Scripture Paradoxes:
THEIR TRUE EXPLANATION
by
Rev. Dr. Bayley
Minister of Argyle Square Church, King's Cross, London 1868
PARADOX XII:
Faith Grounded in Love, the Source of Christian Virtue
Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith, without the deeds of the law. —Romans 3:28.
COMPARED WITH
Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only. — James 3:24.
FAITH is a living heart-felt
confidence in God, and in Divine truth from Him. With the heart, says the
Apostle, a man believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth makes
confession unto salvation. Faith lights up the human soul with rays from
heaven. It is the shining of an inward fire. It is the flame of holy love.
Faith illumines the dark passages of life with a flash of radiance which
sustains hope, and steadies virtue. Faith is the evidence of things not
seen, the substance of things hoped for.
While faith points out the path to
heaven,
It firmly trusts Immanuel's love,
By whom alone all power is given
To reach the realms of bliss above
To judge by the
important position this grace has awarded to it in the pulpit, in
treatises, and in conversation among Christians, who speak constantly of
salvation by faith, of every blessing depending upon faith, and
FAITH ONLY, we might easily
conclude that the whole mind and atmosphere of the world about us, were
made up of and extremely favorable to this Divine virtue. But if we go a
little below the surface, if we inquire really what is meant by the faith
which is set forth, and ask whether there really is so much faith in
truth, in God, and in doing His holy will, as the profession would imply,
it is very much to be feared we shall find that the Lord's inquiry applies
to the present time, at least, as powerfully as to any past epoch, And
when the Son of Man shall come, shall he find faith in the earth?
What is faith? for faith
can scarcely be a contested matter. If we really simply look at it in its
own native character it is firm and loving truth in the truth. No one can
surely contend that real faith is confidence in falsehood. A man may have
a persuasion of what is false, and call it faith. But, superstition
is not faith; irrationality is not faith; stupidity is not faith. Faith,
says the Apostle, is the
EVIDENCE of things unseen, the substance of things hoped for. Faith is itself an EVIDENCE. It is an acknowledgment of the heart that, what is true is
TO BE BELIEVED AND DONE.
There is a harmony
between goodness in the heart and truth in the intellect. When these two,
like companions that have been separated, and yet are dearly attached to
one another, come warmly together and are united, their union forms faith. It is truth in the intellect joined with love in the heart.
If either of these two be wanting there is no faith. Charity, or Christian love,
it is written, believeth all things. It is love that believes. It
is love which believes on every subject. No child trusts the person whom
it does not love. Let a stranger offer a child the fairest promises it
will shrink from him, and take no heed until it has learned to love. Let
the mother, let one whom the child has learned to trust come, and a ready
belief is given. What the child shrank from as dangerous it will then dare
to do, because it trusts where it loves. The basis of all faith is
affection. Think of it in reference to any of the relationships of life;
of friend with friend, of lover with lover, of husband with wife, of child
with parent, you will find that just in proportion to the love, are the
power and fervency of the faith.
In that grand old story
of ancient times which relates the trial of Damon and Pythias, how
strikingly is this proposition shown. Pythias took the place of the
condemned Damon in the prison of a tyrant, that his friend might go and
bid farewell to his wife, and arrange the affairs of his home. Pythias
declared himself prepared to suffer in his friends stead, if he did not
come back, because he valued, loved, and trusted him. The crowd of his
countrymen thought the conduct of Pythias was extravagant and absurd, and
would be sure to be attended by the loss of his life. But no!
the heart that could do such a thing would also understand that another
would do it for him. He was calm and thankful. The days passed
by and no Damon returned. At length he was brought out on the
scaffold, and every one was expecting that the axe would now have its victim, and that the
confidence of friendship would torn out to be the direst folly. Pythias was trustful,
he was quite sure that if his friend did not come back it would be because
some accident, not to be overcome, had stayed him. He was thankful to be
privileged to suffer in the loved Damons place. But before he could fall a
victim to his generous confidence, the huzzas of the crowd in the distance
were heard, a rider was seen driving with all haste his foaming steed. Damon hurried to throw himself where death would prove his faithfulness,
and justify the trust of his generous friend. Such was faith with them; a
faith founded on love, and powerful enough to melt the tyrants heart, and
procure pardon for them both. There is no such thing really as
FAITH ONLY. Where there is
faith only, there is not faith. There is only a profession of faith, only
some talk of faith. Such a thing as
FAITH ONLY is a non-entity; it cannot exist at all. Faith is trust,
is confidence, is a steady reliance upon the truth which has been unfolded
to us, and which we understand. The Apostle Paul in the first text we have
to consider, is really speaking in perfect harmony with this great truth,
because faith, as he uses it, includes love, and implies good works. We
are justified by Christian faith, without Judaism, that is without the
deeds of the law. It is not said, We are justified by
FAITH ALONE without the
deeds of the law.
