Morning
Time: 10:42 AM PST
"Come unto me." --Matthew 11:28
The cry of the Christian religion is the gentle word, "Come." The Jewish law
harshly said, "Go, take heed unto thy steps as to the path in which thou shalt
walk. Break the commandments, and thou shalt perish; keep them, and thou shalt
live." The law was a dispensation of terror, which drove men before it as with a
scourge; the gospel draws with bands of love. Jesus is the good Shepherd going
before His sheep, bidding them follow Him, and ever leading them onwards with
the sweet word, "Come." The law repels, the gospel attracts. The law shows the
distance which there is between God and man; the gospel bridges that awful
chasm, and brings the sinner across it.
From the first moment of your spiritual life until you are ushered into
glory, the language of Christ to you will be, "Come, come unto me." As a
mother puts out her finger to her little child and woos it to walk by saying,
"Come," even so does Jesus. He will always be ahead of you, bidding you
follow Him as the soldier follows his captain. He will always go before you to
pave your way, and clear your path, and you shall hear His animating voice
calling you after Him all through life; while in the solemn hour of death, His
sweet words with which He shall usher you into the heavenly world shall
be--"Come, ye blessed of my Father."
Nay, further, this is not only Christ's cry to you, but, if you be a
believer, this is your cry to Christ--"Come! come!" You will be longing for His
second advent; you will be saying, "Come quickly, even so come Lord Jesus." You
will be panting for nearer and closer communion with Him. As His voice to you is
"Come," your response to Him will be, "Come, Lord, and abide with me. Come, and
occupy alone the throne of my heart; reign there without a rival, and consecrate
me entirely to Thy service."