Page 286 - That I May Know Him (1964)

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A Jubilee for Jesus?, September 25
And my tongue shall speak of thy righteousness and of thy praise all
the day long.
Psalm 35:28
.
While I was in England, one day there was a great parade in the streets.
It was the Queen’s Jubilee. Everyone was talking about it. The shop
windows were filled with her pictures, and all were extolling the queen
of England. Could we have taken from the shop windows the pictures of
the queen and the signs of her glory, and placed instead expressions of
the glory and majesty of Jesus, would not the people have regarded us as
religious fanatics? They would have thought that we were carrying religion
too far.... But did not our Master lay aside His royal robes, His crown of
glory? Did He not clothe His divinity with humanity, and come to our
world to die man’s sacrifice? Why should we not talk about it? Why should
we not dwell on His matchless love?
O that our tongues might lose their paralysis, that we might speak forth
His praise! O that the spiritual torpor which has come upon the souls of
men might be removed, that we might discern the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ! We are to be the representatives of our Lord upon
earth.... He can communicate heaven’s light through you to those who sit
in darkness. You that have claimed to know the Lord, you who profess
to have tasted and seen that the Lord is good, reveal it to those around
you. Show forth the praises of Him who has called you out of darkness
into His marvelous light. If men can make so much ado over the Queen’s
Jubilee, if they can manifest so much enthusiasm over a finite being, can
we not speak to the glory of the Prince of Life, who is so soon to come
in majesty to take His weary, worn followers to Himself; to unlock the
prison bars of death, and set the captives free; to give His loved ones who
sleep, a glorious immortality? Why cannot Christ be introduced into our
conversation? We are almost home. Let us speak courage to the weary
soldiers of the cross.... Let us tell the pilgrims and strangers of earth that
we shall soon reach a better country, even a heavenly
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31
The Review and Herald, February 11, 1890
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