Morning “The Lord is my portion, saith my soul.” / Lamentations 3:24
It is not “The Lord is partly my portion,” nor “The Lord is in my portion”;
but he himself makes up the sum total of my soul’s inheritance. Within the
circumference of that circle lies all that we possess or desire. The Lord is
my portion. Not his grace merely, nor his love, nor his covenant, but Jehovah
himself. He has chosen us for his portion, and we have chosen him for ours. It
is true that the Lord must first choose our inheritance for us, or else we
shall never choose it for ourselves; but if we are really called according to
the purpose of electing love, we can sing–
“Lov’d of my God for him again
With love intense I burn;
Chosen of him ere time began,
I choose him in return.”
The Lord is our all-sufficient portion. God fills himself; and if God is
all-sufficient in himself, he must be all- sufficient for us. It is not easy
to satisfy man’s desires. When he dreams that he is satisfied, anon he wakes
to the perception that there is somewhat yet beyond, and straightway the
horse-leech in his heart cries, “Give, give.” But all that we can wish for is
to be found in our divine portion, so that we ask, “Whom have I in heaven but
thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee.” Well may we
“delight ourselves in the Lord” who makes us to drink of the river of his
pleasures. Our faith stretches her wings and mounts like an eagle into the
heaven of divine love as to her proper dwelling-place. “The lines have fallen
to us in pleasant places; yea, we have a goodly heritage.” Let us rejoice in
the Lord always; let us show to the world that we are a happy and a blessed
people, and thus induce them to exclaim, “We will go with you, for we have
heard that God is with you.”
Evening “Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty.” / Isaiah 33:17
The more you know about Christ the less will you be satisfied with superficial
views of him; and the more deeply you study his transactions in the eternal
covenant, his engagements on your behalf as the eternal Surety, and the
fulness of his grace which shines in all his offices, the more truly will you
see the King in his beauty. Be much in such outlooks. Long more and more to
see Jesus. Meditation and contemplation are often like windows of agate, and
gates of carbuncle, through which we behold the Redeemer. Meditation puts the
telescope to the eye, and enables us to see Jesus after a better sort than we
could have seen him if we had lived in the days of his flesh. Would that our
conversation were more in heaven, and that we were more taken up with the
person, the work, the beauty of our incarnate Lord. More meditation, and the
beauty of the King would flash upon us with more resplendence. Beloved, it is
very probable that we shall have such a sight of our glorious King as we never
had before, when we come to die. Many saints in dying have looked up from
amidst the stormy waters, and have seen Jesus walking on the waves of the sea,
and heard him say, “It is I, be not afraid.” Ah, yes! when the tenement begins
to shake, and the clay falls away, we see Christ through the rifts, and
between the rafters the sunlight of heaven comes streaming in. But if we want
to see face to face the “King in his beauty” we must go to heaven for the
sight, or the King must come here in person. O that he would come on the wings
of the wind! He is our Husband, and we are widowed by his absence; he is our
Brother dear and fair, and we are lonely without him. Thick veils and clouds
hang between our souls and their true life: when shall the day break and the
shadows flee away? Oh, long-expected day, begin!