What changed these
very ordinary men (who were such cowards that they did not dare stand too
near the cross in case they got involved) into heroes who would stop at
nothing? A swindle? Hallucination? Spooky nonsense in a darkened room?
Or Somebody quietly doing what He said He'd do -- walk right through death?
What do YOU think?
... J.
B. Phillips, Is God at Home?
Do you think the
work God gives us to do is never easy? Jesus says His yoke is easy, His
burden is light. People sometimes refuse to do God's work just because
it is easy. This is sometimes because they cannot believe that easy work
is His work; but there may be a very bad pride in it... Some, again, accept
it with half a heart and do it with half a hand. But however easy any work
may be, it can not be well done without taking thought about it. And such
people, instead of taking thought about their work, generally take thought
about the morrow, in which no work can be done any more than in yesterday.
... George
Macdonald, The Seaboard Parish
The type of Judaism
in which Paul had grown up had become largely traditional: the word of
the Lord, the Rabbis held, came to the prophets of old, but we can only
preserve and interpret the truth they handed down. Jesus Christ, with a
confidence that to the timid traditionalism of His time appeared blasphemous,
asserted that He knew the Father and was prepared to let others into that
knowledge. He did so, not by handing down a new tradition about God, but
by making others sharers in His own attitude to God. This is what Paul
means by "having the mind of Christ." It was this clear, unquestioning
conviction that gave Paul his power as a missionary: but he expected it
also in his converts. To them too "the word of knowledge" came "by the
same Spirit". He prayed that God would give them a spirit of wisdom and
revelation in the knowledge of Him. Such knowledge is, as Paul freely grants,
only partial, but, so far as it goes, it is real, personal knowledge. In
friendship between men there is a mutual knowledge which is never complete
or free from mystery: yet you can know with a certainty nothing could shake,
that your friend is "not the man to do such a thing", or that such-and-such
a thing that you have heard is "just like him." You have a real knowledge
which gives you a criterion. Such is the knowledge the Christian has of
his Father.
... C.
Harold Dodd, The Meaning of Paul
for Today
Ability of speech
in time and season is an especial gift of God, and that eminently with
respect unto the spiritual things of the Gospel; but a profluency of speech,
venting itself on all occasions and on no occasions, making men open their
mouths wide when indeed they should shut them and open their ears, and
to pour out all that they know and ... what they do not know, making them
angry if they are not heard and impatient if they are contradicted, is
an unconquerable fortification against all true spiritual wisdom.
... John
Owen
The self-sins...
dwell too deep within us and are too much a part of our natures to come
to our attention till the light of God is focused upon them. The grosser
manifestations of these sins -- egotism, exhibitionism, self-promotion
-- are strangely tolerated in Christian leaders, even in circles of impeccable
orthodoxy. They are so much in evidence as actually, for many people, to
become identified with the gospel. I trust it is not a cynical observation
to say that they appear these days to be a requisite for popularity in
some sections of the Church visible. Promoting self under the guise of
promoting Christ is currently so common as to excite little notice.
... A.
W. Tozer, Pursuit of God
There is no hope
of establishing a Christian social order except through the labour and
sacrifice of those in whom the Spirit of Christ is active.
... Archbishop
William Temple
Whoso goes seeking
God and seeking aught with God does not find God; but he who seeks God
by himself in truth does not find God alone: all God affords he finds,
as well as God. Art thou looking for God, seeking God with a view to thy
personal good, thy personal profit? Then in truth thou art not seeking
God.
... Meister
Eckhart
The one supreme,
unchangeable rule of love, which is a law to all intelligent beings of
all worlds and will be a law to all eternity, is this, viz., that God alone
is to be loved for Himself, and all other beings only in Him and for Him.
Whatever intelligent creature lives not under this rule of love is so far
fallen from the order of his creation, and is, till he returns to this
eternal law of love, an apostate from God and incapable of the kingdom
of Heaven. Now, if God is alone to be loved for Himself, then no creature
is to be loved for itself; and so all self-love in every creature is absolutely
condemned. And if all created beings are only to be loved in and for God,
then my neighbour is to be loved as I love myself, and I am only to love
myself as I love my neighbour or any other created being that is, only
in and for God.
