Unless otherwise stated all scriptural quotations are our own renderings
based upon the King James Version.
(1) THE inspired Psalmist in loftiest strains of devotion and fervor puts into the hearts and minds
of God's consecrated people sentiments of faith and trust and love and adoration to God, who is
worthy of all praise. While many of these sentiments were based upon his own checkered
experience, they were uttered under divine inspiration for the instruction and edification specially
of the true spiritual Israel of God.
(2) Thus Yahweh himself would indicate to us the sentiments of fervent devotion to him that
should fill our hearts; and in this view of the matter we see how closely he would draw us to
himself in love and faith and childlike confidence. While reason and common sense have their
rightful place and are indispensable to a religious life, the soul that never mounts upon the wings
of holy and fervent emotion, that is never stirred to its depths by a sense of the divine goodness
and beneficence, has never yet experienced the blessedness of the relation of sonship. A true son
of a beloved and approving father naturally experiences the fervor of tender emotion. Especially
is this so of a true son of God who recognizes in his heavenly Father the perfection of every
virtue, the crowning glory of all excellence, and who lives in close communion and fellowship
with him and has the constant witness in himself of his love and approval.
(3) Ah, those were no empty words of our blessed Lord Jesus when he said, -- "The Father
himself loves you." "If a man loves me, he will keep my word. My Father will love him, and we
will come to him, and make our home with him." (John 16:27; 14:23.) It is under such conditions
that all those holy emotions of love, tenderness, faith, gratitude and praise fill to the brim our cup
of joy; and with holy ecstasy we sing, "My cup runs over. Surely goodness and lovingkindness
shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in Yahweh's house forever." -- Psalm 23:5,6.
(4) How full of the melody of fervent emotion, of grateful praise, and of loving confidence are
the inspired psalms! They bid our hearts rejoice and our tongues be glad, and they show us how,
by meditating on his word and obeying his precepts, to "Rejoice in Yahweh always," and "in
everything give thanks." -- Philippians 4:4; 1 Thessalonians 5:18.
(5) It was in view of Yahweh's providences and of his many deliverances from the power of his
enemies, and of the uniform kindness and mercy of God as he meditated upon them, that David
exclaimed, "Yahweh is my light and my salvation: whom shall I fear? Yahweh is the strength of
my life: of whom shall I be afraid?" (Psalm 27:1) This consolation, variously expressed
throughout the Scriptures, comes with all its blessed potency in our times of greatest need: the
more desperate and determined the foes we encounter and the more fierce the conflict with the
powers of darkness, the more glorious is the deliverance and the clearer are the manifestations of
divine grace. And, as a consequence, faith takes deeper root, and, with renewed confidence and
assurance, lays hold upon all the precious promises of God; and love and gratitude well up from
hearts refreshed with an increased sense of the divine favor and blessing.
(6) So it was with David; and so it is with God's faithful people who lead a life of prayer and
faith and close fellowship with God. Such fellowship with God in adversity and in prosperity
naturally tends more and more to center the heart's affections and desires in God, until the one
thing supremely desired and sought after is that expressed by the Psalmist -- to continually dwell
in the house of Yahweh, to behold the beauty of Yahweh and to inquire in his temple. -- Psalm
27:4.
(7) To dwell continually in the house of Yahweh signifies to be continually counted worthy and
to be recognized of God as a member of his Church, "whose house are we if we hold fast the
confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end." (Hebrews 3:6.) These, who hold fast
their faith, and by faith overcome the allurements and temptations of the world, dying daily unto
its spirit, hopes and ambitions, and living more and more unto God -- these shall indeed dwell in
the house of Yahweh, in his holy, spiritual temple, his Church, forever. In Yahweh's house there
will be, not only the bride of Jesus, the King, but many others who will make up the Royal Family.
(Psalm 45) Now in this age, Yahweh's people dwell in the holy place of consecration and
adoption; and the Lord says to his people at the end of this age, "He who endures to the end will
be saved." (Matthew 24:13) First he exalts his joint-heirs to reign as co-regents with him and then
rewards others who receive different honors in the Royal House of Yahweh. -- Romans 8:17;
Revelation 7.
(8) "To behold the beauty of Yahweh" is to behold the beauty of holiness, to have this image of
his glory ever before the mind's eye as our inspiration, our light, our guide, our pattern and our
chief joy. Here indeed is the Christian's secret of a happy life -- happy in the midst of whatever
may come to him of affliction or pain or loss or perplexity or whatever experiences come through
the checkered scenes of this present life. To behold the beauty of Yahweh really is only possible
to those who dwell in his house; for only to such does he reveal himself "the chiefest among ten
thousand" and "the one altogether lovely." (Song of Solomon 5:10,16) Such only know how to
appreciate the beauty of his holiness; such only can delight themselves in Yahweh and in the
continual meditation of his law, and in conforming their lives to it. -- Psalm 1:2; 16:3; 119:24.
(10) "To inquire in his temple" signifies that those who are truly of Yahweh's house are inquirers,
students of his holy law and testimony, and that their delight is in so doing. The language of their
hearts is, "Oh, how love I your law; it is my meditation all the day." (Psalm 119:97) "I have food
to eat that you [who are of the world] do not know of;" for "It is my delight to do your will, O
God." -- John 4:32; Psalm 40:8.
(11) This one desire is the sum and substance of the Christian's ambition as more and more he
becomes less conformed to world and transformed to the will of God. (Romans 12:2) Let us more
and more seek after it and conform to it; for in so doing Christian courage, boldness, fortitude and
zeal will be greatly multiplied. (2 Peter 1:5-8) These all are not only born of faith, but they
increase and grow strong by a living faith developed and strengthened by the lessons of
experience.
(12) Courage, born of faith and strengthened by endurance, cries with humble boldness in the
midst of the deepest darkness of the most perplexing difficulties, and in the midst of the wildest
storms and most threatening dangers, "Yahweh is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?
Yahweh is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?" -- Psalm 27:1.
(13) The Apostle Paul surely caught this blessed inspiration when he said, "Rejoice in Yahweh
alway; and again I say rejoice....Be careful for nothing; but in every thing, by prayer and
supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God." (Philippians 4:4,6)
Mark how all through the Word of God we are taught, not only to be sober, vigilant, diligent,
thoughtful, prayerful, and always abounding in the work of Yahweh through whatsoever it may
bring of toil or care or reproach or persecution, but in the midst of any or all of these experiences
we are taught to be happy and to be filled with the inspiration of a holy joy. (1 Corinthians 15:58)
And not only are we counseled to be joyous, but the manner of life which naturally produces this
joy is pointed out to us. When we come into Yahweh's family we enter a new and holy
atmosphere which those only can realize and appreciate who have the one desire above referred to
paramount to every other, viz., -- to be counted worthy to abide continually in the house of
Yahweh.
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