Spurgeon, "Gleanings Among the Sheaves" Is it possible for us to know anything whatever of our heavenly home? Is there power in human intellect to fly into the land of the hereafter, where God's people rest eternally? Our inquiry is met at the outset by what seems a positive denial: "Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God has prepared for them that love him." If we paused here, we might give up all idea of beholding that "goodly land and Lebanon"; but we do not pause, for, like the apostle, we go on with the text, and we add, "But God has revealed them unto us by his Spirit." It is possible to look within the veil; God's Spirit can turn it aside for a moment and bid us take a glimpse, though it be a distant one, at that unutterable glory! There are "Pisgahs" even now on the earth, from the top of which the celestial Canaan can be beheld. There are hallowed hours in which the mists and clouds are swept away, and the sun shines in his strength, and our eye, being freed from its natural dimness, beholds something of that land which is very far off, and sees a little of the joy and blessedness which is reserved for the people of God hereafter. By the Holy Spirit there is given to them, even now, in seasons of blissful communion, such experiences, joys, and feelings, as seem to bring heaven down to them, and make them able to realize, in some faint measure, what heaven itself must be. |
Sunday, June 21, 2015
That unutterable glory!
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