Precept & Practice – MARCH 2 – The Really Devout Man
The really devout man has a horror of evil, but he has a still greater love of that which is good; he is more set on doing what is right than avoiding what is wrong.
The really devout man has a horror of evil, but he has a still greater love of that which is good; he is more set on doing what is right than avoiding what is wrong.
We are not called to live in some sort of Holy Huddle protected from all the woes of this wicked world but instead journey with Jesus to Gethsemane, to Calvary, and to the hope brought with the Empty Tomb of Easter Day.
Thou shalt not rise by grieving over the irremediable past, but by remedying the present.
There’s a grace of wise forgetfulness,
The while we forward reach and onward press,
Let the dead past be buried.
Faith ought ever to be a sanguine, cheerful thing; and perhaps in practical life we could not give a better account of faith than by saying, that it is, amidst much failure, having the heart to try again.
Be penitent, and prayerful, but discourage looking back; we cannot bring the past again; reject it, and forget it.
Have patience with yourself is a direction often recurring in his writings, and a most important one it is, – because patience with ourselves is essential if we would have patience with others.
Conduct is the mouth-piece of character. What a man is declares itself through what he does…..
A man of integrity, sincerity, and good-nature can never be concealed, for his character is wrought into his countenance.
Travelling with Jesus does not mean we are immune from storms. It does mean we are safe in the midst of them and are given the courage to follow Him more closely