What was God to
do in the face of the dehumanizing of mankind -- this universal hiding
of the knowledge of Himself? So burdened were men with their wickedness
that they seemed rather to be brute beasts than reasonable men, reflecting
the very likeness of the Word. What, then, was God to do? What else could
He possibly do, being God, but renew His Image in mankind, so that through
it men might once more come to know Him? And how could this be done save
by the coming of the very Image Himself, our Savior Jesus Christ?... Men
had turned from the contemplation of God above, and were looking for Him
in two opposite directions, down among created things, and things of sense.
The Savior of us all, the Word of God, in His great love took to Himself
a body and moved as Man among men, meeting their senses, so to speak, half-way.
He became Himself an object for the senses, so that those who were seeking
God in sensible things might apprehend the Father through the works which
He, the Word of God, did in the body. [Continued]
... St.
Athanasius, The Incarnation of
the Word of God
Human and human-minded
as men were, therefore, to whichever side they looked in the sensible world,
they found themselves taught the truth. Were they awe-stricken by creation?
They beheld it confessing Christ as Lord. Did their minds tend to regard
men as gods? The uniqueness of the Savior's works marked Him, alone of
men, as Son of God. Were they drawn to evil spirits? They saw them driven
out by the Lord, and learned that the Word of God alone was God and that
the evil spirits were not gods at all. Were they inclined to hero-worship
and the cult of the dead? Then the fact that the Savior had risen from
the dead showed them how false these other deities were, and that the Word
of the Father is the one true Lord, the Lord even of death. For this reason
was He both born and manifested as Man, for this He died and rose, in order
that, eclipsing by His works all other human deeds, He might recall man
from all the paths of error to know the Father. As He says Himself, "I
came to seek and to save that which was lost."
... St.
Athanasius, The Incarnation of
the Word of God
He is not a good
Christian who is not heartily sorry for the faults even of his greatest
enemies. And if he will be so, he will lay them bare no further than is
necessary to some good end.
... John
Tillotson
If it be the earnest
desire and longing of your heart to be merciful as He is merciful; to be
full of His unwearied patience, to dwell in His unalterable meekness; if
you long to be like Him in universal, impartial love; if you desire to
communicate every good to every creature that you are able; if you love
and practice everything that is good, righteous, and lovely for its own
sake, because it is good, righteous, and lovely; and resist no evil but
with goodness; then you have the utmost certainty that the Spirit of God
dwells and governs in you.
... William
Law, The Spirit of Prayer
Among Christians
so much prominence has been given to the disciplinary effects of sorrow,
affliction, bereavement, that they have been in danger of overlooking the
other and more obvious side: that by every joy, by every favor, by every
sign of prosperity -- yea, and by these chiefly -- God designs to educate
and discipline His children. This one-sided view of the truth has made
many morbid, gloomy Christians, who look for God's hand only in the lightning
and never think of seeing it in the sunlight.
... F.
E. Clark
What is the relation
of a secular, this-worldly unification of mankind to the biblical promise
of the summing up of all things in Christ? Is it a total contradiction
of it? Is it some sort of a reflection of it? or perhaps a devil's parody
of it? Or has it nothing to do with it at all? Perhaps there will be many
Christians to whom it would not occur to pose the question whether the
process of secularization has anything to do with the biblical understanding
of the goal of history. The Bible, for them, belongs to a religious world
which is not admitted to belong to the world of secular events -- the world
in which we are when we read the daily newspaper. But this is to read the
Bible wrongly. Whatever else it may be, the Bible is a secular book dealing
with the sort of events which a news editor accepts for publication in
a daily newspaper; it is concerned with secular events, wars, revolutions,
enslavements and liberations, migrants and refugees, famines and epidemics
and all the rest. It deals with events which happened and tells a story
which can be checked. We miss this because we do not sufficiently treat
the Bible as a whole. When we do this, we see at once that the Bible --
whatever be the variety of material which it contains: poetry, prayers,
legislation, genealogy, and all the rest -- is in its main design a universal
history. It is an interpretation of human history as a whole, beginning
with the saga of creation and ending with a vision of the gathering together
of all the nations and the consummation of God's purpose for mankind. The
Bible is an outline of world history.
