The wilderness 

(J. C. Philpot, “The Valley of Achor” 1861)

The wilderness 

(J. C. Philpot, “The Valley of Achor” 1861)

“Therefore I am now going to allure her; I will lead 
her into the wilderness, and speak tenderly to her.” 
Hosea 2:14
The children of God would not voluntarily go into the 
wilderness–it is a place too barren for them to enter, 
except as allured in a special manner by the grace of 
God, and led by the power of God. 
Nor do they for the most part know where the Lord 
is taking them. They follow His drawings; they are 
led by His allurings; they listen to His persuading 
voice, trusting to Him as to an unerring Guide. 
But they do not know the ‘place of barrenness’ into which 
He is bringing them–this the Lord usually conceals from 
their eyes. He allures and they follow, but He does not 
tell them what He is going to do with them, or where 
He intends to take them. He hides His gracious purposes, 
that He may afterwards bring them more clearly to light.
Look at the place where He brings His people–the 
wilderness. This is a type and figure much used by 
the Holy Spirit, and conveys to us much deep and 
profitable instruction. 
The wilderness is an isolated, solitary spot, far, far 
away from cities, and towns, and other busy haunts of 
men–a remote and often dreary abode, where there is 
no intruding eye to mark the wanderer’s steps, where 
there is no listening ear to hear his sighs and cries. 
The Lord, when He puts forth His sacred power upon 
the heart, to allure His people into the wilderness, 
brings them into a spot where in solitude and silence 
they may be separated from everyone but Himself. 
The ‘wilderness’, we take as an emblem of being alone 
with God–coming out of the world, away from sin and 
worldly company, out of everything carnal, sensual, and 
earthly, and being brought into that solemn spot where 
there are secret, sacred, and solitary dealings with God.

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