By
C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
“Now
as I beheld the living creatures, behold one wheel upon the earth by the living
creatures, with his four faces. The
appearance of the wheels and their work was like unto the color of a beryl; and
they four had one likeness; and their appearance and their work was as it were
a wheel in the middle of a wheel. When
they went, they went upon their four sides; and they returned not when they
went. As for their rings, they were so
high that they were dreadful; and their rings were full of eyes round about
them four. And when the living
creatures went, the wheels went by them; and when the living creatures were
lift up from the earth, the wheels were lift up.” -Ezekiel, 1:15-19.
While
reading the Scriptures, we tried to hint at the practical benefits of the
doctrine of Providence. We attempted to
explain that portion of Scripture which teaches us to “take no thought for the
morrow, for the morrow will take thought for the things of itself.” Our blessed
Lord had there uttered very precious words to drive away our fears, to keep us
from distrust and from distress, and to enable us so to rely upon Providence
that we may say, he that feeds the ravens, and clothes the lilies, will never
suffer me to famish nor to be naked.
Having shown you from our Lord’s own words the practical benefits of the
doctrine of Providence, I thought I would endeavor to explain that doctrine
more fully this morning. I am constantly talking about providence in my
preaching, and I thought it quite as well to devote a whole sermon to explain
what I believe are God’s great wonder-working processes which we call
Providence. In looking for a text I
found this, These “wheels” signify divine Providence; and I trust, while
explaining them, I may be so assisted by God’s Spirit that I may say many
things to you concerning God’s government which may rejoice any who are
desponding, and lift up the souls of many who are distressed.
I. Going at once to my divisions, my first
remark will be that Providence is here compared to a “wheel.”
When
the prophet had seen the “living creatures,” which I take it were angels, he
opened his eyes again, and he saw a wonderful illustration of the divine
Providence, and this exhibition was in the figure of a wheel. You must know that this is not the only
place where the comparison is to be found; for among the classics, the Romans
and the Greeks were accustomed to compare the wondrous works of God in
Providence to a wheel. The story goes,
that a certain king being taken prisoner, was bound in chains, and dragged
along at the chariot wheels of his conqueror.
As he went along, he kept looking at the wheel, and shedding tears--looking
at the wheel again, and lifting up his eyes and smiling. The conqueror turned and said, “Wherefore
art thou looking at that wheel?” He said, “I was thinking, such is the lot of
man; just now I was here; now I am there; but soon I may be here again at the
top of the wheel, and thou mayest be grinding the dust.” This was well for a
heathen. The prophet had the very same
idea. He was permitted by God to see
that the wheel is a very beautiful figure of divine Providence. Let us show you that it is. I have just hinted at the reason why
Providence is like a wheel; because sometimes one part of the wheel is at the
top, and one again at the bottom.
Sometimes this part is exalted, and anon it sinks down to the dust. Then it is lifted to the air, and then again
by a single revolution it is brought down again to the earth. Just as our poet sings--
“Here he exalts neglected
worms
To scepters and a crown;
And there the following page
he turns,
And treads the monarch
down.”
So
it is with our life. Sometimes we are
in humble poverty, and hardly know what we shall do for bread; anon the wheel
revolves, and we are brought into the comfort of wealth; our feet stand in a
spacious room; we are fed with corn and wine; we drink of a cup overflowing its
brim. Again we are brought low through
affliction and famine. A little while
and another page is turned, and we are exalted to the heavens, and can sing and
rejoice in the Lord our God. I have no
doubt many of you here have experienced a far more checkered life than I have,
and therefore you can feel that your life has been as a “wheel.” Ah! man, thou
art strong, and great, and rich; thou mayest stand now as the uppermost part of
it; but it is a wheel, and you may yet be brought low. And you, poor, who are depressed and
downcast, who are weeping because you know not where you shall lay your heads--that
wheel may revolve and you may be lifted up.
Our own experience is never a stable thing; it is always changing,
always turning round. The fly that sits
now on the edge of the wheel may be crushed by its next revolution, and be
brought to the dust of death the next day.
