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Monday, November 22, 2010

Romans 8:28

Romans 8:28



"And we know that God causes everything to work
 together for the good of those who love God and
 are called according to His purpose for them." 

Romans 8:28


(adapted from Winslow's, "All Things Working for Good")


It is palpably clear and emphatically true that all
that occurs in the Lord's government of His people
conspires for, and works out, and results in, their
highest happiness, their greatest good.

The gloomiest and most painful circumstances in
the history of the child of God, without a solitary
exception, are all conspiring, and all working
together, for his real and permanent good.

The painful and inexplicable dispensations, which
at the present moment may be thickening and
deepening around your path, are but so many
problems in God's government, which He is working
out to their certain, satisfactory, and happy results.

And when the good thus embosomed in the lowering
cloud of some crushing providence, accomplishes its
benevolent and heaven sent mission, then trial will
expand its dark pinions and fly away; and sorrow will
roll up its somber drapery and disappear.

All things under the government of an infinitely great,
all wise, righteous, and beneficent Lord God, work together
for good. What that good may be, the shape it may assume,
the complexion it may wear, the end to which it may be
subservient, we cannot tell. To our dim view it may appear
an evil, but to God's far seeing eye it is a positive good.

Oh, truth most divine!
Oh, words most consolatory!


How many whose eye traces this page, it may be whose
tears bedew it, whose sighs breathe over it, whose prayers
hallow it, may be wading in deep waters, may be drinking
bitter cups, and are ready to exclaim: "All these things
are against me!"

Oh no, beloved of God, all these things are for you!
Do not be afraid!

Christ restrains the flood upon whose heaving bosom
He serenely sits. Christ controls the waters, whose
sounding waves obey the mandate of his voice.
Christ's cloudy chariot is paved with love!

Then, fear not!

Your Father grasps the helm of your storm tossed
bark, and through cloud and tempest will steer it
safely to the port of endless rest.

Will it not be a good, if your present adversity results in...
  the dethronement of some worshiped idol;
  in the endearing of Christ to your soul;
  in the closer conformity of your mind to God's image;
  in the purification of your heart;
  in your more thorough fitness for heaven?

Will it not be a real good if it terminate...
  in a revival of God's work within you;
  in stirring you up to more prayer;
  in enlarging your heart to all that love the same Savior;
  in stimulating you to increased activity...
     for the conversion of sinners,
     for the diffusion of the truth,
     and for the glory of God?

Oh yes! good, real good, permanent good must result
 from all the Divine dispensations in your history.

Bitter repentance shall end in the experienced sweetness of Christ's love.
The festering wound shall but elicit the healing balm.

The overpowering burden shall but bring you to the tranquil rest.
The storm shall but quicken your footsteps to the Hiding place.

The north wind and the south wind shall breathe together
  over your garden, and the spices shall flow out.

In a little while; oh, how soon! you shall pass away
from earth to heaven, and in its clearer, serener light
shall read the truth, often read with tears before,
"And we know that God causes everything to work
 together for the good of those who love God and
 are called according to His purpose for them."

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3 comments:

  1. Yes, so true. If we love Him, the storms will always quicken our footsteps to The Hiding place. And this is always the best part of going through a storm.
    Somethings we do understand later and somethings we don't, but we can trust our Lord and master that His aim is indeed to perfect all things concerning us.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Encircled by Shadows - Winslow

    Oh, how comforting, how sanctifying is the conviction that the Bible is God’s word, that the gospel is Christ’s revelation, and that all that it declares is as true as Jehovah Himself is true!

    What a stable foundation for our souls is this! We live encircled by shadows: Our friends are shadows, our comforts are shadows, our defenses are shadows, our pursuits are shadows, and we ourselves are shadows passing away.

    But in the precious gospel we have substance, we have reality, we have that which remains with us when all other things disappear, leaving the soul desolate, the heart bleeding, and the spirit bowed in sorrow to the dust. It peoples our lonely way, because it points us to a cloud of witnesses. It guides our perplexities, because it is a lamp to our feet. It mitigates our grief, sanctifies our sorrow, heals our wounds, dries our tears, because it leads us to the love, the tenderness, the sympathy, the grace of Jesus.

    The gospel reveals Jesus, speaks mainly of Jesus, leads simply to Jesus, and this makes it what it is: glad tidings of great joy, to a poor, lost, ruined, tried, and tempted sinner.

    - Octavius Winslow
    http://www.sermonindex.net/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=36321&forum=45&1

    ReplyDelete
  3. For the Christian's "Day of Trouble" - Winslow
    Is it now with you a “day of trouble”?

    God makes no exception as to how, or by whom, or from where your trouble came. It is enough that it is a time of trouble with you, and that you are in sorrow, in difficulty, in trial. God says to you, “Call upon me in the day of trouble, I will deliver you.”

    Resign, then, your unbelief, embrace the promise, and behold Jesus showing Himself through its open lattice. Take yet another glorious promise: “Him that comes unto me I will in no wise cast out.” This is just the promise that a poor, guilty, anxious heart needs. "But dare I with all my sin, and wretchedness, and poverty, take up my rest in Christ? May I, who have been so long an enemy against God, and such a despiser of Christ, and such a neglecter of my soul, and scoffer at its great salvation, approach with a trembling yet assured hope that Christ will receive me, save me, and not cast me out?”

    Yes! You may. The promise is absolute and unconditional, and, magnificent and precious as it is, it is yours. “Him that comes unto me I will in no wise cast out. Satan shall not persuade me, sin shall not prevail with me, my own heart shall not constrain me, yes, nothing shall induce me, to cast out that poor sinner who comes to me, believes my word, falls upon my grace, and hides himself in my pierced bosom: I will in no wise cast him out.”

    - Octavius Winslow

    http://www.sermonindex.net/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=36246&forum=45&1

    ReplyDelete