God is wanting you to give Him the despised, the humdrum things in your life—like feet—and let Him make them beautiful.
... Bob Pierce, founder and president, World Vision
In the Old Testament,
we find the idea that God enters into the sufferings of His people. "In
all their afflictions, He was afflicted." The relation of God to the woes
of the world is not that of a mere spectator. The New Testament goes further,
and says that God is love. But that is not love which, in the presence
of acute suffering, can stand outside and aloof. The doctrine that Christ
is the image of the unseen God means that God does not stand outside.
... B.
H. Streeter
Jesus calls us
not only to repentance, to the "letting go" of the false gods we come to
him with; but he goes one more difficult step farther: he also calls us
to believe in him alone as the decisive, absolutely unique, once and for
all, full revelation of God to man. This is extremely difficult for us,
because Jesus was careful to give men no external guarantee that he was,
in fact, God in the flesh. Otherwise, he realized, we would not be worshipping
him, but would only be worshipping or trusting in the guarantee, whatever
it might be.
... Robert
L. Short, The Parables of Peanuts
We have need of
patience with ourselves and with others; with those below and those above
us, and with our own equals; with those who love us and those who love
us not; for the greatest things and for the least; against sudden inroads
of trouble, and under daily burdens; against disappointments as to the
weather, or the breaking of the heart; in the weariness of the body, or
the wearing of the soul; in our own failure of duty, or others' failure
towards us; in every-day wants, or in the aching of sickness or the decay
of old age; in disappointment, bereavement, losses, injuries, reproaches;
in heaviness of the heart, or its sickness amid delayed hopes. In all these
things, from childhood's little troubles to the martyr's sufferings, patience
is the grace of God, whereby we endure evil for the love of God.
... Edward
B. Pusey
The separate creaturely
life, as opposed to life in union with God, is only a life of various appetites,
hungers, and wants, and cannot possibly be anything else. God Himself cannot
make a creature to be in itself, or in its own nature, anything else but
a state of emptiness. The highest life that is natural and creaturely can
go no higher than this: it can only be a bare capacity for goodness and
cannot possibly be a good and happy life but by the life of God dwelling
in it and in union with it. And this is the two-fold life that, of all
necessity, must be united in every good and happy and perfect creature.
... William
Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and
Holy Life
Extraordinary afflictions
are not always the punishment of extraordinary sins, but sometimes the
trial of extraordinary graces. Sanctified afflictions are spiritual promotions.
... Matthew
Henry
When the Bible
speaks of "following Jesus", it is proclaiming a discipleship which will
liberate mankind from all man-made dogma, from every burden and oppression,
from every anxiety and torture which afflicts the conscience. If they follow
Jesus, men escape from the hard yoke of their own laws, and submit to the
kindly yoke of Jesus Christ. But does this mean that we can ignore the
seriousness of His command? Far from it! We can only achieve perfect liberty
and enjoy fellowship with Jesus when His command, His call to absolute
discipleship, is appreciated in its entirety. Only the man who follows
the command of Jesus without reserve, and submits unresistingly to His
yoke, finds his burden easy, and under its gentle pressure receives the
power to persevere in the right way. The command of Jesus is hard -- unutterably
hard -- for those who try to resist it.
... Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship
When we look at
the history of the Church, at the reckless fashion in which we have squandered
our strength and time in fratricidal struggles between sect and sect, in
embittered bickerings over matters often of secondary moment, while the
world about us lies unwon, and the Church's great commission remains plainly
unfulfilled, surely we can understand that outburst of Erasmus, when he
cried that he wished that we would cease from our disputings altogether,
and put all that energy and zeal that we are wasting upon them into the
carrying of the Gospel to the heathen! Or recall the infinite pains that
have been taken, down the centuries, to preserve minute orthodoxy in all
points of mental belief while ugly evils flaunt along the streets and are
accepted meekly as part of the makeup of things! Or recollect how easy
it is to assume that we, ourselves, are Christian people. Why? Oh, well,
just the usual reasons: we say our prayers, when we are not too sleepy;
and we come to church, when there is nothing much to do; and so, of course,
there is no doubt of it, although our tempers may remain uncurbed, and
our characters are not the least like Jesus Christ's, nor growing any nearer
it! Do we not need that solemn warning that Christ gives us when He tells
us bluntly that many people lose their lives and souls, because they are
always laying the emphasis and stress on the wrong points?
... A.
J. Gossip, The Galilean Accent
Then are we servants
of God, then are we the disciples of Christ, when we do what is commanded
us and because it is commanded us.
