The blessed son of God only
In a crib full poor did lie;
With our poor flesh and our poor blood
Was clothed that everlasting goodThe Lord Christ Jesu, God's son dear,
Was a guest and a stranger here;
Us for to bring from misery,
That we might live eternally.All this did he for us freely,
For to declare his great mercy;
All Christendom be merry therefore,
And give him thanks for evermore.
... Miles Coverdale
We must try to
keep the mind in tranquility. For just as the eye which constantly shifts
its gaze, now turning to the right or to the left, now incessantly peering
up or down, cannot see distinctly what lies before it, but the sight must
be fixed firmly on the object in view if one would make his vision of it
clear; so too man's mind when distracted by his countless worldly cares
cannot focus itself distinctly on the truth.
... St.
Basil the Great
Religion is the
same that ever it was, only it suffers by them that make profession of
it. Never was there less regard for the Person and offices of Christ, of
His grace, and of the benefits of His mediation, among them that are called
Christians, than is found among many at this day.
... John
Owen
Many Christians
are reluctant to become involved in public affairs be cause politics is
a "dirty business", but the same people are generally quite happy to go
into business life, which is in its way just as "dirty". If the dubious
practices and moral compromises of every walk of life were dissected and
made known with the glare of publicity which shines on the activities of
politicians, then those who like to think that they can keep their hands
clean would have very few professions to choose from.
... John
Lawrence, Hard Facts
The underlying
questions are always: What is the Church? What is the Church for? If that
is not kept in mind, the lay ministry, about which so much is being said
at present, remains on the level of a many-sided activity in which the
self-assertion of the laity threatens to be more evident than a new manifestation
of the Church in modern society. The responsible participation of the laity
in the discharge of the Church's divine calling is not primarily a matter
of idealism and enthusiasm or organizational efficiency, but a new grasp
and commitment to the meaning of God's redemptive purpose with mankind
and with the world in the past, the present, and the future: a purpose
which has its foundation and inexhaustible content in Christ.
... Hendrik
Kraemer, A Theology of the Laity
If on our daily course our mind
Be set to hallow all we find,
New treasures still of countless price
God will provide for sacrifice.The trivial round, the common task
Will furnish all we ought to ask;
Room to deny ourselves -- a road
To bring us daily nearer God.
... John Keble
The church has
magnificent buildings, superb equipment, trained leadership, excellent
teaching materials, organizational ability, and yet lacks that one thing
that could take all these tools and make them the channel of God's will.
In spite of its ever-increasing membership, the church lacks the spirit
of God's growing love and understanding that can transform it from an efficient
organization into a loving, dynamic fellowship where men and women become
vitally alive with faith, love, and hope.
... Thomas
M. Steen, "Renewal in the Church"
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.
... Daniel
Day Williams, Interpreting Theology,
1918-1952
Nothing could have
saved the infant Church from melting away into one of those vague and ineffective
schools of philosophic ethics except the stern and strict rule that is
laid down here [Rev.
2:15, 16] by St. John. An easy-going Christianity could never have
survived; only the most convinced, resolute, almost bigoted adherence to
the most uncompromising interepretation of its own principles could have
given the Christians the courage and self-reliance that were needed. For
them to hesitate or to doubt was to be lost.
... W.
M. Ramsay, The Letters to the Seven
Churches
The symbol of the
New Testament and the Christian Church is a cross, which stands for a love
faithful despite physical agony and rejection by the world. No amount of
air-conditioning and pew-cushioning in the suburban church can cover over
the hard truth that the Christian life... is a narrow way of suffering;
that discipleship is costly: that, for the faithful, there is always a
cross to be carried. No one can understand Christianity to its depths who
comes to it to enjoy it as a pleasant weekend diversion.
... W.
Waldo Beach, The Christian Life
I compare the troubles
which we have to undergo in the course of the year to a great bundle of
fagots, far too large for us to lift. But God does not require us to carry
the whole at once. He mercifully unties the bundle, and gives us first
one stick, which we are to carry today, and then another, which we are
to carry tomorrow, and so on. This we might easily manage, if we would
only take the burden appointed for each day; but we choose to increase
our troubles by carrying yesterday's stick over again today, and adding
tomorrow's burden to the load, before we are required to bear it.
