What will happen during this year
to ourselves and to those whom we love? Life
or death health or sickness joy
or sorrow good or evil? What will
the coming twelve months bring to me and mine?
What may be what must be what
ought to be? Such questions, multiplied
a hundredfold, or broken up into every variety of
anxious inquiry, often fill the heart and mind on
the first day of a new year.
Now, is it possible for us to find
rest and peace for our spirits as we steadily contemplate
the future, with its darkness and light, with all
the duties and trials which it contains, and with all
that it may and must bring forth? Is there any
secret of strength and comfort by which we can with
courage and hope encounter all the possibilities of
the future? There is. Let us only trust
God, and we need not fear anything, but welcome
everything!
Let us consider this; and, first of
all, understand what is meant by trusting God.
To trust God, remember, is to trust
Himself a living, personal God.
It is not to trust to any means whatever whereby He
makes Himself known; but to look through them, all,
or to go by them all, to the living God himself.
This is more than trusting to any truth even revealed
in the Bible, for it is trusting the Person who spoke
the truth, or of whom the truth is spoken.
To trust God is to trust Him as He
is revealed in all the fulness of His glorious character.
It is to trust Him as true, and therefore as faithful
in keeping every promise, and in fulfilling every threat;
as wise, and therefore as never erring in any arrangement
made for the well-being of His creatures; as righteous,
and therefore as doing right to each and all; as holy,
and therefore as hating evil, and loving good; as
merciful and therefore as pardoning the guilty through
a Redeemer; it is, in one word, to trust
Him “whose name is Love!” love
which shines in every attribute, and is the security
for every blessing! Trust and obedience are therefore,
from their nature, inseparable.
This trust in God is not common.
Nothing, indeed, so common in men’s mouths as
the phrases, “I trust in God,” “I
have all my dependence on God,” “We have
none else to look to but Him,” and the like.
But, alas! how meaningless often to men’s hearts
are those sayings in men’s mouths! They
frequently express confidence only in God’s doing
what He has never promised to do; as when
a slothful, idle, dissipated man continues in his
wickedness, yet “trusts God” will ward
off poverty from him, or provide for his family whom
he is all the while robbing. Or the words express
confidence in what God has positively declared He
never will nor can do; as when an impenitent
man, who has no faith in Christ or love to Him, “trusts
God will forgive him,” or make him happy, or
not punish him, should he die as he is. All this,
and such like trust, is “vain confidence,”
trusting a lie, and believing a delusion. Others,
again, professing to trust God’s word, manifest
a total want of trust in His ways, and do not walk
in His commandments, nor submit to His corrections,
believing neither to be the will of a holy and loving
Father. And thus, men who in theory say
they trust God, practically have no trust in Him,
whatever they may have in themselves, in the world,
or in things seen and temporal. But oh the blessedness
and the peace of him whose trust is in the Lord!
Read a few declarations from God’s
Word upon the crime of want of trust, and the peace
enjoyed when possessing it:
“Thus saith the Lord, Cursed
be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh
his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord:
for he shall be like the heath in the desert, and
shall not see when good cometh; but shall inhabit
the parched places in the wilderness, in a salt land
and not inhabited.” “The Lord also
will be a refuge for the oppressed, a refuge in times
of trouble. And they that know thy name will
put their trust in thee: for thou, Lord, hast
not forsaken them that seek thee.” “Many
sorrows shall be to the wicked: but he that trusteth
in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about. Be
glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous:
and shout for joy, all ye that are upright in heart.”
“What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee.
In God I will praise his word, in God I have put my
trust; I will not fear what flesh can do unto me....In
God have I put my trust: I will not be afraid
what man can do unto me.” “Trust in
the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine
own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge
him, and he shall direct thy paths.” “Thou
wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed
on thee: because he trusteth in thee. Trust
ye in the Lord for ever: for in the Lord Jehovah
is everlasting strength.”
