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<title>Morning Readings by Octavius Winslow</title>
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April09 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220409</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">APRIL 9. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;He shall take of mine, and shall show it unto you.&quot; John 
    16:15 </p>
    <p align="justify">The Spirit is the Great Conveyancer of Christ to the 
    soul. Placing Himself between the Fountain and the believer, He purposes to 
    convey all blessing, to supply all need, by taking the things of Christ's 
    mediatorial fulness, and bringing them into our blest and holy experience. 
    Having gone before to prepare the soul for the blessing, by discovering its 
    poverty of state, and creating its poverty of spirit, He now takes of the 
    atoning blood and applies it to the conscience; the justifying 
    righteousness, and wraps it around the soul; the sanctifying grace, and 
    conducts it into the heart. In a word, He reveals Jesus to the mind, 
    testifies of Christ to the soul- how divine He is, therefore able to save; 
    how loving He is, therefore as willing as He is able; how gracious He is, 
    therefore stooping to our lowest circumstance; how tender He is, therefore 
    trampling not upon our weak faith, nor despising our little grace; how 
    sympathizing He is, therefore turning not away His ear, and withdrawing not 
    His heart from our tale of sorrow or our burden of grief. Oh, what a 
    Glorifier of Christ is the Divine Spirit! All that we truly know of Jesus, 
    all that we have inwardly experienced of His grace, has been of His teaching 
    and conveyance. He has conducted us to the Fountain- He has led us to the 
    robing-chamber of the King- He has anointed us with the &quot;oil of gladness,&quot;- 
    He has caused our &quot;garments to smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia; out of 
    the ivory palaces,&quot;- He has opened the treasury, taking of the precious, 
    glorious things of a precious, glorious Christ, spreading them out in all 
    their vastness, suitableness, and freeness before our longing eye. How 
    often, when the soul has hungered, He has broken up to us the bread that 
    came down from heaven! when it has thirsted, He has smitten the rock, and 
    satiated us with its life-giving stream! How often, when guilt has 
    distressed us, He has sprinkled anew the peace-speaking blood; and when 
    sorrow has oppressed, and difficulties have embarrassed, and dependences 
    have failed, and resources have become exhausted, and creatures most deeply 
    loved have most deeply wounded us, He, the tender, loving Comforter, He, the 
    blessed Teacher, He, the great Glorifier of Jesus, has given to us some new 
    and appropriate and precious view of our Immanuel; and in a moment the storm 
    has passed, the waves have stilled, and peace, serenity, and joy have shed 
    their luster on the soul. One glimpse of Jesus in deep tribulation, one 
    glance in heart-rending bereavement, one discovery of His countenance when 
    all is dark, and dreary, and desolate, one surprisal of His love when the 
    heart sinks into loneliness, one touch of His cross when it is depressed, 
    and bowed, and broken by sin- oh, it is as though heaven had expanded its 
    gates, and we had passed within, where neither tribulation, nor bereavement, 
    nor darkness, nor loneliness, nor sin, is known any more forever! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April08 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220408</guid>
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     <p align="justify">APRIL 8. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;This is my infirmity.&quot; Psalm 77:10. </p>
    <p align="justify">The infirmities of the believer are as varied as they are 
    numerous. Some are weak in faith, and are always questioning their interest 
    in Christ. Some, superficial in knowledge, and shallow in experience, are 
    ever exposed to the crudities of error and to the assaults of temptation. 
    Some are slow travelers in the divine life, and are always in the rear; 
    while yet others are often ready to halt altogether. Then there are others 
    who groan beneath the burden of bodily infirmity, exerting a morbid 
    influence upon their spiritual experience. A nervous temperament-&nbsp; a 
    state of perpetual depression and despondency- the constant corrodings of 
    mental disquietude- physical ailment- imaginary forebodings- a facile 
    yielding to temptation- petulance of spirit- unguardedness of speech- gloomy 
    interpretations of providence- an eye that only views the dark hues of the 
    cloud, the somber shadings of the picture. Ah! from this dismal catalogue 
    how many, making their selection, may exclaim, &quot;This is my infirmity.&quot; But 
    be that infirmity what it may, let it endear to our hearts the grace and 
    sympathy of Him who for our sake was encompassed with infirmity, that He 
    might have compassion upon those who are alike begirt. All the fulness of 
    grace that is in Jesus is for that single infirmity over which you sigh. </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April07 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220407</guid>
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     <p align="justify">APRIL 7. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I the Lord search the heart.&quot; Jeremiah 17:10. </p>
    <p align="justify">Solemn as is this view of the Divine character, the 
    believing mind finds in it sweet and hallowed repose. What more consolatory 
    truth in some of the most trying positions of a child of God than this- the 
    Lord knows the heart. The world condemns, and the saints judge, but God 
    knows the heart. And to those who have been led into deep discoveries of the 
    heart's hidden evil, to whom have been made startling and distressing 
    unveilings, how precious is this character of God- &quot;He that searches the 
    heart!&quot; Is there a single recess of our hearts we would veil from His 
    penetrating glance? Is there a corruption we would hide from His view? Is 
    there an evil of which we would have Him ignorant? Oh no! Mournful and 
    humiliating as is the spectacle, we would throw open every door, and uplift 
    every window, and invite and urge His scrutiny and inspection, making no 
    concealments, and indulging in no reserves, and framing no excuses when 
    dealing with the great Searcher of hearts, exclaiming, &quot;Search me, O God, 
    and know my heart; try me, and know my thoughts; and see if there be any 
    wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.&quot; And while the Lord is 
    thus acquainted with the evil of our hearts, He most graciously conceals 
    that evil from the eyes of others. He seems to say, by His benevolent 
    conduct, &quot;I see my child's infirmity,&quot;- then, covering it with His hand, 
    exclaims- &quot;but no other eye shall see it, but my own!&quot; Oh, the touching 
    tenderness, the loving-kindness of our God! Knowing, as He does, all the 
    evil of our nature, He yet veils that evil from human eye, that others may 
    not despise us as we often despise ourselves. Who but God could know it? who 
    but God would conceal it? And how blessed, too, to remember that while God 
    knows all the evil, He is as intimately acquainted with all the good that is 
    in the hearts of His people! He knows all that His Spirit has implanted, 
    that His grace has wrought. Oh encouraging truth! That spark of love, faint 
    and flickering- that pulsation of life, low and tremulous- that touch of 
    faith, feeble and hesitating- that groan, that sigh, that low thought of 
    self that leads a man to seek the shade- that self-abasement that places his 
    mouth in the dust, oh, not one of these sacred emotions is unseen, unnoticed 
    by God. His eye ever rests with infinite complaisance and delight on His own 
    image in the renewed soul. Listen to His language to David: &quot;Forasmuch as it 
    was in your heart to build a house for my name, you did well, in that it was 
    in your heart.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April06 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220406</guid>
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     <p align="justify">APRIL 6. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;But even the very hairs of your head are all numbered.&quot; 
    Luke 12:7. </p>
    <p align="justify">You know so little of God, my reader, because you live at 
    such a distance from God; you have so little transaction with Him- so little 
    confession of sin, so little searching of your own conscience, so little 
    probing of your own heart, so little dealing with Him in the blood and 
    righteousness of Christ, so little transaction with Him in the little things 
    of life. You deal with God in great matters; you take great trials to God, 
    great perplexities, great needs; but in the minutiae of each day's history, 
    in what are called the little things of life, you have no dealings with God 
    whatever; and consequently you know so little of the love, so little of the 
    wisdom, so little of the glory, of this glorious covenant God and reconciled 
    Father. <br>
    I tell you, the man who lives with God in little matters, who walks with God 
    in the minutiae of his life, is the man who becomes the best acquainted with 
    God- with His character, His faithfulness, His love. To meet God in my daily 
    trials, to take to Him the trials of my calling, the trials of my church, 
    the trials of my family, the trials of my own heart- to take to Him that 
    which brings the shade upon my brow, that rends the sigh from my heart- to 
    remember it is not too trivial to take to God- above all, to take to Him the 
    least taint upon the conscience, the slightest pressure of sin upon the 
    heart, the softest conviction of departure from God- to take it to Him, and 
    confess it at the foot of the cross, with the hand of faith upon the 
    bleeding sacrifice- oh! these are the paths in which a man becomes 
    intimately and closely acquainted with God! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April05 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220405</guid>
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     <p align="justify">APRIL 5. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;If God be for us, who can be against us?&quot; Romans 8:31.
    </p>
    <p align="justify">With such a Father, such a Friend, and such a Comforter, 
    who can wage a successful hostility against the saints of God? God Himself 
    cannot be against us, even when the clouds of His providence appear the most 
    lowering, and His strokes are felt to be the most severe. &quot;Though He slay 
    me, yet will I trust in Him.&quot; The law cannot be against us; for the 
    Law-fulfiller has, by His obedience, magnified and made it honorable. Divine 
    justice cannot be against us; for Jesus has, in our stead, met its demands, 
    and His resurrection is a full discharge of all its claims. Nor sin, nor 
    Satan, nor men, nor suffering, nor death, can be really or successfully 
    against us, since the condemnation of sin is removed, and Satan is 
    vanquished, and the ungodly are restrained, and suffering works for good, 
    and the sting of death is taken away. &quot;If God be for us, who can be against 
    us?&quot; With such a Being on our side, whom shall we fear? We will fear nothing 
    but the disobedience that grieves, and the sin that offends Him. Fearing 
    this, we need fear nothing else. &quot;God is our refuge and strength, a very 
    present help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear.&quot; Listen once more to 
    His wondrous words: &quot;Fear not; for I am with you: do not be dismayed; for I 
    am your God: I will strengthen you; yes, I will help you; yes, I will uphold 
    you with the right hand of my righteousness.&quot; <br>
    Would we always have God for us? Then let us aim to be for God. God deals 
    with us His creatures by an equitable rule. &quot;The ways of the Lord are 
    equal.&quot; &quot;If you walk contrary unto me, their will I walk contrary unto you.&quot; 
    Is not God for you? Has He not always, since He manifested Himself to you as 
    your covenant God, been on your side? Has He ever been a wilderness to you, 
    a land of darkness? Has He, in any instance, been unkind, unfriendly, 
    unfaithful? Never. Then be for God- decidedly, wholly, uncompromisingly for 
    God. Your heart for God, your talents for God, your rank for God, your 
    property for God, your influence for God, your all for God; a holy 
    unreserved consecration to Him, all whose love, all whose grace, all whose 
    perfections, all whose heaven of glory is for you. Trembling Christian! God 
    is on your side; and &quot;if God be for us, who can be against us?&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April04 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220404</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">APRIL 4. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they 
    come?&quot; 1 Cor. 15:35 </p>
    <p align="justify">The identical body that was sown, yet so changed, so 
    spiritualized, so glorified, so immortalized, as to rival in beauty the 
    highest form of spirit, while it shall resemble, in its fashion, the 
    glorious body of Christ Himself. We can form but a faint conception, even 
    from the glowing representations of the apostle, of the glory of the raised 
    body of the just. But this we know, it will be in every respect a structure 
    worthy of the perfected soul that will inhabit it. Now 'the body' is the 
    antagonist, and not the auxiliary of 'the soul'- its clog, its prison, its 
    foe. The moment that Jesus condescends to &quot;grace this mean abode&quot; with His 
    indwelling presence, there commences that fierce and harassing conflict 
    between holiness and sin, which so often wrings the bitter cry from the 
    believer, &quot;Oh wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of 
    this death?&quot; Oh, what a cumbrance is this body of sin! Its corruptions, its 
    infirmities, its weaknesses, its ailments, its diseases, all conspire to 
    render it the tyrant of the soul, if grace does not keep it under, and bring 
    it into subjection as its slave. How often, when the mind would pursue its 
    favorite study, the wearied and over-tasked body enfeebles it! How often, 
    when the spirit would expatiate and soar in its contemplations of, and in 
    its communings with, God, the inferior nature detains it by its weight, or 
    occupies it with its needs! How often, when the soul thirsts for divine 
    knowledge, and the heart pants for holiness, its highest aspirations and its 
    strongest efforts are discouraged and thwarted by the clinging infirmities 
    of a corrupt and suffering humanity! <br>
    Not so will it be in the morning of the resurrection. &quot;Then shall this 
    corruptible put on incorruption, and this mortal shall put on immortality.&quot; 
    Mysterious and glorious change! &quot;In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at 
    the last trump,&quot; the dead in Christ shall awake from their long sleep, and 
    spring from their tombs into a blissful immortality. Oh, how altered! oh, 
    how transformed! oh, how changed! &quot;Sown a natural body, it is raised a 
    spiritual body.&quot; &quot;A spiritual body!&quot; Who can imagine, who describe it? What 
    anatomy can explain its mysteries? What pencil can paint its beauties! &quot;A 
    spiritual body!&quot; All the remains, all the vestiges of corrupt matter passed 
    away. &quot;A spiritual body!&quot; So regenerated, so sanctified, so etherealized, so 
    invested with the high and glorious attributes of spirit, yet retaining the 
    &quot;form and pressure&quot; of matter; that now sympathizing and blending with the 
    soul in its high employment of obeying the will and chanting the praises of 
    God, it shall rise with it in its lofty soarings, and accompany and aid it 
    in its deep researches in the hidden and sublime mysteries of eternity. </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April03 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220403</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">APRIL 3. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Do not be deceived; God is not mocked: for whatever a 
    man sows, that shall he also reap. For he that sows to his flesh shall of 
    the flesh reap corruption; but he that sows to the Spirit shall of the 
    Spirit reap life everlasting.&quot; Galatians 6:7-8 </p>
    <p align="justify">It is a self-evident truth, that there can be no harvest 
    where no seed has been sown. But the fact that there is coming a moral 
    harvest in each individual life- a future reaping of present sowing- is a 
    truth equally demonstrable. The life that now is, is the seed-time of a life 
    that is to come. The future of human destiny derives all its complexion and 
    its form from the present of human character. The spring does not more 
    certainly deepen into summer- nor the summer fade into autumn- nor the 
    autumn pale into winter- nor the winter bloom again into spring, than does 
    our present probation merge into our future destiny, carrying with it its 
    fixed principles, its unchanged habits, and its tremendous account. <br>
    And what, my dear reader, are you sowing? I wish this question to have all 
    the earnestness and force of a personal appeal. With what seed, again I ask, 
    are you sowing for the future? If you are unconverted, nothing is more true 
    than that you are sowing to the flesh! You may be rigidly moral, deeply 
    intellectual, profoundly learned, exquisitely refined, outwardly religious, 
    generous, and amiable, and yet all the while you are but sowing to the 
    flesh, and not to the Spirit. &quot;That which is born of the flesh is flesh,&quot; 
    and nothing but flesh. &quot;That which is born of the Spirit is spirit,&quot; it is 
    spiritual and divine, heavenly and holy; and, what is more, it is 
    imperishable. No lowly seed of divine truth, or grace, love, or service, 
    sown in this present life of suffering and toil, shall ever be lost. All 
    other things shall perish- the world with its loveliness and love, the 
    &quot;lust, of the flesh, and the lust of the eye, and the pride of life,&quot; all 
    shall pass away and vanish; but not one seed of grace implanted in the heart 
    of man by the Holy Spirit shall ever perish. The Divine image once restored 
    to the soul shall never more be obliterated. Nothing done by Jesus, or for 
    Jesus- no sin laid down, no cross taken up, no holiness cultivated, no labor 
    wrought, no service done, no cup of cold water given- nothing, the fruit of 
    love to God and of faith in Jesus Christ, shall ever be lost. Oh, who does 
    not earnestly desire that in his heart and life may be sowing the good 
    incorruptible seed, that shall, though long buried and concealed, yield a 
    golden harvest of future joy, bliss, and glory? <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April02 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220402</guid>
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     <p align="justify">APRIL 2. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;There is a friend that sticks closer than a brother.&quot; 
    Proverbs 28:24. </p>
    <p align="justify">The power of human sympathy is amazing, if it leads the 
    heart to Christ. It is paralyzed, if it leads only to ourselves. Oh, how 
    feeble and inadequate are we to administer to a diseased mind, to heal a&nbsp; 
    broken heart, to strengthen the feeble hand, and to confirm the trembling 
    knees! Our mute sympathy, our prayerful silence, is often the best exponent 
    of our affection, and the most effectual expression of our aid. But if, 
    taking the object of our solicitude by the hand, we gently lead him to God- 
    if we conduct him to Jesus, portraying to his view the depth of His love, 
    the perfection of His atoning work, the sufficiency of His grace, His 
    readiness to pardon, and His power to save, the exquisite sensibility of His 
    nature, and thus His perfect sympathy with every human sorrow; we have then 
    most truly and most effectually soothed the sorrow, stanched the wound, and 
    strengthened the hand in God. <br>
    There is no sympathy- even as there is no love, no gentleness, no 
    tenderness, no patience- like Christ's. Oh how sweet, how encouraging, to 
    know, that in all my afflictions He is afflicted; that in all my temptations 
    He is tempted; that in all my assaults He is assailed; that in all my joys 
    He rejoices- that He weeps when I weep, sighs when I sigh, suffers when I 
    suffer, rejoices when I rejoice. May this truth endear Him to our souls! May 
    it constrain us to unveil our whole heart to Him, in the fullest confidence 
    of the closest, most sacred, and precious friendship. May it urge us to do 
    those things always which are most pleasing in His sight. Beloved, never 
    forget- and let these words linger upon your ear, as the echoes of music 
    that never die- in all your sorrows, in all your trials, in all your needs, 
    in all your assaults, in all your conscious wanderings, in life, in death, 
    and at the day of judgment- you possess a friend that sticks closer than a 
    brother! That friend is- Jesus! </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/April01 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220401</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify"><b>APRIL 1. </b></p
    <p align="justify">&quot;For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be
    judged.&quot; 1 Cor. 11:31 </p
    <p align="justify">Self-condemnation averts God's condemnation. When a
    penitent sinner truly, humbly, graciously sits in judgment upon himself, the
    Lord will never sit in judgment upon him. The penitent publican, who stood
    afar off, wrapped in the spirit of self-condemnation, retired from His
    presence a justified man. The proud, self-righteous Pharisee, who marched
    boldly to the altar and justified himself, went forth from God's presence a
    condemned man. When God sees a penitent sinner arraigning, judging,
    condemning, loathing himself, He exclaims, &quot;I do not condemn you; go and sin
    no more.&quot; He who judges and condemns himself upon God's footstool shall be
    acquitted and absolved from God's throne. The Lord give unto us this secret
    spirit of self-judgment. Such was Job's, when in deep contrition he
    declared, &quot;I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes.&quot; Such was David's,
    when he penitentially confessed, &quot;Against You, You only have I sinned, and
    done this evil in Your sight.&quot; Such was Peter's, when he vehemently
    exclaimed, &quot;Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord.&quot; Such was
    Isaiah's, when he plaintively cried, &quot;Woe is me, for I am undone; because I
    am a man of unclean lips.&quot; Such was the publican's, when he humbly prayed,
    &quot;God be merciful to me a sinner.&quot; Oh lovely posture! Oh sacred spirit of
    self-abhorrence, of self condemnation! The Holy Spirit works it in the
    heart, and this stamps it as so precious, so salutary, and so safe. The
    great day of the Lord will unveil blessings passing all thought, and glories
    passing all imagination, to the soul who beneath the cross lies prostrate,
    in the spirit of self-condemnation. The judgment-day of the self-condemning
    soul is on this side of eternity; while the judgment-day of the
    self-justifying soul is on the other side of eternity. And oh, how terrible
    will that judgment be! <br
&nbsp; </p 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March31 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220331</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 31. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;And for sin, condemned sin in the flesh.&quot; Romans 8:3.
