Precept and Practice – JUNE 1 – Gladness
Lord, since all is well with Thee It cannot well be ill with me.
Lord, since all is well with Thee It cannot well be ill with me.
Banish the trifling, oh so trifling matter, by things more deserving of attention, and in a couple of months you will wonder why it upset you so.
it. It may be very absurd, nay very immoral, to be teased by trifles; but alas while you remain in the dust, reason as you may, it will annoy you; and there is no help for it, but to retire into a higher and grassier region, where the sultry road is visible from afar.
The only letters that can wait are those which provoke a hot answer.
He has achieved success who has lived well, laughed often, and loved much, who has gained the respect of intelligent men and the love of little children;
Carlyle pointed out that crabbedness, pride, obstinacy, and affectation are, at bottom, want of strength – weakness.
Who are we, what is our insight into other men’s hearts, that we should foreclose the time of their growth; that we should call for speed, when God, it may be, is patiently disengaging their minds from difficulties that we have never known;
Even the most perfect people have many imperfections, and we ourselves have no fewer.
There is always danger of misrepresentation in the attempt to present a view that is not one’s own.
Love of the last word has made more bitterness in families, and spoiled more Christians than it is worth.