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Coming To Drink
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The
Sovereign Potter |
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If
any man thirsts, let him come unto me and drink. -- John
7:37 |
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Most generally, the words of
the well-known hymn: "whosoever will may come," are
interpreted as meaning that salvation is a matter that is
left up to the will and choice of the sinner. It is
true, all men are not saved, for all men do not will to come
to Christ. But that they do not will is not due to any
incapacity of the will and spiritual darkness of the
understanding, but simply to a wrong use of their willpower.
Man is master of his own will. Even though it may be granted
that by nature he is inclined to reject salvation and
Christ, he has the power to turn about and accept Him.
He can will as he pleases, and please as he wills. The
will of man is free, sovereignly free, arbitrarily free. Man can will to accept
Christ, and he can will to reject Him. And this situation
prevails until he dies. Even as he is able to accept Christ
today, so he may reject Him again, and apostatize from the faith,
tomorrow. He may come to the Savior today, and forsake Him
tomorrow. If only he accepts Him just before he dies, or is
faithful to Him till that moment, he is saved. But if he
should accept Him all his life, and reject Him at the last moment,
he is lost. Nor is it from this viewpoint quite clear, why
if this arbitrariness is essential to freedom of the will, the
saints in glory are not continually in danger of rejecting Christ,
and plunging from glory into desolation.
This view we reject. Not only is it
contrary to all that the Scriptures teach us concerning the state
of the natural man, and concerning the sovereign grace of God to
save, but it is also absurd, and contrary to actual experience.
An arbitrary will of man, that can turn either this way or that,
that can arbitrarily will either one thing or its opposite, simply
does not exist. The will is motivated in its choice.
This is true in respect to natural things. Why do you will
to eat? Because you are hungry. Why do you drink?
Because you are thirsty. You cannot will to eat when you are full
and nauseated. But the same is true spiritually. Also the
will to come to Christ is motivated. Why does man come to Christ?
Because he longs after the living God. Because he is weary
of sin, and seeks rest, the rest of forgiveness, of eternal
righteousness, of fellowship with the God of his salvation, and
because he acknowledges that it is only in and through Christ that
he can attain to them. Why does a man come to Christ?
Because he thirsts for the living water, and the Fount of that
water of life is opened in Christ alone. And this longing
after God, after forgiveness and righteousness, this thirst for
the water of life, this will to come to Christ, is not of the
sinner himself: it is the fruit of grace.
Christ is the Fount of the water of life.
The river of the water of life in the paradise of God flows from
the throne of God and of the Lamb, which means that it proceeds
from God through Christ. In the last day, the great day of
the feast of the tabernacles, when the golden pitcher was filled
with water from the pool of Siloam, Jesus stood and cried:
"If any man thirsts, let him come unto me and drink."
John 7:37. To the Samaritan woman at the well the Lord says:
"If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to
thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldst have asked of him, and he
would have given thee living water." And again:
"Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again: but
whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never
thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well
of living water." John 4:10, 13, 14. The opening of
this fountain of living water in Christ was typified and foretold
ages before in the old dispensation. The thirst of the
children of Israel was wonderfully quenched with water out of the
rock, and the apostle Paul referring to this miracle of grace
writes, that they all drank "the same spiritual drink: for
they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that
Rock was Christ." I Cor. 10:4. Christ followed them all
through their wanderings in the desert, and revealed Himself by
supplying them with water from the rocks. With a view to His
coming, Isaiah called: "Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye
to the waters, and he that hath no money; come ye, buy and eat;
yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without
price." Isa. 55:1. And he could proclaim the blessed
promise: "For I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and
floods upon the dry ground." Isa. 44:3. Through his
prophet Zechariah the Lord promised: "In that day there shall
be a fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants
of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness." And
"living waters shall go out from Jerusalem" in that day
of great salvation. Zech. 13:1; 14:8. That fountain is
opened in Christ, and from Him flow the streams of living water.
Let us ask the question: what is the
meaning of this symbol?
