"The Preciousness of 
    God's Word" 
    by Octavius Winslow, 1860 
    "The word of the Lord was precious in those days." I 
    Samuel 3:1. 
    Among the precious things of God the saints of the Most 
    High will ever regard as transcendently precious His revealed Word. But for 
    this revelation we had known nothing of those precious things upon which 
    this volume is designed to engage the reader's thoughts. The works of 
    creation, varied and rich in their forms of beauty, while they testify to " 
    His power and Godhead," -thus leaving man inexcusable for his atheism,  
    -nowhere supply an answer to the momentous question, "What must I do to be 
    saved?" They bear a palpable and solemn witness to man's apostasy, but they 
    testify nothing to his recovery. They tell of a fallen, but not of a 
    restored humanity. They speak not of a Savior of a salvation of hope of 
    heaven. I may wander in sad and pensive thought upon the sunny banks of its 
    flowing rivers, I may tread its carpeted vales, or climb its cloud-capped 
    mountains, reveling amid its beauty, its grandeur, and sublimity, and yet 
    find no repose for this restless mind, no peace for this troubled heart, no 
    hope for this sinful and lost soul. Not a flower below, not a star above, 
    tells me of JESUS, a Savior! 
     I turn to the "GLORIOUS GOSPEL of the blessed God," and my case as a 
    ruined, self-destroyed, condemned sinner, is met by that single, but 
    comprehensive and sublime announcement- "This is a faithful saying, and 
    worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save 
    sinners." Beloved reader, the kingdom of nature, replete as it is with the 
    wisdom, power, and benevolence of Jehovah, every spire of grass, every lowly 
    flower, every towering mountain, every glimmering star, rebuking the 
    "fool's" denial of a God, can never disclose how you may be pardoned, 
    justified, and saved. No solution can it supply to the great moral problem 
    of the universe how God can be just, and yet the justifier of the ungodly.
    
     The "gospel of the grace of God," which these pages propose to unfold, 
    meets to the utmost your case as a sinner, bringing life and immortality to 
    light, and thus revealing to you a hope, resplendent and eternal, beyond the 
    gloom and corruption of the grave. 
     In the prosecution of our subject, let it be premised that there are points 
    which it is not our province to discuss. The reasonableness of a revelation 
    from God, the necessity of a revelation, the fact that such a revelation is 
    given to us in the Bible, are questions we must assume as established. It is 
    rather to the worth and preciousness of God's Word, than to any line of 
    argument in proof of its divinity, that we must bend our thoughts. And yet, 
    let it not be supposed that we slight or undervalue evidence as 
    substantiating the truth of the Bible. Everything that is solemn and 
    precious to us as believers is bound up in the fact, that the BOOK upon 
    which we ground our hope of the future is, what it declares itself to be, 
    the WORD OF THE LORD. The moment our faith in the divinity of the Holy 
    Scriptures is shaken, everything else trembles with it. Life, in all its 
    moral relations, wears another and a totally different aspect. Its foliage 
    is withered, its flowers are blighted, its springs are embittered, and the 
    entire landscape of the present and the future is enshrouded in, gloom and 
    despair. No marvel, then, that error should plant its strong and stern 
    battery in front of this the most precious doctrine of our faith -the Divine 
    inspiration of the Scriptures. 
     How truly has the apostle described the unbelieving mind -"The god of this 
    world has blinded the minds of those who believe not, lest the light of the 
    glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them." 
    We hold it, then, of infinite moment that our faith in the divinity of the 
    Bible. in the plenary inspiration of the Scriptures, should grow stronger 
    and stronger; and that whatever tends to instruct and confirm us in this 
    doctrine of our faith, be it a fact in history, a discovery in science, or a 
    page in the volume of our personal history, should be welcomed by us with 
    eagerness, and be acknowledged with devout thanksgiving and praise. 
     The Lord keep you, my reader, from the low views of divine inspiration 
    prevalent in this day! If this foundation be destroyed, or even apparently 
    shaken, what else has your immortal soul to build upon but quicksand, every 
    step, passing to eternity, over which sinks your soul deeper and deeper in 
    doubt, darkness, and despair ? 
     As the Word of the Lord, then, it is most precious. It could possess no 
    real intrinsic worth apart from this fact. The Bible claims to be nothing 
    less than the WORD OF GOD. " All scripture is given by inspiration from 
    God," and "holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit." We 
    part the lids of this sacred volume, and we listen to God's voice sometimes 
    in terrific thunder, at others in entrancing music now in sublime majesty, 
    then gentle as an infant's whisper, in mercy and in judgment God's Word 
    speaks. That infidelity should wish to disbelieve and stifle this divine 
    voice speaking from the Bible, is no marvel, since, if the Bible is true, 
    infidels have no hope. An illustration of this may be cited. The late 
    William Wilberforce, when passing through a town in which a noted infidel 
    was imprisoned for blasphemy, called to see him. He endeavored to engage the 
    unhappy sceptic in a conversation upon the Scriptures, but he declined, 
    saying, that he had made up his mind, and did not wish his conclusions 
    disturbed. Pointing to the Bible in the hands of his visitor, he remarked, 
    in a manner which betrayed deep malignity of heart, blended with mental 
    despair, " How, sir, do you suppose that I can like that Book, since, if it 
    be true, I am undone forever?" "No," replied the illustrious philanthropist 
    and Christian, " this is not a necessary consequence, and need not be. This 
    Book excludes none from hope who will seek salvation by our Lord Jesus 
    Christ, who died for us, that whether we wake or sleep we may live together 
    with Him." Thus infidelity rejects the Bible for fear it is true! We recur 
    to the thought that God's Word is precious because it is truly and 
    emphatically His Word, the Word of JEHOVAH. And when the believer opens the 
    Bible, it is with the profound and solemn conviction that he is about to 
    listen to the voice of God! 
