TASTE— Spiritual, Heedful for Heavenly Joys-Charles Spurgeon
Taste— spiritual, heedful for heavenly joys the unfitness of un-renewed souls for heaven, may be illustrated by the incapacity of certain uneducated and coarse-minded persons for elevated thoughts and intellectual pursuits. When a little child, i lived some years in my grandfather’s house. In his garden there was a fine old hedge of yew of considerable length, which was clipped and trimmed till it made quite a wall of verdure. Behind it was a wide grass walk, which looked upon the fields, and afforded a quiet outlook. The grass was kept sown, so as to make pleasant walking. Here, ever since the old puritanic chapel was built, godly divines had walked, and prayed, and meditated. My grandfather was wont to use it as his study. Up and down it he would walk when preparing his sermons, and always on sabbath-days when it was fair, he had half-an- hour there before preaching. To me it seemed to be a perfect paradise, and being forbidden to stay there when grandfather was meditating, i viewed it with no small degree of awe. I love to think of the green and quiet walk at this moment, and could wish for just such a study. But i was once shocked and even horrified by hearing a farming man remark concerning this sane/ton sandstorm, “it’ would grow a many ‘taturs if it wore ploughed up.” what cared he for holy memories? What were meditation and contemplation to him? Is it not the chief end of man to grow potatoes and eat them? Such, on a larger scale, would be an unconverted man’s estimate of joys so elevated and refined as those of heaven, could he by any possibility be permitted to gaze upon them.