Luther in translating
this passage for his German Bible, ventured to introduce the word alone
into the text, although that very circumstance ought to have suggested
that he did not understand it rightly, or it would have suited him as it
was. When a man finds that the Scriptures do not state what he wants them
to state, he should conceive not that the Scriptures are wrong, but that
he himself is mistaken. If he cannot get the Scriptures to say what
he wants them to say, he should correct his impressions and bow to the
sacred volume.
Let us examine the
passage before us a little closely. We are justified by faith without
the deeds of the law. Faith is simply mentioned. It is a word,
however, that implies something else associated with it. Faith in what? We
have mentally to answer that question from other parts of Scripture. We
are justified by faith, that is trust, confidence. But as we said before,
in what? The answer, which is perfectly unimpeachable, is faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ, and in what He teaches.
We are justified by
faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and what He teaches. What does He teach? He teaches that God is good to all, and that His tender mercies over all
His works. He teaches He that in His love and in His pity He redeemed us. He came to seek and to save that which was lost. He invites all who are
weary and heavy laden to come to Him, and has promised to give them rest
unto their souls. He is the Good Shepherd who came to lay down His life
for His sheep, and He did die and rise again for every man, that He might
be Lord of the dead and the living. True faith is to believe all this as
an undoubting evidence of the love of God, and His desire to regenerate
and thus to save every one of us. To be justified we must have faith in
this.
But the Lord Jesus
teaches more than this, and true faith is to believe that also. He teaches
that He came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill the law Himself, and
thus to magnify it and make it honorable, and then to give us power to
keep His commandments from a spirit of love.
Whosoever, He
says, shall break one of the least of these commandments and teach men
so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven; but whosoever
shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of
heaven. That is what we have to believe. He declares If ye love
Me,
keep My commandments. Not every one that saith unto Me Lord, Lord, shall
enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of My Father
who is in heaven. If we live this heavenly life, our Savior teaches,
we shall never die. We are justified, that is made just, if we have faith
in these Divine lessons; and we have faith in them, when we carry them
out. True faith is not opinions about doctrines, but confidence in the
truth which changes the life, and embodies the Divine will. The man who
does this, has faith in what the Lord teaches.
Merely to talk, however
earnestly and persuasively, about what the Lord teaches, is not having
faith in it; it is only having talk about it.
In the early part of
this discourse we mentioned that, people measure belief by practice in all
the other ways and purposes of life. For instance, we hear a person say
the way to Charing-cross is in a certain direction, and he has to go there
immediately. But the moment he leaves our presence he goes quite in
another direction; you conclude he does not believe what he said. So, if a
person professes to have a great regard for you and declares it will be
the greatest pleasure on the earliest opportunity to recommend you, and be
of use to you in life; but you know the opportunity has been offered, and
he does nothing or does you harm. You pay no attention to his talk, you
believe what he does. So it is really in religion. Hence the
Apostle James puts it precisely upon that ground, Show me thy faith
without thy works. He says, show it me. How is the person thus
addressed to show it? By profession only, he can only show that he talks.
Unless he does the thing that he professes to believe there is no evidence
that he does really believe. Show me thy faith without thy works,
the Apostle says, and I will show thee my faith by my works.
