The Lord hath prepared his throne in the heavens; and his kingdom ruleth overall (Psalm 103:19).
Some time since, in the early spring, I was going out at my door when round the comer came a blast of east wind-defiant and
pitiless, fierce and withering-sending a cloud of dust before it.
I was just taking the latchkey from the door as I said, half
impatiently, "I wish the wind would"- I was going to say change, but the word was checked, and the sentence was never finished.
As I went on my way, the incident became a parable to me. There came an angel holding out a key; and he said:
"My Master sends thee His love, and bids me give you this."
"What is it?" I asked wondering. "The key of the winds," said the angel, and disappeared.
Now indeed should I be happy. I hurried away up into the heights
whence the winds came, and stood amongst the caves. "I will have
done with the east wind at any rate-and that shall plague us no
more," I cried; and calling in that friendless wind, I dosed the
door, and heard the echoes ringing in the hollow places. I turned
the key triumphantly. "There," I said, "now we have done with that"
"What shall I choose in its place?" I asked myself, looking about me. "The south wind is pleasant"; and I thought of the lambs, and the young fife on every hand, and the flowers that had begun to
deck the hedgerows. But as I set the key within the door, it began to bum my hand.
"What am I doing?" I cried; "who knows what mischief I may bring about? How do I know what the fields want! Ten thousand things of ill may come of this foolish wish of mine."
Bewildered and ashamed, I looked up and prayed that the Lord would
send His angel yet again to take the key; and for my part I promised that I would never want to have it any more.
But lo, the Lord Himself stood by me. He reached His had to take the key; and as I laid it down, I saw that it rested against the
sacred wound-print
It hurt me indeed that I could ever have murmured against anything
wrought by Him who bare such sacred tokens of His love. Then He took the key and hung it on His girdle.
"Dost THOU keep the key of the winds?" I asked. "I do, my child," He answered graciously.
And lo, I looked again and there hung all the keys of all my fife.
He saw my look of amazement and asked, "Didst thou not know, my child, that my kingdom ruleth over all?"
"Over all, my Lord?" I answered; "then it is not safe for me to
murmur at anything?" Then did He lay His hand upon me tenderly. "My child," He said, "thy only safety is, in everything, to
love and trust and praise. --Mark Guy Pearse.
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Streams in the Desert Daily Devotional
Streams in the Desert May 2 Daily Devotional
Read the May 2 devotional from Streams in the Desert with Scripture-rooted reflection and daily Christian encouragement.