Quiet Talks on John's Gospel by S. D. (Samuel Dickey) Gordon
page 77 of 225 (34%)
page 77 of 225 (34%)
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against the bricks, and leave the whole door-space wide for Him.
But I've learned better. No man wants to leave the doorway of his life unguarded. He must keep the strong hand of his controlling purpose on the knob of the front door of his life. There are others than He, evil ones, cunningly subtle ones, standing just at the corner watching for such an opportunity. And they step quickly slyly in under your untaught unsuspicious eyes, and get things badly tangled in your life. There's a better, a stronger way. Here's the personal translation that I try now, by His help, to work out into living words, the language of life. He comes to His own, and His own opens the door wide, and _holds_ it wide open, that He may come in all the way, and cleanse, and change, readjust, and then shape over on the shape of His own presence. But every one must work out his own translation of that; and every one does. And the crowd reads--not this printed version. It reads this other translation, the one nearest, in such big print, the one our lives work out daily. That's the translation they prefer. And that's the translation they're being influenced by, and influenced by tremendously. He Came to His Own. In certain circles in England, they tell of a certain physician years ago. He came of a very humble family. His father was a gardener on a gentleman's estate. And the father died. And the mother wasn't able to |
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