— from The Life of Faith, Part 2, Chapter 12.
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Monday, November 4, 2024
Inward Crucifixion and Inward Consolations
Those, who are the subjects of inward
crucifixion, do not seek, and do not value inward consolations in
themselves considered. “It is written,” says the Savior, “man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”
Consolation is the attendant of religion, but it is not religion
itself. Religion, in its highest sense, implies an entire union with the
will of God. The true food of our souls is God’s commandment, which is
only another name for God’s will. A desire of any thing, and complacency
in any thing, which does not place God’s will first, is infidelity to
God’s claims. Holy joy is not a thing, which comes by volition; but by a
necessary law. If our hearts are right with God, such joy will always
come in its appropriate place; not because it is called or willed, but
because it cannot help coming. It is a thing which flows from holiness
as from its natural fountain. The truly crucified man, therefore, is
right in seeking the fountain first. Holiness is something which must be
desired and sought for itself; something, which must stand, independently of its pleasant results, first in the mind’s eye, first in the heart’s affections.

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