Water has a rich symbolic meaning in
Scripture. Sometimes it symbolizes deep affliction that
overwhelms one's soul, and threatens to drown him and swallow him
up. As a sign of spiritual realities, it signifies
especially three things: separation, cleansing, and spiritual
quickening and refreshment. The water of baptism is a sign
and seal of spiritual separation from the world into the
fellowship of Christ, and of cleansing from sin unto eternal
righteousness. Thus the waters of the deluge were typical of
baptism into Christ, for by the flood it was, not by the ark, that
the church was cleansed and separated from the ungodly world that
perished in the waters of the flood. I Pet. 3:20, 21.
In the same way the waters of the Red Sea typified baptism, for by
these the people of Israel were separated unto God from Pharaoh
and his host, and the house of bondage in Egypt. And through
baptism the old man of sin is swallowed up, the new man in Christ
arises, separated from sin and from the evil world, and raised
with Christ into a new life of fellowship with God.
It is evident, however, that when Christ
is presented as the fount of the water of life, from which we must
drink, the meaning of the symbol is somewhat different. It
is not spiritual cleansing, but quickening, refreshment, complete
satisfaction that is signified. It may be said, first of
all, that living water or water of life represents principally,
and in its deeper sense, the Holy Spirit, as the Spirit of Christ,
by Whom all the spiritual blessings of salvation are bestowed upon
the Church as a whole, and upon believers individually. He
is this stream of living water that flows constantly out of God,
through Christ into the Church. This is evident from Isa. 44:3,
for after the prophet has said "I will pour water upon him
that is thirsty," he explains the symbolism by adding "I
will pour my Spirit upon thy seed." Thus also in John
7:37-39. The promise of living water is explained by the
apostle in the words: "But this spake he of the Spirit which
they that believe on him should receive." And this is
also evident from the picture of the river of the water of life in
Rev. 22, for the river is presented as flowing from the throne of
God and the Lamb. With the exaltation of the Savior and the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit soon after, on the day of Pentecost,
the promise was fulfilled, the river of the water of life began to
flow, and the fount of living water was opened.
But the stream of living water represents
the Spirit as the Author of our salvation, who realizes unto us
and within us all the spiritual blessings in heavenly places that
are in Christ, and which He obtained for us by His perfect
obedience. These blessings are in the exalted Christ, and
the Spirit of Christ takes them out of Him to bestow them upon us.
He is called the Spirit of life, the Spirit of adoption whereby we
cry, Abba, Father; the Spirit of truth, that leads us into all the
truth; the quickening Spirit, the Spirit of wisdom and knowledge
and revelation, the Spirit of holiness and sanctification, the
Spirit of Christ. Accordingly, it is He that regenerates us, and
causes up to be born of God, making us partakers of the
resurrection-life of Christ. He gives us understanding and
discernment of spiritual things, eyes to see, and ears to hear,
and hearts to understand the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven.
It is by Him that we are called from darkness into light, from sin
unto righteousness, from corruption into holiness, from death into
life. All the spiritual blessings of knowledge and wisdom,
of life and glory, of righteousness and holiness, and all other
riches of grace constantly flow from Christ in the Spirit into the
Church and into the believers. By these they live, and are
constantly refreshed unto eternal life. And this stream of
spiritual blessings is symbolized by the living water, or the
river of the water of life.
All these spiritual blessings of
salvation have their ground and heart in one, namely, perfect
righteousness. Righteousness and salvation are so closely
and inseparably connected, that Scripture sometimes virtually
identifies them. Just as the real essence of our misery is
sin, so the heart of our salvation is righteousness. Without
righteousness there is no life, no favor of God, no fellowship
with Him. Righteousness is life and joy. We must,
therefore, be made righteous, and that, too, both in the legal and
juridical sense, and in the spiritual, ethical sense of the word.
We must be justified. Our sins must be blotted out and
forgiven, and the perfect righteousness of God in Christ must be
imputed to us, so that, even though in ourselves we lie in the
midst of sin and death, we glory in our justification, and are
assured that we are righteous before God. But we must also
be sanctified, delivered from darkness and corruption and all
defilement, and quickened unto a new life of holiness unto God.
