God does not lead
His children around hardship, but leads them straight through hardship.
But He leads! And amidst the hardship, He is nearer to them than ever before.
... Otto
Dibelius
He was too great
for his disciples. And in view of what he plainly said, is it any wonder
that all who were rich and prosperous felt a horror of strange things,
a swimming of their world at his teaching? Perhaps the priests and the
rich men understood him better than his followers. He was dragging out
all the little private reservations they had made from social service into
the light of a universal religious life. He was like some terrible moral
huntsman digging mankind out of the snug burrows in which they had lived
hitherto. In the white blaze of this kingdom of his there was to be no
property, no privilege, no pride and precedence; no motive indeed and no
reward but love. Is it any wonder that men were dazzled and blinded and
cried out against him? Even his disciples cried out when he would not spare
them the light. Is it any wonder that the priests realized that between
this man and themselves there was no choice but that he or priestcraft
should perish? Is it any wonder that the Roman soldiers, confronted and
amazed by something soaring over their comprehension and threatening all
their disciplines, should take refuge in wild laughter, and crown him with
thorns and robe him in purple and make a mock Caesar of him? For to take
him seriously was to enter upon a strange and alarming life, to abandon
habits, to control instincts and impulses, to essay an incredible happiness...
Is it any wonder that to this day this Galilean is too much for our small
hearts?
... H.
G. Wells, The Outline of History
Let a man but separate
himself from all contingencies and from all works, and there will come
over him in this state of emptiness a peace which is very great, lovely,
and agreeable, and which is in itself no sin since it is part of our human
nature. But when it is taken for a veritable possessing of God, or unity
with God, then it is sin, for it is in reality nothing else than a state
of thorough passivity and apathy untouched by the power from on high --
a purely negative state from which (if one in arrogance calls it divine)
nothing follows but blindness, failure of understanding, and a disinclination
to be governed by the rules of ordinary righteousness.
... Johannes
Tauler
The minister is
the servant of his people, who has to help them discern for themselves
the will of God for their real work in the real world. It will often be
his duty, therefore, to establish a certain economy in the internal life
of the Church, so that people are released to give time and energy to fulfilment
of their Christian duty in the worlds of industry or politics or business
or professional life, where their most determinative decisions have to
be taken. A new puritanism is urgently needed in most churches, which cuts
away ruthlessly from their life all organizations and activities which
prevent their members from grappling with their real task.
... Daniel
Jenkins, The Protestant Ministry
He that sees the
beauty of holiness, or true moral good, sees the greatest and most important
thing in the world... Unless this is seen, nothing is seen that is worth
seeing: for there is no other true excellence or beauty.
... Jonathan
Edwards, Treatise concerning Religious Affections
The deepest need
of men is not food and clothing and shelter, important as they are. It
is God. We have mistaken the nature of poverty, and thought it was economic
poverty. No, it is poverty of soul, deprivation of God's recreating, loving
peace. Peer into poverty and see if we are really getting down to the deepest
needs, in our economic salvation schemes. These are important. But they
lie farther along the road, secondary steps toward world reconstruction.
The primary step is a holy life, transformed and radiant in the glory of
God.
... Thomas
R. Kelly, A Testament of Devotion
Where every day
is not the Lord's, the Sunday is his least of all... There may be a sickening
unreality even where there is no conscious hypocrisy.
... George
Macdonald, Donal Grant
If the Christian
penitent dares to ask that his many departures from the Christian norm,
his impatience, gloom, self-occupation, unloving prejudices, reckless tongue,
feverish desires, with all the damage they have caused to Christ's Body,
be set aside, because -- because, in spite of all, he longs for God and
Eternal Life: then he must set aside and forgive all that the impatience,
selfishness, bitter and foolish speech, and sudden yieldings to base impulse
by others have caused him to endure. Hardness is the one impossible thing.
Harshness to others in those who ask and need the mercy of God sets up
a conflict at the very heart of personality and shuts the door upon grace.
... Evelyn
Underhill, Abba
To the Christian,
love is the works of love. To say that love is a feeling or anything of
the kind is really an un-Christian conception of love. That is the aesthetic
definition and therefore fits the erotic and everything of that nature.