The world may cry “Hosannah” to its minister today and the next day may
say, “Crucify him, crucify him.” Such is the state of man. Providence is like a wheel.
You
know in a wheel there is one portion that never turns round, that stands
steadfast; and that is the axle. So in
God’s Providence, there is an axle which never moves. Christian, here is a sweet thought for thee! Thy state is ever changing; sometimes thou
art exalted, and sometimes depressed; yet there is an unmoving point in thy
state. What is that axle? What is the pivot upon which all the
machinery revolves? It is the axle of God’s
everlasting love toward his covenant people.
The exterior of the wheel is changing, but the center stands forever
fixed. Other things may move; but God’s
love never moves: it is the axle of the wheel; and this is another reason why
Providence should be compared to a wheel.
Yet
further. You observe when the wheel moves
very rapidly you can discern nothing but the circumference--nothing but the
exterior circle. So, if you look back
to history, and read the story of a thousand years, you just set the wheel of
Providence revolving rapidly; you lose sight of all the little things that are
within the circle; you see only one great thing, and that is, that God is
working through the world his everlasting purposes. You sit down and take a book of history--say the History of
England--and you will say of one event, “Now that seems to be out of place;” of
another, “That seems to be out of time;” of another, “That seems to be adverse
to the cause of liberty;” but look through a thousand years, and those things
which seemed as if they would crush liberty in her germ; those things which
seemed as if they would destroy this our commonwealth in our very rising, have
been those which have caused the sturdy oak of liberty to take deeper
root. Take the whole together, instead
of the things one by one; look at a thousand years, and you will see nothing
but one round ring of symmetry, teaching you that God is wise, and God is
just. So let it be with you in your
lives. Here you are fretting about
troubles today. Think also of the past;
put all your troubles together, and they are no troubles at all. You will see that one counteracts the
other. If you take your life--not
today, but look back on forty years of it--you will be obliged, instead of
lamenting and mourning, to bless God for his mercies toward you. Let the wheel go round, and you will see
nothing but a ring of everlasting wisdom revolving. I trust I have made the first part intelligible--that the
Providence of God is here compared to a wheel.
II. The second thought is that the Providence of
God is in some mysterious way connected with angels.
Look
at the text: “Now as I beheld the living creatures.” Then turn to the 19th
verse: “And when the living creatures went, the wheels went by them; and when
the living creatures were lifted up from the earth, the wheels were lifted up.”
These living creatures I believe to be angels; and the text teaches us that
there is a connection between Providence and angelic agency. I do not know how to explain it; I cannot tell
how it is; but I believe angels have a great deal to do with the business of
this world. In times of miracles and
wondrous things, there was an angel that came down and slew the firstborn of
Egypt; and an angel cut off the hosts of Sennacherib. Angels did mighty things in those ancient days. My firm belief is, that angels are sent
forth somehow or other to bring about the great purposes of God. The great wheel of Providence is turned by
an angel. When there is some trouble
which seems to stop that wheel, some mighty cherub puts his shoulder to it, and
hurls it around, and makes the chariot of God’s Providence still go on. Angels have much more to do with us than we
imagine. I do not know but that spirits
sometimes come down and whisper thoughts into our ears. I have strange thoughts sometimes, that seem
to come from a land of dreams; and fiery visions that make my soul hot within
me. Sometimes I have thoughts which I
know come from God’s Spirit; some which are glorious, and some that are not so good
as those which the Spirit would have put there, but still holy thoughts; and I
often attribute them to angels. I have
sometimes a thought which cheers me in distress; and was not an angel sent to
strengthen Christ in the garden? How do
you think the angel strengthened him?
Why, by putting thoughts into Christ’s mind. He could not in any other way: he could not strengthen him by a
plaster, or by any physical means; but by injecting thoughts.
