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 Day 1 
	
	"Afterward that 
	which is spiritual" (I. Cor. xv. 46). 
	
	God has often to 
	bring us not only into the place of suffering, and the bed of sickness and 
	pain, but also into the place where our righteousness breaks down and our 
	character falls to pieces, in order to humble us in the dust and show us the 
	need of entire crucifixion to all our natural life. Then, at the feet of 
	Jesus we are ready to receive Him, to abide in Him and depend upon Him 
	alone, and draw all our life and strength each moment from Him, our Living 
	Head. 
	
	It was thus that 
	Peter was saved by his very fall, and had to die to Peter that he might live 
	more perfectly to Christ. 
	
	Have we thus died, 
	and have we thus renounced the strength of our own self-confidence? 
	
	We begin life with 
	the natural, next we come into the spiritual; but then, when we have truly 
	received the kingdom of God and His righteousness, the natural is added to 
	the spiritual, and we are able to receive the gifts of His providence and 
	the blessings of life without becoming centered in them or allowing them to 
	separate us from Him.   |  
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 Day 2 
	
	"Who hath despised 
	the day of small things" (Zech. iv. 10). 
	
	The oak comes out 
	of the acorn, the eagle out of that little egg in the nest, the harvest 
	comes out of the seed; and so the glory of the coming age is all coming out 
	of the Christ life now, even as the majesty of His kingdom was all wrapped 
	up that night in the babe of Bethlehem. 
	
	Oh, let us take 
	Him for all our life. Let us be united to His person and His risen body. Let 
	us know what it is to say, "The Lord is for the body and the body is for the 
	Lord"! We are members of His body and His flesh and His bones. 
	
	He that gave that 
	little infant, His own blessed babe and His only begotten Son, on that dark 
	winter night to the arms of a cruel and ungrateful world, will not refuse to 
	give Him in all His fulness to your heart if you will but open your heart 
	and give Him right of way and full ownership and possession. Then shall you 
	know in your measure His quickening life, even in this earthly life, and 
	by-and-by your hope shall reach its full fruition when you shall sit with 
	Him on His throne with every fiber of your immortal being even as He.   |  
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 Day 3 
	
	"The God of Israel 
	hath separated you" (Num. xvi. 9). 
	
	The little plant 
	may grow out of a manure heap, and be surrounded by filth, and covered very 
	often with the floating dust that is borne upon the breeze, but its white 
	roots are separated from the unclean soil, and its leaves and flowers have 
	no affinity with the dust that settles upon them; and after a shower of 
	summer rain they throw off every particle of defilement, and look up, as 
	fresh and spotless as before, for their intrinsic nature cannot have any 
	part with these defiling things. 
	
	This is the 
	separation which Christ requires and which He gives. There is no merit in my 
	staying from the theater if I want to go. There is no value in my abstaining 
	from the foolish novel or the intoxicating cup, if I am all the time wishing 
	I could have them. My heart is there, and my soul is defiled by the desire 
	for evil things. It is not the world that stains us, but the love of the 
	world. The true Levite is separated from the desire for earthly things, and 
	even if he could, he would not have the forbidden pleasures which others 
	prize.   |  
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 Day 4 
	
	"Come ye 
	yourselves apart" (Mark vi. 31). 
	
	One of the 
	greatest hindrances to spirituality is the lack of waiting upon God. You 
	cannot go through twenty-four hours with two or three breaths of air, in the 
	morning, as you sip your coffee. But you must live in the atmosphere, and 
	you must breathe it all day long. Christians do not wait upon God enough. It 
	needs hours and hours daily of spiritual communion with the Holy Spirit to 
	keep your vitality healthful and full. Every moment should find you 
	breathing out yourself into Christ, and breathing afresh His life, and love 
	and power. 
	
	God is waiting to 
	send us the Holy Spirit. He is longing to bless us. His one business is to 
	quicken and sustain our spiritual life. He has nothing else to do with His 
	infinite and great resources. Let us receive Him. Let us live in Him. Let us 
	give to Him the joy of knowing that His infinite grace has not been bestowed 
	in vain, but that we appreciate and improve the blessings which He oft has 
	so freely bestowed. 
	
