登陆注册
4610300000111

第111章 MRS. TIMOROUS(3)

Histories of intrigue and scandal are the books that Julia thinks are always too short. The truth is, she lives upon folly and scandal and impertinence. These things are the support of her dull hours. And yet she does not see that in all this she is plainly telling you that she is in a miserable, disordered, reprobate state of mind. Now, whether you read her books or no, you perhaps think with her that it is a dull task to read only religious and especially spiritual books. But when you have the spirit of true religion, when you can think of God as your only happiness, when you are not afraid of the joys of eternity, you will think it a dull task to read any other books. When it is the care of your soul to be humble, holy, pure, and heavenly-minded; when you know anything of the guilt and misery of sin, or feel a real need of salvation, then you will find religious and truly spiritual books to be the greatest feast and joy of your mind and heart." Yes.

And then we shall thank God every day we live that He raised us up such helpers in our salvation as the gifted and gracious authors we have been speaking of.

5. "The further I go the more danger I meet with," said old Timorous, the father, to Christian, when Christian asked him on the Hill Difficulty why he was running the wrong way. "I, too, was going to the City of Zion," he said; "but the further on I go the more danger I meet with." And, in saying that, the old runaway gave our persevering pilgrim something to think about for all his days. For, again and again, and times without number, Christian would have gone back too if only he had known where to go. Go on, therefore, he must. To go back to him was simply impossible.

Every day he lived he felt the bitter truth of what that old apostate had so unwittingly said. But, with all that he kept himself in his onward way till, dangers and difficulties, death and hell and all, he came to the blessed end of it. And that same has been the universal experience of all the true and out-and-out saints of God in all time. If poor old Timorous had only known it, if he had only had some one beside him to remind him of it, the very thing that so fatally turned him back was the best proof possible that he was on the right and the only right way; ay, and fast coming, poor old castaway, to the very city he had at one time set out to seek. Now, it is only too likely that there are some of my hearers at this with it tonight, that they are on the point of giving up the life of faith, and hope, and love, and holy living;

because the deeper they carry that life into their own hearts the more impossible they find it to live that life there. The more they aim their hearts at God's law the more they despair of ever coming within sight of it. My supremely miserable brother! if this is any consolation to you, if you can take any crumb of consolation out of it, let this be told you, that, as a matter of fact, all truly holy men have in their heart of hearts had your very experience. That is no strange and unheard-of thing which is passing within you. And, indeed, if you could but believe it, that is one of the surest signs and seals of a true and genuine child of God. Dante, one of the bravest, but hardest bestead of God's saints, was, just like you, well-nigh giving up the mountain altogether when his Greatheart, who was always at his side, divining what was going on within him, said to him -

"Those scars That when they pain thee most then kindliest heal."

"The more I do," complained one of Thomas Shepard's best friends to him, "the worse I am." "The best saints are the most sensible of sin," wrote Samuel Rutherford. And, again he wrote, "Sin rages far more in the godly than ever it does in the ungodly." And you dare not deny but that Samuel Rutherford was one of the holiest men that ever lived, or that in saying all that he was speaking of himself.

And Newman: "Every one who tries to do God's will"--and that also is Newman himself--"will feel himself to be full of all imperfection and sin; and the more he succeeds in regulating his heart, the more will he discern its original bitterness and guilt."

As our own hymn has it:

"They who fain would serve Thee best Are conscious most of wrong within."

Without knowing it, Mrs. Timorous's runaway father was speaking the same language as the chief of the saints. Only he said, "Therefore I have turned back," whereas, first Christian, and then Christiana his widow, said, "Yet I must venture!"

And so say you. Say, I must and I will venture! Say it; clench your teeth and your hands and say it. Say that you are determined to go on towards heaven where the holy are--absolutely determined, though you are quite well aware that you are carrying up with you the blackest, the wickedest, the most corrupt, and the most abominable heart either out of hell or in it. Say that, say all that, and still venture. Say all that and all the more venture.

Venture upon God of whom such reassuring things are said. Venture upon the Son of God of whom His Father is represented as saying such inviting things. Venture upon the cross. Survey the wondrous cross and then make a bold venture upon it. Think who that is who is bleeding to death upon the cross, and why? Look at Him till you never afterwards can see anything else. Look at God's Eternal, Divine, Well-pleasing Son with all the wages of sin dealt out to Him, body and soul, on that tree to the uttermost farthing. And, devil incarnate though you indeed are, yet, say, if that spectacle does not satisfy you, and encourage you, and carry your cowardice captive. Venture! I say, venture! And if you find at last that you have ventured too far--if you have sinned and corrupted yourself beyond redemption--then it will be some consolation and distinction to you in hell that you had out-sinned the infinite grace of God, and had seen the end of the unsearchable riches of Christ. Timid sinner, I but mock thee, therefore venture! Fearful sinner, venture! Cowardly sinner, venture. Venture thyself upon thy God, upon Christ thy Saviour, and upon His cross. Venture all thy guilt and all thy corruption taken together upon Christ hanging upon His cross, and make that tremendous venture now!

