Character

J.R. Miller 90x115by J.R. Miller

Reputation is what a man’s neighbors and friends think of him. Character is what the man IS.

Character is personal. It is not a possession we can share with someone else. We can give a hungry person part of our loaf of bread; we can divide our money with one who needs it; but character is something we cannot give away or transmit. The brave soldier cannot share his courage with the trembling recruit who fights by his side in the battle. The pure, gentle woman cannot give part of her purity and gentleness, to the defiled and hardened woman she meets.

Character is our own–a part of our very being. It grows in us over the years. Acts repeated become habits, and character is made up in the long run, of those habits which have been repeated so often, that they become a permanent part of our lives.

Sow a thought–and you will reap an act; sow an act–and you will reap a habit; sow a habit–and you will reap a character; sow character–and you will reap a destiny!

As the tree falls–so must it lie; As the man lives–so must he die!

As a man dies–such must he be; All through the ages of eternity!

by J.R. Miller

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Go On To Perfection—Part 1

Andrew Murray 90x115by Andrew Murray

Excerpt From God’s Gift of Perfection Series

Chapter 20—Part 1

"But solid food is for the perfect, even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern goad and evil. For this reason, let us cease to speak of the first principles of Christ, and press on unto perfection." Hebrews 5: 14; 6: 1.

The writer had criticized the Hebrews for being slow to hear; for having made no progress in the Christian life; for still being as little children who needed milk. They could not bear solid food—the deeper and more spiritual teaching in regard to the heavenly state of life into which Christ had entered—the life into which He admits those who are ready for it. Those who are ready, our writer calls the perfect, mature or full-grown men of the house of God. We must not associate the idea of mature or full-grown with time. In the Christian life it is not as in nature. A believer of three years’ standing may be counted among the mature or perfect. One of twenty years’ standing may be but a babe, unskilled in the word of righteousness. Nor must we associate it with power of intellect or maturity of judgment. These may be found without that insight into spiritual truth, and that longing after the highest attainable perfection in character and fellowship with God, of which Paul is speaking.