	Lord, help me this 
	day to dwell in Thee as the flower in the sunshine, as the fish in the sea, 
	living in Thy love as the atmosphere and element of my being.   |  
			| 
 Day 5 
	
	"He breathed on 
	them" (John xx. 22). 
	
	The beautiful 
	figure suggested by this passage is full of simple instruction. It is as 
	easy to receive the Holy Ghost as it is to breathe. It almost seems as if 
	the Lord had given them the very impression of breathing, and had said, 
	"Now, this is the way to receive the Holy Ghost." 
	
	It is not 
	necessary for you to go to a smallpox hospital to have your lungs 
	contaminated with impure air. It is enough for you to keep in your lungs the 
	air you inhaled a minute ago and it will kill you. All the pure elements 
	have been absorbed from it, and there is nothing left but carbon and other 
	deadly gases and fluids. 
	
	Therefore, if you 
	are to be filled with the Holy Spirit, you must first get emptied not only 
	of your old sinful life, but of your old spiritual life. You must get a new 
	breath every moment, or you will die. God wants you to empty out all your 
	being into Him, and then you will take Him in, without needing to try too 
	hard. A vacuum always gets filled, an empty pair of lungs unavoidably 
	breathes in the pure air. If you are only in the true attitude, there will 
	be no trouble about receiving the Holy Ghost.   |  
			| 
 Day 6 
	
	"Finally, my 
	brethren, rejoice in the Lord" (Phil. iii. 1). 
	
	There is no 
	spiritual value in depression. One bright and thankful look at the cross is 
	worth a thousand morbid, self-condemning reflections. The longer you look at 
	evil the more it mesmerizes and defiles you into its own likeness. Lay it 
	down at the cross, accept the cleansing blood, reckon yourself dead to the 
	thing that was wrong, and then rise up and count yourself as if you were 
	another man and no longer the same person; and then, identifying yourself 
	with the Lord Jesus, accept your standing in Him and look in your Father's 
	face as blameless as Jesus. Then out of your every fault will come some 
	lesson of watchfulness or some secret of victory which will enable you some 
	day to thank Him, even for your painful experience. 
	
	But praise is a 
	sacrifice, for "it is acceptable to God." It goes up to heaven sweeter than 
	the songs of angels, "a sweet smelling savor to your Lord and King." It 
	should be unintermittent--"the sacrifice of praise continually." One drop of 
	poison will neutralize a whole cup of wine, and make it a cup of death, and 
	one moment of gloom will defile a whole day of sunshine and gladness. Let us 
	"rejoice evermore."   |  
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 Day 7 
	
	"I will joy in the 
	God of my salvation" (Hab. iii. 18). 
	
	The secret of joy 
	is not to wait until you feel happy, but to rise, by an act of faith, out of 
	the depression which is dragging you down, and begin to praise God as an act 
	of choice. This is the meaning of such passages as these: "Rejoice in the 
	Lord alway, and again I say, rejoice"; "I do rejoice; yes, and I will 
	rejoice." "Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations." In all 
	these cases there is an evident struggle with sadness and then the triumphs 
	of faith and praise. 
	
	Now, this is what 
	is meant--in part, at least--by the sacrifice of praise. A sacrifice is that 
	which costs us something. And when a man or woman has some cherished grudge 
	or wrong and is harboring it, nursing it, dwelling on it, rolling it as a 
	sweet morsel under the tongue, and quite determined to enjoy a miserable 
	time in selfish morbidness and grumbling, it costs us no little sacrifice to 
	throw off the morbid spell, to refuse the suggestions of injury, neglect and 
	the remembrance of unkindness, to rise out of the mood of self-commiseration 
	in wholesome and holy determination, and say, "I will rejoice in the Lord"; 
	I will "count it all joy."   |  
			| 
 Day 8 
	
	"He that eateth 
	Me, even He shall live by Me" (John vi. 57). 
	
