It is to no purpose
to boast of Christ, if we have not an evidence of His graces in our hearts
and lives. But unto whom He is the hope of future glory, unto them He is
the life of present grace.
... John
Owen
Among our own people
also the church sorely needs clergy in close touch with the ordinary life
of the laity, living the life of ordinary men, sharing their difficulties
and understanding their trials by close personal experience. Stipendiary
clergy cut off by training and life from that common experience are constantly
struggling to get close to the laity by wearing lay clothing, sharing in
lay amusements, and organizing lay clubs; but they never quite succeed.
To get close to men, it is necessary really to share their experience,
and to share their experience is to share it by being in it, not merely
to come as near to it as possible without being in it.
... Roland
Allen, The Case for Voluntary Clergy
As I do no good
action here, merely for the interpretation of good men, though that be
one good and justifiable reason of my good actions: so I must do nothing
for my salvation hereafter, merely for the love I bear to mine own soul,
though that also be one good and justifiable reason of that action; but
the primary reason in both, as well as the actions that establish a good
name, as the actions that establish eternal life, must be the glory of
God.
... John
Donne
I love my God, but with no love of mine
For I have none to give;
I love Thee, Lord, but all that love is Thine,
For by Thy life I live.
I am as nothing, and rejoice to be
Emptied and lost and swallowed up in Thee.
... Mme. Guyon
Slowly, all through
the universe, that temple of God is being built. Wherever, in any world,
a soul, by free-willed obedience, catches the fire of God's likeness, it
is set into the growing walls, a living stone. When, in your hard fight,
in your tiresome drudgery, or in your terrible temptation, you catch the
purpose of your being and give yourself to God, and so give Him the chance
to give Himself to you, your life -- a living stone -- is taken up and
set into that growing wall. Wherever souls are being tried and ripened,
in whatever commonplace and homely ways, there God is hewing out the pillars
for His temple. Oh, if the stone can only have some vision of the temple
of which it is to be a part forever, what patience must fill it as it feels
the blows of the hammer, and knows that success for it is simply to let
itself be wrought into what shape the Master wills.
... Phillips
Brooks, The Law of Growth
We Christians must
simplify our lives or lose untold treasures on earth and in eternity. Modern
civilization is so complex as to make the devotional life all but impossible.
The need for solitude and quietness was never greater than it is today.
... A.
W. Tozer
The word "carnal"
is ambiguous. "Flesh" means sin and corruption, and is opposed to the Spirit;
but embodiment, outward manifestation, concrete form, is not opposed to
the Spirit. "Carnal" means sinful and hostile to God; the evil spirits,
who we suppose possess no bodies, are carnal, but the Son of God became
man, the Word was made flesh, He took upon Him a human body as well as
a reasonable soul. God's ways and thoughts are not ours. While the abstract
and ethereal imaginations of human reason create a god, who is not spirit,
and whom they do not worship in spirit and truth, the God of the Bible
is God manifest in the flesh -- Emmanuel... Did not Jesus, after His resurrection,
eat before His disciples, who gave Him a piece of a broiled fish and honey?
Is not the earth to be the scene of God's triumph and manifestation? Whatever
is revealed in spiritual, whatever man imagines is carnal; the end of the
ways of God is embodiment.
... Adolph
Saphir, Christ and Israel
It is the fellowship
of the Cross to experience the burden of the other. If one does not experience
it, the fellowship he belongs to is not Christian. If any member refuses
to bear that burden, he denies the law of Christ.
... Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, Life Together
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
I would not favour
a fiction to keep a whole world out of hell. The hell that a lie would
keep any man out of is doubtless the very best place for him to go to.
It is truth... that saves the world.
... George
Macdonald
It is only by forgetting
yourself that you can draw near to God.
... Henry
Davi
May I be patient!
It is so difficult to make real what one believes, and to make these trials,
as they are intended, real blessings.
... John
Henry Newman
[With thanks to Bill
Blake]
When our Lord began
his ministry he announced a manifesto, far more comprehensive, thoroughgoing,
and revolutionary than any socialism, which spoke of the good news to the
poor, release for prisoners, and recovery of sight to the blind. The Church
must learn to stand solidly behind all efforts to bring fuller life to
people.
... John
W. Sadiq
The law of nature
is nothing but the law of God given to mankind for the conservation of
his nature and the promotion of his perfective end: a law of which a man
sees a reason and feels a necessity.
... Jeremy
Taylor
What is said in
the passage [James 2:14 ff.] is like a two coupon train or bus ticket.
