No doubt the gospel
is quite free, as free as the Victoria Cross, which anyone can have who
is prepared to face the risks; but it means time, and pains, and concentrating
all one's energies upon a mighty project. You will not stroll into Christlikeness
with your hands in your pockets, shoving the door open with a careless
shoulder. This is no hobby for one's leisure moments, taken up at intervals
when we have nothing much to do, and put down and forgotten when our life
grows full and interesting... It takes all one's strength, and all one's
heart, and all one's mind, and all one's soul, given freely and recklessly
and without restraint. This is a business for adventurous spirits; others
would shrink out of it. And so Christ had a way of pulling up would-be
recruits with sobering and disconcerting questions, of meeting applicants
-- breathless and panting in their eagerness -- by asking them if they
really thought they had the grit, the stamina, the gallantry, required.
For many, He explained, begin, but quickly become cowed, and slink away,
leaving a thing unfinished as a pathetic monument of their own lack of
courage and of staying power.
... A.
J. Gossip, From the Edge of the Crowd
We need never shout
across the spaces to an absent God. He is nearer than our own soul, closer
than our most secret thoughts.
... A.
W. Tozer
Faith keeps the
soul at a holy distance from these infinite depths of divine wisdom, where
it profits more by reverence and holy fear than any can do by their utmost
attempt to draw nigh to that inaccessible light wherein these glories of
the divine nature do dwell.
... John
Owen
For many years
the Christians met in homes and never possessed any special buildings for
their gatherings. As religio illicita, no thought could be had of
a permanent structure for gatherings. This would only facilitate matters
for the Roman government in its merciless persecutions. The early Church
was very conscious of its pilgrim character in a world which was at enmity
with God.
... Donald
L. Norbie, New Testament Church Organization
What then are we
afraid of? Can we have too much of God? Is it a misfortune to be freed
from the heavy yoke of the world, and to bear the light burden of Jesus
Christ? Do we fear to be too happy, too much delivered from ourselves,
from the caprices of our pride, the violence of our passions, and the tyranny
of this deceitful world?
... François
Fénelon
Gambling challenges
the view of life which the Christian Church exists to uphold and extend.
Its glorification of mere chance is a denial of the Divine order of nature.
To risk money haphazard is to disregard the insistence of the Church in
every age of living faith that possessions are a trust, and that men must
account to God for their use. The persistent appeal to covetousness is
fundamentally opposed to the unselfishness which was taught by Jesus Christ
and by the New Testament as a whole. The attempt (which is inseparable
from gambling) to make a profit out of the inevitable loss and possible
suffering of others is the antithesis of that love of one's neighbour on
which our Lord insisted.
... Archbishop
William Temple
The great need
today among the young is the strengthening of belief in things spiritual,
for in spite of the superhuman advances in science, invention, and culture,
none of this is attributed to God's gift to man; in fact, the increase
of knowledge and the cult of education have but given to youth a self-reliant
independence where religion has no place, and beyond admitting that Christ
was "the best man that ever lived," there are few who concede any other
tribute to the Creator. And yet the saving principles of the world are
rooted in Christ, implanted in him; the Truth by which men live is the
Truth as taught and lived by Jesus.
... Helen
Olney, Thoughts
And I said to the
man who stood at the gate of the year: "Give me a light. that I may tread
safely into the unknown." And he replied: "Go out into the darkness and
put your hand into the hand of God. That shall be to you better than light,
and safer than a known way."
... Minnie
L. Haskins
The Lord's dealings
and method with others are not our rule. It is the cause of much doubting
and disquietness that persons, reading inattentively in books the Lord's
way to others, hence cut out this channel to themselves, and think, Thus
and thus I must be dealt with, or else not at all.
... James
Fraser of Brea
Perhaps there cannot
be a better way of judging of what manner of spirit we are of, than to
see whether the actions of our life are such as we may safely commend them
to God in our prayers.
... William
Law
In short: in all
his ways and walks, whether as touching his own business, or his dealings
with other men, he must keep his heart with all diligence, lest he do aught,
or turn aside to aught, or suffer aught to spring up or dwell within him
or about him, or let anything be done in him or through him, otherwise
than were meet for God, and would be possible and seemly if God Himself
were verily made Man.
... Theologia
Germanica
The Partisan
Review, a journal of literary opinion representing a section of advanced
secular thought, recently published a series of papers answering the question,
"Why has there been a turn toward religion among intellectuals?" The asking
of the question is significant. Few writers dispute the fact implied by
it. Most of the contributors, whether they count themselves among those
who have "turned to religion" or not, find the principal reason for it
in the collapse of the optimistic hope that modern science and human good
will would bring the world into an era of peace and justice. The confidence
in that outcome has been so violently shaken that men must ask whether
there are not higher resources than man's to sustain courage and hope.
The faith of the Bible points to such sources. God works within the tragic
destiny of human efforts with a healing power, and a reconciling spirit.
Even those who have felt completely superior to all "outworn" religious
notions, must look today at least wistfully to the possibility that such
a God lives and works.
