[1] See more at:
http://str.typepad.com/weblog/2013/12/we-expect-to-be-christians-without-study.html#sthash.oR4egZXw.dpuf
Throughout history and wherever you are, full nets, fruitfulness, and effective ministry comes from realizing, "It is the Lord!" The purpose of the "It is the Lord!" blog is to encourage and edify those in ministry through Biblical teaching and discussion.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
We Expect to Be Christians without Study from A Practical View of Christianity, by William Wilberforce
“[I]f, when summoned to give an account of our stewardship,
we shall be called upon to answer for the use which we have made of our bodily
organs, and of the means of relieving the wants and necessities of our
fellow-creatures; how much more for the exercise of the nobler and more exalted
faculties of our nature, of invention, and judgment, and memory, and for our
employment of all the instruments and opportunities of diligent application,
and serious reflection, and honest decision. And to what subject might we in
all reason be expected to apply more earnestly, than to that wherein our
eternal interests are at issue? When God has of his goodness vouchsafed
[deigned] to grant us such abundant means of instruction in that which we are
most concerned to know, how great must be the guilt, and how awful the
punishment of voluntary ignorance! And why, it may be asked, are we in this
pursuit alone to expect knowledge without inquiry, and success without
endeavor? The whole analogy of nature inculcates on us a different lesson, and
our own judgments in matters of temporal interest and worldly policy confirm
the truth of her suggestions. Bountiful as is the hand of Providence, its gifts
are not so bestowed as to seduce us into indolence, but to rouse us to
exertion; and no one expects to attain to the height of learning, or arts, or
power, or wealth, or military glory, without vigorous resolution, and strenuous
diligence, and steady perseverance. Yet we expect to be Christians without
labor, study, or inquiry. This is the more preposterous, because Christianity,
being a revelation from God, and not the invention of man, discovering to us
new relations, with their correspondent duties; containing also doctrines, and
motives, and practical principles, and rules, peculiar to itself, and almost as
new in their nature as supreme in their excellence, we cannot reasonably expect
to become proficient in it by the accidental intercourses of life, as one might
learn insensibly the maxims of worldly policy, or a scheme of mere morals.” [1]
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