"But there are conditions to our prayers also: 'if I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me.'"
"The Scriptures affirm that we must live on the promises."
"They are indeed the very aliment of the Christian life. But what are the promises?"
"Free pardon and eternal life to them that are in Christ Jesus."
"True. But who are they that are in Christ Jesus? The apostle tells us, 'they who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit.' Besides, is not holiness promised as well as pardon? 'A new heart will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you.'"
"Surely, Stanley, you abuse the grace of the gospel, by pretending that man is saved by his own righteousness."
"No, no, my dear Tyrrel, it is you who abuse it, by making God's mercy set aside man's duty. Allow me to observe, that he who exalts the grace of God with a view to indulge himself in any sin, is deceiving no one but himself; and he who trusts in Christ, with a view to spare himself the necessity of watchfulness, humility, and self-denial, that man depends upon Christ for more than he has promised."
"Well, Mr. Stanley, it appears to me that you want to patch up a convenient accommodating religion, as if Christ were to do a little, and we were to do the rest; a sort of partnership salvation, and in which man has the larger share."
"This, I fear, is indeed the dangerous creed of many worldly Christians. No; God may be said to do all, because he gives power for all, strength for all, grace for all. But this grace, is a principle, a vital energy, a life-giving spirit to quicken us, to make us abound in holiness. He does not make his grace abound, that we may securely live in sin, but that we may subdue it, renounce it, live above it."
"When our Saviour was upon earth, there was no one quality he so uniformly commended in those who came to be healed by him, as faith."