Hence, Scripture always
declares that, judgment in the eternal world is to be pronounced upon what
each man does. No notice will be taken of what he professed to
believe, what he argued, what he wrangled about. What he really believed
was what HE DID. There are
few persons who will not profess to believe in doing rightly. Ask any one. Now is it your faith that a person ought to do right? Do you not believe
he ought to do to others as he would have others do to him? Ought he not
to act in accordance with love to God and his neighbor? There is scarcely
any person to be found who would not say, Yes, that is certainly right. I
can believe in that at any rate. If however our professor is constantly in
his life seeking only selfish objects, seeking to get ten times as much as
he will ever need, by dishonest, unfair, and over-reaching means, is it
not clear that, in his heart he despises kindness and honesty, and
believes in cheating. He believes in lying; he believes in grasping; he
believes in covetously getting as much as he can. His life shews what he
really believes in. Hence it is, as we have said before, that when the
present age is judged by what we know to exist in public and in private
life, the answer to the Divine question, When the Son of Man shall come,
shall he find faith in the earth? must be, if in accordance with the
truth, Lord help us to be stronger, for we are men of little faith.
The teachings of the
Sacred Volume respecting faith are three-fold. First,
TRUE FAITH is real
confidence and heart-felt trust in the Lord Jesus Christ; in what the
Scriptures declare Him to be, and what He really is. Secondly
TRUE FAITH is heart-felt
trust and confidence in the Lord's commands, as being essential to
happiness and salvation. And thirdly,
TRUE FAITH is heart-felt
trust and confidence in the Lord's promises, as opening to us happiness
and heaven.
Allow me, in the first
place, to call your attention when considering what is the real character
of faith, to its first part,—the belief in the Lord Jesus, as the Apostle
has it in another place, that He is
GOD MANIFEST. And as the
Lord Himself expresses it, ye believe in God, believe also in Me.
Ye believe in God as the Creator, believe in Him now as your Redeemer.
Ye believe in God, believe also in Me.
Real heart-felt faith is
a confidence in the Lord Jesus Christ, as to what the Sacred Volume
teaches Him to be, our Creator, our Redeemer, our Regenerator,—the
Everlasting Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,—the King of kings, and
Lord of lords. Jehovah who would come into the world, and who did come,
yet how little faith there is in this, in the world. Yet Scripture teaches
this, plainly. He Himself declares, whosoever sees the Lord Jesus Christ,
sees the Father, All things that the Father hath are Mine. All
Mine are Thine, He says, and Thine are Mine, and I am glorified in
them. The Lord Jesus Christ is the present God everywhere; the
Regenerator of human souls everywhere. Behold, I stand at the door and
knock, He says, if any man will open the door I will come into him,
and sup with him, and he with Me. Abide in Me, and I in you.
I give you power to tread upon serpents and scorpions, and all the power
of the enemy. But who believes this?
The Scriptures teach,
and in the plainest, simplest, directest manner, that the Lord Jesus
Christ is ALL IN ALL to the
real Christian. In Him, dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily,
and ye are complete in Him, who is head of all principality and power;
not one in a million believes that. Where then is your faith? Faith is to
believe the Lord Jesus Christ, when He tells us that He and the Father are
one. It is to believe that He is all sufficient. He tells us that not only
without Him we can do nothing, but that with Him we can do all
things:—that ALL POWER is
His in heaven, and on earth. The greatest mass of men do not think that He
is half as powerful as self-love, as treachery, or lust, as the
instigations and impulses of passion in our fallen natures. How common is
it to talk as if sin were a thing that could not be conquered, as if each
particular evil, our bad temper, our impatience, our insolence to others,
our covetousness, or our contempt of right was omnipotent. We excuse
ourselves, by saying these cannot be overcome; they are such terrible
things. We are men of little faith. We are poor weak creatures. The Son of
Man has come, but has He found faith in the earth?
Had we faith we should
take His Word, depend upon it, live upon it, and act from it. When He
says, Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden, and I will
give you rest, we should believe that it is so, go to Him and receive
the peace that passeth all understanding.
Secondly, true faith is
a heart-felt confidence in the Lord's commandments; and these are of the
most simple and direct kind. Bless them that curse you, do good to them
that hate you, and pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute
you. Thus it is not only the teaching of the Lord, but the teaching of
the whole Word. It is the grand unfolding of Divine truth from first
to last. Oh, that there were such a heart in them, it is said by the Lord in
the Book of Deuteronomy, that they would fear me and keep My commandments
always, that it would be well with them and with their children forever.
