For this Life and the Life to Come 

The entrance of Thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the
simple. Ps. 119:130. 

For the mind and the soul, as well as for the body, it is God's law that
strength is acquired by effort. It is exercise that develops. In harmony
with this law, God has provided in His Word the means for mental and
spiritual development. 

The Bible contains all the principles that men need to understand in order
to be fitted either for this life or for the life to come. And these
principles may be understood by all. . . . 

And even greater is the power of the Bible in the development of the
spiritual nature. Man, created for fellowship with God, can only in such
fellowship find his real life and development. Created to find in God his
highest joy, he can find in nothing else that which can quiet the cravings
of the heart, can satisfy the hunger and thirst of the soul. He who with
sincere and teachable spirit studies God's Word, seeking to comprehend its
truths, will be brought in touch with its Author; and, except by his own
choice, there is no limit to the possibilities of his development. 

In its wide range of style and subjects the Bible has something to interest
every mind and appeal to every heart. In its pages are found history the
most ancient; biography the truest to life; principles of government for the
control of the state, for the regulation of the household--principles that
human wisdom has never equaled. It contains philosophy the most profound,
poetry the sweetest and the most sublime, the most impassioned and the most
pathetic. Immeasurably superior in value to the productions of any human
author are the Bible writings, even when thus considered; but of infinitely
wider scope, of infinitely greater value, are they when viewed in their
relation to the grand central thought. Viewed in the light of this thought,
every topic has a new significance. In the most simply stated truths are
involved principles that are as high as heaven and that compass eternity. 

The central theme of the Bible, the theme about which every other in the
whole book clusters, is the redemption plan, the restoration in the human
soul of the image of God. From the first intimation of hope in the sentence
pronounced in Eden to that last glorious promise of the Revelation, "They
shall see his face; and his name shall be in their foreheads" (Rev. 22:4),
the burden of every book and every passage of the Bible is the unfolding of
this wondrous theme--man's uplifting--the power of God, "which giveth us the
victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Cor. 15:57). 

He who grasps this thought has before him an infinite field for study. He
has the key that will unlock to him the whole treasure house of God's Word
(Education, pp. 123-126). 

>From Lift Him Up - Page 122

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