	What the children 
	of God need is not merely a lot of teaching, but the Living Bread. The best 
	wheat is not good food. It needs to be ground and baked before it can be 
	digested and assimilated so as to nourish the system. The purest and the 
	highest truth cannot sanctify or satisfy a living soul. 
	
	He breathes the 
	New Testament message from His mouth with a kiss of love and a breath of 
	quickening power. It is as we abide in Him, lying upon His bosom and 
	drinking in His very life that we are nourished, quickened, comforted and 
	healed. 
	
	This is the secret 
	of Divine healing. It is not believing a doctrine, it is not performing a 
	ceremony, it is not wringing a petition from the heavens by the logic of 
	faith and the force of your will; but it is the inbreathing of the life of 
	God; it is the living touch which none can understand except those whose 
	senses are exercised to know the realities of the world unseen. Often, 
	therefore, a very little truth will bring us much more help and blessing 
	than a great amount of instruction.   |  
			| 
 Day 9 
	
	"All things are 
	lawful for Me" (I. Cor. x. 23). 
	
	I may be perfectly 
	free myself to do many things, the doing of which might hurt my brother and 
	wound his conscience, and love will gladly surrender the little indulgence, 
	that she may save her brother from temptation. There are many questions 
	which are easily settled by this principle. 
	
	So there are many 
	forms of recreation which, in themselves might be harmless, and, under 
	certain circumstances, unobjectionable, but they have become associated with 
	worldliness and godlessness, and have proved snares and temptations to many 
	a young heart and life; and, therefore, the law of love would lead you to 
	avoid them, discountenance them, and in no way give encouragement to others 
	to participate in them. 
	
	It is just in 
	these things that are not required of us by absolute rules, but are the 
	impulses of a thoughtful love, that the highest qualities of Christian 
	character show themselves, and the most delicate shades of Christian love 
	are manifested.   |  
			| 
 Day 10 
	
	"Wherefore, 
	receive ye one another as Christ also received us, to the glory of God" 
	(Rom. xv. 7). 
	
	This is a sublime 
	principle, and it will give sublimity to life. It is stated elsewhere in 
	similar language, "Whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of 
	the Lord Jesus." 
	
	This is our high 
	calling, to represent Christ, and act in His behalf, and in His character 
	and spirit, under all circumstances and toward all men. "What would Jesus 
	do?" is a simple question which will settle every difficulty, and always 
	settle it on the side of love. 
	
	But we cannot 
	answer this question rightly without having Jesus Himself in our hearts. We 
	cannot act Christ. This is too grave a matter for acting. We must have 
	Christ, and simply be natural and true to the life within us, and that life 
	will act itself out. 
	
	Oh, how easy it is 
	to love every one, and see nothing but loveliness when our heart is filled 
	with Christ, and how every difficulty melts away and every one we meet seems 
	clothed with the Spirit within us when we are filled with the Holy Ghost!   |  
			| 
 Day 11 
	
	"Lo, I am with you 
	all the days, even unto the end of the age" (Matt. xxviii. 20). 
	
	It is "all the 
	days," not "always." He comes to you each day with a new blessing. Every 
	morning, day by day, He walks with us, with a love that never tires and a 
	blessing that never grows old. And He is with us "all the days"; it is a 
	ceaseless abiding. There is no day so dark, so commonplace, so 
	uninteresting, but you find Him there. Often, no doubt, He is unrecognized, 
	as He was on the way to Emmaus, until you realize how your heart has been 
	warmed, your love stirred, your Bible so strangely vivified, and every 
	promise seems to speak to you with heavenly reality and power. It is the 
	Lord! God grant that His living presence may be made more real to us all 
	henceforth, and whether we have the consciousness and evidence, as they had 
	a few glorious times in those forty days, or whether we go forth into the 
	coming days, as they did most of their days, to walk by simple faith and in 
	simple duty, let us know at least that the fact is true forevermore, THAT HE 
	IS WITH US, a Presence all unseen, but real, and ready if we needed Him any 
	moment to manifest Himself for our relief.   |  
			| 
 Day 12 
	
	"The furnace for 
	gold; but the Lord trieth the hearts" (Prov. xvii. 3.) 
	