     But not only is the Word of God precious as a revelation of His being and 
    perfections, but to the child of God it is peculiarly so as revealing the 
    mind and will of God. What the thoughts and purposes of God were could be 
    but dimly gathered from the external works and operations of nature. If 
    these divine thoughts were ever made known to man, GOD himself must reveal 
    them. "Can you by searching find out God? can you find out the Almighty unto 
    perfection?" We cannot fully fathom even the finite mind; how much less the 
    Infinite! If at all acquainted with the science of physiognomy, we may trace 
    some faint glimmer in the human countenance of the mental emotions, but this 
    is all the index we have of the hidden thoughts and feelings of the soul. 
    Now, by a similar process, we may learn something of God. The face of nature 
    the natural countenance of God is replete with his power, wisdom, and 
    beauty. There is enough of His Godhead to confound and silence the deepest 
    and loudest atheism of man. But nature can go no further. It leads me to the 
    vestibule, but cannot conduct me into the glory within. It tells me there is 
    a God, but it reveals not His nature and character as a Father and a 
    sin-forgiving God. But where nature leaves me, revelation comes to my aid. 
    Hence the high estimate in which God is represented as regarding His own 
    Word. "You have magnified Your Word above all Your name." That is, God has 
    magnified His Word above every other manifestation of His name, there being 
    no such revelation and illustration of the Deity as is found in His revealed 
    Word. Do the heavens and the earth declare the glory of God? Does providence 
    testify to His divine government? How much more His revealed truth! Truly, 
    "You have magnified Your Word above all Your name."  As a revelation of 
    His character, the Word of God is precious. What we gather of God's moral 
    character from the kingdom of nature is more inferential than positive. From 
    its creation, we infer the being of God; from its loveliness, we infer that 
    God is beautiful; from its wonders, we infer that God is great; from the 
    admirable unity and fitness of all its parts, we infer that God is wise; 
    from the merciful blessings so richly and profusely scattered over its 
    surface, we infer that God is good; and from the judgments which follow sin, 
    and land upon the sinner, we infer that God is holy and just. But for the 
    clear, positive, and complete revelation of God's character as a righteous, 
    holy, wise, merciful, and sin-pardoning God, we must repair to His written 
    Word. God has unfolded more of His moral character, perfections, and glory 
    in the following words, spoken to Moses on Mount Sinai, amid the awful 
    emblems of His majesty, than in all the beauties, wonders, and sublimities 
    of His created work: "And the LORD descended in the cloud, and stood with 
    him there, and proclaimed the name of the LORD. And the LORD passed by 
    before him, and proclaimed. The LORD, the LORD God, merciful and gracious, 
    long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for 
    thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no 
    means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the 
    children, and upon the children's children, unto the third and to the fourth 
    generation." (Exod. xxxiv. 5-7.) What a glorious unfolding of God! What a 
    foreshadowing of the yet richer unfolding of the gospel! If God was so 
    glorious on Mount Sinai, what must be His glory as revealed on Mount 
    Calvary! 
     As a revelation of the love of God, His Word is inexpressibly precious. We 
    want to know more than the mind of God. We are sinners, and we want to read 
    His heart—His loving, gracious, sin-forgiving heart. We want to know, not 
    only what His thoughts and purposes are, but what are His feelings towards 
    us. Does He love us? Does His justice smile on us? Does His heart expand 
    with mercy, and glow with affection towards us ? The Bible alone supplies 
    the answer to these momentous questions. There we read—as we read it 
    tableted in no part of this vast and beautiful universe— "GOD is LOVE." And 
    when we approach the subject yet closer, penetrate more deeply into the 
    heart of God, what a transcendent, marvellous unfolding of His love is 
    presented in the gift of His beloved Son! Read the declaration, often read 
    before, yet to  read again and again with deepening wonder, gratitude, 
    and praise— "God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, 
    that whosoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting 
    life." "In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God 
    sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him. 
    Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His 
    Son to be the propitiation for our sins." 
     How precious ought that Word to be to our hearts which contains such 
    declarations and reveals such truths as these! Well may the apostle exclaim, 
    "Here in is love!" as if he had said, and he might have added, "and nowhere 
    else but here!" Nowhere in the heavens above, or in the earth beneath, or in 
    the waters under the earth; no star, no flower, no creature, so reveals, 
    expresses, and embodies the love of God as the gift of His dear Son to die 
    for our sins. Oh, what love is this! "God so loved the world!" So loved, 
    that He gave Jesus! Jesus is the most precious exponent of God's love; Jesus 
    descends from the bosom of His love; Jesus draws aside the veil of His love; 
    Jesus is God's love expressed, God's love incarnate, God's love speaking, 
    laboring, dying, redeeming! Beyond this it would seem impossible that love 
    could go. Oh, let every affection of our heart, every faculty of our soul, 
    every power of our mind, every action of our life, embody as its grateful 
    response the words of the adoring apostle, "Thanks be unto God for His 
    unspeakable Gift!" 
