This is the age
of the conference and study group -- people talking about what they know
they should be doing. In a subtle way, talking about something becomes
an excuse for not doing it. This new bolt-hole of the conference and study
group is not confined to the local congregation. It is a painful fact of
life in the central structures of the churches. We have a welter of reports,
commissions, surveys, liaison bodies, and so on. They have the appearance
of progressive thinking and readiness to face change, combined with the
function of being delaying devices. They are the sacraments of current
Christianity, and its dilemma. Outreach is a move from power structures
to meekness structures, and, in spite of the fact that Christians believe
that it is the meek who shall inherit the earth, they show (as in the ecumenical
movement) a distinct reluctance to relinquish power-structure thinking.
... Gavin
Reid, The Gagging of God
Into God's hands
let us now -- for the coming year, and for all the years of time, and for
Eternity -- commend our spirits. Whether for the Church or for ourselves,
let us not take ourselves into our own hands, or choose our own lot. "My
times are in Thy hand." He loveth the Church, which He died to purchase,
His own Body, and all the members of the Body, better than we can; He loveth
us better and more wisely than we ourselves He who made us loveth us better
than we who unmade ourselves; He who died for us, better than we who destroy
ourselves: He who would sanctify us for a Holy Temple unto Himself, better
than we who have defiled what He has hallowed. Fear we not, therefore,
anything which threateneth, shrink we not back from anything which falleth
on us. Rather let us, though with trembling, hold up our hearts to Him,
to make them His Own, in what way He willeth.
... Edward
B. Pusey
We have still much
to learn as to the laws according to which the mind and body act on one
another, and according to which one mind acts on another; but it is certain
that a great part of this mutual action can be reduced to general laws,
and that the more we know of such laws, the greater our power to benefit
others will be. When, through the operation of such laws, surprising events
take place, [we may] cry out, ... "Such is the will of God," instead of
setting ourselves to inquire whether it is the will of God to give us power
to bring about or prevent such results; then our conduct is not piety but
sinful laziness.
... George
Salmon, "A Sermon on the Work of the
Holy Spirit"
The most difficult
task facing us today is to persuade the person who is enjoying Christian
culture and Christian standards that these do not survive of themselves.
... Godfrey
Cowan
The whole point
of the story of Cornelius and of the admission of the Gentiles lies in
the fact that these people had not accepted what up to that moment had
been considered a necessary part of the Christian teaching. The question
was whether they could be admitted without accepting the teaching and undergoing
the rite. It was that question which was settled by the acknowledgement
that they had received the Holy Spirit... The difficulty today is that
Christians acknowledge that others have the Spirit, and yet do not recognize
that they ought to be, and must be -- because spiritually they are -- in
communion with one another. Men who hold a theory of the Church which excludes
from communion those whom they admit to have the Spirit of Christ simply
proclaim that their theory is in flat contradiction to the spiritual fact.
... Roland
Allen, Pentecost and the World
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
Sorrow for sin
and sorrow for suffering are ofttimes so twisted and interwoven in the
same person -- yea, in the same sigh and groan -- that sometimes it is
impossible for the party himself so to separate and divide them in his
own sense and feeling, as to know which proceeds from the one and which
from the other. Only the all-seeing eye of an infinite God is able to discern
and distinguish them.
... Thomas
Fuller, A Wounded Conscience
The word "Comforter"
as applied to the Holy Spirit needs to be translated by some vigorous term.
Literally, it means "with strength." Jesus promised His followers that
"The Strengthener" would be with them forever. This promise is no lullaby
for the faint-hearted. It is a blood transfusion for courageous living.
... E.
Paul Hovey
[With thanks to Bill
Blake]
God did not write
a book and send it by messenger to be read at a distance by unaided minds.
He spoke a Book and lives in His spoken words, constantly speaking His
words and causing the power of them to persist across the years.
... A.
W. Tozer
A child kicks its
legs rhythmically through excess, not absence, of life. Because children
have abounding vitality, because they are in spirit fierce and free, therefore
they want things repeated and unchanged. They always say, "Do it again";
and the grown-up person does it again until he is nearly dead. For grown-up
people are not strong enough to exult in monotony. But perhaps God is strong
enough... It is possible that God says every morning, "Do it again," to
the sun; and every evening, "Do it again," to the moon. It may not be automatic
necessity that makes all daisies alike: it may be that God makes every
daisy separately, but has never got tired of making them. It may be that
He has the eternal appetite of infancy; for we have sinned and grown old,
and our Father is younger than we.
... G.
K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
They were in a
better condition, acknowledging only a terror above them flaming on that
unknown mountain height, than stooping to worship the idol below them.
