If we allow the
consideration of heathen morality and heathen religion to absolve us from
the duty of preaching the gospel we are really deposing Christ from His
throne in our own souls. If we admit that men can do very well without
Christ, we accept the Saviour only as a luxury for ourselves. If they can
do very well without Christ, then so could we. This is to turn our backs
upon the Christ of the gospels and the Christ of Acts and to turn our faces
towards law, morality, philosophy, natural religion. We look at the moral
teaching of some of the heathen nations and we find it higher than we had
expected... Or we look at morality in Christian lands, and we begin to
wonder whether our practice is really much higher than theirs, and we say,
"They are very well as they are. Leave them alone." When we so speak and
think we are treating the question of the salvation of men exactly as we
should have treated it had Christ never appeared in the world at all. It
is an essentially pre-Christian attitude, and implies that the Son of God
has not been delivered for our salvation. It suggests that the one and
only way of salvation known to me is to keep the commandments. That was
indeed true before the coming of the Son of God, before the Passion, before
the Resurrection, before Pentecost; but after Pentecost that is no longer
true. After Pentecost, the answer to any man who inquires the way of salvation
is no longer "Keep the law," but "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ."
... Roland
Allen, Pentecost and the World
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
Our deepest insight
into the nature of God is expressed with a family analogy. He is both Father
and Son bound together in one Spirit. We are created to be brothers under
God, the Father. The human family is our best illustration of how each
person grows in his unique potentialities by sharing in the loving care
of a society of other persons. Yet each member of the family discovers
what it is to give of himself for the sake of the others. The human family
is only an analogy both for our thought about God and about society; but
no Christian thought gets very far away from it.
... D.
D. Williams, Interpreting Theology
1918-1952
I know what it
is to doubt and question. And I suspect that every Christian who takes
the time to think seriously about his faith, does so too.
... Clark
H. Pinnock
We have forgotten
the gracious hand which has preserved us in peace and multiplied and enriched
and strengthened us, and have vainly imagined in the deceitfulness of our
hearts that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and
virtue of our own. Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too
self sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving Grace,
too proud to pray to the God that made us.
... Abraham
Lincoln
The world, indeed,
seems to be weary of the just, righteous, holy ways of God, and of that
exactness in walking according to His institutions and commands which it
will be one day known that He doth require. But the way to put a stop to
this declension is not by accommodating the commands of God to the corrupt
courses and ways of men. The truths of God and the holiness of His precepts
must be pleaded and defended, though the world dislike them here and perish
hereafter. His law must not be made to lackey after the wills of men, nor
be dissolved by vain interpretations, because they complain they cannot
-- indeed, because they will not -- comply with it. Our Lord Jesus Christ
came not to destroy the law and the prophets, but to fulfill them, and
to supply men with spiritual strength to fulfill them also. It is evil
to break the least commandment; but there is a great aggravation of that
evil in them that shall teach men so to do.
... John
Owen, Sermons
We must always
speak of the efficacy of the ministry in such a manner that the entire
praise of the work may be reserved for God alone.
... John
Calvin
When all is done,
there is no such error or heresy, nothing so fundamentally opposed to religion,
as a wicked life.
... John
Tillotson
Devotion is not
a passing emotion: it is a fixed, enduring habit of mind permeating the
whole life and shaping every action. It rests upon a conviction that God
is the Sole Source of Holiness, and that our part is to lean upon Him and
be absolutely guided and governed by Him; and it necessitates an abiding
hold on Him, a perpetual habit of listening for His Voice within the heart,
as of readiness to obey the dictates of that Voice.
... Jean
N. Grou
Since you have
forsaken the world and turned wholly to God, you are symbolically dead
in the eyes of men; therefore, let your heart be dead to all earthly affections
and concerns, and wholly devoted to our Lord Jesus Christ. For you must
be well aware that if we make an outward show of conversion to God without
giving Him our hearts, it is only a shadow and pretence of virtue, and
no true conversion. Any man or woman who neglects to maintain inward vigilance,
and only makes an outward show of holiness in dress, speech, and behavior,
is a wretched creature. For they watch the doings of other people and criticize
their faults, imagining themselves to be something when in reality they
are nothing. In this way they deceive themselves. Be careful to avoid this,
and devote yourself inwardly to His likeness by humility, charity, and
other spiritual virtues. In this way you will be truly converted to God.
