The casual indifference with which millions of Protestants view their God-blessed religious liberty is ominous. Being let go they go on weekends to the lakes and mountains and beaches to play shuffleboard, fish and sunbathe. They go where their heart is and come back to the praying company only when the bad weather drives them in. Let this continue long enough and evangelical Protestantism will be ripe for a takeover by Rome.1
——
Freedom is liberty within bounds: liberty to obey holy laws, liberty to keep the commandments of Christ, to serve mankind, to develop to the full all the latent possibilities within our redeemed natures. True Christian liberty never sets us free to indulge our lusts or to follow our fallen impulses.2
——
Unqualified freedom in any area of human life is deadly. In government it is anarchy, in domestic life, free love and in religion, antinomianism. The freest cells in the body are cancer cells, but they kill the organism where they grow.3
——
The ideal Christian is one who knows he is free to do as he will and wills to be a servant. This is the path Christ took; blessed is the man who follows Him.4
——
I can make a case for the doctrine that you cannot have morality unless you have freedom. There is a good, sound philosophy underneath it, that you cannot even have an idea of morality unless you also have freedom.
For, just as soon as we coerce a human will, that human will can be neither good nor bad—that will cannot do righteousness as long as it is coerced into it.
And the human will, driven to anything, is not doing it freely, and therefore is not doing it morally.5