     We are conducted to another view in the progress of our subject, 
    illustrating the preciousness of God's Word. We refer to its gospel 
    announcements. Jn this light, we cannot conceive of a more costly, precious 
    blessing than the Word of God. The Gospel is the most valuable treasure the 
    believer possesses. Everything else is shadowy, chimerical, transitory, 
    passing away. Nothing is real, nothing substantial, nothing satisfying and 
    abiding, except the "glorious gospel of the blessed God." Jt is the glorious 
    gospel, because it is replete with real glory in reveals a glorious God, it 
    makes known a glorious Savior, it proclaims a glorious salvation, and it 
    unveils the hope of a glorious immortality. And all other glory in 
    comparison of the "glorious gospel of the blessed God" is as visionary and 
    fleeting as a midnight dream. Nowhere does Jehovah appear so glorious as in 
    the gospel of His grace. There He is revealed as a sin-forgiving God; there 
    He is mirrored forth as a "just God and a Savior," there He is portrayed as 
    a reconciled God in Christ; and there He is represented as standing in the 
    relation, and exercising the love, of a FATHER. O glorious gospel that 
    presents such a view of God to the sinner's believing eye! "God was in 
    Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself. What declaration can more 
    clearly indicate the love of God to us, as the moving, originating cause of 
    our salvation, than this? 
     There is a marked, and we think, essential defect in the theology of many 
    Christians touching this subject, which tends much to obscure the Divine 
    glory, and to lessen in our view the greatness of God's love in man's 
    salvation. We refer to the statements which represent God as angry, 
    incensed, and vindictive, and as appeased, pacified, and reconciled by the 
    death of Christ. Is not this an essential misapprehension of God's 
    everlasting love to His people? Would it not appear from this representation 
    of God that the Atonement of Christ was the originating cause of His love, 
    rather than that His love was the originating cause of the Atonement? We 
    think so. We look upon this notion of God as enshrouding the glory of 
    redemption, by the palpably false view it presents of the Divine character. 
    But the correct statement is the converse of this. God loved us- and as a 
    result, Christ died for us. The Atonement of the Son of God was not the 
    procuring cause, but the consequence, of the Father's love. Christ did not 
    inspire God with love to man, but expressed it. He did not die to originate 
    the Divine affection, but to expound and exhibit it. The love of God to His 
    people was as eternal as the eternity of His being, as everlasting as His 
    uncreated nature. "I have loved you with an everlasting love." It panted, it 
    yearned for an outlet. It sought and found it in Christ. The Atonement of 
    Jesus, uniting and harmonizing all the perfections of the Deity, supplied 
    the channel through which the ocean of Divine love washed the shores of this 
    earth, its soul-healing waves spreading like a sea of life over our 
    sin-tainted, curse-blighted, sorrow-stricken humanity. 
     When, therefore, the Scriptures speak of Divine reconciliation, as in the 
    passage just quoted, we are to understand the full expiatory satisfaction 
    given to God's moral government through the Atonement of Christ, by which 
    His law is honored. His justice is satisfied. His holiness is secured, His 
    truth is maintained, and He appeared upon earth walking among men, 
    "reconciling the world unto Himself." 
     But the experience of the believer supplies, perhaps, the most powerful and 
    conclusive testimony to the preciousness of God's Word. We have not been 
    advancing a vain thing, but a well-attested fact, in affirming the divinity 
    and value of revelation. We are now about to cite the child of God- yes, the 
    whole Church of Christ as testifying to the preciousness of the Word of the 
    Lord. How many a truth-experienced, gospel-believing, Christ-loving heart 
    will respond to the words of David, "How sweet are Your words unto my taste! 
    yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth." What says Jeremiah? "Your words were 
    found, and I did eat them; and Your word was unto me the joy and rejoicing 
    of my heart." Corresponding with this is the experience of the universal 
    Church, find it where we may, whatever may be the dissonance of opinion 
    prevailing upon less essential and important questions of polity and 
    worship. 
     It is precious to the believer, first, because it is divine, attested, 
    experienced Truth. Is it not so that, to you who believe in God's Word, 
    every other word in comparison seems a fiction and a fable? And that, as you 
    grow in grace, as your acquaintance with, and experience of, the Word of God 
    deepens, as you near eternity, your hold upon everything else grows fainter 
    and fainter, and your grasp upon it grows firmer and firmer? 
     Now, God's Word is truth. He who is emphatically " the Truth," because He 
    is essential truth, and the substance of revealed truth, has affirmed this 
    in His sublime and memorable prayer—properly the Lord's Prayer—"Your Word is 
    truth." Pursue this thought for a moment. There would seem to exist a 
    necessity that it should be so, since it is the Word of the God of truth, 
    partaking of the nature of that God whose truth it is. All that emanates 
    from God must be a transcript, in some degree, of what He is. It is faintly 
    so in the works of nature; yet more clearly so in the kingdom of providence: 
    perfectly so in the empire of grace. The great truth, then, to which these 
    three witnesses testify is this, "He is the Rock, His work is perfect: for 
    all His ways are judgment: a God of truth and without iniquity, just and 
    right is He." (Deut. xxxii. 4.) It follows then, as clearly as any 
    conclusion can from  premise, that His Word is true—eternally, 
    essentially, immortally true. True in the Savior it reveals—in the salvation 
    it declares—in the doctrines it expounds—in the precepts it enforces— in the 
    promises it speaks—in the hopes it unveils —and in the threatenings it 
    denounces. "YOUR WORD is TRUTH." 