	Remember that 
	temptation is not sin unless it be accompanied with the consent of your 
	will. There may seem to be even the inclination, and yet the real choice of 
	your spirit is fixed immovably against it, and God regards it simply as a 
	solicitation and credits you with an obedience all the more pleasing to Him, 
	because the temptation was so strong. 
	
	We little know how 
	evil can find access to a pure nature and seem to incorporate itself with 
	our thoughts and feelings, while at the same time we resist and overcome it, 
	and remain as pure as the sea-fowl that emerges from the water without a 
	single drop remaining upon its burnished wing, or as the harp string, which 
	may be struck by a rude or clumsy hand and gives forth a discordant sound, 
	not from any defect of the harp, but because of the hand that touches it. 
	But let the Master hand play upon it, and it is a chord of melody and a note 
	of exquisite delight. 
	
	"In nothing 
	terrified by your adversaries which is to you an evident token of salvation 
	and that of God."   |  
			| 
 Day 13 
	
	"Think it not 
	strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you" (I. Peter xii. 16). 
	
	Most persons after 
	a step of faith are looking for sunny skies and unruffled seas, and when 
	they meet a storm and tempest they are filled with astonishment and 
	perplexity. But this is just what we must expect to meet if we have received 
	anything of the Lord. The best token of His presence is the adversary's 
	defiance, and the more real our blessing, the more certainly it will be 
	challenged. It is a good thing to go out looking for the worst, and if it 
	comes we are not surprised; while if our path be smooth and our way be 
	unopposed, it is all the more delightful, because it comes as a glad 
	surprise. 
	
	But let us quite 
	understand what we mean by temptation. You, especially, who have stepped out 
	with the assurance that you have died to self and sin, may be greatly amazed 
	to find yourself assailed with a tempest of thoughts and feelings that seem 
	to come wholly from within and you will be impelled to say, "Why, I thought 
	I was dead, but I seem to be alive." This, beloved, is the time to remember 
	that temptation, the instigation, is not sin, but only of the evil one.   |  
			| 
 Day 14 
	
	"For the Lord God 
	will help me, therefore shall I not be confounded; therefore, have I set my 
	face like a flint, and I know I shall not be ashamed" (Isa. l. 7). 
	
	This is the 
	language of trust and victory, and it was through this faith, as we are told 
	in a passage in Hebrews, that in His last agony, "Jesus, for the joy that 
	was set before Him, endured the cross, despising the shame." His life was a 
	life of faith, His death was a victory of faith, His resurrection was a 
	triumph of faith, His mediatorial reign is all one long victory of faith, 
	"From henceforth expecting till all His enemies be made His footstool." 
	
	And so, for us He 
	has become the pattern of faith, and in every situation of difficulty, 
	temptation and distress has gone before us waving the banner of trust and 
	triumph, and bidding us to follow in His victorious footsteps. 
	
	He is the great 
	Pattern Believer. While we must claim our salvation by faith, the Great 
	Forerunner also claimed the world's salvation by the same faith. 
	
	Let us therefore 
	consider this glorious Leader our perfect example, and as we follow close 
	behind Him, let us remember where He has triumphed we may triumph, too.   |  
			| 
 Day 15 
	
	"Though it tarry, 
	wait for it, for it will surely come, and will not tarry" (Hab. ii. 3). 
	
	Some things have 
	their cycle in an hour and some in a century; but His plans shall complete 
	their cycle whether long or short. The tender annual which blossoms for a 
	season and dies, and the Columbian aloe, which develops in a century, each 
	is true to its normal principle. Many of us desire to pluck our fruit in 
	June rather than wait until October, and so, of course, it is sour and 
	immature; but God's purposes ripen slowly and fully, and faith waits while 
	it tarries, knowing it will surely come and will not tarry too long. 
	
	It is perfect rest 
	to fully learn and wholly trust this glorious promise. We may know without a 
	question that His purposes shall be accomplished when we have fully 
	committed our ways to Him, and are walking in watchful obedience to His 
	every prompting. This faith will give a calm and tranquil poise to the 
	spirit and save us from the restless fret and trying to do too much 
	ourselves. 
				
