Quotations for January, 2022
Saturday, January 1, 2022 Feast of the Naming & Circumcision of Jesus
When we once begin to form good resolutions, God gives us every opportunity of carrying them out.
... St. John Chrysostom (345?-407), quoted in Catena aurea, v. IV, part 1, Thomas Aquinas, Oxford: John Henry Parker, 1845, p. 67
(see the book; see also Matt. 25:14-30; Luke 10:40-42; John 1:37-40; 15:2; more at Action, God, Goodness, Opportunity, Repentance, Resolve)
Sunday, January 2, 2022 Feast of Basil the Great & Gregory Nazianzen, Bishops, Teachers, 379 & 389 Commemoration of Seraphim, Monk of Sarov, Mystic, Staretz, 1833
What He was, He laid aside; what He was not, He assumed.
... St. Gregory of Nazianzus (329-389/390), Oration 37.2, quoted in Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture: New Testament, v. IVa, John 1-10, Joel C. Elowsky & Thomas C. Oden, InterVarsity Press, 2006, p. 14
(see the book; see also Isa. 53:2-3; Matt. 19:1; John 1:1; 10:38; 2 Cor. 8:9; Phil. 2:5-7; Heb. 2:9; more at Incarnation, Jesus, Trinity)
Monday, January 3, 2022 Commemoration of Gladys Aylward, Missionary in China, 1970
If, therefore, in doubtful cases, you would discover God’s will, govern yourselves in your search after it by these rules.1. Get the true fear of God upon your hearts; be really afraid of offending him; God will not hide his mind from such a soul...2. Study the word more, and the concerns and interests of the world less. The word is a light to your feet...3. Reduce what you know into practice, and you shall know what is your duty to practise...4. Pray for illumination and direction in the way that you should go; beg the Lord to guide you in straits, and that he would not suffer you to fall into sin...5. And this being done, follow providence so far as it agrees with the word, and no farther. There is no use to be made of providence against the word, but in subserviency to it.
... John Flavel (1628-1691), Divine Conduct [1677], in The Whole Works of the Reverend Mr. John Flavel, v. IV, London: J. Mathews, 1799, p. 470
(see the book; see also Ezra 8:21; Ps. 25:14; 86:17; 91:9-11; 111:10; 119:11,105; Mic. 6:9; John 7:17-18; more at Direction, Fear, Guidance, Illumination, Knowledge, Prayer, Providence)
Tuesday, January 4, 2022
If you read history, you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next. The Apostles themselves, who set on foot the conversion of the Roman Empire, the great men who built up the Middle Ages, the English Evangelicals who abolished the Slave Trade, all left their mark on Earth, precisely because their minds were occupied with Heaven.
... C. S. Lewis (1898-1963), Mere Christianity, New York: MacMillan, 1952, reprint, HarperCollins, 2001, p. 104
(see the book; see also Matt. 5:11-12; Luke 6:35; 2 Tim. 4:8; Heb. 11:24-26; Jas. 1:12; 1 Pet. 5:4; more at Conversion, Earth, Greatness, Heaven, Historical, Mind, Slave)
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
Intellect can light up only a small area of the universe. For my part, I should subscribe to the familiar paradox that the more we know, the more we are conscious of our ignorance; the further the intellect has traveled, the smaller it seems relatively to the distance still to be traveled... The intellect does, indeed, take us part of the way; we have no other mode of conveyance; and, in taking us as far as it does, it justifies us in taking the rest on trust... In following the religious account of the universe beyond the point at which it leaves reason behind, and trusting to it as an explanation of the many things that pass our understanding, we are accepting on faith conclusions which are not demonstrated by reason. In other words, we are acting as if a hypothesis were true which, at the moment at which we act upon it, is still a hypothesis and not a truth. Nevertheless, it is, I suggest, knowledge, the knowledge which we possess already and which reason has won for us, that makes it reasonable to do so.
... C. E. M. Joad (1891-1953), The Recovery of Belief, London: Faber and Faber, 1952, p. 19-20
(see the book; see also 1 Cor. 3:18; Eph. 3:17-19; Phil. 3:8; more at Apologetics, Faith, Knowledge, Paradox, Reason, Trust, Truth, Universe)
Thursday, January 6, 2022 EPIPHANY
Of late, I have thought much of having the kingdom of Christ advanced in the world; but now I saw I had enough to do within myself. The Lord be merciful to me a sinner, and wash my soul!