同类推荐
  • 黄石斋先生大涤函书

    黄石斋先生大涤函书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛为娑伽罗龙王所说大乘法经

    佛为娑伽罗龙王所说大乘法经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 径中径又径

    径中径又径

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 未曾有因缘经

    未曾有因缘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 西方确指

    西方确指

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 夜的草(莫迪亚诺作品系列·精装)

    夜的草(莫迪亚诺作品系列·精装)

    《夜的草》讲述了在一本上世纪六十年代的旧笔记本里,一位作家发现了一段往昔时光的踪迹。五十年过去了,笔记本里记录的文字将他带回到蒙帕纳斯、大学城、左岸以及那个“去殖民化”时代。那时他与一位名叫丹妮的年轻女子来往甚密,然而走在2012年的巴黎街道上,1966年发生的那些事变得可疑,她隐瞒了许多事实真相:她的真名,她的活动,还有一个令她着实烦恼的巨大秘密……警察局里留有她与几个熟人朋友的档案,但追寻真相的线索依然若隐若现,空间与时间的错位,现实与诗意的混淆,让这部小说成为一个扑朔迷离的青春梦幻曲。
  • 我喜欢你跟我交往吗

    我喜欢你跟我交往吗

    一個窮人家的女生跟喜歡的男生告白,卻被取笑。女生決意要報仇,就在女生要成有錢人家的小孩時。另一個霸道的男生決定要女生心甘情願的做自己的女人,而且要把她寵得天上有地下無。
  • 农妇灵泉

    农妇灵泉

    张倩怎么也没想到自己只不过是眯了一会儿,醒来的时候发现自己居然穿越了,而且还是穿到新嫁娘身上。本应该的洞房花烛夜,谁知张倩因为饥饿而晕倒来告终!不过好在老天爷对她还算是有点良心,给了她一个好相公,另外还给她开了一个金手指。本以为从此以后要跟着好相公过上幸福的生活,只是梦想是美好的,现实是残酷的!原以为自己嫁的相公是个老实巴交的农民,没想到,突然有一天,相公的身世居然还有这么离奇的一面!什么,不单她相公有惊人身世,她也有!以前对他们夫妻俩不闻不问的婆家,娘家见他们过好了,一个个过来打秋风!行,老虎不发威,他们就当她是HELLOKITTY是不是,相公,来啊,关门放圣蛇!
  • 魔神驾到:师兄,来战

    魔神驾到:师兄,来战

    重生于魔女体内,拜师于仇人门派。爱了一个人,碍了一个人。一心修仙怎奈魔体,从此师门反目!“师兄,我走了,从此你我再也不见!”唇间的柔软一触即离。“亲了师兄就打算跑,师妹难道不知道,男女授受不亲,亲了就要成亲?”
  • 无端被雕刻的时光

    无端被雕刻的时光

    一个关于个人命运与爱情的故事,一个关于历史与现在,理想与现实,冲突和理解,记忆与羞耻的故事。高中学生文学谦本是泛泛之辈,因偶然对好朋友的女友何文萱暗生好感,引得兄弟讨伐,无奈只得放手。却又在高考中因运气脱颖而出,考入全国重点大学——楚天工大,并阴差阳错当选班长,不劳而获新的恋情。可他心里却悄悄爱上另一个女生钱倩,两人逐渐走向暧昧,当爱情即将被证明之时,学谦却感到似乎历史又在重演……
  • 佛说摩利支天陀罗尼咒经

    佛说摩利支天陀罗尼咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 瓜田李下女当家

    瓜田李下女当家

    【推荐新文《侍婢倾城:暴君不温柔》】什么?敢往她的南瓜里装石子?好吧,姐姐家粪池里的粪也还剩了不少。什么?敢借钱不还?好吧。不要怪我,姐姐我揭人瓦一揭一个准。什么?迂腐书呆不吃不喝?老姑娘没人要,没关系,女子当自强。
  • 明日又天涯

    明日又天涯

    相见,何恨晚,立誓盟约,奈何桥畔,有谁料得,劳燕终须离散。人生如梦恨如雪,都化作水流烟淡。而今斯人安在?明月青山空唤。
  • 总裁的赎心情人

    总裁的赎心情人

    刁小溪:我爱你,可是还有机会吗?<p>卞玉泽:你永远是我的,生,是,死,也是。<p>夏俊彦:如果,你还能爱,给我一次机会好吗?我会等你,直到你来。<p>丁傲然:这是我常带女伴来的地方,怎么样,不错吧?<p>白小荷:我得不到的,谁都别想得到。<p>………………<p>她,刁小溪,只是简单的女子,平凡如尘埃,可是上帝却偏不如她愿,在婚礼的前夕,一场无妄之灾,打破他的平静,一切,旦夕之间,已是不同,五年之后,物是人非,她想爱,可是,他不愿意给她机会,她,不爱,却无法拒绝他深情的眼眸。还有他,像魔鬼与撒旦的化身,在最严肃的场面总是最滑稽的出现,还有他,他,他……到底她该如何选择,或者,命运又如何为她作出了选择呢……<p>“你不爱我了吗?”<p>”爱“<p>”那你为什么跟他走,不留下来?“<p>“那是因为我太爱了。”<p>“不,我不会让你走的,除非我死!”<p>………………<p>明明是他先要放弃,为何现在又出来搅局,充当她的免费斯司机、冒牌男友、厨师兼洗衣工,更过分的,竟然连她不小心怀的孩子的尿布也洗的干干净净,似乎一点也不介意这个“野种”。这到底是怎么了,谁能告诉她…………<p>推荐月人的小说<p>《冷酷堡主色娇妻》完结本,进入半价区,看完大概需要两~三元人民币<p>《压寨王妃》完结本<p>《邪王的风流小妾》情人系列:<p>第一部《总裁的正牌情人》<p>第二部《总裁的厨娘床伴》<p><p>月人的群:6183341365728619喜欢的可以进去方便交流
  • 花底拾遗

    花底拾遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。