This devotion taken from Charles Haddon Spurgeon’s “Morning and Evening” is a great encouragement to many a feeble saint. Let us do well and take hold of this blessed Gospel truth. Though it seems we tread this Pilgrim’s journey alone, misunderstood, hated and misrepresented in every front, feeling lonely and unloved; let us remember that we are adventuring not simply with our own strengths and self-comforts. Yes we are strengthened by grace above, but dear heart, there still is a greater blessedness that must be seen, a greater mercy, a greater grace to behold:
“I am a stranger with thee.”
— Psalm 39:12
Yes, O Lord, with thee, but not to thee. All my natural alienation from thee, thy grace has effectually removed; and now, in fellowship with thyself, I walk through this sinful world as a pilgrim in a foreign country. Thou art a stranger in thine own world. Man forgets thee, dishonours thee, sets up new laws and alien customs, and knows thee not.
When thy dear Son came unto his own, his own received him not. He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not. Never was foreigner so speckled a bird among the denizens of any land as thy beloved Son among his mother’s brethren. It is no marvel, then, if I who live the life of Jesus, should be unknown and a stranger here below.
Lord, I would not be a citizen where Jesus was an alien. His pierced hand has loosened the cords which once bound my soul to earth, and now I find myself a stranger in the land. My speech seems to these Babylonians among whom I dwell an outlandish tongue, my manners are singular, and my actions are strange. A Tartar would be more at home in Cheapside than I could ever be in the haunts of sinners.
But here is the sweetness of my lot: I am a stranger with thee. Thou art my fellow-sufferer, my fellow-pilgrim. Oh, what joy to wander in such blessed society!
My heart burns within me by the way when thou dost speak to me, and though I be a sojourner, I am far more blest than those who sit on thrones, and far more at home than those who dwell in their ceiled houses.
“To me remains nor place, nor time:
My country is in every clime;
I can be calm and free from care
On any shore, since God is there.While place we seek, or place we shun,
The soul finds happiness in none:
But with a God to guide our way,
’Tis equal joy to go or stay.”—C.H. Spurgeon, Morning and evening—March 16 AMi
Footnotes
- Morning and Evening: Daily readings (Complete and unabridged; New modern edition.) Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers. [↩]




Amen! oh how i love to leave this place and be with my Lord!
Amen brother! And thence will our hope be finally complete. Not anymore to be with him in our fallenness, but being with Him in the fullness of His glorified work in us in Christ. What a day it would be to finally worship Him truly in Spirit and in Truth!