Looking for true love? To read FREE love stories, click here!
Journey of the Heart & Other Love Stories
Present
Words of Love
by C. H. Spurgeon
October 8
"Forsaken" is a dreary word. It sounds
like a knell. It is the record of sharpest sorrows and the prophecy of direst ills.
An abyss of misery yawns in that word forsaken. Forsaken by one who pledges his honor!
Forsaken by a friend so long tried and trusted! Forsaken by a dear relative! Forsaken
by father and mother! Forsaken by all! This is woe indeed, and yet it may be patiently
born if the LORD will take us up.
But what must it be to feel forsaken of God? Think of that bitterest of cries, "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Have we ever in any degree tasted the
wormwood and the gall of "forsaken" in that sense? If so, let us beseech
our LORD to save us from any repetition of so unspeakable a sorrow. Oh, that such
darkness may never return! Men in malice said of a saint, "God hath forsaken
him; persecute and take him." But it was always false. The LORD's loving favor
shall compel our cruel foes to eat their own words or, at least, to hold their tongues.
The reverse of all this is that superlative word Hephzibah "the LORD delighteth
in thee." This turns weeping into dancing. Let those who dreamed that they were
forsaken hear the LORD say, "I will never leave thee nor forsake thee."