Showing posts with label Heavenly dew. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heavenly dew. Show all posts

Friday, December 4, 2015

Heavenly dew

Image result for dew free wallpaper


(J. C. Philpot, "The Doctrine which Drops as the
Rain, and the Speech which Distills as the Dew")

"My words descend like dew."  Deuteronomy 32:2

The dew falls imperceptibly. No man can see it fall.
Yet its effects are visible in the morning. So it is with
the blessing of God upon His Word. It penetrates the
heart without noise; it sinks deep into the conscience
without anything visible going on. And as the dew
opens the pores of the earth and refreshes the ground
after the heat of a burning day, making vegetation lift
up its drooping head, so it is with the blessing of God
resting upon the soul.

Heavenly dew comes imperceptibly, falls quietly, and is
manifested chiefly by its effects, as softening, opening,
penetrating, and secretly causing every grace of the Spirit
to lift up its drooping head.

Whenever the Lord may have been pleased to bless our
souls, either in hearing, in reading, or in private meditation,
have not these been some of the effects? Silent, quiet,
imperceptible, yet producing an evident impression . . .
  softening the heart when hard,
  refreshing it when dry,
  melting it when obdurate,
  secretly keeping the soul alive, so that it is neither withers
up by the burning sun of temptation, nor dies for lack of grace.

"May God give you the dew of heaven." Genesis 27:28



Friday, July 10, 2015

Heavenly dew

(Choice formatted selections
 from the works of J. C. Philpot)


Heavenly dew

"My words descend like dew."  Deuteronomy 32:2

The dew falls imperceptibly. No man can see it fall. 
Yet its effects are visible in the morning. So it is with 
the blessing of God upon His Word. It penetrates the 
heart without noise; it sinks deep into the conscience 
without anything visible going on. And as the dew 
opens the pores of the earth and refreshes the ground 
after the heat of a burning day, making vegetation lift 
up its drooping head, so it is with the blessing of God 
resting upon the soul. 

Heavenly dew comes imperceptibly, falls quietly, and is 
manifested chiefly by its effects, as softening, opening, 
penetrating, and secretly causing every grace of the Spirit 
to lift up its drooping head.

Whenever the Lord may have been pleased to bless our 
souls, either in hearing, in reading, or in private meditation,
have not these been some of the effects? Silent, quiet, 
imperceptible, yet producing an evident impression . . . 
  softening the heart when hard,
  refreshing it when dry,
  melting it when obdurate,
  secretly keeping the soul alive, so that it is neither withers 
up by the burning sun of temptation, nor dies for lack of grace. 

"May God give you the dew of heaven." Genesis 27:28