... D.
D. Williams, Interpreting Theology
1918-1952
It is further objected
that he hath left to us no example of that which by many is esteemed the
only religious state of life, viz. perfect retirement from the world, for
the more devout serving of God and freeing us from the temptations of the
world -- such as is that of monks and hermits. This perhaps may seem to
some a great oversight and omission. But our Lord in great wisdom thought
fit to give us a pattern of a quite different sort of life, which was,
not to fly the conversation of men and to live in a monastery or a wilderness,
but to do good among men, to live in the world with great freedom and with
great innocence. He did indeed sometimes retire himself for the more free
and private exercise of devotion, as we ought to do; but he passed his
life chiefly in the conversation of men, that they might have all the benefit
that was possible of his instruction and example We read that "he was carried
into the wilderness to be tempted," but not that he lived there to avoid
temptation. He hath given us an example of denying the world without leaving
it.
... John
Tillotson, Sermons
[Dr. Johnson to
a Quaker:] Oh, let us not be found, when our Master calls us, ripping the
lace off our waistcoats, but the spirit of contention from our souls and
tongues.
... Samuel
Johnson
[Jesus'] life and
utterance were the proclamation of this new order of things, of this new
force by which man was to be ruled. When, unarmed and defenseless, He said
to the Roman power, "My Kingdom is not of this world," He spoke the word
of inauguration. Over the kingdom of the elemental forces, over the kingdom
of the animal, over the kingdom of the intellect, He beheld rising, with
Himself as prophet and embodiment, that kingdom of the spiritual whose
forces should be those of purity and sacrifice, love and trust, obedience
and service. It is the last of the kingdoms because it is the highest;
it will be the most enduring for there is nothing that can take its place.
... J.
Brierley, The Life of the Soul
If 'religion' is
understood... as man's search for God on man's own terms, as his effort
to make some kind of adjustment to the 'ground of being' on a level less
radical than that of the self-forgetful commitment of faith, it clearly
can become faith's greatest enemy, the last bastion of human pride to hold
out against God. The experience of the Jews in relation to Jesus, and of
the churches throughout the ages, demonstrates that this is the most persistent
and far-reaching temptation which confronts men. To call attention to this
is always an urgently necessary part of the prophetic ministry within the
Church.
... Daniel
Jenkins, "Religion and Coming of Age"
More things are wrought by prayer
Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice
Rise like a fountain for me night and day.
For what are men better than sheep or goats
That nourish a blind life within the brain,
If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer
Both for themselves and those who call them friend?
For so the whole round earth is every way
Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.
... Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Anyone can believe
that Jesus was a god: what is so hard to credit is that He who hung upon
the cross was the God. That is what you are asked as Christians to believe.
And it is the sword, glittering but fearful. It must cut your life away
from the standards of this world, away from its thought and its measures,
no less than its aims and hopes. Hard and bitter is the separation, and
you will be parted from many great and noble men, some perhaps your own
teachers, who can accept about Jesus everything but the one thing needful.
The Christian faith, if accepted, drives a wedge between its own adherents
and the disciples of every other philosophy or religion, however lofty
or soaring. And they will not see this; they will tell you that really
your views and theirs are the same thing, and only differ in words, which,
if only you were a little more highly trained, you would understand. Even
among Christ's nominal servants there are many who think a little good-will
is all that is needed to bridge the gulf -- a little amiability and mutual
explanation, a more careful use of phrases, would soon accommodate Christianity
to fashionable modes of speaking and thinking, and destroy all causes of
provocation. So they would. But they would destroy also its one inalienable
attraction: that of being... a wonder, and a beauty, and a terror -- no
dull and drab system of thought, no mere symbolic idealism.
... John
Neville Figgis, The Gospel and Human
Needs
Our own curiosity
often hindereth us in the reading of holy writings, when we seek to understand
and discuss, where we should pass simply on. If thou wouldst profit by
thy reading, read humbly, simply, honestly, and not desiring to win a character
[i.e., reputation] for learning.
... Thomas
à Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ
To have heard the
Bible speak is to be prepared not for maturity, balance, poise, riches,
but for the poverty, and distress and uncertainty of thought and action
that are so desperately characteristic of human life. The Bible takes human
mortality seriously, that mortality which the preacher does not hide from
you even when you stand on the threshold of life. To wrestle with the theme
of the Scriptures is your proper preparation for the rough things of human
life, as we see it, and observe it, and are immersed in it. The Truth which
is being spoken to you most clearly in the Scriptures is your only protection
against cynicism and skepticism, just as it is your only protection against
that false romanticism which is the modern cruel substitute for faith in
God.
... Sir
Edwyn Clement Hoskyns
He enters by the
door who enters by Christ, who imitates the suffering of Christ, who is
acquainted with the humility of Christ so as to feel and know that, if
God became man for us, men should not think themselves God, but men. He
who, being man, wishes to appear God, does not imitate Him who, being God,
became man. Thou art not bid to think less of thyself than thou art, but
to know what thou art.