... William
Law, The Spirit of Prayer
That crowd of Jews
would have followed Christ at that moment because He was giving them what
they wanted [bread], and they wished to use Him for their plans and dreams
and purposes. That attitude to Christ still lingers in men's minds. We
would like Christ's gifts without Christ's Cross; we would like to use
Christ instead of allowing Him to use us.
... William
Barclay, The Gospel of John
(Vol. 1)
If we would put
some slight stress on ourselves at the beginning, then afterwards we should
be able to do all things with ease and joy. It is a hard thing to break
through a habit, and a yet harder thing to go contrary to our own will.
Yet, if thou overcome not slight and easy obstacles, how wilt thou overcome
greater ones? Withstand thy will at the beginning, and unlearn an evil
habit, lest it lead thee little by little into worse difficulties. Oh,
if thou knewest what peace to thyself thy holy life should bring, ... and
what joy to others, methinketh thou wouldst be more zealous for spiritual
profit.
... Thomas
à Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ
People naturally
do not shout it out, least of all into the ears of us ministers; but let
us not be deceived by their silence. Blood and tears, deepest despair and
highest hope, a passionate longing to lay hold of ... Him who overcomes
the world because He is its Creator and Redeemer, its beginning and ending
and lord -- a passionate longing to have the word spoken, the word which
promises grace in judgment, life in death, and the beyond in the here and
now, God's word -- this it is that animates our church-goers.
... Karl
Barth
A vocation to marriage
is a vocation to glorify God in a particular state with its necessary rights
and duties. It can only be combined with the vocation of a pioneer missionary
of the classic type if matrimony is felt to be spiritually neutral, irrelevant
to God's calling. Marriage can be irrelevant only if we believe that the
body -- matter -- is neutral, irrelevant, or evil. Man can not believe
that and believe the Christian faith. God made matter, and was incarnate
in it: the comparison of the relation of husband and wife to that between
Christ and the Church naturally follows. But this conclusion is not always
drawn, for orthodox Christians are often prone to speak and behave as if
the Lord... became not flesh but spirit.
... David
M. Paton, Christian Missions and
the Judgment of God
Let no one suppose
that we may attain to this true light and perfect knowledge, or life of
Christ, by much questioning, or by hearsay, or by reading and study, nor
yet by high skill and great learning. Yea, so long as a man taketh account
of anything which is this or that, whether it be himself, or any other
creature; or doeth anything, or frameth a purpose, for the sake of his
own likings or desires or opinions or ends, he cometh not unto the life
of Christ.
... Theologia
Germanica
If one thing is
clear as soon as the Church becomes serious about its missionary and ministerial
calling for the world, it is that two difficult roads in particular have
to be trodden: first, the road towards overcoming the scantiness of its
knowledge of the world of today, and its ignoring of what really goes on
in the world under its surface; secondly, the road towards reforming its
spirit, atmosphere, and inherited structure, in so far as they give no
room for new vitality... What can and must be said and resaid, with all
gratitude for what in many places is already happening, is that a fearless
scrutiny and revision of structure is one of the most urgent aspects of
a renewal of the Church.
... Hendrik
Kraemer
If people gathered
to a political meeting, and the chief speaker spoke to them only for some
quarter of an hour, they would be annoyed, would feel with some resentment
that he had not taken them seriously, had dealt much too cavalierly with
the question of the hour, an Ulster boundary, or such like. But the things
of the soul are far more momentous, and to be asked to deal with huge,
unfathomable facts like the Cross in a few minutes, means that people are
not really interested in these things. This is, of course, a snippety age,
with a snippety press, and snippety novels. But must we preachers follow
and be snippety, too?
... A.
J. Gossip, In Christ's Stead
As a man increases
in moral strength of character, so his conscience becomes more sensitive;
he realizes more keenly the distance that separates him from the ideal,
and hence the weight of the feeling of guiltiness oppresses him ever more
heavily. Growth in goodness does not, therefore, necessarily imply increased
happiness, on the contrary, it may mean greater unhappiness. And his unhappiness
increasing in proportion to the elevation of his ethical standards, a man's
end is either Buddha or suicide if he knows no God; while if he knows God,
it is despair or that conversion which, having sobbed away its tears on
the Father's breast, thence derives ever new strength to fight the battle
of life, sure of the final victory.
