This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1882 Excerpt: ...after holiness, if left to earn heaven for themselves, than if invited to accept it as a gift. But on second thoughts this will not be found so. 1. Look at the covenant of works. As it requires perfect obedience without containing any provision for pardon, mediation, or escape, to the offender of any one of its ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1882 Excerpt: ...after holiness, if left to earn heaven for themselves, than if invited to accept it as a gift. But on second thoughts this will not be found so. 1. Look at the covenant of works. As it requires perfect obedience without containing any provision for pardon, mediation, or escape, to the offender of any one of its precepts, will it not produce despair and even recklessness to fallen beings, in whom there is a tendency to sin, and a decay in all die powers of resistance, and who at the best can only give an imperfect obedience, which is of no avail? Such is the constitution of our nature, that the prospect of success is indispensable for vigour and exertion. Place me, therefore, under a covenant of works--shut out from me all notices of a surety and Redeemer---read me that, by keeping them, I may insure myself a blessed immortality--and I shall either fold my arms in inactivity, or resign myself to my sinfulness. Why mortify imperious desires, why deny craving appetites, in the face of a moral certainty that I could not come up to what the law commanded, and that, if I failed, I was irretrievably condemned? No--there must be some provision in the case of failure; else will there never be any effort to obey. There must be room for second thoughts, room for repentance; otherwise will the law, with all its rewards, be set at nought, as unadapted to the beings on whom it is imposed. 2. Look at the covenant of grace, (a) There is an energy of motive of the most powerful character. There is more--immeasurably more--in the fact that Christ died for me (more, we mean, to lead to the hatred of sin and the striving after holiness), than in a thousand statute books with multiplied enactments and many rewards. Only let this fact seat itself in the soul, and it must excite ...
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Add this copy of The Expositor's Commentary on St Paul's Epistle to the to cart. $73.86, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2015 by Arkose Press.