Now, this trust in God has been the
character of all God’s people in every age,
and under every dispensation. We who live in these
latter days may say of all our spiritual ancestry,
“Our fathers trusted thee.” They
all had faith in the living God, and believed His word
to be true, and His ways to be excellent. Abraham
did so, when he went forth into the wide world, not
knowing whither he went, having but God’s word
as a staff to lean on; and when he offered up his only
son, believing that God was able even to raise him
from the dead. Moses did so, when “by faith
he forsook Egypt,” and preferred “the reproach
of Christ,” and “endured, as seeing Him
who is invisible,” Job did so, when deprived
of everything but God himself; when he sat in sackcloth
and ashes, and bore the glorious testimony in the presence
of men and devils, “Though He slay me, yet will
I trust in Him,” David did so during his whole
life, and his sacred songs are anthems of joyful trust,
which the Church of God can never cease to sing till
faith is lost in sight. And Jehoshaphat did so,
when in the presence of the great invading army he
addressed his small band with the noble words, “Trust
in the Lord your God, so shall ye be established.”
And Daniel did so, when he entered the den of lions,
and came out unscathed, “because he believed
in the Lord his God.” And Paul did so, when
he ended his triumphant life, which he “lived
by faith in the Son of God,” with the shout
of victory, saying, “I know whom I have trusted,
and I am persuaded He can keep what I have committed
to Him until that day.” All the children
of God have known, loved, and trusted their Father,
and have reflected that holy light which shone with
unclouded and faultless lustre in the Firstborn of
all the brethren; for Jesus ever held fast His confidence
in God until His last cry of faith, “Father,
into Thy hands I commit my spirit!”
Begin the year and spend it in this
frame of mind. Know God, trust Him, and go on
thy way rejoicing, whatever that way may be. Heaven
and earth may pass away, but thou art safe, because
right.
Do you, for example, fear the future
because it is unknown? Trust God, and fear not!
This ignorance of coming events which are to affect
our own happiness for time or for eternity is very
remarkable, especially when contrasted with our minute
and accurate knowledge of other things; such as the
future movements of the moon and stars, events
which, though revealing the history of immense worlds,
are yet to us of far less importance than the malady
which may enter our home to-morrow, and close for
ever the eyelids of a babe! In proportion, indeed,
as the things of each day are to affect us, God has
so concealed them, that we know not what one day is
to bring forth. And this ignorance is surely
intended to accomplish at least one blessed end that
of making us fly to God himself, and look up to Himself
for guidance, for protection, and for peace.
The feeblest child thereby becomes filled with such
assurance of faith, that, whatever is before him,
he can say, “Nevertheless I am continually
with thee: thou hast holden me by my right hand.
Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel, and afterward
receive me into glory,” How grand, then, is this
thought, that whatever may come to the believer out
of the mysterious womb of time, or out of the vast
recesses of an unknown and immense eternity, nothing
can possibly destroy his soul’s peace; for nothing
can separate him from the love of the ever-present,
unchangeable, omnipotent God. The stars of heaven
may fall, and the heavens depart as a scroll, and
every mountain and island be moved out of its place;
but the meekest child of God will be kept in perfect
peace on the bosom of his Father, and there rest,
untouched by the revolutions of coming ages, as the
rainbow reposes on the bosom of the sky, unmoved by
“the strong wind which rends the mountains, and
breaks in pieces the rocks before the Lord.”
Whether, therefore, the year is to
bring life or death, poverty or riches, health or
sickness to us or to our friends, all is
beyond our knowledge or our will. But, thank
God, it is nevertheless within the province of our
will to secure to ourselves perfect peace and rest.
This sure hope is based on the glorious fact that there
is a God a living God who verily governs
the universe; whose kingdom is one of righteousness;
whose omnipotence is directed by love; and who, consequently,
so administers the affairs of His blessed kingdom,
as that all its complex machinery of events move in
harmony with the safety and peace of every true child.
Again, Do you fear because of coming
duties or trials which you cannot but anticipate?
Trust God, and fear not! “Cast thy burden” however
great “the Lord, and He will
sustain thee.” Experience tells us that
the evils which we once most feared never came, but
were purely imaginary, while the things really appointed
to us were never anticipated. Let this help us
to appreciate God’s goodness and wisdom more
in commanding us to “take no anxious thought
about the morrow,” because “sufficient
for the day is the evil thereof.”