... Heinrich
Weinel, St. Paul, the Man and His
Work
It is of great
importance that you endeavour, at all times, to keep your hearts in peace;
that you may keep pure that temple of God. The way to keep it in peace
is to enter into it by means of inward silence. When you see yourself more
sharply assaulted, retreat into that region of peace; and you will find
a fortress that will enable you to triumph over all your enemies, visible
and invisible, and over all their snares and temptations. Within your own
soul resides divine aid, and sovereign succour. Retreat within it, and
all will be quiet, secure, peaceable, and calm. Thus, by means of mental
silence, which can only be attained with divine help, you may look for
tranquility in tumult: for solitude in company; for light in darkness;
for forgetfulness in pressures: for vigour in despondency; for courage
in fear; for resistance in temptation; and for quiet in tribulation.
... William
Backhouse and James Jansen, A
Guide to True Peace
And thus we rust Life's iron chain
Degraded and alone:
And some men curse, and some men weep,
And some men make no moan:
But God's eternal Laws are kind
And break the heart of stone.And every human heart that breaks,
In prison-cell or yard,
Is as that broken box that gave
Its treasure to the Lord,
And filled the unclean leper's house
With the scent of costliest nard.Ah! happy they whose hearts can break
And peace of pardon win!
How else may man make straight his plan
And cleanse his soul from sin?
How else but through a broken heart
May Lord Christ enter in?
... Oscar
Wilde, The Ballad of Reading Gaol
If He hath promised
to make us happy, though He hath not particularly declared to us wherein
this happiness shall consist, yet we may trust Him that made us, to find
out ways to make us happy, and may believe that He who made us, without
our knowledge or desire, is able to make us happy beyond them both.
... John
Tillotson
Living for others,
commitment to God's redeeming purposes, is a means of grace. We give because
of our faith, and it deepens as we give. If we permit ourselves and our
people to give casually, we are really teaching contempt.
... Richard
S. Emrich
The old pagans
had to choose between a brilliant, jangling, irresponsible universe, alive
with lawless powers, and the serene and ordered universe of God and law.
We modern pagans have to choose between that divine order, and the grey,
dead, irresponsible, chaotic universe of atheism. And the tragedy is that
we may make that choice without knowing it -- not by clear conviction but
by vague drifting, by losing interest in Him. A nominal deist will say:
"Yes, of course there must be some sort of Force that created the galaxy.
But it's childish to imagine that It has any personal relation to me!"
In that belief atheism exists as an undiagnosed disease. The man who says,
"One God," and does not care, is an atheist in his heart. The man who speaks
of God and will not recognize him in the burning bush -- that man is an
atheist, though he speak with the tongues of men or angels, and appear
in his pew every Sunday, and make large contributions to the church.
... Joy
Davidman, Smoke on the Mountain
... Also see comments
on this book in Bookworms
I too had noticed
that our prayers for others flow more easily than those we offer on our
own behalf. And it would be nice to accept your view that this just shows
we are made to live by charity. I'm afraid, however, I detect two much
less attractive reasons for the ease of my own intercessory prayers. One
is that I am often, I believe, praying for others when I should be doing
things for them. It's so much easier to pray for a bore than to go and
see him. And the other is like unto it. Suppose I pray that you may be
given grace to withstand your besetting sin (short list of candidates for
this post will be forwarded on demand). Well, all the work has to be done
by God and you. If I pray against my own besetting sin there will be work
for me. One sometimes fights shy of admitting an act to be a sin for this
very reason.
... C.
S. Lewis, Letters to Malcolm
It is God Himself,
personally present and redeemingly active, who comes to meet men in this
Man of Nazareth. Jesus is more than a religious genius, such as George
Fox, and more than a holy man, such as the lovable Lana in Kipling's Kim. He himself knows that he is more. The Gospel story is a tree rooted in
the familiar soil of time and sense; but its roots go down into the Abyss
and its branches fill the Heavens; given to us in terms of a country in
the Eastern Mediterranean no bigger than Wales, during the Roman Principate
of Tiberius Caesar in the first century of our era, its range is universal;
it is on the scale of eternity. God's presence and his very Self were made
manifest in the words and works of this Man. In short, the Man Christ Jesus
has the decisive place in man's ageless relationship with God. He is what
God means by 'Man'. He is what man means by 'God'.
... J.