				Wait, and every 
	wrong will righten,
				
				Wait, 
	and every cloud will brighten,
				
				If you only wait.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 16 
	
	"I will never 
	leave Thee nor forsake Thee" (Heb. xiii. 5). 
	
	It is most 
	cheering thus to know that although we err and bring upon ourselves many 
	troubles that might have been easily averted, yet God does not forsake even 
	His mistaken child, but on his humble repentance and supplication is ever 
	really both to pardon and deliver. Let us not give up our faith because we 
	have perhaps stepped out of the path in which He would have led us. The 
	Israelites did not follow when He called them into the Land of Promise, yet 
	God did not desert them; but during the forty years of their wandering He 
	walked by their side bearing their backsliding with patient compassion, and 
	waiting to be gracious unto them when another generation should have come. 
	"In all their afflictions He was afflicted, but the Angel of His presence 
	saved them; He bare them and carried them all the days of old." And so yet, 
	while our wanderings bring us many sorrows and lose us many blessings, to 
	the heart which truly chooses His, He has graciously said: "I will never 
	leave thee nor forsake thee."   |  
			| 
 Day 17 
	
	"Thy people shall 
	be a freewill offering in the day of Thy power" (Ps. cx. 3). 
	
	This is what the 
	term consecration properly means. It is the voluntary surrender or 
	self-offering of the heart, by the constraint of love to be the Lord's. Its 
	glad expression is, "I am my Beloved's." It must spring, of course, from 
	faith. There must be the full confidence that we are safe in this 
	abandonment, that we are not falling over a precipice, or surrendering 
	ourselves to the hands of a judge, but that we are sinking into a Father's 
	arms and stepping into an infinite inheritance. Oh, it is an infinite 
	inheritance. Oh, it is an infinite privilege to be permitted thus to give 
	ourselves up to One who pledges Himself to make us all that we would love to 
	be, nay, all that His infinite wisdom, power and love will delight to 
	accomplish in us. It is the clay yielding itself to the potter's hands that 
	it may be shaped into a vessel of honor, and meet for the Master's use. It 
	is the poor street waif consenting to become the child of a prince that he 
	may be educated and provided for, that he may be prepared to inherit all the 
	wealth of his guardian.   |  
			| 
 Day 18 
	
	"We walk by faith, 
	not by sight" (II. Cor. v. 7). 
	
	There are heavenly 
	notes which have power to break down walls of adamant and dissolve mountains 
	of difficulty. The song of Paul and Silas burst the fetters of the 
	Philippian gaol; the choir of Jehoshaphat put to flight the armies of the 
	Ammonites, and the song of faith will disperse our adversaries and lift our 
	sinking hearts into strength and victory. Beloved, is it the dark hour with 
	us? the winter of barrenness and gloom? Oh, let us remember that it is God's 
	chosen time for the education of faith and that He conceals beneath the 
	surface, precious and untold harvests of unthought-of fruit! It will not be 
	always winter, it will not be always night, and when the morning comes and 
	spring spreads its verdant mantle over the barren fields then we shall be 
	glad that we did not disappoint our Father in the hour of testing, but that 
	faith had already claimed and seen in the distance the glad fruition which 
	sight now beholds, with a rapture even less than the vision of naked faith. 
	
	Lord, help me to 
	believe when I cannot see, and learn from my trials to trust Thee more.   |  
			| 
 Day 19 
	
	"In due season we 
	shall reap if we faint not" (Gal. vi. 9). 
	
	If the least of us 
	could only anticipate the eternal issues that will probably spring from the 
	humblest services of faith, we should only count our sacrifices and labors 
	unspeakable heritages of honor and opportunity, and would cease to speak of 
	trials and sacrifices for God. 
	