One coupon says, "Not good if detached" and the other says, "Not good for
passage". Works are not good for passage; but faith detached from works
is not saving faith.
... Charles
C. Ryrie
The fulfillment
of the Lord's mercy does not depend upon believers' works, but... he fulfills
the promise of salvation for those who respond to his call with upright
life, because in those who are directed to the good by his Spirit he recognizes
the only genuine insignia of his children.
... John
Calvin
I believe in Christianity
as I believe that the Sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because
by it I see everything else.
... C.
S. Lewis, "Is Theology Poetry?"
There is such a
thing as taking ourselves and the world too seriously, or at any rate too
anxiously. Half of the secular unrest and dismal, profane sadness of modern
society comes from the vain idea that every man is bound to be a critic
of life, and to let no day pass without finding some fault with the general
order of things, or projecting some plan for its general improvement. And
the other half comes from the greedy notion that a man's life does consist,
after all, in the abundance of things that he possesseth, and that it is,
somehow or other, more respectable and pious to be always at work trying
to make a larger living, than it is to lie on your back in the green pastures
and beside the still waters, and thank God that you are alive.
... Henry
Van Dyke
I can tell you
for an eternal truth that troubled souls are always safe. It is the untroubled
that are in danger. Trouble in itself is always a claim on love, and God
is love. He must deny Himself if He does not come to help the helpless.
It is the prisoners, and the blind, and the leper, and the possessed, and
the hungry, and the tempest-tossed, who are His special care. Therefore
if you are lost and sick and bound, you are just in the place where He
can meet you. Blessed are the mourners. They shall be comforted.
... Andrew
Jukes
We must face the
recognition that what the early Christians saw in Jesus Christ, and what
we must accept if we look at him rather than at our imaginations about
him, was not a person characterized by universal benignity, loving God
and loving man. His love of God and his love of neighbor are two distinct
virtues that have no common quality but only a common source. Love of God
is adoration of the only true good; it is gratitude to the bestower of
all gifts; it is joy in holiness; it is "consent to Being." But the love
of man is pitiful rather than adoring; it is giving and forgiving rather
than grateful. It suffers for them in their viciousness and profaneness;
it does not consent to accept them as they are, but calls them to repentance.
The love of God is nonpossessive Eros; the love of man pure Agape; the
love of God is passion; the love of man, compassion. There is duality here,
but not of like-minded interest in two great values, God and man. It is
rather the duality of the Son of Man and Son of God, who loves God as man
should love Him, and loves man as only God can love, with powerful pity
for those who are foundering.
... H.
Richard Niebuhr, Christ and Culture
Why do we talk
and gossip so continually, seeing that we so rarely resume our silence
without some hurt done to our conscience? ... Devout conversation on spiritual
things helpeth not a little to spiritual progress, most of all where those
of kindred mind and spirit find their ground of fellowship in God.
... Thomas
à Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ
In the world to
which the Apostles preached their new message, religion had not been the
solace of the weary, the medicine of the sick, the strength of the sin-laden,
the enlightenment of the ignorant: It was the privilege of the healthy
and the instructed. The sick and the ignorant were excluded. They were
under the bondage of evil demons. "This people which knoweth not the law
are accursed", was the common doctrine of Jews and Greeks. The philosophers
addressed themselves only to the well-to-do, the intellectual, and the
pure. To the mysteries were invited only those who had clean hands and
sound understanding. It was a constant marvel to the heathen that the Christians
called the sick and the sinful.
... Roland
Allen, Missionary Methods
I will attempt
no historical or theological classification of [George] Macdonald's thought,
partly because I have not the learning to do so, still more because I am
no great friend to such pigeon-holing. One very effective way of silencing
the voice of conscience is to impound in an Ism the teacher through whom
it speaks; the trumpet no longer seriously disturbs our rest when we have
murmured 'Thomist', 'Barthian', or 'Existentialist'. And in Macdonald
it is always the voice of conscience that speaks. He addresses the will:
the demand for obedience, for "something to be neither more nor less nor
other than done" is incessant. Yet in that very voice of conscience every
other faculty somehow speaks as well -- intellect and imagination and humour
and fancy and all the affections; and no man in modern times was perhaps
more aware of the distinction between Law and Gospel, the inevitable failure
of mere morality.
... C.
S. Lewis, preface to George Macdonald,
an Anthology
We have been adopted
as sons by the Lord with this one condition: that our life express Christ,
the bond of our adoption. Accordingly, unless we give and devote ourselves
to righteousness, we not only revolt from our Creator with wicked perfidy,
but we also abjure our Savior Himself.