    </p>
    <p align="justify">As sin is the great condemning cause, let us aim to 
    condemn sin, if we would rank with those for whom there is no condemnation. 
    Most true is it, that either sin must be condemned by us, or we must be 
    condemned for sin. The honor of the Divine government demands that a 
    condemnatory sentence be passed, either upon the transgression, or upon the 
    transgressor. And shall we hesitate? Is it a matter of doubt to which our 
    preference shall be given? Which is best, that sin should die, or that we 
    should die? Will the question allow a moment's consideration? Surely not, 
    unless we are so enamored with sin as calmly and deliberately to choose 
    death rather than life, hell rather than heaven. &quot;The wages of sin is 
    death.&quot; Sin unrepented, unforgiven, unpardoned, is the certain prelude to 
    eternal death. Everlasting destruction follows in its turbid wake. There is 
    a present hell in sin, for which the holy shun it; and there is a future 
    hell in sin, for which all should dread it. If, then, we would be among &quot;the 
    pure in heart who shall see God,&quot; if we would lift up our faces with joy 
    before the Judge at the last great day, if we would be freed from the final 
    and terrible sentence of condemnation, oh, let us be holy, &quot;denying all 
    ungodliness and worldly lusts, and living righteously, soberly, and godly in 
    this present world.&quot; Oh, let us condemn sin, that sin may not condemn us. 
    And let us draw the motive that constrains us, and the power that helps us, 
    from that cross where Jesus &quot;condemned sin in the flesh.&quot;</p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March30 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220330</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 30. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the 
    holiest by the blood of Jesus.&quot; Hebrews 10:19. </p>
    <p align="justify">In all true prayer great stress should be laid on the 
    blood of Jesus; perhaps no evidence distinguishes a declension in the power 
    and spirituality of prayer more strongly than an overlooking of this. Where 
    the atoning blood is kept out of view, not recognized, not pleaded, not made 
    the grand plea, there is a deficiency of power in prayer. Words are nothing, 
    fluency of expression nothing, niceties of language and brilliancy of 
    thought nothing, and even apparent fervor nothing, where the blood of 
    Christ- the new and the living way of access to God, the grand plea that 
    moves Omnipotence, that gives admission within the holy of holies- is 
    slighted, undervalued, and not made the groundwork of every petition. Oh, 
    how much is this overlooked in our prayers, how is the atoning blood of 
    Immanuel slighted! How little mention we hear of it in the sanctuary, in the 
    pulpit, in the social circle! whereas it is this that makes prayer what it 
    is with God. All prayer is acceptable with God, and only so, as it comes up 
    perfumed with the blood of Christ; all prayer is answered as it urges the 
    blood of Christ as its plea; it is the blood of Christ that satisfies 
    justice, and meets all the demands of the law against us; it is the blood of 
    Christ that purchases and brings down every blessing into the soul; it is 
    the blood of Christ that sues for the fulfilment of His last will and 
    testament, every precious legacy of which comes to us solely on account of 
    His death; this it is, too, that gives us boldness at the throne of grace. 
    How can a poor sinner dare approach with out this? How can he look up, how 
    can he ask, how can he present himself before a holy God, but as he brings 
    in the hand of faith the precious blood of Jesus? Outside of Christ, God can 
    hold no communication with us; all communion is suspended, every avenue of 
    approach is closed, all blessing is withheld. God has crowned His dearly 
    beloved Son, and He will have us crown Him too; and never do we place a 
    brighter crown upon His blessed head, than when we plead His finished 
    righteousness as the ground of our acceptance, and His atoning blood as our 
    great argument for the bestowment of all blessing with God. If, then, dear 
    reader, you feel yourself to be a poor, vile, unholy sinner; if a 
    backslider, whose feet have wandered from the Lord, in whose soul the spirit 
    of prayer has declined, and yet still feel some secret longing to return, 
    and dare not, because so vile, so unholy, so backsliding; yet you may 
    return, &quot;having boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus.&quot; 
    Come, for the blood of Jesus pleads; return, for the blood of Christ gives 
    you a welcome. &quot;If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus 
    Christ the righteous.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March29 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220329</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 29. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I know, O Lord, that your judgments are right, and that 
    you in faithfulness have afflicted me.&quot; Psalm 119:75. </p>
    <p align="justify">The mark of a vigorous love to God is when the soul 
    justifies God in all His wise and gracious dealings with it; rebels not, 
    murmurs not, repines not, but meekly and silently acquiesces in the 
    dispensation, be it ever so trying. Divine love in the heart, deepening and 
    expanding towards that God from where it springs, will, in the hour of 
    trial, exclaim, &quot;My God has smitten me, but He is my God still, faithful and 
    loving. My Father has chastened me sorely, but He is my Father still, tender 
    and kind. This trying dispensation originated in love, it speaks with the 
    voice of love, it bears with it the message of love, and is sent to draw my 
    heart closer and yet closer to the God of love, from whom it came.&quot; Dear 
    reader, are you one of the Lord's afflicted ones? Happy are you if this is 
    the holy and blessed result of His dealings with you. Happy if you hear the 
    voice of love in the rod, winning your lonely and sorrowful heart to the God 
    from whom it came. But when love to God has declined, the reverse of this is 
    the state of a tried and afflicted believer; and hard thoughts of God in His 
    dispensations may be regarded as an undeniable symptom of such declension.
    <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March28 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220328</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 28. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;The children of Manasseh could not drive out the 
    inhabitants of those cities; but the Canaanites would dwell in the land.&quot; 
    Joshua 17:12. </p>
    <p align="justify">You will recollect that when the children of Israel took 
    possession of Canaan, although they conquered its inhabitants and took 
    supreme possession and government of the country, yet they could not 
    entirely dispossess the former occupants of the soil. Now, what these 
    Canaanites, these heathenish idolaters, were to the children of Israel, the 
    natural corruptions of the heart are to the called children of God. After 
    all that divine and sovereign mercy has done for the soul, though the 
    inhabitants of the land have been conquered, and the heart has yielded to 
    the power of omnipotent grace, and the &quot;strong man armed&quot; has been deposed, 
    and Jesus has taken the throne, yet the Canaanites still dwell in the land, 
    and we cannot expel them thence. These are the natural corruptions of our 
    fallen nature, the evils of a heart that is but partially renewed, the 
    heathenish lusts and passions and infirmities that formerly were the sole 
    occupants of the soil, and still dwell there, and which we shall never, in 
    the present state, entirely dispossess. But what did the children of Israel 
    do to these Canaanites, whom they could not give out of the cities, but who 
    would dwell in the land? We read in the 13th verse: &quot;Yet it came to pass 
    when the children of Israel were waxen strong, that they put the Canaanites 
    to tribute; but did not utterly drive them out.&quot; Now this is what the 
    children of God must do with the spiritual Canaanites that yet dwell in the 
    renewed heart: they cannot be driven out, but they may be put to tribute; 
    they cannot be entirely extirpated, yet they may be brought into complete 
    subjection, and even made to contribute to the spiritual advance of the 
    soul, and to the glory of God. Yes, even these very indwelling and powerful 
    Canaanites, these strong corruptions that war and fight in the renewed soul, 
    may be made subservient to the spiritual benefit of a child of God. Will it 
    not be so, if they lead him to put no confidence in himself, to draw largely 
    from the fulness of grace in Jesus, to repair often to the throne of mercy, 
    to deal much and closely with the atoning blood, to cultivate a watchful, 
    prayerful, tender spirit, and daily and hourly to rejoice in Christ Jesus, 
    having no confidence in the flesh? Thus may the renewed soul- often led to 
    exclaim, &quot;O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of 
    this death?&quot;- through a supply of the Spirit of Christ Jesus, and becoming 
    more thoroughly versed in the are of the holy war, be able to turn the 
    risings of his indwelling sins into occasions of more holy and humble walk 
    with God. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March27 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220327</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 27. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;We walk by faith, not by sight.&quot; 2 Cor. 5:7. </p>
    <p align="justify">This walk of faith takes in all the minute circumstances 
    of every day's history; a walking every step by faith; a looking above 
    trials, above necessities, above perplexities, above improbabilities and 
    impossibilities, above all second causes; and, in the face of difficulties 
    and discouragements, going forward, leaning upon God. If the Lord were to 
    roll the Red Sea before us, and marshal the Egyptians behind us, and thus 
    hemming us in on every side, should yet bid us advance, it would be the duty 
    and the privilege of faith instantly to obey, believing that, before our 
    feet touched the water, God, in our extremity, would divide the sea and take 
    us dry-shod over it. This is the only holy and happy life of a believer; if 
    he for a moment leaves this path and attempts to walk by sight, difficulties 
    will throng around him, troubles will multiply, the smallest trials will 
    become heavy crosses, temptations to depart from the simple and uptight walk 
    will increase in number and power, the heart will sicken at disappointment, 
    the Holy Spirit will be grieved, and God will be dishonored. Let this 
    precious truth ever be before the mind, &quot;We walk by faith, not by sight.&quot;
    <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March26 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220326</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 26. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;It is good for me to draw near to God.&quot; Psalm 73:28. </p>
    <p align="justify">The more any object is to us a source of sweet delight 
    and contemplation, the more strongly do we desire its presence, and the more 
    restless are we in its absence. The friend we love we want constantly at our 
    side; the spirit goes out in longings for communion with him; his presence 
    sweetens, his absence embitters every other joy. Precisely true is this of 
    God. He who knows God, who with faith's eye has discovered some of His 
    glory, and, by the power of the Spirit, has felt something of His love, will 
    not be at a loss to distinguish between God's sensible presence and absence 
    in the soul. Some professing people walk so much without communion, without 
    fellowship, without daily, filial, and close communion with God; they are so 
    immersed in the cares, and so lost in the fogs and mists of the world; the 
    fine edge of their spiritual affection is so blunted, and their love so 
    frozen by contact with worldly influences and occupations- and no less so 
    with cold, formal professors- that the Sun of Righteousness may cease to 
    shine upon their soul, and they not know it! God may cease to visit them, 
    and His absence not be felt! He may cease to speak, and the stillness of His 
    voice not awaken an emotion of alarm! Yes, a more strange thing would happen 
    to them if the Lord were suddenly to break in upon their soul with a visit 
    of love, than were He to leave them for weeks and months without any token 
    of His presence. Reader, are you a professing child of God? Content not 
    yourself to live thus; it is a poor, lifeless existence, unworthy of your 
    profession, unworthy of Him whose name you do bear, and unworthy of the 
    glorious destiny towards which you are looking. Thus may a believer test the 
    character of his love. He in whose heart divine affection deepens, 
    increases, and expands, finds God an object of increasing delight and 
    desire, and communion with Him the most costly privilege on earth; he cannot 
    live in the neglect of constant, secret, and close fellowship with his God, 
    his best and most faithful friend. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March25 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220325</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 25. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;The love of Christ constrains us.&quot; 2 Cor. 5:14. </p>
    <p align="justify">Love is the great influential principle of the gospel. 
    The religion of Jesus is preeminently a religion of motive: it excludes 
    every compulsory principle; it arrays before the mind certain great and 
    powerful motives with which it leads captive the understanding, the will, 
    the affections, and enlists them all in the active service of Christ. Now 
    the law of Christianity is not the law of coercion, but of love. This is the 
    grand lever, the great influential motive, &quot;the love of Christ constrains 
    us.&quot; This was the apostle's declaration, and this his governing motive; and 
    the constraining love of Christ is to be the governing motive, the 
    influential principle, of every believer. Apart from the constraining 
    influence of Christ's love in the heart, there cannot possibly be a willing, 
    prompt, and holy obedience to His commandments. A conviction of duty and the 
    influence of fear may sometimes urge forward the soul, but love can only 
    prompt to a loving and holy obedience; and all obedience that springs from 
    an inferior motive is not the obedience that the gospel of Jesus inculcates. 
