Genuine love and sympathy are what
wins the hearts of our fellows.
A Christian ought always to wake up
in the morning in a good humor.
Remember that sorrow and pain soften
the heart and sweeten the temper.
The young man who sees no beauty in
a flower will make a mean husband.
If you love young people’s work
you will prove it by laboring and sacrificing for
it.
Begin active work in your society
at once, and do not fail to see that each one has
something to do.
The fact that God gives any consideration
to mere mites of humanity scattered about the surface
of this little world of ours is conclusive proof of
His infinity.
What a blessing it is that we can
not always do what we wish to do, or have everything
our own way.
Many words are no more an indication
of depth of feeling and heart than are boiling bubbles
in a frying pan.
There are some people who would scorn
to keep bad company, but who think the worst kind
of thoughts by the hour.
Do not wait for somebody else to put
your society on the roll of honor. If you want
a thing well done, do it yourself.
If the very hairs of our head are
numbered, then why should we not consult the Father
in regard to all our temporal affairs?
How the heart of God must yearn for
the record of lives devoted to humanity. He
asks no higher service of man than this.
The truly great man is that one who
is satisfied if he is doing to the utmost limit of
his capacity the thing which he has at hand.
God would never make the mistake of
helping any young man or young woman who did not make
every possible effort to help himself.
Do not make the mistake of thinking
you are the biggest man in your society. Bigger
men than you have died and have not been missed after
forty-eight hours.
The girl who is caught by gold-headed
canes, carried by heads with no brains on the inside
and only pasted hair on the outside, has a pitiable
future before her.
No pain, no privation, no sacrifice
endured for Christ is a loss, but is rather a gain.
Christ will not forget those who suffered for Him
when He comes to make up His jewels.
Sunday manners are just like Sunday
clothes; everybody can tell that you put them on for
the occasion only, and know that you are not used
to wearing them through the week.
The devil led the Prodigal Son away
from a good home into the gay society of the world,
and amused him with the pleasures of sin till he got
him down, then he fed him on husks. That is the
way he works.
A good many church members do not
like to have it known how much they give for missions.
They remind us of the man who said, when asked about
the amount he gave, “What I give is nothing to
nobody.”
The reason why some people do not
want the preacher to preach on personal sins, is because
they are afraid he might say something against them.
When we see a man going to get water
at his neighbor’s well, we naturally suppose
his own is dry. So when we see a Christian seeking
the pleasures of the world, we suppose he no longer
finds pleasure in religion.
To know which way a stream of water
is flowing, you must not look at the little eddy,
but at the main current, and to know which way a life
is tending, you must not look at a single act, but
at the whole trend of the life.
Satan likes to discourage people,
to hinder them in the performance of their Christian
duties, but remember that Christ has said, “My
grace is sufficient for you.” Go steadily
forward in the line of duty and success will crown
your efforts.
The light of a candle can not be seen
very far in the light of a noon-day sun, but at night
it may be seen for a long distance and may be a guiding
star to some poor wanderer. And so, God sometimes
darkens our way that we may shine.
The man who prays for the conversion
of the heathen, and then spends a great deal more
for tobacco than he gives to missions, is certainly
not very consistent in his praying and giving.
Thomas Hood once wrote to his wife:
“I never was anything, dearest, till I knew
you; and I have been a better, happier, and more prosperous
man ever since. Lay by that truth in lavender,
sweetest, and remind me of it when I fail.”
I believe one reason why such numerous instances of
erudition occur among the lower ranks is, that with the same powers of mind the
poor student is limited to a narrower circle for indulging his passion for
books, and must necessarily make himself master of the few he possesses before
he can acquire more. Walter Scott.
Christians should not forget that
God uses human agency in the work of salvation.
The only reason that there are not more saved, is
because the people of God do not put themselves at
his disposal for the work. The Lord wants all
to be saved, but they will not be saved until the
people of God are willing to let the Lord use them
to bring the lost unto Himself.
Deceit and falsehood, whatever conveniences
they may for a time promise or produce, are, in the
sum of life, obstacles to happiness. Those who
profit by the cheat distrust the deceiver; and the
act by which kindness was sought puts an end to confidence.
The judges of the election can not
tell the difference, when they are counting the votes,
between the one cast by the minister of the gospel
and the one cast by the saloon-keeper, when it has
been cast for the same party. Vote for principle
rather than for party.
“Let every man,” said
Sydney Smith, “be occupied in the highest employment
of which his nature is capable, and die with the consciousness
that he has done his best.” If the highest
employment is not to be found in our avocations, let
us seek it in our leisure.
Beware of anger of the tongue; control
the tongue. Beware of anger of the mind; control
the mind. Practice virtue with thy tongue and
with thy mind. By reflection, by restraint and
control, a wise man can make himself an island which
no floods can overwhelm. He who conquers himself
is greater than he who in battle conquers a thousand
men. He who is tolerant with the intolerant,
mild with the fault-finders, and free from passion
with the passionate, him I call indeed a wise man.
Brothers, keep posted in what your
lodge is doing; knowing who is sick; inquire if there
is not some widow in need of help; some poor orphan
that should be clothed and provided with a home and
sent to school. Remember that the widow was your
brother’s wife, and the children your brother’s.
Be a brother to the widow, and a kind uncle to your
brother’s children. There is plenty of
work for you, and you agreed to do it. Cheer
up the care-worn traveler on his pilgrimage help
the weak and weary, the lonely and sad ones.
Time is passing by, and we have none too much of
it in which to do our work. Remember that if
we expect to complete our labor, now is the time;
soon all will be over with us, and then all that we
shall leave behind, by which to be remembered, will
be the good or evil we have done. If we have
done good it will be emblazoned on many hearts, and
our names will be spoken of with reverence and love;
but if we have done evil, our names will be blotted
out of the memory of the good and true, and we despised.
“How is’t the sons of men
are sad,
Oppressed with grief and care?
How is’t that some of this world’s
goods,
Have such a scanty share?
Why should the orphan’s piercing
cry,
Assail so oft our ear,
And thousands find the world to be
All desolate and drear?
“We do not solve the mystery
Of woes, the lot of man,
But in the lodge we all unite
To do the good we can.
’Tis there we learn the pleasing
task
To soothe the troubled breast,
To educate the orphan child,
And succor the distressed.
“Our motto Friendship, Love and Truth
These e’er shall be
our guide,
Our aim shall be, of misery
To stop the running tide.”
We ask not what’s a brother’s
faith,
What country gave him birth;
But open the door to every creed
And nation of the earth.
Hail, Charity! Odd-Fellows all
Bow down before thy shrine;
They raise no altar, make no vow,
That is not wholly thine.