	The smallest grain 
	of faith is a deathless and incorruptible germ, which will yet plant the 
	heavens and cover the earth with harvests of imperishable glory. Lift up 
	your head, beloved, the horizon is wider than the little circle that you can 
	see. We are living, we are suffering, we are laboring, we are trusting, for 
	the ages yet to come. "Let us not be weary in well doing for in due season 
	we shall reap if we faint not," and with tears of transport we shall cry 
	some day, "Oh, how great is thy goodness which Thou hast laid up for them 
	that fear Thee, which Thou hast wrought for them that trust in Thee before 
	the sons of men." 
	
	Help me to-day to 
	live under the powers of the world to come, and to live as a man in heaven 
	walking upon the earth.   |  
			| 
 Day 20 
	
	"They shall not be 
	ashamed that wait" (Isa. xlix. 23). 
	
	Often He calls us 
	aside from our work for a season and bids us be still and learn ere we go 
	forth again to minister. Especially is this so when there has been some 
	serious break, some sudden failure and some radical defect in our work. 
	There is no time lost in such waiting hours. Fleeing from his enemies the 
	ancient knight found that his horse needed to be reshod. Prudence seemed to 
	urge him without delay, but higher wisdom taught him to halt a few minutes 
	at the blacksmith's forge by the way to have the shoe replaced, and although 
	he heard the feet of his pursuers galloping hard behind, yet he waited those 
	minutes until his charger was refitted for his flight, and then, leaping 
	into his saddle just as they appeared a hundred yards away, he dashed away 
	from them with the fleetness of the wind, and knew that his halting had 
	hastened his escape. So often God bids us tarry ere we go, and fully recover 
	ourselves for the next great stage of the journey and work. 
	
	Lord, teach me to 
	be still and know that Thou art God and all this day to walk with God.   |  
			| 
 Day 21 
	
	"Faint, yet 
	pursuing" (Judges viii. 4). 
	
	It is a great 
	thing thus to learn to depend upon God to work through our feeble resources, 
	and yet, while so depending, to be absolutely faithful and diligent, and not 
	allow our trust to deteriorate into supineness and indolence. We find no 
	sloth or negligence in Gideon, or his three hundred; though they were weak 
	and few, they were wholly true, and everything in them ready for God to use 
	to the very last. "Faint yet pursuing" was their watchword as they followed 
	and finished their glorious victory, and they rested not until the last of 
	their enemies were destroyed, and even their false friends were punished for 
	their treachery and unfaithfulness. 
	
	So God still calls 
	the weakest instruments, but when He chooses and enables them they are no 
	longer weak, but "mighty through God," and faithful through His grace to 
	every trust and opportunity; "trusting," as Dr. Chalmers used to say, "as 
	though all depended upon God, and working as though all depended upon 
	themselves." 
	
	Teach me, my 
	blessed Master, to trust and obey.   |  
			| 
 Day 22 
	
	"We see not yet 
	all things put under Him, but we see Jesus" (Heb. ii. 8, 9). 
	
	How true this is 
	to us all! How many things there are that seem to be stronger than we are, 
	but blessed be His name! they are all in subjection under Him, and we see 
	Jesus crowned above them all; and Jesus is our Head, our representative, our 
	other self, and where He is we shall surely be. Therefore when we fail to 
	see anything that God has promised, and that we have claimed in our 
	experience, let us look up and see it realized in Him, and claim it in Him 
	for ourselves. Our side is only half the circle, the heaven side is already 
	complete, and the rainbow of which we see not the upper half, shall one day 
	be all around the throne and take in the other hemisphere of all our now 
	unfinished life. By faith, then, let us enter into all our inheritance. Let 
	us lift up our eyes to the north and to the south, to the east and to the 
	west, and hear Him say, "All the land that thou seest will I give thee." Let 
	us remember that the circle, is complete, that the inheritance is unlimited, 
	and that all things are put under His feet.   |  
			| 
 Day 23 
	
	"I am the Lord 
	that healeth thee" (Ex. xv. 26). 
	