    The relation in which the believer stands to God, under the new covenant 
    dispensation, is not that of a slave to his master, but of a child to its 
    father. &quot;And because you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of his Son 
    into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.&quot; &quot;Wherefore you are no more a 
    servant (a slave), but a son.&quot; With this new and spiritual relation, we look 
    for a new and spiritual motive, and we find it in that single but 
    comprehensive word- Love. And thus has our Lord declared it: &quot;If you love 
    me, keep my commandments;&quot; &quot;If a man love me, he will keep my words;&quot; and 
    &quot;he that loves me not, keeps not my sayings.&quot; It is, then, only where this 
    love is shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Spirit that we may expect to 
    find the fruit of obedience. Swayed by this divine principle, the believer 
    labors not for life, but from life; not for acceptance, but from acceptance. 
    A holy, self- denying, cross-bearing life, is not the drudgery of a slave, 
    but the filial, loving obedience of a child; it springs from love to the 
    person, and gratitude for the work of Jesus, and is the blessed effect of 
    the spirit of adoption in the heart. <br>
    Under the constraining influence of this principle, how easy becomes every 
    cross for Jesus! how light every burden, and how pleasant every yoke! Duties 
    become privileges, difficulties vanish, fears are quelled, shame is humbled, 
    and delay is rebuked. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March24 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220324</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 24. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether 
    we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made 
    to drink into one Spirit.&quot; 1 Cor. 12:13. </p>
    <p align="justify">The Church of God is equally one in the Holy Spirit. One 
    Spirit regenerating all, fashioning all, teaching all, sealing all, 
    comforting all, and dwelling in all. Degrees of grace and &quot;diversities of 
    gifts&quot; there are, &quot;but the same Spirit.&quot; That same Spirit making all 
    believers partakers of the same divine nature, and then taking up his abode 
    in each, must necessarily assimilate them in every essential quality, and 
    feature, and attribute of the Christian character. Thus, the unity of the 
    Church is an essential and a hidden unity. With all the differences of 
    opinion, and the varieties of ceremonial, and the multiplicity of sects into 
    which she is broken and divided, and which tend greatly to impair her 
    strength, and shade her beauty, she is yet essentially and indivisibly one- 
    her unity consisting, not in a uniformity of judgment, but better far than 
    this, in the &quot;unity of the Spirit.&quot; Thus, no individual believer can with 
    truth say that he possesses the Spirit exclusively, boasting himself of what 
    other saints have not; nor can any one section of the Christian Church lay 
    claim to its being the only true Church, and that salvation is found only 
    within its pale. These lofty pretensions, these exclusive claims, this 
    vain-glory and uncharitableness, are all demolished by one lightning touch 
    of truth, even by that blessed declaration, &quot;For by one Spirit are we all 
    baptized into one body.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March23 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220323</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 23. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;One Lord.&quot; Ephesians 4:5. </p>
    <p align="justify">The Church is also one in the Son- &quot;There is one Lord.&quot; 
    The Lord Jesus is the one Head, as He is the one Foundation, of the Church. 
    All believers are chosen in Christ, blessed in Christ, saved in Christ, 
    preserved in Christ, and in Christ will be glorified. The work of Christ is 
    the one resting-place of their souls. They rely for pardon upon the same 
    blood, for acceptance upon the same righteousness, and for sanctification 
    upon the same grace. One in Christ, all other differences and distinctions 
    are merged and forgotten: &quot;There is neither Jew nor Greek; there is neither 
    bond nor free; there is neither male nor female for you are all one in 
    Christ Jesus.&quot; Blessed truth! the &quot;righteousness of God, which is unto all 
    and upon all those who believe,&quot; imparts the same completeness to all 
    believers in Christ. Upon the breastplate of the great High Priest, now 
    within the veil, every, name is alike written- not a sectarian appellation 
    dims the luster of the &quot;Urim and the Thummin,&quot; in whose glowing light the 
    names of all the saints are alike enshrined. What a uniting truth is this! 
    Jesus is the one Head of life, light, and love, to all His saints. He 
    carried the transgression of all- He bore the curse of all- He endured the 
    hell of all- He pardons the sin of all- He supplies the need of all- He 
    soothes the sorrows of all, and He lives and intercedes for all. To Him all 
    alike repair, it is true, with different degrees of knowledge and of faith, 
    and from different points; yet, to Jesus, as to one Savior, one Brother, one 
    Lord, they all alike come. Oh! what a cementing principle is this! The body 
    of Christ- the purchase of the same blood, loved with the same affection, 
    and in heaven represented by the same Advocate, and soon, oh, how soon, to 
    be &quot;gloried together&quot; with Him. What love, then, ought I to bear towards Him 
    whom Jesus has so loved! How can I feel coldly, to, or look unkindly at, or 
    speak uncharitably of, one whom Jesus has redeemed with the same precious 
    blood, and whom He carries each moment in the same loving heart? <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March22 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220322</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 22. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;One God and Father of all, who is above all, and through 
    all, and in you all.&quot; Ephesians 4:6. </p>
    <p align="justify">All who? -the one Church of God. One covenant God and 
    Father unites the one family in heaven and in earth. They are one in His 
    choice, one in His purpose, one in His covenant, one in His heart. The same 
    will chose them- the same affection loved them- the same decree 
    predestinated them: they are one in Him. Blessed truth! &quot;One God and 
    Father.&quot; Behold them clustering together around the mercy-seat: they come 
    from various parts of the world, they speak different languages, they 
    express opposite feelings, they unfold needs and sorrows; yet listen! they 
    all address Him as &quot;Our Father.&quot; Every heart bows in love to Him, every 
    heart is fixed in faith upon Him, and every tongue breathes the lofty, and 
    endearing, and holy name of &quot;Abba, Father.&quot; There, in the glowing light amid 
    which the throne of mercy, stands, all sectarian feeling dies, all 
    denominational distinction is lost, and Christians of every name meet, and 
    embrace, and love as brethren. Holy thought! One God loves all, and protects 
    all; one Father pities all, supplies all, bears with all, and, with an 
    impartial affection, binds all together and alike in His heart. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March21 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220321</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 21. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;It is I; do not be afraid.&quot; John 6:20. </p>
    <p align="justify">Imagine yourself threading your way along a most 
    difficult and perilous path, every step of which is attended with pain and 
    jeopardy, and is taken with hesitancy and doubt. Unknown to you and unseen, 
    there is one hovering each moment around you, checking each false step, and 
    guiding each doubtful one; soothing each sorrow, and supplying each need. 
    All is calm and silent. Not a sound is heard, not a movement is seen; and 
    yet, to your amazement, just at the critical moment the needed support 
    comes- you know not from where, you know not from whom. This is no picture 
    of fancy. Are you a child of God, retracing your steps back to Paradise by 
    an intricate and a perilous way? Jesus is near to you at each moment, unseen 
    and often unknown. You have at times stood speechless with awe at the 
    strange interposition, on your behalf, of providence and of grace. No 
    visible sign betokened the source of your help. There was no echo of 
    footfall at your side, nor flitting of shadow across your path. No law of 
    nature was altered or suspended, the sun did not stand still, nor did the 
    heavens open; and yet deliverance, strange and effectual deliverance, came 
    at a moment most unexpected, yet most needed. It was Jesus, your Redeemer, 
    your Brother, your Shepherd, and your Guide. He it was who, hovering round 
    you, unknown and unobserved, kept you as the apple of His eye, and sheltered 
    you in the hollow of His hand. It was He who armed you with courage for the 
    fight, who poured strength into your spirit, and grace into your heart, when 
    the full weight of calamity pressed upon them. Thus has He always been to 
    His saints. The incident of the disciples in the storm presents a striking 
    instance of this. Behold Him standing upon the shore, eyeing, with riveted 
    gaze, the little boat as it struggled amid the sea. They were often 
    invisible to human eye, but not a moment were they lost to His. Not even 
    when in the mount alone in prayer, were they forgotten or unobserved. He 
    beheld from thence their peril, He knew their fears, and He hastened to 
    their support. Stepping from the shore, He approached them. Oh how majestic 
    did His form now appear- walking like a man; and upon the water, like a God! 
    They did not realize that it was Jesus, and were afraid. But their knowledge 
    of Him was not necessary to their safety. It was enough that He knew them. 
    And just as the storm was at its height, and their fears rose with their 
    peril, He drew near and said, in His own gentle, soothing tone, unto them, 
    &quot;It is I; do not be afraid.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
]]>
</description>
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March20 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220320</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 20. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;And it came to pass, while he blessed them, he was 
    parted from them, and carried up into heaven.&quot; Luke 24:51 </p>
    <p align="justify">How touching and instructive was the parting interview! 
    Oh, how worthy of Himself was this His final blessing! How harmonious with 
    every previous act of His life was this its closing one! Blessing to the 
    last, and while with outstretched hands that blessing was yet breathing from 
    His lips, &quot;received up into glory.&quot; Oh, how full of grace and love is our 
    adorable Immanuel! What a heart of overflowing tenderness and blessing is 
    His! Knowing this, knowing it from observation and from experience, 
    supported by the innumerable proofs which crowd every page of the New 
    Testament, is it not a marvel that we should seek our blessing from any 
    other source than Jesus, or that we should breathe our sighs, or pour our 
    sorrows, or repose our aching head, on any other bosom than His? Ah! our 
    acquaintance with Him- our best, our dearest, our most loving Friend- is so 
    limited, we walk with Him so coldly, we follow Him so distantly, we believe 
    in Him so feebly; the greatest wonder is; that in the midst of all, His 
    patience forbearance, tender and unchangeable love, towards us should still 
    be so unwearied and so great. <br>
    But who can describe the parting interview and the last blessing? Clustering 
    around Him a lonely timid band, saddened as they must have been by the 
    thought that they were about to separate forever on earth from Him whom they 
    loved- as many of them afterwards proved- better than life itself- to whom 
    they had been wont to look for guidance, on whom they had leaned for 
    strength, and to the shelter of whose bosom they had fled in danger and in 
    sorrow, they needed His blessing- they needed that which none but Jesus 
    could give to them. They were oppressed, and He only could undertake for 
    them. They were in sorrow, and He only could comfort them. They were tried 
    and perplexed, and He only could sustain and counsel them. And what, may we 
    suppose, would that blessing contain, which He now breathed over them? The 
    richer anointing of the Spirit to fit them for their work- a larger measure 
    of grace to shield them in temptation, and to uphold them in trial- 
    increased light in the understanding respecting the spiritual nature of His 
    kingdom, and the meaning of the Holy Scriptures of truth; and- what to them, 
    at that moment, would be of unspeakable preciousness- a deeper discovery of 
    His own pardoning love, a fuller assurance of their personal acceptance in 
    Himself, and a richer bestowment of the &quot;peace of God, which passes all 
    understanding.&quot; Thus blessing, He was &quot;parted from them, and carried up into 
    heaven,&quot; to intercede for them there; and thus blessed, &quot;they worshiped Him, 
    and returned to Jerusalem with great joy,&quot; to spread the fragrance and to 
    manifest the power of His name through all the world. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
]]>
</description>
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March19 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220319</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 19. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;And he led them out as far as to Bethany, and he lifted 
    up his hands, and blessed them.&quot; Luke 24:50 </p>
    <p align="justify">Let us approach the spot where the Redeemer ascended. It 
    was from Mount Olivet, near to Bethany; so that the two accounts of Christ's 
    ascension recorded by Luke, the one in his Gospel, and the other in his Acts 
    of the Apostles, 1:12, perfectly, agree. How full of great, and holy, and 
    solemn, yes, awful, associations would be that spot to Jesus! It was no 
    strange, unfamiliar, untrodden ground to Him. At the foot of that mount, 
    from whose summit He entered into glory, He had been wont to resort with His 
    disciples for holy meditation and prayer. There, too, His sufferings 
    commenced. There He endured the fearful conflict, when His soul was 
    &quot;exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.&quot; It was there, prostrate in the dust, 
    the cup of trembling in His hand, the sweat of blood falling to the ground, 
    He thrice poured out His soul in that touching prayer- &quot;O my Father, if it 
    be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless, not as I will, but as 
    You will.&quot; Yes, it was from Mount Olivet, the scene of His deep mental 
    agony, and near to Bethany (which signifies the house of affliction), our 
    blessed Lord took His flight to His Father and His God, to enjoy His 
    presence forever, and to drink deeply and eternally of the pleasures which 
    are at His right hand. And so will it be with all His members. As if to 
    heighten, by contrast with the sufferings of earth, the glories of heaven- 
    as if to give a deeper melody to their song, and a richer sweetness to their 
    joy, and a higher character to their ecstasy, and a profounder sense of the 
    grace that brought them there, it often pleases the Lord that affliction, in 
    various forms, should throw its deepest gloom around the path of the 
    children of God, when just on the eve of translation to glory. And when, in 
    anticipation of a smooth descent and a cloudless sunset, they have said, 
    with Job, &quot;I shall die in my nest,&quot; God their Father has seemed to have 
    reserved the bitter dregs of affliction's cup for the dying lips; and, like 
    Jacob, they have been constrained to anticipate that with sorrow their grey 
    hairs will be brought down to the grave. Thus, through much tribulation they 
    enter the kingdom; out of the house of affliction, and, as it were, from 
    Mount Olivet, they ascend to Mount Zion, borne up as in a chariot of fire. 
    Be it so; &quot;He does all things well.&quot; Compared with the sufferings of Jesus, 
    it is, in its heaviest form, but a &quot;light affliction;&quot; and measured with an 
    eternity of bliss, in its longest duration, is but &quot;for a moment.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
]]>
</description>
        </item>
        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March18 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220318</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 18. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I John, who also am your brother, and companion in 
    tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was in the 
    isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God, and for the testimony of 
    Jesus Christ. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day.&quot; Rev. 1:9-10. </p>
    <p align="justify">Our adorable Immanuel frequently reveals the most 
    brilliant beams of His glory in seasons of the most painful trial and 
    deepest gloom. The dark providential dispensations of God often bring out in 
    richer radiance the glories of His beloved Son, as the darkness of night 
    reveals more distinctly and brightly the existence and beauty of the 
    heavenly bodies. For the manifestation of this remarkable revelation of His 
    risen glory to His servant, our Lord selects precisely such an occasion- an 
    occasion which, to the eye of reason, would appear the most unfavorable and 
    improbable; but to faith's eye, ranging beyond second causes, the most 
    appropriate for such a revelation of Jesus. The emperor Domitian, though not 
    released from his fearful responsibility for the act, was but the instrument 
    of executing the eternal purpose of grace and love. God's hand was moving, 
    and moving too, as it often does, in the &quot;thick darkness.&quot; Exiled as John 
    was by this Roman emperor to a desolate island of the Aegean Sea, &quot;for the 
    word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ,&quot; the Redeemer was but 
    preparing the way for the revelation of those visions of glory, than which, 
    none more sublime or more precious ever broke upon the eye of mortal man. 
    God was not only placing His beloved servant in a right posture to behold 
    them, but was also most wisely and graciously training and disciplining His 
    mind spiritually and humbly to receive them. <br>
    But mark how this dark and trying incident was making for the good of this 
    holy exile. Banished though he was from the saints, from society, and from 
    all means of grace, man could not banish him from the presence of God; nor 
    persecution separate him from the love of Christ. Patmos, to his view, 
    became resplendent with the glory of a risen Savior- a reconciled God and 
    Father was his Sanctuary- the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, overshadowed him- 
    and the Lord's day, already so hallowed and precious to him in its 
    association with the resurrection of the Lord, broke upon him with unwonted 
    effulgence, sanctity, and joy. Oh, how richly favored was this beloved 
    disciple! Great as had been his previous privileges- journeying with Christ, 
    beholding His miracles, hanging on His lips, reposing on His bosom- yet 
    never had he been so privileged- never had he learned so much of Jesus, nor 
    had seen so much of His glory, nor had drunk so deeply of His love, nor had 
    experienced so richly His unutterable tenderness, gentleness, and sympathy; 
    and never had he spent such a Lord's day as now, the solitary in habitant of 
    an isolated isle though he was. Oh, where is there a spot which Jesus cannot 
    irradiate with His glory; where is there solitude which He cannot sweeten 
    with His presence; where is there suffering, privation, and loss, which He 
    cannot more than recompense by His sustaining grace and soothing love; and 
    where is there a trembling and prostrate soul, which His &quot;right hand&quot; cannot 
    lift up and soothe? This, then, was the occasion on which the Lord appeared 
    in so glorious a form, with such soothing words and sublime revelations, to 
    His beloved servant. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March17 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220317</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 17. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;And the same day Pilate and Herod were made friends 
    together; for before they were at enmity between themselves.&quot; Luke 13:12.
