Daily reflection and inspiration from the "Prince of Preachers," Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Monday, April 2, 2012
The God who hears your cries
The God of most men — the God of the unregenerate — is an inanimate God, or, if alive and able to see, he is an unfeeling God, careless about them and their personal interests. “Oh, it is preposterous,” say they, “to think that he takes notice of our sorrows and troubles — and still more absurd to suppose that he hears prayer, or that he ever interferes in answer to the voice of supplication, to grant a poor man his requests. It cannot be.” That is their God, you see. That is the God of the heathen — a dead, blind, dumb God. I do not wonder that they do not pray to him. They could not expect an answer.
But the God of grace is one who has opened a communication between heaven and earth, who notices the cries of his children, puts their tears into his bottle, sympathises with their sorrows, looks down on them with an eye of pity and a father’s love, has communion with them, and permits them to have communion with him, and all that through the blessed person of the Lord Jesus Christ.
From a sermon by Charles Haddon Spurgeon entitled "The God Of Bethel." Image by Linda Cronin on Flickr under Creative Commons License.
Labels:
Christianity,
God,
prayer,
religion,
Spurgeon
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment