When we pray, "Thy Kingdom come," we ask
Almighty God that the number of His elect may
soon be complete, and that Our Lord may soon
come again to take to Himself His great power,
and reign. That second coming of Christ has been
watched for by His saints for nineteen hundred
years. "Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly," says St.
John (Apoc. xxii. 20). "We look for the new
heavens and the new earth, in which dwelleth justice,"
says St. Peter (2 St. Peter iii. 13). "The Lord
is night at hand," writes St. Paul to the Philippians.
Do I look forward with joy and confidence
to the day of the Lord's return?
If we are to desire from the heart the coming
of Jesus, to reign on earth, we must prepare for
His coming by making Him Lord and King of
our hearts, nay, of our whole nature, of everything
we are, and everything we possess. Above all, our
natural self-will and self-love must pay humble
homage to Him, and must cease altogether from
disputing His sway. Too often they have had the
mastery rather than He, and as long as they reign,
He will not come to dwell with us, and to prepare
us for His future coming in glory.
If Christ is to reign in our hearts. His dominion
there must be universal and constant. Our
senses must be subject to Him, so that we do not
indulge them except in obedience to His will. Our
imagination must not wander here and there as
it chooses, but must be under His control. No
day-dreaming, no vain and idle following of every
thought to which we are inclined, no admittance
of what we know is dangerous, if Christ is to be
truly our King.