... David Brainerd (1718-1747), entry for April 8, 1743, Memoirs of the Rev. David Brainerd, New Haven: S. Converse, 1822, p. 96
(see the book; see also Ezra 9:6; Ps. 40:11-12; Luke 5:8; 7:6-9; 18:10-14; 1 Cor. 1:11-13; more at Kingdom, Thought, World)
Friday, January 7, 2022
If we do not pray, we fail to realize that we are in the presence of God.
... Karl Barth (1886-1968), Prayer, Westminster John Knox Press, 2002, p. 15
(see the book; see also Matt. 28:19-20; Luke 18:1; Rom. 8:26; 2 Cor. 1:19-20; Phil. 4:6; 2 Tim. 2:13; Heb. 4:16; 10:19-22; more at Failure, Prayer, Presence of God)
Saturday, January 8, 2022 26th anniversary of CQOD Commemoration of Jim Elliot, Nate Saint, Roger Youderian, Ed McCully, and Pete Fleming, martyrs, Ecuador, 1956
Forgive me for being so ordinary while claiming to know so extraordinary a God.
... Jim Elliot (1927-1956), The Journals of Jim Elliot, ed. Elisabeth Elliot, Revell, 1990, p. 98
(see the book; see also Job 42:2-6; Ps. 39:4-5; Luke 11:52; Rom. 11:33-34; 12:16; 1 Cor. 1:28-29; 2 Cor. 12:9; more at Forgiveness, God, Knowledge, Prayers)
Sunday, January 9, 2022
But when does flesh receive the bread which He calls His flesh? The faithful know and receive the Body of Christ if they labor to be the body of Christ; and they become the body of Christ if they study to live by the Spirit of Christ: for that which lives by the Spirit of Christ is the body of Christ.
... St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430), Lectures or Tractates on the Gospel according to St. John, vol. i, Marcus Dods, ed., as vol. x of The Works of Aurelius Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, Edinbugh: T & T Clark, 1873, tract. XXVI.13, p. 376
(see the book; see also Rom. 8:14; John 6:41-59; Rom. 8:29-30; 1 Cor. 12:12; 2 Tim. 2:15; more at Body of Christ, Communion, Faith, Historical, Holy Spirit, Life)
Monday, January 10, 2022
Our Master was his own Gospel. Men came to Him one by one attracted by the winsomeness of Jesus. He spake, of course, as never man spake, and He was as never man was, and, as has been well said by one who has a right to speak upon such subjects, he reversed our ordinary experience about our human ideals. The nearer we draw to an individual, as a rule the more plainly we see the flaws and the crevices in his character; but the nearer men drew to Jesus the more His faultless excellence declared itself; they were drawn to Him, they hardly knew why, with a reverence and a devotion unexampled in the history of the world.
... R. J. Campbell (1867-1956), City Temple Sermons, New York: F. H. Revell company, 1903, p.195
(see the book; see also Matt. 26:6-7; 27:54; Mark 12:14; John 1:14; 3:2; more at Devotion, Gospel, Jesus, Man, Reverence)
Tuesday, January 11, 2022 Commemoration of Mary Slessor, Missionary in West Africa, 1915
The displacement of ‘the Son of Man’ by ‘man’ [according to the recommendation of textual critics] has only a superficial plausibility in logic. The healing of the palsy by Jesus does not prove that man generically can forgive sins. The man who does the visible miracle in confirmation of his claim to do the invisible is to be taken at his word: but it is no more true that man generically can speak the word of forgiveness with divine effect than that man generically can effectively bid the lame walk. The only question raised, and the only question settled, is one concerning the power claimed by Jesus; and it is settled, not by bringing Jesus under the general category of humanity, but by an act of Jesus Himself which was as impossible for men in general as the forgiveness of sins. It is not any man, but only He who has the right to think of Himself as the Son of Man, who can forgive sins upon the earth.
... James Denney (1856-1917), Jesus and the Gospel: Christianity justified in the mind of Christ, New York: Hodder & Stoughton, 1908, p. 275
(see the book; see also Matt. 9:2-8; 11:5,21; Mark 2:1-12; more at Action, Forgiveness, Jesus, Man, Miracle, Question, Sin, Thought)
Wednesday, January 12, 2022 Feast of Aelred of Hexham, Abbot of Rievaulx, 1167 Commemoration of Benedict Biscop, Abbot of Wearmouth, Scholar, 689
The religion of a hundred years ago or of two thousand years ago does not seem quaint, for men can speak to each other about their knowledge of God, unhindered by the barriers of centuries.