	It is very 
	reasonable that God should expect us to trust Him for our bodies as well as 
	our souls, for if our faith is not practical enough to bring us temporal 
	relief, how can we be educated for real dependence upon God for anything 
	that involves serious risk? It is all very well to talk about trusting God 
	for the distant and future prospect of salvation after death! There is 
	scarcely a sinner in a Christian land that does not trust to be saved some 
	day, but there is no grasp in faith like this. It is only when we come face 
	to face with positive issues and overwhelming forces that we can prove the 
	reality of Divine power in a supernatural life. Hence as an education to our 
	very spirits as well as a gracious provision for our temporal life, God has 
	trained His people from the beginning to recognize Him as the supply of all 
	their needs, and to look to Him as the Physician of their bodies and Father 
	of their spirits. Beloved, have you learned the meaning of Jehovah-rophi, 
	and has it changed your Marah of trial into an Elim of blessing and praise?   |  
			| 
 Day 24 
	
	"He calleth things 
	that are not as though they were" (Rom. iv. 17). 
	
	The Word of God 
	creates what it commands. When Christ says to any of us "Now are ye clean 
	through the word which I have spoken unto you," We are clean. When He says 
	"no condemnation" there is none, though there has been a lifetime of sin 
	before. And when He says, "mighty through God to the pulling down of 
	strongholds," then the weak are strong. This is the part of faith, to take 
	God at His Word, and then expect Him to make it real. A French commander 
	thanked a common soldier who had saved his life and called him captain, 
	although he was but a private, but the man took the commander at his word, 
	accepted the new name and was thereby constituted indeed a captain. 
	
	Shall we thus take 
	God's creating word of justification, sanctification, power and deliverance 
	and thus make real the mighty promise, "He giveth power to the faint, and to 
	them that have no might He increaseth strength; for they that wait on the 
	Lord shall renew their strength."   |  
			| 
 Day 25 
	
	"The faith of the 
	Son of God" (Gal. ii. 20). 
	
	Let us learn the 
	secret even of our faith. It is the faith of Christ, springing in our heart 
	and trusting in our trials. So shall we always sing, "The life that I now 
	live I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself 
	for me." Thus looking off unto Jesus, "the Author and Finisher of our 
	faith," we shall find that instead of struggling to reach the promises of 
	God, we shall lie down upon them in blessed repose and be borne up by them 
	with the faith which is no more our own than the promises upon which it 
	rests. Each new need will find us leaning afresh on Him for the grace to 
	trust and to overcome. 
	
	Further we see 
	here the true spirit of prayer. It is the Spirit of Christ in us. "In the 
	midst of the church will I sing praises unto thee." Christ still sings these 
	praises in the trusting heart and lifts our prayers into songs of victory! 
	This is the true spirit of prayer, like Paul and Silas in the prison at 
	Philippi, turning prayer into praise, night into day, the night of sorrow 
	into the morning of joy, and when He is in us, the spirit of faith, He will 
	also become the spirit of praise.   |  
			| 
 Day 26 
	
	"I will be with 
	Him in trouble" (Ps. xci. 15). 
	
	The question often 
	comes, "Why didn't He help me sooner!" It is not His order. He must first 
	adjust you to the situation and cause you to learn your lesson from it. His 
	promise is, "I will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him and honor 
	him." He must be with you in the trouble first until you grow quiet. Then He 
	will take you out of it. This will not come till you have stopped being 
	restless and fretful about it and become calm and trustful. Then He will 
	say, "It is enough." 
	
	God uses trouble 
	to teach His children precious lessons. They are intended to educate us. 
	When their good work is done a glorious recompense will come to us through 
	them. There is a sweet joy and opportunity in them. He does not regard them 
	as difficulties but as opportunities. They have come to give God a greater 
	interest in you, and to show how He can deliver you from them. We cannot 
	have a mercy worth praising God for without difficulty. God is as deep, and 
	long, and high, as our little world of circumstances.   |  
			| 
 Day 27 
	
	"The glorious 
	liberty of the children of God" (Rom. viii. 21). 
	
