To be near unto God - pagina 191
places the utterance of tenderest piety that seeks after God, and finds him, and is aglow with warmest love for him; can not do without him; of itself thinks of him; is continually busy with him; and directs evers^ utterance of the soul to him and to him alone. And in this love there is a knowled ...
To be near unto God - pagina 192
foreground as the first and great commandment. is less complaint in the Bible about lack of brotherly love than about forgetfulness of God. The Apostle shows that this was no Jewish exaggeration, when in his epistle to the Romans he reiterates the bitter complaint of the Psalmist that: "There is ...
To be near unto God - pagina 193
protest? Not at all. On the contrary, in the course of an ordinary hfetime the faith has been abandoned in ever widening circles, and there is almost no more shame now in being credited with atheism. Even this is nothing new. The selfsame condition prevailed in Israel in the days of its spiritual ...
To be near unto God - pagina 194
never inspire us when it concerns the ever Blessed One. Here another kind of love is required. A love which springs from the perception that we belong with God by reason of our origin and manner of existence; that we are his creatures; and that therefore we can have no reason for being,no ...
To be near unto God - pagina 195
be not hindered. You feel this yourself when you want to pray, and cannot, because of the things that stand between you and God. Your thoughts, inclinations and feelings must first be detached from them all. They must be driven out from the mind. And then God comes back to you, and you can pray a ...
To be near unto God - pagina 196
Then it becomes the shamefacedness of the thief, who returns what he had stolen and makes no boast of merit; but prays to be forgiven. This is what the prophet calls "to lay God upon the heart." Love is a tender, touching emotion, which needs symbols. This gave rise in olden times to the custom a ...
To be near unto God - pagina 199
mthe love, then was the degree of tenderness conand how long did this exaltation of soul us become tinue? More yet, how often did it And suppose we have a thirsting after God? days come thus far, not every day, but most Uod how far distant are we even then from loymg our and all with all t ...
To be near unto God - pagina 197
37"WITHALL."The commandment bor as ourselvesisthat ^.e shall love our neighso strongly emphasized in these the rank and file of people thedays, that among and great commandment is more and more forgotten. That it is everyone's calling first of all not onl ...
To be near unto God - pagina 198
this love for God upon the conscience of his hearers, with such warmth and eloquence, that the whole congregation would be impressed with his tender devotion to God, and would be inspired by his zeal to such a degree as to be itself revived in its love for God, with the board of ofl&cials in ...
To be near unto God - pagina 201
the love of God has come first, and that with all our imperfections and shortcomings it has been our deepest desire and will to have God's love be our supremest inspiration, and that it has prepared us for what is highest and best. And this is the mystery of being a Christian, that as we hide our ...