
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Until John, we have been using older manuscripts of Ryle's Expository Thoughts. Just recently, though, EP Publishing has put out a lightly updated version of Ryle's work, which I am now working from. If you are interested in a physical copy of the Expository Thoughts, you can find it HERE.
John 6:35-40
"The soul of every person is naturally starving and famishing through sin. Christ is given by God the Father to be the Satisfier, the Reliever and the Physician of human spiritual need."
"What does “coming” mean? It means that movement of the soul which takes place when a person, feeling their sins and finding out that they cannot save themselves, hears of Christ, applies to Christ, trusts in Christ, lays hold on Christ and leans all their weight on Christ for salvation."
"Just in the same way, everyone who desires eternal life may look to Christ by faith and have life freely. There is no barrier, no limit, no restriction. The terms of the gospel are wide and simple. Everyone may “look and live.”
Questions:
Until John, we have been using older manuscripts of Ryle's Expository Thoughts. Just recently, though, EP Publishing has put out a lightly updated version of Ryle's work, which I am now working from. If you are interested in a physical copy of the Expository Thoughts, you can find it HERE.
John 6:35-40
"The soul of every person is naturally starving and famishing through sin. Christ is given by God the Father to be the Satisfier, the Reliever and the Physician of human spiritual need."
"What does “coming” mean? It means that movement of the soul which takes place when a person, feeling their sins and finding out that they cannot save themselves, hears of Christ, applies to Christ, trusts in Christ, lays hold on Christ and leans all their weight on Christ for salvation."
"Just in the same way, everyone who desires eternal life may look to Christ by faith and have life freely. There is no barrier, no limit, no restriction. The terms of the gospel are wide and simple. Everyone may “look and live.”
Questions: