Dear Weekly Readers!
The book of Isaiah is such a wonderful and powerful
book! Many of my favorite chapters in
the Bible are found in this book. Some
of these are Chapters 6, 12, 40, 53, 55, 61 to name just a few! The entire Bible is for all ages! It will never grow old fashioned or out of
date!
May God Bless your week! John R.
Please enjoy the below daily writing by Charles Spurgeon.
"Sing, O barren."—Isaiah 54:1.
THOUGH we have brought forth some fruit unto Christ, and have
a joyful hope that we are "plants of His own right hand planting,"
yet there are times when we feel very barren. Prayer is lifeless, love is cold,
faith is weak, each grace in the garden of our heart languishes and droops. We
are like flowers in the hot sun, requiring the refreshing shower. In such a
condition what are we to do? The text is addressed to us in just such a state. "Sing,
O barren, break forth and cry aloud."
But what can I sing about? I cannot
talk about the present, and even the past looks full of barrenness. Ah! I can
sing of Jesus Christ. I can talk of visits which the Redeemer has aforetimes
paid to me; or if not of these, I can magnify the great love wherewith He loved
His people when He came from the heights of heaven for their redemption. I will
go to the cross again. Come, my soul, heavy laden thou wast once, and thou
didst lose thy burden there. Go to Calvary again.
Perhaps that very cross which gave
thee life may give thee fruitfulness. What is my barrenness? It is the platform
for His fruit-creating power. What is my desolation? It is the black setting
for the sapphire of His everlasting love. I will go in poverty, I will go in
helplessness, I will go in all my shame and backsliding, I will tell Him that I
am still His child, and in confidence in His faithful heart, even I, the barren
one, will sing and cry aloud.
Sing, believer, for it will cheer
thine own heart, and the hearts of other desolate ones. Sing on, for now that thou
art really ashamed of being barren, thou wilt be fruitful soon; now that God
makes thee loath to be without fruit He will soon cover thee with
clusters. The experience of our barrenness is painful, but the Lord's
visitations are delightful. A sense of our own poverty drives us to Christ, and
that is where we need to be, for in Him is our fruit found.
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