     As divine truth, then, it is most precious to the believer who has staked 
    his all of future and eternal happiness upon its veracity. Let your faith, 
    beloved reader, have more close dealing with the truth of God's Word. 
    Whatever gloomy and untoward providences may gather their shadows around 
    your path, hold fast your confidence in the truth of God's Word. You shall 
    find mutability in everything but this. God will vary His providences, but 
    cannot alter His Word. "Forever, 0 Lord, Your Word is settled in heaven." 
    Heaven, with its resplendent glory and surpassing wonder—earth, with its 
    countless myriads of beings, its beauty, and its history, shall be a thing 
    of yesterday, not a vestige remaining to tell of its existence, its 
    grandeur, and its greatness; but "the Word of the Lord shall endure 
    forever." 
     All that God has Whispered in mercy, or has thundered in judgment—the 
    promise of love, the threatening of wrath—all the precious words upon which 
    He has caused our souls to hope the succourings pledged, the sure mercies 
    covenanted, the assurances given, the consolations engaged, the oath sworn, 
    shall all be fulfilled. Then, amid the fluctuations and the vicissitudes of 
    all sublunary things, the home of childhood changed, the place of hallowed 
    memories and sacred associations changed, the friends and companions of our 
    choicest, sunniest years changed, adversity and death flinging their deep 
    shadows upon life's landscape, we will approach the closer and cling the 
    firmer to the eternal, unchangeable TRUTH of our God. Your faith, beloved, 
    in God's word of promise may be severely tried by God's dealings with you in 
    providence the one may appear to oppose and contradict the other but ever 
    remember that God cannot deny Himself, nor alter the word that has gone out 
    of His mouth. If the sentence of death seems pronounced upon the promise of 
    God by His strange and mysterious procedure, forget not that there is yet 
    life in the Word of the Lord; and that when the stone that sealed the tomb 
    of all your mercy is rolled away, the Word upon which your soul has reposed, 
    upon which your heart has lived, to which your faith has clung, and which 
    has kept alive the spark of hope within your breast, shall come to life 
    again, every sentence, word, and syllable fulfilled to the letter by Him of 
    whom it is said, "It is impossible that God should lie." Oh, cling then to 
    Christ's Word, as the mariner to the plank, as the mother to her infant, 
    yes, as a humble believer in that divine and gracious Savior who has said, 
    "Him that comes unto me I will in no wise" literally, "I will never, no, 
    never, cast out." 
     As testifying of Jesus and His salvation, the Word of God must ever be 
    transcendently precious to the believer. The Bible is, from its commencement 
    to its close, a record of the Lord Jesus. Around Him the divine and glorious 
    Center -all its wondrous types, prophecies, and facts gather. His Promise 
    and Foreshadowing, His holy Incarnation, Nativity, and Baptism, His 
    Obedience and Passion, His Death, Burial, and Resurrection, His Ascension to 
    heaven, His Second Coming to judge the world, and to set up His glorious 
    kingdom, are the grand and touching, the sublime and tender, the priceless 
    and precious truths interwoven with the whole texture of the Bible, to which 
    the Two Witnesses of Revelation the Old and the New Testaments bear their 
    harmonious and solemn testimony. Beloved, let this be the one and chief 
    object in your study of the Bible the knowledge of Jesus. The Bible is not a 
    history, a book of science, a poem, it is a record of Christ. Study it to 
    know more of Him, His nature, His love, His work. With the magnanimous Paul, 
    "count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ 
    Jesus your Lord." 
     Then will God's Word become increasingly precious to your soul, and its 
    truths unfold. You will trace the history of Jesus, see the glory of Jesus, 
    admire the work of Jesus, learn the love of Jesus, and hear the voice of 
    Jesus, in every page. The whole volume will be redolent of His name, and 
    luminous with His beauty. Oh, what were the Bible to us apart from its 
    revelation of a Savior! Is there not great danger of studying it merely 
    intellectually and scientifically, of reveling among its literary beauties 
    and its grandeur, blind to its true value, and without any desire to know 
    that precious Savior who died for sinners, that Divine Redeemer who 
    purchased the ransom of His Church with His own blood; that Friend who loves 
    us, that Brother who sympathizes with us, that enthroned High Priest who 
    intercedes for us within the veil? 
     May we not resort to it as mere controversialists, polemics, and partisans, 
    searching it but for weapons of attack upon a Christian brother's system or 
    creed, or quoting it but to give countenance and complexion to a favorite 
    dogma? But do we study the "Word of Christ" spiritually and honestly, as 
    those whose souls hunger and thirst for this the bread and water of life? Do 
    we search it diligently and earnestly as for hid treasure—treasure beyond 
    all price? Can we say with David, "O how love I your law ! it is my 
    meditation all the day?" "The entrance of your Word gives light; it gives 
    understanding unto the simple. I opened my mouth, and panted: for I longed 
    for your commandments,"—"Your Word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto 
    my path." 
     Do we read it with a child-like mind, receive it with a believing heart, 
    bow to its teaching with reverence of soul, and receive its decisions in all 
    questions of faith and practice as decisive and ultimate? In a word, do we 
    search the Scriptures humbly, prayerfully, depending upon the guidance of 
    the Spirit, to find Jesus in them? Of these Scriptures He is the Alpha and 
    the Omega—the substance, the  sweetness, the glory—the one, precious, 
    absorbing THEME. Listen to His own words, "Search the Scriptures, for these 
    are they which testify of me." Moses wrote of Me—David sang of Me—seers 
    prophesied of Me—evangelists recorded My life —apostles expounded My 
    doctrine—and martyrs have died for My name. "THESE ARE THEY WHICH TESTIFY OF 
    ME." Yes, Lord! Your word is precious to our souls, because it reveals to us 
    Your glory, and tells us of Your love! 
