Best quotes by Edward McKendree Bounds on God

Checkout quotes by Edward McKendree Bounds on God

  • It must never be forgotten that Almighty God rules this world. He is not an absentee God.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • The life-giving preacher is a man of God, whose heart is ever athirst for God, whose soul is ever following hard after God, whose eye is single to God, and in whom by the power of God's Spirit the flesh and the world have been crucified, and his ministry is like the generous flood of a life-giving river.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Prayer is a specific divine appointment, an ordinance of Heaven, whereby God purposes to carry out His gracious designs on earth and to execute and make efficient the plan of salvation.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • It is only when the whole heart is gripped with the passion of prayer that the life-giving fire descends, for none but the earnest man gets access to the ear of God.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • The Bible nowhere enters into an argument to prove the person and being of God. It assumes His being and reveals His person and character.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Every preacher who does not make prayer a mighty factor in his own life and ministry is weak as a factor in God's work and is powerless to project God's cause in this world.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Preaching is God's great institution for the planting and maturing of spiritual life. When properly executed, its benefits are untold; when wrongly executed, no evil can exceed its damaging results.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Faith accepts the Bible as the word and will of God and rests upon its truth without question and without other evidence.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Man's access in prayer to God opens everything and makes his impoverishment his wealth. All things are his through prayer.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Faith can make no appeal to reason or the fitness of things; its appeal is to the Word of God, and whatever is therein revealed, faith accepts as true.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Christianity is not rationalism, but faith in God's revelation. A conspicuous, all-important item in that revelation is the resurrection of the body.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • God's plan is to make much of the man, far more of him than of anything else. Men are God's method. The Church is looking for better methods; God is looking for better men.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • The character as well as the fortunes of the gospel is committed to the preacher. He makes or mars the message from God to man. The preacher is the golden pipe through which the divine oil flows.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • We may excuse the spiritual poverty of our preaching in many ways, but the true secret will be found in the lack of urgent prayer for God's presence in the power of the Holy Spirit.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • The preachers who gain mighty results for God are the men who have prevailed in their pleadings with God ere venturing to plead with men.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • When we say that prayer puts God to work, it is simply to say that man has it in his power by prayer to move God to work in His own way among men, in which way He would not work if prayer was not made.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • If prayer puts God to work on earth, then, by the same token, prayerlessness rules God out of the world's affairs and prevents Him from working.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Prayer lays hold upon God and influences Him to work. This is the meaning of prayer as it concerns God. This is the doctrine of prayer, or else there is nothing whatever in prayer.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Nothing is more important to God than prayer in dealing with mankind. But it is likewise all-important to man to pray.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Prayer concerns God, whose purposes and plans are conditioned on prayer. His will and His glory are bound up in praying.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • While the pulpit must hold to its unswerving loyalty to the Word of God, it must, at the same time, be loyal to the doctrine of prayer which that same Word illustrates and enforces upon mankind.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • In doing God's work, there is no substitute for praying. The men of prayer cannot be displaced with other kinds of men.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • The men to whom Jesus Christ committed the fortunes and destiny of His Church were men of prayer. To no other kind of men has God ever committed Himself in this world.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Men of prayer, before anything else, are indispensable to the furtherance of the kingdom of God on earth. No other sort will fit in the scheme or do the deed. Men, great and influential in other things but small in prayer, cannot do the work Almighty God has set out for His Church to do in this, His world.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • In all God's plans for human redemption, He proposes that men pray. The men are to pray in every place, in the church, in the closet, in the home, on sacred days and on secular days.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • Praying men are God's agents on earth, the representative of government of Heaven, set to a specific task on the earth.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds
  • We are feeble, weak and impoverished because of our failure to pray. God is restrained in doing because we are restrained by reason of our non-praying. All failures in securing heaven are traceable to lack of prayer or misdirected petition.
    - Edward McKendree Bounds