... Elton Trueblood (1900-1994), The Knowledge of God, Harper & Brothers, 1939, p. 107
(see the book; see also Ps. 22:30-31; John 8:58; Rom. 1:17; 5:19; Heb. 11:4; more at Knowing God, Religion, Truth)
Thursday, January 13, 2022 Feast of Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers, Teacher, 367 Commemoration of Kentigern (Mungo), Missionary Bishop in Strathclyde & Cumbria, 603
We proclaim ... that the Father is eternal and the Son eternal, and demonstrate that the Son is God of all with an absolute, not a limited, preexistence; that these bold assaults of... blasphemous logic—He was born out of nothing, and He was not before He was born—are powerless against Him; that His eternity is consistent with sonship, and His sonship with eternity; that there was in Him no unique exemption from birth but a birth from everlasting, for, while birth implies a Father, Divinity is inseparable from eternity.
... St. Hilary (ca. 300-367?), On the Trinity, in A Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, second series, v. IX, Philip Schaff & Henry Wace, ed., New York: Christian Literature Company, 1902, p. 50
(see the book; see also John 8:14; 1:1,32-33; 8:58; 13:3; 1 Cor. 8:5-6; Phil. 2:5-7; Col. 2:2-3; 1 Pet. 3:18-19; more at Eternity, Everlasting, Father, God, Logic, Son)
Friday, January 14, 2022 Commemoration of Richard Meux Benson, Founder of the Society of St John the Evangelist, 1915
In reality (spiritual reality) it is much too simple to think that God offers his grace to man and man accepts or refuses. When God has graciously chosen a man his grace continues even though the man does not do what God has decided. On the other hand, this persistence of election... does not entail a negation of man’s will. God pursues this man, conducts him through his whole life, in order to bring about the consent of this man’s will to what God has decided.
... Jacques Ellul (1912-1994), The Judgment of Jonah, tr. Geoffrey W. Bromiley, Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1971, p. 24
(see the book; see also Jonah 1:1-2; Isa. 45:4; John 15:16; 17:6; Acts 9:15-16; Eph. 1:4-5; 2:10; more at God, Grace, Man, Predestination)
Saturday, January 15, 2022
The preacher and the writer may seem to have an... easy task. At first sight, it may seem that they have only to proclaim and declare; but in fact, if their words are to enter men’s hearts and bear fruit, they must be the right words, shaped cunningly to pass men’s defenses and explode silently and effectually within their minds. This means, in practice, turning a face of flint toward the easy cliché, the well-worn religious cant and phraseology, dear, no doubt, to the faithful, but utterly meaningless to those outside the fold. It means learning how people are thinking and how they are feeling; it means learning with patience, imagination and ingenuity the way to pierce apathy or blank lack of understanding. I sometimes wonder what hours of prayer and thought lie behind the apparently simple and spontaneous parables of the Gospel.
... J. B. Phillips (1906-1982), Making Men Whole, London: Highway Press, 1952, p. 44
(see the book; see also Col. 3:16-17; Matt. 13:10-13; Mark 4:33-34; Luke 12:11-12; more at Gospel, Imagination, Man, Patience, Prayer, Preacher, Simplicity, Understanding)
Sunday, January 16, 2022
It is further objected that [Jesus] hath left us no example of that, which by many is esteemed the only religious state of life; viz. perfect retirement from the world, for the more devout serving of God, and freeing us from the temptations of the world, such as is that of monks and hermits; this, perhaps, may seem to some a great oversight and omission: but our Lord in great wisdom thought fit to give us a pattern of a quite different sort of life, which was, not to fly the conversation of men, and to live in a monastery or a wilderness, but to do good among men, to live in the world with great freedom, and with great innocency. He did, indeed, sometimes retire himself for the more free and private exercise of devotion, as we ought to do; but he passed his life chiefly in the conversation of men, that they might have all the benefit that was possible of his instruction and example. We read, that “he was carried into the wilderness to be tempted;” but not that he lived there to avoid temptation. He hath given us an example of denying the world, without leaving it.