... Lesslie
Newbigin, Honest Religion for Secular
Man
Devotion is neither
more nor less than a prompt, fervent, loving service to God. And the difference
between an ordinarily good man and one that is devout lies herein, that
the first observes God's commands without any special fervour or promptitude;
whereas the latter not only keeps them, but does it willingly, earnestly,
and resolutely
... François
de Sales
We of the churches
often gather our robes away from contamination, and thank God that we are
not as other men. We don't despise God's name; in fact, we call upon it
constantly to justify ourselves... If we object to meat-eating, we declare
that God is vegetarian; if we abhor war, we proclaim a pacifist Deity.
He who turned water into wine to gladden a wedding it now accused by many
of favouring that abominable fluid grape juice. There can hardly be a more
evil way of taking God's name in vain than this way of presuming to speak
in it. For here is spiritual pride, the ultimate sin, in action -- the
sin of believing in one's own righteousness. The true prophet says humbly,
"To me, a sinful man, God spoke." But the scribes and Pharisees declare,
"When we speak, God agrees." They feel no need of a special revelation,
for they are always, in their own view, infallible. It is this self-righteousness
of the pious that most breeds atheism, by inspiring all decent, ordinary
men with loathing of the enormous lie.
... Joy
Davidman, Smoke on the Mountain
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
But when once Christ
had called him, Peter had no alternative he must leave the ship and come
to Him. In the end, the first step of obedience proves to be an act of
faith in the word of Christ. But we should completely misunderstand the
nature of grace if we were to suppose that there was no need to take the
first-step, because faith was already there. Against that, we must boldly
assert that the step of obedience must be taken before faith can be possible.
Unless he obeys, a man cannot believe.
... Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship
The more we fear
crosses, the more reason we have to think that we stand in need of them:
let us not be discouraged when the hand of God layeth heavy ones upon us.
We ought to judge of the violence of our disease by the violence of the
remedies which our spiritual physician prescribes for us. It is a great
argument of our wretchedness and of God's mercy, that, notwithstanding
the difficulty of our recovery, He vouchsafes to undertake our cure.
... François
Fénélon
God wanted to redeem
men and open the way of salvation to those who seek Him. But men make themselves
so unworthy of it that it is only just that God should refuse to some because
of the hardness of heart what He gives to others from a compassion that
they do not deserve. If He had wanted to overcome the obstinacy of the
most hardened, He could have done so by revealing Himself to them so obviously
that they could not have doubted the truth of His Being -- just as He will
appear at the last day with such a clap of thunder and such an upheaval
of nature that the dead will revive and the blindest will see. It is not
in this way, however, that He willed to appear at His gentle coming: because
so many men had made themselves unworthy of His mercy, He willed to leave
them deprived of the good which they did not desire. And so it would not
have been fair for Him to have appeared in an obviously divine manner,
absolutely capable of convincing all men. But also it would not have been
fair for Him to appear in a manner so hidden that even those who were sincerely
seeking Him should not be able to recognize Him... So He has tempered His
knowledge, by giving marks of Himself which were visible to those who seek
Him, and not to those who seek Him not.
... Blaise
Pascal, Pensées
It is not the mere
existence of unusual criminals that [has] ravaged our world; for the arrangements
of society (whether national or international) ought always to presume
that some of these will be lurking somewhere. The gates have been opened
to evil in part because of a terrible discrepancy between human ideals
and actual possibilities -- terrible heresies concerning the nature of
man and the structure of the historical universe. Christianity, even if
it cannot persuade men to rise to the contemplation of the spiritual things,
embodies principles which may at least have the effect of bringing the
dreamers down to earth. Because it confronts the problem of human sin,
it can face our difficulties and dilemmas without evasions -- without the
fundamental evasiveness of those who believe that all would be well with
the world if it were not for a few unspeakable criminals, always conveniently
identified with the political enemy of the moment.
