Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God Quotes
Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
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J.I. Packer10,270 ratings, 4.36 average rating, 654 reviews
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Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God Quotes
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“A God whom we could understand exhaustively, and whose revelation of Himself confronted us with no mysteries whatsoever, would be a God in man's image, and therefore an imaginary God, not the God of the Bible at all.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“Creatures are not entitled to register complaints about their Creator.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“C. H. Spurgeon was once asked if he could reconcile these two truths to each other. “I wouldn’t try,” he replied; “I never reconcile friends.” Friends?—yes, friends. This is the point that we have to grasp. In the Bible, divine sovereignty and human responsibility are not enemies. They are not uneasy neighbors; they are not in an endless state of cold war with each other. They are friends, and they work together.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“What we do every time we pray is to confess our impotence and God's sovereignty.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“The preacher should work to convert his congregation; the wife should work to save her unbelieving husband. Christians are sent to convert, and they should not allow themselves, as Christ's representatives in the world, to aim at anything less. Evangelizing, therefore, is not simply a matter of teaching, and instructing, and imparting information to the mind. There is more to it than that. Evangelizing includes the endeavor to elicit a response to the truth taught.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“But the way to tell whether in fact you are evangelizing is not to ask whether conversions are known to have resulted from your witness. It is to ask whether you are faithfully making known the gospel message.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“The results of preaching depend, not on the wishes and intentions of men, but on the will of God Almighty.
This consideration does not mean that we should be indifferent as to whether we see fruit from our witness to Christ or not; if fruit is not appearing, we should seek God's face about it to find out why. But this consideration does mean that we ought not to define evangelism in terms of achieved results.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
This consideration does not mean that we should be indifferent as to whether we see fruit from our witness to Christ or not; if fruit is not appearing, we should seek God's face about it to find out why. But this consideration does mean that we ought not to define evangelism in terms of achieved results.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“In the Bible, divine sovereignty and human responsibility are not enemies. They are not uneasy neighbors; they are not in an endless state of cold war with each other. They are friends, and they work together.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“What Is the Motive for Evangelizing? There are, in fact, two motives that should spur us constantly to evangelize. The first is love of God and concern for his glory; the second is love of man and concern for his welfare.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“For it is not true that some Christians believe in divine sovereignty while others hold an opposite view. What is true is that all Christians believe in divine sovereignty, but some are not aware that they do, and mistakenly imagine and insist that they reject it. What causes this odd state of affairs? The root cause is the same as in most cases of error in the church--the intruding of rationalistic speculations, the passion for systematic consistency, a reluctance to recognize the existence of mystery and to let God be wiser than men, and a consequent subjecting of Scripture to the supposed demands of human logic.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“What we have to grasp, then, is that the bad conscience of the natural man is not at all the same thing as conviction of sin. It does not, therefore, follow that a man is convicted of sin when he is distressed about his weaknesses and the wrong things he has done. It is not conviction of sin just to feel miserable
about yourself and your failures and your inadequacy to meet life's demands. Nor would it be saving faith if a man in that condition called on the Lord Jesus Christ just to soothe him, cheer him up and make him feel confident again. Nor should we be preaching the gospel (though we might imagine we were) if all that we did was to present Christ in terms of a human's felt wants. (`Are you happy? Are you satisfied? Do you want peace of mind? Do you feel that you have failed? Are you fed up with yourself? Do you want a friend? Then come to Christ; he will meet your every need"-as if the Lord Jesus Christ were to be thought of as a fairy godmother, or a super-psychiatrist.) No; we have to go deeper than this. To preach sin means not to make capital out of people's felt frailties (the brainwasher's trick), but to measure their lives by the holy law of God. To be convicted of sin means not just to feel that one is an all-around flop, but to realize that one has offended God, flouted his authority, defied him, gone against him and put oneself in the wrong with him. To preach Christ means to set him forth as the One who, through his cross, sets men right with God again. To put faith in Christ means relying on him, and him alone, to restore us to God's fellowship and favor.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
