The Rainbow in the Cloud

Ministry Archive Registry Entry

'''The Rainbow in the Cloud' Or, Covenant Mercy for the Afflicted'''<br> William Bacon Stevens<br> [[The Wilderness Wanderer]] by John East<br> [[Christ, a Man of Sorrows]] by Edward Payson<br> [[Songs in the Night Season]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[The Weaned Child!]] by Octavius Winslow<br> [[The Well-Spring in the Desert]] by James Buchanan (prayer in times of affliction)<br> [[Jesus Veiling His Dealings]] by Octavius Winslow<br> [[The Chastening Rod in the Father's Hand]] by James Buchanan<br> [[Uses of Chastisement]] by James W. Alexander<br> [[The Stones of the Heavenly Temple Prepared on Earth]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[Covenant Promises Seen Through Tears]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[Silent Suffering]] by Philip Doddridge<br> [[Christ at Bethany]] by Robert Candlish<br> [[The Noontide Eclipse]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[The Setting Sun]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[Christ the Keyholder of the Eternal World]] by James Buchanan<br> [[The Compassionate High Priest]] by William Bacon Stevens<br> [[The Sun Going Down While Yet Day]] by John Newton<br> [[The White-Robed Throng!]] by Henry Venn<br> [[The Refuge from the Storm]] by Robert Leighton<br> ---- <p><strong>PREFACE</strong><br> We live in a world of <em>sin</em> — and hence in a world of <em>sorrow</em>, for "man is born to sorrow, as the sparks fly upward."<br><br> The apostle Paul tells us that "We must go through <em>much tribulation </em>to enter the kingdom of God." The apostle John shows us, in one of the visions of the Revelations, that those who "were arrayed in white robes," who were led by the Lamb "into living fountains of water," and from whose eyes "God shall wipe away all tears" — "are those who have come out great tribulation, and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb."<br><br> Thus it is true that <em>"The path of sorrow, and that path alone, leads to the land where sorrow is unknown." </em>That being so, it befits us to learn how to transmute tribulations into blessings; how to turn God's chastening rod into a supporting staff; how to discern the rainbow in the cloud, while we are still wet with raindrops of sorrow!<br><br> It is the design of this volume to aid in doing this <em>comforting work</em>. It seeks to ameliorate sorrow — not by a kind of moral anesthetic, deadening the sensibility of grief, and making the heart less susceptible to woe — but rather by showing to the afflicted that chastenings are the <em>sure evidenced of God's fatherly love</em>.<br><br> Afflictions are the means whereby, when right used, "we become partakers of the divine nature." The <em>furnace of affliction </em>is but the purifying agent to purge away our dross — that the great Refiner may see His own image reflected in purified souls.<br><br> In adding another to the many works designed to furnish consolation to the afflicted, the Editor feels that he is but meeting the ever-pressing needs of the human race, and the ever-earnest demands for comfort by those who are visited by bereavement and sorrow. The present work, without interfering with or displacing any of the valuable treatises which have lately been published, has yet a distinct character of its own, in the originality of its design, in the arrangement of its several parts, and in gathering together, from choice and diverse writers, English and American — the strongest and most scriptural consolation which can be offered to the sorrowful and stricken-hearted.<br><br> Believing, as the Editor does, <br><br> that all our springs of comfort are in Jesus Christ,<br> that they are applied to the soul by the Holy Spirit, <br> that they are to be sought for by the prayer of faith, and <br> that they result from the overflowing grace of our Heavenly Father<br><br> — he has aimed to keep these points prominently before the reader, being unwilling to lead him to any of the "broken cisterns" of earth for consolation, when the <em>well-spring of Divine comfort</em>, which can alone staunch his bleeding heart, is pouring forth its free and life-giving waters!<br><br> It is the lot of all to be visited with sorrow. There is "a time to mourn" marked out in every man's life; and when that time comes, and the fainting spirit turns away from the "miserable comforters" of earth — may all who consult these pages find in God a refuge from every storm, and "a very present help" in every time of trouble. And may they be enabled so to look at their sorrows, with the clear-sighted <em>eye of faith</em>, that they shall discern "a rainbow" in every <em>cloud of affliction</em>, and "covenant mercy" in every <em>shower of grief</em>.<br><br> [[Category:Lifestyle]]