and a trifling experiment will prove it to any one. 
	
	And so when God 
	wants to bring more power into your life, He brings more pressure. He is 
	generating spiritual force by hard rubbing. Some of us don't like it. Some 
	of us don't understand, and we try to run away from the pressure, instead of 
	getting the power and using it to rise above the painful cause.   |  
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 Day 4 
	
	"They were all 
	filled with the Holy Ghost" (Acts ii. 4). 
	
	Blessed secret of 
	spiritual purity, victory and joy, of physical life and healing, and all 
	power for service. Filled with the Spirit there is no room for self or sin, 
	for fret or care. Filled with the Spirit we repel the elements of disease 
	that are in the air as the red-hot iron repels the water that touches it. 
	Filled with the Spirit we are always ready for service, and Satan turns away 
	when he finds the Holy Ghost enrobing us in His garments of holy flame. Not 
	half-filled, but filled with the Spirit is the place of victory and power. 
	
	This is not only a 
	privilege; it is a command, and He who gave it will enable us to fulfill it 
	if we bring it to Him with an empty, honest, trusting heart, and claim our 
	privilege in the name of Jesus and for the glory of God. 
				
				
				Holy Ghost, I bid 
	Thee welcome;
				
				Come 
	and be my Holy Guest;
				
				Heavenly 
	Dove within my bosom,
				
				Make 
	Thy home and build Thy nest;
				
				Lead 
	me on to all Thy fulness,
				
				Bring 
	me to Thy Promised Rest,
				
				Holy 
	Ghost, I bid Thee welcome,
				
				Come 
	and be my Holy Guest.
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 Day 5 
	
	"I have overcome 
	the world" (John xvi. 33). 
	
	Christ has 
	overcome for us every one of our four terrible foes--Sin, Sickness, Sorrow, 
	Satan. He has borne our Sin, and we may lay all, even down to our sinfulness 
	itself, on Him. "I have overcome for thee." He has borne our sickness, and 
	we may detach ourselves from our old infirmities and rise into His glorious 
	life and strength. He has borne our sorrows, and we must not even carry a 
	care, but rejoice evermore, and even glory in tribulations also. And He has 
	conquered Satan for us, too, and left him nailed to the cross, spoiled and 
	dishonored and but a shadow of himself. And now we have but to claim His 
	full atonement and assert our victory, and so "overcome him by the blood of 
	the Lamb and the word of our testimony." 
	
	Beloved, are we 
	overcoming sin? Are we overcoming sickness? Are we overcoming sorrow? Are we 
	overcoming Satan? 
				
				
				Fear not, though 
	the strife be long;
				
				Faint 
	not, though the foe be strong;
				
				Trust 
	thy glorious Captain's power;
				
				Watch 
	with Him one little hour,
				
				Hear 
	Him calling, "Follow me.
				
				"I 
	have overcome for thee."
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 Day 6 
	
	"Lean not unto 
	thine own understanding" (Prov. iii. 5). 
	
	Faith is hindered 
	by reliance upon human wisdom, whether our own or the wisdom of others. The 
	devil's first bait to Eve was an offer of wisdom, and for this she sold her 
	faith. "Ye shall be as gods," he said, "knowing good and evil," and from the 
	hour she began to know she ceased to trust. It was the spies that lost the 
	Land of Promise to Israel of old. It was their foolish proposition to search 
	out the land, and find out by investigation whether God had told the truth 
	or not, that led to the awful outbreak of unbelief that shut the doors of 
	Canaan to a whole generation. It is very significant that the names of these 
	spies are nearly all suggestive of human wisdom, greatness and fame. 
	
	So in the days of 
	Christ, it was the bondage of the Jews to the traditions of their fathers 
	and the opinions of men, that kept them back from receiving Him. "How can ye 
	believe," He asked, "which receive honor from men, and seek not that which 
	cometh from God only?" 
	
	Let us trust Him 
	with all our heart and lean not to our own understanding.   |  
			| 
 Day 7 
	
	"It is more 
	blessed to give than to receive" (Acts xx. 35). 
	
	How shall we know 
	the difference between the earthly and the heavenly love? The one terminates 
	on ourselves and is partly ourself seeking its own gratification. The other 
	reaches out to God and others, and finds its joy in glorifying Him and 
	blessing them. Love is unselfishness, and the love that is not unselfish is 
	not divine. How much do we pray for others, and how much for ourselves? What 
	is the center of our being? Ourselves, or our Lord and His people and work? 
	The Lord help us to know more fully the meaning of that great truth, "It is 
	more blessed to give than to receive." "He that saveth his life shall lose 
	it, and he that loseth his life for My sake and the Gospel, shall keep it 
	unto life eternal." 
				
				
				Have you found 
	some precious treasure,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
				 
				
				Have 
	You found some holy pleasure,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
				
				 
				
				Giving 
	out is twice possessing,
				
				Love 
	will double every blessing,
				
				On 
	to higher service pressing,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
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 Day 8 
	
	"Pray Ye 
	therefore" (Luke x. 2). 
	
	Prayer is the 
	mighty engine that is to move the missionary work. "Pray ye therefore the 
	Lord of the harvest that He will send forth laborers into His harvest." 
	
	We are asking God 
	to touch the hearts of men every day by the Holy Ghost, so that they shall 
	be compelled to go abroad and preach the Gospel. We are asking Him to wake 
	them up at night with the solemn conviction that the heathen are perishing, 
	and that their blood will be upon their souls, and God is answering the 
	prayer by sending persons to us every day who "feel that the King's business 
	requireth haste." 
	
	Beloved, pray, 
	pray, pray; and as the incense rises to the heavens, "there will be silence 
	in heaven" by the space of more than half an hour, and the coals of fire 
	will be emptied out upon the earth, and the coming of the Lord will begin to 
	draw nearer. Pray till the Lord of the harvest shall thrust forth laborers 
	into His harvest. 
				
				
				Send the coals of 
	heavenly fire,
				
				From 
	the altar of the skies;
				
				Fill 
	our hearts with strong desire,
				
				Till 
	our pray'rs like incense rise.
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 Day 9 
	
	"How ye ought to 
	walk and please God" (I. Thess. iv. 1). 
	
	How many dear 
	Christians are in the place that the Lord has appointed them, and yet the 
	devil is harassing their lives with a vague sense of not quite pleasing the 
	Lord. Could they just settle down in the place that God has assigned them 
	and fill it sweetly and lovingly for Him there would be more joy in their 
	hearts and more power in their lives. God wants us all in various places, 
	and the secret of accomplishing the most for Him is to recognize our places 
	from Him and our service in it as pleasing Him. In the great factory and 
	machine there is a place for the smallest screw and rivet as well as the 
	great driving wheel and piston, and so God has His little screws whose 
	business is simply to stay where He puts them and to believe that He wants 
	them there and is making the most of their lives in the little spaces that 
	they fill for Him. 
				
				
				There is something 
	all can do,
				
				Tho' 
	you're neither wise nor strong;
				
				You 
	can be a helper true,
				
				You 
	can stand when friends are few,
				
				Some 
	lone heart has need of you,
				
				You 
	can help along.
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 Day 10 
	
	"The peace of God 
	which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds" (Phil. iv. 
	7). 
	
	It is not peace 
	with God, but the peace of God. "The peace that passes all understanding" is 
	the very breath of God in the soul. He alone is able to keep it, and He can 
	so keep it that "nothing shall offend us." Beloved, are you there? 
	
	God's rest did not 
	come till after His work was over, and ours will not. We begin our Christian 
	life by working, trying and struggling in the energy of the flesh to save 
	ourselves. At last, when we are able to cease from our own work, God comes 
	in with His blessed rest, and works His own Divine works in us. 
				
				
				Oh! have you heard 
	the glorious word
				
				Of 
	hope and holy cheer;
				
				From 
	heav'n above its tones of love
				
				Are 
	lingering on my ear;
				
				The 
	blessed Comforter has come,
				
				And 
	Christ will soon be here.
				
				
				
				Oh, hearts that 
	sigh there's succor nigh,
				
				The 
	Comforter is near;
				
				He 
	comes to bring us to our King,
				
				And 
	fit us to appear.
				