     Precious, too, is the Word of God, as containing doctrine, precept, and 
    promise. The doctrines are precious, as affording instruction to the mind, 
    and establishment to the faith of the child of God. There can be no real, 
    stable building up in God's truth when the great doctrines of grace are 
    faintly believed and loosely held. These doctrines, then, which exalt the 
    Lamb of God, which lay the glory and power and boasting of the creature in 
    the dust, and which exhibit the electing love and sovereign grace of God in 
    his salvation, are most precious to the truth-experienced heart of the 
    believer in Jesus. 
     Not less precious to him is the preceptive teaching of God's Word. When 
    there is a real experience of the power of the doctrines, there will be a 
    love of the precept. You will desire to be sanctified, as well as 
    justified—to have your heart purified, and your life molded by the holiness 
    of the truth. The precept that enjoins separation from the world—that 
    teaches us to deny all ungodliness, and to live soberly, righteously, and 
    godly in this present evil world—that bids us take up our daily cross and 
    follow a crucified Savior, and realizing our resurrection life in Him, thus 
    to seek those things that are above, where Christ sits at the right hand of 
    God—must be precious, inconceivably precious, to a Christ-loving heart. 
     The rebukes, too, of God's Word, humbling though they are, yet are welcome 
    to the believer. The Word that gently chides your backslidings, unveils your 
    follies, checks your inconsistencies, lays your pride, self-seeking, and 
    self-boasting in the dust, is precious to your soul. The Christian feels, 
    that "all Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for 
    doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, 
    that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good 
    works," and therefore he welcomes all. Beloved, count not less dear to  
    your heart, or as less the tender unfolding of God's love, those parts of 
    His truth which reprove humble, empty, and lay you low. The rebukes and 
    reproofs of God's Word are as valuable and precious in themselves as the 
    promises, since both equally seek the sanctification of the believer, and 
    both emanate from the same Divine mind, and flow from the same loving heart.
    
     As a source of Divine consolation how many will testify to the preciousness 
    of God's Word! The Bible, while it is a proclamation of mercy to the vilest 
    sinner, is equally the book of the afflicted. As a system of consolation 
    Christianity has no equal. No other religion in the wide world touches the 
    hidden springs of the soul, or reaches the lowest depths of human sorrow, 
    but the religion of Christ. Saints of the living God! suffering members of a 
    suffering Head! we cite you as witnesses to this truth. When your hearts 
    have been overwhelmed, when adversity has wrapped you within its gloomy 
    pall, when the broken billows of grief have swollen and surged around your 
    soul, how have you fled to the Scriptures of truth for succor and support, 
    for guidance and comfort! Nor have you repaired to them in vain. "The God of 
    all comfort" is He who speaks in this Word, and there is no word of comfort 
    like that which He speaks. The adaptation of His truth to the varied, the 
    peculiar and personal trials and sorrows of His Church, is one of the 
    strongest proofs of its divinity. Take to the Word of God whatever sorrow 
    you may, go with whatever mental beclouding, with whatever spirit-sadness, 
    with whatever heart-grief; whatever be its character, its complexion, its 
    depth unsurpassed in the history of human sorrow, there is consolation and 
    support in the Word of God for your mind. 
     There is in these sacred pages a voice of sympathy and soothing chiming 
    with your grief; and thus "by the comfort of the Scriptures you have hope" 
    that God will not leave you in trouble, but will sustain you in it, will 
    bring you out of, and sanctify you by it, to the endless glory and praise of 
    His great and precious name. O you sons of God whose faith has been 
    strengthened by the histories of the Old Testament saints whose minds have 
    been instructed by the dealings of God with His Church in the wilderness 
    whose hearts have been comforted by the rich experience of David in the 
    Psalms -whose views of God's kingdom prophets have enlarged -whose knowledge 
    of Christ's history evangelists have deepened -whose souls apostles have 
    established in the faith, we cite you as witnesses to the divinity and 
    preciousness of God's Word. "You are my witnesses, says the Lord." 
     Testify to an infidel world what the Bible is, and to the saints what you 
    have experienced it to be. Tell how its revealed truths have established 
    you, how its illustrious examples of piety, faith, and love have animated 
    you, how its exceeding great and precious promises have comforted you, and 
    how the glorious hope of heaven which the gospel unveils has inspired you to 
    run with patience the race set before you, looking unto Jesus. Tell how this 
    precious Word of God has made clear many a perplexity, has illumined many a 
    dark road, has cheered many a lonesome way, has soothed many a deep sorrow, 
    has guided and upheld many a faltering step, and has crowned with victory 
    many a feat of arms in the great battle with Satan, the world, and sin. May 
    we not say of the Bible, as David said of Saul's sword, "There is none like 
    it." 
