By a man's reaction to Jesus Christ, that man stands revealed.
By his reaction to Jesus Christ his soul is laid bare. If he regards Christ with love, even with wistful yearning,
for him there is hope; but if in Christ he sees nothing lovely he has condemned himself. He who was sent in love
has become to the man, judgment.
Any alleged conversion which does not leave one totally committed
solely to Jesus Christ is incomplete and imperfect.
We may not understand how the spirit works; but the effect of the spirit on the lives of men
is there for all to see; and the only unanswerable argument for Christianity is a Christian life.
It may well be that the world is denied miracle after miracle and triumph after triumph because
we will not bring to Christ what we have and what we are. If, just as we are, we would lay
ourselves on the altar of service of Jesus Christ, there is no saying what Christ could do with us and through us.
We may be sorry and embarrassed that we have not more to bring -- and rightly so;
but that is not reason for failing or refusing to bring what we have and what we are. Little is always much in the hands of Christ.
Prayer is not a way of making use of God; prayer is a way of offering ourselves to God in order that He should be able to make use of us.
It may be that one of our great faults in prayer is that we talk too much and listen too little.
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.
If Christianity has never frightened us, we have not yet learnt what it is.
So long as we judge ourselves by human comparisons, there is plenty of room for self-satisfaction, and self-satisfaction kills faith,
for faith is born of the sense of need. But when we compare ourselves with Jesus Christ, and through Him,
with God, we are humbled to the dust, and then faith is born, for there is nothing left to do but to trust to the mercy of God.
The social gospel is not an addendum to the gospel; it is the gospel. If we read the Gospels, it becomes clear that it was not
what Jesus said about God that got him into trouble (but) his treatment of men and women, his way of being friendly
with outcasts with whom no respectable Jew would have anything to do. It has always been fairly safe to talk about God;
it is when we start to talk about men that the trouble starts. And yet the fact remains that there is no conceivable way of proving that we love God other than by loving men. And there is no conceivable way of proving that we love men than by doing something for those who most need help.
When Jesus takes possession of our life, it is not only that the past is forgotten and forgiven; if that were all, we might well proceed to make the same mess of life all over again;
but into life there enters this new power which enables us to be what by ourselves we could never be,
and to do what by ourselves we could never do.
The tragedy of life and of the world is not that men do not know God; the tragedy is that, knowing Him,
they still insist on going their own way.
True and genuine worship is when man, through his spirit attains to friendship and intimacy with God. True and genuine worship is not to come to a certain place;
it is not to go through a certain ritual or liturgy; it is not even to bring certain gifts.
True worship is when the spirit, the immortal and invisible part of man, speaks to and meets with God,
who is immortal and invisible.
While it is right to stress the dangers of the permissive society, the argument from danger is not in itself a good argument,
because it seems to imply that, if the danger could be removed,
if there was no risk of a child and no peril of infection, then the objection would be removed,
too. It tends to imply that the objection is to the attendant dangers and not to the thing itself.
But if sexual intercourse before and outside marriage is against the teaching of Jesus, then the thing is not
only dangerous, it is wrong in itself.
Faith is not only a commitment to the promises of Christ; faith is also a commitment to the demands of Christ.
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.
When a man undergoes treatment from a doctor, he does not need to know the way in which the
drug works on his body in order to be cured. There is a sense in which Christianity is like that.
At the heart of Christianity there is a mystery, but it is not the mystery of intellectual appreciation;
it the mystery of redemption.
Conversion is not something simply between a man and Jesus Christ, with no other person involved.
True, it may start in that way; but it cannot end in that way. Conversion is not individualistic.
It is, in fact, just the opposite. It joins man to his fellow men, and certainly does not separate him from them.
A conversion is incomplete if it does not leave one integrated into the Church. By this we do not mean any particular part
of the Church; what we do mean is that conversion must leave one linked in loving fellowship with one's fellow believers.
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