Fear is nobler than sensuality. Fear is better than no God, better than
a god made with hands. In that fear lay deep hidden the sense of the infinite.
The worship of fear is true, though very low; and though not acceptable
to God in itself -- for only the worship of spirit and of truth is acceptable
to him -- yet even in His sight it is precious. For he regards men not
as they are merely, but as they shall be; not as they shall be merely,
but as they are now growing, or capable of growing, towards that image
after which He made them that they might grow to it. Therefore a thousand
stages, each in itself all but valueless, are of inestimable worth as the
necessary and connected gradations of an infinite progress. A condition
which of declension would indicate a devil, may of growth indicate a saint.
... George
Macdonald, "The Consuming Fire"
And have the bright immensities received our risen Lord
Where light-years frame the Pleiades and point Orion's sword?
Do flaming suns his footsteps trace through corridors sublime,
The Lord of interstellar space and Conqueror of time?The heaven that hides Him from our sight knows neither near nor far:
An altar candle sheds its light as surely as a star;
And where His loving people meet to share the gift divine,
There stands He with unhurrying feet, and Heaven's splendors shine.
... Howard Chandler Robbins
Must we then have
strange music... unlike the world's music, and a special language with
an imagery that illuminates the minds only of the religious? Or dare we
do what our Lord did, and see the Name hallowed in all life that is real
and honest and good? Indeed, it was a scandal to the religious men of Jesus'
day when they saw what He did with sacred things. With Jesus all life was
sacred and nothing was profane until sin entered in. And so it was that
the word "common," which used to mean profane and unclean, became the New-Testament
word for the Communion of Saints and for the fellowship of the Holy Spirit.
... Howard
Hewlett Clark
The Churches belong
together in the Church. What that may mean for our ecclesiastical groupings
we do not know. We have not discovered the kind or outward manifestation
which God wills that we shall give to that inner unity. But we must seek
it.
... Hugh
Martin
The deaf may hear the Saviour's voice,
The fettered tongue its chains may break;
But the deaf heart, the dumb by choice,
The laggard soul that will not wake,
The guilt that scorns to be forgiven --
These baffle e'en the spells of heaven.
... John Keble, The Christian Year
We must frankly
face the fact that there is in this teaching a revolutionary element which
could be dangerously subversive of our existing ways of thought. Let us
admit that it is part of the fallen human nature of ecclesiastics, no less
than of others in responsible positions, to desire always criteria of judgement
which can be used without making too heavy demands upon the delicate faculty
of spiritual discernment, clear-cut rules by which we may hope to be saved
from making mistakes -- or rather, from being obviously and personally
responsible for the mistakes. We are uncomfortable without definite principles
by which we may guide our steps. We fear uncharted country, and the fanatics
of all kinds who, upon the alleged authority of the Holy Spirit, summon
us with strident cries in all directions simultaneously. Only those who
have never borne the heavy burden of pastoral responsibility will mock
at the cautious spirit of the ecclesiastic.
... Lesslie
Newbigin, The Household of God
These things I
did not see by the help of man, nor by the letter, though they are written
in the letter; but I saw them in the light of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
by his immediate Spirit and power, as did the Holy men of God, by whom
the Holy Scriptures were written. Yet I had no slight esteem of the Holy
Scriptures; they were very precious to me, for I was in that spirit by
which they were given forth; and what the Lord opened in me, I afterwards
found was agreeable to them.
... George
Fox's Journal
Though you may
think yourself ever so dull and incapable of sublime attainments, yet by
prayer the possession and enjoyment of God is easily obtained; for He is
more desirous to give Himself to us than we can be to receive Him.
... William
Backhouse and James Jansen, A
Guide to True Peace
We ought not to
forget that the whole Church, quite as much as any part of it, exists for
the sole reason of finally becoming superfluous. Of heaven St. John the
Divine said, "I saw no temple therein."
... Howard
A. Johnson
As long as I live,
I will never appeal for money for the mission of God in this world. This
is a degradation of God and of ourselves, which has pauperized us in every
way over the centuries. God has no need, and if the mission is God's, then
we do not ask for help to give God a boost; therefore we do not appeal
for funds. We allow people to take a share in God's work, and this is a
very different thing.
... Stephen
F. Bayne, Jr.
An essential part
of the ordination exam ought to be a passage from some recognized theological
work set for translation into vulgar English -- just like doing Latin prose.
Failure on this part should mean failure on the whole exam. It is absolutely
disgraceful that we expect missionaries to the Bantus to learn Bantu, but
never ask whether our missionaries to the Americans or English can speak
American or English. Any fool can write learned language: the vernacular
is the real test. If you can't turn your faith into it, then either you
don't understand it or you don't believe it.
... C.