And in this comprehensive sense of the word righteousness is our
salvation. And, therefore, it may finally be said that the
water of life that flows from the throne of God and the Lamb, is a
stream of constant righteousness, forgiveness, light, holiness,
love of God, eternal life! And blessed are they that hunger
and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled!
We must come, then, to Christ, in order
to drink the water of life, that is, to receive from Him, and to
appropriate unto ourselves all the spiritual blessings of grace,
to obtain righteousness and life. Christ calls: "Come unto me
and drink." Let us clearly understand this. The
Christ of the Scriptures, the Son of God in the flesh, Who dwelled
among us, Who revealed unto us the Father, and spoke the words of
eternal life, Who was delivered unto the death of the cross for
our transgressions, and was raised on the third day for our
justification, Who was exalted in the highest heavens, and Who
received the promise of the Holy Spirit, Who, finally, on the day
of Pentecost poured out His Spirit into the Church, --that Christ
is the open Fount of the water of life. He is our righteousness.
He is our complete redemption. And He imparts Himself and
all the blessings of salvation unto us through His Spirit.
But this is done in such a way, that we receive and appropriate
these blessings of salvation by a conscious and willing act on our
part corresponding to Christ's act of imparting Himself to us.
This act on our part is expressed by the words: "Come and
drink!" The water of life, if I may retain the figure
for a moment, is not poured down our throat without any act on our
part, or even against our will. Even if such a thing were
possible, we would never taste its pure and refreshing sweetness.
But it is the will of God that we taste it, for we are saved to
the glory of His grace in the Beloved. He wills that we
taste His grace, that we consciously experience the wonder of His
grace. We must come and drink the water of life!
But what does it mean to come and drink
from the Fountain of this living water? It implies that we
are thirsty: "If any man thirsts, let him come unto me, and
drink." "Ho, every one that is thirsty, come ye to
the waters!" This thirst for the living water belongs
to the will to come. Unless a sinner thirsts after the water
of life, that is, principally after righteousness, he will never
come to Christ, nor does he have the will to drink. And this
means, first of all, that there is in his soul a profound
consciousness of his sinful state, of his lost condition, of his
being devoid of all righteousness, and of his being full of sin
and corruption that makes him damnable before God. It
implies that he deplores his sin in true repentance, that he longs
for forgiveness, and for the deliverance from the power and the
dominion of sin. He longs to be clothed with righteousness.
It signifies, too, that he recognizes Christ as the Fount of
living water, as the fullness of righteousness and life out of
which he must drink and longs to drink. He yearns for the
full Christ and all the blessings of salvation. He thirsts
for the water of life. But this is not enough. Thirsting he
must hear and heed the word of Christ: "Come unto me, and
drink." He must not merely recognize his own misery and
the riches of the Savior, but he must now turn to Him, receive
Him, believe on Him, and by faith draw out of Him forgiveness and
righteousness, wisdom and knowledge, light and life eternal! Then
he drinks and his soul shall be satisfied.
"Ho, every one that thirsteth, come
ye to the waters !" "Come unto me, and drink!
Let him that is athirst come! And whosoever will, let him
take of the water of life freely!" To be sure,
whosoever will may come to Christ to drink of the living water!
But who will come? What is the
relation between Christ as the Fount of living water and the
sinner? Is it thus, that He is simply the overflowing
Fountain of living water, that He sends out preachers to call the
attention of men to this fountain, and that He now waits until
they come, and drink? Ah, but in that case no one would
come. All would despise the water of life! For all men
are by nature children of wrath, dead through trespasses and sins,
and they walk according to the course of this world, fulfilling
the desires of the flesh and of the mind. They thirst, yes,
but not after righteousness. They crave after the things of
this world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, the pride
of life. And always the natural man boasts of his own
righteousness, and spurns the righteousness of God! And if it
depends upon the will of that man, whether or not he will come to
the Fountain of living water, and drink, he will never come.
Nor will a veritable army of begging and hawking preachers
persuade him to come. No man has of himself the will to
come.
But the living Christ is first. And
our will to come and take of the water of life freely is only the
reaction of His own gracious act of imparting Himself to us.
