Moral Leadership and the MinistryHorace Worth Company, 1912 - 200 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 16
Page 6
... charm , and makes it an unrivaled book . It makes the grand dig- nity and the cheerful hopefulness of the Gospel . It gives life its awful solemnity , grounds its needed consolation and its glori- ous liberty ; creates man's ...
... charm , and makes it an unrivaled book . It makes the grand dig- nity and the cheerful hopefulness of the Gospel . It gives life its awful solemnity , grounds its needed consolation and its glori- ous liberty ; creates man's ...
Page 43
... charm . They know not as I how vain and weak are things , nor have felt as I the glory of love . Others may push and crowd for the first places their master bids them so I whose Lord is lowly will be last and least . Others may pine and ...
... charm . They know not as I how vain and weak are things , nor have felt as I the glory of love . Others may push and crowd for the first places their master bids them so I whose Lord is lowly will be last and least . Others may pine and ...
Page 61
... changes us into His own likeness , creates within us His mind . He terribly rebukes of lukewarmness and sin ; appealingly invites and charms . He is the object of our trust [ 61 ] Religion the Equipment for Leadership ―
... changes us into His own likeness , creates within us His mind . He terribly rebukes of lukewarmness and sin ; appealingly invites and charms . He is the object of our trust [ 61 ] Religion the Equipment for Leadership ―
Page 62
Edward Everett Keedy. and charms . He is the object of our trust : inevitable , because He is trustworthy ; the ground of our optimism and hope . Faith is the inevitable impulse after contact with Jesus . St. John affirms , " He that ...
Edward Everett Keedy. and charms . He is the object of our trust : inevitable , because He is trustworthy ; the ground of our optimism and hope . Faith is the inevitable impulse after contact with Jesus . St. John affirms , " He that ...
Page 63
... charm of person are all his . These beget in turn in others , interest , devotion , willingness to be commanded , and a sense of God which is authority . Now the ministry as friends of Christ are wrapped round with those ideals , and ...
... charm of person are all his . These beget in turn in others , interest , devotion , willingness to be commanded , and a sense of God which is authority . Now the ministry as friends of Christ are wrapped round with those ideals , and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
apostles become believe Bible certainty challenge character charm Christ Christian Church comes command common conscience constraining conviction creed cross daring death declares divine doctrine endeavor endure ennobling enthroned enthu enthusiasm evolution of society experience facts of religion faith fear feeling fellowship gain give glory God's Gospel grounds heart heroic heroism hope ideals incarnation indifference inspires interest Israel ister Jesuits Jesus Kingdom Kingdom of God labor lead ligion live logic loyalty man's martyr masterful men's mighty minister minister of religion minister's ministry monasticism moral leader moral leadership moral power motives ness numbers passion pastor person persuade practical preacher preaching reality religious righteousness sacrifice sake scorn Seminary sermon siasm social society soul sounding brass speak spirit spiritual possessions superior task theology thought tion touch tremendous trust truth ultimate facts unto valor vindicated virtue vision western world wholly words worth
Popular passages
Page 35 - For I think that God hath set forth us the apostles last, as it were appointed to death : for we are made a spectacle unto the world, and to Angels, and to men.
Page 35 - Even unto this present hour we both hunger, and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain dwellingplace ; and labour, working with our own hands...
Page 17 - This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that JESUS CHRIST came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief.
Page 21 - Their enemies themselves not unfrequently acknowledged it. The love shown by the early Christians to their suffering brethren has never been more emphatically attested than by...
Page 21 - Never before was a religious transformation so manifestly inevitable. No other religion ever combined so many forms of attraction as Christianity, both from its intrinsic excellence, and from its manifest adaptation to the special wants of the time.
Page 117 - The water that I shall give you, shall be in you a well of water springing up into everlasting life.
Page 170 - government of the people, for the people and by the people, should not perish from the earth.
Page 35 - To the present hour we both hunger and thirst and we are poorly clothed and beaten and homeless. And we labor working with our own hands. Being reviled, we bless; being persecuted we endure; being defamed we entreat. We have been made as the filth of the world, the off scouring of all things until now.
Page 129 - The willing department of our nature. . .dominates both the conceiving department and the feeling department; or, in plainer English, perception and thinking are only there for behavior's sake. I am sure I am not wrong in stating this result as one of the fundamental conclusions to which the entire drift of modern physiological investigation sweeps us.
Page 5 - ... how to labor together with God instead of becoming a cog in some great machine ; how to maintain peace of mind amid the disasters, illusions, and tragedies of experience, — this is the cry for power which goes up from many a life, ensnared — as whose is not ? — in the mechanism and materialism of the world.