... St.
Augustine
What we have been
told is how we men can be drawn into Christ -- can become part of that
wonderful present which the young Prince of the universe wants to offer
to His Father -- that present which is Himself and therefore us in Him.
It is the only thing we were made for. And there are strange, exciting
hints in the Bible that when we are drawn in, a great many other things
in Nature will begin to come right. The bad dream will be over: it will
be morning.
... C.
S. Lewis, Mere Christianity
Thanks to Kerry
Callahan
One can believe
in the divinity of Jesus Christ and feel no personal loyalty to Him at
all -- indeed, pay no attention whatever to His commandments and His will
for one's life. One can believe intellectually in the efficacy of prayer
and never do any praying.
... Catherine
Marshall, Beyond Our Selves
It is as reasonable
to suppose it the desire of all Christians to arrive at Christian perfection
as to suppose that all sick men desire to be restored to perfect health;
yet experience shows us, that nothing wants more to be pressed, repeated,
and forced upon our minds, than the plainest rules of Christianity.
... William
Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and
Holy Life
"The Law", he says,
"was our 'pedagogue', until Christ should come." Those words have been
interpreted as though they described the Law as a preparatory education,
continued at a higher stage by Christ. That, however, is not quite what
Paul meant. The "pedagogue" in Greek society was not a schoolmaster, he
did not give lessons. He was a slave who accompanied a boy to school, and
both waited upon him and exercised a supervision which interfered with
the boy's freedom of action. He is, in fact, a figure in the little allegory
which Paul gives us to illustrate the position of the People of God before
Christ came. There was a boy left heir to a great estate. He was a minor,
and so must have guardians and trustees. He was as helpless in their hands
as if he had been a slave. He must live on the allowance they gave him,
and follow their wishes from day to day. They gave him a "pedagogue" to
keep him out of mischief. He could not please himself, or realize his own
purposes and ambitions. Yet all the time he was the heir; the estate was
his, and no one else's. Just so the People of God, the Divine Commonwealth,
was cramped and fettered by ignorance and evil times. It remained in uneasy
expectation of one day coming into active existence. At last the heir came
of age: guardians and trustees abdicated their powers, and the grown man
possessed in full realization all that was his. So now the fettered life
of the Divine Commonwealth bursts its bonds and comes into active existence...
The intervention of law was not a reversal of God's original and eternal
purpose of pure love and grace towards men, it only subserved that purpose,
while it seemed to contradict it, just as the presence of the "pedagogus"
might seem to the high-spirited young heir quite contrary to the rights
secured to him by his father's will.
... C.
H. Dodd, The Meaning of Paul For
Today
The great question
for us now is, Do we believe in that love of God which Christ taught by
His words, and of which His followers saw in His voluntary death a crowning
manifestation? And remember that even belief in the love of God will do
us no good unless it awakes answering love in ourselves -- unless it adds
to our hatred of the sin which separates us from God and increases our
love of other men.
... James
Hastings Rashdall, Principles
and Precepts
Lord, I am glad for the great gift of living,
Glad for Thy days of sun and of rain;
Grateful for joy, with an endless thanksgiving,
Grateful for laughter -- and grateful for pain.Lord, I am glad for the young April's wonder,
Glad for the fulness of long summer days;
And now when the spring and my heart are asunder,
Lord, I give thanks for the dark autumn ways.Sun, bloom, and blossom, O Lord, I remember,
The dream of the spring and its joy I recall;
But now in the silence and pain of November,
Lord, I give thanks to Thee, Giver of all!
... Charles Hanson Towne
There is in St.
Paul's definite, soul-stirring assertion of the wrath of God and the reality
of the judgment at hand, a truth more profound than any that underlies
our somewhat enfeebled ideas of universal benevolence and the determined
progress of the race. There is something more true in his denunciation
of idolatry as sin than in our denial that it is possible for a man to
worship an idol, or in our suggestion that all idolatry is only a road
to spiritual worship of the one true God... One day, I think, we shall
return to these stern doctrines, realizing in them a truth more profound
than we now know, and then we shall preach them with conviction, and, being
convinced ourselves, we shall convince others.
... Roland
Allen, Missionary Methods: St.
Paul's or ours?
The heart must
be kept tender and pliable; otherwise agnosticism converts to skepticism.
In such a case, the value of apologetics is voided, for apologetics is
aimed at persuading doubters, not at refuting the defiant. He who demands
a kind of proof that the nature of the case renders impossible, is determined
that no possible evidence shall convince him.
... Edward
John Carnell
I would very earnestly
ask you to check your conception of Christ, the image of Him which as a
Christian you hold in your mind, with the actual revealed Person who can
be seen and studied in action in the pages of the Gospels. It may be of
some value to hold in our minds a bundle of assorted ideals to influence
and control our conduct. But surely we need to be very careful before we
give that "bundle" the name of Jesus Christ the Son of God.
... J.
B. Phillips
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,