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GLASGOW, Sept 1st, 1888.
MY DEAR MISS
MACPHUN,We are to 'rejoice with those that do rejoice,' as well as
to sympathise with those that weep, and so I wish to-day to join with you in
praises and thanks. You have been getting much to gladden you, even in that one
case you so kindly send me the details of. Yours is the joy of Luke 15:7,
something peculiarly heavenly in it; and it cannot fail to help you in your
work, for 'the joy of the Lord is your strength.'
We are always glad to
hear of you and from you. Your Zenana work interests us all. The other evening
(it was a Wednesday prayer-meeting) it was proposed to have special prayer for
all who had gone out from among us to labour among the heathen and the Jews,
and you were not forgotten in these prayers. Our Sabbath-school has been
blessed since the beginning of the year in several ways, specially in the case
of the older lads in the classes, some of them among the roughest and least
likely. The Lord likes to remind us that 'His arm is not shortened that it
cannot save, nor His ear heavy that it cannot hear,' and that the Cross has not
lost its power for salvation. Do you not more and more find that the Holy
Spirit uses nothing so much as the truth concerning the atoning blood for
drawing souls? He said long ago, 'If I be lifted up, I will draw all men unto
me,' and we at home here, as well as you abroad, are ourselves blessed every
time we look to the Brazen Serpent, and are made from time to time to rejoice
in seeing the Holy Spirit fixing the eye of the awakened sinner on this great
sight!
I daresay I need not say 'Pray for us,' for I am sure you do. Nor
need you wonder that we are covetous of prayer on our behalf, for was not Paul
insatiable in this respect? always in his Epistles telling his friends how he
prayed for them and how he expected them to 'continue in prayer and watch in
the same with thanksgiving,' adding now and then, 'withal praying also for us,
that God would open unto us a door of utterance, to speak the mystery of
Christ.'
My daughters are all well, and join with me in sending kindest
regards.
Yours truly in the Lord,
ANDREW
A. BONAR.
Transcribed from Reminiscences of Andrew A.Bonar D.D.
first published
LONDON, HODDER AND STOUGHTON,
27 Paternoster
Row
1895
HTML transcription files copyright © 2001-2006.
Jane Newble
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August 2001