Page 288 - This Day With God (1979)

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Divine Grace, Our Greatest Need, September 25
Though I preach the gospel, I have nothing to glory of.
1
Corinthians 9:16
.
Genuine conversion brings us daily into communion with God. There will
be temptations to meet, and a strong undercurrent drawing us from God to our
former state of indifference and sinful forgetfulness of God. No human heart
can remain strong without divine grace. No man can remain converted unless
he takes care of himself and the Master has a care for him. Unless the heart
holds fast to God, and God holds fast to him, he will become self-confident
and exalted and will surely stumble and fall. The power of God through faith
was Paul’s dependence. “I live; yet not I,” he exclaims in his humility, “but
Christ liveth in me” (
Galatians 2:20
). “I therefore so run, not as uncertainly;
so fight I, not as one that beateth the air: but I keep under my body, and bring
it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I have preached to others, I
myself should be a castaway” (
1 Corinthians 9:26, 27
).
Paul was in such constant dread, lest his evil propensities should get the
better of him, that he was constantly battling, with firm resistance, unruly
appetites and passions. If the great apostle felt like trembling in view of his
weakness, who has a right to feel self-confident and boastful? The moment
we begin to feel self-sufficient and confident then we are in danger of a
disgraceful failure.
Our only sure defense against besetting sins is prayer, daily and hourly
prayer. Not one day zealous and the next careless, but through watchfulness
and earnestness becoming vitalized by intercourse with God. Prayer is nec-
essary, and we should not wait for feeling, but pray, earnestly pray, whether
we feel like it or not. Heaven is open to our prayers. Prayer is the channel
that conducts our gratitude and yearnings of soul for the divine blessing to
the throne of God, to be returned to us in refreshing showers of divine grace.
With very many, this channel is allowed to freeze up, and then the connection
with heaven is interrupted.... Oh, that we would spend more time upon our
knees and less time in planning for ourselves and in thinking we may do some
great thing.—
Letter 52, September 25, 1874
, to Edson and Emma White.
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