But to the Christian, love is the works of love. Christ's love was not
an inner feeling, a full heart and what-not: it was the work of love which
was his life.
... Søren
Kierkegaard, Journals
There are many
people who... speak to God in prayer, but hardly ever listen to Him, or
else listen to Him only vaguely.
... Paul
Tournier
All God's revelations
are sealed to us until they are opened to us by obedience. You will never
get them open by philosophy or thinking. Immediately you obey, a flash
of light comes. Let God's truth work in you by soaking in it, not by worrying
into it. Obey God in the thing He is at present showing you, and instantly
the next thing is opened up. We read tomes on the work of the Holy Spirit
when... five minutes of drastic obedience would make things clear as a
sunbeam. We say, "I suppose I shall understand these things some day."
You can understand them now: it is not study that does it, but obedience.
The tiniest fragment of obedience, and heaven opens up and the profoundest
truths of God are yours straight away. God will never reveal more truth
about Himself till you obey what you know already. Beware of being wise
and prudent.
... Oswald
Chambers
You have... the
Gospel written upon vellum; it deserveth to be set with diamonds, except
that the heart of man were a fitter repository for it.
... The Colloquies
of Erasmus
Faith is the source
of energy in the struggle of life, but life still remains a battle which
is continually renewed upon ever-new fronts. For every threatening abyss
that is closed, another yawning gulf appears. The truth is -- and this
is the conclusion of the whole matter -- the Kingdom of God is within us.
But we must let our light shine before men in confident and untiring labor
that they may see our good works and praise our Father in Heaven. The final
ends of all humanity are hidden within His hands.
... Ernst
Troeltsch, The Social Teaching of
the Christian Churches
I see the wrong that round me lies,
I feel the guilt within;
I hear, with groan and travail-cries,
The world confess its sin.Yet, in the maddening maze of things,
And tossed by storm and flood,
To one fixed trust my spirit clings
I know that God is good!
... John Greenleaf Whittier
It is sufficient
to know in the general that our employment [in Paradise] shall be our unspeakable
pleasure and every way suitable to the glory and happiness of that state,
and as much above the noblest and most delightful employments of this world
as the perfection of our bodies and the power of our souls shall then be
above what they now are in this world. For there is no doubt that he who
made us and endued our souls with a desire of immortality and so large
a capacity of happiness, does understand very well by what ways and means
to make us happy, and hath in readiness proper exercises and employments
for that state, and every way more fitted to make us happy than any condition
or employment in this world is suitable to a temporal happiness.
... John
Tillotson
Justification is
withdrawn from works, not that no good works may be done, or that what
is done may be denied to be good, but that we may not rely upon them, glory
in them, or ascribe salvation to them.
... John
Calvin
Men must not content
themselves with the lawfulness of their employments, but must consider
whether they use them, as they are to use everything, as strangers and
pilgrims that are baptised into the resurrection of Jesus Christ, that
we are to follow Him in a wise and heavenly course of life, in the mortification
of the worldly desires, and in purifying and preparing their souls for
the blessed enjoyment of God. For to be vain, or proud, or covetous, or
ambitious, in the common course of our business, is as contrary to these
holy tempers of Christianity as cheating and dishonesty. If a glutton were
to say, in excuse of his gluttony, that he only eats such things as it
is lawful to eat, he would make as good an excuse for himself as the greedy,
covetous, ambitious tradesman that would say that he only deals in lawful
business. For, as a Christian is not only required to be honest, but to
be of a Christian spirit, and make his life an exercise of humility, repentance,
and heavenly affection, so all tempers that are contrary to these are as
contrary to Christianity as cheating is contrary to honesty.
... William
Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and
Holy Life
The radical failure
in so-called religion is that its way is from man to God. Starting with
man, it seeks to rise to God; and there is no road that way.
... J.
Arundel Chapman, The Theology
of Karl Barth
To the rich man,
Lazarus was part of the landscape. If ever he did notice him, it never
struck him that Lazarus had anything to do with him. He was simply unaware
of his presence, or, if he was aware of it, he had no sense of responsibility
for it... A man may well be condemned, not for doing something, but for
doing nothing.
