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Kingsley, Charles, 1819-1875

"Town and Country Sermons"


This--the pattern of perfect obedience, perfect unselfishness,
perfect generosity, perfect self-sacrificing love--is what we are to
look at in Passion Week. This, I believe, is what we are meant to
copy in Passion Week; that we may learn the habit of copying it all
our lives long.
Why should not we, then, keep Passion Week somewhat as our Lord kept
it before us? Not by merely hiding in our closets to meditate, even
about _him_: but by going about our work, each in his place,
dutifully, bravely, as he went? By doing the duty which lies
nearest us, and trying to draw our lesson out of it.
Thus we may keep Passion Week in spirit and in truth; though some of
us may hardly have time to enter a church, hardly have time for an
hour's private thought about religion.
Amid the bustle of daily duties; amid the buzz of petty cares; amid
the anxieties of great labours; amid the roar of the busy world,
which cannot stop (and which ought not to stop), for our
convenience; we may keep Passion Week in spirit and in truth, if we
will do the duty which lies nearest us, and try to draw our lesson
out of it.
For practice--and, I believe, practice alone--will teach us to
restrain ourselves, and conquer ourselves. Experience--and, I
believe, experience alone--will show us our own faults and
weaknesses.


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