Report, if you have a problem with this page“ Thus his belief was that in a service where feeling could be restrained it ought to be restrained. The power of God was more likely to be known in a solemn stillness than amid noise and excitement. Silence and an expectant seriousness, born of a realisation of the nearness of God, were striking characteristics of the services at Sandfields. ”
Iain H. Murray
From : The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones - 1899-1981