"This year thou shalt die. " - Jeremiah 28:16
I have often thought this passage, pronounced on the lying prophet, a
most suitable sermon for a birthday portion, to be sounded in the ears
of the sinner: and if qualified with the possibility and probability
which arise out of our dying circumstances, it might, when commissioned
by the Lord, have a blessed effect. My soul, take it for the meditation
of thy birth-day. It may be fulfilled this year; it must be fulfilled
some year; it cannot be a very distant year; and there is a birth-day
when it shall be passed upon thee in the year. And why not the present?
Pause, my soul, and meditate upon it, as if this were the very year.
And what though carnal men celebrate the anniversary of their
birth-day, as best suited to their carnal minds, let thine be wholly
spiritual. If indeed a man came into the world laughing, there might be
a suitable correspondence in commemorating the annual return of such a
birth with laughing. But if cries first indicated the birth of a poor
helpless creature, born to want, and the subject of sin and misery; can
rioting and folly be the proper celebration of such an event? And is
there no joy suitable on the return of a man's birthday? Oh yes, there
is, and ought to be, real heal-felt joy with every child of God. When a
man begins to count birth-days in grace, every return calls for holy
joy in the Holy Ghost. Not for that he was born an intelligent immortal
creature only, but for that he was made a new creature in Christ Jesus.
Not for that he came into the world in a state of nature only, but that
he was brought also into a state of grace. Not for that he was of the
stock and lineage of Adam only, but of the seed of Christ. Here is an
alliance royal, holy, heavenly, divine! My soul, how many moons or
years in the new life canst thou mark down? Let this be the arithmetic
in thy calculation. And if, like the herald of the morning, the voice
should say, "This year thou shalt die:" Oh how sweet to answer, Lord,
my times are in thine hands! Can they be in a wiser, or more tender, or
more loving hand than Jesus's? Precious Lord, wean me from everything
here below, that I may be living nearer with thee, and in thee, and to
thee; that as the last year of my pilgrimage lessens to the month, and
the month to the week, and the week to the day, nay to the very hour
and moment of my departure from a body of sin and death, the last
expiring words on my trembling lips may be of Jesus; and thine, Oh
Lord, come home with power and sweetness to my soul, like thine to him
upon the cross: "To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise."
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