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July 2
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A cry is the natural
expression of sorrow, and a suitable utterance when all other modes
of appeal fail us; but the cry must be alone directed to the Lord, for
to cry to man is to waste our entreaties upon the air. When we consider
the readiness of the Lord to hear, and His ability to aid, we shall
see good reason for directing all our appeals at once to the God of
our salvation. It will be in vain to call to the rocks in the day of
judgment, but our Rock attends to our cries. Mere formalists
may be content without answers to their prayers, but genuine suppliants
cannot; they are not satisfied with the results of prayer itself in
calming the mind and subduing the will -- they must go further, and
obtain actual replies from heaven, or they cannot rest; and those replies
they long to receive at once, they dread even a little of God's silence.
God's voice is often so terrible that it shakes the wilderness; but
His silence is equally full of awe to an eager suppliant. When God seems
to close His ear, we must not therefore close our mouths, but rather
cry with more earnestness; for when our note grows shrill with eagerness
and grief, He will not long deny us a hearing. What a dreadful case
should we be in if the Lord should become for ever silent to our prayers?
"Lest, if Thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down
into the pit." July
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