Grace: Its Truth...
Puritan Book Reviews
A wonderful book on what grace is,
and how it function sin different degrees in Christians all along the
road of salvation.
Grace: The Truth, Growth, and Different Degrees
by
Christopher Love
Soli Deo Gloria Publications, Morgan, PA: 1997.
173 Pages, Hardback
What
is grace? How do you know if you have grace?
Are you a Christian who exhibits fiery mountains of grace which
the Lord has poured within you, or are you simply a divine spark which
seems as though it is almost extinguished, but ever lives on glowing?
Love’s 15 sermons on 1 Kings 14:13 (“Because in him there is
found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel.”) demonstrates
the vast spectrum of degree of grace, and those motivations a necessary
works which cause that grace to grow from a spark into a flame.
Love
did not believe that God looked to His people to find some evil or
wicked thing in them, though He was aware of all their deeds.
Rather, He looked to them to see His Son shining through, to find
the sparks of holiness and godliness of grace which is the hallmark of
the salvation of Christ and the work of that salvation in the spirits of
His people through the Spirit. Love
shows that God looks for the good in His elect, and desires to fan the
sparks into bon-fires of God’s grace.
Love
covers the beginning of faith, and what that is; the notice of God’s
favor to any degree of faith; that all faith is faith, no matter how big
or small, if given to us by God; what the marks of a strong and true
Christian are; how temptations and grace mix together, and the war
between them; may men who have grace lack the comfort that the grace
often brings?; and many applications of the doctrine.
If you desire to be spiritually edified through a God-honoring,
Christ centered, and glorifying book, then Love’s book accomplishes
all of these and more. I was delighted to read, and reread this book as a litmus
test and help in personal examination towards godliness. Love’s style is so easy to understand, that though his
structure is puritanical (statement of the doctrine, explanation of the
doctrine, use of the doctrine) it is still effortlessly understood by
any reader from teen to adult, though it needs much in meditation to
warm the heart. I highly
recommended this for reading to gain personal edification and intimacy
with Christ.
Some
Quotes:
“Grace
is the best foundation for spiritual consolation.”
“It
pleases God to exercise His people with great afflictions and
temptations for the setting out of His own glorious attributes, and
magnifying of His own name.”
“Weak
Christians are all for easy and ordinary exercises, such as hearing and
reading good books, but a strong Christian is much in spiritual
watchfulness, secret prayer, frequent fasting, self-denial, heavenly
meditation, and such like duties as have a special influence upon the
mortification of sin and corruption.”
“And
that is the third demonstration of God’s tender care over His people,
that the meanest measure of grace shall not be deserted or forsaken
because God is the author of it.”
“The
least measure of grace is grace.”
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