Morning, January 7, edited from Spurgeon’s Morning and Evening

“For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain.”  — Philippians 1:21

The believer did not always live for Christ. He began to do so when God the Holy Spirit convinced him of sin, and when by grace he was brought to see the dying Savior making a substitution for his guilt. From the moment of the new and celestial birth the man begins to live for Christ. Jesus is to believers the one pearl of great price, for whom we are willing to part with all that we have. He has so completely won our love, that it beats alone for him; to his glory we would live, and in defense of his gospel we would die; he is the pattern of our life, and the model after which we would sculpt our character. Paul’s words mean more than most men think; they imply that the aim and end of his life was Christ, but indeed, his life itself was Jesus. In the words of an ancient saint, he did eat, and drink, and sleep eternal life. Jesus was his very breath, the soul of his soul, the heart of his heart, the life of his life. Can you say, as a professing Christian, that you live up to this idea? Can you honestly say that for you to live is Christ? Your business — are you doing it for Christ? Is it not done for self-aggrandizement and for your family’s advantage? Do you ask, “Is that a poor reason?” For the Christian it is. He professes to live for Christ; how can he live for another object without committing spiritual adultery?

There are many  who carry out this principle in some measure; but who is there that dare say that he has lived wholly for Christ as the apostle did? Yet, this alone is the true life of a Christian — its source, its sustenance, its method, its end, all gathered up in one word — Christ Jesus. Lord, accept me; I here present myself, praying to live only in you and for you. Let me be as the bull which stands between the plow and the altar, to work or to be sacrificed; and let my motto be, “Ready for either.”

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