    </p>
    <p align="justify">How striking and solemn the instruction conveyed in this 
    incident! Pilate and Herod, standing in the attitude of the deadliest hate 
    to each other, are now made friends! And what strange but mighty power has 
    thus suddenly subdued their animosity, and turned their hatred into love? 
    What mystic chain has drawn and bound together these hostile rulers? Their 
    mutual and deep enmity against Jesus! Believers in Christ! are the enemies 
    of our glorious Redeemer, inspired by a natural and kindred feeling of 
    hatred, induced to forget their private quarrels, and merge their 
    differences in one common confederation to crush the Son of God, the object 
    of their mutual hostility; and shall not the friends of the Redeemer, 
    constrained by that divine principle of love which dwells in the hearts of 
    all who are born of God, quench their heart-burnings, bury their 
    antipathies, and draw more closely together in one holy, vigorous, and 
    determined alliance to exalt the Son of God, the glorious and precious 
    Object of their mutual affection? Oh, if Jesus is the bond of union to those 
    who hate Him, how much more should He be the bond of union to those who love 
    Him! Beneath His cross how should all unholy jealousy and bitterness, and 
    wrath and anger, and clamor and all uncharitableness, be mourned over, 
    confessed, abhorred, and renounced by the children of the one family; and 
    how should all who love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity be unhesitatingly 
    and cordially recognized as such, thus &quot;endeavoring to keep the unity of the 
    Spirit in the bond of peace.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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</description>
        </item>
        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March16 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220316</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 16. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;He shall glorify me.&quot; John 16:14. </p>
    <p align="justify">One essential and important office of the Spirit is to 
    glorify Christ. And how does He most glorify Christ, but by exalting His 
    atoning work, giving to it the preeminence, the importance, and the glory it 
    demands; leading the sinner, whom He has first convinced of sin, to accept 
    of Jesus as a willing, an all-sufficient Savior; to cast away all trust in 
    self, all reliance upon a covenant of works, which is but a covenant of 
    death, and thus going entirely outside of himself, to take up his rest in 
    the blood and righteousness of Immanuel, the God-man Mediator. Oh, what 
    sweet, holy delight must it be to the Spirit of God when a poor sinner, in 
    all his conscious nothingness, is led to build upon Jesus, the &quot;tried stone, 
    the precious corner-stone, the sure foundation!&quot; <br>
    Let the reader, then, imagine how grieving it must be to the Spirit, when 
    there is any resting in His work in the soul, either for acceptance, or for 
    comfort, or for peace, or for strength, or even for evidence of a state of 
    grace, and not solely and entirely in the atoning work which Jesus has 
    wrought out for the redemption of sinners. The work of the Spirit and the 
    work of Christ, though they form parts of one glorious whole, are yet 
    distinct, and to be distinguished in the economy, of grace and in the 
    salvation of a sinner. It is the work of Jesus alone, His perfect obedience 
    to the broken law of God, and His sacrificial death as a satisfaction to 
    divine justice, that forms the ground of a sinner's acceptance with God- the 
    source of his pardon, justification, and peace. The work of the Spirit is 
    not to atone, but to reveal the atonement; not to obey, but to make known 
    the obedience; not to pardon and justify, but to bring the convinced, 
    awakened, penitent soul to receive the pardon, and embrace the justification 
    already provided in the work of Jesus. Now, if there is any substitution of 
    the Spirit's work for Christ's work- any undue, unauthorized leaning upon 
    the work within, instead of the work outside of the believer, there is a 
    dishonor done to Christ, and a consequent grieving of the Holy Spirit of 
    God. It cannot be pleasing to the Spirit to find Himself a substitute for 
    Christ; and yet this is the sin which so many are constantly falling into. 
    If I look to convictions of sin within me, to any motion of the indwelling 
    Spirit, to any part of His work, as the legitimate source of healing, of 
    comfort, or of evidence, I turn my back upon Christ, I remove my eye from 
    the cross, and slight His great atoning work; I make a Christ of the Spirit! 
    I make a Savior of the Holy Spirit! I convert His work into an atoning work, 
    and draw the evidence and the consolation of my pardon and acceptance from 
    what He has done, and not from what Jesus has done! Oh, is not this, again 
    we ask, dishonoring to Christ, and grieving to the Holy Spirit of God? Do 
    not think that we undervalue the Spirit's work- great and precious is it. 
    Viewed as a Quickener- as an Indweller- as a Sanctifier- as a Sealer- as a 
    Witness- as a Comforter- as the Author of prayer- His person cannot be too 
    ardently loved, nor can His work be too highly prized; but the love we bear 
    Him, and the honor we give Him, must not be at the expense of the honor and 
    glory and love due to the Lord Jesus Christ, whom it is His office and His 
    delight to glorify. The crown of redemption must be placed upon the head of 
    Jesus; He alone is worthy to wear it- He alone has a right to wear it. &quot;You 
    have redeemed us by Your blood,&quot; is the song they sing in glory; and &quot;You 
    shall wear the crown,&quot; should be the song echoed back from the redeemed on 
    earth. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March15 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220315</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 15. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Trust in the Lord with all your heart; and lean not unto 
    your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he shall 
    direct your paths.&quot; Proverbs 3:5-6 </p>
    <p align="justify">The constant exercise of prayer makes every burden light, 
    and smooths every rugged step of a child of God: it is this only that keeps 
    down his trials; not that he is ever exempt from them- no, it is &quot;through 
    much tribulation that he is to enter the kingdom;&quot;- he is a disciple of the 
    cross, his religion is that of the cross, he is a follower of Him who died 
    upon the cross, and entire exemption from the cross he never expects until 
    he passes to the possession of the crown. But he may pray down his crosses: 
    prayer will lessen their number, and will mitigate their severity. The man 
    whose walk is far from God, whose frame is cold, and worldly, and careless, 
    if he be a true child of the covenant, one of the Lord's family, may expect 
    crosses and trials to increase upon every step he advances towards the 
    kingdom. Ah! little do many of the tried, afflicted, and constantly 
    disappointed believers think how closely related are these very trials, and 
    afflictions, and disappointments, to their restraining of prayer before God; 
    every step seems attended with some new cross- every scheme is blasted by 
    some adverse wind- every effort is foiled- disappointment follows 
    disappointment, wave attends upon wave- nothing they attempt prospers, all 
    they enter upon fails, and everything seems against them. Oh, could we pass 
    behind the scene, what should we discover? a deserted throne of grace! Were 
    we to divulge the secret, and place it in the form of a charge against the 
    believer, what would it be? &quot;You have restrained prayer before God!&quot; The 
    scheme was framed without prayer; the enterprise was entered upon without 
    prayer; the effort was made without prayer- God has blown upon it, and all 
    has come to nothing. No marvel- God was not consulted- the Lord was not 
    acknowledged, His permission was not asked, His wisdom was not sought, His 
    blessing was not craved; and so He blew upon it all! The precious injunction 
    is- &quot;In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.&quot; 
    Where this is honored, there is the divine blessing; where it is slighted, 
    there is the divine curse. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
]]>
</description>
        </item>
        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March14 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220314</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 14. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the 
    sure mercies of David.&quot; Isaiah 55. 3. </p>
    <p align="justify">God had promised David that he would sit upon the throne 
    of his fathers- that the kingdom of Israel, rent from Saul, should be 
    transferred to his government. But the crown and the scepter thus promised 
    loomed in the distance, almost enshrouded from view by dark intervening 
    clouds. The promise seemed as a dead letter. The providence of God appeared 
    to clash with and to contradict the promise of God. But, in the history of 
    His Church, the providences of the divine government are not the exponents 
    of the promises of the Divine Governor. It is not so much by what God does, 
    as by what God has said, that He is to be judged. Christian mourner, in the 
    divine promises you have an equal proprietorship. They are as much yours as 
    they were David's, of whose &quot;sure mercies&quot; you are the possessor. These 
    promises are exceedingly great and precious in their nature- they are 
    personal and particular in their application- they are absolute and 
    infallible in their fulfilment. Death may appear to be written upon the 
    promise, and upon all the means leading to its accomplishment, but there is 
    a life in the promise that cannot die. See how God wrote the sentence of 
    death upon the promise, as in the case of the age of Abraham- the sterility 
    of Sarah- the abduction of Joseph- the demand for Benjamin- the banishment 
    of David; and yet, in all the instances, the word upon which God caused 
    those waiting souls to hope was made good to the letter; and the promise 
    that appeared dead rose again with a life, all the more vigorous and 
    glorious from its long and gloomy entombment. It is the believer's mercy to 
    know that he has to do with a Divine Promiser, whose faithfulness has been 
    proved, and with a promise whose power has been tested. There is not a 
    promise with which the Holy Spirit the Comforter seeks to support and 
    console you, but has passed through the crucible, and has been &quot;tried as 
    silver is tried.&quot; &quot;The word of the Lord is tried.&quot; And if it be a fearful 
    sin to doubt what God has declared, it is a tenfold aggravation of that sin 
    not to believe, when a thousand times over He has made good what He has 
    promised, and when a great cloud of witnesses testify that He has never once 
    falsified His word. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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</description>
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March13 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220313</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 13. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;O you of little faith, wherefore did you doubt?&quot; Matthew 
    14:31. </p>
    <p align="justify">Doubting faith is not doubtful faith. If the believer has 
    not the faith of assurance, he may have the faith of reliance, and that will 
    take him to heaven. All the doubts and fears that ever harassed a child of 
    God cannot erase his name from the Lamb's book of life, nor take him out of 
    the heart of God, nor shut him out of glory. &quot;Unbelief,&quot; says Rutherford, 
    &quot;may perhaps tear the copies of the covenant which Christ has given you; but 
    He still keeps the original in heaven with Himself. Your doubts and fears 
    are no parts of the covenant; neither can they change Christ.&quot; <br>
    &quot;The doubts and fears of the elect,&quot; remarks another, &quot;are overruled by 
    almighty grace to their present and eternal good; as conducing to keep us 
    humble at God's footstool, to endear the merits of Jesus, and to make us 
    feel our weakness and dependence, and to render us watchful unto prayer.&quot; 
    Did ever an unregenerate, lifeless soul entertain a doubt or fear of its 
    spiritual condition? Never. Was it ever known anxiously and prayerfully to 
    question or to reason about its eternal state? Never. Do I seek to 
    strengthen your doubts? No; but I wish to strengthen your tried and doubting 
    faith. I would tell you, for your encouragement, that the minutest particle 
    of grace has eternal glory in it, even as the smallest seed virtually 
    contains all that proceeds from it- the blade, the ear, and the full corn in 
    the ear. Faint not, nor be discouraged in your trial of faith. There is not 
    a sweeter way to heaven than along the path of free grace, paved with hard
    <br>
    trials. It was the way which He trod who was &quot;full of grace.&quot; Rich though He 
    was in grace, yet see how deeply He was tried. Think not, then, that your 
    sore trials are signs of a graceless state. Oh no! The most gracious saints 
    have been the most tried saints. But do not rest here. There is still 
    richer, surer comfort for you- even the fulness of grace that is in Jesus- 
    grace, ever flowing, and yet ever full. Disclose to Him your doubts and 
    fears. Tell Him you desire Him above all good. Plunge into the sea of His 
    fulness; and He, who has created in your soul a thirst for grace, will 
    assuredly and bountifully give you the grace for which you thirst. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March12 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220312</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 12. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Let me fall now into the hand of the Lord; for very 
    great are his mercies: but let me not fall into the hand of man.&quot; 1 Chron. 
    21:13. </p>
    <p align="justify">Well did the trembling king of Israel so exclaim, when 
    with an air of tender faithfulness the prophet placed before him the choice 
    of those evils which should mark his sin. Every point of light in which his 
    decision can be viewed justifies both its wisdom and its holiness. It was 
    wise: he knew that the Lord was his God; as such, He had long been wont to 
    deal with him in transactions the most solemn and confiding, and thus, from 
    knowledge and experience, he felt he could now safely trust in Him. It was 
    holy: he saw that God was most righteous in punishing his sin, and that in 
    meekly submitting to that punishment which came more immediately from the 
    Lord, he was sympathizing with the equity of the divine government, and was 
    upholding the character of the &quot;Judge of all the earth&quot; as &quot;most upright.
    <br>
    Guided by these considerations, he would rather fall into the hands of the 
    Lord, uplifted though they were to scourge. Who has not made this prayer his 
    own, and breathed it at the footstool of mercy? The &quot;tender mercies of the 
    wicked are cruel,&quot; but the severest corrections of our Father are love. To 
    be smitten by God is infinitely better to the believer than to be blest by 
    man. The creature's affection often brings with it a snare; and the honor 
    which comes from man tends to nourish the corrupt principle of depraved 
    self. But whatever, in the experience of a child of God, that may be which 
    comes more directly from the Lord, it brings with it its concealed but its 
    certain and often unutterable blessing. Oh, how safe are we in the Lord's 
    hands! Though He frown, we yet may love. Though He scourge, we yet may 
    cling. Though He slay, we yet may trust. &quot;I will cause you to pass under the 
    rod, and I will bring you into the bond of the covenant.&quot; With such an 
    issue, welcome the discipline that leads to it. &quot;Let me fall into the hand 
    of the Lord; for very great are His mercies.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March11 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220311</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 11. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.&quot; 
    1 Thes. 4:14 </p>
    <p align="justify">Will it add nothing to the glory of that event, and to 
    the happiness of that moment, when the Son of God descends, and, dissolving 
    the soft slumbers of the holy dead, will reanimate each with its former 
    occupant, that then we shall perfectly recognize those we once knew and 
    loved, and renew the sweet communion, before imperfect and limited, but now 
    complete and eternal? Dry, then, your tears, and cease to mourn, you saints 
    of God. They are &quot;not lost, but gone before.&quot; Their spirits live with Jesus. 
    And when He comes, He will bring them with Him, and you shall see and know 
    them with a cloudless sight and a perfect knowledge. The very eyes which 
    once smiled upon you so kindly- the very tongue which spoke to you so 
    comfortingly- the very hands which administered to you so skillfully- the 
    very feet which traveled by your side so faithfully- the very bosom which 
    pillowed you so tenderly- you shall meet again. &quot;The coming of the Lord 
    draws near,&quot; and those who &quot;sleep in Jesus will God bring with Him.&quot; Let us 
    &quot;comfort one another with these words.&quot; <br>
    And will it be no additional joy to meet and to know those eminent servants 
    of the Lord whose histories and whose writings stimulated, instructed, and 
    cheered us, shedding light and gladness on our way? Abraham, whose faith had 
    animated us- David, whose experimental psalms had comforted us- Isaiah, 
    whose visions of Jesus had gladdened us- Paul, whose doctrinal epistles had 
    instructed us- John, whose letters of love had subdued us; to gaze upon the 
    &quot;Magdalene &quot; sitting at Jesus' feet- upon the &quot;beggar&quot; reposing in Abraham's 
    bosom- upon the &quot;thief&quot; with Christ in Paradise- oh! will not this add to 
    the happiness of heaven? Will this be no joy, no bliss, no glory? Assuredly 
    it will! At Christ's coming, will not His ministers, too, and those to whom 
    their labors had been useful, meet, know, and rejoice in each other? The 
    pastor and the flock, will there be no certain and permanent reunion? no 
    sweet, and fond, and holy recognition? Shall their union in the Church below 
    exceed, in its beauty and sweetness, their reunion in the Church above? Here 
    it is necessarily mingled with much that is imperfect. Much concealment is 
    connected with their united labors in the vineyard of Christ. They go forth 
    weeping, bearing precious seed, and often are called to their rest before 
    the fruit of their prayers, and tears, and toil appears. Here, too, seasons 
    of sickness and of separation frequently transpire, enshrouding the spirit 
    with gloom, and wringing the heart with anguish. And then, at last, death 
    itself rudely breaks the tender bond, lays the standard-bearer low, leaving 
    the affectionate flock to gaze with streaming eye upon the lessening spirit 
    of their pastor as it ascends and towers away to glory. But the coming of 
    Jesus, with all His saints, will restore this happy union, invest it with 
    new and richer glory, and place it upon a permanent, yes, everlasting basis. 
