"With lovingkindness have I
drawn thee."-Jeremiah 31:3
The thunders of the law and the terrors of judgment are
all used to bring us to Christ; but the final victory is effected by
lovingkindness. The prodigal set out to his father's house from a sense of need;
but his father saw him a great way off, and ran to meet him; so that the last
steps he took towards his father's house were with the kiss still warm upon his
cheek, and the welcome still musical in his ears.
"Law and terrors do but harden
All the while they work alone;
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Will dissolve a heart of stone."
The Master came one night to the door, and knocked with
the iron hand of the law; the door shook and trembled upon its hinges; but the
man piled every piece of furniture which he could find against the door, for he
said, "I will not admit the man." The Master turned away, but
by-and-bye He came back, and with His own soft hand, using most that part where
the nail had penetrated, He knocked again-oh, so softly and tenderly. This time
the door did not shake, but, strange to say, it opened, and there upon his
knees the once unwilling host was found rejoicing to receive his guest.
"Come in, come in; thou hast so knocked that my bowels are moved for thee.
I could not think of thy pierced hand leaving its blood-mark on my door, and of
thy going away houseless, 'Thy head filled with dew, and thy locks with the
drops of the night.' I yield, I yield, Thy love has won my heart." So in
every case: lovingkindness wins the day. What Moses with the tablets of stone
could never do, Christ does with His pierced hand. Such is the doctrine of
effectual calling. Do I understand it experimentally? Can I say, "He drew
me, and I followed on, glad to confess the voice divine?" If so, may He
continue to draw me, till at last I shall sit down at the marriage supper of
the Lamb.
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