Sermon

Precept and Practice – DECEMBER 29 – Sorrow and Selfishness

Precept and Practice – DECEMBER 29 – Sorrow and Selfishness

There is no selfishness greater than a life which forgets in the isolation of sorrow that others are sorrowing and need our help.

(Reverend Stopford A. Brooke)

We lose our griefs by making others cease to grieve.

Physical strength is measured by what one can carry; 

spiritual, by what one can bear.

(Ivan Panin)

oooOOOooo

From the Introduction to Precept and Practice

The kindly welcome given to my other little books, ‘Being and Doing’ and ‘Character and Conduct,’ must be my excuse for adding another collection of extracts to the number now in circulation.

The quotations are gathered from the books of many earnest thinkers, and deal with Life in all its length and breadth, with ourselves, our characters, our plain unvarnished faults and weaknesses, our often untoward circumstances, and with all that drags us down;-  with our purposes, our religion, our love and friendships, and with all that uplifts us;-  with our relation to others, our influence and responsibilities, and finally with those stages of our journey which bring us to the Road’s Last Turn and to the Silent Land.

CONSTANCE  M. WHISHAW

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