Being and Doing · Character and Conduct

Character and Conduct – 5 November – True Patience

Character and Conduct – 5 November – True Patience

THERE are those who think it is Christian patience to sit down by the wayside to endure the storm, crying in themselves, ‘God is hard on me, but I will bear His smiting’;  but their endurance is only idleness which is ignoble, and hiding from the battle which is cowardice.   Or they cry, ‘I am the victim of Fate, but I will be patient’ – as if any one could be a victim if God be love, or as if there were such a thing as blind fate, when the order of the world is to lead men into righteousness;  when to be victor and not victim is the main word of that order.   No, the severity of the battle is to force us into self-forgetfulness;  and this lazy resignation, this wailing patience, is mere self-remembrance.  The true patience is activity of faith and hope and righteousness in the cause of men for the sake of God’s love of them;  is in glad proclamation of the gospel;  is in wielding the sword of the Truth of God against all that injures mankind.

The Gospel of Joy, STOPFORD BROOKE

Wise men ne’er sit and wail their loss,

But cheerly seek how to redress their harms.

What though the mast be now blown overboard, 

The cable broke, the holding anchor lost, 

And half our sailors swallowed in the flood –

Yet lives our Pilot still.

SHAKESPEARE

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These quotes are from ‘Character and Conduct’ A selection of helpful thoughts from various authors arranged for daily reading.

Collected by Constance M Whishaw and first published in 1905 as a follow up to her volume of Daily Readings for members of the Being and Doing Guild who asked for an additional volume

In her preface Whishaw writes:

‘This collection of noble thoughts expressed by men and women of past and present ages who have endeavoured to leave the world a little better than they found it.’

It is my hope in publishing them here readers may be inspired to imitate the example of the authors.

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