Salvation may come quietly, but we must not remain quiet about it.
Jesus took our place that we might have His peace; He took our sin that we might have His salvation.
Where one goes hereafter depends on what he does after here.
The new birth is not optional—it’s imperative.
Jesus came to save the lost, the last, and the least.
Of all the thousands of deceptive substitutes, a substitute for salvation is the worst.
One must be a wide-awake Christian before he can fall asleep in Jesus.
If you keep rejecting the “come” of salvation, you will have to accept the “depart” of damnation.
There are none so good that they can save themselves—none so bad that God cannot save them.
The sinner has only two options—be pardoned or be punished.
When God pardons sin, He purges the record, erases the remembrance, and empowers the recipient.
When God saves us, our sins are forgiven and forgotten forever.
Salvation causes us to step out of sin’s slavery into security with Christ.
Justification means man’s guilt gone and Christ’s goodness given.
We can be so caught up in the theology of the coming of Christ that we forget the fact of His coming.
Jesus Who died as our substitute now lives as our Advocate.
How tragic that people pay a high price for being lost when salvation is free.
Empty cross—empty tomb—full salvation!
Calvary is never to be forgotten, and never to be repeated.
God makes us miserable through conviction to make us happy through confession.
Reformation is turning over a new leaf; regeneration is receiving a new life.
Honest restitution is a mark of honest repentance.
Better not to have been born at all than never to have been born again.
A man can go to hell in his own way, but only go to heaven God’s way—through Christ.
It is dangerous and fatal presumption to say “tomorrow” when God says “Today.”
God votes for us; Satan votes against us—we cast the deciding vote.
The church is a hospital for sinners—not a club for Christians.
Eternal life is the only life insurance you can collect after death.
Nature forms us; sin deforms us; school informs us; but only Christ can transform us.
He who is born of God should increasingly resemble his Father.
Some people have tons of religion but not one ounce of salvation.
Service can put a new coat on a man—but salvation puts a new man in the coat.
A true fear of hell has sent many souls to heaven.
Some expect to repent of their sin at the eleventh hour but die at 10:30.
Some people take up religion as an insurance against hell, then are not willing to pay the premiums.
Man is saved by believing Christ—he is lost by believing the devil.
Salvation is by atonement—not by attainment.
The thief on the cross had just one chance and accepted it.
Salvation is so simple that people overlook it; so free they do not believe it.
Christ came not to save only the “down and out,” but also the “up and out.”
Where will you be and what will you be doing ten years from today if you keep on doing what you are doing now?
Conversion is going into business with God.
Calvary is God’s bank for a sick world.
There is a difference between religion and salvation. Religion is man trying to do something for God—salvation is God doing something for man.
Man may whitewash himself, but only God can wash him white.
Life is a one-way street; we are not coming back.
Conversion to Christ makes useful saints our of useless sinners.
Calvary knows how far man will go into sin and how far God will go for man’s salvation.
God has promised forgiveness for your repentance, but He has not promised tomorrow for your procrastination.
Death is more universal than life; everyone dies but not everyone lives.
Salvation is not to be analyzed but realized.
Are you on the rocks or on the Rock?
Good works are not the means of salvation but the result.
There is a time to be born and a time to die. Where we spend eternity depends on the interval between these times.
It is never too early to decide for Christ, but the time will come when it will be too late.
An insurance agent has this slogan on his letterhead: “We insure everything except eternity.”
We may travel the sea of life without Christ, but what about the landing?
Millions will miss the second coming of Christ because they fail to accept Him and His first coming.
The head may seek God, but it is the heart that finds Him.
No one ever got lost on the straight and narrow road.
Some day you must bow your knee to Christ—why not now?
The Christian will find satisfaction just where he found salvation.
It is impossible to drive in the wrong direction and arrive at the right destination.
Pictures of doom: Knowledge without wisdom; a ship without a port; and a man without Christ.
No reformation can ever take the place of regeneration.
Life with Christ is an endless hope; without Him, life is a hopeless end.
Salvation is not something we achieve but something we receive.
Heaven and hell are in opposite directions, and no man can go both ways at the same time.
Law condemns the best man; grace saves the worst man.
A person who is almost persuaded is still completely lost.
Salvation depends upon Christ’s work for us, while rewards depend upon our works for Christ.
There is a way to stay out of hell, but no way to get out of hell.
In salvation, it’s Who you know that counts.
We are saved by Christ’s mediation, not by our merits.
No one is too good—nor too bad—to be a candidate for salvation.
God’s grace makes new creatures out of the best and worst sinners.
Salvation changes our heritage from a living death to a deathless life.
Many who are well prepared for a rainy day are not prepared for eternity.
If you make an excuse for sin, your sin will never be excused.
We are saved by God’s mercy, not by our merit—by Christ’s dying, not by our doing.
You cannot repent too soon because you don’t know how soon it may be too late.
If you refuse Christ because you feel you are not good enough, you are settling for less than God made you to be.
To say, “I’m not good enough to be a Christian,” is a bit like saying, “I’m not healthy enough to go to the hospital.”
God saves us, not for what we are, but for what He can make us.
Plan as if Christ’s return were years away, but be ready as if it were today.
The old nature knows no law, the new nature needs no law.
What we do with Christ now determines what God will do for us later.
Salvation produces a change within that breaks the chains of sin.
Every Christian carries a key that can open the door of salvation to others.