He imparts Himself to us, and we receive Him. He gives us
spiritual eyes to see our own misery and spiritual wretchedness,
and the riches of His fullness, and we behold Him as we never saw
Him before. He draws us, and we come. He makes us
thirsty and we drink. He changes our heart, and our mind,
and our will by His Spirit and Word, and we find Him more precious
than all the riches of the world, and consider all things but dung
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord.
Let no man, then, glory in himself!
For if you do not thirst for the living
Christ, it is only because you are blind, and dead, and naked and
miserable, an enemy of God, hating righteousness though boasting
of your goodness, loving the darkness rather than the light,
glorying in your shame. And boast not against the Christ of
God, as if you had the power to decide to come to Him whenever you
please. Christ is the Lord. No one can come to Him
unless the Father draw him!
On the other hand, ye that thirst, and
come unto Him to drink, exalt not yourselves. Ye came not of
yourselves. It was His grace that made you thirst for the
living water. It was He that called: Come! and you came.
It was He that imparted Himself to you, and you drank, and
continue to drink unto everlasting life! He that glorieth, let him
glory in the Lord!But what does it mean to come and drink from the
Fountain of this living water? It implies that we are
thirsty: "If any man thirsts, let him come unto me, and
drink." "Ho, every one that is thirsty, come ye to
the waters!" This thirst for the living water belongs
to the will to come. Unless a sinner thirsts after the water
of life, that is, principally after righteousness, he will never
come to Christ, nor does he have the will to drink. And this
means, first of all, that there is in his soul a profound
consciousness of his sinful state, of his lost condition, of his
being devoid of all righteousness, and of his being full of sin
and corruption that makes him damnable before God. It
implies that he deplores his sin in true repentance, that he longs
for forgiveness, and for the deliverance from the power and the
dominion of sin. He longs to be clothed with righteousness.
It signifies, too, that he recognizes Christ as the Fount of
living water, as the fullness of righteousness and life out of
which he must drink and longs to drink. He yearns for the
full Christ and all the blessings of salvation. He thirsts
for the water of life. But this is not enough. Thirsting he
must hear and heed the word of Christ: "Come unto me, and
drink." He must not merely recognize his own misery and
the riches of the Savior, but he must now turn to Him, receive
Him, believe on Him, and by faith draw out of Him forgiveness and
righteousness, wisdom and knowledge, light and life eternal! Then
he drinks and his soul shall be satisfied.
"Ho, every one that thirsteth, come
ye to the waters !" "Come unto me, and drink!
Let him that is athirst come! And whosoever will, let him
take of the water of life freely!" To be sure,
whosoever will may come to Christ to drink of the living water!
But who will come? What is the
relation between Christ as the Fount of living water and the
sinner? Is it thus, that He is simply the overflowing
Fountain of living water, that He sends out preachers to call the
attention of men to this fountain, and that He now waits until
they come, and drink? Ah, but in that case no one would
come. All would despise the water of life! For all men
are by nature children of wrath, dead through trespasses and sins,
and they walk according to the course of this world, fulfilling
the desires of the flesh and of the mind. They thirst, yes,
but not after righteousness. They crave after the things of
this world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, the pride
of life. And always the natural man boasts of his own
righteousness, and spurns the righteousness of God! And if it
depends upon the will of that man, whether or not he will come to
the Fountain of living water, and drink, he will never come.
Nor will a veritable army of begging and hawking preachers
persuade him to come. No man has of himself the will to
come.
But the living Christ is first. And
our will to come and take of the water of life freely is only the
reaction of His own gracious act of imparting Himself to us.
He imparts Himself to us, and we receive Him. He gives us
spiritual eyes to see our own misery and spiritual wretchedness,
and the riches of His fullness, and we behold Him as we never saw
Him before. He draws us, and we come. He makes us
thirsty and we drink. He changes our heart, and our mind,
and our will by His Spirit and Word, and we find Him more precious
than all the riches of the world, and consider all things but dung
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord.
But the living Christ is first. And
our will to come and take of the water of life freely is only the
reaction of His own gracious act of imparting Himself to us.