				I'm 
	glad the Comforter has come,
				
				And 
	Christ will soon be here.
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 Day 11 
	
	"But ye are a 
	chosen generation, a peculiar people" (I. Peter ii. 9). 
	
	We have been 
	thinking lately very much of the strange way in which God is calling a 
	people out of a people already called. The word ecclesia, or church, means 
	called out, but God is calling out a still more select body from the church 
	to be His bride--the specially prepared ones for His coming. 
	
	We see a fine type 
	of this in the story of Gideon. When first he sounded the trumpet of Abiezer 
	there resorted to him more than thirty thousand men; but these had to be 
	picked, so a first test was applied, appealing to their courage, and all but 
	ten thousand went back; but there must be an election out of the election, 
	and so a second test was applied, appealing to their prudence, caution and 
	singleness of purpose, and all but three hundred were refused; and, with 
	this little picked band, he raised the standard against the Midianites, and 
	through the power of God won his glorious victory. So, again, in our days, 
	the Master is choosing His three hundred, and by them He will yet win the 
	world for Himself. Let us be sure that we belong to the "out and out" 
	people.   |  
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 Day 12 
	
	"They wandered in 
	the wilderness in a solitary way" (Ps. cvii. 4). 
	
	All who fight the 
	Lord's battles must be content to die to all the favorable opinions of men 
	and all the flattery of human praise. You cannot make an exception in favor 
	of the good opinions of the children of God. It is very easy for the 
	insidious adversary to make this also all appeal to the flesh. It is all 
	right when God sends us the approval of our fellow men, but we must never 
	make it a motive in our life, but be content with the "solitary way" and the 
	lonely "wilderness." 
	
	All such motives 
	are poison and a taking away from you of the strength with which you are to 
	give glory to God. It is not the fact that all that see the face of the Lord 
	do see each other. 
	
	The man of God 
	must walk alone with God. He must be contented that the Lord knoweth that 
	God knows. It is such a relief to the natural man within us to fall back 
	upon human countenances and human thoughts and sympathy, that we often 
	deceive ourselves and think it "brotherly love," when we are just resting in 
	the earthly sympathy of some fellow worm!   |  
			| 
 Day 13 
	
	"Keep yourselves 
	in the love of God" (Jude 21). 
	
	Some time ago, we 
	were enjoying a surpassingly beautiful sunset. The western skies seemed like 
	a great archipelago of golden islands, the masses in the distance rising up 
	into vast mountains of glory. The hue of the sky was so gorgeous that it 
	seemed to reflect itself upon the whole atmosphere, as we looked back from 
	the west to the eastern horizon. The whole earth was radiant with glory. The 
	fields had changed to strange, red richness, and the earth seemed bathed 
	with the dews of heaven. 
	
	And so it is, when 
	the love of God shines through all our celestial sky, it covers everything 
	below, and life becomes radiant with its light. Things that were hard become 
	easy. Things that were sharp become sweet. Labor loses its burden, and 
	sorrow becomes silver-lined with hope and gladness. 
	
	There are two ways 
	of living in His love. One is constant trust, and the other is constant 
	obedience, and His own Word gives the message for both. "If ye keep My 
	commandments ye shall live in My love, even as I keep My Father's, and live 
	in His love."   |  
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 Day 14 
	
	"We are His 
	workmanship" (Eph. ii. 10). 
	
	Christ sends us to 
	serve Him, not in our own strength, but in His resources and might. "We are 
	His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath 
	prepared that we should walk in them." We do not have to prepare them; but 
	to wear them as garments, made to order for every occasion of our life. 
	
	We must receive 
	them by faith and go forth in His work, believing that He is with us, and in 
	us, as our all sufficiency for wisdom, faith, love, prayer, power, and every 
	grace and gift that our work requires. In this work of faith we shall have 
	to feel weak and helpless, and even have little consciousness of power. But 
	if we believe and go forward, He will be the power and send the fruits. 
	
	The most useful 
	services we render are those which, like the sweet fruits of the wilderness, 
	spring from hours of barrenness. "I will bring her into the wilderness and I 
	will give her vineyards from thence." Let us learn to work by faith as well 
	as walk by faith, then we shall receive even the end of our faith, the 
	salvation of precious souls, and our lives will bear fruit which shall be 
	manifest throughout all eternity.   |  
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 Day 15 
	
	"Continue ye in My 
	love" (John xv. 9). 
	
	Many atmospheres 
	there are in which we may live. Some people live in an atmosphere of 
	thought. Their faces are thoughtful, minds intellectual. They live in their 
	ideas, their conceptions of truth, their tastes, and esthetic nature. Some 
	people, again, live in their animal nature, in the lusts of the flesh and 
	eye, the coarse, low atmosphere of a sensuous life, or something worse. 
	Some, again, live in a world of duty. The predominating feature of their 
	life is conscience, and it carries with it a certain shadowy fear that takes 
	away the simple freedom and gladness of life, but there is a rectitude, and 
	uprightness, a strictness of purpose, and of conduct which cannot be 
	gainsaid or questioned. 
	
	But Christ bids us 
	live in an atmosphere of love. "As My Father has loved Me, so have I loved 
	you; continue ye in My love." In the original it is, "Live in My love." Love 
	is the atmosphere that He would have us ever live in, that is, believing 
	that He ever loves us, and claiming His sweet approval and tender regard. 
	This is a life of love.   |  
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 Day 16 
	
	"The Lord will 
	give grace and glory" (Ps. lxxxiv. 11). 
	
	The Lord will give 
	grace and glory. This word glory is very difficult to translate, define 
	and explain; but there is something in the spiritual consciousness of the 
	quickened Christian that interprets it. It is the overflow of grace; it is 
	the wine of life; it is the foretaste of heaven; it is a flash from the 
	Throne and an inspiration from the heart of God which we may have and in 
	which we may live. "The glory which Thou hast given Me I have given them," 
	the Master prayed for us. Let us take it and live in it. David used to say, 
	"Wake up my glory." Ask God to wake up your glory and enable you to mount up 
	with wings as eagles, to dwell on high and sit with Christ in the heavenly 
	places. 
				
				
				Mounting up with 
	wings as eagles,
				
				Waiting 
	on the Lord we rise,
				
				Strength 
	exchanging, life renewing,
				
				How 
	our spirit heavenward flies.
				 
				
				Then 
	our springing feet returning,
				
				Tread 
	the pathway of the saint,
				
				We 
	shall run and not be weary,
				
				We 
	shall walk and never faint.
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 Day 17 
	
	"He hath 
	remembered His covenant forever" (Ps. cv. 8). 
	
	So long as you 
	struggle under law, that is by your own effort, sin shall have dominion over 
	you: but the moment you step from under the shadow of Sinai, throw yourself 
	upon the simple grace of Christ and His free and absolute gift of 
	righteousness, and take Him to be to you what He has pledged Himself to be, 
	your righteousness of thought and feeling, and to keep you in spite of 
	everything, that ever can be against you, in His perfect will and peace, the 
	struggle is practically over. Beloved, do you really know and believe that 
	this is the very promise of the Gospel, the very essence of the new 
	covenant, that Christ pledges Himself to put His law in your heart, and to 
	cause you to walk in His statutes, and to keep His judgments and do them? Do 
	you know that this is the oath which He sware unto Abraham, that He would 
	grant unto us. "That we being delivered from the hands of our enemies, and 
	from all that hate us, might serve Him without fear, in righteousness and 
	holiness before Him all the days of our life." He has sworn to do this for 
	you, and He is faithful, that promised. Trust Him ever.   |  
			| 
 Day 18 
	
	"Neither shall any 
	plague come near thy dwelling" (Ps. xci. 10). 
	