S. Lewis in "The Christian Century"
Instead of so knowing
Christ that they have Him in them saving them, they lie wasting themselves
in soul-sickening self-examination as to whether they are believers, whether
they are really trusting in the Atonement, whether they are truly sorry
for their sins -- the way to madness of the brain and despair of the heart...
Instead of asking yourself whether you believe or not, ask yourself whether
you have, this day, done one thing because He said, Do it! or once abstained
because He said, Do not do it! It is simply absurd to say you believe,
or even want to believe, in Him, if you do not do anything He tells you.
... George
Macdonald, "The Truth in Jesus"
It is for Christ's
sake that we believe in the Scriptures, but it is not for the Scriptures'
sake that we believe in Christ.
... Martin
Luther
Faith is not a
refuge from reality. It is a demand that we face reality, with all its
difficulties, opportunities, and implications. The true subject matter
of religion is not our own little souls, but the Eternal God and His whole
mysterious purpose, and our solemn responsibility to Him.
... Evelyn
Underhill, The School of Charity
Every man naturally
desires knowledge; but what good is knowledge without fear of God? Indeed
a humble rustic who serves God is better than a proud intellectual who
neglects his soul to study the course of the stars.
... Thomas
à Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ
Our Christian experience
must agree with the Bible. We will be taught by the Bible and fed by the
Bible. But we do not believe in Christ because He is in the Bible: we believe
in the Bible because Christ is in us.
... Claxton
Monro
God is none other
than the Saviour of our wretchedness. So we can only know God well by knowing
our iniquities... Those who have known God without knowing their wretchedness
have not glorified him, but have glorified themselves.
... Blaise
Pascal
If ever we intend
to take one step towards any agreement or unity, it must be by fixing this
principle in the minds of all men -- that it is of no advantage to any
man whatever church or way in Christian religion he be of, unless he personally
believe the promises, and live in obedience unto all the precepts of Christ;
and that for him who doth so, it is a trampling of the whole gospel under
foot to say that his salvation could be endangered by his not being of
this or that church or way, especially considering how much of the world
hath inmixed itself into all the known ways that are in it.
... John
Owen, "A Vindication of the Animadversions
on "Fiat Lux'"
Jesus, priceless treasure, source of purest pleasure
Truest friend to me;
Long my heart has panted, till it well-nigh fainted,
Thirsting after Thee.
Thine I am, O spotless Lamb;
I will suffer naught to hide Thee,
Ask for naught beside Thee.In Thine arm I rest me; foes who would molest me
Cannot reach me here.
Though the earth be shaking, every heart be quaking,
God dispels our fear.
Sin and hell in conflict fell
With their heaviest storms assail us:
Jesus will not fail us.Hence, all thoughts of sadness! For the Lord of gladness,
Jesus, enters in:
Those who love the Father, though the storms may gather,
Still have peace within;
Yes, whate'er we here must bear,
Still in Thee lies purest pleasure,
Jesus, priceless treasure!
... Johann Franck (tr. by Catherine Winkworth)
'Twas an unhappy
Division that has been made between Faith and Works; though in my Intellect
I may divide them, just as in the Candle I know there is both Light and
Heat. But yet, put out the Candle, and they are both gone.
... John
Selden
It seems to be
an opinion pretty generally prevalent, that kindness and sweetness of temper;
sympathizing, benevolent, and generous affections; attention to what in
the world's estimation are the domestic, relative, and social duties; and,
above all, a life of general activity and usefulness, may well be allowed,
in our imperfect state, to make up for the defect of what, in strict propriety
of speech, is termed religion. Many, indeed, will unreservedly declare,
and more will hint, the opinion that the difference between the qualities
above mentioned and religion, is rather a verbal or logical, than a real
and essential difference; for in truth, what are they but religion in substance
if not in name? Is it not the great end of religion, and, in particular,
the glory of Christianity, to extinguish the malignant passions; to curb
the violence, to control the appetites, and to smooth the asperities of
man; to make us compassionate and kind, and forgiving one to another; to
make us good husbands, good fathers, good friends; and to render us active
and useful in the discharge of the relative social and civil duties? We
do not deny that, in the general mass of society, and particularly in the
lower orders, such conduct and tempers can not be diffused and maintained
by any other medium than that of religion. But if the end be effected,
surely it is only an unnecessary refinement to dispute about the means.
It is even to forget your own principles; and to refuse its just place
to solid, practical virtue, while you assign too high a value to speculative
opinions.
... William
Wilberforce, A Practical View
You go to your
saint and find God working and manifest in him. He got near to God by some
saint of his that went before him, or that stood beside him, in whom he
saw the divine presence. That saint again lighted his fire at some flame
before him; and so the power of the sainthoods animates and fills the world.
... Phillips
Brooks
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,