He imparts Himself to us, and we receive Him. He gives us
spiritual eyes to see our own misery and spiritual wretchedness,
and the riches of His fullness, and we behold Him as we never saw
Him before. He draws us, and we come. He makes us
thirsty and we drink. He changes our heart, and our mind,
and our will by His Spirit and Word, and we find Him more precious
than all the riches of the world, and consider all things but dung
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord.
Let no man, then, glory in himself!
For if you do not thirst for the living
Christ, it is only because you are blind, and dead, and naked and
miserable, an enemy of God, hating righteousness though boasting
of your goodness, loving the darkness rather than the light,
glorying in your shame. And boast not against the Christ of
God, as if you had the power to decide to come to Him whenever you
please. Christ is the Lord. No one can come to Him
unless the Father draw him!
On the other hand, ye that thirst, and
come unto Him to drink, exalt not yourselves. Ye came not of
yourselves. It was His grace that made you thirst for the
living water. It was He that called: Come! and you came.
It was He that imparted Himself to you, and you drank, and
continue to drink unto everlasting life! He that glorieth, let him
glory in the Lord!But what does it mean to come and drink from the
Fountain of this living water? It implies that we are
thirsty: "If any man thirsts, let him come unto me, and
drink." "Ho, every one that is thirsty, come ye to
the waters!" This thirst for the living water belongs
to the will to come. Unless a sinner thirsts after the water
of life, that is, principally after righteousness, he will never
come to Christ, nor does he have the will to drink. And this
means, first of all, that there is in his soul a profound
consciousness of his sinful state, of his lost condition, of his
being devoid of all righteousness, and of his being full of sin
and corruption that makes him damnable before God. It
implies that he deplores his sin in true repentance, that he longs
for forgiveness, and for the deliverance from the power and the
dominion of sin. He longs to be clothed with righteousness.
It signifies, too, that he recognizes Christ as the Fount of
living water, as the fullness of righteousness and life out of
which he must drink and longs to drink. He yearns for the
full Christ and all the blessings of salvation. He thirsts
for the water of life. But this is not enough. Thirsting he
must hear and heed the word of Christ: "Come unto me, and
drink." He must not merely recognize his own misery and
the riches of the Savior, but he must now turn to Him, receive
Him, believe on Him, and by faith draw out of Him forgiveness and
righteousness, wisdom and knowledge, light and life eternal! Then
he drinks and his soul shall be satisfied.
"Ho, every one that thirsteth, come
ye to the waters !" "Come unto me, and drink!
Let him that is athirst come! And whosoever will, let him
take of the water of life freely!" To be sure,
whosoever will may come to Christ to drink of the living water!
But who will come? What is the
relation between Christ as the Fount of living water and the
sinner? Is it thus, that He is simply the overflowing
Fountain of living water, that He sends out preachers to call the
attention of men to this fountain, and that He now waits until
they come, and drink? Ah, but in that case no one would
come. All would despise the water of life! For all men
are by nature children of wrath, dead through trespasses and sins,
and they walk according to the course of this world, fulfilling
the desires of the flesh and of the mind. They thirst, yes,
but not after righteousness. They crave after the things of
this world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, the pride
of life. And always the natural man boasts of his own
righteousness, and spurns the righteousness of God! And if it
depends upon the will of that man, whether or not he will come to
the Fountain of living water, and drink, he will never come.
Nor will a veritable army of begging and hawking preachers
persuade him to come. No man has of himself the will to
come.
But the living Christ is first. And
our will to come and take of the water of life freely is only the
reaction of His own gracious act of imparting Himself to us.
He imparts Himself to us, and we receive Him. He gives us
spiritual eyes to see our own misery and spiritual wretchedness,
and the riches of His fullness, and we behold Him as we never saw
Him before. He draws us, and we come. He makes us
thirsty and we drink. He changes our heart, and our mind,
and our will by His Spirit and Word, and we find Him more precious
than all the riches of the world, and consider all things but dung
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord.
Let no man, then, glory in himself!
