Posted on Monday, October 6, 2014 by Samuel
John Flavel:
It is the great support and solace of the saints in all the distresses that befall them here, that there is a wise Spirit sitting in all the wheels of motion, and governing the most eccentric creatures and their most pernicious designs to blessed and happy issues.
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Filed under: Christianity, God, Grace, Providence, Sovereignty | Tagged: comfort, John Flavel | 1 Comment »
Posted on Thursday, August 21, 2014 by Samuel
John Flavel:
I think it is not very difficult to discern by the duties and conversations of Christians, what frames their spirits are under. Take a Christian in a good frame, and how serious, heavenly, and profitable, will his conversations and duties be! What a lovely companion is he during the continuance of it!
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Filed under: Christianity, Holiness, Samuel at Gilgal | Tagged: John Flavel | 2 Comments »
Posted on Monday, March 10, 2014 by Samuel
Quoting James Montgomery Boice:
[T]he greatest periods of faithful expository preaching were inevitably accompanied by the highest levels of sensitivity to the presence of God in worship and the greatest measure of concern for the cure of souls.
The Puritans are a great example, though one could cite the Reformation period or the age of the evangelical awakening in England as well. The Puritans abounded in the production of expository material. We think of the monumental productions of men like Richard Sibbes (1577-1635), Richard Baxter (1615-l691), John Owen (1616-1683), Thomas Watson (d. l686), John Flavel (1627-1691), Jonathan Edwards (1702-1758), and that later Puritan Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892). These men produced material so serious in its nature and so weighty in its content that few contemporary pastors are even up to reading it. Yet common people followed these addresses in former times and were moved by them. Worship services were characterized by a powerful sense of God’s presence, and those who did such preaching and led such services were no less concerned with the individual problems, temptations, and growth of those under their care. Who in recent years has produced a work on pastoral counseling to equal Baxter’s The Reformed Pastor (1656)? Who has analyzed the movement of God in individual lives as well as did Jonathan Edwards in A Narrative of Surprising Conversions (1737) and Religious Affections (1746) or Archibald Alexander in his Thoughts on Religious Experience (1844)? Questions like these should shake us out of self-satisfied complacency and show that we are actually conducting our pastoral care, worship, and preaching at a seriously lower level. (The Foundation of Biblical Authority, London & Glasgow: Pickering & Inglis, 1979, pp.123-143)
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Filed under: Charles H. Spurgeon, Christianity, Gospel, James Montgomery Boice, John Owen, Jonathan Edwards, Samuel at Gilgal, Thomas Watson | Tagged: John Flavel, Richard Baxter, Richard Sibbes | 1 Comment »
Posted on Friday, April 5, 2013 by Samuel
John Flavel:
Whatsoever we have over-loved, idolized, and leaned upon, God has from time to time broken it, and made us to see the vanity of it; so that we find the readiest course to be rid of our comforts is to set our hearts inordinately upon them.
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, God, Holiness, Providence, Quotes, Samuel at Gilgal, sin | Tagged: John Flavel | 2 Comments »
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2012 by Samuel
Quoting John Flavel:
“Oh, that I might live to see that day when professors [converts] shall not walk in vain show; when they shall please themselves no more with a name to live, being spiritually dead; when they shall no more (as many of them now are) be a company of frothy, vain, and unserious persons, but the majestic beams of holiness shining from their heavenly and serious conversation shall awe the world, and command reverence from all who are about them; when they shall warm the hearts of those who come nigh them, so that men shall say, ‘God is truly in these men!'”
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, Faith, God, Holiness, Living Life | Tagged: Christ, Father God, Holy Spirit, Jesus, John Flavel, Psalm, Religion and Spirituality, Ten Commandments, United States | 2 Comments »
Posted on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 by Samuel
Quoting John Flavel:
Christ is the very essence of all delights and pleasures, the very soul and substance of them. As all the rivers are gathered into the ocean, which is the meeting-place of all the waters in the world, so Christ is that ocean in which all true delights and pleasures meet.
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Grace, Jesus Christ | Tagged: Christianity, God, Jesus, John Flavel, Religion and Spirituality | Comments Off on Christ Is An Ocean Of True Delights
Posted on Sunday, October 9, 2011 by Samuel

James Montgomery Boice
Quoting James Montgomery Boice:
[T]he greatest periods of faithful expository preaching were inevitably accompanied by the highest levels of sensitivity to the presence of God in worship and the greatest measure of concern for the cure of souls.
The Puritans are a great example, though one could cite the Reformation period or the age of the evangelical awakening in England as well. The Puritans abounded in the production of expository material. We think of the monumental productions of men like Richard Sibbes (1577-1635), Richard Baxter (1615-l691), John Owen (1616-1683), Thomas Watson (d. l686), John Flavel (1627-1691), Jonathan Edwards (1702-1758), and that later Puritan Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892). These men produced material so serious in its nature and so weighty in its content that few contemporary pastors are even up to reading it. Yet common people followed these addresses in former times and were moved by them. Worship services were characterized by a powerful sense of God’s presence, and those who did such preaching and led such services were no less concerned with the individual problems, temptations, and growth of those under their care. Who in recent years has produced a work on pastoral counseling to equal Baxter’s The Reformed Pastor (1656)? Who has analyzed the movement of God in individual lives as well as did Jonathan Edwards in A Narrative of Surprising Conversions (1737) and Religious Affections (1746) or Archibald Alexander in his Thoughts on Religious Experience (1844)? Questions like these should shake us out of self-satisfied complacency and show that we are actually conducting our pastoral care, worship, and preaching at a seriously lower level. (The Foundation of Biblical Authority, London & Glasgow: Pickering & Inglis, 1979, pp.123-143)
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, Church Leadership, Faith, Holiness, Theology | Tagged: Charles Spurgeon, Foundation of Biblical Authority, James Montgomery Boice, John Flavel, Jonathan Edwards, Puritan, Richard Baxter, Richard Sibbes | Comments Off on The Preacher and Pastoral Care
Posted on Friday, September 30, 2011 by Samuel
Quoting George Swinnocke (1660):
“How wonderfully does the new born soul differ from his former self. He lives a new life, he walks in a new way, he steers his course by a new compass, and towards a new coast. His principle is new, his pattern is new, his practices are new, his projects are new, all is new. He ravels out all he had wove before, and employs himself wholly about another work.”
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, Faith, Grace, Holiness, Holy Spirit, Jesus Christ, Prayer | Tagged: Business and Economy, Carole Laure, Copenhagen Central Station, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Jesus, Jew, John Flavel, Judaism, Maurice Ravel, New King James Version, Puritan, Soul, Soul music, United States | Comments Off on The New Born Soul
Posted on Monday, June 27, 2011 by Samuel
Quoting John Flavel:
Whatsoever we have over-loved, idolized, and leaned upon, God has from time to time broken it, and made us to see the vanity of it; so that we find the readiest course to be rid of our comforts is to set our hearts inordinately upon them.
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Filed under: Christianity, Devotional, Holy Spirit, Jesus Christ, Living Life | Tagged: Bible, Britney Spears, Christianity, God, Jessica Biel, John Flavel, Justin Timberlake, Religion and Spirituality | Comments Off on Are Your Material Comforts Leading You Away From God?