Quote 4558




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When God seems to be turning a man into a desolate and ruinous heap, yet even then is He building and preparing him to be a more excellent structure. The gardener digs up his garden, pulls up his fences, takes up his plants, and, to the eye, seems to make a pleasant place as a waste. But we know he is about to mend it, not to mar; to plant it better and not to destroy it. So God is present even in desertions, and though He seem to annihilate or to reduce His new creation into a confused chaos, yet it is to repair its ruins and to make it more beautiful and more strong.


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There may be a time when God will not be found, but no time wherein He must not be trusted.


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My Lord and Savior, whom I do love unfeignedly and above all other things, having in my sense and feeling withdrawn Himself from me, I fought earnestly and labored to recover my comfort in by serious meditations and trial of mine own heart and crying unto Him upon my bed in the night, when I was most free from all other distractions.


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By divine withdrawings, the soul is put upon hanging upon a naked God, a naked Christ, a naked promise. Now the soul is put upon the highest and the purest acts of faith (Isa. 63:15–16)—namely, to cleave to God, to hang upon God, and to carry it sweetly and obediently toward God—though He frowns, though He chides, though He strikes, yea, though He kills (Job 13:15).


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God is said to harden men when He removes not from them the incentives to sin, curbs not those principles which are ready to comply with those incentives, withdraws the common assistances of His grace, concurs not with counsels and admonitions to make them effectual, flashes not in the convincing light which He darted upon them before. If hardness follows upon God's withholding His softening grace, it is not by any positive act of God but from the natural hardness of man.


   314        0
True friendship and acquaintance stands not in bare words and complemental visits, but in real communication of offices and benefits. So here, converse and acquaintance with God stands in our improving God and our interest in Him, so as to acquaint Him with all our secrets, so as to impart unto Him all our griefs and fears, so as to rely upon Him to guide us in all our ways and to supply all our wants. This [very thing] God looks we should do and takes it unkindly when we do otherwise, as a true friend that is willing and able to help his friend takes it unkindly if he go to any other, thinks himself either distrusted or slighted, and it is almost a matter of falling out between them.


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