Encouraging the Heralds of the Gospel, May 24
            
            
              Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think any thing as of
            
            
              ourselves; but our sufficiency is of God; who also hath made us able
            
            
              ministers of the New Testament; not of the letter, but of the spirit: for
            
            
              the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.
            
            
              2 Corinthians 3:5, 6
            
            
              .
            
            
              Those only who are constantly receiving fresh supplies of grace will have
            
            
              power proportionate to their daily need and their ability to use that power.
            
            
              Instead of looking forward to some future time when, through a special
            
            
              endowment of spiritual power, they will receive a miraculous fitting up for
            
            
              soul winning, they are yielding themselves daily to God, that He may make
            
            
              them vessels meet for His use. Daily they are improving the opportunities for
            
            
              service that lie within their reach. Daily they are witnessing for the Master
            
            
              wherever they may be, whether in some humble sphere of labor in the home,
            
            
              or in a public field of usefulness.
            
            
              To the consecrated worker there is wonderful consolation in the knowledge
            
            
              that even Christ during His life on earth sought His Father daily for fresh
            
            
              supplies of needed grace; and from this communion with God He went forth
            
            
              to strengthen and bless others. Behold the Son of God bowed in prayer to His
            
            
              Father! Though He is the Son of God, He strengthens His faith by prayer,
            
            
              and by communion with heaven gathers to Himself power to resist evil and to
            
            
              minister to the needs of men.
            
            
              As the elder brother of our race He knows the necessities of those who,
            
            
              compassed with infirmity and living in a world of sin and temptation, still
            
            
              desire to serve Him. He knows that the messengers whom He sees fit to
            
            
              send are weak, erring men; but to all who give themselves wholly to His
            
            
              service He promises divine aid. His own example is an assurance that earnest,
            
            
              persevering supplication to God in faith—faith that leads to entire dependence
            
            
              upon God, and unreserved consecration to His work—will avail to bring to
            
            
              men the Holy Spirit’s aid in the battle against sin.—
            
            
              The Acts of the Apostles,
            
            
              55, 56
            
            
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