Expositions of Holy Scripture - Collected Sermons. Alexander Maclaren

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Название Expositions of Holy Scripture - Collected Sermons
Автор произведения Alexander Maclaren
Жанр Философия
Серия
Издательство Философия
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066396626



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EVERMORE

       HOW TO OBEY AN IMPOSSIBLE INJUNCTION

       THE WARRIOR PEACE

       THINK ON THESE THINGS

       HOW TO SAY 'THANK YOU'

       GIFTS GIVEN, SEED SOWN

       FAREWELL WORDS

       COLOSSIANS

       SAINTS, BELIEVERS, BRETHREN

       THE GOSPEL-HOPE

       'ALL POWER'

       THANKFUL FOR INHERITANCE

       CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOUR

       CHRISTIAN PROGRESS

       RISEN WITH CHRIST

       RISEN WITH CHRIST

       WITHOUT AND WITHIN

       I. THESSALONIANS

       FAITH, LOVE, HOPE, AND THEIR FRUITS

       GOD'S TRUMPET

       WALKING WORTHILY

       SMALL DUTIES AND THE GREAT HOPE

       SLEEPING THROUGH JESUS

       THE WORK AND ARMOUR OF THE CHILDREN OF THE DAY

       WAKING AND SLEEPING

       EDIFICATION

       CONTINUAL PRAYER AND ITS EFFECTS

       PAUL'S EARLIEST TEACHING

       II. THESSALONIANS

       CHRIST GLORIFIED IN GLORIFIED MEN

       WORTHY OF YOUR CALLING

       EVERLASTING CONSOLATION AND GOOD HOPE

       THE HEART'S HOME AND GUIDE

       THE LORD OF PEACE AND THE PEACE OF THE LORD

       I. TIMOTHY

       THE END OF THE COMMANDMENT

       'THE GOSPEL OF THE GLORY OF THE HAPPY GOD'

       THE GOSPEL IN SMALL

       THE CHIEF OF SINNERS

       A TEST CASE

       THE GLORY OF THE KING

       WHERE AND HOW TO PRAY

       SPIRITUAL ATHLETICS

       ONE WITNESS, MANY CONFESSORS

       THE CONDUCT THAT SECURES THE REAL LIFE

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Having therefore these promises … let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.'—2 Cor. vii. 1.

      It is often made a charge against professing Christians that their religion has very little to do with common morality. The taunt has sharpened multitudes of gibes and been echoed in all sorts of tones: it is very often too true and perfectly just, but if ever it is, let it be distinctly understood that it is not so because of Christian men's religion but in spite of it. Their bitterest enemy does not condemn them half so emphatically as their own religion does: the sharpest censure of others is not so sharp as the rebukes of the New Testament. If there is one thing which it insists upon more than another, it is that religion without morality is nothing—that the one test to which, after all, every man must submit is, what sort of character has he and how has he behaved—is he pure or foul? All high-flown pretension, all fervid emotion has at last to face the question which little children ask, 'Was he a good man?'

      The Apostle has been speaking about very high and mystical truths, about all Christians being the temple of God, about God dwelling in men, about men and women being His sons and daughters; these are the very truths on which so often fervid imaginations have built up a mystical piety that had little to do with the common rules of right and wrong. But Paul keeps true to the intensely practical purpose of his preaching and brings his heroes down to the prosaic earth with the homely common sense of