Robert Smart > Robert's Quotes

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  • #1
    D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
    “Prayer is beyond any question the highest activity of the human soul. Man is at his greatest and highest when upon his knees he comes face to face with God.”
    Martyn Lloyd-Jones

  • #2
    D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
    “Have you realized that most of your unhappiness in life is due to the fact that you are listening to yourself instead of talking to yourself? Take those thoughts that come to you the moment you wake up in the morning. You have not originated them but they are talking to you, they bring back the problems of yesterday, etc. Somebody is talking. Who is talking to you? Your self is talking to you. Now this man’s treatment [in Psalm 42] was this: instead of allowing this self to talk to him, he starts talking to himself. “Why art thou cast down, O my soul?” he asks. His soul had been depressing him, crushing him. So he stands up and says, “Self, listen for moment, I will speak to you.”
    Martyn Lloyd-Jones

  • #3
    D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
    “If your preaching of the gospel of God's free grace in Jesus Christ does not provoke the charge from some of antinomianism, you're not preaching the gospel of the free grace of God in Jesus Christ.”
    David Martyn Lloyd-Jones

  • #4
    D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
    “we must never look at any sin in our past life in any way except that which leads us to praise God and to magnify His grace in Christ Jesus.”
    D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Spiritual Depression: Its Causes and Cures

  • #5
    Thomas Watson
    “When you find a chillness upon your souls, and that your former heat begins to abate, ply yourselves with warm clothes, get those good books that may acquaint you with such truths as may warm and affect your hearts.”
    Thomas Watson

  • #6
    Thomas J. Watson Jr.
    “Would you like me to give you a formula for success? It's quite simple, really. Double your rate of failure.”
    Thomas J. Watson Jr.

  • #7
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    “Discipleship is not an offer that man makes to Christ.”
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship

  • #8
    Jonathan Edwards
    “God is the highest good of the reasonable creature. The enjoyment of him is our proper; and is the only happiness with which our souls can be satisfied. To go to heaven, fully to enjoy God, is infinitely better than the most pleasant accommodations here. Better than fathers and mothers, husbands, wives, or children, or the company of any, or all earthly friends. These are but shadows; but the enjoyment of God is the substance. These are but scattered beams; but God is the sun. These are but streams; but God is the fountain. These are but drops, but God is the ocean.”
    Jonathan Edwards, The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 17: Sermons and Discourses, 1730-1733

  • #9
    Jonathan Edwards
    “He that has doctrinal knowledge and speculation only, without affection, never is engaged in the business of religion.”
    Jonathan Edwards

  • #10
    Jonathan Edwards
    “God’s purpose for my life was that I have a passion for God’s glory and that I have a passion for my joy in that glory, and that these two are one passion.”
    Jonathan Edwards

  • #11
    Jonathan Edwards
    “If the heart be chiefly and directly fixed on God, and the soul engaged to glorify him, some degree of religious affection will be the effect and attendant of it. But to seek after affection directly and chiefly; to have the heart principally set upon that; is to place it in the room of God and his glory. If it be sought, that others may take notice of it, and admire us for our spirituality and forwardness in religion, it is then damnable pride; if for the sake of feeling the pleasure of being affected, it is then idolatry and self-gratification.”
    Jonathan Edwards, The Life and Diary of David Brainerd

  • #12
    Jonathan Edwards
    “Who will deny that true religion consists, in a great measure, in vigorous and lively actings of the inclination and will of the soul, or the fervent exercises of the heart? That religion which God requires, and will accept, does not consist in weak, dull, and lifeless, wishes, raising us but a little above a state of indifference. ”
    Jonathan Edwards

  • #13
    Jonathan Edwards
    “It does not answer the aim which God had in this institution, merely for men to have good commentaries and expositions on the Scripture, and other good books of divinity; because, although these may tend, as well as preaching, to give a good doctrinal or speculative understanding of the word of God, yet they have not an equal tendency to impress them on men's hearts and affections. God hath appointed a particular and lively application of his word, in the preaching of it, as a fit means to affect sinners with the importance of religion, their own misery, the necessity of a remedy, and the glory and sufficiency of a remedy provided; to stir up the pure minds of the saints, quicken their affections by often bringing the great things of religion in their remembrance, and setting them in their proper colours, though they know them, and have been fully instructed in them already. ”
    Jonathan Edwards

  • #14
    Charles Margrave Taylor
    “We define our identity always in dialogue with, sometimes in struggle against, the things our significant others want to see in us. Even after we outgrow some of these others—our parents, for instance—and they disappear from our lives, the conversation with them continues within us as long as we live.”
    Charles Taylor, Multiculturalism

  • #15
    C.S. Lewis
    “There was a boy called Eustace Clarence Scrubb, and he almost deserved it.”
    C.S. Lewis, The Voyage of the “Dawn Treader”

  • #16
    E.M. Bounds
    “Paul lived on his knees, that the Ephesian Church might measure the heights, breadths, and depths of an unmeasurable saintliness, and “be filled with all the fullness of God.”
    E.M. Bounds, Power Through Prayer

  • #17
    C.S. Lewis
    “I think we delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation. It is not out of compliment that lovers keep on telling one another how beautiful they are; the delight is incomplete till it is expressed. It is frustrating to have discovered a new author and not to be able to tell anyone how good he is; to come suddenly, at the turn of the road, upon some mountain valley of unexpected grandeur and then to have to keep silent because the people with you care for it no more than for a tin can in the ditch; to hear a good joke and find no one to share it with. . . . The Scotch catechism says that man’s chief end is ‘to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.’ But we shall then know that these are the same thing. Fully to enjoy is to glorify. In commanding us to glorify Him, God is inviting us to enjoy Him.”
    C.S. Lewis, Reflections on the Psalms



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