    &quot;For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even you in 
    the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at His coming? For you are our glory 
    and joy.&quot; Yes, beloved, we shall know each other again, altered and 
    glorified though we may be. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March10 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220310</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 10. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;You are come . . . to the spirits of just men made 
    perfect.&quot; Hebrews 12:22, 23. </p>
    <p align="justify">That the saints will recognize and have communion with 
    each other immediately on their entrance into glory is, we think, clear from 
    these words of the apostle, when enumerating the privileges of the released 
    believers. We indulge, therefore, the fond hope that, should death remove us 
    before the coming of the Lord, we shall meet, know, and have delightful 
    communion with our friends who departed this life in Jesus. But the 
    recognition and the communion must necessarily do not be so perfect and full 
    as when Christ shall appear, and the risen saints shall cluster together 
    around the person and in the kingdom of their Lord; since neither we nor 
    they have attained our state of full knowledge and capacity until that great 
    event take place, and the &quot;blessed hope&quot; is realized. We argue the 
    recognition of the saints from the fact of the perfection of knowledge to 
    which the coming glory will advance us. Our dear Lord reminds His saints 
    that they shall be equal to the angels. They know each other. It would seem 
    impossible, living together for so many years, that they would not. If, 
    then, the saints are equal to them at all, they must be in this sweet 
    privilege. And is it reasonable to suppose that in all other respects our 
    knowledge will be perfected, but in this one particular only? Shall we 
    possess an element of mental power here, which we shall lose in a gradation 
    towards perfection, and, consequently, shall not possess in a higher degree 
    hereafter? Assuredly not. When, therefore, the dead in Christ shall rise at 
    His coming, every intellectual faculty will be enlarged, and not only 
    retaining all our former, but increasing the amount by a larger degree of 
    additional knowledge, we shall &quot;know even as we are known.&quot; The perfection 
    of happiness, which glorification implies, involves this blessing. What a 
    rich source of high and holy delight does the communion of saints supply, 
    even in our present state! How it elevates, chastens, expands, and soothes 
    the mind and heart, so much beclouded by care and chafed by sorrow! But 
    heaven will perfect this bliss. Does it not heighten the beauty of the 
    prospect, and strengthen the expectation of the scene? <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        </item>
        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March09 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220309</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 9. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself.&quot; 
    2 Cor. 5:19. </p>
    <p align="justify">The great glory of our Immanuel is his essential glory. 
    When our faith can firmly grasp the Deity of our adorable Lord- and on this 
    precious doctrine may it never waver!- there is a corresponding confidence 
    and repose of the mind in each particular of His sacrificial work. Then it 
    is that we talk of Him as a Mediator, and love to view Him as the great 
    Sin-bearer of His people. In vain do we admire His righteousness, or extol 
    His death, if we look not upon Him in the glory which belongs to Him as 
    essentially God. From this truth, as from a fountain of light, beams forth 
    the glory, which sheds its soft halo around His atoning work. Oh, when, in 
    the near view of death, memory summons back the past, and sin in battle 
    array passes before the eye, and we think of the Lord God, the Holy One, 
    into whose dreadful presence we are about to enter, how will every other 
    support sink beneath us but this! And, as the Holy Spirit then glorifies 
    Christ in His essential glory, testifying that the blood and righteousness- 
    the soul's great trust- are of the incarnate God, we shall rise superior to 
    fear, smile at death, and pass in peace and triumph to glory. Yes, reader, 
    we shall be satisfied with nothing short of absolute Deity, when we come to 
    die. And, in proportion as you find this great truth the substance of your 
    life, you will experience it the support of your death. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March08 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220308</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH VIII. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ 
    Jesus.&quot; Philippians 2:5. </p>
    <p align="justify">What is it to have &quot;the mind that was in Christ&quot;? We 
    answer, it is to be ever aiming after the highest perfection of holiness. It 
    is to have the eye of faith perpetually on Jesus as our model, studying Him 
    closely as our great example, seeking conformity to Him in all things. It is 
    to be regulated in all our conduct by His humble spirit. First, with regard 
    to others, to choose the low place, to acknowledge God in, and to glorify 
    Him for, the grace, gifts, and usefulness bestowed on other saints, and to 
    exemplify in our social communion the self-denying, expansive benevolence of 
    the Gospel, which enjoins the duty of not seeking paramountly our own 
    interests, but to sacrifice all self-gratification, and even honor and 
    advantage, if, by so doing, we may promote the happiness and welfare of 
    others; thus it is to live, not for ourselves, but for God and our fellow 
    men; for &quot;no man lives to himself, and no man dies to himself;&quot; in the 
    spirit of Him, who, on the eve of returning to His glory, took a towel and 
    girded Himself, and washed His disciples' feet, it is to serve the saints in 
    the most lowly acts and offices. Second, it is to exemplify, with regard to 
    ourselves, the same humble spirit which He breathed. It is to be little in 
    our own eyes, to cherish a humble estimate of our gifts, attainments, 
    usefulness, and station- to be meek, gentle, and submissive under rebuke and 
    correction- to &quot;seek not great things for ourselves,&quot;- to court not human 
    praise, watching our hearts with perpetual vigilance and jealousy, lest we 
    thirst for the honor which comes from man, and not &quot;the honor that comes 
    from God only.&quot; It is to contribute to the necessities of saints without 
    begrudging, to give to Christ's cause without ostentation, to do good in 
    secret- to seek, in all our works of zeal, and benevolence, and charity, to 
    hide ourselves, that self may be perpetually mortified- in a word, it is to 
    hunger and thirst after righteousness, to be poor in spirit, lowly in mind, 
    to walk humbly with God, and to live to, and labor for, and aim after, the 
    glory of God in all things. This is to have the &quot;mind which was also in 
    Christ Jesus.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March07 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220307</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 7. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Your will be done on earth, as it is heaven.&quot; Matthew 
    6:10. </p>
    <p align="justify">The holy Leighton has remarked, that to say from the 
    heart, &quot;your will be done,&quot; constitutes the very essence of sanctification. 
    There is much truth in this; more, perhaps, than strikes the mind at the 
    first view. Before conversion, the will, the governing principle of the 
    soul, is the seat of all opposition to God. It rises against God- His 
    government, His law, His providence, His grace, His Son; yes, all that 
    appertains to God, the unrenewed will of man is hostile to. Here lies the 
    depth of man's unholiness. The will is against God; and so long as it 
    refuses to obey Him, the creature must remain unholy. Now, it needs no 
    lengthened argument to show that the will, being renewed by the Holy Spirit, 
    and made to submit to God, in proportion to the degree of its submission 
    must be the holiness of the believer. There could not be perfect holiness in 
    heaven, were there the slightest preponderance of the will of the creature 
    towards itself. The angels and &quot;the spirits of just men made perfect,&quot; are 
    supremely holy, because their wills are supremely swallowed up in the will 
    of God. &quot;Your will be done on earth, even as it is in heaven.&quot; The will of 
    God is supremely obeyed in heaven, and in this consists the holiness and the 
    felicity of its glorious inhabitants. <br>
    Now, in exact proportion as God's will &quot;is done on earth&quot; by the believer, 
    he drinks from the pure fountain of holiness; and as he is enabled, by the 
    grace of Christ, in all things to look up to God with filial love, and to 
    say, &quot;not my will,&quot; O my Father, &quot;but your, be done,&quot; he attains the very 
    essence of sanctification. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March06 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220306</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 6. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, 
    that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.&quot;&nbsp; 
    Hebrews 4:16. </p>
    <p align="justify">The throne of grace is for the needy. It is always a time 
    of need with a child of God. &quot;Without me,&quot; says Jesus, &quot;you can do nothing.&quot; 
    There is not a moment, but, if he knows his real state, he is in need of 
    something. What a blessing, then, is the throne of grace! It is for the 
    needy. It is for those who are in need- upon whom all other doors are 
    closed, with whom all other resources have failed, who have nowhere else to 
    look, nowhere else to fly. To such is the throne of grace always open. Is it 
    a time of trial with you? then it is a time of need. Take your trial, 
    whatever it be, simply to God. Do not brood over it. Do not cherish it. This 
    will not make it sweeter, or more easy to be borne. But taking it to Jesus 
    will. The very act of taking it will lighten it, and casting it upon His 
    tenderness and sympathy will make it sweet. Is it a time of spiritual 
    darkness with you? then it is a time of need. Take your darkness to the 
    throne of grace, and &quot;in His light&quot; who sits upon it you &quot;shall see light.&quot; 
    Is it a time of adverse providences? then it is a time of need. And where 
    can you go for guidance, for direction, for counsel, for light upon the 
    intricacies of the way, but to the God of grace? Is it a time of temporal 
    distress with you? then it is a time of need. Take your temporal cares and 
    necessities to the Lord, for He who is the God of grace is also the God of 
    providence. <br>
    Thank the Lord for every errand that takes you to the throne of grace. 
    Whatever it is that sends you to prayer, count it one of your choice 
    blessings. It may be a heavy cross, a painful trial, a pressing need; it may 
    be a broken cistern, a cold look, an unkind expression; yet, if it leads you 
    to prayer, regard it as a mercy sent from God to your soul. Thank God for an 
    errand to Him. </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March05 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220305</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 5. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;The spirit is life because of righteousness.&quot; Romans 
    8:10. </p>
    <p align="justify">What are we to understand by the term spirit? Our reply 
    will at once exclude the idea of the Holy Spirit. Of the Third Person of the 
    blessed Trinity it cannot be of whom the apostle speaks. The only remaining 
    interpretation, then, is that which restricts its meaning to the spiritual 
    and immortal part of the believer- the regenerated spirit of man, and not 
    the regenerating Spirit of God. The cheering declaration, then, of the 
    apostle is, that the spiritual and immortal part of our nature is recovered 
    from the curse, renewed and quickened with a divine and heavenly life. If 
    the body is dead because of sin, the spirit is life because of 
    righteousness. The spirit is life- instinct with a new and deathless 
    principle- because Christ is the righteousness of His people. On the broad 
    basis of God's method of justification our spirit lives. In every point of 
    view Christ is identified with our spiritual life. We live a life of 
    justification by Christ- a life of holiness from Christ- a life of faith in 
    Christ- and a life of immortality with Christ. Thus, in all its phases, 
    &quot;Christ is our life.&quot; Oh glorious truth! Welcome death- the spirit lives! 
    Welcome the grave- the spirit is beyond it! Death! you can but touch the 
    material fabric- the inner life towers above your reach, hid with Christ in 
    God. Grave! you can but imprison the body- the soul is at home with Jesus. I 
    live, not because of any righteousness which I have wrought, but because 
    Christ is my righteousness. I live on account of the Righteous One- I live 
    in the Righteous One- and I shall live forever with the Righteous One. Thus 
    is the spirit life because of righteousness. Oh, what a glorious immortality 
    unveils to the eye of faith! If through the gloomy portals of death the 
    spirit of the believer must pass, in its transit to eternity, life attends 
    it, and life awaits it, and life crowns it. Animated with a deathless 
    existence, clothed with the robe of a new-born immortality, it bursts from 
    its enthralment, and, smiling back upon death, speeds its way to glory, 
    honor, and endless life. To this life let us look forward. From a life now 
    experienced, let us live for a life so soon to be enjoyed. The body must 
    die. But what of that? the spirit is life. And the life-inspired spirit will 
    come back again, re-enter and re-animate the slumbering dust; and now, 
    remodeled and spiritualized, it will be with Christ and all the saints in 
    the new heaven and the new earth, wherein will dwell righteousness. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March04 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220304</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH4. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our 
    faith.&quot; Hebrews 12:2 </p>
    <p align="justify">Be careful of making a savior of faith. There is a 
    danger, and it cannot be too vigilantly guarded against, of substituting the 
    work of the Spirit for the work of Christ; this mistake it is that leads so 
    many of God's saints to look within, instead of outside of themselves, for 
    the evidences of their calling and acceptance; and thus, too, so many are 
    kept, all their spiritual course, walking in a state of bondage and fear, 
    the great question never fully and fairly settled; or, in other words, never 
    quite sure of their sonship. The work of Christ is a great and finished 
    work; it is so glorious that it can admit of no comparison, so complete that 
    it can allow of no addition, and so essential that it can give place to no 
    substitution. Precious as is the work of the Holy Spirit in the heart, and 
    essential as it is to the salvation of the soul, yet he who places it where 
    the work of Jesus ought only to be, deranges the order of the covenant, 
    closes up the legitimate source of evidence, and will assuredly bring 
    distress and uncertainty into his soul. &quot;Righteousness, peace, and joy&quot; are 
    the fruit of a full belief in the Lord Jesus Christ, and he who looks for 
    them away from the cross will meet with disappointment; but they are found 
    in Jesus. He who looks away from himself, from his vileness, guiltiness, 
    emptiness, and poverty, fully, and believingly unto Jesus, shall know what 
    the forgiveness of sin is, and shall experience the love of God shed abroad 
    in his heart. <br>
    If, then, your faith is feeble and tried, do not be cast down. Faith does 
    not save you; though it be an instrument of salvation, and, as such, is of 
    vast importance, it is but the instrument. The finished work of Immanuel is 
    the ground of your salvation, yes, it is your salvation itself. Then, make 
    not a savior of your faith; despise it not if it is feeble, exult not in it 
    if it is strong, trample not on it if it is small, deify it not if it is 
    great: such are the extremes to which every believer is exposed. If your 
    faith is feeble and sharply tried, it is no evidence that you are not a 
    believer; but the evidence of your acceptance in the Beloved is to arise 
    from Jesus alone; then let your constant motto be, &quot;looking unto Jesus;&quot; 
    looking to Him just as you are; looking unto Him when faith is feeble; 
    looking unto Him when faith is tried; looking unto Him when faith is 
    declining; yes, looking unto Him when you fear you have no faith. Look up, 
    tried and tempted soul! Jesus is the Author, the Sustainer, and He will 
    become the Finisher of your faith. All you need is in Him; one glimpse, dim 
    though it be, of His cross, one touch, trembling though it be, of His 
    garment, will lift you from your lowest depths, lighten your heaviest 
    burden, gild your darkest prospect, and when you arrive at Jordan's brink, 
    will bear you safely through its swellings, and land you on the sunny and 
    verdant shores of Canaan. </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March03 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220303</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 3. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;If you then be risen with Christ, seek those things 
    which are above, where Christ sits on the right hand of God. Set your 
    affection on things above, not on things on the earth.&quot; Col. 3:1-2 </p>
    <p align="justify">To win heaven, the mind must become heavenly; and to be 
    heavenly, it must habituate itself to heavenly things and heavenly pursuits. 
    It is a law of our mental constitution, that the mind assimilates in its 
    tone and habits of thought with the subject which most engrosses its study. 
    Hence it is that we sometimes become men of one idea. Now the contemplation 
    of divine and spiritual themes has a powerful tendency to spiritualize and 
    sanctify the mind. It seems impossible to breathe a heavenly atmosphere, and 
    not be heavenly; to study holy things, and not be holy; to admire the image 
    of Christ, and not resemble Christ; to have frequent communion with Jesus 
    upon the throne, and not catch some stray beam of His glory. And apart from 
    Christ nothing is really pleasant and satisfying to the heavenly mind. 
