thirsty?
I just finished reading "Hudson Taylor's Spiritual Secret." It's a book about a missionary to China during the late 1800s, and his exercise of faith in God.
I am posting an excerpt here of a letter he wrote to his sister. I found it very encouraging and I hope you also will want to dive deeper with Father.
“And now I have the very passage for you, and God has so blessed it to my own soul! John 7:37 – 39 – ‘If any man thirst, let him come unto ME and drink.’ Who does not thirst? Who has not mind-thirsts, heart-thirsts, soul-thirsts, or body-thirsts? Well, no matter which, or whether I have them all – ‘Come unto me and’ remain thirsty? Ah no! ‘Come unto me and drink.’
“What, can Jesus meet my need? Yes, and more than meet it. No matter how intricate my path, how difficult my service; no matter how sad my bereavement, how far away my loved ones; no matter how helpless I am, how deep are my soul-yearnings – Jesus can meet all, all, and more than meet. He not only promises me rest – ah, how welcome that would be, were it all, and what an all that one word embraces! He not only promises me drink to alleviate my thirst. No, better than that! ‘He who trusts Me in this matter (who believeth on Me, takes Me at My word) out of him shall flow…’
“Can it be? Can the dry and thirsty one not only be refreshed – the parched soil moistened, the arid places cooled – but the land be so saturated that springs well up and streams flow down from it? Even so! And not mere mountain-torrents, full while the rain lasts, then dry again…but, ‘from within him shall flow rivers’ – rivers like the mighty Yangtze, ever deep ever full. In times of drought brooks may fail, often do, canals may be pumped dry, often are, but the Yangtze never. Always a mighty stream, always flowing deep and irresistible!
‘Come unto me and drink,’…Not, come and take a hasty draught; not, come and slightly alleviate, or for a short time remove one’s thirst. No! ‘drink’ or ‘be drinking’ constantly, habitually. The cause of thirst may be irremediable. One coming, one drinking may refresh and comfort: but we are to be ever coming, ever drinking. No fear of emptying the fountain or exhausting the river”
pp. 172-173.
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