…be not contented to have right notions of the love of Christ in your minds, unless you can attain a gracious taste of it in your hearts; no more than you would be to see a feast or banquet richly prepared, and partake of nothing of it unto your refreshment. It is of that nature that we may have a spiritual sensation of it in our minds; whence it is compared by the spouse to apples and flagons of wine. We may taste that the Lord is gracious; and if we find not a relish of it in our hearts, we shall not long retain the notion of it in our minds. Christ is the meat, the bread, the food of our souls. Nothing is in him of a higher spiritual nourishment than his love, which we should always desire.
In this love is he glorious; for it is such as no creatures, angels or men, could have the least conceptions of, before its manifestation by its effects; and, after its manifestation, it is in this world absolutely incomprehensible.
From John Owen, Meditations and Discourses on the Glory of Christ.
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1 response so far ↓
1 Ryan // Apr 14, 2006 at 11:57 am
Great one…
I’ve always compared it to reading the lyrics of a song, but never hearing it sung. It needs to be seen, felt, heard, tasted, and touched; experienced.
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