May
14, 2005
Our
Daily Bread, Part I
"Give
us this day our daily bread." (1)
"The
first half of the prayer Jesus has taught us is in regard
to the name and kingdom and will of God--that His name may
be honored, His kingdom established, His will performed. When
you have thus made God's service your first interest, you
may ask with confidence that your own needs may be supplied.
If you have renounced self and given yourself to Christ you
are a member of the family of God, and everything in the Father's
house is for you. All the treasures of God are opened to you,
both the world that now is and that which is to come. The
ministry of angels, the gift of His Spirit, the labors of
His servants--all are for you. The world, with everything
in it, is yours so far as it can do you good. Even the enmity
of the wicked will prove a blessing by disciplining you for
heaven. If you are Christ's,' 'all things are yours.' (2).
"But
you are as a child who is not yet placed in control of his
inheritance. God does not entrust to you your precious possession,
lest Satan by his wily arts should beguile you, as he did
the first pair in Eden. Christ holds it for you, safe beyond
the spoiler's reach. Like the child, you shall receive day
by day what is required for the day's need. Every day you
are to pray, 'Give us this day our daily bread.' Be not dismayed
if you have not sufficient for tomorrow. You have the assurance
of His promise, 'So shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily
thou shalt be fed.' David says, 'I have been young, and now
am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his
seed begging bread.' (3) That God who sent the ravens to feed
Elijah by the brook Cherith will not pass by one of His faithful,
self-sacrificing children. Of him that walketh righteously
it is written: 'Bread shall be given him; his waters shall
be sure.' (4) 'They shall not be ashamed in the evil time:
and in the days of famine they shall be satisfied.' (5) 'He
that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all,
how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?'
(6) He who lightened the cares and anxieties of His widowed
mother and helped her to provide for the household at Nazareth,
sympathizes with every mother in her struggle to provide her
children food. He who had compassion on the multitude because
they 'fainted, and were scattered abroad,' (7) still has compassion
on the suffering poor. His hand is stretched out toward them
in blessing; and in the very prayer which He gave His disciples,
he teaches us to remember the poor." (8)
1. Matthew
6:11.
2. 1 Corinthians 3:23, 21.
3. Psalm 37:3, 25.
4. Isaiah 33:16.
5. Psalm 37:19.
6. Romans 8:32.
7. Matthew 9:36.
8. Thoughts From The Mount Of Blessing, pp., 110, 111.
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