When the Lord Jesus came into the world He reiterated the same sacred
truth; only He taught that His commandments were to be kept from a deeper
ground than they heel been regarded before. Except your righteousness
shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall
IN NO CASE enter into the
kingdom of heaven, IN NO CASE. There are no exceptions;
there cannot be.
No one can be warmed
without fire, no one can see without light. Only fish can live in water,
and they cannot live in air. It is quite impossible that any but those who
have become heavenly, can go to heaven. If a person whose heart was
ingrained in lust were to go to heaven it would be no heaven to him. To
him the highest heaven would be the most terrible of hells. Yet, although
the Lord so simply and so strikingly teaches us, that we are so to obey
His Divine commandments, and thus to become heavenly, the infidelity of
the evil heart constantly puts forth the strange phantasy that, the Lord's
commandments are something too hard to be kept. What doth the
Lord thy God require of thee, but to do justly, to love mercy, and walk
humbly with thy God. All misery comes from breaking the commandments, not from keeping
them. It is a mere darkening phantasy in the soul that we cannot obey
those blessed laws. The only translation of that phrase is that we are not
disposed. That is all. There is no cannot in the business; a person might
just as well pretend that he cannot walk, although the Lord has given him
excellent legs: that he cannot work, although the Lord has given him two
excellent hands. Our whole being has been created to find happiness in
obeying the Divine will. The astonishment is, that a man will try to avoid
keeping the commandments.
What is the very first
command? Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and soul,
and mind and strength. If any human being were to do one-millionth
part for us that the Lord does for every one of us, we should deem
ourselves the most ungrateful persons in the world if we did not glow
towards that individual with love and respect. Suppose that we had only
one arm, and some admirable physician were to come and be able to give us
another, should we not take good care that that no one should see on our
part anything but affection towards so excellent a benefactor. But the
Lord has given to every ordinary human being two arms, two eyes, two
hands, and so with all the rest of our bodies, and all the faculties of
our soul. He has given us two worlds, the world of matter and the world of
mind, to pour out their blessings upon us and around us. And, all is given
without charge. All that Divine Love desires is, that we should live
obediently, and to allow Him to give us something more, in continual
progression. When we come to worship the Lord, it is only that we may open
our minds and hearts, that He may flow in and bless us more. He wishes to
give us more virtue, more intelligence, more heavenly-mindedness. Is it
then hard to love this Gracious Being? How can we do anything else? We
ought to detest the selfishness that holds us back from adoring this
Glorious One with all our hearts. What should we have thought of Joseph's
brethren, when they not only got all the corn they asked for, but every
time they went, they got their money back at the same time, if they had
been ungrateful and insolent to him? But this is precisely what happens,
though immeasurably aggravated, when we withhold our grateful homage to
the God of love, from whom we are every moment receiving mercies. Oh no! let us on the contrary rejoicingly confess Oh give thanks unto the Lord
for He is good, for His mercy endureth forever
So with every other
commandment. They are all
LAWS OF HAPPINESS. It is the breach of these commandments that has made all
the miseries that exist in the world. Neither disease nor sorrow would
have existed had not sin preceded them. Our own follies, or the follies of
those who have gone before us, have sown the seeds of sickness. Disease,
war, poverty, do not belong to the creation in its true order.
Everything from God is made according to justice and truth. Justice and judgment are
the habitation of His throne.—Ps. 97:2. All His works are done in truth.—Ps. 33:4. A
heart-felt faith in the Lord's commandments as being the laws of happiness
and the laws of heaven, is the
FAITH THAT JUSTIFIES, or makes man just.
But, thirdly, real faith
is a similar heart-felt confidence in the Lord's promises. The Apostle
teaches, the Lord Jesus Christ came into the world to deliver from the
fear of death those who had been all their life time in bondage.—Heb. 2:13. Has the Christian world been delivered
from the fear of death? Is
there one in a million now that has no fear of death? Yet one true and
proper result of our Lord's coming into the world is the deliverance of us
from the fear of death. Now, real heart-felt faith is such a confidence in
the Lord that we have no fear of death, but a triumphant assurance of
heaven. True faith trusts in the
fact that death is really nothing but the step to a higher life. There is
no death for any one in whom sin is conquered. He that believes His Word,
the Lord says, is no longer under condemnation, but
HAS PASSED FROM DEATH UNTO LIFE.