    Without Him, what a dreary, lonesome wilderness would this be! But with 
    Christ in the heart, and the heart resting in Christ- He in the center of 
    our souls, and our affections and desires centering on Him- the desert loses 
    its solitude and its desolateness. To have the eye resting on Jesus- all our 
    heart-springs in Him- the spirit in frequent excursions where He dwells in 
    light and glory- to lean upon Him and converse with Him as though He were 
    actually walking by our side, sitting at our table, associating with us in 
    our callings- this, this is heavenly-mindedness. Such is the 
    counter-attraction to the &quot;things on the earth,&quot;- the secularizing pursuits, 
    the low-thoughted cares, the carnal enjoyments- which we so deeply need. And 
    this powerful counteracting influence which we possess is a realization of 
    our resurrection with Christ, and His enthronement in glory. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March02 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220302</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">MARCH 2. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Open you mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things 
    out of your law.&quot; Psalm 119:18 </p>
    <p align="justify">To the question often earnestly propounded- &quot;What is the 
    best method of reading, so as to understand the Scriptures?&quot; I would reply- 
    Read them with the one desire and end of learning more of Christ, and with 
    earnest prayer for the teaching of the Spirit, that Christ may be unfolded 
    in the Word. With this simple method persevered in, you shall not fail to 
    comprehend the mind of the Holy Spirit, in portions which previously may 
    have been unintelligible and obscure. Restrict not yourself to fixed rules, 
    or to human helps. Rely less upon dictionaries, and maps, and annotations. 
    With singleness of aim, with a specific object of research, and with fervent 
    prayer for the Holy Spirit's teaching, &quot;you need not that any man teach 
    you;&quot; but collating Scripture with Scripture, &quot;comparing spiritual things 
    with spiritual,&quot; you may fearlessly enter upon the investigation of the 
    greatest mysteries contained in the sacred volume, assured that the Savior, 
    for whose glories and riches you search, will reveal Himself to your eye, 
    &quot;full of grace and truth.&quot; Precious Bible! so full of a precious Jesus! How 
    do all its clouds and darkness melt into light and beauty, as He, the Sun of 
    righteousness, rises in noontide glory upon its page! Search it, my reader, 
    with a view of seeing and knowing more of your Redeemer, compared with whom 
    nothing else is worth knowing or making known. Love your Bible, because it 
    testifies of Jesus; because it unfolds a great Savior, an almighty Redeemer; 
    because it reveals the glory of a sin-pardoning God, in the person of Jesus 
    Christ. Aim to unravel Jesus in the types, to grasp Him amid the shadows, to 
    trace Him through the predictions of the prophet, the records of the 
    evangelist, and the letters of the apostles. All speak of, and all lead to, 
    Jesus. &quot;They are they which testify of me.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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</description>
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/March01 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220301</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify"><b>MARCH 1. </b></p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Search the scriptures; for in them you think you have 
    eternal life: and they are they which testify of me.&quot; John 5:39 </p>
    <p align="justify">The word of God is full of Christ. He is the Sun of this 
    divine system, the Fountain of its light and beauty. Every doctrine derives 
    its substance from His person, every precept its force from His work, every 
    promise its sweetness from His love. Is it not to be feared, that in the 
    study of the Scriptures it is a much-forgotten truth, that they testify of 
    Jesus? Are they not read, searched, and examined, with a mind too little 
    intent upon adding to its wealth by an increased knowledge of His person, 
    and character, and work? And thus it is we lower the character of the Bible. 
    We may read it as a mere uninspired record; we may study it as a book of 
    human literature. Its antiquity may interest us, its history may inform us, 
    its philosophy may instruct us, its poetry may charm us; and thus, while 
    skimming the surface of this Book of books, the glorious Christ, who is its 
    substance, its subject, its sweetness, its worth- and but for whom there had 
    been no Bible- has been deeply and darkly veiled from the eye. <br>
    But it is the office of the blessed and eternal Spirit to unfold, and so to 
    glorify, Jesus in the Word. All that we spiritually and savingly learn of 
    Him, through this revealed medium, is by the sole teaching of the Holy 
    Spirit, opening up this word to the mind. He shows how all the luminous 
    lines of Scripture truth emanate from, return to, and center in, Christ- how 
    all the doctrines set forth the glory of His person, how all the promises 
    are written in His heart's blood, and how all the precepts are embodied in 
    His life. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February28 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220228</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 28. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of 
    the water of life freely.&quot; Revelation 21:6. </p>
    <p align="justify">The grace that is in Christ Jesus must, from its very 
    nature, be unpurchasable. It implies absolute poverty in the creature, and 
    infinite affluence in God. Could it, by any possibility, be purchased, it 
    would cease to be what it now is, the &quot;grace of God.&quot; Because it is so 
    great, so rich, and infinite, God has made it as free as the sun, the light, 
    and the air. Nothing can procure it. Tears cannot- convictions cannot- faith 
    cannot- obedience cannot- prayer cannot- yes, not even can the most costly 
    work of God's Spirit in the soul procure a drop of this &quot;living water.&quot; God 
    gives it, and He gives it, as the word implies, freely. This is its glory- 
    it is an unpurchasable and a freely bestowed gift. Upon no other terms is it 
    granted. Consequently, no condition of human character, and no case of human 
    guilt, is excluded. The vilest of the vile, the poor insolvent sinner, the 
    needy, the wretched, the penniless; the voice of free grace welcomes to the 
    &quot;living waters.&quot; What has kept you so long from this fountain? You have 
    thirsted, and panted, and desired; but still your soul has not been 
    replenished. You have, perhaps, long been seeking the Lord, asking the way, 
    and desiring salvation. Why have you not found Him? You have borne the heavy 
    burden of sin, month after month and year after year, knowing nothing of a 
    sense of pardon, of acceptance, of adoption, of rest. And why? Because you 
    have stumbled at the freeness of the gift. You have expected to receive it 
    as a saint, not seeing that God will only give it to you as a sinner. But 
    hear the word of the Lord: &quot;By grace are you saved;&quot; &quot;Redeemed without 
    money;&quot; &quot;Nothing to pay;&quot; &quot;Whoever will, let him take of the water of life 
    freely.&quot; Oh! receive into your heart this truth, and you will be happy. All 
    creation will seem to smile upon you- the heavens will smile- the earth will 
    smile- yes, God himself will smile. Dropping its chain, your emancipated 
    soul will spring into the glorious liberty of the sons of God. What 
    sovereignty, sweetness, and glory will now appear in the very act that 
    forgives all, forgets all, and which introduces you into a new world, 
    redolent of joy and delight! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February27 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220227</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 27. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;With You is the fountain of life.&quot; Psalm 36:9. </p>
    <p align="justify">What a fountain of life is Jesus! The dead, on whose ear 
    falls the sound of His voice, live. There is grace in Christ- quickening, 
    regenerating, life-giving grace; and to whomsoever that grace is imparted, 
    he that was lying cold and inanimate in the valley begins to move, to live, 
    to breathe, and to arise. One touch of Christ, a whisper of His voice, a 
    breath of His Spirit, begets a life in the soul that never dies. What a 
    fountain of life is Jesus! Think of its superabundance . There is a fulness 
    of life in Christ. The grace that is welled in Jesus is as infinite in its 
    source, as it is divine in its nature. An uncreated fulness, it must possess 
    an inexhaustible overabundance. Had the Father deposited this life-giving 
    grace in all the angels in heaven, it had long since been exhausted. Think 
    of the myriads, thirsting for holiness and for happiness, who have knelt and 
    slaked their thirst at this fountain- think of the myriads who have here 
    filled their empty vessels, and have gone away with joy and hope springing 
    high in their minds. Think of the myriads whose sins His blood has washed, 
    whose souls His righteousness has clad, whose corruptions His grace has 
    subdued, and whose sorrows His love has comforted. Think of the iniquities 
    which He has pardoned; of the backslidings which He has healed; of the grief 
    which He has removed; of the tears which He has dried; of the souls which He 
    has saved. Think of the myriads once drinking from the stream below, but who 
    are now drinking from the fountain head in glory. And yet is this fountain 
    as full as ever! Not one hair's breadth has it sunk. Jesus is as full of 
    pardoning grace for the guilty, and of justifying grace for the vile, and of 
    sanctifying grace for the unworthy, as ever. He is full enough to meet the 
    needs of every poor, thirsty, panting soul who ventures near. Oh, what a 
    precious truth is this! Precious, indeed, to him who feels his own 
    insufficiency, poverty, and need. What, reader, is your need? what your 
    sorrow? what your trial? what your infirmity? what your burden? Whatever it 
    may be, repair with it to this fountain of living water, and despair not of 
    a gracious welcome and of an adequate supply. It is a fountain, and a living 
    fountain. It needs no persuasion to flow, for it flows spontaneously; and 
    wherever it flows there is life. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February26 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220226</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 26. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Go, and sin no more.&quot; John 8:11. </p>
    <p align="justify">See how Christ manifests His abhorrence of the sin, while 
    He throws His shield of mercy around the sinner. The Lord does not justify 
    the sinner's transgression, though He justifies the sinner's person. In the 
    great matter of salvation, justification and sanctification, pardon and 
    holiness, are essentially and inseparably united. When the Lord Jesus 
    dismisses a sinner with a sense of acquittal in his conscience, it is ever 
    accompanied with that most affecting of all exhortations, &quot;Sin no more.&quot; And 
    as he passes out from the presence of Jesus, pardoned, justified, saved, the 
    Savior's tender, soul-subduing words from that moment seem to vibrate upon 
    his ear every step of his onward way. &quot;Go, admire, and publish abroad the 
    glory of that grace that has done such great things for you. Go, and spread 
    His fame, and with your latest breath dwell upon His name, who, when sin and 
    Satan and conscience accused you, and would have consigned you to eternal 
    woe- then appeared your Friend, your Advocate, and your Savior. Go, and when 
    tempted to wound afresh the bosom that sheltered you, remember Me; from 
    Gethsemane, from Calvary, and from the hallowed spot where I spoke to you, I 
    condemn you not. Go, and sin no more.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February25 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220225</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 25. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him.&quot; Psalm 
    37:7. </p>
    <p align="justify">It is just this simple, patient waiting upon God in all 
    our straits that certainly and effectually issues in our deliverance. In all 
    circumstances of faith's trial, of prayer's delay, of hope deferred, the 
    most proper and graceful posture of the soul- that which insures the largest 
    revenue of blessing to us and of glory to God- is a patient waiting on the 
    Lord. Although our impatience will not cause God to break His covenant, nor 
    violate His oath, yet a patient waiting will bring down larger and richer 
    blessings. The moral discipline of patience is most costly. It keeps the 
    soul humble, believing, prayerful. The mercy in which it results is all the 
    more prized and precious from the long season of hopeful expectation. It is 
    possible to receive a return too speedily. In our eagerness to grasp the 
    mercy with one hand, we may lose our hold on faith and prayer and God with 
    the other. A patient waiting the Lord's time and mode of appearing in our 
    behalf will tend to check all unworthy and unwise expedients and attempts at 
    self-rescue. An immediate deliverance may be purchased at a price too 
    costly. Its present taste may be sweet, but afterwards it may be bitter- God 
    embittering the blessing that was not sought with a single eye to His glory. 
    God's time, though it tarry, and God's deliverance, though delayed, when it 
    comes proves always to have been the best: &quot; My soul, wait only upon God, 
    for my expectation is from him.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February24 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220224</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 24. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;For I am the Lord, I change not; therefore you sons of 
    Jacob are not consumed.&quot; Malachi 3:6. </p>
    <p align="justify">It is no small attainment to be built up in the 
    faithfulness of God. This forms a stable foundation of comfort for the 
    believing soul. Mutability marks everything outside of God. Look into the 
    Church, into the world, into our families, ourselves, what innumerable 
    changes do we see on every hand! A week, one short day, what alterations 
    does it produce! Yet, in the midst of it all, to repose calmly on the 
    unchangeableness, the faithfulness of God. To know that no alterations of 
    time, no earthly changes, affect His faithfulness to His people. And more 
    than this- no changes in them- no unfaithfulness of theirs, causes the 
    slightest change in God. Once a Father, ever a Father; once a Friend, ever a 
    Friend. His providences may change, His heart cannot. He is a God of 
    unchangeable love. The promise He has given, He will fulfil; the covenant He 
    has made, He will observe; the word that has gone out of His mouth, He will 
    not alter. &quot;He cannot deny Himself.&quot; Peace then, tried believer! Are you 
    passing now through the deep waters? Who kept you from sinking when wading 
    through the last? <br>
    Who brought you through the last fire? Who supported you under the last 
    cross? Who delivered you out of the last temptation? Was it not God, your 
    covenant God- your faithful, unchangeable God? This God, then, is your God 
    now, and your God forever and ever, and He will be your guide even unto 
    death. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February23 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220223</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 23. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;For this thing I besought the Lord thrice, that it might 
    depart from me.&quot; 2 Corinthians 12:8. </p>
    <p align="justify">When Paul prayed for the removal of the thorn in the 
    flesh, he asked that of God which betrayed a lack of judgment in his 
    estimate of the thing which he petitioned for. Who would have suspected this 
    in the apostle of the Gentiles? But the Lord knew best what was for the good 
    of His dear servant. He saw that, on account of the peculiar revelations 
    that were given him in his visit to glory, the discipline of the covenant 
    was needed to keep him low in the dust. And, when His child petitioned 
    thrice for the removal of the thorn in the flesh, he for a moment 
    overlooked, in the painful nature of the discipline, its needed influence to 
    keep him &quot;walking humbly with God.&quot; So that we see even an inspired apostle 
    may ask those things of God, which He may see fit to refuse. We may 
    frequently expect some trial, something to keep us low before God, after a 
    season of peculiar nearness to Him, a manifestation of His loving-kindness 
    to our souls. There is a proneness to rest in self-complacency after close 
    communion with God, that the gentle hand of our Father is needed to screen 
    us from ourselves. It was so with Paul- why may it not be with us? In 
    withholding, however, the thing we ask of Him, we may be assured of this, 
    that He will grant us a perfect equivalent. The Lord saw fit to deny the 
    request of the apostle; but He granted him an equivalent- yes, more than an 
    equivalent, to that which He denied him- He gave him His all-supporting 
    grace. &quot;My grace is suffcient for you.&quot; Beloved reader, have you long asked 
    for the removal of some secret, heavy, painful cross? Perhaps you are yet 
    urging your request, and yet the Lord seems not to answer you. And why? 
