A Little Book on the Christian Life Quotes
A Little Book on the Christian Life
by
John Calvin3,956 ratings, 4.53 average rating, 585 reviews
A Little Book on the Christian Life Quotes
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“The gospel is not a doctrine of the tongue, but of life. It cannot be grasped by reason and memory only, but it is fully understood when it possesses the whole soul and penetrates to the inner recesses of the heart.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“The Lord commands us to do good unto all men without exception, though the majority are very undeserving when judged according to their own merits... [The Scripture] teaches us that we must not think of man's real value, but only of his creation in the image of God to which we owe all possible honor and love.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“Let us, however, remember this truth: No one has made much progress in the school of Christ who doesn’t look forward joyfully both to his death and the day of his final resurrection.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“Would the Lord have dressed the flowers with a beauty that runs freely to meet our eyes if it were wrong to be moved by such beauty? Would He have endowed them with so sweet a fragrance that flows freely into our nostrils if it were wrong to be moved by the pleasantness of such fragrance?”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“When He orders you to forgive that man for whatever sin he has committed against you, He calls you to do so not because that man deserves it, but because God Himself has forgiven you (Luke 17:3–4).”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“We carefully conceal our abundant vices from others—and we pretend they’re small and insignificant. In fact, we so delude ourselves that we sometimes embrace our vices as virtues. When”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“Believers are also trained in obedience by means of the cross. For thus they are taught to live according to God's will rather than their own. If everything went according to their own plans, they would never know what it means to follow God.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“The Holy Spirit has consecrated us as temples of God. We, therefore, must let the glory of God shine through us, and we must not pollute ourselves with sin.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“It teaches us not to regard others according to their own merits, but to consider in them the image of God to which we owe both honor and love. But”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“Each of us thinks we have just cause for elevating ourselves and despising all others in comparison to ourselves—our self-love ruins us with such blindness. If, in fact, God has gifted us with something that is good in itself, we immediately make it the basis for praising ourselves to such a degree that we not only swell up but almost burst with pride.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“Moreover, many philosophers, being overcome with arrogance, have recommended seeking virtue for its own sake. They recommend seeking virtue only for the sake of pride. Yet God isn’t pleased with those who strive after fleeting praise. He isn’t pleased with those who have puffed-up hearts and who manifest to others that they have received their reward in this life (Matt. 6:5–6, 16). Prostitutes and tax collectors are nearer to the kingdom of heaven than such people.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“The proper use, then, of all the good gifts we have received is the free and generous sharing of those gifts with others.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“desire is bridled when we acknowledge that all things given to us are given in order that we might know their author. This leads us to gratitude for His kindness toward us.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“Indeed, the holiest among us know they stand by God’s grace and not by their own virtues. Yet they would nevertheless become too confident in their own courage and constancy if they weren’t led to a more intimate knowledge of themselves by the testing of the cross.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“We see how many tricks they try, how many pursuits they exhaust themselves with in order to secure the objects of their ambition or greed, while trying to avoid, on the other hand, poverty and humility.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“In order to lead us by the hand to such self-denial, Scripture warns us that whatever we have freely received from the Lord is given to us on the condition that it be used for the common good of the church. As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace. 1 PETER 4:10”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life, Damask
― A Little Book on the Christian Life, Damask
“We are not our own; therefore, neither our reason nor our will should dominate our plans and actions. We are not our own; therefore, let us not make the gratification of our flesh our end. We are not our own; therefore, as much as possible, let us forget ourselves and our own interests.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life, Damask
― A Little Book on the Christian Life, Damask
“Let this be our principle, that we err not in the use of the gifts of Providence when we refer them to the end for which their author made and destined them, since he created them for our good, and not for our destruction. No man will keep the true path better than he who shall have this end carefully in view. Now then, if we consider for what end he created food, we shall find that he consulted not only for our necessity, but also for our enjoyment and delight. Thus, in clothing, the end was, in addition to necessity, comeliness and honour; and in herbs, fruits, and trees, besides their various uses, gracefulness of appearance and sweetness of smell. Were it not so, the Prophet would not enumerate among the mercies of God "wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make his face to shine," (Ps. civ. 15). The Scriptures would not everywhere mention, in commendation of his benignity, that he had given such things to men. The natural qualities of things themselves demonstrate to what end, and how far, they may be lawfully enjoyed.”