... Herbert
Butterfield, Christianity,
Diplomacy and War
A comprehended
god is no god.
... St.
John Chrysostom
God often takes
a course for accomplishing His purposes directly contrary to what our narrow
views would prescribe. He brings a death upon our feelings, wishes and
prospects when He is about to give us the desire of our hearts.
... John
Newton
It may be possible
for each of us to think too much of his own potential glory hereafter;
it is hardly possible for him to think too often or too deeply about that
of his neighbour. The load, or weight, or burden, of my neighbour's glory
should be laid daily on my back, a load so heavy that only humility can
carry it, and the backs of the proud will be broken. It is a serious thing
to live in a society of possible gods and goddesses, to remember that the
dullest and most uninteresting person you talk to may one day be a creature
which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to worship --or
else a horror and a corruption such as you now meet, if at all, only in
a nightmare. All day long we are, in some degree, helping each other to
one or other of these destinations. It is in the light of these overwhelming
possibilities, it is with the awe and the circumspection proper to them,
that we should conduct all our dealings with one another, all friendships,
all loves, all play, all politics. There are no ordinary people.
... C.
S. Lewis, "The Weight of Glory"
You and I drift
on through the years dully enough, because we do not believe in God, not
really, and so we have no expectation. But Jesus did believe in Him, was
sure He is alive and abroad in the world; that, therefore, anything may
happen any hour. And thus to Him any smallest incident was a magic casement
opening upon who could tell what possibilities. A fisherman offers Him
a crude, inchoate half-faith, and with that He is sure that He can found
a world-wide Church that will defy the powers of evil, aye, and grind them
into nothingness at last: a dying brigand, paying the just penalties of
his crimes, gropes towards Him in the darkness with the vague hands of
a blind man, and, founding upon that, Christ dies, quite sure that He has
won: two or three Gentiles seek an interview with Him, and He sees a whole
teeming world of men and women being saved.
... A.
J. Gossip, The Galilean Accent
I find that doing
the will of God leaves me with no time for disputing about His plans.
... George
Macdonald
Whenever man decides
that he is competent to do as he pleases he is soon enjoying Hell on earth,
partly because much of what he pleases, except he know he must obey God,
is low-down disgusting and partly because, even when he pleases to do something
decent, he is mostly too weak-willed and too addle-pated to bring the same
to good effect. Man must be redeemed by a power outside himself. I do not
regard the over-determined "optimists" as silly; they seem to me only the
victims of a wishful thinking.
... Bernard
Iddings Bell, God is Not Dead
We must confess
our sins in order to obtain pardon; but we must see our sins in order to
confess. How few of those who think that they have confessed and been pardoned
have ever seen their sin!
... Coventry
Patmore
Anybody with any
maturity knows that an experienced Christian is more eager to have God
use him than he is to use God for his own ends; but this does not mean
that God is absent from the processes of business and livelihood, nor unconcerned
about them, nor unable to reveal Himself through them. When we begin to
look upon work, business, money, as potential sacraments through which
God can work, we shall make better use of them.
... Samuel
M. Shoemaker, The Experiment
of Faith
But how shall we
rest in God? By giving ourselves wholly to Him. If you give yourself by
halves, you cannot find full rest -- there will ever be a lurking disquiet
in that half which is withheld... All peace and happiness in this world
depend upon unreserved self-oblation to God. If this be hearty and entire,
the result will be an unfailing, ever-increasing happiness, which nothing
can disturb. There is no real happiness in this life save that which is
the result of a peaceful heart.
... Jean
N. Grou, The Hidden Life of the Soul
Pray with your
intelligence. Bring things to God that you have thought out and think them
out again with Him. That is the secret of good judgment. Repeatedly place
your pet opinions and prejudices before God. He will surprise you by showing
you that the best of them need refining and some the purification of destruction.