... John Tillotson (1630-1694), Works of Dr. John Tillotson, v. VIII, London: J. F. Dove, for R. Priestley, 1820, Sermon CXC, p. 274
(see the book; see also 1 Pet. 4:1; Matt. 4:1,12-17; Luke 4:1-2,14-15; 22:27; John 13:15; 2 Cor. 8:9; Eph. 5:1-2; Heb. 12:3; 1 Pet. 2:21; 1 John 2:6; more at Devotion, Example, Instruction, Jesus, Man, Temptation)
Monday, January 17, 2022 Feast of Antony of Egypt, Abbot, 356 Commemoration of Charles Gore, Bishop, Teacher, Founder of the Community of the Resurrection, 1932
We do not know if it is God’s will that this or that person should recover from sickness, or this or that calamity should be averted. God is wiser than we are. We do not know whether it is God’s will that we should have rain that is so necessary for our crops. There are things like these that lie in a region of uncertainty into which the intelligence of man cannot penetrate. So then as the object of prayer is not to bring the divine will down to the human, but to lift the human up into correspondence with the divine, for all these uncertain things we can pray indeed, but uncertainly—‘If it be possible, let this or that come to pass; nevertheless, not my will, but Thine, be done.’
... Charles Gore (1853-1932), The Sermon on the Mount [1910], London: John Murray, 1905, p. 141
(see the book; see also Matt. 26:42; 6:9-10; John 4:34; 6:38-40; more at God, Knowledge, Prayer, Rain, Sickness, Uncertainty, Will of God)
Tuesday, January 18, 2022 Feast of the Confession of Saint Peter the Apostle Commemoration of Amy Carmichael, Founder of the Dohnavur Fellowship, 1951
Tune Thou my harp;There is not, Lord, could never be,The skill in me.
Tune Thou my harp,That it may play Thy melody,Thy harmony.
Tune Thou my harp;O Spirit, breathe Thy thought through meAs pleaseth Thee.
... Amy Carmichael (1867-1951), Rose from Brier [1933], London: SPCK, 1950, p. 128-129
(see the book; see also Rev. 14:2-3; Ps. 57:8-9; Eph. 5:19-20; Col. 3:16; more at Harmony, Music, Spirit, Thought)
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 Commemoration of Wulfstan, Bishop of Worcester, 1095
The holiness of God, the wrath of God, and the health of the creation are inseparably united. Not only is it right for God to display anger at sin, but I find it impossible to understand how He could do otherwise.God’s wrath is His utter intolerance of whatever degrades or destroys.
... A. W. Tozer (1897-1963), Man: The Dwelling Place of God, Harrisburg, Penn.: Christian Publications, Inc., 1966, p. 111
(see the book; see also Isa. 13:9; Lev. 11:44; 19:2; 20:7; Deut. 6:14-15; Nahum 1:2-6; Eph. 1:4; Heb. 12:14; 1 Pet. 1:15-16; more at Creation, God, Holiness, Intolerance, Sin)
Thursday, January 20, 2022 Commemoration of Richard Rolle of Hampole, Writer, Hermit, Mystic, 1349
It behooves 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 behooves 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 (1290?-1349), A Little Book of Heavenly Wisdom: selections from some English prose mystics, Eleanor C. Gregory, ed., London: Methuen, 1904, p. 206
(see the book; see also 1 Tim. 6:17-19; John 7:17; Rom. 16:19; 1 Cor. 1:22-25; 3:18; Eph. 5:15-17; more at Devotion, God, Heart, Jesus, Love, Poverty, Service, Wisdom, World)
Friday, January 21, 2022 Feast of Agnes, Child Martyr at Rome, 304
By giving humans freedom of will, the Creator has chosen to limit His own power. He risked the daring experiment of giving us the freedom to make good or bad decisions, to live decent or evil lives, because God does not want the forced obedience of slaves. Instead, He covets the voluntary love and obedience of sons who love Him for Himself.
... Catherine Marshall (1914-1983), Beyond Our Selves, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1961, p. 26
(see the book; see also Isa. 1:18-20; Gen. 1:27; Ps. 19:13; 1 Cor. 8:2-3; 2 Cor. 3:17; Gal. 5:1; 1 John 4:16; more at Free will, Freedom, Slave, Son)
Saturday, January 22, 2022
Whatever gifts we possess belong to the Body, and are useful only as they are used in the common life of the Church. All this is made very plain in the New Testament Epistles, for in them we are taught that in each local Christian community is a fellowship in which every member is to live in humility and in love to the brethren. Yet no local church is to live to itself. Again and again, local churches are reminded of their close relationship to one another, in life, work, worship, pain, and death. Not that such a relationship is to be regarded either as a matter of convenience or as a question of organization. On the contrary, this intimate relationship is seen as the direct outcome of the saving work of Christ. This unity with one another, and of local churches with each other, is the unity which belongs to the Body of Christ, arising from the unity of God Himself, uttered in the dying and rising again of Jesus, and now expressed in the order and structure of the Church.
