Showing posts with label Daniel Cawdrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Cawdrey. Show all posts

Daniel Cawdrey on the Law

Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: , | Posted On Tuesday, April 10, 2018 at 5:30 AM

"The law showeth unto us our sins, and maketh known unto us our miserable estate and wretchedness, and how that there is nothing good in us, and that we are far off from all manner of righteousness, and so driveth us of necessity to seek righteousness in Christ."

Daniel Cawdrey
(1588–1664)

Daniel Cawdrey on Affliction

Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: , | Posted On Tuesday, April 3, 2018 at 5:30 AM

"As the musician straineth his strings, and yet he breaketh none of them, but maketh thereby a sweeter melody and better concord; so God, through affliction makes His own better unto the fruition and enjoying of the life to come."

Daniel Cawdrey
(1588–1664)

Daniel Cawdrey on God's Wrath

Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: , | Posted On Tuesday, October 9, 2012 at 8:00 AM


"As we do not cease to hate a young wolf although that he hath not yet worried any sheep, or a young serpent, notwithstanding that it hath not yet cast forth its venom, but do judge them worthy of death because of the perverse nature that is in them: so ought we to esteem that God hath no less occasion to condemn us, even from our mother's womb, because of our perversity and natural malice engendered within us. And though the Lord should damn us eternally, He should do us no wrong, but only that which our nature deserveth; for although the young infant hath not yet done any work which we may judge to be evil, since he hath not yet the understanding or the power to do it, yet it followeth not therefore but that the perversity which is natural in man hath already its root in him as one part of his paternal inheritance, the which cannot please God; for although it bringeth not forth its fruits, yet they do remain still there, as in their root, which will bring them forth in its time—as the venom is already in a serpent, although he bite not, and the nature of a wolf in a young wolf, how harmless soever he seemeth to be,…."
Daniel Cawdrey
(1588–1664)

Daniel Cawdrey on Conscience

Posted by Antoinette Petersen | Labels: , | Posted On Thursday, March 8, 2012 at 9:00 AM

"Even as he who is troubled with a burning fever is hotter than he who is parched with the sun; so is that man more troubled who hath a guilty conscience than a good man by all outward afflictions."

~Daniel Cawdrey~

Daniel Cawdrey on Works

Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: , | Posted On Thursday, March 3, 2011 at 9:00 AM

“As the apple is not the cause of the apple tree, but a fruit of it; even so good works are not the cause of our salvation, but a sign and a fruit of the same.”

Daniel Cawdrey
(1588–1664)