All over the world God is opening doors of opportunity, making it possible for us to take the Gospel to millions who have never heard of Christ.
~ Billy Graham
The greatest tribute a boy can give to his father is to say, “When I grow up, I want to be just like my dad.” It is a convicting responsibility for us fathers and grandfathers.
In searching for ways to bridge the generation gap, there is no doubt that we, as parents, will have to practice what we preach, by striving more to bring our conduct into line with our code of beliefs.
If ever we needed to put the Golden Rule into action, it’s with our aging parents.
Although the testimony of my mother’s life helped mold me and taught me how to live, the testimony of her last years and her death gave me insight into how to die.
What a comfort it was for me to know that no matter where I was in the world, my mother was praying for me.
If God gives you responsibility for aging parents, seek what is best for them, not what is most convenient for you. And keep contact with them!
Parents have bought into the world’s pastimes chock-full of pop culture, and it is searing the souls of our children. Parents have allowed electronic babysitters to infiltrate their homes and minds; young people’s sense of right and wrong is being choked by wild and rank weeds in a moral wasteland.
Only God Himself fully appreciates the influence of a Christian mother in the molding of character in her children.
The influence of a mother upon the lives of her children cannot be measured. They know and absorb her example and attitudes when it comes to questions of honesty, temperance, kindness, and industry.
Many parents preach to their children but do not set good examples. Parents want the children to do as they say, not as they do.
Parenting is the most important responsibility most of us will ever face, and none of us does it perfectly.
My father-in-law . . . was a great inspiration to me both in life and in his preparation for death.
What a blessing it is for parents to believe in their children.
Parents, pray that God may crown your home with grace and mercy.
Jesus worked all His life. But the greatest work that Jesus did was not in the carpenter’s shop . . .His greatest work was achieved in those three dark hours on Calvary . . . dying for us.
Calloused hands were the badge of the pioneer, while furrowed brows are the insignia of modern man.
[Every] believer will receive a reward for his works. The New Testament teaches these rewards are called “crowns.” We will surely be surprised to note who receives the crowns and who doesn’t. The lowliest servant may sparkle with more jewels than the philanthropist who endowed the church and whose name is engraved on the plaque in the narthex.
Work isn’t only earning a living, work gives us a sense of purpose and worth and opportunities for companionship.
One of the Christian’s responsibilities in following Christ is to have a new attitude toward work. So many young people want Christ without responsibility . . . whatever work a Christian does . . . he should do his best.
Think of working forever at something you love to do, for [the] one you love with all your heart, and never getting tired! We will never know weariness in heaven.
God did not intend for us to be idle and unproductive. There is dignity in work.
Both my parents had a great influence on me. I never heard my father use a profane or even a slang word. I always respected him because of his complete integrity. In his business dealings his handshake was like a contract. He was as good as his word. Of all the people I have ever known, my mother had the greatest influence on me.
Society has become so obsessed with sex that it seeps from all the pores of our national life.
In the face of legalized pornography, the conscience of America seems to be paralyzed. More serious than our fakery in art, literature, and pictures is the collapse of our moral standards and the blunting of our capacity as a nation for righteous indignation.
The word lust [can] mean “selfish desire.” . . .It is wanting something so badly you will do anything to get it. That is one of the tricks of the devil. It is too high a price to pay.
It is a source of encouragement that many homosexuals report being transformed through the power of the Gospel.
No matter how we may rationalize the practice [of homosexuality] . . . Romans 1 makes it clearly the product of a reprobate mind . . .I am not exonerating all heterosexual activity . . . When we come to Christ, we are called upon to repent of our sins and no longer to practice the ungodly patterns of living.
God has not changed. His laws have not changed. He is still a God of love and mercy But He is also a God of righteousness and judgment.
God is sending forth His message of love, but you must tune in. You must be willing to listen and to receive His message and then to obey it.
Don’t make the mistake of thinking that because God is love everything is going to be sweet, beautiful, and happy and that no one will be punished for his sins . . . God’s love provided the cross of Jesus, by which we can have forgiveness and cleansing.
A God of love must be a God of justice. It is because God loves that He is just. His justice balances His love and makes His acts of bothlove and justice meaningful.
God could not consistently love men if He did not provide for the judgment of evildoers.
[The] love of God that reaches to wherever man is, can be entirely rejected. God will not force Himself upon anyone against his will. It is your part to believe. It is your part to receive. Nobody else can do it for you.
God’s love is unchangeable, He knows exactly what we are and loves us anyway.
God’s love did not begin at the cross. It began in eternity before the world was established, before the time clock of civilization began to move.
It was God’s love which knew that men were incapable of obeying His law, and it was His love which promised a Redeemer, a Savior, who would save His people from their sins.
No one can grasp the love of the God of the universe without knowing His Son.
Speak about the love of God and faces light up, but speak of God as a Judge, and our attitudes change.
There is one thing God’s love cannot do. It cannot forgive the unrepentant sinner.