S. Whale, Christian Doctrine
Sinlessness is
a bloodless category, making an anemic savior. What matters is the reality
of Jesus' struggles, that he was in all things like us, and that victory
is possible with God and is indeed a reality in Jesus' life as a "Fragment
of the future," to use Cairns's phrase. We, too, can find Christ in us.
We, too, can find the new level of the Spirit and walk in its law, which
is life and peace. That does not mean that we shall have serene and steady
experiences of God. It may mean, humanly speaking, tremendous failures,
struggles, and tensions. When, however, we constantly abandon all faith
in ourselves and welcome God's power and purpose in us, when we identify
ourselves not with the sin which dwells and works in us, but with the living
power of God, then the world can see that Christ still works and that the
Holy Spirit still speaks with demonstration of power. For even as Christ
had to fulfill the human life of Jesus, the life of self-drive and altruism
which was lived under the Spirit of God -- a fulfillment which yet made
Jesus a very truly integrated person -- even so the same Christ must fulfill
our lives.
... Nels
F. S. Ferré, The Christian
Understanding of God
Here [Mark 11:27-33]
they discerned a flaw, a heresy; and they would force Him either to make
a fatal claim, or else to moderate His pretensions at their bidding, which
would promptly restore their lost influence and leadership. Nor need we
shrink from confessing that our Lord was justly open to such reproach,
unless He was indeed Divine, unless He was deliberately preparing His followers
for that astonishing revelation, soon to come, which threw the Church upon
her knees in adoration of her God manifest in flesh.
... G.
A. Chadwick, The Gospel of St. Mark
"They shall return
unto me with their whole heart." "Ye shall search for me with all your
heart." He makes a direct call to us for single-mindedness: a single-minded
longing for Him -- no lesser aim will do; no desire to be good, no striving
to measure up to some standard we have set for ourselves, to correct some
failure we have been shown in our way of life. These may be temporarily
necessary, but they will turn to dust and ashes, they will end in a grim
dryness, unless at the back of them all is what He asks of us --a never-ending
search for a real knowledge of Him, for a sense of His reality, a confidence
in His companionship, a joy and delight in the very person of God Himself.
It is for this that we must learn to long and long, till our prayers for
it become not just a form of words, but a stretching out of our whole being
to Him.
... The Notebooks
of Florence Allshorn
When God finished
man He breathed into the human form the divine life, "and man became a
living soul." Man is created to be a witness and likeness of God. God and
man are so near to one another that it was possible for the Eternal Word
to become Man without ceasing to be God, to re-ascend to the Highest without
dehumanizing the Manhood which He had assumed; so near that the believer
may say in the fullest meaning of the words, "I live, yet not I, but Christ".
... David M. M'Intyre, Faith's Title Deeds
Beautiful sanctuaries,
paved parking lots, and new liturgies will do very little for people who
sit in worship with their fingers crossed and do not really believe the
faith which is expounded. Often the layman dismisses what the preacher
says as something irrelevant to his situation and generation. When he joins
a group where he is no longer afraid to be frank, the supposedly faithful
member often admits that he has never really accepted what he thinks he
has heard. He has, for example, grave reservations about the idea of creation.
Did not the world evolve of itself? Do we really need the hypothesis of
Infinite Purpose to make sense of the physical, biological, and psychological
development? These questions seldom come to the surface when the Church
provides merely a one-way preaching. There is little chance of renewal
if all that we have is the arrangement by which one speaks and the others
listen. One trouble with this conventional system is that the speaker never
knows what the unanswered questions are, or what reservations remain in
the layman's mentality.
... Elton
Trueblood, The Incendiary Fellowship
If man is not made
for God, why is he not happy except in God? If man is made for God, why
is he so opposed to God?
... Blaise
Pascal
Devotion is the
real spiritual sweetness which takes away all bitterness from mortifications,
and prevents consolations from disagreeing with the soul; it cures the
poor of sadness, and the rich of presumption; it keeps the oppressed from
feeling desolate, and the prosperous from insolence; it averts sadness
from the lonely, and dissipation from social life; it is as warmth in winter
and as refreshing dew in summer; it knows how to abound and how to suffer
want, how to profit alike by honour and by contempt; it accepts gladness
and sadness with an even mind, and fills men's hearts with a wondrous sweetness.
... François
de Sales
Compilation Copyright, 1996-2008, by Robert McAnally Adams,
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