... William
Barclay
Local churches
which are respected and even attended by "the public" -- interpreted as
people who under different circumstances would not feel obliged to attend
church at all -- are often found to be those where, on a Christian judgment,
the gospel seems to be most faithfully preached. Such churches may invite
and suffer temporary periods of unpopularity -- by standing up for West
Indian immigrants, say, or refusing indiscriminate baptism. But on the
whole, the storms are weathered by churches, and ministers, whose interest
in the community and presentation of the faith [are] alert and genuine.
Even so, the Church has every excuse for getting itself disliked: none
at all for escaping notice.
... Christopher
Driver, A Future for the Free Churches?
There is never
any peace for those who resist God.
... François
Fénélon
The New Testament
is an intensely personal document. It is not the effort of a group of men
who are out to prove something to us by the force of their rational arguments.
But it is the testimony, or testament, of a group of witnesses... who are
bent on simply reporting to us the experience of a love that overtook them
and overwhelmed them, a peace that passed all their understanding, and
a peace that they in turn would pass on to us.
... Robert
L. Short
We may search so
far, and reason so long of faith and grace, as that we may lose not only
them, but even our reason too, and sooner become mad than good. Not that
we are bound to believe any thing against reason, that is, to believe,
we know not why. It is but a slack opinion, it is not Belief, that is not
grounded upon Reason. It is true, we have not a Demonstration; not such
an Evidence as that one and two are three, to prove these to be Scriptures
of God; God hath not proceeded in that manner, to drive our reason into
a pound, and to force it by a peremptory necessity to accept these for
Scriptures, for then, here had been no exercise of our Will, and our assent,
if we could not have resisted.
... John
Donne, Fifty Sermons
Christianity is
not a religion but a relationship of love expressed toward God and men.
The church is committed by its Founder to reach out in love to every movement
that upbuilds character and integrity in men, and every gesture that aims
to resolve the differences that estrange human beings from each other.
The Gospel in its free course goes hand-in-hand with the cup of cold water.
... Sherwood
Eliot Wirt, The Social Conscience
of the Evangelical
The rejection as
unhistorical of all passages which narrate miracles is sensible if we start
by knowing that the miraculous... never occurs. Now, I do not want here
to discuss whether the miraculous is possible: I only want to point out
that this is a purely philosophical question. Scholars, as scholars, speak
on it with no more authority than anyone else. The canon, "If miraculous,
unhistorical", is one they bring to their study of the texts, not one they
have learned from it. If one is speaking of authority, the united authority
of all the Biblical critics in the world counts for nothing. On this they
speak simply as men -- men obviously influenced by, and perhaps insufficiently
critical of, the spirit of the age they grew up in.
... C.
S. Lewis, "Fern-seed and Elephants"
I sought Him where my logic led.
"This friend is always sure and right;
His lantern is sufficient light --
I need no star," I said.I sought Him in the city square.
Logic and I went up and down
The marketplace of many a town,
And He was never there.I tracked Him to the mind's far rim.
The valiant Intellect went forth
To east and west and south and north,
And found no trace of Him.We walked the world from sun to sun,
Logic and I, with little Faith,
But never came to Nazareth,
Or found the Holy One.I sought in vain. And finally,
Back to the heart's small house I crept,
And fell upon my knees, and wept;
And lo! -- He came to me!
... Sara Henderson Hay
Come, my Way, my Truth, my Life :
Such a Way, as gives us breath :
Such a Truth, as ends all strife :
And such a Life as killeth death.Come, my Light, my Feast, my Strength :
Such a Light, as shows a feast :
Such a Feast, as mends in length :
Such a Strength, as makes his guest.Come, my Joy, my Love, my Heart :
Such a Joy, as none can move :
Such a Love, as none can part :
Such a Heart, as joyes in love.
... George Herbert
The view of evil
which regards it as the by-product of circumstances which circumstances
can, therefore, alter and even eliminate -- has come to seem to me intolerably
shallow, and the contrary view of it as endemic in man -- more particularly
in its Christian form, the doctrine of original sin -- to express a deep
and essential insight into human nature.
... C.
E. M. Joad, The Recovery of Belief
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,