And
so with us. There was a temptation
which might have led you astray; but God said, “Gabriel, fly! there is a danger
to one of my people; go and put such a thought into his soul, that when the
danger comes he will say, Get thee behind me, Satan, I will have nothing to do
with sin.” We have each of us a guardian angel to attend us; and if there be any
meaning in the passage, “In heaven their angels do always behold the face of my
Father which is in heaven,” it means that every person has a guardian spirit,
and every Christian has some angel who flies about him, and holds the shield of
God over his brow; keeps his foot, lest he should dash it against a stone;
guards him, controls him, manages him; injects thoughts, restrains evil
desires, and is the minister and servant of the Holy Ghost to keep us from sin,
and lead us to righteousness. Whether I
am right or wrong, I leave you to judge; but perhaps I have more angelology in
me than most people. I know my
imagination sometimes has been so powerful that I could almost, when I have
been alone at night, fancy I saw an angel fly by me, and hear the horse-hoofs
of the cherubim as they dashed along the stony road when I have been out
preaching the word. However, I take it
that the text teaches us that angels have very much to do with God’s
Providence. For it says, “And when the
living creatures went, the wheels went by them; and when the living creatures
were lifted up from the earth, the wheels were lifted up.” Let us bless God
that he has made angels ministering spirits to minister unto them that are
heirs of salvation.
III.
Our third remark shall be, that Providence is universal; and that you
will see by the text: “Behold one wheel upon the earth by the living creatures,
with his four faces.”
The
wheel had “four faces.” I think that means one face to the north, another to
the south, another to the east, and another to the west. There is a face to every quarter. Providence is universal, looking to every
quarter of the globe. Have you ever
been in a house where there was an old picture hanging? I have sometimes stood in a picture gallery,
and there has been some old warrior: he has looked at me. If I have gone to the
other end of the room, he has still looked at me; wherever you are in the room,
a well painted portrait will be looking at you. Such is the Providence of God; wherever you are, the eye of God
will be upon you--as much upon you as if there were not another person in the
whole world. If there were only one,
you might think how much God would look upon that one, but he looks on each one
of us as if there were no other created being, and nothing else in the whole
world. His eye is fixed upon us at
every hour, and at every moment.
Wherever we may be, we shall have one face of the wheel turned upon us.
You
cannot banish me from my Lord. Send me
to the snows of Siberia or Lapland, I shall have the eyes of God there; send me
to Australia, and let me toil at the gold diggings, there will he visit
me. If you send me to the utmost verge
of the round globe, I shall still have the eye of God upon me. Put me in the desert where there is not one
single blade of grass growing, and his presence shall cheer me. Or let me go to
sea, amid the howlings of the tempest and the shrieking wind, where the mad
waves lift up their hands to the skies as if they would pluck the stars from
their cloudy thrones, and I shall have the eye of God there. Let me sink, and let my gurgling voice be
heard among the waves--let my body lie down in the caverns of the sea, and the
eye of God shall be on every bone, and in the day of the resurrection shall my
every atom be tracked in its wanderings.
Yes, the eye of God is everywhere; Providence is universal.
Now
there may be some here who have friends far away--let me comfort them. The eye of God is looking on them. There may be some here who are about to part
with beloved ones who are going to distant countries. Wherever they are, they will be as much in the keeping of God as
though they were here. If one part of
the world is not as near the sun’s light as another, yet they are all equally
near the eye of our God. Transport me
where you please--wherever the cloudy pillar of Providence shall guide me--and
I shall have God with me. That thought
comforted the great traveler, Mungo Park, when he was in the desert of
Sahara. He had been robbed and stripped
of every thing, and was left naked. He
suddenly saw a little piece of moss, and taking it up, he saw how beautiful it
was. He said: “Then the hand of God is
here--here is one of his works; though I call loudly none can hear me, for
there is nothing but the prowling lion and the howling jackal; yet God is
here.” That comforted him. Wherever you
may be, whatever may be your case, God will be with you. Whatever period of your life you may now be
in, God is with you. His eye is at the
bridal and at the funeral; at the cradle and at the grave. In the battle, God’s eye is looking through
the smoke; in the revolution, there is God’s hand managing the masses of men
who have broken loose from their rulers.
In the earthquake, there is Jehovah manifest; in the tempest, there is
God’s hand, tossing the bark, dashing it against the rocks, or saving it in his
hand from the boisterous waves. In all
seasons, at all times, in all dangers, and in all climates, there is the hand
of God.