... Ambrose Reeves (1899-1980), Bishop of Johannesburg [1956], Church and Race in South Africa, David M. Paton, London: SCM Press, 1958, p. 31
(see the book; see also Rom. 12:4-5; 1:11-12; 15:5-7; Gal. 6:10; 1 Pet. 2:17; 1 John 1:3; more at Body of Christ, Church, Gifts, Humility, Jesus, Love, Unity)
Sunday, January 23, 2022 Commemoration of Phillips Brooks, Bishop of Massachusetts, spiritual writer, 1893
What sort of Christians are we that go about asking for the things of this life first, thinking that it shall make us prosperous to be Christians, and then a little higher asking for the things that pertain to the eternal prosperity, when the Great Master, who leaves us the great law, in whom our Christian life is spiritually set forth, has as His great symbol the cross, the cross, the sign of consecration and obedience? It is not simply suffering too. Christ does not stand primarily for suffering. Suffering is an accident. It does not matter whether you and I suffer. “Not enjoyment and not sorrow” is our life, not sorrow any more than enjoyment, but obedience and duty. If duty brings sorrow, let it bring sorrow. It did bring sorrow to the Christ.
... Phillips Brooks (1835-1893), Addresses, Philadelphia: Henry Altemus, 1895, p. 16
(see the book; see also John 8:31-36; 4:34; 6:38; Acts 4:19-20; Rom. 8:1-2; more at Christ, Cross, Duty, Obedience, Prosperity, Simplicity, Sorrow, Suffer)
Monday, January 24, 2022 Feast of François de Sales, Bishop of Geneva, Teacher, 1622
... if you lie to God’s Holy Spirit, you can scarcely wonder that He refuses you His comfort.
... François de Sales (1567-1622), Introduction to the Devout Life [1609], London: Rivingtons, 1876, IV.xiv, p. 334
(see the book; see also Eccl. 12:14; Matt. 6:5; Mark 4:22; Luke 8:16-17; 12:2; Rom. 8:26; 1 Cor. 4:5; more at Comfort, Holy Spirit, Truth)
Tuesday, January 25, 2022 Feast of the Conversion of Paul
Any theory which asserts universal salvation in Christ must involve not only the potential notion of “anonymous faith” but also some doctrine of a future state in which those whose religion has not made them “anonymous Christians”, and those who have professed and lived by no faith at all (a category often conveniently ignored in this context), are presented over and over again with the chance of faith in Christ. Such a theory is not only without scriptural warrant; it cuts clean across all that Scripture teaches about the historical nature of Christianity. Those who are saved at the last are those who are genuinely in Christ in this life.
... Michael Sadgrove (b. 1950) & N. T. Wright (b. 1948), “Jesus Christ the Only Saviour”, in The Lord Christ [1980], John Stott, ed., vol. 1 of Obeying Christ in a Changing World, John Stott, gen. ed., 3 vol., London: Fountain, 1977, p. 78
(see the book; see also Matt. 7:13-14; Pr. 4:26-27; Isa. 30:20-21; John 15:18-20; 16:33; Rom. 8:1; 9:30-32; 1 Cor. 15:22-23; more at Christ, Faith, Future, Life, Religion, Salvation, Scripture)
Wednesday, January 26, 2022 Feast of Timothy and Titus, Companions of Paul Commemoration of Dorothy Kerin, Founder of the Burrswood Healing Community, 1963
It is atonement that makes repentance, not repentance that makes atonement. Repentance comes because the Father of love has proved Himself a ‘Holy Father.’ He has closed the rent that sin had made; He offers a pardon that is a pardon, and that is absolutely free.
... P. T. Forsyth (1848-1921), from “God as Holy Father,” in Homiletic Review, v. XXXIII, I. K. Funk & D. S. Gregory, eds., New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1897, p. 236
(see the book; see also Heb. 7:27; Matt. 5:48; John 17:11; Rom. 2:4; Gal. 4:4-5; Col. 1:19-20; 1 Pet. 1:15-17; more at Atonement, Father, Forgiveness, Repentance, Sin)
Thursday, January 27, 2022
To be chosen by God so often means at one and the same time a crown of joy and a cross of sorrow. The piercing truth is that God does not choose a person for ease and comfort and selfish joy but for a task that will take all that head and heart and hand can bring to it. God chooses us in order to use us.
