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Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, July 2

Morning and Evening: Daily Readings

Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, July 2

Imported boundary: Evening, July 2 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: Psalm 28:1.

> "Unto thee will I cry, O Lord my rock; be not silent to me: lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit."

A cry is the natural expression of sorrow, and a suitable utterance when all other modes of appeal fail us; but the cry must be alone directed to the Lord, for to cry to man is to waste our entreaties upon the air. When we consider the readiness of the Lord to hear, and his ability to aid, we shall see good reason for directing all our appeals at once to the God of our salvation. It will be in vain to call to the rocks in the day of judgment, but our Rock attends to our cries.

"Be not silent to me." Mere formalists may be content without answers to their prayers, but genuine suppliants cannot; they are not satisfied with the results of prayer itself in calming the mind and subduing the will--they must go further, and obtain actual replies from heaven, or they cannot rest; and those replies they long to receive at once, they dread even a little of God's silence. God's voice is often so terrible that it shakes the wilderness; but his silence is equally full of awe to an eager suppliant. When God seems to close his ear, we must not therefore close our mouths, but rather cry with more earnestness; for when our note grows shrill with eagerness and grief, he will not long deny us a hearing. What a dreadful case should we be in if the Lord should become forever silent to our prayers? "Lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit." Deprived of the God who answers prayer, we should be in a more pitiable plight than the dead in the grave, and should soon sink to the same level as the lost in hell. We must have answers to prayer: ours is an urgent case of dire necessity; surely the Lord will speak peace to our agitated minds, for he never can find it in his heart to permit his own elect to perish.

Source and provenance

Citation: Charles H. Spurgeon, Morning and Evening: Daily Readings, Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, July 2, CCEL all-text cache, accessed 2026-07-07. Source URL: https://ccel.org/ccel/spurgeon/morneve/cache/morneve.html3#d0702pm

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: PSA.28.1

Source provider: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Use guidance: quote-ok

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