    Because the request may not be in itself wise. Were He now to remove that 
    cross, He may, in taking away the cross, close up a channel of mercy which 
    you would never cease to regret. Oh, what secret and immense blessing may 
    that painful cross be the means of conveying into your soul! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February22 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220222</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 22. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;And this is the confidence that we have in Him, that, if 
    we ask anything according to His will, He hears us: and if we know that He 
    hear us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we desired 
    of Him.&quot; 1 John 5:14, 15. </p>
    <p align="justify">When we draw near to God, and ask for more love, more 
    zeal, an increase of faith, a reviving of God's work within us, more 
    resemblance to Christ, the subjection of some enemy, the mortification of 
    some evil, the subduing of some iniquity, the pardon of some guilt, more of 
    the spirit of adoption, the sprinkling of the atoning blood, the sweet sense 
    of acceptance, we know and are assured that we ask for those things which 
    are according to the will of God, and which it is in the heart of God fully 
    and freely to bestow. There need be no backwardness here- there need be no 
    restraint here- there may be no misgiving here. The believer may, when 
    pleading for such blessings, spreading out such needs before the Lord, with 
    &quot;boldness enter into the holiest, by the blood of Jesus.&quot; He may draw near 
    to God, not standing afar off, but, in the spirit of a child, drawing near 
    to God, he may come with large requests, large desires, hopeful 
    expectations; he may open his mouth wide, because he asks those things which 
    it is glorifying to God to give, which glorify Him when given, and which we 
    know, from His own word, are according to His blessed will to bestow. Oh, 
    the unspeakable encouragement of going to God with a request which we feel 
    assured it is in His heart and according to His will freely to grant! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February21 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220221</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 21. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;If so be that we suffer with Him.&quot; Romans 8:17. </p>
    <p align="justify">Not as He suffered. Oh, no! there is no curse, no wrath, 
    no hell in the cup of sorrow which we drink. All these ingredients composed 
    His bitter draught. Yet He suffers with us, and permits our afflictions to 
    be called the &quot;afflictions of Christ.&quot; He is with you on that bed of 
    sickness; He is with you on that couch of languishing; He is with you in 
    that darkened room; He kneels with you at that coffin; and He weeps with you 
    by the side of that sepulcher. Oh, may it not reconcile us to all the 
    suffering we have ever endured, or may yet be called to endure, to feel the 
    perfect oneness, the presence, the sympathy, the succourings of such a 
    Savior? Who would wish to shun the shame of His cross, the scorn of His 
    name, the lowliness of His kingdom, the self-denial of His religion, allied 
    in the tenderest sympathy at every step with this illustrious Martyr- this 
    Prince of sufferers- this Brother born for adversity? </p>
    <p align="justify">&nbsp;</p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February20 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220220</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 20. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;You have not as yet come to the rest and to the 
    inheritance which the Lord your God gives you.&quot; Deuteronomy 12:9. </p>
    <p align="justify">It is a richly instructive and deeply sanctifying 
    thought- the futurity of the heavenly rest. When told that we are not as yet 
    come to the rest and to the inheritance which the Lord our God gives us, we 
    are gently reminded that we have each one a niche in life to occupy, a 
    sphere to fill, a mission to perform. The idea of personal responsibility, 
    of individual influence, and of untiring action, instantly starts up before 
    the mind. &quot;Not yet in heaven- then for what am I here? Surely it is for an 
    object in harmony with my intellectual and spiritual being, and worthy of 
    Him who still detains me on earth. It must be that I have something to do, 
    or something to endure, for Christ- an active or a passive part to fill. 
    Lord, what will You have me to do or suffer for You?&quot; Oh, there is a 
    fathomless depth of divine wisdom in the arrangement that keeps us so long 
    out of heaven. The world needs us, and we need the world. It needs us to 
    illumine and sanctify it; we need it as the field of our conflict, and as 
    the school of our graces. We need the world, not as a hermit's cell, but as 
    a vast theater, where before angels and men our Christianity is developed in 
    the achievements of prayer, in the triumphs of faith, in the labors of love, 
    and in the endurance of suffering. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February19 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220219</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 19. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, 
    though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor, that you through His 
    poverty might be rich.&quot; 2 Corinthians 8:9. </p>
    <p align="justify">How little do we associate our most costly mercies, and 
    even those which we are accustomed to esteem of a more ordinary character 
    (although every mercy is infinitely great), with the abasement of our Lord! 
    How seldom do we trace our happy moments, and hallowed joys, and high 
    delights, and sacred scenes, and precious privileges, to this dark part of 
    His eventful history! And yet all flow to us through this very channel, and, 
    but for this, would never have been ours. When the ocean of His goodness 
    rolls in upon me, wave on wave- when I feel the cheering warmth of creature 
    smiles beaming sweetly and fondly- when I review, one by one, my personal, 
    domestic, and relative mercies- when even the cup of cold water, presented 
    by the hand of Christian kindness, moistens my lips, what is the thought 
    that forces itself upon my mind? &quot;All this springs from the deepest 
    humiliation of my adorable Christ!&quot; <br>
    And when I ascend into the higher region of grace, and survey the blessings 
    so richly and so freely bestowed- a rebel subdued- a criminal pardoned- a 
    child adopted- a royal priest anointed- union with Christ- covenant 
    relationship with God- access within the Holy of Holies- conformity to the 
    Divine image- still more deeply am I overwhelmed with the thought, &quot;all this 
    proceeds from the infinite abasement of the incarnate God!&quot; <br>
    And when yet higher still I ascend, and, passing from grace to glory, 
    contemplate the heaven of bliss that awaits me- in one moment absent from a 
    body of sin, and present with the Lord- away from a world, beautiful though 
    it is, because God has made it, yet the throne of Satan, the empire of sin, 
    the scene of sorrow, pollution, suffering, and death; and eternally shut in 
    with God, where all is joy, and all is holiness- made perfectly holy, and, 
    consequently, perfectly happy, to sin no more, to sorrow no more, to weep no 
    more, to wander no more, to fall no more- oh, how full of glory then becomes 
    the humiliation of my incarnate Lord! Beloved, when God exalts you, remember 
    it is because your Savior was abased. When your cup is sweet, remember it is 
    because His cup was bitter. When you press your mercy fondly and closely to 
    your heart, remember it is because He pressed His heart to the spear. And 
    when your eye of faith and hope looks forward to the coming glory, oh, do 
    not forget that, because He endured your hell, you shall enjoy His heaven!
    <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February18 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220218</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 18. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Looking unto Jesus.&quot; Hebrews 12:2. </p>
    <p align="justify">If Jesus is especially glorified in the faith of His 
    people, let yours be a life of faith in all its minute detail. Live upon Him 
    for spiritual supplies; live upon Him for temporal supplies. Go to Him in 
    dark providences, that you may be kept from sinking: go to Him in bright 
    providences, that you may be kept from falling. Go to Him when the path is 
    rough, that you may walk in it contentedly: go to Him when the path is 
    smooth, that you may walk in it surely. Let your daily history be a 
    traveling to Jesus empty, and a coming from Jesus filled. Keep the truth 
    constantly and prominently before your eye, &quot;The just shall live by faith.&quot; 
    If this be so, do not expect that God will ever permit you to live by sight. 
    Bend your whole soul submissively to Him in this matter. Let His will and 
    yours be one. If, in the course of your wilderness journeyings, He has 
    brought you into a great difficulty, yes, to the very margin of the sea, 
    still, at His bidding, &quot;go forward,&quot; though it be into that sea. Trust Him 
    to cleave asunder its waters, making a dry passage for your feet, and 
    causing those very waves that threatened to engulf you, now to prove as a 
    cloud canopying you above, and as walls of strength fencing you in on every 
    side. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February17 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220217</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 17. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his 
    saints.&quot; Psalm 116:15. </p>
    <p align="justify">It is solemnly true that there is a &quot;time to die.&quot; Ah! 
    affecting thought- a &quot;time to die!&quot; A time when this mortal conflict will be 
    over- when this heart will cease to feel, alike insensible to joy or sorrow- 
    when this head will ache and these eyes will weep no more- best and holiest 
    of all- a time &quot;when this corruptible shall put on incorruption, and this 
    mortal shall put on immortality,&quot; and we shall &quot;see Christ as He is, and be 
    like Him.&quot; If this be so, then, O Christian, why this anxious, trembling 
    fear? Your time of death, with all its attendant circumstances, is in the 
    Lord's hand. All is appointed and arranged by Him who loves you, and who 
    redeemed you- infinite goodness, wisdom, and faithfulness consulting your 
    highest happiness in each circumstance of your departure. The final sickness 
    cannot come, the &quot;last enemy&quot; cannot strike, until He bids it. All is in His 
    hand. Then calmly, confidingly, leave life's closing scene with Him. You 
    cannot die away from Jesus. Whether your spirit wings its flight at home or 
    abroad, amid strangers or friends, by a lingering process or by a sudden 
    stroke, in brightness or in gloom, Jesus will be with you; and, upheld by 
    His grace, and cheered with His presence, you shall triumphantly exclaim, 
    &quot;Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no 
    evil; for you are with me: your rod and your staff, they comfort me,&quot; 
    bearing your dying testimony to the faithfulness of God, and the 
    preciousness of His promises. My time to die is in Your hand, O Lord, and 
    there I calmly leave it. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February16 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220216</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 16. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;I am not alone, because the Father is with Me.&quot; John 
    16:32. </p>
    <p align="justify">Oh, what words are these! Who can harm you now? What can 
    befall you? When and where can you be alone, if your heavenly Father is with 
    you? He is with you on the ocean; He is with you on the land. He is with you 
    in your exile; He is with you at home. Friends may forsake, and kindred may 
    die, and circumstances may change- but &quot;my Father is with me!&quot; may, still be 
    your solace and your boast. And, oh, to realize the presence of that Father- 
    to walk with God in the absorbing consciousness of His loving eye never 
    removed, of His solemn presence never withdrawn, of His encircling arm never 
    untwined- welcome the solitude, welcome the loneliness, welcome the sorrow, 
    cheered, and sweetened, and sanctified by such a realization as this! &quot;I am 
    not alone, because the Father is with Me.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February15 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220215</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 15. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for 
    us all, how shall He not with him also freely give us all things?&quot; Romans 
    8:32. </p>
    <p align="justify">Look at the cross; behold His precious Gift transfixed to 
    it, and that by His own hand, and for your sins. Then look at your present 
    circumstances, survey your needs, your trials, your chastisements, your 
    bereavements, your heart-sickening, heartbreaking tribulations, and know 
    that God still is love. If He had love strong enough, deep enough, to give 
    you Jesus- to tear Him, as it were, from His bosom, and to transfix Him on 
    yonder accursed tree for your iniquities- has He not love enough to bow His 
    ear to your cry, and His heart to your sorrow? Will He not rescue you from 
    this difficulty, deliver you out of this trouble, shield you in this 
    temptation, supply this need, and support, succour, and comfort you in this 
    grief? Oh yes, He will! doubt it not! The cross of Calvary is a standing 
    pledge- standing until sin and guilt, need and woe, shall be known no more- 
    that God, who &quot;spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will 
    with Him also freely give us all things&quot; necessary to our good, and 
    promotive of His glory. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February14 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220214</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 14. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved 
    us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.&quot; 1 John 4:10. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Herein is love!&quot; as though John would say, &quot;and nowhere 
    else but here!&quot; That God should punish the innocent for the guilty- that He 
    should exact the blood of His Son to cancel the guilt of His rebels- that He 
    should lay an infinite weight of wrath on His soul, in order to lay an 
    infinite weight of love on ours- that He should sacrifice His life of 
    priceless value for ours- worthless, forfeited, and doomed- that He should 
    not only give His Son, but should bruise Him, put Him to grief, afflict Him, 
    should make His soul an offerinq for sin- that the 'Lord of Glory' should 
    become a 'man of sorrows', the Lord of Life should die, and the Heir of all 
    things should be &quot;as him that serves.&quot; Oh depth of love unfathomable! Oh 
    height of love unsearchable! Oh length and breadth of love unmeasurable! Oh 
    love of God, which passes knowledge! <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February13 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220213</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 13. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;The wind blows where it wills, and you hear the sound 
    thereof, but cannot tell where it comes, and where it goes: so is every one 
    that is born of the Spirit.&quot; John 3:8. </p>
    <p align="justify">Mark how striking is the figure. The wind bids defiance 
    to man's governing power. It is as sovereign in its influence as it is 
    irresistible in its strength. We cannot command it, nor can we control it. 
    It is alike out of our power to summon it, as it is to soothe it. It comes, 
    we know not where; it goes, we know not where. &quot;So is every one that is born 
    of the Spirit.&quot; We do not say that the Spirit is not resisted- He is 
    resisted, strongly and perseveringly. But He is not overpowered. All the 
    enmity and carnality of the heart rises in direct opposition to Him; but, 
    when bent upon a mission of love, when, in accordance with the eternal 
    purpose, He comes to save, not all the powers on earth or in hell can 
    effectually resist Him. Like the mighty force, He bears down all opposition, 
    sweeps away every barrier, overcomes every difficulty, and the sinner, &quot;made 
    willing in the day of His power,&quot; is brought to the feet of Jesus, there 
    meekly and gratefully to sit, &quot;clothed, and in his right mind.&quot; Who can 
    withstand the power of the Spirit? Whether He speaks in the &quot;still small 
    voice&quot; of tender, persuasive love, or whether He comes in the &quot;mighty 
    rushing wind&quot; of deep and overwhelming conviction, His influence is 
    quenchless, His power is irresistible. He effectually works in those who 
    believe. <br>
    But His operation is as sovereign as it is mighty. He comes to whom He will; 
    He comes when He will; He comes in the mode He will. He blows where He 
    wills; we hear the sound, we see the effects; but how He works, why He 
    works, and why in a particular way He works, He reveals not to mortals. Even 
    so, O blessed and eternal Spirit, for so it seems good in Your sight. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February12 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220212</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 12. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Whom He did foreknow, He also did predestinate to be 
    conformed to the image of His Son.&quot; Romans 8:29. </p>
    <p align="justify">Here is the glorious pattern of a child of God. 
    Sanctification is a conformity to the image and the example of Christ. The 
    more the believer is growing like Jesus, the more he is growing in holiness. 
    And, on the contrary, the less resemblance there is to Christ in his 
    principles, in the habit of his mind, in his spirit, temper, daily walk, 
    yes, in every action and in every look, the less is he advancing in the 
    great work of holiness. Oh, how many who profess His dear name, and who are 
    expecting to be with Him forever, never pause to consider what resemblance 
    they bear to Him now! And were they to deal faithfully, with conscience in 
    the much- neglected duty of self-examination; were they to bring themselves 
    to this great standard, how far below it would they be found to have come! 
