Evening Meditation by Charles Spurgeon
"And be not conformed to this world."—Romans 12:2.
If a
Christian can by possibility be saved while he conforms to this world,
at any rate it must be so as by fire. Such a bare salvation is almost as
much to be dreaded as desired. Reader, would you wish to leave this
world in the darkness of a desponding death bed, and enter heaven as a
shipwrecked mariner climbs the rocks of his native country? then be
worldly; be mixed up with Mammonites, and refuse to go without the camp
bearing Christ's reproach. But would you have a heaven below as well as a
heaven above? Would you comprehend with all saints what are the heights
and depths, and know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge? Would
you receive an abundant entrance into the joy of your Lord? Then come ye
out from among them, and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean
thing. Would you attain the full assurance of faith? you cannot gain it
while you commune with sinners. Would you flame with vehement love? your
love will be damped by the drenchings of godless society. You cannot
become a great Christian—you may be a babe in grace, but you never can
be a perfect man in Christ Jesus while you yield yourself to the worldly
maxims and modes of business of men of the world. It is ill for an heir
of heaven to be a great friend with the heirs of hell. It has a bad
look when a courtier is too intimate with his king's enemies. Even small
inconsistencies are dangerous. Little thorns make great blisters,
little moths destroy fine garments, and little frivolities and little
rogueries will rob religion of a thousand joys. O professor, too little
separated from sinners, you know not what you lose by your conformity to
the world. It cuts the tendons of your strength, and makes you creep
where you ought to run. Then, for your own comfort's sake, and for the
sake of your growth in grace, if you be a Christian, be a Christian, and
be a marked and distinct one.
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