... Walter
Hilton, The Scale of Perfection
Assumptions based
on faith are apparently an ever-present component in any system of belief
-- whether these assumptions include the existence of a personal God, or
whether they begin with non-rational directionally-emergent forces governed
by statistical probabilities. Our argument does not claim that evidences
are so clear that faith is not needed. We do intend to imply, however,
that the choice of a set of assumptions is a moral choice. Adherence to
an epistemology is not something which merely "happens to" a person, but
instead it reflects a component of his moral development. In some sense
he is, in my judgment, morally responsible for adopting an epistemology
even though it can be neither proved nor disproved to the satisfaction
of those who oppose it.
... Kenneth
L. Pike, With Heart and Mind
Christian history
looks glorious in retrospect; but it is made up of constant hard choices
and unattractive tasks, accepted under the pressure of the Will of God.
... Evelyn
Underhill, Abba
Christ says that
not alone in the Church is there forgiveness of sins, but that where two
or three are gathered together in His name they shall have the right to
promise to each other comfort and the forgiveness of sins.
... Martin
Luther
If you were to
rise early every morning, as an instance of self-denial, as a method of
renouncing indulgence, as a means of redeeming your time, and fitting your
spirit for prayer, you would find mighty advantages from it. This method,
though it seem such a small circumstance of life, would in all probability
be a means of great piety. It would keep it constantly in your head, that
softness and idleness were to be avoided, that self-denial was a part of
Christianity... It would teach you to exercise power over yourself, and
make you able by degrees to renounce other pleasures and tempers that war
against the soul.
... William
Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and
Holy Life
Sun of my soul, Thou Savior dear,
It is not night if Thou be near;
O may no earth-born cloud arise
To hide Thee from thy servant's eyes.
... John Keble
[Thanks to Bill Blake at pilgrimwb@aol.com]
It is necessary
to die, but nobody wants to; you don't want to, but you are going to, willy-nilly.
A hard necessity that is, not to want something which can not be avoided.
If it could be managed, we would much rather not die; we would like to
become like the angels by some other means than death. "We have a building
from God," says St. Paul, "a home not made with hands, everlasting in heaven.
For indeed we groan, longing to be clothed over with our dwelling from
heaven; provided, though we be found clothed, and not naked. For indeed
we who are in this dwelling place groan, being burdened; in that we do
not wish to be stripped, but to covered over, so that what is mortal may
be swallowed up by life." We want to reach the kingdom of God, but we don't
want to travel by way of death. And yet there stands Necessity saying:
"This way, please." Do you hesitate, man, to go this way, when this is
the way that God came to you?
... St.
Augustine
It is a poor thing
to strike our colours to God when the ship is going down under us; a poor
thing to come to Him as a last resort, to offer up "our own" when it is
no longer worth keeping. If God were proud, He would hardly have us on
such terms.
... C.
S. Lewis
Sound Bible exposition
is an imperative must in the Church of the Living God. Without it no church
can be a New Testament church in any strict meaning of that term. But exposition
may be carried on in such a way as to leave the hearers devoid of any true
spiritual nourishment whatever. For it is not mere words that nourish the
soul, but God Himself, and unless and until the hearers find God in personal
experience they are not the better for having heard the truth. The Bible
is not an end in itself, but a means to bring men to an intimate and satisfying
knowledge of God, that they may enter into Him, that they may delight in
His presence, may taste and know the inner sweetness of the very God Himself
in the core and center of their hearts.
... A.
W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God
Once in seven years
I burn all my sermons; for it is a shame, if I cannot write better sermons
now than I did seven years ago.
... John
Wesley
You will tell me
that I am always saying the same thing: it is true, for this is the best
and easiest method I know; and as I use no other, I advise all the world
to it. We must know before we can love. In order to know God, we must often
think of Him; and when we come to love Him, we shall then also think of
Him often, for our heart will be with our treasure.
... Brother
Lawrence
If God said, "I
forgive you," to a man who hated his brother, and if (as is impossible)
that voice of forgiveness should reach the man, what would it mean to him?
How would the man interpret it? Would it not mean to him, "You may go on
hating. I do not mind it. You have had great provocation, and are justified
in your hate?" No doubt God takes what wrong there is, and what provocation
there is, into the account; but the more provocation, the more excuse that
can be urged for the hate, the more reason, if possible, that the hater
should be delivered from the hell of his hate, that God's child should
be made the loving child that He meant him to be. The man would think,
not that God loved the sinner, but that He forgave the sin, which God never
does. Every sin meets its due fate -- inexorable expulsion from the paradise
of God's Humanity.
... George
Macdonald, "It Shall Not Be Forgiven"
It is not God's
way that great blessings should descend without the sacrifice first of
great sufferings. If the truth is to be spread to any wide extent among
the people, how can we dream, how can we hope, that trial and trouble shall
not accompany its going forth.
