Two learned
doctors are angrily discussing the nature of food, and allowing their meal to
lie untasted, while a simple countryman is eating as heartily as he can of that
which is set before him. The religious world is full of quibblers, critics, and skeptics, who, like the doctors, fight over Christianity without profit either
to themselves or others; those are far happier who imitate the farmer and feed
upon the Word of God, which is the true food of the soul. Luther’s prayer was,
“From nice questions the Lord deliver us.” Questioning with honesty and candor
is not to be condemned, when the object is to “prove all things, and hold fast
that which is good;” but to treat revelation as if it were a football to be
kicked from man to man is irreverence, if not worse. Seek the true faith, by
all manner of means, but do not spend a whole life in finding it, lest you be
like a workman who wastes the whole day in looking for his tools. Hear the true
Word of God; lay hold upon it, and spend your days not in raising hard
questions, but in feasting upon precious truth.
Charles
Spurgeon
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