IV. Our next remark is, that Providence is uniform.
It
is only one Providence, and ever one.
“Now as I beheld the living creatures, behold one wheel upon the earth
by the living creatures, with his four faces. The appearance of the wheels and
their work was like unto the color of a beryl: and they four had one likeness.”
There were four wheels and four faces, yet one likeness. There was but one piece of machinery; and
thus we are taught that Providence is all one.
Sometimes providences seem to cross each other. One thing that God does seems to contradict
the next thing; but it never really does so.
It is a great truth, though hard for us to grasp, that Providence is
one. Just look at the case of Joseph.
God
has it in his mind that Joseph shall be governor over all the land of Egypt:
how is that to be done? The first thing
to be done is that Joseph’s brethren must hate him. O, say you, that is a step
backward. Next, Joseph’s brethren must
put him in the pit. That is another step backward, say you. No, it is not: wait a little. Joseph’s brethren must sell him; that is
another step backward, is it not? Providence is one, and you must not look at
its separate parts. He is sold; he
becomes a favorite: so far, so good.
That is a step onward. Anon, he
is put in a dungeon. Wait and see the
end; all the different parts of the machinery are one. They appear to clash; but they never
do. Put them all together. If Joseph had not been put in the pit, he
never would have been the servant of Potiphar: if he never had been put in the
round-house, he never would have interpreted the jailor’s dream; and if the
king had never dreamed, he would not have been sent for. There were a thousand chances, as the world
has it, working together to produce the exaltation of Joseph. Providence is one: it never clashes.
“O,”
says one, “I cannot understand that; Providence seems to be very adverse to
me.” Mrs. Hannah More, I think it is, says, she went into a place where they
were manufacturing a carpet. She said:
“There is no beauty there.” The man said: “It is one of the most beautiful
carpets you ever saw.” “Why, here is a piece hanging out, and it is all in
disorder.” “Do you know why, ma’am? You
look at the wrong side.” So it is very often with us. You and I think Providence is very bad, because we are looking at
the wrong side. We do took at the wrong
side while we are here, but when we get to heaven we shall see the right side
of God’s dealings; and when we do we shall say., “Lord, how wonderful are thy
works: in wisdom thou hast made them all: glorious are thy works, and that my
soul knoweth right well.” You have been puzzled sometimes to think why that
friend was brought into the grave. You
have said, “Why was I made sick at such a time?” Why that trouble and that calamity? That is no business of yours.
It is yours to believe that all things work together for one great
purpose: that one thing never crosses another.
But you must not expect to see it so just yet. Here on earth the machine
appears to be broken into pieces, and we can only see it in confusion: but in
heaven we shall see it all put together.
Suppose I go into a place where some great artist is manufacturing a
machine: I say, Do you mean to say this is a machine? Yes, and an exquisite one it will be. It does not look like it; I could not put it together. O, no,
sir, you could not, but I can: and come and see it when I have put it together,
and you shall see that each part fits-- that each cog on one wheel will work on
the cog of another wheel, and all the parts will move together when I adjust
them. Do not find fault with it, and
say, One is too small and another too large, because you know nothing at all
about it. So, dear friends, you and I can never see but parts of God’s ways. We only see here a wheel and there a wheel;
but we must wait till we get to heaven, then we shall see the right side of the
carpet; we shall see it all put together, and then we shall see it was one
piece of machinery, had one end, one aim, one object, and was all one.
V. The next thought is, that Providence is in
this text compared to the sea.
Look
to the 16th verse --“The appearance of the wheels and their work was like unto
the color of a beryl.” The word beryl is commonly used in Scripture to denote
the ocean, because it bears the greatest likeness to that deep green you
sometimes see, and at other times the blue appearance of the sea. Let us transport ourselves for a moment to
the top of some high cliff, and we look down on the noisy ocean. It has been the theme of a thousand songs;
it has some myriads of fleets on its mighty breast. Ay! and yet there it is rolling on. If you begin to think about the ocean, though it is one of the
minor parts of God’s works compared with the constellations of the heavens, and
the globes which he has hung on high, you begin to be lost in the vastness of
your conceptions concerning the greatness of God’s works. And so with providence. It is like the ocean for another
reason. The sea is never still; both
day and night it is always moving. In
the day, when the sun shines upon it, its waves march up in marshaled order as
if about to capture the whole land, and drown all the solid earth. Then again they march back each one as if
reluctant to yield its prey. It is
always moving: the moon shines upon it, and the stars light it up; still it
moves. Or, it is darkness, and nothing
is seen; still it moves--by night and day the restless billows chant a
boisterous hymn of glory, or murmur the solemn dirge of mariners wrecked far
out in the depths. Such is Providence;
by night or day Providence is always going on.