What we ordinarily call death, is not death. He that liveth and believeth
in Me shall never die. The real man does not die. The immortal being does
not die, he merely puts off the outward case. He rises a more noble being
than he was before. The just man becomes a just man made perfect. He who
has been an angelic man in his life has the beauty of intelligence, the
beauty of goodness in him, the sublimest beauty of all. When a
person has loved the Lord, and walked in the sacred steps of right, the
beauty of goodness becomes more and more perfect; and, like those trees
which strip their bark but magnify their strength, the trees of
righteousness peel off their outer coats but bloom with a Divine delicacy,
more beautifully than ever. He that liveth and believeth in me shall never die,
the Lord says. God giveth them bodies as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own
body.
Now true faith is to be
confident that this is so. We are not to have fellowship with worms.
Earth goes to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust, but the real man rises
to his immortal friends. He is not here, he is risen, said the angels of the
Lord. They are not here, they have risen, we say of all the good who have
gone to their rest. They are in a nobler and a higher state of being. True
faith has no fear, no anxiety, no doubt, but rather the confiding,
unswerving hope, that says, For me to live is Christ, but to die is gain. This world has been a good world,
but that is a grander and a happier one. This is faith, to smile at the approach of death and feel it to be the
touch of an angel's scepter; the palm in the hand of the herald of
everlasting life. It is to feel as if our Lord were bending over us and
saying, Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of
everlasting life. With a regenerate soul like this, there is no death, nor
fear of death, but a smile of confidence that expresses, I have no concern
whether I stay here a little longer, or go to the better home; my only
desire is to he a ministering servant of my Master, either here or there. Now, with such a faith we may well say, therefore a man is justified by
faith—not faith alone, but faith grounded in love, faith, shining with the
light of many truths, faith doing the Lord's works. By such a faith in the
Lord, and what He teaches, we are justified without the deeds of the law.
But what are the deeds
of the law? They were Judaism. The apostolic age of the Church was the
transition age from Judaism to Christianity. Jewish righteousness, of
meritorious deservings; circumcision and Jewish customs—these were the
deeds of the law. And of course we are justified by faith, without the
deeds of the law. These deeds of the law now are scarcely mentioned, but
they were a terrible stumbling block to Christians then. Refer to the
early accounts of the Church, and mark the views and feelings which
prevailed then, and you will understand this phrase, the deeds of the law. In the twenty-first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, you will find
from the 20th to the 24th verse the very best exposition of what is meant
by the deeds of the law. It was the age of transition, in which there were
great numbers who received Christianity, and who nevertheless believed it
was a sort of addition to Judaism. These maintained, Christians would
still need to be circumcised, to practice the washings, the shavings, the
outward sacrifices, and the rituals belonging to Judaism. The Apostle
Paul, and a large number of those who were single-hearted in their
reception of Christianity said,—Christianity is complete in itself. The
Christian faith involves love, and produces virtue. Christianity is a new
dispensation, it has nothing at all to do with the old outward
observances. We have left the old Church, we have entered the new. The
Church of faith in the Lord Jesus is complete. Ye are complete in Him, who
is the Head of all principality and power.
The Apostle Paul was
understood to be the chief leader of those who taught that Christianity
was itself sufficient for everyone, and the Jews were extremely
exasperated at their fellow-countryman for taking such a position. At
length, after some fourteen years of absence and labor in different parts
of the world, the Apostle Paul returned to Jerusalem, which he had left as
a persecutor. Such was the bitter state of excitement that prevailed there
that the Apostles met together, and considered what they should do. They were
afraid that Paul's life would be in danger. They sent messengers to meet
Paul, and requested he would conform himself to some extent to these
people, who were so zealous for keeping the law. And they said, This
thing would we advise thee to do—take four men and let them shave their
heads and wash themselves, and do according to the customs, and so will
they know that thou art faithful and keepest the law. Here, you have
this very expression, all this washing and shaving and the rest of the
changes as it was said, all these were to be done, and then he would be
considered all right, and to keep the law.—Acts 21:20-24. The
Apostle did so. He felt it to be necessary at the time, and
complied. Yet Paul was like Galileo, who, to avoid continual
imprisonment, signed a declaration that the earth did not move, although
he had proved fully that the earth moved diurnally and the sun stood
still. He signed his retraction, compelled by the bigoted Pope and
theologians of his time; and then threw his pen on the floor, and said
It moves yet! So when the Apostle Paul was compelled to submit
to these trivial accommodations to the prejudices of the Jews at the time,
he still declared But faith is quite enough, without any of these deeds
of the law. Faith in the Lord Jesus, faith in doing His will,
faith in the grand principles of truth and right, the righteousness which
existed from God's eternal nature before circumcision, before Sinai.
