Thomas Adams Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Thomas Adams's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Scientist Thomas Adams's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 46 quotes on this page collected since 1818! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
  • We know there is a sun in heaven, yet we cannot see what matter it is made of, but perceive it only by the beams, light and heat. Election is a sun, the eyes of eagles cannot see it, yet we may find it in the heat of vocation, in the light of illumination, in the beams of good works.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.117
  • Paradise had four rivers that watered the earth.... and howsoever neglected by many, they make glad the city of God. So Bernard sweetly: Eternal life is granted to us in election, promised in our vocation, sealed in our justification, possessed in our glorification. Conclude then, faithfully to thy own soul. I believe, therefore I am justified; I am justified, therefore I am sanctified; I am sanctified, therefore I am called; I am called, therefore I am elected; I am elected, therefore I shall be saved. Oh! settled comfort of joy, which ten thousand devils shall never make void.

  • Passion costs me too much to bestow it on every trifle.

  • He that will be knighted must kneel for it, and he that will enter in at the strait gate must crowd for it-a gate made so on purpose, narrow and hard in the entrance, yet, after we have entered, wide and glorious, that after our pain our joy may be the sweeter.

  • Let us not make the poor our friends by our alms, not our enemies by our scorns. We had better have the ears of God full of their prayers, than heaps of money in our own coffers with their curses.

    Thomas Adams (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.351
  • Will you trust your five senses above the four Gospels?

    Thomas Adams (1861). “The works of Thomas Adams: being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and other divine and moral discourses”, p.95
  • Prevention is so much better than healing because it saves the labor of being sick.

  • Grace comes into the soul as the morning sun into the world: there is first a dawning, then a mean light, and at last the sun in his excellent brightness.

    "The Sermons of Thomas Adams: The Shakespeare of Puritan Theologians".
  • The hypocrite, certainly, is a secret atheist; for if he did believe there was a God, he durst not be so bold as to deceive Him to His face.

  • The Bible is to us what the star was to the wise men; but if we spend all our time in gazing upon it, observing its motions, and admiring its splendor, without being led to Christ by it, the use of it will be lost on us.

  • Alas! that the farthest and of all our thoughts should be the thought of our ends.

  • Beauty is like an almanack: if it lasts a year it is well.

    Thomas Adams (1862). “The works: Being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and other divine and moral discourses. With memoir by Joseph Angus”, p.3
  • Better a holy discord than a profane concord.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.79
  • There is no coming to heaven with dry eyes.

  • The patient man is merry indeed.... The jailers that watch him are but his pages of honour, and his very dungeon but the lower side of the vault of heaven. He kisseth the wheel that must kill him; and thinks the stairs of the scaffold of his martyrdom but so many degrees of his ascent to glory. The tormentors are weary of him. the beholders have pitty on him, all men wonder at him; and while he seems below all men, below himself, he is above nature. He hath so overcome hlmself that nothing can conquer him.

    Thomas Adams (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.728
  • The covetous man pines in plenty, like Tantalus up to the chin in water, and yet thirsty.

    Thomas Adams (2013). “The Sermons of Thomas Adams: The Shakespeare of Puritan Theologians”, p.48, Cambridge University Press
  • Death is as near to the young as to the old; here is all the difference: death stands behind the young man's back, before the old man's face.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.150
  • No man more truly loves God than he that is most fearful to offend Him.

    Thomas Adams (1861). “The works: Being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and other divine and moral discourses. With memoir by Joseph Angus”, p.51
  • A man may be so bold of his predestination, that he forget his conversation.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.123
  • Even the tired horse, when he comes near home, mends pace: be good always, without weariness, but best at last; that the nearer thou comest to the end of thy days, the nearer thou mayest be to the end of thy hopes, the salvation of thy soul.

  • Satan like a fisher, baits his hook according to the appetite of the fish.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.236
  • The devil makes his Christmas-pie of lawyers' tongues and clerks' fingers.

  • As God by creation made two of one, so again by marriage He made one of two.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.84
  • Baptizing them in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost: there are three distinct persons: in the Name, not names; there is one essence.

    Thomas Adams, James Sherman (1848). “An Exposition Upon the Second Epistle General of St. Peter”, p.171
  • Both in thy private sessions, and the universal assizes, thou shalt be sure of the same Judge, the same jury, the same witnesses, the same verdict. How certain thou art to die, thou knowest; how soon to die, thou knowest not. Measure not thy life with the longest; that were to piece it out with flattery. Thou canst name no living man, not the sickest, which thou art sure shall die before thee.

  • Plan the town, if you like; but in doing it do not forget that you have got to spread the people. Make wider roads, but do not narrow the tenements behind. Dignify the city by all means, but not at the expense of the health of the home and the family life and the comfort of the average workman and citizen.

  • If thou wilt fly from God, the devil will lend thee both spurs and a horse.

  • That which a man spits against heaven, shall fall back on his own face.

    Thomas Adams (1861). “The works: Being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and other divine and moral discourses. With memoir by Joseph Angus”, p.391
  • A drunkard is the annoyance of modesty, the trouble of civility, the spoil of wealth, the distraction of reason. He is the brewer's agent, the tavern and alehouse benefactor, the beggar's companion, the constable's trouble, his wife's woe, his children's sorrow, his neighbours scoff, his own shame.

  • He who reforms himself, has done much toward reforming others; and one reason why the world is not reformed, is, because each would have others make a beginning, and never thinks of himself doing it.

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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 46 quotes from the Scientist Thomas Adams, starting from 1818! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!