Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from November 13, 1995

WE GIVE THANKS-BUT TO WHOM?

It must be an odd feeling to be thankful to nobody in particular. Christians in public institutions often see this odd thing happening on Thanksgiving Day. Everyone in the institution seems to be thankful “in general.” It’s very strange. It’s a little like being married in general.

—Cornelius Plantinga, Jr., in “Assurances of the Heart”

THEOLOGY’S TOUGHEST BELIEF

All men matter. You matter. I matter. It’s the hardest thing in theology to believe.

—G. K. Chesterton in “The Father Brown Omnibus”

BETTER THAN E-MAIL

From the time when God became real to me, I knew that communicating with him—two way communication—was the most important thing in the world. To communicate with everyone else and be deaf and dumb to God is to turn our priorities upside down, isn’t it?

—David Winter in “Christian Classics in Modern English: Brother Lawrence’s Practicing the Presence of God”

RUNNING DRY

I believe that if we are to be and to do for others what God means us to be and to do, we must not let Adoration and Worship slip into second place, “For it is the central service asked by God of human souls; and its neglect is responsible for much lack of spiritual depth and power.” Perhaps we may find here the reason why we so often run dry. We do not give time enough to what makes for depth, and so we are shallow; a wind, quite a little wind, can ruffle our surface; a little hot sun, and all the moisture in us evaporates. It should not be so.

—Amy Carmichael in “Edges of His Ways”

VIOLENCE GOD APPROVES

You must violently resist the tides of the world. Violently give up all that holds you back from God. Violently turn your will over to God to do His will alone.

—Francois Fenelon in “The Seeking Heart”

SHEPHERDS OR MUTTON FARMERS?

Back when the sacred authors used the imagery of the shepherd to depict Jesus, they had a clear understanding of the job description.

A shepherd is needed only when there are no fences. He is someone who stays with his sheep at all cost, guiding, protecting, and walking with them through the fields. He’s not just a person who raises sheep.

Though our bishops consider themselves “tenders of the flock,” most are nothing more than mutton farmers. They build fence after fence, keeping the flock within sight so they don’t have to dirty their feet plodding through the open fields. After all, the landowner frowns upon dirty feet.

—Lena Wolter, quoted by Martin E. Marty in “Context” (Sept. 15, 1995)

GRACE GREATER THAN WE KNOW

Why do we call grace amazing? Grace is amazing because it works against the grain of common sense. Hard-nosed common sense will tell you that you are too wrong to meet the standards of a holy God; pardoning grace tells you that it’s all right in spite of so much in you that is wrong.

Realistic common sense tells you that you are too weak, too harassed, too human to change for the better; grace gives you power to send you on the way to being a better person.

Plain common sense may tell you that you are caught in a rut of fate or futility; grace promises that you can trust God to have a better tomorrow for you than the day you have made for yourself.

—Lewis Smedes in “How Can It Be All Right When Everything Is All Wrong?”

GRATITUDE IS ENRICHING

Gratitude is an offering precious in the sight of God, and it is one that the poorest of us can make and be not poorer but richer for having made it.

—A. W. Tozer in “Signposts”

GOOD NEWS CAN’T BE HIDDEN

Every Christian—as he explores the historical record of Scripture and tradition and comes to a deep, abiding faith—experiences that Christ is the risen one and that he is therefore the eternally living one. It is a deep, life-changing experience. No true Christian can keep it hidden as a personal matter. For such an encounter with the living God cries out to be shared-like the light that shines, like the yeast that leavens the whole mass of dough.

—Pope John Paul II in “Breakfast with the Pope”

Copyright © 1995 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Fifty Years with Billy, Part 2

Cover Story

A Workman That Needeth Not to Be Ashamed

News

News Briefs: November 13, 1995

Vietnam Missionary, Church Threats Continue

'Heal Our Land' Prayers in Russia Initiated

Marine Worries ID Is Satanic

Haircut Ordeal Messy for School

Ministry Fund Suit Appeal Filed

Religion Is Big News in Dallas

Tent Crusade Kicks Off Campaign

BOOKS: Worth Mentioning

CHARLES COLSON: Who Speaks for Leonard?

Empowering the Laity

Jury Awards $4.8 Million in Deprogramming Case

Academia Loses Interest in Excavations

Top Evangelicals Confer with Pope

Tentmaking Movement Puts Down Stakes

Farrakhan March Reveals "Psychological Apartheid"

A Christian Community Makes Waves, Not War

Principle or Pragmatism?

ARTS: Martha’s Angels

ARTS: A Brush with Prophecy

Cult Watchers Make Amends

To Hell on a Cream Puff

Graham's Smallest Audience

CONVERSATIONS: China’s Cross: Jonathan Chao

BOOKS: The Post-closet Era

BOOKS: Making It Strange

BOOKS: When Boomers Become CEOs

BOOKS: Jesus’ Women

Grace Under Fire

SIDEBAR: Billy’s Rib

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Can the Sheep Save Their Shepherds?

Editorial

EDITORIALS: Post-Simpson America

LETTERS: Life is Full of Odd Things

Against the Tide

God's Affirmative Justice

Tributes to Billy Graham

View issue

Our Latest

It’s Time to Make New Kingdom Friends

It’s not just God who is for us. We’re meant to be supported by a band of saints across dividing lines.

News

US Missionary Pilot Kidnapped in Niger

Local Nigerien missionaries are shocked and saddened; foreign workers there provide training, aid, and encouragement.

Who Are the Ismaili Muslims?

The history of this small Shiite sect includes assassinations, persecution, and periods of adherence to pluralism.

A Pastor Stood Up to Persecution in India. Christianity Spread.

“It is very scary out there. … But the Holy Spirit reminds [me] that ‘for when I am weak, then I am strong.’”

The Bulletin

JD Vance’s Interfaith Marriage, Fighting in Nigeria, Nick Fuentes Interview

Vance hopes his wife becomes a Christian, fighting continues in Nigeria, and Tucker Carlson interviews Nick Fuentes.

Excerpt

The ‘Whole Counsel of God’ Requires Seeking Justice—and Naming Sin

An excerpt from Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around on family history, gospel music, and the great Christian legacy of the Civil Rights Movement.

You Can Be a Christian and a Patriot

Daniel Darling calls believers to their political duty, no matter the chaos.

News

Trump’s Refugee Policy ‘Is Slamming the Door on Persecuted Christians’

Faith organizations hope the Trump administration will reverse course after the announcement of a historically low refugee ceiling.

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