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What Wilt Thou Have Me To Do?


   

“What Wilt Thou Have Me To Do?”

And the people asked him, saying, What shall we do then?-Luke 3:10.

What is there to do? First, and last, and midst, keep close to Jesus Christ.
In the measure in which we keep ourselves in continual touch with Him will
His law be written upon our hearts. If we are forever twitching away the
paper; if we are forever flinging blots and mud upon it, how can we expect
the transcript to be clear and legible? We must keep still that God may
write. We must keep near Him that He may write. We must wait habitually in
His presence. When the astronomer wishes to get the image of some far-off
star, invisible to the naked eye, he regulates the motion of his sensitive
plate, so that for hours it shall continue right beneath the invisible beam.
So we have to still our hearts, and keep their plates-the fleshly tables of
them- exposed to the heavens; then the likeness of God will be stamped
there. Be faithful to what is written there, which is the Christian shape of
the heathen commandment, “Do the duty that lies nearest thee; so shall the
next become plainer.” Be faithful to the line that is “written,” and there
will be more on the tablet tomorrow. Now this is a promise for us all.
However blotted and blurred and defaced by crooked, scrawling letters, like
child’s copybook, with its first pothooks and hangers, our hearts may be,
there is no need for any of us to say despairingly, as we look on the
smeared page, “What I have written I have written.” He is able to blot it
all out, to take away the handwriting-our own-“that was against us, nailing
it to his cross” [Col. 2:14], and to give us, in our inmost spirits, a
better knowledge of, and a glad obedience to, His discerned and holy will.
So that each of us, if we like, and will observe the conditions, may be able
to say with all humility, “Lo! I come, in the volume of the book it is
written of me. I delight to do Thy will. Yea! Thy law is within my heart.”
Two mirrors set one against each other reflect one another, and themselves
in each other, in long perspective. Two hearts that love, with similar
reciprocation of influence, mirror back to each other their own affections.
“I am thine; thou art mine,” is the very mother-tongue of love, and of
blessedness the source. All loving hearts know that. This mutual surrender,
and, in surrender, reciprocal possession, is lifted up here into the highest
regions. “I . . . will be their God . . . they shall be my people” [Jer.
31:33].




In Celebration of Life in Him,

Dr. Jim DeBruhl,  gembeaux@bellsouth.net

" Everything is wrong until God makes it right,"

















 



 

 
 



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