     Christian mourner, let me once more direct your eye too dimmed perhaps by 
    tears to behold this divine source of true, unfailing comfort. God's Word is 
    the book of the afflicted. Written to unfold the wondrous history of the 
    "Man of Sorrows," it would seem to have been equally written for you, 0 
    child of grief! God speaks to your sad and sorrowing heart from every page 
    of this sacred volume, with words of comfort, loving, gentle, and persuasive 
    as a mother's. "As one whom his mother comforts, so will I comfort you." The 
    Bible is the opening of the heart of God. It is God's heart unveiled, each 
    throb inviting the mourner, the poor in spirit, the widow, the fatherless, 
    the bereaved, the persecuted, the sufferer, yes, every form and child of 
    affliction and grief to the asylum and sympathy, the protection and soothing 
    of His heart. Oh, thank God for the comfort and consolation of the 
    Scripture! Open it with what sorrow and burden and perplexity you may, be it 
    the guilt of sin, the pressure of trial, or the corrodings of sorrow, it 
    speaks to the heart such words of comfort as God only could speak. 
     Have you ever borne your grief to God's Word, especially to the 
    experimental Psalms of David, and not felt that it was written for that 
    particular sorrow? You have found your grief more accurately portrayed, your 
    state of mind more truly described, and your case more exactly and fully 
    met, probably in a single history, chapter, or verse, than in all the human 
    treatises that the pen of man ever wrote. What a proof that the Bible is the 
    Word of God! We verily believe that no Christian is thoroughly versed in the 
    evidences of the truth of the Bible, or is in a right position to understand 
    its divine contents, until he is afflicted. Luther remarks that he never 
    understood the Psalms until God afflicted him. 
     Fly to the Word of God, then, in every sorrow. You will know more of the 
    mind and heart of God than you, perhaps, ever learned in all the schools 
    before. We must be experimental Christians, if Christians at all. A bare 
    notionalist, a mere theorist, an empty professor of religion, is a fearful 
    deception. Study to know God's Word from a heartfelt experience of its 
    quickening, sanctifying, comforting power. Sit not at the feet of men, but 
    at the feet of Jesus. His Word can alone instruct you in these sacred and 
    precious truths. You must learn in Christ's school, and be taught by the 
    Holy Spirit. And if you are truly converted, spiritually regenerated, a real 
    believer in the Lord Jesus, think not that some strange thing has happened 
    to you when the Lord causes you to pass under the rod of discipline, brings 
    you into trial, and makes you to partake of what may seem to you a soul-diet 
    that is anything but healthful and nutritious, "the bread of adversity, and 
    the water of affliction." (Isa. Xxx.20) 
     But affliction is one of the Lord's moulds for shaping you into an 
    experimental Christian. And to be an experimental Christian His Word must be 
    inwrought into our soul. What can we know of the promises, the succourings, 
    the sympathy of God's Word, its perfect adaptation to the crushed and 
    sorrowful condition of our humanity, but for trial? Thus, more than one-half 
    of the Bible is a "garden inclosed, a spring shut up, a fountain sealed," 
    until the Lord lays sorrow upon our hearts, and brings us into circumstances 
    of adversity. Then this garden unveils its beauty, and this spring pours 
    forth its refreshment, and this fountain overflows with its rich and varied 
    supply. Oh, with what power, depth, and sweetness does the Word of God 
    unfold to us then! It is as though a new book had been composed, another 
    constellation in the spiritual hemisphere had burst upon the telescope of 
    faith, another Arcadia had floated into view, a new world had been 
    discovered! 
     "Blessed is the man whom You chasten, O Lord, and teach him out of Your 
    law." "Unless Your law had been my delight, I should then have perished in 
    my affliction." Draw, then, O child of sorrow, your consolation from God's 
    Word. Put it not away as if it were for others, and not for you. There is 
    not a promise in the Bible, of pardon, of grace, of help, of sympathy, but 
    it is yours, because you are Christ's, "in whom are all the promises of God, 
    and in Him are Yes and Amen to the glory of God the Father." Oh, clasp this 
    precious Word of comfort to your sorrowful heart, and exclaim, "It is mine! 
    The Jesus of whom it speaks is mine, the salvation it reveals is mine, the 
    promises it contains are mine, the heaven it unveils is mine, and all the 
    consolation, comfort, and sympathy which wells lip from these hidden 
    springs, is MINE." 
     The Word of God is equally valuable and precious to the believer, because 
    of its quickening power. There is a divine vitality in the Word, which, like 
    Ezekiel's vision of the waters, conveys life wherever it comes in "the power 
    and demonstration of the Spirit." As the instrument of regeneration and of 
    sanctification, the Bible is beyond all price. The statements touching these 
    two points are many and conclusive. We quote but a few: "The law of the Lord 
    is perfect, converting the soul, making wise the simple, rejoicing the 
    heart, enlightening the eyes." (Ps.xix. 7, 8.) See how David extols its 
    quickening power: "This is my comfort in my affliction: for Your word has 
    quickened me." "I will never forget Your precepts: for with them You have 
    quickened me. "As the instrument of the new birth, thus does the Holy Spirit 
    speak of it: "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of 
    incorruptible, by the Word of God, which lives and abides forever." (I Peter 
    i. 23.) "The Word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any 
    two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, 
    and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents 
    of the heart." (Heb. iv. 12.) 
     And alluding to it equally as the appointed instrument of holiness, our 
    Lord prays to His Father, "Sanctify them through Your truth." And to the 
    disciples He employs similar language: "Now you are clean through the word 
    which I "have spoken unto you." Employing the same argument, the apostle 
    thus exhorts the saints: "Seeing you have purified your souls in obeying the 
    truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that you 
    love one another with a pure heart fervently." Clearly, then, is God's Word 
    an instrument of spiritual life and of gospel holiness, and as such commends 
    itself to the deepest reverence, the warmest love, and the  most 
    diligent study of the believer. Allow, beloved reader, a few words of 
    exhortation bearing upon this subject. 
