« All Enter Quotes · Charles Spurgeon's Page
Enter Quotes by Charles Spurgeon
- No matter how good you think yourself to be, you cannot enter heaven unless it is under the terms of sovereign grace.
- Avoid a sugared gospel as you would shun sugar of lead. Seek the gospel which rips up and tears and cuts and wounds and hacks…
- O What A Freedom Is Thine! Freedom from Condemnation. Freedom to the Promises, Freedom to the Throne of Grace, and at last Freedom to Enter…
- Self-righteousness exclaims, "I will not be saved in God's way; I will make a new road to heaven; I will not bow before God's grace;…
- If He had not known with certainty that He would be Master over sin and that out of evil would evolve the noblest display of…
More Enter Quotes
- Hemingway is terribly limited. His technique is good for short stories, for people who meet once in a bar very late at… — Wystan Hugh Auden
- Drug prohibition has caused gang warfare and other violent crimes by raising the prices of drugs so much that vicious criminals enter… — Michael Badnarik
- You're creating a different world and the actor's job is to be able to convince the audience to enter into that world,… — Christian Bale
- Unlike 'real relationships', 'virtual relationships' are easy to enter and to exit. They look smart and clean, feel easy to use, when… — Zygmunt Bauman
- Your own mind is a sacred enclosure into which nothing harmful can enter except by your permission. — Arnold Bennett
- Put off your imagination, as you put off your overcoat, when you enter the laboratory. Put it on again, as you put… — Claude Bernard
- I found Spotted Tail's lodge. He invited me to enter. — Buffalo Bill
- Doctoral training is devoted almost entirely to learning to do research, even though most Ph.Ds who enter academic life spend far more… — Derek Bok
- Make no mistake, most women are well aware that they've never had it so good; when they enter a spa or salon,… — Julie Burchill
- Before a group can enter the open society, it must first close ranks. — Stokely Carmichael
- All hope abandon, ye who enter here! — Dante Alighieri
- After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, the United States would enter, in a formal way, what had been up… — John Henrik Clarke