![]() ![]() Nobody doubts that grace saved all through but for more than a dozen centuries where is there a single sentence which proclaims salvation as the apostles once taught and all saints enjoyed? Even redemption in any adequate conception of it had quickly faded away, before men had to contend for the truth of Christ's person or the Holy Ghost. It is needless to say that it would be vain to look for aught better, or as good, in the middle ages, or among the Fathers. But the calling and the inheritance of saints, the purposes of God for the glory of God in Christ, never fully dawned on evangelical hearts, any more than on Puritans, or even the Reformers that preceded. The evangelical revival, whether of Wesley or of Whitfield, or outside the borders of either, was a pious reaction, which insisted on the new birth and earnestness on behalf of perishing souls, from the cold ethics and formality, if not deism, of the century before. There was not even the consciousness of the true deliverance and heavenly associations of the christian. ![]() There was no real faith in the presence of the Spirit, no looking for His free action in the assembly, no expression of the one body of Christ, nor even sense of the church's ruin-state, any more than really waiting for God's Son from heaven. Evangelical men were at a manifestly low ebb, even the most devoted of them betraying their ignorance of church or even christian privilege by periodical gatherings for prayer that the Holy Spirit might be once more shed on souls, and meanwhile eagerly forming societies to do thus anomalously the work which was the common responsibility of God's church. Nor did Satan delay to set up counterfeits, so as to bring the discredit of heterodoxy and evils of various other kinds on the recovered hope. When it pleased God of late to awaken the slumbering virgins by the midnight cry, not only were the wise roused, but the foolish. )Ĭhapter 1 - Introduction and Early History.Ĭhapter 3 - Closing Sketch and Conclusion of the History The Catholic Apostolic Body, or Irvingites.
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