    How much in their principles, in their governing motives, in their temper, 
    spirit, and daily conduct- how much in their walk in the world, in their 
    deportment in the Church, and in their more concealed conduct in their 
    families, would be discovered that was unlike Christ! How much that was 
    &quot;from beneath,&quot; how little that was &quot;from above,&quot;- how much of the &quot;image of 
    the earthly,&quot; how little of the &quot;image of the heavenly!&quot; But look at the 
    image of our dear Lord- how lowly, how holy it is! Look at His poverty of 
    spirit- lowliness of heart- humility of deportment- tenderness- forgiveness 
    of injuries- self-denial- prayerfulness- zeal for His Father's glory- 
    yearnings for the salvation of men. Oh to be like Jesus! to grow up into Him 
    in all things! this is to &quot;walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing.&quot; This 
    is to realize &quot;the will of God, even our sanctification.&quot; Let it not then be 
    forgotten, that an advancing believer is one growing in a resemblance and 
    conformity to the image and example of Christ. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February11 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220211</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 11. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Every one that does righteousness is born of him.&quot; 1 
    John 2:29. </p>
    <p align="justify">Negative holiness- the abstaining from outward sins- does 
    not always describe a regenerate soul; associated with this there must be 
    the positive evidence- &quot;Every one that does righteousness is born of him.&quot; 
    Where there is life, there is action, motion, energy. The life of a 
    regenerate man is a life of the highest activity. The principles that 
    influence him are divine and heavenly; their tendency is to holy action. The 
    more we resemble Christ &quot;in righteousness and true holiness,&quot; the stronger 
    the evidence to ourselves and to others that we are born again. We possess, 
    professedly, and, if not self-deceived, actually, the life of Christ. That 
    life is holy in its tendency and vigorous in its acting. The renewed soul 
    longs for holiness. He pants for divine conformity. He rests not in the mere 
    longing; he arises and labors for the blessing; he &quot;works out his salvation 
    with fear and trembling.&quot; He prayerfully and diligently uses the means the 
    Lord of sanctification has given him for the attainment of holiness; he is 
    active in his pursuit of the blessing. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February10 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220210</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 10. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;He ever lives to make intercession for them.&quot; Hebrews 
    7:25 </p>
    <p align="justify">How sweet and consolatory to the believer is this view of 
    our exalted Immanuel in the hour of bereavement- when confined to his 
    chamber of solitude, or languishing upon his bed of &quot;pining sickness&quot;! Too 
    deeply absorbed in sorrow, it may be, to give utterance to his anguished 
    spirit in prayer- his bodily frame so weakened by disease, and racked by 
    pain, as to render the mind unfit for close and connected spiritual thought- 
    oh, how sweet is then the intercession of Jesus, to know that, in the hour 
    of the soul's extremity, when human sympathy and power are exhausted, &quot;Jesus 
    has entered into heaven, now to appear in the presence of God&quot; for His 
    suffering child! And, when all utterance has failed on earth- and the heart 
    is broken- and the lips are sealed, then to look up and see our elder 
    Brother- the Brother born for our adversity- the exalted High Priest, waving 
    the golden censer before the throne, while the cloud of His atoning merit 
    goes up before the mercy-seat, bearing as it ascends the person, the name, 
    the circumstances, and the needs of the sufferer below. Precious gospel, 
    that opens to the eye of faith so sweet a prospect as this! When you cannot 
    think of Him, afflicted soul, He is thinking of you- when you cannot pray to 
    Him, He is praying for you, for &quot;He ever lives to make intercession.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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</description>
        </item>
        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February09 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220209</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 9. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of 
    God, that the Son of God might be glorified thereby.&quot; John 11:4 </p>
    <p align="justify">The season of sickness is the schooling of the soul. More 
    of God is unfolded then, and more of his truth is learned, than perhaps in 
    any other circumstances. Oh, how the character, and the perfections, and the 
    government of God become unfolded to his mind by the teachings of the Spirit 
    of truth! His dim views are cleared, his crude ideas are ripened, his 
    erroneous ideas are rectified; he contemplates God in another light, and 
    truth through another medium. But the sweetest effect of all is the personal 
    appropriation of God to his own soul. He can now say, &quot;This God is my God, 
    and is my Father, and is my portion forever,&quot;- words of assurance hitherto 
    strange to his lips. The promises of God were never realized as so precious, 
    the doctrines of grace were never felt to be so establishing, and the 
    precepts were never seen to be so obligatory and so sanctifying as now; 
    blessed results of a hallowed possession of the season of sickness! And what 
    a pruning of this living branch has taken place! What weanedness from the 
    engrossing claims of the earthly calling, from an undue attachment to 
    created good, from the creature, from the world, and what is the greatest 
    weanedness of all, from the wedded idol, self! What humility of mind, what 
    meekness of spirit, and self-renunciation follow! He entered that chamber as 
    a proud man; he leaves it as a little child. He went into it with much of 
    the spirit of a grasping, covetous, worldly-minded professor; he emerges 
    from it with the world under his feet: &quot;Consecration to Christ and Holiness 
    to God&quot;, written upon his substance, and engraved upon his brow. He has been 
    near to eternity! He has been looking within the veil! He has been reading 
    his own heart! He has been dealing with Christ! He has seen and felt how 
    solemn a thing it was to approach the gate of death, to enter the presence 
    of God- and from that dreadful point of vision, he has contemplated the 
    world, and life, and human responsibility, as they are; and he has come back 
    like a spirit from another sphere, clothed with all the solemnities of 
    eternity- to live now as one soon in reality to be there. Truly, his 
    sickness was &quot;for the glory of God, that the Son of God might be gloried 
    thereby.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February08 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220208</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 8. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;He will rest in his love.&quot; Zephaniah 3:17. </p>
    <p align="justify">The marginal reading of the passage is exceedingly 
    beautiful and expressive: &quot;He will be silent because of His love.&quot; Divine 
    wrath is silent, because love has hushed it. Divine justice is silent, 
    because love has satisfied it. Sin is silent, because love has condemned it. 
    Satan is silent, because love has vanquished him. God's love has silenced 
    every voice but its own. When an accusation was brought against a poor 
    sinner in the presence of Jesus, and He was called upon to judge in the 
    case, it is recorded that He &quot;stooped down, and with His finger wrote on the 
    ground, as though He heard them not.&quot; He was silent, because of His love! 
    And have we no accusers? Ah, yes! many and just. Conscience accuses, and 
    Satan accuses, and sin accuses, and the world accuses, but Jesus does not 
    accuse; He is silent, because of His love. They condemn loudly, fiercely, 
    justly, but He never condemns. &quot;And again he stooped down and wrote on the 
    ground.&quot; Still not a word of condemnation breathed from His lips. He had 
    been wronged, He had been sinned against, His own holy law had been broken, 
    and the witnesses, many and malignant, are there to testify in truth against 
    the sinner- but Jesus is silent, and silent in His love. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February07 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220207</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 7. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;When He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide 
    you into all truth.&quot; John 16:13. </p>
    <p align="justify">New and enlarged views of the Holy Spirit mark a 
    regenerate mind. Having received the Holy Spirit as a quickener, he feels 
    the need of Him now as a teacher, a sanctifier, a comforter, and a sealer. 
    As a teacher, discovering to him more of the hidden evil of the heart, more 
    knowledge of God, of His word, and of His Son. As a sanctifier, carrying 
    forward the work of grace in the soul, impressing more deeply on the heart 
    the Divine image, and bringing every thought and feeling and word into 
    sweet, holy, and filial obedience to the law of Jesus. As a comforter, 
    leading him, in the hour of his deep trial, to Christ; comforting, by 
    unfolding the sympathy and tenderness of Jesus, and the exceeding 
    preciousness and peculiar fitness of the many promises with which the word 
    of truth abounds for the consolation of the Lord's afflicted. As a sealer, 
    impressing upon his heart the sense of pardon, acceptance, and adoption; and 
    entering himself as the &quot;earnest of the inheritance, until the redemption of 
    the purchased possession.&quot; Oh! what exalted views does he now have of the 
    blessed and eternal Spirit- of His personal glory, His work, His offices, 
    His influences, His love, tenderness, and faithfulness! The ear is open to 
    the softest whisper of His voice; the heart expands to the gentlest 
    impression of His sealing, sanctifying influence. Remembering that He is &quot;a 
    temple of the Holy Spirit,&quot; he desires so to walk- lowly, softly, 
    watchfully, and prayerfully. Avoiding everything that would &quot;grieve the 
    Spirit,&quot; resigning every known sin that would dishonor and cause Him to 
    withdraw, the one single aim of his life is to walk so as to please God, 
    that &quot;God in all things may be glorified.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February06 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220206</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 6. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of 
    God.&quot; John 3:3. </p>
    <p align="justify">Regeneration is a work standing alone and distinct from 
    all the other operations of the Divine Spirit. It is to be carefully 
    distinguished from conversion, adoption, justification, and sanctification; 
    and yet must be regarded as forming the basis and the spring-head of them 
    all. For instance, there can be no conversion without a principle of life in 
    the soul; for conversion is the exercise of a spiritual power implanted in 
    man. There can be no sense of adoption, apart from a renewed nature; for 
    adoption confers the privilege only, not the nature of sons. There can be no 
    comforting sense of acceptance in the Beloved, until the mind has passed 
    from death unto life; nor can there be the smallest advance in a conformity 
    of the will and of the affections to the image of God, while there is 
    lacking in the soul the very root of holiness. Faith is a purifying grace, 
    but faith is only found in the heart &quot;created anew in Christ Jesus.&quot; There 
    must necessarily be the spiritual renewal of the whole man, before the soul 
    can pass into an adopted, justified, and sanctified state. Reader, ponder 
    seriously this solemn truth. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February05 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220205</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 5. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Without Me you can do nothing.&quot; John 15:5. </p>
    <p align="justify">Oh, that the Church of Christ, and each individual 
    member, would but realize this truth; that simpler, closer, more 
    experimental views of Jesus would essentially strengthen the tone of inward 
    spirituality and comfort! The great secret of all comfort in seasons of 
    affliction is to take the affliction, as it comes, simply to Christ; and the 
    great secret of all holiness is to take the corruption, as it rises, simply 
    to Christ. It is this living upon Christ for all he needs, this going to 
    Christ under all circumstances, and at all seasons, which forms the happy 
    and holy life of a child of God. There is no other path for him to walk in. 
    The moment he turns from Christ he becomes like a vessel loosed from its 
    moorings, and driven at the mercy of the winds from billow to billow. Christ 
    must be all in all to him; friends, domestic comforts, Church privileges, 
    ordinances, means of grace, nothing must suffice for Jesus. And why does the 
    Lord so frequently discipline the soul? Why remove friends, why blight 
    domestic comforts, why rob us of Church privileges, why close up the 
    ordinances, and write death upon the means of grace? Oh, why? but to open a 
    way through which He Himself might enter the believer, and convince that 
    lonely, bereaved, and desolate heart that He is a substitute for everything, 
    while nothing shall ever be a substitute for Him. He will have the supreme 
    affection of His saints; they shall find their all in Him; and to this end 
    He sends afflictions, crosses, and disappointments, but to wean them from 
    their idols and draw them to Himself. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February04 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220204</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 4. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Who his own self bore our sins in his own body on the 
    tree,&quot; or, to the tree. 1 Peter 2:24. </p>
    <p align="justify">Blessed announcement! Not the less hateful, nor hated, is 
    the sin because it is forgiven and entirely blotted out. Oh no! Let the Lord 
    touch your heart, Christian reader, with a sense of His pardoning love, with 
    the assurance of His forgiveness, and you will go and hate, and mortify, and 
    forsake it, more resolutely and effectually than ever. And must the Son of 
    God become the Son of man, that those who are by nature children of wrath, 
    might become the sons of God! Must God, the eternal God, the high and lofty 
    One, stoop so low as to become incarnate, and that for sinners; for me, a 
    poor worthless sinner! To save me from eternal woe, must the Son of Man 
    suffer, agonize, and die; die in my stead, die for my sins, die an accursed 
    death! Ah! Lord, what must sin be, what must my sin be! How little have I 
    thought of it, how little have I mourned for it, still less have I hated it 
    as I ought to have hated it! Lord, how vile, how unutterably vile I am! Oh 
    hated sin! Do You forgive it, Father of my mercies? This only makes it more 
    hateful still. Never, never, can I forgive myself. <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February03 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220203</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 3. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;There remains, then, a rest for the people of God.&quot; 
    Hebrews 4:9. </p>
    <p align="justify">Not yet come to the heavenly rest, we still are 
    approaching it, and, oh ecstatic thought! we shall reach it at last. 
    Everything in our present course reminds us that we are nearing home, as the 
    seaweed washed from the rocks, and as the land-birds venturing from their 
    bowers and floating by the vessel, are indices to the voyager that he is 
    nearing his port. Are you bereaved? Weep not! earth has one tie the less, 
    and heaven has one tie more. Are you impoverished of earthly substance? 
    Grieve not! your imperishable treasure is in heaven. Are you sailing over 
    dark and stormy waters? Fear not! the rising flood but lifts your ark the 
    higher and nearer the mount of perfect safety and endless rest. Are you 
    battling with disease, conscious that life is ebbing and eternity is 
    nearing? Tremble not! there is light and music in your lone and shaded 
    chamber- the dawn and the chimings of your heavenly home. &quot;I am going home! 
    Transporting thought!- True, I leave an earthly one, all so sweet and 
    attractive, but I exchange it for a heavenly one infinitely brighter, more 
    sacred and precious. I am going to Jesus- to the Church Triumphant- to 
    Apostles, Prophets, and Martyrs- to the dear ones who line the shore on the 
    other side, prepared to welcome me there. Death, from which I have so often 
    recoiled, is but the triumphal arch- oh, how bright a risen Christ has made 
    it! -through which I pass into 'my Father's house.'&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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        <item>
                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February02 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220202</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify">FEBRUARY 2. </p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;Who went about doing good.&quot; Acts 10:38. </p>
    <p align="justify">Earnestly would I endeavor to impress upon the reader 
    what Henry Martyn beautifully terms &quot;the pleasure of doing good.&quot; Next to 
    direct communion with God, the loftiest and purest source of enjoyment 
    opened to us on earth is found in the expression of human sympathy, in the 
    exercise of Christian benevolence. No selfish pleasure ever brought to the 
    heart the peace, the joy, the happiness which one solitary act of kindness 
    to another did. God is happy in the exercise of His boundless love. Angels 
    are happy in the discharge of their beneficent mission, and man is happy as 
    his affections and sympathies travel forth in quest of objects upon which 
    they may repose. Oh! the luxury of effacing one sorrow from the heart, one 
    shadow from the brow, one tear from the eye. It is in this living for the 
    good of others, especially in seeking their spiritual and eternal happiness, 
    we have found a most powerful means of advancing vital godliness in our own 
    souls. The religion of many of the Lord's people is sickly and feeble, cold 
    and gloomy, just because it is so selfish. Would they be more vigorous in 
    their souls? Would they make greater progress in the divine life? Would they 
    combat more successfully the many doubts and fears that assail them? Would 
    they have a happier, sunnier religion, walking more fully in the light of 
    the Lord's countenance? Then let them be up and doing in their Lord's 
    vineyard. Let them seek the conversion of lost sinners, the comforting of 
    poor saints, the betterment of human misery in some of its many forms, thus, 
    like their Master, going about doing good, and then would be fulfilled in 
    their souls' happy experience the precious promise: &quot;You come to the help of 
    those who gladly do right, who remember your ways.&quot; <br>
&nbsp; </p> 
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                <title>Morning Daily Readings by Octavious Winslow</title>
                <link> http://bach.bellclan.xyz/octavious/morning-readings/February01 </link>
                <guid> ODRM_20220201</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[
     <p align="justify"><b>FEBRUARY 1. </b></p>
    <p align="justify">&quot;It is God who justifies.&quot; Romans 8:33. </p>
    <p align="justify">Behold the eternal security of the weakest believer in 
    Jesus. The act of justification, once passed under the great seal of the 
    resurrection of Christ, God can never revoke without denying Himself. Here 
    is our safety. Here is the ground of our dauntless challenge, &quot;Who shall lay 
    anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God who justifies.&quot; What can I 
    need more? What more can I ask? If God, the God of spotless purity, the God 
    of inflexible righteousness, justifies me, &quot;who is he that condemns? &quot; Sin 
    may condemn, but it is God that justifies! The law may alarm, but it is God 
    that justifies! Satan may accuse, but it is God that justifies! Death may 
    terrify, but it is God that justifies! &quot;If GOD is for us, who can be against 
    us?&quot; Who will dare condemn the soul whom He justifies? How gloriously will 
    this truth shine forth in the great day of judgment! Every accuser will then 
    be dumb. Every tongue will then be silent. Nothing shall be laid to the 
    charge of God's elect. GOD Himself shall pronounce them fully, and forever 
    justified: &quot;And those He justifies, He also glorifies.&quot; <br>
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    discipline of love. <br>
    <br>
    But through all this there flows a river, the streams whereof make glad the
    city of God. It is the peace of the heavenly mind, the peace which Jesus
    procured, which God imparts, and which the Holy Spirit seals. A heavenly
    mind soars above a poor dying world, living not upon a creature's love or
    smile- casting its daily need upon the heart of a kind Providence- anxious
    for nothing, but with supplication and thanksgiving making known its
    requests unto God- indifferent to the turmoil, vexations, and chequered
    scenes of worldly life, and living in simple faith and holy pleasing on
    Christ. Thus detached from earth, and moving heavenwards by the attractions
    of its placid coast, it realizes a peace which passes all understanding. <br>
    <br>
    And if this be the present of the heavenly mind, what will be the future of
    the mind in heaven? Heaven is the abode of perfect peace. There are no
    cloudings of guilt, no tossings of grief, no agitations of fear, no
    corrodings of anxiety there. It is the peace of perfect purity- it is the
    repose of complete satisfaction. It is not so much the entire absence of all
    sorrow, as it is the actual presence of all holiness, that constitutes the
    charm and the bliss of future glory. <br>
    <br>
    The season of sorrow is frequently converted into that of secret joy- Christ
    making our very griefs to sing. But the occasion of sin is always that of
    bitter grief; our backslidings often, like scorpions, entwined around our
    hearts. Were there even- as most assuredly there will not be- sadness in
    heaven, there might still be the accompaniment of happiness; but were there
    sin in heaven- the shadow of a shade of guilt- it would becloud and embitter
    all. Thus, then, as heaven is the abode of perfect peace, he who on earth
    has his conversation most in heaven approximates in his feelings the nearest
    to the heavenly state. Oh that our hearts were more yielding to the sweet,
    holy, and powerful attractions of the heavenly world! Then would our
    conversation be more in heaven.<br>
    <br>
    <br> 
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