Still you are certain of some duties
or trials before you. This sickness, you say,
must end in death; or this journey must, if you are
in life, be taken to a foreign shore, and last farewells
be spoken; or this year you must enter upon this new
profession so arduous and so full of risks. And
thus each one, with more or less degree of certainty,
chalks an imaginary outline of his future course.
But supposing all your anticipations to be well-founded,
yet, oh! believe that when your day of trial or of
duty comes, a Father, if you know Him and trust Him,
will come with it. You will have on that dark
day a Father’s unerring wisdom to guide you,
a Father’s omnipotent arm to uphold you, a Father’s
infinite love to soothe you, comfort you, and fully
satisfy you. Hear these precious commands and
promises: “fast your confidence,
which hath a great reward!” “Be careful
for nothing, but in everything, by prayer and supplication,
with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known
to God; and the peace of God, which passeth understanding,
will keep your mind and heart through Christ Jesus!”
Once more, Do you fear the future,
lest you should sin and depart from God as you have
done in the past? Trust God, and fear not!
For how did you depart from God before? From
want of trust. You lost confidence in
your Father’s teaching, and leant on your own
understanding, or listened to the voice of strangers;
you first lost confidence in your Father’s love
and goodwill to you, and in His power to satisfy all
your wants, and to give whatever was best for you out
of His rich and inexhaustible treasures, and then
you demanded the portion of your goods, and departed
from Him, and ceased to pray to Him or to think of
Him at all, but gave your heart, soul, and strength
to the creature. But you had no peace.
You left the cistern of living waters; but the cisterns
hewn out by yourselves held no water to assuage your
soul’s thirst. You found it to be “an
evil and a bitter thing” to forsake God.
Hear, then, His invitation on the first day of a new
year: “Return to the Lord thy God!”
Arise, and go to thy Father; “abide” with
Him; and never more lose thy confidence in Him as thy
strength, thy peace, thy life! Trust His mercy
to pardon the past; His grace to help in the present;
and His love to fill up thy being at all times.
“Fear not: I am with thee: I will uphold
thee with the right hand of my righteousness!”
Your only strength and safety are in God. Daily
seek Him, daily trust Him, and you will daily serve
Him.
But perhaps you fear the future lest
you should not “redeem the time” as you
ought to do to the glory of God? Trust God, and
fear not! Lost time is a sad and oppressive thought
to the child of God. What might he have done!
What might he have been! How might he have improved
his talents, and cultivated his spirit, and done good
to relations, friends, neighbours, and to the world,
had he only redeemed days, hours, minutes, which have
been spent in sloth or folly! And not one second
can be restored. Shall the future be a similar
record to the past? You fear to think of it!
But be assured that till the last hour of the best
spent life, you will need the atoning blood of Jesus
for your innumerable shortcomings as a miserable sinner.
The very “light of life” which enables
you to know and rejoice in Jesus, will enable you
also, in proportion as it burns brightly, to know and
to mourn over yourselves. But while there is
cause for earnest thoughtfulness about coming time,
as a talent to be improved for your own good and God’s
glory, there is no cause for unbelieving fear, for
such “fear hath torment.” God does
not give you a year to spend; He gives you
but a day; nay, not even that, but only the present
moment. He divides the talent of time into minutes,
fractions, and says to you, “Employ this one
for me.” Therefore do not concern yourself
with what is not yours; but as each day or hour comes,
trust God! He is not a hard master, reaping where
He does not sow; but is a Father sowing in you, and
by you, in order that you, as well as Himself, might
reap so that “both sower and reaper might rejoice
together.” Trust Him for always pointing
out to you the path of duty, so that, as a wayfarer,
you will never err. Be assured, that when the
moment comes in which you must take any step, He will,
by some voice in His Word or providence, say to you,
“This is the way, walk ye in it!” Be assured,
also, that amidst many things undone, or ill done
by you, He will still so help you, if sincere,
to labour in His cause here, and to improve your time
and talents, as to be able hereafter to say, even to
you, “Well done, good and faithful servant!
enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.” “In
the name of the Lord, then, let us lift up our banners!”
