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Reviews for Stepping Heavenward

 Stepping Heavenward magazine reviews

The average rating for Stepping Heavenward based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-01-02 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars Todd Darby
Dead by age 29, what a remarkable life and example of holiness and love for Christ and his people Robert Murray M'Cheyne was. "But there has been one among us who, ere he had reached the age at which a priest in Israel would have been entering on his course, dwelt at the Mercy seat as if it were his home - preached the certainties of eternal life with an undoubting mind- and spent his nights and days in ceaseless breathings after holiness, and the salvation of sinners. Hundreds of souls were his reward from the Lord, ere he left us; and in him have we been taught how much one man may do who will only press farther into the presence of his God, and handle more skillfully the unsearchable riches of Christ, and speak more boldly for his God."
Review # 2 was written on 2018-11-08 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Wu Tsz yan
This biography of Robert Murray M'Cheyne (a pastor who lived in the early 1800's) was written by his friend Andrew Bonar. It is a beautiful biography of a life that started out hard and was gradually transformed into an incredible example of Christ like humility and love. The first few chapters started slow. But when the book picks up, almost every page has something to learn or think about. A few of my favorite quotes: When writing to a student about studying the Bible, "Never see the face of man till you have seen His face, who is our life, our all." "If thou meanest to enlarge thy religion [life of faith], do it rather by enlarging thine ordinary devotions than thy extraordinary." The biographer goes on to say that this advice describes very accurately the plan of spiritual life on which M'Cheyne acted... "the real secret of his soul's prosperity lay in the daily enlargement of his heart in fellowship with his God." "During his years in Dundee, he often rode out in an afternoon to the ruined church of Invergowrie, to enjoy and hour's perfect solitude; for he felt meditation and prayer to be the very sinews of his work." And scattered throughout this book are little gems like "May God make the Word fire." "He wished to be always in the presence of God." "Lord, wean me from my sins, my cares, and from this passing world. May Christ be all in all to me." I especially loved the section about his trip with his eventual biographer to Palestine. It was so well written I felt I was right there, in the burning heat of the day and the frigidness of night. He made the Bible his life, often entertaining himself by making poems and memory games so he could remember things, like the different duties assigned to the Priests in the Old Testament. A few of the "to-do" sections I marked to try to incorporate in my own life I learned from his personal reformation reflections: 1. "I ought to have a stated day of confession, with fasting--say, once a month." 2. "I ought to have a number of scriptures marked, to bring sin to remembrance." 3. "I must never think a sin too small to need immediate application to the blood of Christ." 4. "I ought to have a number of Scriptures ready, which lead my blind soul directly to Christ, such as Isaiah 45, Romans 3." This book is a definite keep, take notes on, and re-read at least once a year. It is very encouraging while at the same time being very convicting, while always keeping the focus on Christ.


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