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Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, December 19

Morning and Evening: Daily Readings

Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, December 19

Imported boundary: Evening, December 19 from CCEL's all-text Morning and Evening cache. CCEL navigation, month link lists, reader-start-page note, scripture index, and page apparatus are not mirrored.

Scripture heading: Revelation 21:1.

> "And there was no more sea."

Scarcely could we rejoice at the thought of losing the glorious old ocean: the new heavens and the new earth are none the fairer to our imagination, if, indeed, literally there is to be no great and wide sea, with its gleaming waves and shelly shores. Is not the text to be read as a metaphor, tinged with the prejudice with which the Oriental mind universally regarded the sea in the olden times? A real physical world without a sea it is mournful to imagine, it would be an iron ring without the sapphire which made it precious. There must be a spiritual meaning here. In the new dispensation there will be no division--the sea separates nations and sunders peoples from each other. To John in Patmos the deep waters were like prison walls, shutting him out from his brethren and his work: there shall be no such barriers in the world to come. Leagues of rolling billows lie between us and many a kinsman whom tonight we prayerfully remember, but in the bright world to which we go there shall be unbroken fellowship for all the redeemed family. In this sense there shall be no more sea. The sea is the emblem of change; with its ebbs and flows, its glassy smoothness and its mountainous billows, its gentle murmurs and its tumultuous roarings, it is never long the same. Slave of the fickle winds and the changeful moon, its instability is proverbial. In this mortal state we have too much of this; earth is constant only in her inconstancy, but in the heavenly state all mournful change shall be unknown, and with it all fear of storm to wreck our hopes and drown our joys. The sea of glass glows with a glory unbroken by a wave. No tempest howls along the peaceful shores of paradise. Soon shall we reach that happy land where partings, and changes, and storms shall be ended! Jesus will waft us there. Are we in him or not? This is the grand question.

Source and provenance

Citation: Charles H. Spurgeon, Morning and Evening: Daily Readings, Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, December 19, CCEL all-text cache, accessed 2026-07-07. Source URL: https://ccel.org/ccel/spurgeon/morneve/cache/morneve.html3#d1219pm

Original work: public-domain nineteenth-century devotional readings by Charles H. Spurgeon

Digital source: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Edition status: Needs verification

Proof texts: Proof references present

Scripture refs: REV.21.1

Source provider: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Use guidance: quote-ok

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