Someone recently gave me an anonymous gift subscription to Bible League Quarterly, the magazine of
the Bible League Trust, and I got the first two issues of 2016 in the mail from
the UK this week. I had subscribed a few
years ago but had let it lapse. The BLQ is a gem, and I am thankful to my
benefactor for the opportunity to read it again.
The opening article in the January-March 2016 issue from editor
John Thackway is a reflection on 1 Samuel 27:1 titled “David’s Fainting Fit.” The title reminded me of the
recent post here from Bunyan. Thackway
makes skilful application of David’s spiritual state to that of his readers:
Gospel ministers can suffer this “fainting
fit,” and sink into deep dejection. Some
can hardly continue, and some even leave the pastorate. Many Christians have sunk terribly low or
turned aside from the right way. It may
be, dear reader, that you find yourself on the brink of this. Or maybe you have already come to where David
was and are now ensnared in the consequences.
David’s “fainting fit” is on record
here for our admonition and comfort. Let
us follow the account of what happened and seek to apply it to ourselves (p.
324).
I was also struck by this vivid illustration on how the Lord
sovereignly uses our circumstances, even troubled ones, to grow us in
godliness:
The story is told of a little girl
walking in a garden who noticed a particularly beautiful flower. She admired its fragrance. “It is so pretty!” she exclaimed. Then her eyes followed the stem down to the
soil in which it grew. “This flower is
too pretty to be planted in such dirt!” she cried. So she pulled it up by its roots and ran to
the tap to wash away the soil. It wasn’t
long until the flower wilted and died. When
the gardener saw what the little girl had done, he exclaimed, “You have
destroyed my finest plant!” “I’m sorry,”
she said, “but I didn’t like it in that dirt.”
The gardener replied, “I chose that spot and mixed the soil because I
knew that only there could it grow to be a beautiful flower.” And so it is in our God-appointed
circumstances that, by God’s grace, we produce the beauty of Christian
character and the fragrance of Christ (pp. 322-323).
JTR
1 comment:
Beautiful and great encouragement as I was feeling 'spiritually' low dwelling on some troubling personal circumstances, then the Lord brought me to read this! Thank you for being the Lord's instrument of encouragement!
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