... John
Newton
We must alter our
lives in order to alter our hearts, for it is impossible to live one way
and pray another.
... William
Law
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
It is easy to throw
angels and demons and the cosmic character and relevance of Christ's work
upon the scrap heap of ancient superstition and mythology, and to consider
them but a manner of speech that is utterly irrelevant for our space age.
But if we should feel entitled to throw out one part of the witness of Ephesians
to Christ, why not the rest of it also: for instance, Christ's Lordship
over the church and in the heart? It is unfair and scarcely honest to consider
the Bible or parts of it as a cake from which we can pick out merely the
raisins we happen to like. Speaking the truth in love and witnessing to
the biblical Christ may imply the necessity to speak also of some very
strange things.
... Markus
Barth, The Broken Wall
It is necessary
to point out that our responsibility is a relative one only, for as we
think of the world-wide disintegration of the human family, the prospect
before us could easily fill us with alarm and despondency, if we were not
sure first of the absolute sovereignty of God who (I speak reverently)
knows what He is doing in conducting this enormous experiment that we call
life.
... J.
B. Phillips, Making Men Whole
Some go to the
light of nature and the use of "right reason" (that is, their own) as their
guides; and some add the additional documents of the philosophers. They
think a saying of Epictetus, or Seneca, or Arrianus, being wittily suited
to their fancies and affections, to have more life and power in it than
any precept of the Gospel. The reason why these things are more pleasing
unto them than the commands and instructions of Christ is because, proceeding
from the spring of natural light, they are suited to the workings of natural
fancy and understanding; but those of Christ, proceeding from the fountain
of eternal spiritual light, are not comprehended in their beauty and excellency
without a principle of the same light in us, guiding our understanding
and influencing our affections. Hence, take any precept, general or particular,
about moral duties, that is materially the same in the writings of philosophers
and in the doctrine of the Gospel; not a few prefer it as delivered in
the first way before the latter.
... John
Owen, A Discourse upon the Holy
Spirit
What fellowship
means in material matters is made very plain. Every man is to work for
his living. "If a man will not work, neither let him eat." But those who
cannot work are to be provided for out of the common fund. Old and helpless
persons who have relations of their own should, indeed, find support from
them and not be forced to come upon the Church; but for the resourceless
the Church must provide. And those who are rich and who earn more than
enough to support their own families are to be willing contributors to
the common fund. The love of money -- the desire to accumulate wealth --
is the root of every kind of evil. The relation of one to another is to
be that of members in one body, in which, if one member suffers, all the
members suffer with it.
... Charles
Gore, Christ and Society
We, and all things,
exist in God's lnfinitude now; our individuality begins with it; our personality
grows strong because of it; and we know, if we know anything, that while
the more we approach the good the more we please God, at the same time
the more men approach the good the more nobly distinctive, the more beautifully
individual do their characters become. To imagine, then, at the end of
this life we shall cease to exist as conscious beings, that our characters,
our personalities, will fall back into some boundless being, instead of
becoming more and more definite, more and more individual, is certainly
not to exalt God; for it is founded on the belief, either that God is now
belittled by our present individuality, or that our present individuality
is a mere delusion. In the latter case God, whom we find in the depths
of our souls, is doubtless also a delusion, for if the self is not real
it is no respectable witness on whose testimony we can accept God. Our
deepest mature conviction is that finite and infinity interpenetrate, as
time and eternity interpenetrate, and our problems must be solved in the
light of that conviction.
... Lily
Dougall, The Undiscovered Country
It was his steadfast
and unalterable conviction that for a man who has wrapped his will in God's
will, put his life consciously into the stream of the divine Life, freed
his soul from all personal ambitions, taken his life on trust as a divine
gift -- that for such a man there is an over-ruling Providence which guards
and guides him in every incident of his life, from the greatest to the
least. He held that all annoyances, frustrations, disappointments, mishaps,
discomforts, hardships, sorrows, pains, and even final disaster itself,
are simply God's way of teaching us lessons that we could never else learn.
That circumstances do not matter, are nothing, but that the response of
the spirit that meets them is everything; that there is no situation in
human life, however apparently adverse, nor any human relationship, however
apparently uncongenial, that cannot be made, if God be in the heart, into
a thing of perfect joy; that, in order to attain this ultimate perfection,
one must accept every experience and learn to love all persons... that
the worth of life is is not to be measured by its results in achievement
or success, but solely by the motives of the heart and the efforts of one's
will.