For if you do not thirst for the living
Christ, it is only because you are blind, and dead, and naked and
miserable, an enemy of God, hating righteousness though boasting
of your goodness, loving the darkness rather than the light,
glorying in your shame. And boast not against the Christ of
God, as if you had the power to decide to come to Him whenever you
please. Christ is the Lord. No one can come to Him
unless the Father draw him!
On the other hand, ye that thirst, and
come unto Him to drink, exalt not yourselves. Ye came not of
yourselves. It was His grace that made you thirst for the
living water. It was He that called: Come! and you came.
It was He that imparted Himself to you, and you drank, and
continue to drink unto everlasting life! He that glorieth, let him
glory in the Lord!But what does it mean to come and drink from the
Fountain of this living water? It implies that we are
thirsty: "If any man thirsts, let him come unto me, and
drink." "Ho, every one that is thirsty, come ye to
the waters!" This thirst for the living water belongs
to the will to come. Unless a sinner thirsts after the water
of life, that is, principally after righteousness, he will never
come to Christ, nor does he have the will to drink. And this
means, first of all, that there is in his soul a profound
consciousness of his sinful state, of his lost condition, of his
being devoid of all righteousness, and of his being full of sin
and corruption that makes him damnable before God. It
implies that he deplores his sin in true repentance, that he longs
for forgiveness, and for the deliverance from the power and the
dominion of sin. He longs to be clothed with righteousness.
It signifies, too, that he recognizes Christ as the Fount of
living water, as the fullness of righteousness and life out of
which he must drink and longs to drink. He yearns for the
full Christ and all the blessings of salvation. He thirsts
for the water of life. But this is not enough. Thirsting he
must hear and heed the word of Christ: "Come unto me, and
drink." He must not merely recognize his own misery and
the riches of the Savior, but he must now turn to Him, receive
Him, believe on Him, and by faith draw out of Him forgiveness and
righteousness, wisdom and knowledge, light and life eternal! Then
he drinks and his soul shall be satisfied.
"Ho, every one that thirsteth, come
ye to the waters !" "Come unto me, and drink!
Let him that is athirst come! And whosoever will, let him
take of the water of life freely!" To be sure,
whosoever will may come to Christ to drink of the living water!
But who will come? What is the
relation between Christ as the Fount of living water and the
sinner? Is it thus, that He is simply the overflowing
Fountain of living water, that He sends out preachers to call the
attention of men to this fountain, and that He now waits until
they come, and drink? Ah, but in that case no one would
come. All would despise the water of life! For all men
are by nature children of wrath, dead through trespasses and sins,
and they walk according to the course of this world, fulfilling
the desires of the flesh and of the mind. They thirst, yes,
but not after righteousness. They crave after the things of
this world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, the pride
of life. And always the natural man boasts of his own
righteousness, and spurns the righteousness of God! And if it
depends upon the will of that man, whether or not he will come to
the Fountain of living water, and drink, he will never come.
Nor will a veritable army of begging and hawking preachers
persuade him to come. No man has of himself the will to
come.
But the living Christ is first. And
our will to come and take of the water of life freely is only the
reaction of His own gracious act of imparting Himself to us.
He imparts Himself to us, and we receive Him. He gives us
spiritual eyes to see our own misery and spiritual wretchedness,
and the riches of His fullness, and we behold Him as we never saw
Him before. He draws us, and we come. He makes us
thirsty and we drink. He changes our heart, and our mind,
and our will by His Spirit and Word, and we find Him more precious
than all the riches of the world, and consider all things but dung
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord.
Let no man, then, glory in himself!
For if you do not thirst for the living
Christ, it is only because you are blind, and dead, and naked and
miserable, an enemy of God, hating righteousness though boasting
of your goodness, loving the darkness rather than the light,
glorying in your shame. And boast not against the Christ of
God, as if you had the power to decide to come to Him whenever you
please. Christ is the Lord. No one can come to Him
unless the Father draw him!
On the other hand, ye that thirst, and
come unto Him to drink, exalt not yourselves. Ye came not of
yourselves. It was His grace that made you thirst for the
living water. It was He that called: Come! and you came.
It was He that imparted Himself to you, and you drank, and
continue to drink unto everlasting life! He that glorieth, let him
glory in the Lord!
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