Meditation Moments 20: "FORGETTING THE PAST!"
God bless you! We greet you again with the old-time greeting:
The Lord bless you and make you a blessing and use you in
His Service. We want to say from all of us that we do wish
you a wonderful New Year and that you will have a sweet
fresh revelation of the Lord Jesus Christ in your soul,
and that God's blessings shall attend you every step of
the way! You surely have our prayers.
Now as we stand before the portals of the New Year, we don't
know what's in store for us, what it's going to bring! And
I'm glad of that, aren't you? Glad we can't pull aside the
curtains of the future and see what is in store!
But there's one thing we do know, and this is that we can
leave behind the past with all of its cares and frets and
its pains and heartaches and mistakes and blunders. Isn't
it wonderful! -- Forever in the past, beyond our recall.
We can't undo one single act and we can't un-say a word
that we have said.
All that the past year holds of wrong or right, this regret
or sorrow is in the hand of God's Almighty love! But thank
God, if we truly trust the Lord Jesus Christ, if we have
completely yielded all into His hands, He can bring honey
out of the rock and sweet waters out of the bitter desert
of the past, no matter what it was.
He can give you in this New Year beauty for ashes and the
garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness, joy of the
morning for the woe of the night! All this is promised in
His Word, and how we delight to know that He'll do this!
-- That we are His! (Isaiah 61:3)
And trusting Him, he says that "All things work together
for good to them that love the Lord, to them that are called
according to His purpose!" So all of this in the past
-- if you're truly yielded, if you're utterly surrendered,
if you're truly His child -- all this to "them that
love the Lord, who are called according to His purpose"
-- He can make it all work out for good!
And all the rest of that is in the past, save for the beautiful
memories that will linger sweet and tender. There are some
wonderful memories of last year. But the principle thought
we want to bring to your heart is that this past is gone
now! I have nothing at all to do with it!
It was mine, but now it is God's, because we commit it into
His hands: Every day of the last year is past beyond our
reach and we should leave it there! God has them in His
keeping and we should not go back and be tormented with
regrets or let the Devil put any condemnation upon us about
anything in the past. Susan Coolidge wrote these words,
The past is now a part of forever,
Bound up in a sheath which God holds tight.
With glad days and sad days
And bad days which never
Shall visit us more
With their bloom or their blight,
Their fullness of sunshine
Or sorrowful night.
-- Yet how many people claim they're trusting God, yet they
worry about the past, the blots and stains on the pages
of the past! They never rejoice in the fullness of God,
in that He has said that He has blotted them out. (Isaiah
43:25)
If you're a Child of God and came to Him repentant and confessing
about any of those mistakes that you made this last year,
and you ask forgiveness, then you certainly mustn't go picking
around in the past and bringing out again things that the
Lord has covered with His precious Blood, covered with the
Sacrifice of Calvary!
Because He says of your past sin, "I will remember
them against you no more!" God doesn't even remember
them, why should you? -- Much less worry about them! But
oh, how the Devil loves to accuse the saints of God about
their past, because he wants to keep them under condemnation!
Now you don't want the Devil to have victory in this matter,
do you? You don't want to yield to him in this thing, so
that he can have you continually under condemnation when
God says,
"There is therefore now no condemnation to them that
are in Christ Jesus." When you keep going back and
picking out in the past and regretting this and that and
weeping over things that you can't help, just remember that
Verse in Isaiah 1:18,
"Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white
as snow, and though they be red like crimson, they shall
be as wool." -- Oh, there are wonderful promises along
that line! -- Sins are all washed away "Down at the
Cross where the Savior Died." -- You know, that, to
me, is one of the most wonderful old songs, "Down at
the Cross where the Savior Died," and I know it brings
back memories to you.
Someone has written this poem, and I can't say that I agree
with them:
If I could only find
The road to yesterday
I'd ease my heart of many a load
That burdens me today.
Recall the words so harsh, unkind,
Kiss clean the stabs I made when blind,
Plant love for hate --
If I could find the road to yesterday.
I'd write the page with cleaner pen
And wipe out yesterdays,
Repent and turn and walk again
The road to yesterday.
With wiser heart I would retrace
The stains of sin, and wrong efface.