	We know what it is 
	to be fireproof, to be waterproof: but it is a greater thing to be proof 
	against sin. It is possible to be so filled with the Spirit and presence of 
	Jesus that all the shafts of the enemy glance off our heavenly armor; that 
	all the burrs and thistles which grow on the wayside fail to stick to our 
	heavenly robes; that all the noxious vapors of the pit disappear before the 
	warm breath of the Holy Ghost, and we walk with a charmed life even through 
	the valley of the shadow of death. The red hot iron repels the water that 
	touches it, and the fingers that would trifle with it: and, if we are on 
	fire with the Holy Ghost, Satan will keep his fingers off us, and the cold 
	water that he pours over us will roll off and leave us unharmed: "for He 
	that was begotten of God keepeth us, and that wicked one toucheth us not." 
	
	It is said that 
	before going into a malarious region, it is well to fortify the system with 
	nourishing food. So we should be fed and filled by the life of Christ in 
	such a way that the evil does not really touch our life.   |  
			| 
 Day 19 
	
	"Launch out into 
	the deep" (Luke v. 4). 
	
	Many difficulties 
	and perplexities in connection with our Christian life might be best settled 
	by a simple and bold decision of our will to go forward with the light we 
	have and leave the speculations and theories that we cannot decide for 
	further settlement. What we need is to act, and to act with the best light 
	we have, and as we step out into the present duty and full obedience, many 
	things will be made plain which it is no use waiting to decide. 
	
	Beloved, cut the 
	Gordian knot, like Alexander, with the sword of decision. Launch out into 
	the deep with a bold plunge, and Christ will settle for you all the 
	questions that you are now debating, and more probably show you their 
	insignificance, and let you see that the only way to settle them is to 
	overleap them. They are Satan's petty snares to waste your time and keep you 
	halting when you should be marching on. 
				
				
				The mercy of God 
	is an ocean divine,
				
				A 
	boundless and fathomless flood;
				
				Launch 
	out in the deep, cut away the shore line,
				
				And 
	be lost in the fulness of God.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 20 
	
	"They which 
	receive abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness shall reign in 
	life" (Rom. v. 17). 
	
	Precious souls 
	sometimes fight tremendous battles in order to attain to righteousness in 
	trying places. Perhaps the heart has become wrong in some matter where 
	temptation has been allowed to overcome, or at least to turn it aside from 
	its singleness unto God; and the conflict is a terrible one as it seeks to 
	adjust itself and be right with God, and finds itself baffled by its own 
	spiritual foes, and its own helplessness, perplexity and perversity. How 
	dark and dreary the struggle, and how helpless and ineffectual it often 
	seems at such times! It is almost sure to strive in the spirit of the law, 
	and the result always is, and must ever be, condemnation and failure. Every 
	disobedience is met by a blow of wrath, and discouragement, and it well nigh 
	sinks to despair. Oh, if the tempted and struggling one could only 
	understand or remember what perhaps he has learned before, that Christ is 
	our righteousness, and that it is not by law but by grace alone, "For sin 
	shall not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law, but under 
	grace." That is the secret of the whole battle.   |  
			| 
 Day 21 
	
	"Casting all your 
	care upon Him" (I. Peter v. 7). 
	
	Some things there 
	are that God will not tolerate in us. We must leave them. Nehemiah would not 
	talk with Sanballat about his charges and fears, but simply refused to have 
	anything to do with the matter--even to go into the temple and pray about 
	it. How very few things we really have to do with in life. If we would only 
	drop all the needless things and simply do the things that absolutely touch 
	and require our attention from morning till night, we would find what a 
	small slender thread life was; but we string upon it a thousand imaginary 
	beads that never come, and burden ourselves with cares and flurries that if 
	we had trusted more, would never have needed to preoccupy our attention. 
	Wise indeed was the testimony of the dear old saint who said, in review of 
	her past life, "I have had a great many troubles in my life, especially 
	those that never came." 
				
				
				Trust and rest 
	with heart abiding,
				
				Like 
	a birdling in its nest,
				
				Underneath 
	His feathers hiding,
				
				Fold 
	thy wings and trust and rest.
				
				Trust 
	and rest, trust and rest,
				
				God 
	is working for the best.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 22 
	
	"Hold fast the 
	confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end" (Heb. iii. 6). 
	
	The attitude of 
	faith is simple trust. It is Elijah saying to Ahab, "There is a sound of 
	abundance of rain." But then there comes usually a deeper experience in 
	which the prayer is inwrought; it is Elijah on the mount, with his face 
	between his knees, travailing, as it were, in birth for the promised 
	blessing. He has believed for it--and now he must take. The first is Joash 
	shooting the arrow out of the windows, but the second is Joash smiting on 
	the ground and following up his faith by perseverance and victorious 
	testing. 
	
	It is in this 
	latter place that many of us come short. We ask much from God, and when God 
	proceeds to give it to us we are not found equal to His expectation. We are 
	made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence 
	steadfast to the end, and trust Him through it all. 
				
				
				Fainting soldier 
	of the Lord,
				
				Hear 
	His sweet inspiring word,
				
				"I 
	have conquered all thy foes.
				
				I 
	have suffered all thy woes;
				
				Struggling 
	soldier, trust in Me,
				
				I 
	have overcome for thee."
			   |  
			| 
 Day 23 
	
	"He is a new 
	creature" (II. Cor. v. 17). 
	
	Resurrected, not 
	raised. There is so much in this distinction. The teaching of human 
	philosophy is that we are to raise humanity to a higher plane. This is not 
	the Gospel. On the contrary, the teaching of the cross is that humanity must 
	die and sink out of sight and then be resurrected, not raised. Resurrection 
	is not improvement. It is not elevation, but it is a new supernatural life 
	lifting us from nothingness into God and making us partakers of the Divine 
	nature. It is a new creation. It is an infinite elevation above the highest 
	plane. Let us not take less than resurrection life. 
				
				
				I am crucified 
	with Jesus,
				
				And 
	the cross has set me free;
				
				I 
	have ris'n again with Jesus,
				
				And 
	He lives and reigns in me.
				
				
				
				
				This the story of 
	the Master,
				
				Through 
	the cross He reached the throne,
				
				And 
	like Him our path to glory,
				
				Ever 
	leads through death alone.
				
				
				
				Lord, teach me the 
	death-born life. 
				
				
				Lord, let me live in the power of Thy resurrection!
			   |  
			| 
 Day 24 
	
	"And again I say, 
	rejoice" (Phil. iv. 4). 
	
	It is a good thing 
	to rejoice in the Lord. Perhaps you found the first dose ineffectual. Keep 
	on with your medicine, and when you cannot feel any joy, when there is no 
	spring, and no seeming comfort and encouragement, still rejoice, and count 
	it all joy. Even when you fall into divers temptations, reckon it joy, and 
	delight, and God will make your reckoning good. Do you suppose your Father 
	will let you carry the banner of His victory and His gladness on to the 
	front of the battle, and then coolly stand back and see you captured or 
	beaten back by the enemy? Never! the Holy Spirit will sustain you in your 
	bold advance, and fill your heart with gladness and praise, and you will 
	find your heart all exhilarated and refreshed by the fulness of the heart 
	within. 
				
				
				Lord, teach me to 
	rejoice in Thee, and to rejoice evermore.
				
				
				The joy of the 
	Lord is the strength of His people.
				
				The 
	sunshine that scatters their sadness and gloom;
				
				The 
	fountain that bursts in the desert of sorrow,
				
				And 
	sheds o'er the wilderness, gladness and bloom.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 25 
	
	"The beauty of 
	holiness" (Ps. xxix. 2). 
	
	Some one remarked 
	once that he did not know more disagreeable people than sanctified 
	Christians. He probably meant people that only profess sanctification. There 
	is an angular, hard, unlovely type of Christian character that is not true 
	holiness; at least, not the highest type of it. It is the skeleton without 
	the flesh covering; it is the naked rock without the vines and foliage that 
	cushion its rugged sides. Jesus was not only virtuous and pure, but He was 
	also beautiful and full of the sweet attractiveness of love. 
	
	We read of two 
	kinds of graces: First, "Whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are 
	lovely and of good report." There are a thousand little graces in Christian 
	life that we cannot afford to ignore. In fact, the last stages in any work 
	of art are always the finishing touches; and so let us not wonder if God 
	shall spend a great deal of time in teaching us the little things that many 
	might consider trifles. 
	
