31
All the prayers in the Scripture you will find to be reasoning with God, not a multitude of words heaped together.
- Stephen Charnock
30
It is a sad thing to be Christians at a supper, heathens in our shops, and devils in our closets.
- Stephen Charnock
29
In regard of God, patience is a submission to His sovereignty. To endure a trial, simply because we cannot avoid or resist it, is not Christian patience. But to humbly submit because it is the will of God to inflict the trial, to be silent because the sovereignty of God orders it - is true godly patience.
- Stephen Charnock
28
How comfortable it is to have One, day and night, before the throne to control the charge of our enemy, and the despondencies of our souls.
- Stephen Charnock
27
Without the heart it is not worship; it is a stage play; an acting a part without being that person really a hypocrite. We may truly be said to worship God-though we lack perfection; but we cannot be said to worship Him if we lack sincerity.
- Stephen Charnock
26
Self is the great antichrist and anti-God in the world, that sets up itself above all else.
- Stephen Charnock
24
What a curious workmanship is that of the eye, which is in the body, as the sun in the world; set in the head as in a watch-tower, having the softest nerves for receiving the greater multitude of spirits necessary for the act of vision!
- Stephen Charnock
23
We often learn more of God under the rod that strikes us than under the staff that comforts us.
- Stephen Charnock
22
A man may be theologically knowing and spiritually ignorant.
- Stephen Charnock
21
He [Christ] foresees all the ambushes of Satan, searches into his intention, understands his strategies, and is as ready to speak to the Father for us, as He was to turn back and look Peter into a recovery at the crowing of the cock.
- Stephen Charnock
20
Providence would seem to sleep unless faith and prayer awaken it. The disciples had but little faith in their Master's accounts, yet that little faith awakened him in a storm, and he relieved them. Unbelief doth only discourage God from showing his power in taking our parts.
- Stephen Charnock
19
It is the black work of an ungodly man or an atheist that God is not in all his thoughts. What comfort can be had in the being of God without thinking of him with reverence and delight? A God forgotten is as good as no God to us.
- Stephen Charnock
18
It is less injury to Him to deny His being, than to deny the purity of it; the one makes Him no God, the other a deformed, unlovely, and a detestable God. He that saith God is not holy speaks much worse that he that saith there is no God at all.
- Stephen Charnock
17
This boundless desire had not its original from man itself; nothing would render itself restless; something above the bounds of this world implanted those desires after a higher good, and made him restless in everything else. And since the soul can only rest is something infinite, there is something infinite for it to rest in.
- Stephen Charnock
16
Now what greater comfort is there than this, that there is one presides in the world who is so wise he cannot be mistaken, so faithful he cannot deceive, so pitiful he cannot neglect his people, and so powerful that he can make stones even to be turned into bread if he please!
- Stephen Charnock
15
If every attribute of the Deity were a distinct member, holiness would be the soul to animate them. Without holiness His patience would be an indulgence to sin, His mercy a fondness, His wrath a madness, His power a tyranny, His wisdom an unworthy subtlety. Holiness gives decorum to them all.
- Stephen Charnock
14
Since nothing but God is eternal, nothing but God is worth the loving.
- Stephen Charnock
13
The Devil accuses us when we fall, but he has not so much on his side as we have.
- Stephen Charnock
12
When we believe that we ought to be satisfied, rather than God glorified, we set God below ourselves, imagine that He should submit His own honor to our advantage; we make ourselves more glorious than God, as though we were not made for Him, but He made for us; this is to have a very low esteem of the majesty of God.
- Stephen Charnock
10
No man is an unbeliever, but because he will be so; and every man is not an unbeliever, because the grace of God conquers some, changes their wills, and binds them to Christ.
- Stephen Charnock
9
Without faith we are not fit to desire mercy, without humility we are not fit to receive it, without affection we are not fit to value it, without sincerity we are not fit to improve it. Times of extremity contribute to the growth and exercise of these qualifications.
- Stephen Charnock
8
Had it been published by a voice from heaven, that twelve poor men, taken out of boats and creeks, without any help of learning, should conquer the world to the cross, it might have been thought an illusion against all reason of men; yet we know it was undertaken and accomplished by them.
- Stephen Charnock
7
God doth not govern the world only by his will as an absolute monarch, but by his wisdom and goodness as a tender father. It is not his greatest pleasure to show his sovereign power, or his inconceivable wisdom, but his immense goodness, to which he makes the other attributes subservient.
- Stephen Charnock
6
God often lays the sum of His amazing providences in very dismal afflictions; as the limner first puts on the dusky colors, on which he intends to draw the portraiture of some illustrious beauty.
- Stephen Charnock
5
We may be truly said to worship God, though we lack perfection; but we cannot be said to worship Him if we lack sincerity.
- Stephen Charnock
4
Works make not the heart good, but a good heart makes the works good.
- Stephen Charnock
3
To pretend to homage to God, and intend only the advantage of self, is rather to mock Him than worship Him.
- Stephen Charnock
2
This little member can behold the earth, and in a moment view things as high as heaven.
- Stephen Charnock
1
Since therefore all things are ordered in subserviency to the good of man, they are so ordered by Him that made both man and them.
- Stephen Charnock