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Beveridge, Albert Jeremiah, 1862-1927

"The Young Man and the World"


With all your faith and the fervor of it, be full of thought. Merely
to believe burningly is not enough. Nobody will listen to you declaim
the confession and then declaim it over and over again and nothing
more. Even pious monotony palls. Bread is the staff of life; and yet
too much bread eaten at one time will kill. Food, taken in excess,
becomes poison.
I have emphasized the necessity for faith because it will always be
the very soul of your influence over your audience. It is the power
behind your ideas. Faith is the dynamics of truth. But do not forget
that you have got to _have_ ideas. You have got to _have_ truth.
In every word you utter you must be a teacher.
After all, teaching is the only oratory. Luke says of the Master that
"he _taught_ the people." In reporting the Sermon on the Mount,
Matthew says that "he opened his mouth and _taught_ them." Time and
again I have heard hard-headed business men and sturdy farmers say of
a particularly instructive sermon: "I like to hear that preacher; I
always _learn_ something from him."
And let your discourse be full of "sweet reasonableness." Peter tells
you "to be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you
a reason for the hope that is within you," although Peter himself
seldom gave a reason for anything.


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