Tuesday, June 28, 2011

ANYONE FOR BIBLE STUDY?--W.F .BELL


"What some people call 'Bible Study' is too often just a group of unprepared people exchanging their ignorance."
Warren Wiersbe
"What matters is what the Bible says, not our interpretations about what the Bible says."
W. F. Bell
"All is not wise that wise men say; nor all good that good men do; the best of men are but men at the best."
Augustus Toplady
"But we desire that the Scripture speak like itself, as in the language of Canaan, that it may be understood even of the very vulgar."  The King James Version Translators, 1611
"The Bible is, strictly speaking, not a book but a library."
Frederic W. Farrar
"The Bible is a window in this prison world, through which we may look into eternity."
Timothy Dwight     

Sunday, June 19, 2011

PRAYER POWER--HUDSON TAYLOR

 J. Hudson Taylor  (1832-1905) was a British missionary with a call to China. He spent 51 years and founded  China Inland Mission (now OMF) leaving a great impact which laid a foundation which erected a Chinese church that has lasted through the harsh communist years. Christian historian Ruth Tucker gave this summation:   "No other missionary in the nineteen centuries since the Apostle Paul has had a wider vision and has carried out a more systematised plan of evangelising a broad geographical area than Hudson Taylor "

These are his words: "The prayer power has never been tried to its full capacity. If we want to see mighty wonders of divine power and grace wrought in the place of weakness, failure and disappointment, let us answer God's standing challenge,'Call unto Me, and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not'"

Sunday, June 12, 2011

NOTHING GOOD HAVE I DONE- B.B. WARFIELD

Princeton theologian  Benjamin B. Warfield  (1851-1921)  puts it aptly:

"There is nothing in us or done by us, at any stage of our earthly development, because of which we are acceptable to God. We must always be accepted for Christ’s sake, or we cannot ever be accepted at all. This is not true of us only when we believe. It is just as true after we have believed. It will continue to be trust as long as we live. Our need of Christ does not cease with our believing; nor does the nature of our relation to Him or to God through Him ever alter, no matter what our attainments in Christian graces or our achievements in behavior may be. It is always on His “blood and righteousness” alone that we can rest."

Saturday, June 4, 2011

GRACE FROM FIRST TO LAST

CHARLES SPURGEON 
(Another fine meditation from Mr. Spurgeon)

Many nowadays appear to leap into peace without any convictions of sin — they do not seem to have known what the guilt of sin means; but they scramble into peace before the burden of sin has been felt. It is not for me to judge, but I must confess I have my fears of those who have never felt the terrors of the Lord, and I look upon conviction of sin as a good groundwork for a well-instructed Christian.

I observe as a rule that when a man has been put in the prison of the law, and made to wear the heavy chains of conviction, and at last obtains his liberty through the precious blood, he is pretty sure to cry up the grace of God, and magnify divine mercy. He feels that in his case salvation must be of grace from first to last, and he naturally favors that system of theology which magnifies most the grace of God. Those who have not felt this, whose conversion has been of the more easy kind, produced rather by excitement than by depth of thought, seem to me to choose a flimsy divinity, in which man is more prominent, and God is less regarded.

I am sure of this one thing, that I personally desire to ascribe conversion in my own case entirely to the grace of God, and to give God the glory of it; and I dread that conversion which could in any degree deprive God of being in his everlasting decrees the cause of it, by his effectual Spirit the direct agent of it, by his continued working through the Holy Ghost the perfecter of it. Give God the praise, my brethren. You must do so, if you have thoroughly experienced what God’s anger means, and what the turning away of it means.

From a sermon entitled "A New Song For New Hearts," delivered May 1, 1870.