By: A. Murray
Shew me thy ways, O Lord; Teach me
Thy paths. Lead me in Thy truth, and teach me; For Thou art the God of my
salvation; On Thee do I wait all the day.” Ps. 25: 4-5
I
spoke of an army on the point of entering an enemy’s territories. Answering the
question as to the cause of delay: “Waiting for supplies.” The answer might also have been: “Waiting for
instructions”, or “Waiting for orders”. If the last despatch had not been
received, with the final orders of the commander-in-chief, the army dared not
move.
Even
so in the Christian life: as deep as the need of waiting for supplies, is that
of waiting for instructions.
See
how beautiful this comes out in Psalm. 25. The writer knew and loved God’s law
exceedingly, and meditated in that law day and night. But he knew that this was
not enough. He knew that for the right spiritual apprehension of the truth, and
for the right personal application of it to his own peculiar circumstances, he
needed a direct divine teaching.
The
psalm has at all times been a very peculiar one, because of its reiterated
expression of the felt need of the Divine teaching, and of the childlike
confidence that that teaching would be given. Study the psalm until your heart
is filled with the two thoughts - the absolute need, the absolute certainty of
divine guidance. And with these how entirely it is in this connection that he
speaks, “On Thee do I wait all the day”. Waiting for guidance, waiting for
instruction, all the day, is a very blessed part of waiting upon God.
The
Father in heaven is so interested in His child, and so longs to have his life
at every step in His will and His love, that He is willing to keep his guidance
entirely in His own hand. He knows so well that we are unable to do what is
really holy and heavenly, except as He works it in us, that He means His very
demands to become promises of what He will do, in watching over and leading us
all the day. Not only in special difficulties and times of perplexity, but in
the common course of everyday life, we may count upon Him to teach us His war,
and show us His path.
And
what is needed in us to receive this guidance? One thing: waiting for
instructions, waiting on God. “On Thee do I wait all the day.” We want in our
times of prayer to give clear expression to our sense of need, and our faith in
His help. We want definitely to become conscious of our ignorance as to what
God’s war may be, and the need of the Divine light shining within us, if our
way is to be as of the sun, shining more and more unto the perfect day. And we
want to wait quietly before God in prayer, until the deep, restful assurance
fills us: It will be given - “the meek will He guide in the way”.
“On
Thee do I wait all the day.” The special surrender to the Divine guidance in
our seasons of prayer must cultivate, and be followed up by, the habitual
looking upwards “all the day”. As simple as it is, to one who has eyes, to walk
all the day in the light of the sun, so simple and delightful can it become to
a soul practised in waiting on God, to walk all the day in the enjoyment of
God’s light and leading.
What
is needed to help us to such a life is just one thing: the real knowledge and
faith of God as the one only source of wisdom and goodness, as ever ready, and
longing much to be to us all that we can possibly require - yes! this is the
one thing we need. If we but saw our God in His love, if we but believed that
He waits to be gracious, that He waits to be our life and to work all in us, -
how this waiting on God would become our highest joy, the natural and
spontaneous response of our hearts to His great love and glory!
“My
soul, wait thou only upon God!”
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