Look Heavenward
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Chap. 1 - Look Heavenward They desire a better country, that is, an heavenly: wherefore God is not ashamed to be called
their God: for he hath prepared for them a city.
Heb. 11:16. {UL 15.1} I wish you a happy new year. The old
year with its burden of record has passed into eternity. Now let every
thought, every feeling be that of remembrance of God's love. Let us gather up
one token after another. . . . {UL 15.2} The evidence we have of God's care and
love for us is expressed in the lessons Christ gave to His disciples upon the
things in nature. . . . The eye is not to be fastened upon deformity, upon
the curse, but upon the riches of the grace of Christ that has been provided
so abundantly, that we may live in this world, and act our part in the great
web of humanity, and yet not be of the world. As pilgrims, as strangers
looking for the bright things of God, the joy that is set before us, seeking
a city whose builder and maker is God, and by beholding the provisions made
for us, the mansions Jesus has gone to prepare for us, talking of the blessed
home, we forget the annoyances and the fretting cares of this life. We seem
to breathe in the very atmosphere of that better, even the heavenly country.
We are soothed, we are comforted; we are more than this, we are joyful in
God. {UL 15.3} We could not know that gracious purposes
of God toward us, but for the promises, for it is from them alone we learn
what He has prepared for those who love Him. As the flowers in God's wise
economy are constantly drawing the properties from earth and air to develop
into the pure and beautiful buds and flowers and give forth their fragrance
to delight the senses, so shall it be with us. {UL 15.4} We draw from God's promises all that
peace, that comfort, that hope that will develop in us the fruits of peace,
joy, and faith. And by bringing these promises into our own life we bring
them always into the lives of others. Then let us appropriate these promises
to ourselves. . . . They are like the precious flowers in the garden of God.
They are to awaken our hope and expectation, and lead us to a firm faith and
reliance upon God. They are to strengthen us in trouble and teach us precious
lessons of trust in God. He in these precious promises draws back from
eternity and gives us a glimpse of the far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory. Let us then be quiet in God. Let us calmly trust in Him and praise
Him that He has shown us such revelations of His will and purposes that we
shall not build our hopes in this life but keep the eye upward to the
inheritance of light and see and sense the amazing love of Jesus.--Letter 27,
Jan. 1, 1886, to Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Kellogg. {UL 15.5} |