	God would have His 
	Bride without a spot or even a wrinkle.   |  
			| 
 Day 26 
	
	"Jesus, the author 
	and finisher of our faith" (Heb. xii. 2). 
	
	Add to your 
	faith--do not add to yourself. This is where we make the mistake. We must 
	not only enter by faith, but we must advance by faith each step of the way. 
	At every new stage we shall find ourselves as incompetent and unequal for 
	the pressure as before, and we must take the grace and the victory simply by 
	faith. Is it courage? We shall find ourselves lacking in the needed courage; 
	we must claim it by faith. Is it love? Our own love will be inadequate; but 
	we must take His love, and we shall find it given. Is it faith itself? We 
	must have the faith of God, and Christ in us will be the spirit of faith, as 
	well as the blessing that faith claims. So our whole life from beginning to 
	end, is but Christ in us--in the exceeding riches of His grace; and our 
	everlasting song will be: Not I; but Christ who liveth in me. 
				
				
				'Tis so sweet to 
	walk with Jesus,
				
				Step 
	by step and day by day;
				
				Stepping 
	in His very footprints,
				
				Walking 
	with Him all the way.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 27 
	
	"What time I am 
	afraid, I will trust in Thee" (Ps. lvi. 3). 
	
	We shall never 
	forget a remark Mr. George Mueller once made in answer to a gentleman who 
	asked him the best way to have strong faith. "The only way," replied the 
	patriarch of faith, "to learn strong faith is to endure great trials. I have 
	learned my faith by standing firm amid severe testings." This is very true. 
	The time to trust is when all else fails. Dear one, if you scarcely realize 
	the value of your present opportunity, if you are passing through great 
	afflictions, you are in the very soul of the strongest faith, and if you 
	will only let go, He will teach you in these hours the mightiest hold upon 
	this throne which you can ever know. "Be not afraid, only believe"; and if 
	you are afraid, just look up and say, "What time I am afraid, I will trust 
	in Thee," and you will yet thank God for the school of sorrow which was to 
	you the school of faith. 
				
				
				O brother, give 
	heed to the warning,
				
				And 
	obey His voice to-day.
				
				The 
	Spirit to thee is calling,
				
				O 
	do not grieve Him away.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 28 
	
	"The fruit of the 
	Spirit is all goodness" (Gal. v. 22). 
	
	Goodness is a 
	fruit of the Spirit. Goodness is just "Godness." It is to be like God. And 
	God-like goodness has special reference to the active benevolence of God. 
	The apostle gives us the difference between goodness and righteousness in 
	this passage in Romans, "Scarcely for a righteous man would one die, yet 
	peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die." The righteous man 
	is the man of stiff, inflexible uprightness; but he may be as hard as a 
	granite mountain side. The good man is that mountain side all covered with 
	velvet moss and flowers, and flowing with cascades and springs. Goodness 
	respects "whatsoever things are lovely." It is kindness, affectionateness, 
	benevolence, sympathy, rejoicing with them that do rejoice, and weeping with 
	them that weep. Lord, fill us with Thyself, and let us be God-men and good 
	men, and so represent Thy goodness. 
				
				
				There are lonely 
	hearts to cherish,
				
				While 
	the days are going by;
				
				There 
	are weary souls who perish,
				
				While 
	the days are going by.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 29 
	
	"He will keep the 
	feet of His saints" (I. Sam. ii. 9). 
	
	Perils as well as 
	privileges attend the higher Christian life. The nearer we come to God, the 
	thicker the hosts of darkness in heavenly places. The safe place lies in 
	obedience to God's Word, singleness of heart, and holy vigilance. 
	
	When Christians 
	speak of standing in a place where they do not need to watch, they are in 
	great danger. Let us walk in sweet and holy confidence, and yet with holy, 
	humble watchfulness, and "He will keep the feet of His saints." And "now 
	unto Him who is able to keep us from stumbling, and present us faultless 
	before the presence of His glory, to the only wise God, our Saviour, be 
	glory, and majesty, dominion and power, both now and forever. Amen." 
				
				
				What to do we 
	often wonder,
				
				As 
	we seek some watchword true,
				
				Lo, 
	the answer God has given,
				
				What 
	would Jesus do?
				
				
				
				When the shafts of 
	fierce temptation,
				
				With 
	their fiery darts pursue,
				
				This 
	will be your heavenly armor,
				
				What 
	would Jesus do?
			   |  
			| 
 Day 30 
	
	"I wish above all 
	things that thou mayest prosper and be in health even as thy soul 
	prospereth" (III. John 2). 
	
	In the way of 
	righteousness is life and in the pathway thereof is no death. That is the 
	secret of healing. Be right with God. Keep so. Live in the consciousness of 
	it, and nothing can hurt you. Off from the breastplate of righteousness will 
	glance all of the fiery darts of the devil, and faith be stronger for every 
	fierce assault. How true it is, "Who is he that shall harm you if ye be 
	followers of that which is good?" And how true also, "Holding faith and a 
	good conscience, which some having put away, concerning faith, have made 
	shipwreck." 
	
	And yet again, "If 
	thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, and wilt keep 
	all His statutes and commandments, I will put none of these diseases upon 
	thee that I have brought upon the Egyptians; for I am the Lord that healeth 
	thee." 
				
				
				There's a question 
	God is asking
				
				Every 
	conscience in His sight,
				
				Let 
	it search thine inmost being,
				
				Is 
	it right with God, all right?
			   |  
			| 
 Day 31 
	
	"What things 
	soever ye desire when ye pray, believe that ye receive them and ye shall 
	have them" (Mark xi. 24). 
	
	Faith is not 
	working up by will power a sort of certainty that something is coming to 
	pass, but it is seeing as an actual fact that God has said that this thing 
	shall come to pass, and that it is true, and then rejoicing to know that it 
	is true, and just resting and entering into it because God has said it. 
	Faith turns the promise into a prophecy. While it is merely a promise it is 
	contingent upon our co-operation; it may or may not be. But when faith 
	claims it, it becomes a prophecy and we go forth feeling that it is 
	something that must be done because God cannot lie. 
	
	Faith is the 
	answer from the throne saying, "It is done." Faith is the echo of God's 
	voice. Let us catch it from on high. Let us repeat it, and go out to triumph 
	in its glorious power. 
				
				
				Hear the answer 
	from the throne,
				
				Claim 
	the promise, doubting one,
				
				God 
	hath spoken, "It is done."
				
				Faith 
	hath answered, "It is done";
				
				Prayer 
	is over, praise begun,
				
				Hallelujah! 
	It is done.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 1 
	
	"Wait on the Lord" 
	(Ps. xxvii. 14). 
	
	How often this is 
	said in the Bible, how little understood! It is what the old monk calls the 
	"practice of the presence of God." It is the habit of prayer. It is the 
	continued communion that not only asks, but receives. People often ask us to 
	pray for them and we have to say, "Why, God has answered our prayer for you, 
	and you must now take the answer. It is awaiting you, and you must take it 
	by waiting on the Lord." 
	
	This it is that 
	renews the strength, until we mount up with wings as eagles, run and are not 
	weary, walk and are not faint. Our hearts are too vast to take in His 
	fulness at a single breath. We must live in the atmosphere of His presence 
	till we absorb His very life. This is the secret of spiritual depth and 
	rest, of power and fulness, of love and prayer, of hope and holy usefulness. 
	"Wait, I say, on the Lord." 
				
				
				I am waiting in 
	communion at the blessed mercy seat,
				
				I 
	am waiting, sweetly waiting, on the Lord;
				
				I 
	am drinking, of His fulness; I am sitting at His feet;
				
				I 
	am hearkening to the whispers of His word.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 2 
	
	"That good thing 
	which was committed unto thee keep by the Holy Ghost" (II. Tim. i. 14). 
	