The farmer sleeps, but his wheat is growing. The mariner on the sea sleeps, but the wind and the waves are
carrying on his bark. Providence! thou
never stoppest; thy mighty wheels never stay their everlasting circles. As the blue ocean has rolled on impetuously
for ages, so shall Providence, until he who first set it in motion shall bid it
stop; and then its wheels shall cease, forever fixed by the eternal decree of
the mighty God.
Again,
you will see another reason why the sea is like Providence. Man cannot manage it. Who can rule or govern the sea? Men cannot.
Xerxes made chains for the Hellespont, and lashed the sea with whips
because it washed away his boats; but what cared the sea about that? It laughed at him; and if he had not been
too great a coward to put himself on its bosom, it might have swallowed
him. Canute put his chair on the beach,
and bade the waves retire. What cared
they for him? They came and would have
washed him and his chair away if he had not moved backward. The sea is not to be governed by man. A whole fleet sails over it, and it is only
like a feather blown by the wind across the surface of a brook. All we ever put on the sea is as
nothing. It can never be restrained,
nor chained, nor managed by man. Greedy
man hath carved the land, but the sea has no landmark. It is impetuous; it follows its own will. So does Providence; it will not be managed
by man. Napoleon once heard it said,
that man proposes and God disposes.
“Ah,” said Napoleon, “but I propose and dispose too.” How do you think
he proposed and disposed? He proposed
to go and take Russia; he proposed to make all Europe his. He proposed to destroy that power, and how
did he come back again? How had he
disposed it? He came back solitary and
alone, his mighty army perished and wasted, having well-nigh eaten and devoured
one another through hunger. Man
proposes and God disposes. Providence,
like the sea, cannot be directed by man; it can be controlled by God. “It is not in man that walketh to direct his
steps”--
“Chained to his throne a
volume lies,
With all the fates of men.”
Man
can not alter it, and can not change it.
Let him try to stand against God’s Providence; and Providence will grind
and crush him.
There
are many more reasons; but I think it would be wasting time to notice
them. I leave you to finish that part
of the subject.
VI.
Again, God’s Providence is intricate.
This
is our sixth remark; and that you will find is here too. “The appearance of the wheels and their work
was like unto the color of a beryl; and they four had one likeness: and their
appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel.” We
have just said that Providence is intricate.
When Joseph brought his two sons up to Jacob’s deathbed side, Jacob
ordered the two boys to be brought; and when he was about to bless them, he
guided his hands wittingly; and he put his right hand on the head of the
youngest, and his left hand on the head of the eldest. “O!” said Joseph, “not so, my father.” But
he said, “it is even so;” and he gave the blessing. He would not give the blessing in any other way; but he crossed
his hands. And so God usually blesses
his children by crossing his hands. We
say, “Do not deal so with me.” “It is even so, child; there is a blessing on
thy head.” Do not say, uncross thy hands; that is the way to bless the most of
all. I wish to put thee greatest
blessing upon thee; and therefore I have crossed my hands. Providence is wonderfully intricate. Ah! you want always to see through
Providence, do you not? You never will,
I assure you. You have not eyes good
enough. You want to see what good that
affliction was to you; you must believe it.
