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101 pages, Paperback
First published January 31, 2009
”You are not one of God's agents to make me what l am, rather you are myself. You are my thirteenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.”
”How good God has been to me! I must risk sounding hysterical, but I'm so filled with gratitude that there's really room for nothing else.”
“[God’s] guidance of me was so sure and clear
during those two days. Had the whole court been in uproar, had Herr Freisler and the surrounding walls tottered before my eyes, it would have made no difference to me. I felt exactly as it says in Isaiah, chapter 43, verse 2: "When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee, ‘…that is to say upon thy soul.’”
“Yesterday, my dear, we read this beautiful passage: ‘But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us. We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed; always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life ofJesus might be made manifest in our body.’ Thanks be, my dear, before all things to God.”
“There is only one thing which I can say: if-You keep the consciousness of absolute sincerity when the Lord gives it to you - a security which you would never have known if it had not been for this time and its issue-then I shall leave behind me as my legacy a treasure which none can confiscate, against which even my life cannot weigh in the balance...”
“I stood before Freisler not as a Protestant, not as a great landowner, not as a noble, not as a Prussian, not as a German even... No, I stood there as a Christian and as nothing else...”
“I wept a little, not that I was sad, not that I was dispirited, not that I wanted to turn back-no, I wept forgratitude, because I was overwhelmed by this proof of the presence of God.”
“My dear, my life draws to its close, and I can truthfully
say of myself, ‘He died in the fullness of years and of life's experience.’”
“But I would end by saying toyou from the depths of my being and from the fullness of that treasure wherewith he hath filled this humble earthen vessel, ‘The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the holy
Ghost, be with you all evermore. Amen.’”
THE BEAUTY OF MARRIAGE:
“It is a mercy to have a faithful friend, that loveth you
entirely, and is as true to you as yourself, to whom you may open your mind and communicate your affairs, and who would be ready to strengthen you, and divide the cares of your affairs and family with you, and help you to bear your burdens, and comfort you in your sorrows, and be the daily companion of your lives, and partaker of your joys and sorrows. And it is a mercy to have so near a friend to be a helper to your soul; to join with you in prayer and other holy exercises; to watch over you and tell you of your sins and dangers, and to stir up in you the grace of God, and remember to you of the life to come, and cheerfully accompany you in the ways of holiness.” (Richard Baxter, 1615-1691)
CHARACTERISTICS OF A GODLY SPOUSE:
“He governed by persuasion, which he never employed but to things honourable and profitable for herself; he loved her soul and her honour more than her outside.” Lucy Hutchinson)
“So constant was he in his love, that when she ceased to be young and lovely, he showed most fondness; he loved her at such a kind and generous rate as words cannot express.” (Lucy Hutchinson)
“It is a weighty business, but when put under the management of faith, prayer and prudence, it is a happy business.” (Thomas Charles, November 25, 1780)
“The sight of so much good sense, beauty and unaffected modesty, joined with that genuine piety which eminently adorns your person, administered fuel to the fire already enkindled, and which has continued burning with increasing ardour from that time to this.” (Thomas Charles, December 28, 1779)
ABOUNDING LOVE:
“And this fear was increased much by a consciousness
of the extreme tenderness my heart feels for you, which sometimes makes me dread lest I should sin you away, by giving you that place in my heart which ought to be sacred to God alone, next to whom I believe I am permitted to love you. Pray that I may rest there.” (Mercy Doddridge, November 7, 1742)
“As God hath loved his children here in dust and ashes, with a love superior to that which he bears to all his other creatures (a love so amazing and wonderful as to stagger our belief by its greatness!), in the same manner does one Christian love another. He loves him next to the Almighty.” (Thomas Charles, March 1, 1780)
“I love you more now than ever before, more and more every year of the five - that I love you as much as I ever loved any other, or ever could have learned to love.” (John Broadus, September 2, 1863)
“You are not one of God's agents to make me what l am, rather you are myself. You are my thirteenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.” (Helmuth James Graf Moltke, January 11, 1945)
