Steve Stanley’s Reviews > A Quest for Godliness: The Puritan Vision of the Christian Life > Status Update
Steve Stanley
is on page 100 of 368
God will only prosper our study if we continually exercise ourselves to live by what we learn. . . . He who would interpret Scripture aright, therefore, must be a man of a reverent, humble, prayerful, teachable and obedient spirit; otherwise, however tightly his mind may be ‘stuffed with notions’, he will never reach any understanding of spiritual realities.
— Mar 20, 2026 06:54AM
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Steve Stanley
is on page 202 of 368
The thought of communion with God takes us to the very heart of Puritan theology and religion. . . . Thus, to the Puritans, communion between God and man is the end to which both creation and redemption are the means; it is the goal to which both theology and preaching must ever point; it is the essence of true religion; it is, indeed, the definition of Christianity. (201-22)
— Apr 04, 2026 08:39AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 199 of 368
Sanctification has a double aspect. Its positive side is vivification, the growing and maturing of the new man; its negative side is mortification, the weakening and killing of the old man.
— Apr 03, 2026 03:02PM
Steve Stanley
is on page 198 of 368
We must pray for help, and fight the good fight of faith in God’s strength, and give thanks to him for the victories we win.
— Apr 03, 2026 02:58PM
Steve Stanley
is on page 198 of 368
God's purpose for the Christian during his life on earth is sanctification. So said Calvin; so says Owen; and so says Holy Scripture (1 Thess. 4:3; 1 Peter 1:15f).
— Apr 03, 2026 02:51PM
Steve Stanley
is on page 174 of 368
The gospel of Christ, as the Puritans understood it, specifies that faith must express itself in a life of continual contrition, confession, and conversion. Without these habits of the heart there is no genuine repentance, and where there is no genuine repentance there is no genuine faith either.
— Mar 27, 2026 01:14PM
Steve Stanley
is on page 141 of 368
The question of the extent of the atonement does not arise in evangelistic preaching; the message to be delivered is simply this—that Christ Jesus, the sovereign Lord, who died for sinners, now invites sinners freely to himself. God commands all to repent and believe; Christ promises life and peace to all who do so.
— Mar 26, 2026 06:15AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 117 of 368
Whence comes the skill to apply God’s truth appropriately in preaching? From the experience of having God apply his truth powerfully to oneself.
— Mar 21, 2026 11:40AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 116 of 368
The healthy Christian...has a sense of God’s presence stamped deep on his soul, who trembles at God’s word, who lets it dwell in him richly by constant meditation upon it, and who tests and reforms his life daily in response to it. We can begin to assess our real state in God’s sight by asking ourselves how much exercise of conscience along these lines goes into our own daily thinking.
— Mar 21, 2026 11:37AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 114 of 368
Because of their concern for preciseness in following out God’s revealed will in matters moral and ecclesiastical, the first Puritans were dubbed ‘precisians.’ . . . the local lord of the manor . . . asked [Richard Rogers] what it was that made him *so precise*. ‘O sir,’ replied Rogers, ‘I serve a *precise God*.' If there were such a thing as a Puritan crest, this would be its proper motto.
— Mar 21, 2026 08:12AM