	Are you above self 
	and self-pleasing in every way? Have you got above circumstances so that you 
	are not influenced by them? Are you above sickness and the evil forces 
	around that would drag down your physical life into the quicksands? These 
	forces are all around, and if yielded to would quickly swamp us. God does 
	not destroy sickness, or its power to hurt, but He lifts us above it. Are 
	you above your feelings, moods, emotions and states? Can you sail immovable 
	as the stars through all sorts of weather? A harp will give out sweet music 
	or discordant sounds as different fingers touch the strings. If the devil's 
	hand is on your harp strings what hideous sounds it will give. Let the 
	fingers of the Lord sweep it, and it will breathe out celestial music. Are 
	you lifted above people, so that you are not bound by or to any one except 
	in the dear Lord, and are you standing free in His glorious life? 
				
				"I am risen with 
	Christ, I am dwelling above;
				
				I 
	am walking with Jesus below,
				
				I 
	am shedding the light of His glory and love
				
				Around 
	me wherever I go."
			   |  
			| 
 Day 28 
	
	"The trial of your 
	faith being much more precious than gold" (I. Peter i. 7). 
	
	Our trials are 
	great opportunities. Too often we look on them as great obstacles. It would 
	be a heaven of rest and an inspiration of unspeakable power if each of us 
	would henceforth recognize every difficult situation as one of God's chosen 
	ways of proving to us His love and power, and if instead of calculating upon 
	defeat we should begin to look around for the messages of His glorious 
	manifestations. Then indeed would every cloud become a rainbow, and every 
	mountain a path of ascension and a scene of transfiguration. If we will look 
	upon the past, many of us will find that the very time our heavenly Father 
	has chosen to do the kindest things for us and give us the richest blessings 
	has been the time when we were strained and shut in on every side. God's 
	jewels are often sent us in rough packages and by dark liveried servants, 
	but within we find the very treasures of the King's palace and the 
	Bridegroom's Love. 
				
				Fire of God, thy 
	work begin,
				
				Burn 
	up the dross of self and sin;
				
				Burn 
	off my fetters, set me free,
				
				And 
	through the furnace walk with me.
			   |  
			| 
 Day 29 
	
	"Call not thou 
	common" (Acts x. 15). 
	
	"There is nothing 
	common of itself" (Rom. xiv. 14). 
	
	We can bring 
	Christ into common things as fully as into what we call religious services. 
	Indeed, it is the highest and hardest application of Divine grace, to bring 
	it down to the ordinary matters of life, and therefore God is far more 
	honored in this than even in things that are more specially sacred. 
	
	Therefore, in the 
	twelfth chapter of Romans, which is the manual of practical consecration, 
	just after the passage that speaks of ministering in sacred things, the 
	apostle comes at once to the common, social and secular affairs into which 
	we are to bring our consecration principles. We read: "Be kindly affectioned 
	one to another with brotherly love; in honor preferring one another; not 
	slothful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord." 
	
	God wants the 
	Levites scattered all over the cities of Israel. He wants your workshop, 
	factory, kitchen, nursery, editor's room and printing-office, as much as 
	your pulpit and closet. He wants you to be just as holy at high noon on 
	Monday or Wednesday, as in the sanctuary on Sabbath morning.   |  
			| 
 Day 30 
	
	"In the secret 
	places of the stairs" (Song of Solomon ii. 14). 
	
	The dove is in the 
	cleft of the rock--the riven side of our Lord. There is comfort and security 
	there. It is also in the secret places of the stairs. It loves to build its 
	nest in the high towers to which men mount the winding stairs for hundreds 
	of feet above the ground. What a glorious vision is there obtained of the 
	surrounding scenery. It is a picture of ascending life. To reach its highest 
	altitudes we must find the secret places of the stairs. That is the only way 
	to rise above the natural plane. Our life should be one of quiet mounting 
	with occasional resting places; but we should be mounting higher step by 
	step. Everybody does not find this way of secret ascent. It is for God's 
	chosen ones. The world may think you are going down. You may not have as 
	much public work to do as formerly. "Blessed are the poor in spirit." It is 
	a secret, hidden life. We may be hardly aware that we are growing, till some 
	day a test comes and we find we are established. Have you got above the 
	power of sin so that Christ is keeping you from wilful disobedience? Does it 
	give you a shudder to know the consciousness of sin? Are you lifted above 
	the world?   |  |  |