ALL OF "GRACE QUOTES" FROM NOVEMBER 2002 IN ONE FILE
All these foes and fears?
(J. C. Philpot, "King Of Kings")
We daily and hourly feel the workings of....
mighty sins,
raging lusts,
powerful temptations,
besetting evils,
against the least and feeblest of which we
have no strength. But as the eye of faith
views our blessed Lord at the right hand
of the Father, we are led by the power of
His grace to look unto Him, hang upon Him,
and seek help from him.
Trials in providence,
afflictions in the family,
sickness and infirmities in the body,
crooked things in the church,
opposition and persecution from the world,
a vile, unbelieving heart, which we can neither sanctify nor subdue,
a rough and rugged path, increasing in difficulty as we journey onward,
doubts, fears, and misgivings in our own bosom,
inward slips and falls,
wanderings,
startings aside,
hourly backslidings from the strait and narrow path,
jealous enemies watching for our halting,
with no eye to pity, nor arm to help.
How all these foes and fears make us feel our
need of an enthroned King, Head, and Husband,
whose tender heart is soft to pity, whose mighty
arm is strong to relieve!
Seductive scenes of giddiness and mirth?
(Stephen Tyng, "Christ is All")
The true Christian is no longer devoted to
this perishing world! There was a time, when
the pleasures of the world attracted him,
and he loved them. The seductive scenes
of giddiness and mirth invited his affections,
and he yielded to their influence.
He now recalls, with shame, the low and
groveling disposition which made him stoop
to such pursuits.
The enchantments of the world once seemed
to him of vast importance and worth. He did
not think of the inevitable end of such things.
The danger of the everlasting ruin of his soul
never caused him to hesitate in his vain pursuit.
And yet, while he loved the pleasures; and
eagerly sought the gains of this world;
the trouble which they required in the obtaining,
their cares and losses,
the uncertainty which attended their possession,
the emptiness which came after their enjoyment,
constantly harassed him, and more than counterbalanced
all the gains the world could give.
He now sees the exceeding folly of this futile system of life.
He is ashamed to think that he ever been such a
slave, and risked his eternal soul, for that which
he knew, must eventually leave him and perish.
Wonder, O heavens, and be astonished, O earth!
(Octavius Winslow "Evening Thoughts")
"I tell you the truth, you can go directly to the
Father and ask Him, and He will grant your
request because you use My name." John 16:23
That God should have erected in this lower world
a throne of grace, a mercy-seat, around which may
gather, in clustering and welcome multitudes . . .
the helpless,
the burdened,
the friendless,
the vile,
the guilty,
the deeply necessitous—
that no poor comer, be . . .
his poverty ever so great,
his burden ever so heavy, or
his case ever so desperate,
should meet with the refusal of a hearing
or a welcome, does greatly develop and
magnify the riches of . . .
His grace,
His wisdom, and
His love to sinners.
What a God our God must be, thus to have
appointed a meeting-place, an audience-chamber,
for those upon whom all other doors were closed!
But more than this—that He should have appointed
Jesus as the door of approach to that throne—that
He should have given His only-begotten and well
beloved Son to be the "new and living way" of access,
thus removing all obstruction in the path of the soul's
coming, both on the part of Himself, and on the part
of the sinner; that the door should be a crucified Savior
—the wounds of the Son of God—that through blood,
and that blood, the blood of the incarnate Deity,
the guilty should approach—wonder, O heavens,
and be astonished, O earth!
Shall we say even more than this?
For there is a yet lower depth in this love and
condescension of God—that He should have sent
His Spirit into the heart, the Author of prayer . . .
inditing the petition;
breathing in the soul;
implanting the desire
convincing of the existing necessity;
unfolding the character of God;
working faith in the heart; and
drawing it up to God through Jesus;
seems the very perfection of His wisdom,
benevolence, and grace! Wonder, O
heavens, and be astonished, O earth!
Extremely derogatory to human pride?
(Stephen Tyng, "Christ is All")
Sin has entirely perverted the nature of man.
The carnal mind is opposed to God in its . . .
judgments,
tastes,
desires, and
pursuits.
God demands that guilty man . . . .
sacrifice his own imaginary independence,
renounce his own fancied excellence, and
acknowledge his personal unworthiness,
before he can be received into the family of God.
Such demands seem extremely derogatory to
human pride. And for this reason, multitudes
reject all the offers of the Gospel, and treat with
contempt those who yield to the invitations which
they themselves despise, and submit to the motives
which they renounce, as deluded and degraded people.
The wedding feast!
(Octavius Winslow "Evening Thoughts")
"Let us be glad and rejoice and honor Him. For the
time has come for the wedding feast of the Lamb,
and His bride has prepared herself." Rev. 19:7
Jesus sustains no relation to His Church more
expressive than this. From all eternity He betrothed
her to Himself. He asked her at the hands of her
Father, and the Father gave her to Him. He entered
into a covenant that she should be His. The conditions
of that covenant were great, but not too great for His
love to undertake. They were that He should . . . .
assume her nature,
discharge her legal obligations,
endure her punishment,
repair her ruin, and
bring her to glory!
He undertook all, and He accomplished
all—because He loved her!
The love of Jesus to His Church, is the
love of the most tender husband. It is . . .
single,
constant,
affectionate,
matchless,
wonderful.
Jesus . . . .
sympathizes with her,
nourishes her,
provides for her,
clothes her,
watches over her, and
indulges her with the most intimate
and endearing communion.
The Lord Jesus will come in the clouds of heaven,
and this will be the occasion of His public wedding
of His Church. Her present union to Him is secret
and unknown—invisible to the world. But He will
appear, openly and visibly to take her to Himself;
and before His Father and the holy angels He will
solemnize her eternal union.
Oh what a time of splendor and of rejoicing will
that be! Arrayed in His nuptial robes, Jesus will
descend to make her His own; and she, "prepared
as a bride adorned for her husband," will go forth
to meet Him. Then will be heard the song of angels,
"Let us be glad and rejoice and honor Him. For the
time has come for the wedding feast of the Lamb,
and His bride has prepared herself." Yes! "Blessed
are they who are called unto the wedding feast of
the Lamb."
The others, where are they?
(Octavius Winslow "Evening Thoughts")
"I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy,
and I will have compassion on whom I will have
compassion." Romans 9:15
Here is the Sovereign! How like Himself He speaks!
He carries forward His gracious purposes of infinite
wisdom and love—chooses or rejects—reveals or
withholds, "working all things after the counsel of
His own will," and "giving no account," either to
angels or to men, "of any of His matters."
Is the reader a child of God? Who and what made
you to differ? You have been taken out of your family,
your kindred, your friends, your companions. >From this
circle you alone have been selected, called, and made
a child of grace, an heir of glory.
The others, where are they?
Still dead in trespasses and sin!
The others, where are they?
Living in the world, and to the world;
lovers of pleasure,
lovers of self,