Man has made a start on the meaning of life when he plants shade trees under which he knows he will never sit.
– Trueblood
Category Archives: Food for Thought
Ideas, stories, quotes, and short essays or selections from books that stimulate thoughtful consideration of a topic or spiritual principle.
Carving
Carve your name upon hearts, not upon marble.
A blessing
Christ be with you
Christ within you
Christ behind you
Christ before you
Christ beside you
Christ to win you
Christ to comfort and restore you
Christ beneath you
Christ above you
Christ in quiet
Christ in danger
Christ in hearts of all that love you
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.
Victory in Battle
“The reason why many fail in battle is because they wait until the hour of battle. The reason why others succeed is because they have gained their victory on their knees long before the battle came.”
– R.A. Torrey
Sin’s Results
Sin takes you further than you want to go, makes you stay longer than you want to stay, and makes you pay more than you want to pay.
Don’t have the time?
There were only 24 hours in a day, then, as now.
But before he died in 1826, he:
- Finished college in less than three years.
- Studied Law and had been admitted to the bar at age 24.
- Introduced crop rotation and terracing to the U.S.
- Designed and built his own home, designed one of the nation’s leading universities and the Capitol building of his own state.
- Invented a plow, a manifold signing machine, a letter copy press, double-swinging doors, a seven-day calendar clock, and countless other gadgets.
- Originated the decimal system for U.S. money.
- Played a violin well.
- Became a serious student of natural history, Indian languages, Latin, Greek, Italian, French, German, Anglo-Saxon, mathematics, history, geography, civics, economics and philosophy.
- Served as a member of his State Legislature, Governor, Minister of France, Secretary of State, Vice President and President of the United States for two terms.
- Created the public school system in his state.
- Established the U.S. Military Academy and designed the uniforms the cadets still wear.
- Wrote the rules of parliamentary procedure under which the U.S. Senate still operates.
- Was an excellent host who enjoyed entertaining.
- Fought for a system of government that made the U.S. a democratic Republic, not one ruled by the aristocracy
- Wrote 16,000 letters to friends and colleagues all over the world.
- Designed his own gravestone and created the epitaph listing the three accomplishments, of which he was proudest: “Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence; of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom; and father of the University of Virginia.”
What a lesson to people who say, in these days of labor-saving devices: ‘I just don’t have the time.
Author: William “Bill” Schock, publisher of the Falls City Journal, NE
Source: Unknown
Genius
When Polish pianist Ignace Jan Paderewsky played before Queen Victoria, he won her enthusiastic approval. “Mr. Paderewsky,” she exclaimed, “you are a genius.”
Paderewsky shook his head. “Perhaps, Your Majesty, but before that I was a drudge,” he replied, alluding to the number of hours he spent practicing every day.
Forbidden
“Sin is not harmful because it is forbidden, but it is forbidden because it is hurtful.”
– Benjamin Franklin
Surprising Them?
“Live so that when you tell someone you are a Christian, it confirms their suspicions instead of surprising them.”
– Unknown
The Misery of Arrogance
Arrogance has its own built-in misery. The arrogant person may offend others, but he hurts himself more. I was once stung by a honeybee. The sting hurt me, but it hurt the bee more – the bee died as a result of that thrust, but I didn’t.
– Billy Graham