Quotes about Newness
You can't buy wisdom. You can't get it by hard work or lots of experience. No, wisdom is the result of rescue and relationship. To be wise, you first need to be rescued from you. You need to be given a new heart, one that is needy, humble, seeking, and ready to get from above what you can't find on this earth. And then you need to be brought into a relationship with the One who is wisdom.
— Paul David Tripp
Paul believed, in fact, that Jesus had gone through death and out the other side. Jesus had gone into a new mode of physicality, for which there was no precedent and of which there was, as yet, no other example.
— NT Wright
Love is ever new because it never groweth old.
— St. Augustine
God's mercies are new every morning. Receive them.
— Max Lucado
You can only come to the morning through the shadows.
— JRR Tolkien
We aren't condemning good works. People first have to be made ready to do good works by being born anew. Only
— Martin Luther
Follow me, Jesus said to the first disciples; because in him the living God was doing a new thing, and the list of 'wonderful news' is part of his invitation, part of his summons, part of his way of saying that God is at work in a fresh way and the this is what it looks like. Jesus is beginning a new era for God's people and God's world.
— NT Wright
A man becomes a Christian, he is not born one.
— Tertullian
The old, old gospel is the newest thing in the world; in its very essence it is for ever good news.
— Charles Spurgeon
It is the will of God that we live not only as rational beings, but as 'new men' regenerated by the Holy Spirit in Christ. It is His will that we reach out for our inheritance, that we answer His call to be His sons. We are born men without our consent, but the consent to be sons of God has to be elicited by our own free will.
— Thomas Merton
the radically new thing God did was nevertheless the thing he'd always promised
— NT Wright
We are all trophies of God's grace, some more dramatically than others; Jesus came for the sick and not the well, for the sinner and not the righteous. He came to redeem and transform, to make all things new. May you go forth more committed than ever to nourish the souls who you touch, those tender lives who have sustained the enormous assaults of the universe. (pp.88)
— Philip Yancey