"Give unto
the Lord the glory due unto His name."
Psalm 29:2
Psalm 29:2
God's
glory is the result of His nature and acts. He is glorious in His character,
for there is such a store of everything that is holy, and good, and lovely in
God, that He must be glorious. The actions which flow from His character are
also glorious; but while He intends that they should manifest to His creatures
His goodness, and mercy, and justice, He is equally concerned that the glory
associated with them should be given only to Himself. Nor is there aught in ourselves in which we
may glory; for who makes us to be different from another? And what have we that
we did not receive from the God of all grace?
Then
how careful ought we to be to walk humbly before the Lord!
The moment we glorify ourselves, since there is room for one glory only in the
universe, we set ourselves up as rivals to the Most High. Shall the insect of
an hour glorify itself against the sun which warmed it into life? Shall the
potsherd exalt itself above the man who fashioned it upon the wheel?
Shall
the dust of the desert strive with the whirlwind? Or the drops of the ocean
struggle with the tempest? Give unto the Lord, all ye righteous, give unto the
Lord Glory and strength; give unto Him the honor that is due unto His name. Yet
it is, perhaps, one of the hardest struggles of the Christian life to learn
this sentence; "Not unto us, not unto us, but unto Thy name be
glory." It is a lesson which God is ever teaching us, and teaching us
sometimes by most painful discipline.
Let
a Christian begin to boast, "I can do all things," without adding
"through Christ which strengthens me," and before long he will have
to groan, "I can do nothing," and bemoan himself in the dust. When we
do anything for the Lord, and He is pleased to accept of our doings, let us lay
our crown at His feet, and exclaim, "Not I, but the grace of God which was
with me!"
God
bless,
David
L. Wynn, Pastor
Pauline
B. Grant CME Church
“This
is the Potter’s House”
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