― Little Book on the Christian Life
― Little Book on the Christian Life
“Therefore, you have no cause to evade anyone who stands before you and needs your service. Suppose he’s a stranger. The Lord, however, has stamped him with His own mark that’s familiar to you, and for that reason God forbids you to despise your own flesh. Suppose he is contemptible and worthless. The Lord, however, shows him to be one whom He has condescended to decorate with His own image. Suppose you owe him nothing for what he’s done. But God—to whom you know you are obligated because of His many wonderful benefits to you—puts Himself, as it were, in that person’s place. Suppose he is unworthy of even your smallest labors for his sake. But the image of God, according to which this person is commended to you, warrants your giving of yourself and your all. Supposing a man not only deserves nothing good from you, but he has also provoked you with injustices and injuries—even this is not just cause for you to stop embracing him with affection and fulfilling your duties of love to him. He has deserved, you might say, something much different from me. But what has the Lord deserved? When He orders you to forgive that man for whatever sin he has committed against you, He calls you to do so not because that man deserves it, but because God Himself has forgiven you (Luke 17:3–4). This is the only path to achieving that which is not only difficult for, but entirely adverse to, our human nature—that is, loving those who hate us, repaying evil with good, and blessing those who curse us.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“THE GOAL OF God’s work in us is to bring our lives into harmony and agreement with His own righteousness, and so to manifest to ourselves and others our identity as His adopted children.”
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
― A Little Book on the Christian Life
“It was in olden times truly observed by Cato, that there is great concern about the appearance of the body but great carelessness about virtue. There is also an old proverb, that they who pay much attention to the body generally neglect the soul.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“But this we may positively state, that nobody has made any progress in the school of Christ unless he cheerfully looks forward to the day of his death and to the day of the final resurrection.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“Nor was there anything unreasonable in the behavior of the Scythians, who mourned and wept at the birth of their relatives, and who solemnly celebrated at their funerals.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“It is, indeed, true for pagans that the greatest blessing is not to be born, and the next, to die immediately.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“We, therefore, truly reap advantage from the discipline of the cross only when we learn that this life, taken by itself, is full of unrest, trouble, and misery, and not really happy from any point of view; and that all its so-called blessings are uncertain, passing, vain, and mixed with endless adversity. In consequence of this we should at once come to the conclusion that nothing in this world can be sought or expected but strife, and that we must raise our eyes to heaven to see a crown. But it must be admitted that our heart is never seriously inclined to wish for and to meditate on the future life unless it has first thoroughly learned to forsake the vanities of the present world.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“But we must always come back to this consolation: The Lord planned our sorrow, so let us submit to his will. Even in the throes of grief, groans, and tears, we must encourage ourselves with this reflection, so that our hearts may cheerfully bear up while the storms pass over our heads (John 21:18).”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“At present there are among Christians modern Stoics who think it is wrong to groan and to weep and even to grieve in loneliness. Such wild opinions generally come forth from men who are more dreamers than practical men, and who, therefore, cannot produce anything else but fantasies.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“It is clear that bearing the cross patiently does not mean that we harden ourselves or do not feel any sorrow; according to the old notion of the Stoic philosophers that a greathearted man is someone who has laid off his humanity, and who is not touched by adversity and prosperity, and not even by joy and sorrow, but who acts like a cold rock.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“For the more we are afflicted by adversities, the more surely our fellowship with Christ is confirmed!”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
“We should forever keep in mind that we must not brood on the wickedness of man, but realize that he is God’s image bearer.”
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
― Golden Booklet of the True Christian Life
