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We are not flogged into loving Him',

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"Set your affections on things above, not on things on the earth." Col. 3:2

Where are your affections to be set?

Are they to be set on "things on the earth" . . .
those perishing toys,
those polluting vanities,
those carking cares, 
which must ever dampen the life of God in the soul?

The expression, "things on the earth," takes in a wide 
scope. It embraces not only the vain toys, the ambitious 
hopes, the perishing pleasures in which a gay, unthinking 
world is sunk and lost—but even the legitimate calls of 
business, the claims of wife and home, family and friends, 
with every social tie that binds to earth. Thus . . .
every object on which the eye can rest;
every thought or desire that may spring up in the mind;
every secret idol that lurks in the bosom;
every care and anxiety that is not of grace;
every fond anticipation of pleasure or profit that the 
world may hold out, or the worldly heart embrace
—all, with a million pursuits in which man's fallen nature 
seeks employment or happiness—are "things on the earth" 
on which the affections are not to be set. 

We may love our wives and children. We should 
pursue our lawful callings with diligence and industry. 
We must provide for our families according to the good 
providence of God. But we may not so set our affections 
on these things, that they pull us down from heaven to 
earth. He who is worthy of all our affections claims 
them all for Himself. He who is the Bridegroom of 
the soul
 demands, as He has fairly won, the unrivaled 
love of His bride.

But how are we to do this? 

Can we do this great work by ourselves? No! it is only the 
Lord Himself, manifesting His beauty and blessedness to 
our soul, and letting down the golden cord of His love 
into our bosom, that draws up our affections, and fixes 
them on Himself. In order to do this, He captivates the 
heart 
by . . .
some look of love,
some word of His grace,
some sweet promise, or
some divine truth spiritually applied.

When He thus captivates the soul, and draws it up, 
then the affections flow unto Him as the source and 
fountain of all blessings. 

We are not flogged into loving Him, but are drawn by 
love into love.
 Love cannot be bought or sold. It is an 
inward affection that flows naturally and necessarily 
towards its object, and all connected with it. And thus, 
as love flows out to Jesus, the affections instinctively 
and necessarily set themselves "on things above, and 
not on things on the earth." 

Jesus must be revealed to our soul by the power of God 
before we can see His beauty and blessedness—and so 
fall in love with Him as "the chief among ten thousand,
and the altogether lovely One." Then everything that . . .
speaks of Christ, 
savours of Christ, 
breathes of Christ, 
becomes inexpressibly sweet and precious!

In no other way can our affections be lifted up from earth 
to heaven. We cannot control our affections—they will run 
out of their own accord. If then our affections are earthly
they will run towards earthly objects. If they are carnal and 
sensual, they will flow towards carnal and sensual objects.

But when the Lord Jesus Christ, by some manifestation 
of His glory and blessedness—or the Holy Spirit, by taking 
of the things of Christ and revealing them to the soul—sets 
Him before our eyes as the only object worthy of, and 
claiming every affection of our heart—then the affections 
flow out, I was going to say naturally, but most certainly 
spiritually, towards Him. And when this is the case, the 
affections are set on things above.


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