You want to see how it can bring good to the soul; you may be enabled in
a little time; but you cannot see it now; you must believe it. Honor God by
trusting him. God has many Gordian
knots which wicked men may cut, and which righteous men may try to unravel, but
which God alone can untie. We see the
wicked prosper; they flourish, and great is their power, while the righteous
are cast down. We say why? There are wheels within wheels. Do not fret yourselves because evil-doers
are more prosperous. There may be a
nation that seems to have right on its side; that nation may be crushed, and
another people who are tyrannical may get the victory. Do not say why? Do not ask? You shall
know the reason when you get up yonder:
“God plants his footsteps in
the sea,
And rides upon the storm.”
Do
not attempt to do what Gabriel never dare do--to ask the reason why, for God
will never give it.
VII. Providence is always correct.
I
shall not detain you long over this.
The prophet saw the wheels, and he well says, they turned not when they
went, they always went straightforward; they never turned to the right or to
the left. Such is God’s
Providence. Man marks out plans: he
says, I shall build this tower; he gets it halfway up, and he finds he has not
enough to finish it with; he has to pull it down, lay a smaller foundation, and
build again. God never does so; he has
a plan when he begins, and he carries that plan out: he lays the foundation,
and always finishes the topstone. There
are some who talk about God’s changing his purpose; such people do not know
what God is at all. How could God
change? God must either change from a
better to a worse, or from a worse to a better. If he change from a worse to a better, he is not perfect now; and
if he change from what he is to something worse, he will not be perfect then,
and he will not be God. He cannot
change. It is not possible that God
should ever change or shift in any of his purposes. Can he change because he has not power? Why, sirs, he could girdle this globe with mountains, or move the
hills into the sea. Can he change
because he has not patience enough?
What, he who from his purpose never swerves? Shall he change because he has made a mistake? Shall the Most High, Jehovah, ever have an error
in his mighty mind? To err is
human. With the divine Being the whole
goes on, and what he has ordained shall be.
On the iron rock of destiny it is written, and it cannot be
altered. God moves the wheel, and the
wheel goes on; and though a thousand armies stand to stop it, it goes on
still. “They turned not to the right
hand not to the left when they went.” I cannot make out what some of you do
with your comfortless gospel--believing that God loves you today, and hates you
tomorrow--that you are a child of God one day, and a child of the devil the
next. I could not believe a gospel like
that. If I were a heathen, I could
believe it at once, because I could manufacture a god of wood and stone. I would have a god of mud, that I could
alter with my fingers, and change it to any fashion. But if I once believe in a God that “was and is, and is to come,”
I know he cannot change; and I feel a constancy of faith, and a firmness of
hope, which the cares and trials of this mortal life cannot destroy. He will not cast off his people whom he hath
chosen.
VIII.
One more thought. Providence is amazing.
We
shall not dwell on this; but just show you that the text says so. “As for their rings, they were so high that they
were dreadful; and their rings were full of eyes round about them four.” Even
the man that knows that every wave that dashes against the ship is washing him
nearer home--that every breath of wind that rises comes to his sail and fills
it, and sends it to the white cliffs of his native Albion--even the man that
feels that all is for him--even he must say that Providence is amazing. O! that thought, it staggers thought! O! it is an idea that overwhelms me--that
God is working all! The sins of man,
the wickedness of our race, the crimes of nations, the iniquities of kings, the
cruelties of wars, the terrific scourge of pestilence--all these things in some
mysterious way are working the will of God!
We must not look at it; we cannot look at it. I cannot explain it. I
cannot tell you where human will and free agency unite with God’s sovereignty
and with his unfailing decrees. This
has been the place where intellectual gladiators have fought with each other
ever since the time of Adam. Some have
said, Man does as he likes; and others have said, God does as he pleases. In one sense, they are both true; but there
is no man that has brains or understanding enough to show where they meet. We cannot tell how it is that I do just as I
please as to which street I shall go home by; and yet I can not go home but
through a certain road. John Newton
used to say, there were two streets to go to St. Mary Woolnoth; but Providence
directed him as to which he should use.
Last Sunday I came down a certain street I do not know why--and there
was a young man who wished to speak to me; he wished to see me many times
before. I say that was God’s Providence--that
I might meet that young man. Here was
Providence, and yet there was my choice; how, I cannot tell. I cannot comprehend it. I believe that every particle of dust that
dances in the sunbeam does not move an atom more or less than God wishes--that
every particle of spray that dashes against the steamboat has its orbit as well
as the sun in the heavens--that the chaff from the hand of the winnower is
steered as the stars in their courses.
The creeping of an aphis over the rosebud is as much fixed as the march
of the devastating pestilence--the fall of sere leaves from a poplar is as
fully ordained as the tumbling of an avalanche. He that believes in a God must believe this truth. There is no standing-point between this and
atheism. There is no half way between a
mighty God that worketh all things by the sovereign counsel of his will and no
God at all. A God that cannot do as he
pleases--a God whose will is frustrated, is not a God, and cannot be a
God. I could not believe in such a God
as that.
IX. Our last and closing idea is, that
Providence is full of wisdom; and you will see this by the last part of
the 18th verse--“And their rings were full of eyes round about them four.”
You
will say this morning, Our minister is a fatalist. Your minister is no such thing.
Some will say, Ah! he believes in fate.
He does not believe in fate at all.
What is fate? Fate is this--Whatever
is, must be. But there is a
difference between that and Providence.
Providence says, Whatever God ordains must be; but the wisdom of
God never ordains any thing without a purpose.
Every thing in this world is working for some one great end. Fate does not say that. Fate simply says that the thing must be;
Providence says, God moves the wheels along, and there they are. If any thing would go wrong, God puts it
right; and if there is any thing that would move awry, he puts his hand and
alters it. It comes to the same thing;
but there is a difference as to the object.
There is all the difference between fate and Providence that there is
between a man with good eyes and a blind man.
Fate is a blind thing; it is the avalanche crushing the village down
below and destroying thousands.
Providence is not an avalanche; it is a rolling river, rippling at the
first like a rill down the sides of the mountain, followed by minor streams,
till it rolls in the broad ocean of everlasting love, working for the good of
the human race. The doctrine of
Providence is not, that what is, must be; but that, what is, works
together for the good of our race, and especially for the good of the chosen
people of God. The wheels are full of
eyes; not blind wheels.
Let
us close with the thought, that there is the greatest wisdom in the workings of
Providence. Now you were in great
distress probably, and you could not see why.
The next time you are in distress, you must say, The wheels are full of
eyes: I have but two eyes; but God’s wheels are full of eyes--God can see every
thing; I can only see one thing at a time.
I see it looks good for me now; I do not know what it will be
tomorrow. I see what the plant is now;
I do not know what it will be tomorrow.
I see what the plant is now; I do not know what it will be
tomorrow. I know not what kind of
flower that herb will yield. This
affliction is a cassava root, full of poison, and would soon destroy me; but
God can put that in the oven, so that all the poison shall evaporate, and it
shall become food for me to live upon.
This trouble of mine seems to me to be destructive: God shall get all the destroying power out of
it, and it shall be made food. Now,
thou tried one, groaning down in the valley, up with thine heart; away with thy
tears; put thy hand on thy breast, and make thy heart stop its hard beating--thou
poor soul! dash the cup of misery from thine hand; thou art not condemned; thou
art a pardoned Christian. Remember that
God hath said, “All things work together for good”--more still, they “work
together for good to them that love God, even to them that are called according
to his purpose.” O! how I would like to make your hearts like flint and steel
against trouble! We cannot bear the winds
of trouble; we are soon cast down and broken-hearted. When we are in prosperity, we are giants; we think we can do like
Samson; we can take hold of the two pillars of trouble and distress, and we can
pull them down. But once tell us that
the Philistines will be upon us, and we have no power.
He
who has faith is better than the stoic.
The stoical philosopher bore it, because he believed it must be; the
Christian bears it because he believes it is working for his good. Next time trouble comes, disease comes,
pestilence comes, smile at it, and say:
“He that has made his refuge
God,
Shall find a most secure
abode;
Shall walk all day beneath
his shade,
And there at night shall
rest his head.”
Let
this be thy shield to keep off the thrusts of distress, let this be thy high
rock against all the winds of sorrow.
Sing,
“Though the way may be
rough, it can not be long,
So smooth it with hope, and
cheer it with song.”
Provided by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986