The sermon "God weighs and measures, bounds and ordains my sorrows" by Alexander Smellie addresses the Reformed doctrine of the sovereignty of God in relation to human suffering and affliction. Smellie argues that God deliberately ordains our trials, limiting their duration and purposefully working through them to cultivate spiritual growth and deeper faith in His followers. He supports this claim with Scripture references from 2 Corinthians 4:17-18, which emphasizes the transient nature of affliction compared to the eternal weight of glory, and Romans 8:18, asserting that present suffering is insignificant when contrasted with the glory to be revealed. The practical and doctrinal significance lies in the encouragement that believers are not victims of random suffering, but rather subjects of God's providential care, which refines them for a greater purpose in the eternal state.
“It is good to know that there is a limit to affliction. It is but for a moment. It has its appointed end.”
“Affliction does not rise out of the ground, nor fall on me by chance, as an unfortunate, aimless, undirected, capricious thing.”
“I welcome its sunshine and rest, because I have been out in the midnight when the fierce gales were abroad.”
“I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.”
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