     Study the Scriptures of truth with a heart in prayerful uplifting for the 
    accompanying power, light, and anointing of the Holy Spirit. The Word is but 
    a dead letter, unattended by the Spirit. The Word of God is a "sword," but 
    the sword is effectual only as it is wielded, by the power of the Spirit. 
    "The sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God." Expect, then, this Word 
    to be powerful in your own souls, as in the souls of those upon whom you 
    bring it to bear, only as it is clothed with the divine and irresistible 
    might and energy of the Holy Spirit. Then it will quicken, enlighten, and 
    convince; then it will convert, comfort, and sanctify. Ever remember that 
    the Divine Author of the Bible is at your side—invisible and noiseless—when 
    you sit down to read it. Graciously and kindheartedly He is bending over 
    you, prepared to explain what is difficult, to harmonize what is 
    contradictory, and to shed a flood of light upon each page, causing Heaven's 
    glory to dart into your soul from the diamond spark of a single passage! 
     Such, beloved, are the effects of the gospel, when clothed with the 
    authority and power of God the Holy Spirit. It was the folly of the Jews to 
    think to find life in the Scriptures without Christ: life in the letter 
    without the Original of life. (John v. 19,40.) 'Except the Lord build the 
    house (that is, the temple), they labor in vain that build it.' Without God 
    all endeavors to build a spiritual temple, are like the strivings to wash a 
    blackamoor white. No believing in the Word, though preached a thousand 
    times, without God's revealing arm. (Isaiah liii. I.) It is not the tool 
    that makes the watch, but the artist by it. No instrument can act without 
    the virtue of some superior agent. It is the altar that sanctifies the gold, 
    and Christ that sanctifies the ordinance. 
     Paul may plant by his doctrine and miracles, Apollos may water by his 
    affectionate eloquence, but God alone can give the increase by His almighty 
    breath. Man sows the seed, but God only can make it fructify. Then have your 
    eyes fixed upon God. It is the Word of His lips, not of man's, whereby any 
    are snatched out of the paths of the destroyer, as well as kept from them. 
    Man's teachings direct us to Christ; God's teachings bring us to Christ. Man 
    brings the gospel at most to the heart; the Spirit only brings the gospel 
    into the heart. Man puts the key to the lock; God only turns it, and opens 
    the heart by it. It is God only can knock off the fetters of spiritual 
    death, and open the gates that the King of Glory may enter with spiritual 
    life. If any, therefore, will regard the Word more than as an instrument, or 
    a partner with God in His operations. He may justly leave you to the 
    weakness of this, and deny the influx of His own strength. 
     Cultivate a profound reverence for God's Word. Nothing is more grievous to 
    the Holy Spirit than a trifling with revelation. The words of Scripture are 
    divinely inspired. "Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy 
    Spirit." "Which things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom 
    takes, but which the Holy Spirit takes." Stand in awe of this Holy Book! 
    Beware of referring to it doubtfully, or of quoting it with levity. To adopt 
    the words of Scripture irreverently, to speak of any of its parts with 
    suspicion, or to employ its phraseology flippantly, is to cast discredit 
    upon inspiration, to press it into the service of the flesh, and to make the 
    Word of God the jest-book of the profane. This is awful trifling with the 
    thoughts and words of the Holy Spirit. God says, "I will look to him . . . . 
    who trembles at my Word." This was David's holy reverence, "My heart stands 
    in awe of Your Word." And this his prayer, "Order my steps in Your Word, and 
    let not any iniquity have dominion over me." 
     This profound conviction of the divinity and authority of God's Word will 
    constrain you to bring the state of your soul, your doctrinal sentiments, 
    and your daily life, to its unerring test. The only divine and sure standard 
    is the Word. "To the law and to the testimony," should be our constant rule. 
    Regard, in all matters of faith and practice, the Word of God as 
    authoritative in its teaching, paramount in its voice, and final in its 
    decision. Whatever doctrine or practice squares not with this standard, that 
    will not stand the searching test of this divine touchstone, reject as 
    unworthy your belief and adoption. Let this be your daily practical 
    acknowledgment. "Your Word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my 
    path." Taking into your hands this lamp, and guiding your steps by this 
    light, your feet will never slide. Cling to the Word of God the more firmly, 
    as others attempt to sap the foundations of its divinity. Be "valiant for 
    the truth on the earth," and " contend earnestly for the faith once 
    delivered to the saints." "Let the Word of Christ dwell richly in you in all 
    wisdom," hiding it in your heart, that you sin not against Him. Read it with 
    prayer for the teaching of the Holy Spirit, comparing scripture with 
    scripture, spiritual things with spiritual. Search it to know more of 
    Christ, more of His atoning work, more of His mediatorial suitability to 
    meet your every state of mind and heart. Study it to know the will of God, 
    the love of your heavenly Father. Take every doubt, perplexity, and sorrow 
    to the Word of God. And before you unfold its sacred leaves, lift your heart 
    in prayer to the Eternal Spirit to guide your reading, to open your 
    understanding, and to unveil your eye to this divine well-spring of life. 
    This is the only rule we suggest for the spiritual and practical reading of 
    God's Word. 