	God gives to us a 
	power within which will hold our hearts in victory and purity. "That good 
	thing which was committed unto thee, keep by the Holy Ghost which dwelleth 
	in us." It is the Holy Ghost; and when any thought or suggestion of evil 
	arises in our breast, the quick conscience can instantly call upon the Holy 
	Ghost to drive it out, and He will expel it at the command of faith or 
	prayer, and keep us as pure as we are willing to be kept. But when the will 
	surrenders and consents to evil, the Holy Ghost will not expel it. God, 
	then, requires us to stand in holy vigilance, and He will do exceeding 
	abundantly for us as we hold fast that which is good, and He will also be in 
	us a spirit of vigilance, showing us the evil and enabling us to detect it, 
	and to bring it to Him for expulsion and destruction. 
				
				
				"O Spirit of Jesus 
	fill us until we shall have room only for Thee!"
				
				
				O, come as the 
	heart-searching fire,
				
				O, 
	come as the sin-cleansing flood;
				
				Consume 
	us with holy desire,
				
				And 
	fill with the fulness of God.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 3 
	
	"Now no chastening 
	for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous; nevertheless afterward" 
	(Heb. xii. 11). 
	
	God seems to love 
	to work by paradoxes and contraries. In the transformations of grace, the 
	bitter is the base of the sweet, night is the mother of day, and death is 
	the gate of life. 
	
	Many people are 
	wanting power. Now, how is power produced? The other day we passed the great 
	works where the trolley engines are supplied with electricity. We heard the 
	hum and roar of countless wheels, and we asked our friend, "How do they make 
	the power?" "Why," he said, "just by the revolution of those wheels and the 
	friction they produce. The rubbing creates the electric current." 
	
	It is very simple, 
	and a trifling experiment will prove it to any one. 
	
	And so when God 
	wants to bring more power into your life, He brings more pressure. He is 
	generating spiritual force by hard rubbing. Some of us don't like it. Some 
	of us don't understand, and we try to run away from the pressure, instead of 
	getting the power and using it to rise above the painful cause.   |  
			| 
 Day 4 
	
	"They were all 
	filled with the Holy Ghost" (Acts ii. 4). 
	
	Blessed secret of 
	spiritual purity, victory and joy, of physical life and healing, and all 
	power for service. Filled with the Spirit there is no room for self or sin, 
	for fret or care. Filled with the Spirit we repel the elements of disease 
	that are in the air as the red-hot iron repels the water that touches it. 
	Filled with the Spirit we are always ready for service, and Satan turns away 
	when he finds the Holy Ghost enrobing us in His garments of holy flame. Not 
	half-filled, but filled with the Spirit is the place of victory and power. 
	
	This is not only a 
	privilege; it is a command, and He who gave it will enable us to fulfill it 
	if we bring it to Him with an empty, honest, trusting heart, and claim our 
	privilege in the name of Jesus and for the glory of God. 
				
				
				Holy Ghost, I bid 
	Thee welcome;
				
				Come 
	and be my Holy Guest;
				
				Heavenly 
	Dove within my bosom,
				
				Make 
	Thy home and build Thy nest;
				
				Lead 
	me on to all Thy fulness,
				
				Bring 
	me to Thy Promised Rest,
				
				Holy 
	Ghost, I bid Thee welcome,
				
				Come 
	and be my Holy Guest.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 5 
	
	"I have overcome 
	the world" (John xvi. 33). 
	
	Christ has 
	overcome for us every one of our four terrible foes--Sin, Sickness, Sorrow, 
	Satan. He has borne our Sin, and we may lay all, even down to our sinfulness 
	itself, on Him. "I have overcome for thee." He has borne our sickness, and 
	we may detach ourselves from our old infirmities and rise into His glorious 
	life and strength. He has borne our sorrows, and we must not even carry a 
	care, but rejoice evermore, and even glory in tribulations also. And He has 
	conquered Satan for us, too, and left him nailed to the cross, spoiled and 
	dishonored and but a shadow of himself. And now we have but to claim His 
	full atonement and assert our victory, and so "overcome him by the blood of 
	the Lamb and the word of our testimony." 
	
	Beloved, are we 
	overcoming sin? Are we overcoming sickness? Are we overcoming sorrow? Are we 
	overcoming Satan? 
				
				
				Fear not, though 
	the strife be long;
				
				Faint 
	not, though the foe be strong;
				
				Trust 
	thy glorious Captain's power;
				
				Watch 
	with Him one little hour,
				
				Hear 
	Him calling, "Follow me.
				
				"I 
	have overcome for thee."
			   |  
			| 
 Day 6 
	
	"Lean not unto 
	thine own understanding" (Prov. iii. 5). 
	
	Faith is hindered 
	by reliance upon human wisdom, whether our own or the wisdom of others. The 
	devil's first bait to Eve was an offer of wisdom, and for this she sold her 
	faith. "Ye shall be as gods," he said, "knowing good and evil," and from the 
	hour she began to know she ceased to trust. It was the spies that lost the 
	Land of Promise to Israel of old. It was their foolish proposition to search 
	out the land, and find out by investigation whether God had told the truth 
	or not, that led to the awful outbreak of unbelief that shut the doors of 
	Canaan to a whole generation. It is very significant that the names of these 
	spies are nearly all suggestive of human wisdom, greatness and fame. 
	
	So in the days of 
	Christ, it was the bondage of the Jews to the traditions of their fathers 
	and the opinions of men, that kept them back from receiving Him. "How can ye 
	believe," He asked, "which receive honor from men, and seek not that which 
	cometh from God only?" 
	
	Let us trust Him 
	with all our heart and lean not to our own understanding.   |  
			| 
 Day 7 
	
	"It is more 
	blessed to give than to receive" (Acts xx. 35). 
	
	How shall we know 
	the difference between the earthly and the heavenly love? The one terminates 
	on ourselves and is partly ourself seeking its own gratification. The other 
	reaches out to God and others, and finds its joy in glorifying Him and 
	blessing them. Love is unselfishness, and the love that is not unselfish is 
	not divine. How much do we pray for others, and how much for ourselves? What 
	is the center of our being? Ourselves, or our Lord and His people and work? 
	The Lord help us to know more fully the meaning of that great truth, "It is 
	more blessed to give than to receive." "He that saveth his life shall lose 
	it, and he that loseth his life for My sake and the Gospel, shall keep it 
	unto life eternal." 
				
				
				Have you found 
	some precious treasure,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
				 
				
				Have 
	You found some holy pleasure,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
				
				 
				
				Giving 
	out is twice possessing,
				
				Love 
	will double every blessing,
				
				On 
	to higher service pressing,
				
				Pass 
	it on.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 8 
	
	"Pray Ye 
	therefore" (Luke x. 2). 
	
	Prayer is the 
	mighty engine that is to move the missionary work. "Pray ye therefore the 
	Lord of the harvest that He will send forth laborers into His harvest." 
	
	We are asking God 
	to touch the hearts of men every day by the Holy Ghost, so that they shall 
	be compelled to go abroad and preach the Gospel. We are asking Him to wake 
	them up at night with the solemn conviction that the heathen are perishing, 
	and that their blood will be upon their souls, and God is answering the 
	prayer by sending persons to us every day who "feel that the King's business 
	requireth haste." 
	
	Beloved, pray, 
	pray, pray; and as the incense rises to the heavens, "there will be silence 
	in heaven" by the space of more than half an hour, and the coals of fire 
	will be emptied out upon the earth, and the coming of the Lord will begin to 
	draw nearer. Pray till the Lord of the harvest shall thrust forth laborers 
	into His harvest. 
				
				
				Send the coals of 
	heavenly fire,
				
				From 
	the altar of the skies;
				
				Fill 
	our hearts with strong desire,
				
				Till 
	our pray'rs like incense rise.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 9 
	
	"How ye ought to 
	walk and please God" (I. Thess. iv. 1). 
	
	How many dear 
	Christians are in the place that the Lord has appointed them, and yet the 
	devil is harassing their lives with a vague sense of not quite pleasing the 
	Lord. Could they just settle down in the place that God has assigned them 
	and fill it sweetly and lovingly for Him there would be more joy in their 
	hearts and more power in their lives. God wants us all in various places, 
	and the secret of accomplishing the most for Him is to recognize our places 
	from Him and our service in it as pleasing Him. In the great factory and 
	machine there is a place for the smallest screw and rivet as well as the 
	great driving wheel and piston, and so God has His little screws whose 
	business is simply to stay where He puts them and to believe that He wants 
	them there and is making the most of their lives in the little spaces that 
	they fill for Him. 
				