... John
Owen
Christianity is
not a voice in the wilderness, but a life in the world. It is not an idea
in the air but feet on the ground going God's way. It is not an exotic
to be kept under glass, but a hardy plant to bear twelve months of fruits
in all kinds of weather. Fidelity to duty is its root and branch. Nothing
we can say to the Lord, no calling Him by great or dear names, can take
the place of the plain doing of His will. We may cry out about the beauty
of eating bread with Him in His kingdom, but it is wasted breath and a
rootless hope unless we plow and plant in His kingdom here and now. To
remember Him at His table and to forget Him at ours, is to have invested
in bad securities. There is no substitute for plain, every-day goodness.
... Maltbie
D. Babcock
The essential amorality
of all atheist doctrines is often hidden from us by an irrelevant personal
argument. We see that many articulate secularists are well-meaning and
law-abiding men; we see them go into righteous indignation over injustice
and often devote their lives to good works. So we conclude that "he can't
be wrong whose life is in the right" -- that their philosophies are just
as good guides to action as Christianity. What we don't see is that they
are not acting on their philosophies. They are acting, out of habit or
sentiment, on an inherited Christian ethic which they still take for granted
though they have rejected the creed from which it sprang. Their children
will inherit some what less of it.
... Joy
Davidman, Smoke on the Mountain
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
It is in vain,
0 men, that you seek within yourselves the cure for your miseries. All
your insight only leads you to the knowledge that it is not in yourselves
that you will discover the true and the good. The philosophers promised
them to you, and have not been able to keep their promises... Your principal
maladies are pride, which cuts you off from God, and sensuality, which
binds you to the earth; and they have done nothing but foster at least
one of these maladies. If they have given you God for your object, it has
only been to pander to your pride; they have made you think that you were
like Him and resembled Him by your nature. And those who have grasped the
vanity of such a pretension have cast you down into the other abyss by
making you believe that your nature was like that of the beasts of the
field, and have led you to seek your good in lust, which is the lot of
animals.
... Blaise
Pascal
When a man listens
to the voice of the tempter within him, he is inclined to do as others
do, not to resist when temptation seems great. But when he looks into the
laws of God, and hears the words of Christ, his natural sense of right
and wrong is restored to him, and he becomes elevated, purified, and sanctified.
... Benjamin
Jowett
It is sometimes
said that even if no rules were laid down for the conduct of its affairs,
the Church, being created by Jesus to "further the work of the Kingdom
of God", can be judged by the extent to which it is successful in continuing
his work. This supposition rests upon a misunderstanding of what is meant
by "the Kingdom of God"... The Kingdom itself is not something to be "furthered"
or "built" by men's efforts. It is something which we are invited to recognize
as already present, after a manner, in the life and work of Jesus. It is
something to be inherited or entered into by those who believe. The task
of the Church, in other words, is not to set the stage for a better world
than this one but to draw the curtain from it, to reveal something that
is already there.
... Nick
Earle, What's Wrong with the Church?
If we do not at least try to manifest something of Creative Charity in our dealings with life, whether by action, thought, or prayer, and do it at our own cost—if we roll up the talent of love in the nice white napkin of piety and put it safely out of the way, sorry that the world is so hungry and thirsty, so sick and so fettered, and leave it at that: then, even that little talent may be taken from us. We may discover at the crucial moment that we are spiritually bankrupt.
... Evelyn
Underhill, The School of Charity [1934]
Only the one who has been hurt can bring healing. The
other person cannot. It is the one who has been hurt
who has to be willing to be hurt again to show love,
if there is to be hope that healing will come.
... Francis Schaeffer (1912-1984)
It should be noted,
at least by those who accept Christ's claim to be God, that he by no means
fits into the picture of the "mystic saint". Those who are fascinated by
the supposed superiority of the mystic soul might profitably compile a
list of its characteristics and place them side by side with those of Christ.
The results would probably expose a surprising conclusion. There is, in
fact, no provision for a "privileged class" in genuine Christianity.
... J.
B. Phillips, Your God is Too Small
The Christian message
is not an exhortation -- "try hard to be good." Good advice, but there
is no saving gospel in that.
... Halford
E. Luccock, Marching Off the Map
I am disposed to
say grace upon twenty other occasions in the course of the day besides
my dinner. I want a form for setting out upon a pleasant walk, for a moonlight
ramble, for a friendly meeting or a solved problem. Why have we none for
books, those spiritual repasts -- a grace before Milton, a devotional exercise
proper to be said before reading [Spenser]?
