"What have been the eras of the Church's greatest influence? What have been the moments of its most powerful impact on the world?
Not the epochs of its visible might and splendour;
not the age succeeding Constantine, when Christianity became imperialistic, and all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them seemed ready to bow beneath the spectre of Christ;
not the days of the great medieval pontiffs, when Christ's vicar in Rome wielded a sovereignty more absolute than that of any scular monarch on the earth;
not the later nineteenth century, when the Church became infected with the prevailing humanistic optimism, which was quite sure that man was the architect of his own destinies, that a wonderful utopian kingdom of God was waiting him just round the corner, and that the very momentum of his progress was bound to carry him thither.
Not in such times as these has the Church exercised its strongest leverage upon the soul and conscience of the world: but in days when it has been crucified with Christ, and has counted all things but loss for His sake; days when, smitten with a great contrition and repentance, it has cried out to God from the depths."
James S. Stewart (1896-1990), Scottish preacher.
(Cited in David Wells's Above All Earthly Pow'rs)