Fear not
because your prayer is stammering,
your words feeble,
and your language poor.
Jesus can understand you.
– J. C. Ryle
– J. C. Ryle
Why do people choose the substitutes over God himself? Probably the most important reason is that it obviates accountability to God. We can meet idols on our own terms because they are our own creations. They are safe, predictable, and controllable; they are, in Jeremiah’s colorful language, the “scarecrows in a cucumber field” (10:5). They are portable and completely under the user’s control. They offer nothing like the threat of a God who thunders from Sinai and whose providence in this world so often appears to us to be incomprehensible and dangerous. People who “remain in the center of their lives and loyalties, autonomous architects of their own futures,” Keyes argues, thereby avoid coming face to face with God and his truth. They need face only themselves. That is the appeal of idolatry.
– David Wells in God in the Wasteland
Each day is a vessel to be freighted with holy deeds
and earnest endeavours before it weighs anchor
and sets sail for the eternal shores.
How many hours we misspend!
How many occasions we lose!
How many precious gifts of God we squander!
– David McIntyre in The Hidden Life of Prayer
– Charles Simeon
Communion with God discovers the excellence of his character, and by beholding him the soul is transformed. Holiness is conformity to Christ, and this secured by a growing intimacy with him.
– David McIntyre in The Hidden Life of Prayer
The Bible teaches that God humbles those who exalt themselves. Jesus received the humbling that our constant and unremitting self-exaltation merits. What does it deserve? Crucifixion! In other words, our self-exaltation is so heinous in God’s sight that it must be crucified. That is the humbling our pride deserves!
– William P. Farley in Gospel Powered Humility
– George Whitefield
Why is humility the indispensable virtue?
You can’t get close to God without it.
You can’t love God or man without it.
You can’t obey without it.
You can’t become anything that God wants you to be without it.
– William P. Farley in Gospel Powered Humility
Humility is the crucial virtue.
Without it, the Christian will not be fruitful. Humility is the fertilizer that nourishes our souls and makes us fruitful. Without it, we will lack zeal, be unable to mourn sin, and have little compassion and patience for others. In short, without the pursuit of humility, our souls will wither.
– William P. Farley in Gospel Powered Humility
– J. C. Ryle