... John
Henry Newman
Love can forbear,
and Love can forgive, ... but Love can never be reconciled to an unlovely
object... He can never therefore be reconciled to your sin, because sin
itself is incapable of being altered; but He may be reconciled to your
person, because that may be restored.
... Thomas
Traherne
"In pastures green"? Not always; sometimes He,
Who knoweth best, in kindness leadeth me
In weary ways, where heavy shadows be.And "by still waters" ? No, not always so;
Ofttimes the heavy tempests round me blow,
And o'er my soul the waves and billows go.But when the storm beats loudest, and I cry
Aloud for help, the Master standeth by,
And whispers to my soul, "Lo, it is I."So, where He leads me, I can safely go,
And in the blest hereafter I shall know
Why, in His wisdom, He hath led me so.
... Anonymous
If thou shalt remain
faithful and zealous in labour, doubt not that God shall be faithful and
bountiful in rewarding thee. It is thy duty to have a good hope that thou
wilt attain the victory: but thou must not fall into security lest thou
become slothful or lifted up.
... Thomas
à Kempis
Upon a little reflection
one can see that no concepts which are restricted to Christianity could
possibly be found in a language spoken only by pagans. How could pagans
have developed words for Christian ideas which have never occurred to them?
This identical situation existed when the Holy Spirit inspired the New
Testament. At that time many pagan words, with pagan-thought background,
were used in Christian contexts; by the contexts the present Christian
meaning eventually built up, until it was possible to express all the Christian
meaning in the pagan terms.
... Kenneth
L. Pike, With Heart and Mind
Keep us, Lord,
so awake in the duties of our callings that we may sleep in Thy peace and
wake in Thy glory.
... John
Donne
Be not afraid to pray... to pray is right.
Pray if thou canst with hope; but ever pray
Though hope be weak, or sick with long delay.
Whatever is good to wish, ask that of heaven;
But if for any wish thou darest not pray,
Then pray to God to cast that wish away.
... Hartley Coleridge
You, too, are called
to be an open letter, as Paul puts it, written by Christ's own hand, showing
those round about you what things Christ can do. We are to go into the
world and so to live our ordinary lives that, all unconsciously to us,
those among whom we move will look at us again, and will begin to say,
You know I used to doubt if there was much in Christianity save talk. But
I have revised my opinion. There's So-and-so (that's you, you understand),
that is a man in whom the thing is obviously working out. He used to be
so touchy, so opinionative, so mean and shabby in his views, so dully ordinary.
Yet now, undoubtedly, the man has won to self-control and a large generous
mind, and -- yea, I know it's a queer thing to say -- but he has won to
something more, something that somehow (though he never speaks about those
things) makes you remember Jesus Christ!
... A.
J. Gossip, The Galilean Accent
Ideological notions
are strongest amongst people who have lost their traditional religious
faith, and they provide a kind of pseudo-religion to take its place. Ideology
may well be defined as religion-substitute. The fact that religious faith
expresses itself in the particular ideological forms current in any given
period is no reason why we should confuse religion with ideology; and,
even though it requires a penetrating and candid investigation to distinguish
between the genuinely religious and the merely ideological elements in
the outlook of a particular period or individual, this does not mean that
religion itself is an aspect of ideology. The core of religious belief
is not ideological, whatever may be said of the soft pulp in which it is
wrapped up.
... Alan
Richardson, Christian Apologetics
The generality
of nominal Christians... are almost entirely taken up with the concerns
of the present world. They know indeed that they are mortal, but they do
not feel it. The truth rests in their understandings, and cannot gain admission
into their hearts. This speculative persuasion is altogether different
from that strong practical impression of the infinite importance of eternal
things, which, attended with a proportionate sense of the shortness and
uncertainty of all below, while it prompts to activity from a conviction
that the night cometh when no man can work, produces a certain firmness
of texture, which hardens us against the buffetings of fortune, and prevents
our being very deeply penetrated by the cares and interests, the good or
evil, of this transitory state.
... William
Wilberforce, A Practical View
Sin is not only
manifested in certain acts that are forbidden by divine command. Sin also
appears in attitudes and dispositions and feelings. Lust and hate are sins
as well as adultery and murder. And, in the traditional Christian view,
despair and chronic boredom -- unaccompanied by any vicious act -- are
serious sins. They are expressions of man's separation from God, as the
ultimate good, meaning, and end of human existence.
... Mortimer
J. Adler
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,