Enter upon the labours and duties of the year with
joy I Art thou not a fellow labourer with thy brother
saints and angels, yea, even with thy God? Doth
not that omnipotent Spirit of light and love, who uniteth
all in one, and who hath led the Church of Christ
from grace to glory, dwell in thee? Wherefore,
then, dost thou dishonour God and His word by unbelieving
fear?
Finally, the experience of the past
may strengthen your faith in God for the future.
You have never trusted Him in vain. He has never
failed you in time of need. You have always found
His strength sufficient to uphold you, and
His wisdom able to arrange for you, and His
love inexhaustible in supplying your manifold
wants. Ah! had you foreseen, years ago, all the
past journey, so often dark and perplexing, which
you have since pursued; and also all the duties which
have successively claimed your energies for their performance;
and all the trials, so many, so varied, which you have
had to endure; would you not have sunk down in despair
before the spectacle? But you did not
foresee what is now past. God in mercy concealed
it from you, as He does what is now future. And
therefore you did not then, as you cannot now, despair.
The Lord has hitherto helped you, and led you
through the wilderness, and held you up, and kept you
from falling; and so it is that both in your inward
and outward state, you are this day a monument
of His power, mercy, patience, grace!
And now, in peace of heart, say with
Paul, “I am persuaded that neither death, nor
life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers,
nor things present, nor things to come, shall be able
to separate us from the love of God, which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord!” Lord, it is enough!
Never separated from Thyself for one moment in our
existence, here or anywhere, we can never be separated
from the chief object of our affections, from Him
who is the fulness of our whole being, the never-failing
source of our blessedness and joy. Believing
in Thee our Father, we enter another year, and advance
along our endless journey, not knowing what a day
or an hour may bring forth; but knowing this, as all
we care to know, that during every day and hour we
are “continually with Thee.” A long
life on earth may be ours, but neither its labours
nor its cares, its temptations nor its trials, shall
be able to destroy our peace, because unable to separate
us from Thy love. Thy love will give life to
every duty, deliverance from every temptation, guidance
in every perplexity, and comfort in every trial.
Death may come, in what form or in what circumstances,
how soon or how late, we cannot tell; but we fear
no evil, however dark its shadow, for “Thou
art with us.” Eternity must come, and may
come to us ere the year ends. But whatever things
beyond the grave are hidden from us, Thou Thyself,
our Father, art revealed! We know Thee, and this
is life eternal!
ADVICES ON ENTERING A NEW YEAR.
1. Let a short portion of time
be spent each day this year in private prayer, in
reading God’s Word, and, if possible, some devotional
book.
2. Let it be the great work of
the year to become better acquainted personally with
Jesus Christ as the living and ever-present Friend,
Brother, and Saviour.
3. Endeavour to concentrate your
efforts to do good upon some definite unselfish work
in your family or out of it, which may help others,
as it certainly must help yourself.
4. In all things try to live
more towards God, seeking His approval of your inner
and outer life. The less you talk about yourself
or your doings before men, the better for yourself
and for them.
5. Aim this year at being a peacemaker
between professing Christians; to allay disputes,
and to heal breaches among friends and relations;
and to make men respect and esteem each other more.
6. Do not leave behind you in
the old year guilt unpardoned, but believe in Jesus
for the remission of sins; nor enter a new year with
sin loved and cherished, but accept of and rely upon
His Spirit to sanctify you. Begin the year without
enmity to any man on earth, “forgiving one another,
if any man have a quarrel against any: even as
Christ forgave you, even so do ye.”
7. If you are the head of the
house, resolve to read a portion of God’s Word
once a-day at least to the family; and either read
or offer up, always with them, a short but hearty
prayer.
8. Endeavour to keep an account
of your income and expenditure, that you may be able
to live justly and generously. Give what you can
to assist poor relatives, and poor Christians, and
the Church of Christ. Try this one year to tax
yourself ten per cent, on your free income for such
purposes.
Learn to do these things, and many
more will the Lord teach thee to know and do; and
may the God of love and peace be with thee!