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Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Morning, March 20

Morning and Evening: Daily Readings

Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Morning, March 20

Imported boundary: Morning, March 20 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: Song of Solomon 2:8.

> "My beloved."

This was a golden name which the ancient Church in her most joyous moments was wont to give to the Anointed of the Lord. When the time of the singing of birds was come, and the voice of the turtle was heard in her land, her love-note was sweeter than either, as she sang, "My beloved is mine and I am his: he feedeth among the lilies." Ever in her song of songs doth she call him by that delightful name, "My beloved!" Even in the long winter, when idolatry had withered the garden of the Lord, her prophets found space to lay aside the burden of the Lord for a little season, and to say, as Esaias did, "Now will I sing to my well-beloved a song of my beloved touching his vineyard." Though the saints had never seen his face, though as yet he was not made flesh, nor had dwelt among us, nor had man beheld his glory, yet he was the consolation of Israel, the hope and joy of all the chosen, the "beloved" of all those who were upright before the Most High. We, in the summer days of the Church, are also wont to speak of Christ as the best beloved of our soul, and to feel that he is very precious, the "chiefest among ten thousand, and the altogether lovely." So true is it that the Church loves Jesus, and claims him as her beloved, that the apostle dares to defy the whole universe to separate her from the love of Christ, and declares that neither persecutions, distress, affliction, peril, or the sword have been able to do it; nay, he joyously boasts, "In all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us."

O that we knew more of thee, thou ever precious one!

"My sole possession is thy love;

In earth beneath, or heaven above,

I have no other store;

And though with fervent suit I pray,

And importune thee day by day,

I ask thee nothing more."

Source and provenance

Citation: Charles H. Spurgeon, Morning and Evening: Daily Readings, Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Morning, March 20, CCEL all-text cache, accessed 2026-07-07. Source URL: https://ccel.org/ccel/spurgeon/morneve/cache/morneve.html3#d0320am

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: SNG.2.8

Source provider: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Use guidance: quote-ok

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