... Charles
H. Brent, Adventures in Prayer
From his baptism
until his return to Galilee, Jesus lived in the company of the disciples
of the Baptist. It was there that he received the first public witness
of his Messianic role and found his first followers. The gospel was to
be rooted in John's teaching of asceticism and regeneration. But we see
from the start that the gospel of Jesus was to be quite different. To the
baptism of water would be added the baptism of the Spirit, and the new
message was to be addressed to all. The widening of the circle of hearers
and converts, which had preoccupied John, was to expand still further with
the gospel of Jesus. Of the hundreds of thousands of Jews, the Essenes
only regarded as saved a few thousand elect. Jesus was soon to offer the
Covenant of God to all men.
... Jean
Steinmann, Saint John the Baptist
I know Thee, Saviour, Who Thou art:
Jesus, the feeble sinner's friend!
Nor wilt Thou with the night depart,
But stay and love me to the end.
Thy mercies never shall remove;
Thy nature and Thy name is Love.
... Charles Wesley
Life is at its
noblest and its best when our effort cooperates with God's grace to produce
the necessary loveliness.
... William
Barclay, The Letters of James and
Peter, p.355
Christians must
learn again what Christians have always known -- how to live without immediate
hopes in the world.
... T.
R. Milford
In that obedience
which we have shown to be due the authority of rulers, we are always to
make this exception, indeed, to observe it as primary, that such obedience
is never to lead us away from obedience to him, to whose decrees all their
commands ought to yield, to whose majesty their scepters ought to be submitted.
And how absurd would it be that in satisfying men you should incur the
displeasure of him for whose sake you obey men themselves! The Lord, therefore,
is the King of Kings, who, when he has opened his sacred mouth, must alone
be heard, before all and above all men; next to him we are subject to those
men who are in authority over us, but only in him. If they command anything
against him, let it go unesteemed.
... John
Calvin, The Institutes of the
Christian Religion, iv.20.35
The great danger
facing all of us... is not that we shall make an absolute failure of life,
nor that we shall fall into outright viciousness, nor that we shall be
terribly unhappy, nor that we shall feel [that] life has no meaning at
all -- not these things. The danger is that we may fail to perceive life's
greatest meaning, fall short of its highest good, miss its deepest and
most abiding happiness, be unable to tender the most needed service, be
unconscious of life ablaze with the light of the Presence of God -- and
be content to have it so -- that is the danger: that some day we may wake
up and find that always we have been busy with husks and trappings of life
and have really missed life itself. For life without God, to one who has
known the richness and joy of life with Him, is unthinkable, impossible.
That is what one prays one's friends may be spared -- satisfaction with
a life that falls short of the best, that has in it no tingle or thrill
that comes from a friendship with the Father.
... Phillips
Brooks, Sermons
One use of prayer
is to maintain in us a higher standard and prevent our principles insensibly
sinking to our practice, or to the practice of the world around us.
... Benjamin
Jowett
[Christ] tells
us plainly, and without any qualifications, that we are involved in a war
in which there is no room for neutrals. Yet people attempt to evade His
statement. Generally speaking, these are the very people who are the quickest
in laying the blame upon God for all the sorrow and sin in the world. They
argue that He could prevent it. They excuse their own do-nothing attitude
by making of evil's apparent predominance a ground for doubt of His loving
kindness. It never seems to occur to them to look for the cause in mankind.
... Hugh
Redwood, Live Coals
He frequently made
claims which would have sounded outrageous and blasphemous to Jewish ears
even from the lips of the greatest of prophets. He said that he was in
existence before Abraham and that he was "lord" of the sabbath; he claimed
to forgive sins; he continually identified himself, in his work, his person
and his glory, with the one he termed his heavenly Father; he accepted
men's worship; and he said that he was to be the judge of men at the last
day, and that their eternal destiny would depend on their attitude to him.
Then he died. It seems inescapable, therefore, that his resurrection must
be interpreted as God's decisive vindication of these claims, while the
alternative -- the finality of the cross -- would necessarily have implied
the repudiation of his presumptuous and even blasphemous assertions.
... J.
N. D. Anderson, Christianity:
the Witness of History
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,
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