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The life of man is made up of action and endurance the life is fruitful in the ratio in which it is laid out in noble action or in patient perseverance.
Henry Parry Liddon
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Henry Parry Liddon
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More quotes by Henry Parry Liddon
Look to the end and resolve to make the service of Christ the first object in what remains of life, without indifference to the opinion of your fellow men, but also without fear of it.
Henry Parry Liddon
The resurrection asserts a truth which is by no means always written legibly for all men on the face of nature. It tells us that the spiritual is higher than the material that in this universe spirit counts for more than matter.
Henry Parry Liddon
Again and again the Church of Christ has been all but engulfed, as men might have deemed, in the billows again and again the storm has been calmed by the Master, Who had seemed for awhile to sleep.
Henry Parry Liddon
Nothing is really lost by a life of sacrifice everything is lost by failure to obey God's call.
Henry Parry Liddon
A deliberate rejection of duty prescribed by already recognized truth cannot but destroy, or at least impair most seriously the clearness of our mental vision.
Henry Parry Liddon
Truth has her sterner responsibilities sooner or later in store for those who have known anything about her.
Henry Parry Liddon
Poverty ... is already half-Christian by its very nature it has everything to gain by a doctrine which makes so little of the present and the visible, and so much of the future and the unseen.
Henry Parry Liddon
A Christ upon paper, though it were the sacred pages of the Gospel, would have been as powerless to save Christendom as a Christ in fresco not less feeble than the Countenance which, in the last stages of its decay, may be traced on the wall of the Refectory at Milan. A living Christ is the key to the phenomenon of Christian history.
Henry Parry Liddon
The great laws of the moral world do not vary, however different, under different dispensations, may be the authoritative enunciation of truth, or the means of propagating and defending it.
Henry Parry Liddon
No Legislature can really destroy a religious conviction, except by exterminating its holders. It is historically too late to do that, and we shall live to see the drowned Egyptians on the seashore even yet.
Henry Parry Liddon
No light privilege is it to have a hand in building up the moral life of these new communities no common honour surely to help to lay side by side with the foundations of their free political institutions the broad and deep foundations of the Church of God.
Henry Parry Liddon
Let us think today of the prospect of sharing in a sublime and blessed existence such as is portrayed in the text of the Apocalypse before us, and let us ask ourselves whether it should or should not make any difference in our present state of being.
Henry Parry Liddon
As all true virtue, wherever found, is a ray of the life of the All-Holy so all solid knowledge, all really accurate thought, descends from the Eternal Reason, and ought, when we apprehend it, to guide us upwards to Him.
Henry Parry Liddon
A few years hence and he will be beneath the sod but those cliffs will stand, as now, facing the ocean, incessantly lashed by its waves, yet unshaken, immovable and other eyes will gaze on them for their brief day of life, and then they, too, will close.
Henry Parry Liddon
Useful knowledge, practical kindness, and beneficent laws -- these are not the Gospel but, like philosophy, they are, or may be, its handmaids. They may make its task smooth and grateful they may associate themselves with its victories, or they may prepare its way.
Henry Parry Liddon
Liberalism itself, is, on all matters connected with Church and Education, only a kind of corporate and respectable ungodliness.
Henry Parry Liddon
We may rightly shrink from saying that any given individual is certainly so unfaithful to light and grace as to incur the eternal loss of God, we do know that many are so. God knows who they are.
Henry Parry Liddon
The Church of the Apostles was a Church of the poor of silver and gold it had none.
Henry Parry Liddon
If a religious principle is worth anything, it applies to a million of human beings as truly as to one and the difficulty of insisting on its wider application does not furnish any proof that it ought not to be so applied.
Henry Parry Liddon
Certainly, envy is no monopoly of the poor it makes itself felt in all sections of society it haunts the court, the library, the barrack-room, even the sanctuary it is provoked in some unhappy souls by the near neighbourhood of any superior rank or excellence whatever.
Henry Parry Liddon