Out of 100 men, one will read the Bible, the other 99 will read the Christian.
DWIGHT L. MOODYIn our prayers, we talk to God, in our Bible study, God talks to us, and we had better let God do most of the talking.
More Dwight L. Moody Quotes
-
-
My friends, if we are going to do a great work for God, we must spend much time in prayer; we have got to be closeted with God.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
God doesn’t seek for golden vessels, and does not ask for silver ones, but He must have clean ones.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Some people think God does not like to be troubled with our constant coming and asking. The way to trouble God is not to come at all.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Faith makes all things possible, love makes all things easy.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
I never saw a fruit-bearing Christian who was not a student of the Bible.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Everybody wants to enjoy heaven after they die, but they don’t want to be heavenly-minded while they live.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Before we pray that God would fill us, I believe we ought to pray Him to empty us.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Moses spent forty years thinking he was somebody; forty years learning he was nobody; and forty years discovering what God can do with a nobody.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
The fact is, we are leaky vessels, and we have to keep right under the fountain all the time to keep full of Christ, and so have fresh supply.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
He who kneels the most, stands the best.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Church attendance is as vital to a disciple as a transfusion of rich, healthy blood to a sick man.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
The world does not understand theology or dogma, but it understands love and sympathy.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Fervency in prayer by the power of the Holy Spirit is a good preservative against thoughts rushing in. Flies never settle on the boiling pot.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
Grace isn’t a little prayer you chant before receiving a meal. It’s a way to live. The law tells me how crooked I am. Grace comes along and straightens me out.
DWIGHT L. MOODY -
If you pray for bread and bring no basket to carry it, you prove the doubting spirit, which may be the only hindrance to the boon you ask.
DWIGHT L. MOODY