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Charles Spurgeon

Spurgeon's Morning and Evening - Mar 21 PM

Job 38:31
Charles Spurgeon March, 21 1999 Audio
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Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? Job chapter 38 verse 31

If inclined to boast of our abilities, the grandeur of nature may soon show us how puny we are. We cannot move the least of all the twinkling stars, or quench so much as one of the beams of the morning. We speak of power, but the heavens laugh us to scorn.

When the Pleiades shine forth in spring with vernal joy, we cannot restrain their influences. And when Orion rains aloft and the year is bound in winter's fetters, we cannot relax the icy bands. The seasons revolve according to the divine appointment. Neither can the whole race of men effect a change therein. Lord, what is man?

In the spiritual, as in the natural world, man's power is limited on all hands. When the Holy Spirit sheds abroad his delights in the soul, none can disturb. All the cunning and malice of men are ineffectual to stay the genial quickening power of the comforter. When he deigns to visit a church and revive it, the most inveterate enemies cannot resist the good work. They may ridicule it, but they can no more restrain it than they can push back the spring when the Pleiades rule the hour. God wills it, and so it must be.

On the other hand, if the Lord in sovereignty or in justice bind up a man so that he is in soul bondage, Who can give him liberty? He alone can remove the winter of spiritual death from an individual or a people. He loses the bands of Orion and none but he. What a blessing it is that he can do it. Oh, that he would perform the wonder tonight!

Lord, end my winter, and let my spring begin. I cannot with all my longings raise my soul out of her death and dullness, but all things are possible with thee. I need celestial influences, the clear shinings of thy love, the beams of thy grace, the light of thy countenance. These are the Pleiades to me. I suffer much from sin and temptation. These are my wintry signs, my terrible Orion. Lord, work wonders in me and for me. Amen.
Charles Spurgeon
About Charles Spurgeon
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (19 June 1834 — 31 January 1892) was an English Particular Baptist preacher. His nickname is the "Prince of Preachers."
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