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Octavius Winslow

Lamentations 3:40

Lamentations 3:40
Octavius Winslow February, 5 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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February, 5 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about seeking spiritual revival?

Lamentations 3:40 calls believers to search their ways and return to the Lord for restoration.

The Bible emphasizes the necessity of self-examination and repentance in the process of seeking spiritual revival. In Lamentations 3:40, the call is made to search and try our ways, urging believers to turn back to the Lord. This illustrates the reality that spiritual deadness can occur while living in a world filled with distractions, and such states necessitate a sincere inquiry into one's spiritual life. The passage encourages believers to look directly to Christ, who is seen as the source of life and restoration, filled with grace and the ability to sympathize with human frailty.

When believers recognize signs of deadness, such as lack of zeal in prayer and meditation, they are prompted to identify the root causes—whether it be indulgent sin or the neglect of the means of grace. The process of recovery involves earnest seeking of the Lord, leading to a renewed experience of His presence. Thus, those who earnestly seek revival will find their spirits refreshed, and they will experience joy akin to the arrival of spring after a bleak winter.

Lamentations 3:40

How do we know that Christ can restore our spiritual lives?

Christ is the living source of grace and restoration, as the Bible affirms His fullness can meet our deepest needs.

The assurance that Christ can restore spiritual lives is deeply rooted in the doctrine of His full divinity and humanity. According to the article, all fullness and sufficiency dwell in Christ, making Him the perfect remedy for our spiritual needs. He is described as the 'Fountain-head' and 'living Well', implying that all that we lack can be found in Him. This restoration is crucial because it binds together the believer's dependency on Christ with the understanding that He can alleviate all burdens of sin and spiritual desolation.

Moreover, the article cites the significance of turning to Christ when experiencing spiritual weariness and deadness. By doing so, believers acknowledge that their condition is beyond self-remedy and that divine intervention is necessary. Christ’s ability to relieve is anchored in His dual nature—both God and man—allowing Him to provide both the support needed and the sympathetic understanding of human struggle. Thus, the believers' trust in Christ is not misplaced; rather, it is backed by biblical truth and the promise of His abiding presence.

Lamentations 3:40

Why is understanding our spiritual condition important for Christians?

Understanding our spiritual condition is vital for effective repentance and renewed life in Christ.

For Christians, recognizing the state of their spiritual condition is essential for genuine repentance and renewal. The article emphasizes that a correct understanding of one's spiritual deadness allows for necessary actions to recover a lively inner life. Identifying the sources of such deadness—whether it be sin, worldliness, or neglect of spiritual disciplines—can lead to meaningful engagement with God through prayer, meditation, and seeking His face.

Moreover, this understanding fosters a deeper relationship with Christ. The believer's journey begins by acknowledging their need for grace and looking to Christ as the source of all spiritual renewal. As Lamentations 3:40 encourages believers to return to the Lord, this act of repentance signifies a step toward a more vibrant and fulfilling relationship with God, leading to an abundance of life, peace, and hope. Without this vital understanding, one risks falling into complacency, believing they are well despite being spiritually malnourished.

Lamentations 3:40

“Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the Lord.”

— Lamentations 3:40

LET the spiritual believer but take the history of a single week as the gauge of the general tenor of his life, and what a lesson does it read him of the downward, earthly tendency of his soul! Yes, in one short week how have the wheels lessened in their revolutions—how has the timepiece of his soul lost its power—how have the chords of his heart become unstrung! But his prayer is for Divine quickening. It is his anxious inquiry—What course am I to adopt when I find deadness in my soul, and cannot feel, nor weep, nor sigh, nor desire?—when to read and meditate, to hear and pray, seem an irksome task?—when I cannot see the Savior's beauty, nor feel Him precious, nor labor as zealously, nor suffer as patiently, for Him as I would? The answer is at hand—Look again to Jesus. This is the only remedy that can meet your case. Go direct to Christ; He is the Fountain-head, He is the living Well. May the Holy Spirit open your eyes to see, that while all emptiness exists in you, all fullness dwells in Jesus—there is a fathomless depth in the heart of Christ—of love unchangeable, of grace all-sufficient, of truth immutable, of salvation from all sin and trial and sorrow—commensurate with your need and vast as His own infinity. Never can your grace be too low, nor your frame too depressed, nor your path too perplexing, nor your sorrow too keen, nor your sin too great, nor your condition too extreme, for Christ; because He is both Divine and human: thus uniting the nature that can relieve with the nature that can sympathize. "Son of God! Son of man! how wondrous and glorious are You!"

Be very honest and diligent in ascertaining the cause of your soul's deadness. The correct knowledge of this is necessary to its removal; and its removal is essential to the effectual recovery of the inner life from its relapsed state. Is it indulged sin? Is it the neglect of private prayer? Is it worldliness, carnality, unwatchfulness? Any one of these would so grieve the Spirit of God within you, as to dry up the spirituality of your soul. Do not be beguiled with the belief that the real recovery has taken place, simply because that, conscious of your state, in meaningless regrets you acknowledge and deplore it. "The sluggard desires and has nothing." Observe, He has his desires, but nothing more, because with them he is satisfied. Let not this be your state. Seek earnestly, importunately, believingly, until you possess more abundantly life from Christ. Seek a gracious revival of the life of God in your soul. Seek a clearer manifestation of Christ, a renewed baptism of the Spirit, a more undoubted evidence of your conversion, a surer, brighter hope of heaven. Thus seeking, you will find it; and finding it, your "peace will flow like a river, and your righteousness as the waves of the sea." Oh the joy of a revived state of the inner life of God! It is the joy of spring succeeding to the gloom and chill of winter. It is the joy of the sunlight after a cloudy and dark day. "Lord, lift You up the light of Your countenance upon, us." " Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts; cause Your face to shine, and we shall be saved."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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