The sermon emphasizes the importance of recognizing and trusting in the living, unchanging God who is always present and sovereign.
Charles E. Cowman preaches about the importance of remembering that God is the living God, unchanging in His power and love throughout all time. He emphasizes the need to confide in God, especially in our darkest moments, and to trust that He will never fail us if we walk with Him, look to Him, and expect help from Him. The sermon draws inspiration from the unwavering faith of George Mueller, the hope found in the eternal life of Jesus, and the continuous presence of Christ as shared by Dr. John Douglas Adam.
Text
"O Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God whom thou servest continually, able to deliver thee" (Dan. 6:20).
How many times we find this expression in the Scriptures, and yet it is just this very thing that we are so prone to lose sight of. We know it is written "the living God"; but in our daily life there is scarcely anything we practically so much lose sight of as the fact that God is the living God; that He is now whatever He was three or four thousand years since; that He has the same sovereign power, the same saving love towards those who love and serve Him as ever He had and that He will do for them now what He did for others two, three, four thousand years ago, simply because He is the living God, the unchanging One. Oh, how therefore we should confide in Him, and in our darkest moments never lose sight of the fact that He is still and ever will be the living God!
Be assured, if you walk with Him and look to Him and expect help from Him, He will never fail you. An older brother who has known the Lord for forty-four years, who writes this, says to you for your encouragement that He has never failed him. In the greatest difficulties, in the heaviest trials, in the deepest poverty and necessities, He has never failed me; but because I was enabled by His grace to trust Him He has always appeared for my help. I delight in speaking well of His name. --George Mueller
Luther was once found at a moment of peril and fear, when he had need to grasp unseen strength, sitting in an abstracted mood tracing on the table with his finger the words, "Vivit! vivit!" ("He lives! He lives!"). It is our hope for ourselves, and for His truth, and for mankind. Men come and go; leaders, teachers, thinkers speak and work for a season, and then fall silent and impotent. He abides. They die, but He lives. They are lights kindled, and, therefore, sooner or later quenched; but He is the true light from which they draw all their brightness, and He shines for evermore. --Alexander Maclaren
"One day I came to know Dr. John Douglas Adam," writes C. G. Trumbull. "I learned from him that what he counted his greatest spiritual asset was his unvarying consciousness of the actual presence of Jesus. Nothing bore him up so, he said, as the realization that Jesus was always with him in actual presence; and that this was so independent of his own feelings, independent of his deserts, and independent of his own notions as to how Jesus would manifest His presence.
"Moreover, he said that Christ was the home of his thoughts. Whenever his mind was free from other matters it would turn to Christ; and he would talk aloud to Christ when he was alone--on the street, anywhere--as easily and naturally as to a human friend. So real to him was Jesus' actual presence.
Sermon Outline
- The Living God: Unchanging and Sovereign
- Confidence in the Living God
- Examples of Faith in the Living God
- George Mueller's experience of God's faithfulness
- Luther's reliance on God's living presence
- C. G. Trumbull's consciousness of Jesus' presence
Key Quotes
“He lives! He lives!” — Charles E. Cowman
“Nothing bore him up so, he said, as the realization that Jesus was always with him in actual presence;” — Charles E. Cowman
“Christ was the home of his thoughts. Whenever his mind was free from other matters it would turn to Christ;” — Charles E. Cowman
Application Points
- We should confide in the living God and expect help from Him in times of need.
- We can cultivate a deeper awareness of Jesus' presence by talking to Him and seeking His guidance.
- Trusting in God's presence means relying on His power, love, and guidance, rather than our own strength and wisdom.