Justice existed in the very nature of things, before the law, under the
law, and would continue to exist forever. Faith in the Lord's
righteousness, truth, and mercy; this will do without the deeds of the
law. So he preached, and so he wrote.
This is the purport of
the text, and the very essence of Christianity.
When, therefore, the
Apostle James says, A man is justified by works and not by
FAITH ONLY, he is speaking
in perfect harmony with what Paul taught; for James by works means
Christian works, the works of faith, the works of love, the works of real
righteousness and truth. What James means, as essential proofs of
faith, are the works of true Christianity, and Paul teaches the same
thing.
The deeds of the law,
were the outward washings, the trifling observances, and the circumcision
of the Jewish law, or even obedience to the ten commandments, if kept from
a desire for merit or gain, that is, from Jewish notions; for this is only
self-love masquerading in the form of religion.
If a man keep the
commandment Thou shalt not steal, or every other commandment, only
to make God his debtor, or for fame or gain, it is a deed of the law,
self-righteousness, it is not a solid Christian virtue. Such righteousness
is corrupt and selfish. A selfish man, however fair his life, is inwardly
impure. The true principle, from which we ought ever to act, is to love
the Lord because He is the fountain of love; to do good because it is
good; to have faith in right, to shun evil, because it is sin; to ask
nothing further when the truth shows us what we ought to do, but to do it. This is Christian faith.
What doth the Lord thy
God require of thee but to do justly—be very strict with thyself, but be
very gentle and forbearing with others: love mercy—do not be hard and
harsh and premature, but be gentle, excusatory, consolatory, and loving:
love mercy, and then, do not give thyself airs, but walk humbly with thy
God. This is that faith that encloses love, that lives in heavenly works,
and of which the Apostle James says, a man is justified by works, and not
by faith only. The Apostle Paul is just as plain and as
emphatic. God he
says, will render to every man according to his deeds. To them who by
patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honor and
immortality, eternal life: but unto them that are contentious, and do not
obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath,
tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil; of the
Jew first, and also of the Gentile. But glory, honor, and peace, to every
man that worketh good, to the Jew first, and also to the Gentile.—Rom.
2:6-10. You will
read in the last chapter of the same epistle He that loveth fulfilleth
the law. Owe no man anything but love, for love worketh no ill to his
neighbor, but whether it be thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not kill, or
whatever else it be, it is briefly comprehended in this saying: Love thy
neighbor as thyself. Love is the fulfilling of the law. To the Corinthians
he said, Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing; but
keeping the commandments of God.—l Cor. 7:10. The faith that
WORKETH by love, is, with
this Apostle equally as with James, the only faith that avails in the
sight of God; and the Christian who works out his salvation with fear and
trembling the only true Christian. The fruit of the Spirit,
he says, is love, joy, pence, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,
meekness, temperance. Against such there is no law.—Galatians 5:22, 23.
Work then while it is
day. Work against the evils of temper, of avarice, of passion, and of
lust, until you have finally overthrown them. Work in the ministrations of
tenderness and mercy to mitigate human sorrow, and to multiply human
comforts. Work in your daily duty, whatever your office or employment, for
the sake of the God, of order and use. Be sure He will sustain you. Then
will your wilderness become like Eden, and your desert like the Garden of
God.
Never forget, that the
very essence of life, the very soul of purity and order, the very spirit
of all that is happy on earth, or heavenly in the eternal world, is to
love the Lord our God with all the heart, and soul, and mind, and
strength. This is the first and great commandment. The
second is like unto it. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Upon these two commandments
hangs all the law and the prophets. Believe these and do them, from the
love of Him who created you, died for you, and who every moment gives you
power; to overcome evil, and walk in the path of purity and heaven.
LESSONS
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