We will never excercise faith concerning those for whose salvation we have no care about. I trust we are diligent in looking after individuals, especially those who are amongst our own family and friends. This is what Martha did, her whole care was for her brother. It is often easier to have faith that Christ can save sinners generally than to believe that He can come into our own homes and save some particuar one of our household. But oh what joy when He does, when we are able to pray with our own loved ones and rejoice with them at their being made alive by the power of The Holy Ghost. We cannot expect to have this privilege however unless like Martha we send our prayer to Jesus, and go to meet Him, and tell Him of our need.
In Jesu's presence it seems natural to trust Him, even at the worst extremity. It is when we are at our wits end that He delights to help us. When our hopes seem to be buried, then it is that God gives us a resurrection. When our Issac is on the altar, then the heavens are opened and the word of God comes to us.
Art thou beginning to doubt thy Saviour and to complain of His delay? Have faith that He will come at just the right time, though He must be the Judge of when the time will be best for Him to appear.
Martha had a fine faith, her faith had to do with a dreadful case, her brother was dead and had been buried, but her faith still lived hallelujah, and in spite of everything that went against her she believed in Jesus and looked to Him to help her in her extremity. Her faith went to the very edge of the gulf and she said "but I know that even now, whatso-ever Thou wilt ask of God, God will give it thee." Still Martha had not so much faith as she thought she had for soon after her wonderful confession of confidence in the power of the Lord Jesus she stood at the grave of her brother and evidently doubted the wisdom of He whom she professed to trust, she objected to the stone being removed and strong in the admitted facts of the case she urged her reason "Lord by this time he stinketh." Well but Martha you said but not long ago "even now" yes, she said it and she believed it, in the same way that most of us believe, but when her faith was sharply tried by the facts of the matter, she did not have all the faith she had professed to have. I have a suspicion that this is true of most of us. We often fancy that our confidence in Christ is much stronger than it actually is. When we are not called upon to bear the trouble we feel wonderfully strong, but when the trial comes, very much of our boasted faith ebbs away and disappearss like smoke in the wind. Take heed now to examine well your faith, let it be true and real, for you will have need of it all.
Praise God, Jesus did not take Martha at her worst but at her best. When Our Lord says "according to your faith be it unto you" He does not mean your faith at it's ebb but in it's flood. He reads the thermometer at it's highest point not at it's lowest, He doesn't even take the mean reading of our trust, He gives us credit for our quickest pace not counting our slowest or seeking to discover our average speed in this matter of faith. He did for Martha all she could have dared hoped for and much, much more. Her brother did arise and was restored to her and Mary and their friends. In thy case too, oh thou trembling timorous one, The Lord will take thee at thy best and He will do for thee great and wonderful things, seeing that thou desirest to believe greatly and that thy prayer is "Lord I believe, help Thou mine unbelief."
Saturday, 6 October 2007
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