about yourself and your failures and your inadequacy to meet life's demands. Nor would it be saving faith if a man in that condition called on the Lord Jesus Christ just to soothe him, cheer him up and make him feel confident again. Nor should we be preaching the gospel (though we might imagine we were) if all that we did was to present Christ in terms of a human's felt wants. (`Are you happy? Are you satisfied? Do you want peace of mind? Do you feel that you have failed? Are you fed up with yourself? Do you want a friend? Then come to Christ; he will meet your every need"-as if the Lord Jesus Christ were to be thought of as a fairy godmother, or a super-psychiatrist.) No; we have to go deeper than this. To preach sin means not to make capital out of people's felt frailties (the brainwasher's trick), but to measure their lives by the holy law of God. To be convicted of sin means not just to feel that one is an all-around flop, but to realize that one has offended God, flouted his authority, defied him, gone against him and put oneself in the wrong with him. To preach Christ means to set him forth as the One who, through his cross, sets men right with God again. To put faith in Christ means relying on him, and him alone, to restore us to God's fellowship and favor.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“Our are speculations are not the measure of our God.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“The prayer of a Christian is not an attempt to force God’s hand, but a humble acknowledgment of helplessness and dependence.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“We should not be held back by the thought that if they are not elect, they will not believe us and our efforts to convert them will fail. That is true; but it is none of our business and should make no difference to our action. In the first place, it is always wrong to abstain from doing good for fear that it might not be appreciated. In the second place, the nonelect in this world are faceless men as far as w are concerned. We know that they exist, but we do not and cannot know who they are, and it is as futile as it is impious for us to try and guess. The identity of the reprobate is one of God's 'secret things' into which his people may not pry. In the third place, our calling as Christians is not to love God's elect, and them only, but to love our neighbour, irrespective of whether he is elect or not.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“What, then, are we to say about the suggestion that a hearty faith in the absolute sovereignty of God is inimical to evangelism? We are bound to say that anyone who makes this suggestion thereby shows that he has simply failed to understand what the doctrine of divine sovereignty means. Not only does it undergird evangelism, and uphold the evangelist, by creating a hope of success that could not otherwise be entertained; it also teaches us to bind together preaching and prayer; and as it makes us bold and confident before men, so it makes us humble and importunate before God.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“But the Christ who is depicted and desired merely to make the lot of life’s casualties easier by supplying them with aids and comforts is not the real Christ, but a misrepresented and misconceived Christ—in effect, an imaginary Christ.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“the bad conscience
of the natural man is not at all the same thing as conviction of sin.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
of the natural man is not at all the same thing as conviction of sin.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“We must know what it means to call God Creator before we can grasp what it means to speak of him as Redeemer.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“Evangelism is to be defined not institutionally, in terms of the kind of meeting held, but theologically, in terms of what is taught, and for what purpose.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“But what is in the Bible is just the whole counsel of God for man’s salvation; all Scripture bears witness, in one way or another, to Christ, and all biblical themes relate to him.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“For he was an apostle second and a Christian first;”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“Paul, in his own estimation, was not a philosopher, not a moralist, not one of the world’s wise men,”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“Now they see that the way to find the happiness that God promises is not to seek it as an end in itself, but to forget oneself in the daily preoccupation of seeking God’s glory and doing his will and proving his power through the ups and downs and stresses and strains of everyday life.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility are taught to us side by side in the same Bible; sometimes, indeed, in the same text.[2] Both are thus guaranteed to us by the same divine authority; both, therefore, are true. It follows that they must be held together, and not played off against each other.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“The particular antinomy which concerns us here is the apparent opposition between divine sovereignty and human responsibility, or (putting it more biblically) between what God does as King and what he does as Judge.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“It is not deliberately manufactured; it is”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“The knowledge then that God is sovereign in grace and that we are impotent to win souls should make us pray, and keep us praying.”
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God
“When we preach the promises and invitations of the gospel, and offer Christ to sinful men and women, it is part of our task to emphasize and re-emphasize that they are responsible to God for the way in which they react to the good news of his grace. No preacher can ever make this point too strongly.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
“¿Qué necesidad más grande puede tener un hombre muerto en sus pecados que conocer a Cristo el Salvador y Redentor? ¿Qué bien podemos hacer más bondadoso que compartir el evangelio del Señor Jesucristo?”
― El evangelismo y la soberanía de Dios
― El evangelismo y la soberanía de Dios
“our calling as Christians is not to love God’s elect, and them only, but to love our neighbor, irrespective of whether he is elect or not.”
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
― Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