				
				There is something 
	all can do,
				
				Tho' 
	you're neither wise nor strong;
				
				You 
	can be a helper true,
				
				You 
	can stand when friends are few,
				
				Some 
	lone heart has need of you,
				
				You 
	can help along.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 10 
	
	"The peace of God 
	which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds" (Phil. iv. 
	7). 
	
	It is not peace 
	with God, but the peace of God. "The peace that passes all understanding" is 
	the very breath of God in the soul. He alone is able to keep it, and He can 
	so keep it that "nothing shall offend us." Beloved, are you there? 
	
	God's rest did not 
	come till after His work was over, and ours will not. We begin our Christian 
	life by working, trying and struggling in the energy of the flesh to save 
	ourselves. At last, when we are able to cease from our own work, God comes 
	in with His blessed rest, and works His own Divine works in us. 
				
				
				Oh! have you heard 
	the glorious word
				
				Of 
	hope and holy cheer;
				
				From 
	heav'n above its tones of love
				
				Are 
	lingering on my ear;
				
				The 
	blessed Comforter has come,
				
				And 
	Christ will soon be here.
				
				
				
				Oh, hearts that 
	sigh there's succor nigh,
				
				The 
	Comforter is near;
				
				He 
	comes to bring us to our King,
				
				And 
	fit us to appear.
				
				I'm 
	glad the Comforter has come,
				
				And 
	Christ will soon be here.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 11 
	
	"But ye are a 
	chosen generation, a peculiar people" (I. Peter ii. 9). 
	
	We have been 
	thinking lately very much of the strange way in which God is calling a 
	people out of a people already called. The word ecclesia, or church, means 
	called out, but God is calling out a still more select body from the church 
	to be His bride--the specially prepared ones for His coming. 
	
	We see a fine type 
	of this in the story of Gideon. When first he sounded the trumpet of Abiezer 
	there resorted to him more than thirty thousand men; but these had to be 
	picked, so a first test was applied, appealing to their courage, and all but 
	ten thousand went back; but there must be an election out of the election, 
	and so a second test was applied, appealing to their prudence, caution and 
	singleness of purpose, and all but three hundred were refused; and, with 
	this little picked band, he raised the standard against the Midianites, and 
	through the power of God won his glorious victory. So, again, in our days, 
	the Master is choosing His three hundred, and by them He will yet win the 
	world for Himself. Let us be sure that we belong to the "out and out" 
	people.   |  
			| 
 Day 12 
	
	"They wandered in 
	the wilderness in a solitary way" (Ps. cvii. 4). 
	
	All who fight the 
	Lord's battles must be content to die to all the favorable opinions of men 
	and all the flattery of human praise. You cannot make an exception in favor 
	of the good opinions of the children of God. It is very easy for the 
	insidious adversary to make this also all appeal to the flesh. It is all 
	right when God sends us the approval of our fellow men, but we must never 
	make it a motive in our life, but be content with the "solitary way" and the 
	lonely "wilderness." 
	
	All such motives 
	are poison and a taking away from you of the strength with which you are to 
	give glory to God. It is not the fact that all that see the face of the Lord 
	do see each other. 
	
	The man of God 
	must walk alone with God. He must be contented that the Lord knoweth that 
	God knows. It is such a relief to the natural man within us to fall back 
	upon human countenances and human thoughts and sympathy, that we often 
	deceive ourselves and think it "brotherly love," when we are just resting in 
	the earthly sympathy of some fellow worm!   |  
			| 
 Day 13 
	
	"Keep yourselves 
	in the love of God" (Jude 21). 
	
	Some time ago, we 
	were enjoying a surpassingly beautiful sunset. The western skies seemed like 
	a great archipelago of golden islands, the masses in the distance rising up 
	into vast mountains of glory. The hue of the sky was so gorgeous that it 
	seemed to reflect itself upon the whole atmosphere, as we looked back from 
	the west to the eastern horizon. The whole earth was radiant with glory. The 
	fields had changed to strange, red richness, and the earth seemed bathed 
	with the dews of heaven. 
	
	And so it is, when 
	the love of God shines through all our celestial sky, it covers everything 
	below, and life becomes radiant with its light. Things that were hard become 
	easy. Things that were sharp become sweet. Labor loses its burden, and 
	sorrow becomes silver-lined with hope and gladness. 
	
	There are two ways 
	of living in His love. One is constant trust, and the other is constant 
	obedience, and His own Word gives the message for both. "If ye keep My 
	commandments ye shall live in My love, even as I keep My Father's, and live 
	in His love."   |  
			| 
 Day 14 
	
	"We are His 
	workmanship" (Eph. ii. 10). 
	
	Christ sends us to 
	serve Him, not in our own strength, but in His resources and might. "We are 
	His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath 
	prepared that we should walk in them." We do not have to prepare them; but 
	to wear them as garments, made to order for every occasion of our life. 
	
	We must receive 
	them by faith and go forth in His work, believing that He is with us, and in 
	us, as our all sufficiency for wisdom, faith, love, prayer, power, and every 
	grace and gift that our work requires. In this work of faith we shall have 
	to feel weak and helpless, and even have little consciousness of power. But 
	if we believe and go forward, He will be the power and send the fruits. 
	
	The most useful 
	services we render are those which, like the sweet fruits of the wilderness, 
	spring from hours of barrenness. "I will bring her into the wilderness and I 
	will give her vineyards from thence." Let us learn to work by faith as well 
	as walk by faith, then we shall receive even the end of our faith, the 
	salvation of precious souls, and our lives will bear fruit which shall be 
	manifest throughout all eternity.   |  
			| 
 Day 15 
	
	"Continue ye in My 
	love" (John xv. 9). 
	
	Many atmospheres 
	there are in which we may live. Some people live in an atmosphere of 
	thought. Their faces are thoughtful, minds intellectual. They live in their 
	ideas, their conceptions of truth, their tastes, and esthetic nature. Some 
	people, again, live in their animal nature, in the lusts of the flesh and 
	eye, the coarse, low atmosphere of a sensuous life, or something worse. 
	Some, again, live in a world of duty. The predominating feature of their 
	life is conscience, and it carries with it a certain shadowy fear that takes 
	away the simple freedom and gladness of life, but there is a rectitude, and 
	uprightness, a strictness of purpose, and of conduct which cannot be 
	gainsaid or questioned. 
	
	But Christ bids us 
	live in an atmosphere of love. "As My Father has loved Me, so have I loved 
	you; continue ye in My love." In the original it is, "Live in My love." Love 
	is the atmosphere that He would have us ever live in, that is, believing 
	that He ever loves us, and claiming His sweet approval and tender regard. 
	This is a life of love.   |  
			| 
 Day 16 
	
	"The Lord will 
	give grace and glory" (Ps. lxxxiv. 11). 
	
	The Lord will give 
	grace and glory. This word glory is very difficult to translate, define 
	and explain; but there is something in the spiritual consciousness of the 
	quickened Christian that interprets it. It is the overflow of grace; it is 
	the wine of life; it is the foretaste of heaven; it is a flash from the 
	Throne and an inspiration from the heart of God which we may have and in 
	which we may live. "The glory which Thou hast given Me I have given them," 
	the Master prayed for us. Let us take it and live in it. David used to say, 
	"Wake up my glory." Ask God to wake up your glory and enable you to mount up 
	with wings as eagles, to dwell on high and sit with Christ in the heavenly 
	places. 
				
				
				Mounting up with 
	wings as eagles,
				
				Waiting 
	on the Lord we rise,
				
				Strength 
	exchanging, life renewing,
				
				How 
	our spirit heavenward flies.
				 
				
				Then 
	our springing feet returning,
				
				Tread 
	the pathway of the saint,
				
				We 
	shall run and not be weary,
				
				We 
	shall walk and never faint.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 17 
	
	"He hath 
	remembered His covenant forever" (Ps. cv. 8). 
	