     Human helps may aid you in the study of the sacred literature of the Bible; 
    but to read it with a view to the feeding and nourishing of the divine life 
    in your soul, that you may grow in knowledge, faith, and holiness, that you 
    may be instructed, comforted, and armed for the holy war, you need but rely 
    upon the teaching of the Holy Spirit, who is promised to guide you into all 
    the truth as it is in Jesus. 
     Beware of studying the Bible as a lover of history, of science, of poetry. 
    Study it as a sinner, anxious to know how you may be saved. Read it to 
    ascertain how God can pardon, justify, and take you to heaven when you die. 
    Lay aside your caviling, debating, and speculating, and approach the Bible 
    as a little child, as a sincere inquirer, as a humble learner, desirous of 
    knowing the Scriptures, that are able to make you wise unto eternal life. In 
    a research so momentous, lay aside all other books, and be the student of 
    this one the Book of God. Salvation is its one, its grand and absorbing 
    theme, and this is all you need to know as a sinner bound for the 
    judgment-seat of Christ. 
     A notional, speculative reception of the Bible prepares an uneasy pillow 
    for a dying hour; and it is marvellous and solemn to reflect how every 
    subject, every theme, every question growing out of the history, philology, 
    or destiny of God's Word, gives place in that awful moment to the one 
    momentous, sublime salvation therein revealed, by which the soul may escape 
    from hell and soar to heaven. Who then desires to listen to learned 
    disquisitions upon the literature, the eloquence, the poetry, or the 
    sublimity of the Bible? Who, when nature is dissolving, earth is receding, 
    eternity is opening, is in a condition to weigh, examine, and sift the 
    evidences of the divinity of the Scriptures? The earnest, imploring language 
    of such a one, alive to a conviction of sin and danger, is, "Is there 
    pardon, is there salvation, is there hope for such a sinner as I am? Does 
    the Word of God tell me how I may be saved ? Read to me of Christ. Tell me 
    of the Savior. Point me to the Lamb of God. Direct my eye to the cross, and 
    let me behold Him whose blood cleanses from all sin. Read to me, speak to 
    me, tell me only of JESUS." 
     Precious Book, that fully meets a crisis of our being, and an awakened, 
    alarmed state of mind, so tremendously solemn as this!  We close this 
    chapter with an earnest appeal to your judgment, conscience, and heart in 
    favor of the Word of God. Whatever you neglect, neglect not the Bible. If a 
    professed believer, beware how you blend in your reading the chaff of human 
    fiction and story, with the wheat of God's Word. It is utterly impossible, 
    reason as you may, that you can cultivate a spiritual and devout taste and 
    desire for the truth of God and the fiction of man. The Bible and the novel 
    can never stand side by side. As a Christian, guard against the light, 
    frivolous, frothy literature of the day. It will lessen your conviction of 
    what is true, it will depreciate the value of what is divine, it will impair 
    your taste for what is spiritual, and it will bring poverty, barrenness, and 
    death into your soul. God speaks to you from every paragraph and sentence of 
    this Holy Book. It is His voice that we hear, His signature that we behold, 
    His ineffable glory, which, the more it is viewed in this bright mirror, may 
    the more powerfully command our wonder and praise. When we approach these 
    divine oracles, and hear the voice of God sometimes speaking out of the 
    midst of the fire, but more often from the blood of sprinkling which speaks 
    better things than the blood of Abel, we may well bend our knee, and take 
    the shoes from off our feet, for the ground on which we stand is holy. Oh 
    that power might come down upon us from the Spirit of truth and grace, and 
    beams from the Sun of righteousness break in upon our minds as we 
    contemplate the intrinsic glories of the Bible! Let the truth and weight of 
    these revelations sink deep into your ears. As men of this world merely, as 
    creatures of time, more especially as the proprietors of immortality, you 
    have a thousand-fold deeper interest in the Bible than in any other, or all 
    other books. It is just as important that you who have the opportunity 
    should become acquainted with the Scriptures, and believe, and love, and 
    obey them, as it is that you should be saved. This Book offers to you that 
    which most you need, that which is infinitely more to you than all other 
    things, glory, honor, immortality, and eternal life. We cannot but look upon 
    the prevailing indifference with which the Word of God is regarded, as one 
    of the evils over which we are loudly called to mourn. 
     You send the Bible to the ignorant and destitute, you carry it to every 
    cottage and waft it to every country, and thanks to God that you do so. But 
    to what extent is it studied in your churches, read in your families, taught 
    to your children? There is no surer evidence of living without God in the 
    world than living without intimate communion with the Bible. Who that does 
    not mean to remain in impenetrable obduracy, who that does not form the 
    deliberate resolve to close every avenue to the divine influence, that is 
    not prepared to plunge the dagger of the second death into his own bosom; 
    can live in the neglect of these Scriptures of God? And if you believe them, 
    and understand them, will you refuse them the submission of your heart and 
    your everlasting obedience? Do you accredit the stupendous truths contained 
    in this volume, and shall they awaken no deep interest, and urge you to no 
    solemn preparation for your last account? There is not one among those who 
    will not prove a savor of life unto life, or of death unto death. What can 
    we add more to this searching, solemn appeal to you who are living in a 
    wilful neglect of that Book which tells you of life in this world, and out 
    of which you will be judged in the world which is to come? Disbelieve, or 
    neglect the Word of God, and you reject the only chart to eternity.