GOD AT THE CENTRE OF MARRIAGE:
“Yet even this, which was the highest love he or any man could have, was yet bounded by a superior, he loved her in the Lord as his fellow creature, not his idol, but in such a manner as showed that an affection, bounded in the just rules of duty, far exceeds every way all the irregular passions in the world. He loved God above her, and all the other dear pledges of his heart, and at his command and for his glory cheerfully resigned them.” (Lucy Hutchinson)
“Both for myself and you, I would always pray that God may be so much dearer to us than we are to each other that our souls in his love ‘delight themselves in fatness,’ and feel he is an all sufficient God. By this means we shall be most likely to continue together, and not provoke the stroke of separation by an idolatrous love to one another. By this means we shall love one another in God and for God; and be armed with the whole armour of God for all events.” (Henry Venn, April 5, 1759)
“No, there can be no happiness but in the enjoyment of the inexhaustible and overflowing source of all goodness and perfection. As we lost our happiness by separating ourselves from God, so the only way of regaining it is, by returning to him again: for he has promised to meet us in Christ and there (and nowhere else) to be forever reconciled to us.” (Thomas Charles, March 1, 1780)
“I trust my esteem will keep apace with the working of Providence, whatever that will be.” (Sally Jones, April 27, 1780)
FALLING IN LOVE:
“You are the only person that ever I saw (and the first I ever addressed on the subject), with whom I thought I could spend my life in happy union and felicity, and for whom I possessed that particular affection and esteem requisite for conjugal happiness; and you are the only temporal blessing I have for some time past asked with importunity of the Lord.” (Thomas Charles, December 28, 1779)
PASSIONS VS. CONVICTION:
“Passions are unsteady things: they are no sooner
excited but they subside again and cannot be depended upon, but what proceeds from conviction is likely to be lasting. Passions are blind and dangerous leaders, but when they faithfully follow conviction they preserve their proper place and are not amiss...” (Thomas Charles, November 18, 1780)
MARRIAGE OF MINISTERS:
“It always pleases me to hear that a minister is well married. There is something in domestic life that seems suited to improve our meetness forspeakingto ourpeople. The growing soul when doubled in wedlock, and multiplied in children, acquires a thousand new feelings and sensibilities of which the solitary bachelor is incapable, and these teach and dispose us to feel for others, and give us interest both in their pleasures and their pains. And this sympathizing temper is a happy talent for a minister to possess. It will give him a deeper place in the hearts of his people, than some more shining accomplishments.” (Thomas Charles, November 25, 1780)
TRUSTING GOD DESPITE HARDSHIP:
“Is she ill ? It is right. Is she very ill... dying? It is still right. Is she gone to join the heavenly choristers? It is all right, notwithstanding our repining... Repinings! No; we will not repine. It is best she should go. It is best for her; this we must allow. It is best for us; do we expect it? Oh what poor, ungrateful, shortsighted worms are we! Let us submit, my Sarah, till we come to heaven.” (Samuel Pearce, December 13, 1794)
THE PASSING OF A SPOUSE:
“I have been bereaved of the best companion of my life, of one who, had it been so ordered, would not only have been the willing sharer of my indigence, but even of my death.” (John Calvin, April 7, 1549)
“Adieu, brother, and very excellent friend. May the Lord
Jesus strengthen you by his Spirit; and may he support me also under this heavy affliction, which would certainly overcome me had not he, who raises up the prostrate, strengthens the weak, and refreshes the weary, stretched forth his hand from heaven to me. Salute all the brethren and your whole family.” (John Calvin, April 11, 1549)
“Let not excess of love and delight in the stream make us forget the fountain; he and all his excellencies came from God, and flowed back into their own spring: there let us seek them, thither let us hasten after him; there having found him, let us cease to bewail among the dead that which is risen, or rather immortal.” (Lucy Hutchinson to her children upon her husband’s passing)
“Still bleeds the deep, deep wound; and a return to Birmingham is a return to the most poignant feelings. I wish however to resign him to the hand that gave and that had an unquestionable right to take away. Be still then every tumultuous passion, and know that he who hath inflicted these repeated strokes is God: that God whom I desire to reverence under every painful dispensation, being persuaded that what I know not now, I shall know hereafter.” (Sarah Pearce, Juy 11, 1800)