... George
Seaver, The Faith of Edward Wilson
It behoves thee
to love God wisely; and that may thou not do but if thou be wise. Thou
art wise when thou art poor, without desire of this world, and despisest
thyself for the love of Jesus Christ; and expendeth all thy wit and all
thy might in His service. Whoso will love wisely, it behoves him to love
lasting things lastingly, and passing things passingly; so that his heart
be set and fastened on nothing but in God.
... Richard
Rolle
Most Christians
are affected far more than they know by the standards and methods of the
surrounding world. In these days when power and size and speed are almost
universally admired, it seems to me particularly important to study afresh
the "weakness", the "smallness of entry", and the "slowness" of God as
He begins His vast work of reconstructing His disordered world. We are
all tempted to take short cuts, to work for quick results, and to evade
painful sacrifice. It is therefore essential that we should look again
at love incarnate in a human being, to see God Himself at work within the
limitations of human personality, and to base our methods on what we see
Him do.
... J.
B. Phillips, Making Men Whole
That no obedience
but a perfect one will satisfy God, I hold with all my heart and
strength; but that there is none else that He cares for, is one of the
lies of the enemy. What father is not pleased with the first tottering
attempt of his little one to walk? What father would be satisfied with
anything but the manly step of the full-grown son?
... George
Macdonald, "The Way"
A large acquaintance
with clerical life has led me to think that almost any company of clergymen
gathering together and talking freely to one another will express opinions
which would greatly surprise and at the same time relieve the congregations
who ordinarily listen to these ministers.
... Phillips
Brooks, The Law of Growth
Moderate bodily
discipline is useful in resisting depression, because it rouses the mind
from dwelling on itself; and frequent Communion is specially valuable;
the Bread of Life strengthens the heart and gladdens the spirits. It may
be useful, too, to lay bare all the feelings, thoughts, and longings which
are the result of your depression before some spiritual advisor, in all
humility and faithfulness; to seek the society of spiritually minded people,
and to frequent such as far as possible while you are suffering. And finally,
resign yourself into God's hands, endeavoring to bear this harassing depression
patiently.
... François
de Sales, Introduction to the
Devout Life
The church is unique
in that it is so able to cut across age boundaries and social-status boundaries.
When one loves the Lord Jesus Christ and sincerely seeks to follow Him,
then one quite by surprise comes upon a community that he did not know
existed, a community that is experienced within the heart; and when this
community is found, nothing is ever quite the same again.
... Gerald
J. Jud
The fundamental
doctrines of our evangelical belief are... the full inspiration and ruling
authority of Holy Scripture, with its consequences, the Divinity of Christ,
the finality of His Atonement, and salvation through faith alone. These
basic truths should be studied as set forth in the New Testament, that
they may be asserted or defended whenever occasion requires. If this be
done in a humble and Christian spirit, we shall in the long run be promoting
the cause of Christian unity, which must ultimately find its basis in the
truth which God has revealed.
... G.
T. Manley, Christian Unity
If we look carefully
within ourselves, we shall find that there are certain limits beyond which
we refuse to go in offering ourselves to God. We hover around these reservations,
making believe not to see them, for fear of self-reproach. The more we
shrink from giving up any such reserved point, the more certain it is that
it needs to be given up. If we were not fast bound by it, we should not
make so many efforts to persuade ourselves that we are free.
... François
Fénelon, Spiritual Letters
God usually answers
our prayers so much more according to the measure of His own magnificence,
than of our asking, that we do not recognize His benefits to be those for
which we sought Him.
... Coventry
Patmore
Those talents which
God has bestowed upon us are not our own goods but the free gifts of God;
and any persons who become proud of them show their ungratefulness.
... John
Calvin
The widest thing
in the universe is not space, it is the potential capacity of the human
heart. Being made in the image of God, it is capable of almost unlimited
extension in all directions. Christians should seek for inner enlargement
till their outward dimension gives no hint of the vastness within.
... A.
W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God
I look on all the
world as my parish; thus far I mean, that, in whatever part of it I am,
I judge it meet, right, and my bounden duty, to declare unto all that are
willing to hear, the glad tidings of salvation.
... John
Wesley
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,