Quotes about Merit
The laborer is worthy of his hire.
— Anonymous
You see how every thing is denied to free will, for the very purpose of leaving no room for merit. And yet, as the beneficence and liberality of God are manifold and inexhaustible, the grace which he bestows upon us, inasmuch as he makes it our own, he recompenses as if the virtuous acts were our own.
— John Calvin
It teaches us not to regard others according to their own merits, but to consider in them the image of God to which we owe both honor and love.
— John Calvin
There is nothing absurd in the doctrine, that though man is justified by faith, he is himself not only not righteous, but the righteousness attributed to his works is beyond their own deserts.
— John Calvin
God has not rendered you due punishment, but bestows upon you unmerited grace. If you wish to be an alien from grace, boast your merits," (in Psa 70) Again, "You are nothing in yourself, sin is yours, merit God's. Punishment is your due; and when the reward shall come, God shall crown his own gifts, not your merits.
— John Calvin
If you shall be paid what you deserve, you must be punished. What then happens? God has not rendered you the punishment you deserve, but bestows undeserved grace. If you would be estranged from grace, boast of your own merits." Again: "Of yourself you are nothing. Sins are your own, but merits are God's. You deserve punishment, and when the reward comes he will crown his own gifts, not your merits.
— John Calvin
All the Apostles abound in exhortations, admonitions and rebukes, for the purpose of training the man of God to every good work, and that without any mention of merit. Nay, rather their chief exhortations are founded on the fact, that without any merit of ours, our salvation depends entirely on the mercy of God.
— John Calvin
There is no happiness that isn't earned.
— Dennis Prager
The cross of the Legion of Honor has been conferred on me. However, few escape that distinction.
— John Lennon
All of us do not have equal talent, but all of us should have an equal opportunity to develop our talent.
— John F. Kennedy
Sacrificial religion was all exposed in Jesus' response to any mechanical or mercenary notion of religion, but we soon went right back to it in many Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant forms, because the old ego will always prefer an economy of merit and sacrifice to any economy of grace and unearned love, where we have no control.
— Fr. Richard Rohr
the old ego will always prefer an economy of merit and sacrifice to any economy of grace and unearned love, where we have no control.
— Fr. Richard Rohr