Let us never forget that our chief danger is from within. The world and the devil combined, cannot do us as much harm as our own hearts will, if we do not watch and pray.
Churches may decay and perish; riches may make themselves wings and fly away-but he who builds their happiness on Christ crucified and union with Him by faith, that person is standing on a foundation which shall never be moved, and will know something of true peace.
The brightest saint is the man who has the most heart-searching sense of his own sinfulness, and the liveliest sense of his own complete acceptance in Christ.
We may love money without having it, just as we may have money without loving it.
We want more men and women who walk with God and before God, like Enoch and Abraham.
Experience supplies painful proof that traditions once called into being are first called useful, then they become necessary. At last they are too often made idols, and all must bow down to them or be punished.
Any well-read man knows that the moral difference between the condition of the world before Christianity was planted and since Christianity took root is the difference between night and day, the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of the devil.
When you cannot answer a skeptic, be content to wait for more light; but never forsake a great principle.
A zealous man feels that like a lamp he is made to burn; and if consumed in burning, he has but done the work for which God appointed him. Such a one will always find a sphere for his zeal. If he cannot preach and work and give money, he will cry and sigh and pray.
Let us only take heed that this office of Christ is not set before us in vain. It will profit us nothing at the last day that Jesus was a Shepherd, if during our lifetime, we never heard His voice and followed Him. If we love life, let us join His flock without delay.
The best of men are men at best.
Wrong views about holiness are generally traceable to wrong views about human corruption.
A converted man will not wish to go to heaven alone.
If we would know whether our faith is genuine, we do well to ask ourselves how we are living.
Sin rarely seems sin at first beginnings.
Nothing perhaps affects man’s character more than the company he keeps.
The faith that has not a sanctifying influence on the character is no better than the faith of devils.
People fall in private, long before they fall in public. The tree falls with a great crash, but the secret decay which accounts for it, is often not discovered until it is down on the ground.
We corrupt the Word of God most dangerously, when we throw any doubt on the plenary inspiration of any part of Holy Scripture.
The last day will prove that some of the holiest men that ever lived are hardly known.