... Charles
Lamb
In quite recent
times we seem to have entered a particularly dangerous new phase of anthropological
aberration, namely, a queer combination of nihilism and deification. Theoretically,
man is said to be nothing but an animal with a highly developed cerebrum.
At the same time, it is believed of this man that he is capable by science
and technical devices of achieving whatever he wants. The deification which
might have been thought to be finally overcome, returns as it were from
behind, in the form of a deification of technical creativity to which not
much less than omnipotence is ascribed. After mankind has done away with
the pseudo-religion of race and blood, it is faced with the even greater
danger of a technocratical pseudo-religion. There is no room for human
personality, freedom and justice in either of these new religions of divine
man. But the most dangerous of all must be the one which makes man at the
same time nothing and God.
... Emil
Brunner, The Scandal of Christianity
We may all be inclined
to think of man's countless foolish and selfish intentions, his twisted
and mischievous words and deeds. From all these, sin can be known, as a
tree can be known from its fruits. Yet these outward signs are not sin
itself, the wages of which are death. Sin is not confined to the evil things
we do. It is the evil within us, the evil which we are. Shall we call it
our pride or our laziness, or shall we call it the deceit of our life?
Let us call it for once the great defiance which turns us again and again
into the enemies of God and of our fellowmen, even of our own selves.
... Karl
Barth
It is an abuse
to confess any kind of sin, mortal or venial, without a will to be delivered
from it, since confession was instituted for no other end.
... François
de Sales, Introduction to the
Devout Life
The soul which
gives itself wholly and without reserve to God is filled with His own Peace;
and inasmuch as we are prone to grow like that to which we are closely
united, the closer we draw to our God, so much the stronger and more steadfast
and more tranquil shall we become.
... Jean
N. Grou, The Hidden Life of the Soul
Keep clear of concealment
-- keep clear of the need of concealment. It is an awful hour when the
first necessity of hiding something comes. The whole life is different
thenceforth. When there are questions to be feared and eyes to be avoided
and subjects which must not be touched, the bloom of life is gone.
... Phillips
Brooks
Let us pardon those
who have wronged us. For that which others scarcely accomplish -- I mean
the blotting out of their own sins by means of fasting and lamentations,
and prayers, and sackcloth and ashes -- this it is possible for us easily
to effect without sackcloth and ashes and fasting, if only we blot out
anger from our heart, and with sincerity forgive those who have wronged
us.
... St.
John Chrysostom
In all our criticism
and near-despair of the institutional Church, it should never be forgotten
that many powers and possibilities really exist in it, but often in captivity;
they exist as frozen credits and dead capital.
... Hendrik
Kraemer
If thou desirest
to be safe, turn at once in thy emptiness to God. If thou hast been inconsistent,
how canst thou better become consistent again than in God only? How canst
thou better escape death than by the true, real Life -- which is God Himself?
... Johannes
Tauler
We need not despair
of any man, so long as he lives. For God deemed it better to bring good
out of evil than not to permit evil at all.
... St.
Augustine
No man can be without
his god. If he have not the true God to bless and sustain him, he will
have some false god to delude and to betray him. The Psalmist knew this,
and therefore he joined so closely forgetting the name of our God and holding
up our hands to some strange god. For every man has something in which
he hopes, on which he leans, to which he retreats and retires, with which
he fills up his thoughts in empty spaces of time, when he is alone, when
he lies sleepless on his bed, when he is not pressed with other thoughts;
to which he betakes himself in sorrow or trouble, as that from which he
shall draw comfort and strength -- his fortress, his citadel, his defence;
and has not this a good right to be called his god? Man was made to lean
on the Creator; but if not on Him, then he leans on the creature in one
shape or another. The ivy cannot grow alone: it must twine round some support
or other; if not the goodly oak, then the ragged thorn -- round any dead
stick whatever, rather than have no stay or support at all. It is even
so with the heart and affections of man; if they do not twine around God,
they must twine around some meaner thing.
... Richard
Chevenix Trench
I think that there
is no reason to doubt but that the blessed spirits above, who continually
"behold the face of their Father", are still writing after this copy which
is here propounded to us, and endeavouring to be "perfect as their Father
which is in heaven is perfect", still aspiring after a nearer and more
perfect resemblance of God, whose goodness and mercy is far beyond and
before that of any creature, that they may be for ever approaching nearer
to it and yet never overtake it.
... John
Tillotson
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,