... John
Calvin
It is often said
with a sneer that the God of Israel was only a God of Battles, "a mere
barbaric Lord of Hosts" pitted in rivalry against other gods only as their
envious foe. Well it is for the world that He was indeed a God of Battles.
Well it is for us that He was to all the rest only a rival and a foe. In
the ordinary way, it would have been only too easy for them to have achieved
the desolate disaster of conceiving Him as a friend. It would have been
only too easy for them to have seen Him stretching out His hands in love
and reconciliation, embracing Baal and kissing the painted face of Astarte...
It would have been easy enough for His worshipers to follow the enlightened
course of Syncretism and the pooling of all the pagan traditions. It is
obvious indeed that His followers were always sliding down this easy slope;
and it required the almost demoniac energy of certain inspired demagogues,
who testified to the divine unity in words that are still like winds of
inspiration and ruin, [to stop them]. The more we really understand of
the ancient conditions that contributed to the final culture of the Faith,
the more we shall have a real and even a realistic reverence for the greatness
of the Prophets of Israel. As it was, while the whole world melted into
this mass of confused mythology, this Deity who is called tribal and narrow,
precisely because He was what is called tribal and narrow, preserved the
primary religion of all mankind. He was tribal enough to be universal.
He was as narrow as the universe.
... G.
K. Chesterton, The Everlasting
Man
Religion is not
ours till we live by it, till it is the Religion of our thoughts, words,
and actions, till it goes with us into every place, sits uppermost on every
occasion, and forms and governs our hopes and fears, our cares and pleasures.
... William
Law
We must be ready,
indeed eager, to see God's Name being hallowed outside the Church as well
as inside. It may be that today the philosopher is honouring the Name af
God when he insists that we should know what we mean when we utter our
religious language and that we should be ready to have that meaning tested.
It may be that other philosophers hallow the Name when they refuse to allow
us to withdraw it to some supernatural realm, but insist on wrestling with
the unknown God in the agony and joy of existence, crying with Jacob, "Tell
me, I pray thee, thy Name." And is not the scientist honouring the Name
when he patiently and obediently follows where the evidence leads? Or the
social scientist when he asks us to understand what is before we begin
pronouncing what ought to be? God does not spend all His time in Church.
... Howard
Hewlett Clark
Augustine shows
clearly the religious character of sin. Sin for him is not a moral failure;
it is not even disobedience. Disobedience is a consequence but not the
cause. The cause is: turning away from God, and from God as the highest
good, as the love with which God loves Himself, through us. For this reason,
since sin has this character -- if you say "sins", it is easily dissolved
into moral sins; but sin is first of all basically the power of turning
away from God. For this very reason, no moral remedy is possible. Only
one remedy is possible: return to God. But this of course is possible only
in the power of God, and this power is lost. This is the state of man under
the conditions of existence.
... Paul
Tillich, A History of Christian Thought
If you believe what you like in the gospel, and reject
what you don't like, it is not the gospel you believe,
but yourself.
... St.
Augustine
Religion today
is not transforming people; rather it is being transformed by the people.
It is not raising the moral level of society; it is descending to society's
own level, and congratulating itself that it has scored a victory because
society is smilingly accepting its surrender.
... A.
W. Tozer
John Bunyan understood
the Gospel when he wrote that tract, "The Jerusalem Sinner Saved." He knew
that every sinner is a Jerusalem sinner who has crucified the Lord of Glory;
and to whom, notwithstanding all this, the grace of God is exceedingly
abundant with faith and love which is in Christ Jesus. Therefore the Apostle
Paul himself is a pattern... of the grace of God abounding to the Christ-crucifiers.
A new covenant is made with those who transgressed the first covenant.
It is the brethren of Joseph, who have sold him into Egypt, who are made
the partakers of Joseph's power and of Joseph's riches.
... Adolph
Saphir, Christ and Israel
But upon a day
the good providence of God did cast me to Bedford to work on my calling,
and in one of the streets of that town I came where there were three or
four poor women sitting at a door in the sun and talking about the things
of God; and being now willing to hear them discourse, I drew near to hear
what they said, for I was now a brisk talker also myself in the matters
of religion. But now I may say I heard, but I understood not; for they
were far above, out of my reach; for their talk was about a new birth --
the work of God on their hearts. And methought they spake as if Joy did
make them speak; they spake with such pleasantness of scripture language
and with such appearance of grace in all they said, that they were to me
as if they had found a new world.
... John
Bunyan, Grace Abounding to the Chief
of Sinners
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,