	So long as you 
	struggle under law, that is by your own effort, sin shall have dominion over 
	you: but the moment you step from under the shadow of Sinai, throw yourself 
	upon the simple grace of Christ and His free and absolute gift of 
	righteousness, and take Him to be to you what He has pledged Himself to be, 
	your righteousness of thought and feeling, and to keep you in spite of 
	everything, that ever can be against you, in His perfect will and peace, the 
	struggle is practically over. Beloved, do you really know and believe that 
	this is the very promise of the Gospel, the very essence of the new 
	covenant, that Christ pledges Himself to put His law in your heart, and to 
	cause you to walk in His statutes, and to keep His judgments and do them? Do 
	you know that this is the oath which He sware unto Abraham, that He would 
	grant unto us. "That we being delivered from the hands of our enemies, and 
	from all that hate us, might serve Him without fear, in righteousness and 
	holiness before Him all the days of our life." He has sworn to do this for 
	you, and He is faithful, that promised. Trust Him ever.   |  
			| 
 Day 18 
	
	"Neither shall any 
	plague come near thy dwelling" (Ps. xci. 10). 
	
	We know what it is 
	to be fireproof, to be waterproof: but it is a greater thing to be proof 
	against sin. It is possible to be so filled with the Spirit and presence of 
	Jesus that all the shafts of the enemy glance off our heavenly armor; that 
	all the burrs and thistles which grow on the wayside fail to stick to our 
	heavenly robes; that all the noxious vapors of the pit disappear before the 
	warm breath of the Holy Ghost, and we walk with a charmed life even through 
	the valley of the shadow of death. The red hot iron repels the water that 
	touches it, and the fingers that would trifle with it: and, if we are on 
	fire with the Holy Ghost, Satan will keep his fingers off us, and the cold 
	water that he pours over us will roll off and leave us unharmed: "for He 
	that was begotten of God keepeth us, and that wicked one toucheth us not." 
	
	It is said that 
	before going into a malarious region, it is well to fortify the system with 
	nourishing food. So we should be fed and filled by the life of Christ in 
	such a way that the evil does not really touch our life.   |  
			| 
 Day 19 
	
	"Launch out into 
	the deep" (Luke v. 4). 
	
	Many difficulties 
	and perplexities in connection with our Christian life might be best settled 
	by a simple and bold decision of our will to go forward with the light we 
	have and leave the speculations and theories that we cannot decide for 
	further settlement. What we need is to act, and to act with the best light 
	we have, and as we step out into the present duty and full obedience, many 
	things will be made plain which it is no use waiting to decide. 
	
	Beloved, cut the 
	Gordian knot, like Alexander, with the sword of decision. Launch out into 
	the deep with a bold plunge, and Christ will settle for you all the 
	questions that you are now debating, and more probably show you their 
	insignificance, and let you see that the only way to settle them is to 
	overleap them. They are Satan's petty snares to waste your time and keep you 
	halting when you should be marching on. 
				
				
				The mercy of God 
	is an ocean divine,
				
				A 
	boundless and fathomless flood;
				
				Launch 
	out in the deep, cut away the shore line,
				
				And 
	be lost in the fulness of God.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 20 
	
	"They which 
	receive abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness shall reign in 
	life" (Rom. v. 17). 
	
	Precious souls 
	sometimes fight tremendous battles in order to attain to righteousness in 
	trying places. Perhaps the heart has become wrong in some matter where 
	temptation has been allowed to overcome, or at least to turn it aside from 
	its singleness unto God; and the conflict is a terrible one as it seeks to 
	adjust itself and be right with God, and finds itself baffled by its own 
	spiritual foes, and its own helplessness, perplexity and perversity. How 
	dark and dreary the struggle, and how helpless and ineffectual it often 
	seems at such times! It is almost sure to strive in the spirit of the law, 
	and the result always is, and must ever be, condemnation and failure. Every 
	disobedience is met by a blow of wrath, and discouragement, and it well nigh 
	sinks to despair. Oh, if the tempted and struggling one could only 
	understand or remember what perhaps he has learned before, that Christ is 
	our righteousness, and that it is not by law but by grace alone, "For sin 
	shall not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law, but under 
	grace." That is the secret of the whole battle.   |  
			| 
 Day 21 
	
	"Casting all your 
	care upon Him" (I. Peter v. 7). 
	
	Some things there 
	are that God will not tolerate in us. We must leave them. Nehemiah would not 
	talk with Sanballat about his charges and fears, but simply refused to have 
	anything to do with the matter--even to go into the temple and pray about 
	it. How very few things we really have to do with in life. If we would only 
	drop all the needless things and simply do the things that absolutely touch 
	and require our attention from morning till night, we would find what a 
	small slender thread life was; but we string upon it a thousand imaginary 
	beads that never come, and burden ourselves with cares and flurries that if 
	we had trusted more, would never have needed to preoccupy our attention. 
	Wise indeed was the testimony of the dear old saint who said, in review of 
	her past life, "I have had a great many troubles in my life, especially 
	those that never came." 
				
				
				Trust and rest 
	with heart abiding,
				
				Like 
	a birdling in its nest,
				
				Underneath 
	His feathers hiding,
				
				Fold 
	thy wings and trust and rest.
				
				Trust 
	and rest, trust and rest,
				
				God 
	is working for the best.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 22 
	
	"Hold fast the 
	confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end" (Heb. iii. 6). 
	
	The attitude of 
	faith is simple trust. It is Elijah saying to Ahab, "There is a sound of 
	abundance of rain." But then there comes usually a deeper experience in 
	which the prayer is inwrought; it is Elijah on the mount, with his face 
	between his knees, travailing, as it were, in birth for the promised 
	blessing. He has believed for it--and now he must take. The first is Joash 
	shooting the arrow out of the windows, but the second is Joash smiting on 
	the ground and following up his faith by perseverance and victorious 
	testing. 
	
	It is in this 
	latter place that many of us come short. We ask much from God, and when God 
	proceeds to give it to us we are not found equal to His expectation. We are 
	made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence 
	steadfast to the end, and trust Him through it all. 
				
				
				Fainting soldier 
	of the Lord,
				
				Hear 
	His sweet inspiring word,
				
				"I 
	have conquered all thy foes.
				
				I 
	have suffered all thy woes;
				
				Struggling 
	soldier, trust in Me,
				
				I 
	have overcome for thee."
			   |  
			| 
 Day 23 
	
	"He is a new 
	creature" (II. Cor. v. 17). 
	
	Resurrected, not 
	raised. There is so much in this distinction. The teaching of human 
	philosophy is that we are to raise humanity to a higher plane. This is not 
	the Gospel. On the contrary, the teaching of the cross is that humanity must 
	die and sink out of sight and then be resurrected, not raised. Resurrection 
	is not improvement. It is not elevation, but it is a new supernatural life 
	lifting us from nothingness into God and making us partakers of the Divine 
	nature. It is a new creation. It is an infinite elevation above the highest 
	plane. Let us not take less than resurrection life. 
				
				
				I am crucified 
	with Jesus,
				
				And 
	the cross has set me free;
				
				I 
	have ris'n again with Jesus,
				
				And 
	He lives and reigns in me.
				
				
				
				
				This the story of 
	the Master,
				
				Through 
	the cross He reached the throne,
				
				And 
	like Him our path to glory,
				
				Ever 
	leads through death alone.
				
				
				
				Lord, teach me the 
	death-born life. 
				
				
				Lord, let me live in the power of Thy resurrection!
			   |  
			| 
 Day 24 
	
	"And again I say, 
	rejoice" (Phil. iv. 4). 
	
	It is a good thing 
	to rejoice in the Lord. Perhaps you found the first dose ineffectual. Keep 
	on with your medicine, and when you cannot feel any joy, when there is no 
	spring, and no seeming comfort and encouragement, still rejoice, and count 
	it all joy. Even when you fall into divers temptations, reckon it joy, and 
	delight, and God will make your reckoning good. Do you suppose your Father 
	will let you carry the banner of His victory and His gladness on to the 
	front of the battle, and then coolly stand back and see you captured or 
	beaten back by the enemy? Never! the Holy Spirit will sustain you in your 
	bold advance, and fill your heart with gladness and praise, and you will 
	find your heart all exhilarated and refreshed by the fulness of the heart 
	within. 
				
