“Repentance is a grace of God's Spirit whereby a sinner is inwardly humbled and visibly reformed.”
Thomas Watson (1616–1686) English nonconformist preacher and author
The Doctrine of Repentance (1668)
III, q. 18, art. 1, ad 1
Summa Theologica (1265–1274)
Context: Whatever was in the human nature of Christ was moved at the bidding of the divine will; yet it does not follow that in Christ there was no movement of the will proper to human nature, for the good wills of other saints are moved by God's will... For although the will cannot be inwardly moved by any creature, yet it can be moved inwardly by God.
“Repentance is a grace of God's Spirit whereby a sinner is inwardly humbled and visibly reformed.”
Thomas Watson (1616–1686) English nonconformist preacher and author
The Doctrine of Repentance (1668)
Thomas à Kempis (1380–1471) German canon regular
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 124.
“Whereas if the heart be moved,
Although the verse be somewhat scant,
God doth supply the want.”
George Herbert (1593–1633) Welsh-born English poet, orator and Anglican priest
The Temple (1633), A True Hymn
Abu Bakr al-Kalabadhi Sufi Maturidi scholar and Hanafi jurist
Source: The Sayings and Teachings of the Great Mystics of Islam (2004), p. 83
Frederick William Robertson (1816–1853) British writer and theologian
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 217.
Pierre Nicole (1625–1695) French Jansenists
Essais de Morale (1753), XII, 301, in The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927) as translated by Mary Ilford (1968), p. 118