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Difference between revisions of "April 25-30"

 
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[[April 1-30|'''Day 1''']], [[April 2-30|'''Day 2''']], [[April 3-30|'''Day 3''']], [[April 4-30|'''Day 4''']], [[April 5-30|'''Day 5''']], [[April 6-30|'''Day 6''']], [[April 7-30|'''Day 7''']], [[April 8-30|'''Day 8''']], [[April 9-30|'''Day 9''']], [[April 10-30|'''Day 10''']], [[April 11-30|'''Day 11''']], [[April 12-30|'''Day 12''']], [[April 13-30|'''Day 13''']], [[April 14-30|'''Day 14''']], [[April 15-30|'''Day 15''']], [[April 16-30|'''Day 16''']], [[April 17-30|'''Day 17''']], [[April 18-30|'''Day 18''']], [[April 19-30|'''Day 19''']], [[April 20-30|'''Day 20''']], [[April 21-30|'''Day 21''']], [[April 21-30|'''Day 22''']], [[April 23-30|'''Day 23''']], [[April 24-30|'''Day 24''']], [[April 25-30|'''Day 25''']], [[April 26-30|'''Day 26''']], [[April 27-30|'''Day 27''']], [[April 28-30|'''Day 28''']], [[April 29-30|'''Day 29''']], [[April 30-30|'''Day 30''']],
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[[April 1-30|'''Day 1''']], [[April 2-30|'''2''']], [[April 3-30|'''3''']], [[April 4-30|'''4''']], [[April 5-30|'''5''']], [[April 6-30|'''6''']], [[April 7-30|'''7''']], [[April 8-30|'''8''']], [[April 9-30|'''9''']], [[April 10-30|'''10''']], [[April 11-30|'''11''']], [[April 12-30|'''12''']], [[April 13-30|'''13''']], [[April 14-30|'''14''']], [[April 15-30|'''15''']], [[April 16-30|'''16''']], [[April 17-30|'''17''']], [[April 18-30|'''18''']], [[April 19-30|'''19''']], [[April 20-30|'''20''']], [[April 21-30|'''21''']], [[April 22-30|'''22''']], [[April 23-30|'''23''']], [[April 24-30|'''24''']], [[April 25-30|'''25''']], [[April 26-30|'''26''']], [[April 27-30|'''27''']], [[April 28-30|'''28''']], [[April 29-30|'''29''']], [[April 30-30|'''30''']]
 
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==Waiting For Resurrection==
 
==Waiting For Resurrection==

Latest revision as of 13:14, 7 February 2011

Day 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30


Waiting For Resurrection

"And there was Mary Magdalene and the other Mary, sitting over against the sepulchre" (Matt. 27:61).

How strangely stupid is grief. It neither learns nor knows nor wishes to learn or know. When the sorrowing sisters sat over against the door of God's sepulchre, did they see the two thousand years that have passed triumphing away? Did they see any thing but this: "Our Christ is gone!"

Your Christ and my Christ came from their loss; Myriad mourning hearts have had resurrection in the midst of their grief; and yet the sorrowing watchers looked at the seed-form of this result, and saw nothing. What they regarded as the end of life was the very preparation for coronation; for Christ was silent that He might live again in tenfold power.

They saw it not. They mourned, they wept, and went away, and came again, driven by their hearts to the sepulchre. Still it was a sepulchre, unprophetic, voiceless, lusterless.

So with us. Every man sits over against the sepulchre in his garden, in the first instance, and says, "This woe is irremediable. I see no benefit in it. I will take no comfort in it." And yet, right in our deepest and worst mishaps, often, our Christ is lying, waiting for resurrection.

Where our death seems to be, there our Saviour is. Where the end of hope is, there is the brightest beginning of fruition. Where the darkness is thickest, there the bright beaming light that never is set is about to emerge. When the whole experience is consummated, then we find that a garden is not disfigured by a sepulchre.

Our joys are made better if there be sorrow in the midst of them. And our sorrows are made bright by the joys that God has planted around about them.

The flowers may not be pleasing to us, they may not be such as we are fond of plucking, but they are heart-flowers, love, hope, faith, joy, peace-these are flowers which are planted around about every grave that is sunk in the Christian heart.

"'Twas by a path of sorrows drear
Christ entered into rest;
And shall I look for roses here,
Or think that earth is blessed?
Heaven's whitest lilies blow
From earth's sharp crown of woe.
Who here his cross can meekly bear,
Shall wear the kingly purple there."