My tortured soul seeks means of grace
To re-live yesterday.
Now as I said, it's beautiful poetry, there's fine rhythm
there and beautiful phraseology! But I couldn't agree with
that because I don't want to find the path to yesterday!
-- And surely you don't! It says, "I'd write the page
with cleaner pen and wipe out yesterdays!"
But you can't wipe out anything! Only God can cover, and
when He sees you through the Blood of Calvary, that is what
makes a difference! It isn't God's way to go back and retrace
the past: You can't re-live that past, and who wants to
return to the past when the future is so bright with wonderful
promises?
When I think about this year, I think about all the promises
of God that we can claim, and how bright the picture can
be! What wonderful things can happen: Miracles of faith
because His Word is unchanging! -- God's Word is still there
for us to grasp, His personal promises to us!
And with all of those promises there, how can we want to
go back to the past, retrace the past, and "walk again
the road to yesterday" as the well-versed poem said?
The cross of Christ with outstretched arms stands blocking
the way to the past. And because of the penalty paid for
your sins, the Bible says, "Forgetting those things
which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which
are before,
"I press toward the mark for the prize of the high
calling of God in Christ Jesus." -- That's Philippians
3:13 and 14.
Forget those things which are behind! Forget them! Press
on toward the mark for the prize! You can't make the sands
in the hour-glass run backwards, and if you had the wealth
of the whole World you can't retrace the path to the yesterdays,
as the poem said, you can't go back!
There is no redemptive price for that past, but there is
redemption for you! He's redeemed you and you're clean from
all the past! What a pity if we carry the burden of the
past when the Lord paid such a price to lift that burden
and set us free! And what is that price?
"He paid it all, all to Him I owe" -- I think
there are no more beautiful words than the words of the
little song, "For All My Sin." If you're truly
repentant, surely this poem or the words of this song will
touch your heart, confessing your sins to Him and yielding
your life fully in His hands.
With one strike of His nail-pierced hands, He wipes out
all that awful guilt by the Cross of Calvary:
It was His love for me
That nailed Him to the tree
To die in agony
For all my sin.
For my own guilt and blame
The Great Redeemer came,
Willing to bear the shame
Of all my sin.
Oh what a Savior is mine
In Him God's mercies combine
His love can never decline
And He loves me.
To Calvary's Hill one day
The Lord was led away
None else the price could pay
For all my sin.
He on the Cross was slain,
Yielding His life in pain
And He felt the bitter strain
For all my sin.
Was ever love so strong?
Was ever crime so wrong
When Jesus suffered long
For all my sin?
He saw my greatest need,
Became my Friend in deed,
Through Him I have been freed
Of all my sin.
Wonderful, wonderful! Whosoever will may come to that very
Cross of Calvary and leave his sins there.
Just one little drop of that blood can cleanse the blackest
past! I can remember some time ago when we were holding
a meeting in Roseville in California, a young man came into
the service -- The Hall was on the main street in Roseville
-- and he was just out of Folsom Penitentiary.
And he just couldn't believe it was so easy as that, that
God would cleanse his past, just on his confession of sin
and his asking the Lord to come in his heart and his taking
Jesus as Savior -- it was so hard for him to believe.
He kept talking about all his sinning! It was just too great
a thing to believe that God could cleanse that awful past,
but that night he wept openly and gave his heart to God
and confessed that Jesus Christ is his Savior.
Christ lifted that load and forgave that man who had been
a criminal: cleansed his heart and gave him a freedom he'd
never known. I saw him often after that when he came to
visit.
He could never get through talking about the mercy of God
and how God had rid him of the torment of the past, and
he would repeat some of the words: "My yesterdays so
filled with guilt and shame, my yesterdays are gone, O praise
His Name!"
I wonder if there is anything more wonderful than the miracle
of forgiveness? Is there? Is there anything more glorious
than that? -- The assurance of having your sins forgiven,
that you're clean? It's for all of us!
He died for all of us! All you have to do is just take it,
receive Him as your Savior, accept His forgiveness. Come
confessing your sin.
"He is faithful and just to forgive your sin and to
cleanse you from all unrighteousness." -- All unrighteousness!
He cannot fail His Word and He has promised this. "Hath
He not said it and will He not also do it?" God bless
you.