Meditate on the Word in the Word.

The seed of every sin is in every heart.

Be killing sin or it will be killing you.

Leanness of body and soul may go together.

When sin lets us alone we may let sin alone.

I did not hear what I should have listened to.

There is no death of sin without the death of Christ.

Faith, if it be a living faith, will be a working faith.

If we do not abide in prayer, we will abide in temptation.

It is truth alone that capacitates any soul to glorify God.

He who prays as he ought will endeavor to live as he prays.

There is no true gospel fruit without faith and repentance.

Sin is never less quiet than when it seems to be most quiet.

Christ so loves his people that he sings with joy over them.

Christ's blood is the great sovereign remedy for sin-sick souls.

If Scripture has more than one meaning, it has no meaning at all.

Nothing shall be lost that is done for God or in obedience to Him.

He that hath slight thoughts of sin, never had great thoughts of God.

Christ greatly delights in his people and they greatly delight in him

After hearing the evidence, I will record a verdict of natural causes.

If we believe not with faith divine and supernatural, we believe not at all.

That wisdom which cannot teach me that God is love, shall ever pass for folly.

Fill your affections with the cross of Christ that there may be no room for sin.

Sin will be always acting, if we be not always mortifying, we are lost creatures.

If the Word does not dwell with power in us, it will not pass with power from us.

It is evident that you contend against sin merely because of how it troubles you.

We ought as much to pray for a blessing upon our daily rod as upon our daily bread.

There is a state of perfect peace with God to be attained under imperfect obedience.

All thing I thought I knew; but now confess, the more I know I know, I know the less.

All things I thought I knew; but now confess The more I know, I know, I know the less.

The most tremendous judgment of God in this world is the hardening of the hearts of men.

Unless men see a beauty and delight in the worship of God, they will not do it willingly.

The root of an unmortified course is the digestion of sin without bitterness in the heart.

To those to whom Christ is the hope of future glory, he is also the life of present grace.

We must not be concerned only with that which troubles us, but with all that troubles God.

All attempts, then, for mortification of any lust, without an interest in Christ, are vain.

Mortification is the soul's vigorous opposition to self, wherein sincerity is most evident.

Temptations and occasions put nothing into a man, but only draw out what was in him before.

It is often those who are despised and trampled on that bear up the weight of a whole nation.

Selfishness is the making a man's self his own centre, the beginning and end of all he doeth.

We can have no power from Christ unless we live in a persuasion that we have none of our own.

There wanted not some beams of light to guide men in the exercise of their Stocastick faculty.

The first and principal duty of a pastor is to feed the flock by diligent preaching of the word

Indwelling sin always abides whilst we are in this world; therefore it is always to be mortified.

I wish thy lot, now bad, still worse, my friend, for when at worst, they say, things always mend.

The least grace is a better security for heaven than the greatest gifts or privileges whatsoever.

Temptation gains power by persistent solicitations that beget thoughts that make evil less serious

Before the work of grace the heart is ‘stony.’ It can do no more than a stone can do to please God.

The custom of sinning takes away the sense of it, the course of the world takes away the shame of it.

All other ways of mortification are vain, all helps leave us helpless; it must be done by the Spirit.

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