In order
that truth be effectual, especially to consolation,
something
more is necessary than that it should be revealed
in the Bible; something more than that it should be understood
by the intellect. It must be powerfully brought home
to the mind
and heart. And to do this is the especial work
of the Holy Spirit.
No effect will be produced in reading
Scripture, except so far as
the Holy Spirit takes, shows, and
impresses them to the heart.
And this He graciously does to
many a broken-hearted Christian.
The experienced and godly Christian, long tried in the 'school
of sorrows'--is made to know that the soul may be comforted
amidst the deepest afflictions. In some unexpected moment,
the divine Illuminator reveals to
him the great abiding truths
of Scripture; truths which are as precious and as satisfying--in
adverse as in prosperous days. By a process of holy attraction,
his thoughts are drawn away from self and all its sorrows and
losses--to be fixed and absorbed . . .
by the character of God,
by His mighty works,
by the person of the adorable Redeemer,
by the work of redemption,
by the glory yet to be revealed.
Filled and animated and tranquilized by these blessed truths,
he is led to forget his private griefs; and thus the Comforter
performs His office by means of the truth. "The things of Christ,"
applied to the heart by the Spirit, direct the mind from its earthly
pangs, and to a certain extent afford a foretaste of the celestial joy.