3.19.2018

Chapter 19 Holiness

Welcome to the 19th week of reading the book Holiness.
This week's chapter is "Wants of the Times"

I want to encourage you to continue reading this great book 
or to start reading it today.

For general info about the reading schedule go to 

Here are the questions for this seventeenth chapter.

GENERAL (Questions for each chapter)

1.  What is a quote or two from Chapter 19 that stood out to you?

2.  What was something this chapter said about God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit?

3. What was something this chapter said about man?

4.  What was something this chapter said about how a Christian is to live?  
Think general and specific applications.

SPECIFIC (Questions specific to this chapter)

5.  After reading this chapter, what is something you need to do because God has ordained you to live in this specific time?


FINAL QUESTION
6.  What is the most significant thing that you learned from this chapter?

1 comment:

Drodgersjr said...

1. "Spiritual prosperity depends immensely on our private religion and private religion cannot nourish unless we determine that by God's help we will make time, whatever trouble it may cost us for thought, prayer, Bible and private communion with Christ."

2. "Nothing can explain [Christianity's lasting legacy] but the great foundation principle of revealed religion, that Jesu Christ is God and His Gospel is all true."

3. "The man who is content to sit ignorantly by his own fireside, wrapped up in his own private affairs, and has no public eye for what is going on in the church and the world, is a miserable patriot and a poor style of Christian. Not to our Bibles and our hearts, study the times."

4. "When you cannot answer a skeptic be content to wait for more light but never forsake a great principle."
- I need to prayerfully put myself in places to have conversations with skeptics.

5. I need to be more diligent in my Bible reading and encourage others to do the same.

6. I need to be sure my love for public religion doesn't exceed my desire for private religion