One day I saw a little girl of twelve years lying in one of the beds of a hospital, and asked her, “Do you love the Lord Jesus?”
“No,” she said, “hut I want to very much.”
“Why?” I inquired, and her reply was—
“Because I am a sinner. I have tried to be good, but I do want to come to Him, and to love Him.”
“Well, dear,” I said, “think for a fewmoments of these two verses; ‘God hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all,’ and ‘His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree.’ Now, if God laid your sins on the Lord Jesus, and He bore them, where are they?”
“Well,” she said, very slowly, “if God putt them on Jesus, and He bore them, I can’t bear them, too.”
“No, dear,” I answered, “but let us look at it like this: God hated sin. He could not look upon it, and must punish it, but the Lord Jesus loved little Emily, and bore her punishment instead of her, upon the cross.”
She looked up so brightly, and said, “Is that what trust or believe means? Then I do trust, and will believe Him with all my heart, now.”
“You must only believe or trust the Lord, and He will give you power to be good after you have truly trusted Him.”
She waited a moment before speaking, and then said,
“Is that really all? I want Him to take my heart now. I do trust Him.”
I think little Emily, then and there, really put her trust in the Lord Jesus, her Saviour; and to you, dear children, who feel your need of the Saviour, I would say, come to Him, as Emily did, in all your sins, for He will save you. Take your place before God as a sinner, and ask Him to show you the Lord Jesus on the cross bearing our sins.
The Lord Jesus shed His precious blood for sinners, and all who trust Him have their sins washed away, and are made whiter than the snow.
ML 09/12/1943