... William Barclay (1907-1978), The Gospel of Luke, Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1956, p. 8
(see the book; see also Acts 10:41; Deut. 7:6; Isa. 42:1-4; Luke 1:39-45; John 15:16; Acts 1:8; 9:15; more at Choices, Cross, God, Heart, Joy, Selfish, Sorrow, Task)
Friday, January 28, 2022 Feast of Thomas Aquinas, Priest, Teacher of the Faith, 1274
If all the predestined knew they were predestined, then all those not predestined would know they were not predestined from the very fact that they did not know if they were predestined. This would, in some way, lead them to despair. Now, considering those who are predestined, security is the mother of negligence; and if the predestined were certain about their predestination, they would be secure about their salvation. Consequently, they would not exercise so great care in avoiding evil. Hence, it has been wisely ordained by God’s providence that men should be ignorant of their predestination or reprobation.
... Thomas Aquinas (1225?-1274), Truth, Indianapolis/Cambridge: Hackett Publishing, 1994, p. 281-282
(see the book; see also Eccl. 9:1; John 3:3; 6:47; Acts 2:38; Phil. 2:12; more at Attitudes, Despair, Evil, God, Knowledge, Predestination, Providence, Salvation, Security)
Saturday, January 29, 2022
Nothing will help you as much in meeting people, no matter how far out they are or how caught up in the modern awfulness, than for them to perceive in you the attitude “we are both sinners.” This does not mean that we minimize sin, but we can still exhibit that we understand him because we stand in the same place. We can say “us” rather than just “you.” To project shock as though we are better slams the door shut. Each of us does not need to look beyond himself to know that men and women are sinners.
... Francis A. Schaeffer (1912-1984), No Little People, Downer Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1974, reprint, Crossway, 2003, p. 46
(see the book; see also Rom. 11:32; Luke 18:10-14; Rom. 2:1; 3:23; Gal. 3:22; 1 John 1:8; more at Attitudes, Knowledge, People, Perception, Sinner, Sympathy)
Sunday, January 30, 2022 Commemoration of Lesslie Newbigin, Bishop, Missionary, Teacher, 1998
If we accept the authority of the Bible, then we understand ourselves as being in via, not possessors of eternal truth, but part of a living tradition of discipleship, on the way to the truth that will be perfectly known on the day when the Author of the story brings it to its end and consummation.
... Lesslie Newbigin (1909-1998), Truth and Authority in Modernity, Gracewing Publishing, 1996, p. 70
(see the book; see also 2 Thess. 2:15; Matt. 13:52; John 21:15-17; Acts 20:27; 1 Cor. 11:23; 15:3-5; 2 Tim. 2:15; more at Authenticity, Bible, Disciple, Everlasting, Tradition, Truth)
Monday, January 31, 2022 Commemoration of John Bosco, Priest, Founder of the Salesian Teaching Order, 1888
Meanwhile it is a great consolation to us to look forward, as I think we are authorized to do, to a time when not only the knowledge of the Gospel will be greatly extended, but also, the influence of the Gospel on Christians’ hearts, and tempers, and lives—“the knowledge and love of God,” and the “fruits of his Spirit,”—will be still much more increased;—when those who are Christians in name, will be much less disposed to content themselves with the name,—much more careful to be Christians in principle and in conduct, than the far greater part of them are now:—when Christians, generally, will not look, as they are apt to do now, on the Apostles and others of the early Church whom it is usual to distinguish by the title of Saint, as possessing a degree and a kind of Christian excellence which it would be vain and presumptuous for ordinary Christians to think of equalling. (Continued tomorrow)
... Richard Whately (1787-1863), A View of the Scripture Revelations Concerning a Future State [1829], Philadelphia: Lindsay & Blakiston, 1857, p. 158-159
(see the book; see also 1 Cor. 15:23-24; Isa. 65:17; Dan. 12:10; 1 Cor. 2:13-16; 1 Thess. 1:6; Heb. 8:10-12; Rev. 20:1-7; more at Gospel, Heart, Influence, Knowledge, Life, Saint)
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