				
				Lord, teach me to 
	rejoice in Thee, and to rejoice evermore.
				
				
				The joy of the 
	Lord is the strength of His people.
				
				The 
	sunshine that scatters their sadness and gloom;
				
				The 
	fountain that bursts in the desert of sorrow,
				
				And 
	sheds o'er the wilderness, gladness and bloom.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 25 
	
	"The beauty of 
	holiness" (Ps. xxix. 2). 
	
	Some one remarked 
	once that he did not know more disagreeable people than sanctified 
	Christians. He probably meant people that only profess sanctification. There 
	is an angular, hard, unlovely type of Christian character that is not true 
	holiness; at least, not the highest type of it. It is the skeleton without 
	the flesh covering; it is the naked rock without the vines and foliage that 
	cushion its rugged sides. Jesus was not only virtuous and pure, but He was 
	also beautiful and full of the sweet attractiveness of love. 
	
	We read of two 
	kinds of graces: First, "Whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are 
	lovely and of good report." There are a thousand little graces in Christian 
	life that we cannot afford to ignore. In fact, the last stages in any work 
	of art are always the finishing touches; and so let us not wonder if God 
	shall spend a great deal of time in teaching us the little things that many 
	might consider trifles. 
	
	God would have His 
	Bride without a spot or even a wrinkle.   |  
			| 
 Day 26 
	
	"Jesus, the author 
	and finisher of our faith" (Heb. xii. 2). 
	
	Add to your 
	faith--do not add to yourself. This is where we make the mistake. We must 
	not only enter by faith, but we must advance by faith each step of the way. 
	At every new stage we shall find ourselves as incompetent and unequal for 
	the pressure as before, and we must take the grace and the victory simply by 
	faith. Is it courage? We shall find ourselves lacking in the needed courage; 
	we must claim it by faith. Is it love? Our own love will be inadequate; but 
	we must take His love, and we shall find it given. Is it faith itself? We 
	must have the faith of God, and Christ in us will be the spirit of faith, as 
	well as the blessing that faith claims. So our whole life from beginning to 
	end, is but Christ in us--in the exceeding riches of His grace; and our 
	everlasting song will be: Not I; but Christ who liveth in me. 
				
				
				'Tis so sweet to 
	walk with Jesus,
				
				Step 
	by step and day by day;
				
				Stepping 
	in His very footprints,
				
				Walking 
	with Him all the way.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 27 
	
	"What time I am 
	afraid, I will trust in Thee" (Ps. lvi. 3). 
	
	We shall never 
	forget a remark Mr. George Mueller once made in answer to a gentleman who 
	asked him the best way to have strong faith. "The only way," replied the 
	patriarch of faith, "to learn strong faith is to endure great trials. I have 
	learned my faith by standing firm amid severe testings." This is very true. 
	The time to trust is when all else fails. Dear one, if you scarcely realize 
	the value of your present opportunity, if you are passing through great 
	afflictions, you are in the very soul of the strongest faith, and if you 
	will only let go, He will teach you in these hours the mightiest hold upon 
	this throne which you can ever know. "Be not afraid, only believe"; and if 
	you are afraid, just look up and say, "What time I am afraid, I will trust 
	in Thee," and you will yet thank God for the school of sorrow which was to 
	you the school of faith. 
				
				
				O brother, give 
	heed to the warning,
				
				And 
	obey His voice to-day.
				
				The 
	Spirit to thee is calling,
				
				O 
	do not grieve Him away.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 28 
	
	"The fruit of the 
	Spirit is all goodness" (Gal. v. 22). 
	
	Goodness is a 
	fruit of the Spirit. Goodness is just "Godness." It is to be like God. And 
	God-like goodness has special reference to the active benevolence of God. 
	The apostle gives us the difference between goodness and righteousness in 
	this passage in Romans, "Scarcely for a righteous man would one die, yet 
	peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die." The righteous man 
	is the man of stiff, inflexible uprightness; but he may be as hard as a 
	granite mountain side. The good man is that mountain side all covered with 
	velvet moss and flowers, and flowing with cascades and springs. Goodness 
	respects "whatsoever things are lovely." It is kindness, affectionateness, 
	benevolence, sympathy, rejoicing with them that do rejoice, and weeping with 
	them that weep. Lord, fill us with Thyself, and let us be God-men and good 
	men, and so represent Thy goodness. 
				
				
				There are lonely 
	hearts to cherish,
				
				While 
	the days are going by;
				
				There 
	are weary souls who perish,
				
				While 
	the days are going by.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 29 
	
	"He will keep the 
	feet of His saints" (I. Sam. ii. 9). 
	
	Perils as well as 
	privileges attend the higher Christian life. The nearer we come to God, the 
	thicker the hosts of darkness in heavenly places. The safe place lies in 
	obedience to God's Word, singleness of heart, and holy vigilance. 
	
	When Christians 
	speak of standing in a place where they do not need to watch, they are in 
	great danger. Let us walk in sweet and holy confidence, and yet with holy, 
	humble watchfulness, and "He will keep the feet of His saints." And "now 
	unto Him who is able to keep us from stumbling, and present us faultless 
	before the presence of His glory, to the only wise God, our Saviour, be 
	glory, and majesty, dominion and power, both now and forever. Amen." 
				
				
				What to do we 
	often wonder,
				
				As 
	we seek some watchword true,
				
				Lo, 
	the answer God has given,
				
				What 
	would Jesus do?
				
				
				
				When the shafts of 
	fierce temptation,
				
				With 
	their fiery darts pursue,
				
				This 
	will be your heavenly armor,
				
				What 
	would Jesus do?
			   |  
			| 
 Day 30 
	
	"I wish above all 
	things that thou mayest prosper and be in health even as thy soul 
	prospereth" (III. John 2). 
	
	In the way of 
	righteousness is life and in the pathway thereof is no death. That is the 
	secret of healing. Be right with God. Keep so. Live in the consciousness of 
	it, and nothing can hurt you. Off from the breastplate of righteousness will 
	glance all of the fiery darts of the devil, and faith be stronger for every 
	fierce assault. How true it is, "Who is he that shall harm you if ye be 
	followers of that which is good?" And how true also, "Holding faith and a 
	good conscience, which some having put away, concerning faith, have made 
	shipwreck." 
	
	And yet again, "If 
	thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, and wilt keep 
	all His statutes and commandments, I will put none of these diseases upon 
	thee that I have brought upon the Egyptians; for I am the Lord that healeth 
	thee." 
				
				
				There's a question 
	God is asking
				
				Every 
	conscience in His sight,
				
				Let 
	it search thine inmost being,
				
				Is 
	it right with God, all right?
			   |  
			| 
 Day 31 
	
	"What things 
	soever ye desire when ye pray, believe that ye receive them and ye shall 
	have them" (Mark xi. 24). 
	
	Faith is not 
	working up by will power a sort of certainty that something is coming to 
	pass, but it is seeing as an actual fact that God has said that this thing 
	shall come to pass, and that it is true, and then rejoicing to know that it 
	is true, and just resting and entering into it because God has said it. 
	Faith turns the promise into a prophecy. While it is merely a promise it is 
	contingent upon our co-operation; it may or may not be. But when faith 
	claims it, it becomes a prophecy and we go forth feeling that it is 
	something that must be done because God cannot lie. 
	
	Faith is the 
	answer from the throne saying, "It is done." Faith is the echo of God's 
	voice. Let us catch it from on high. Let us repeat it, and go out to triumph 
	in its glorious power. 
				
				
				Hear the answer 
	from the throne,
				
				Claim 
	the promise, doubting one,
				
				God 
	hath spoken, "It is done."
				
				Faith 
	hath answered, "It is done";
				
				Prayer 
	is over, praise begun,
				
				Hallelujah! 
	It is done.
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