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"He was driven to use the prerogatives of his profession, to act the parson."
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"We have created a culture of leadership "development" in the Church at the expense of ignore the ministry of the Church to making disciples."
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Personal Development


"If we are established in a ministry it will be very difficult for the devil to uproot us."
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Personal Development


"The ministry of Christ is related to fellowshipping with people."
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Personal Development


"Every unearnest minister is an unfaithful one."
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Personal Development


"Our success in ministry is not to elevate us but to glorify Him who has called and equipped us."
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Personal Development


"The ministry of Christ is based on people."
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Personal Development


"Pastor Face Your Business. When people say this they mean that I must just stay behind the pulpit and preach."
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Personal Development


"The 21st Century Church must rethink ministry via the lens of technology. While most of them are consumed by their imbalance stance; bathing anointing oil and buying tokens for miracles, their counterparts are ministering to millions using the advancement in technology/internet. A powerful tool in the hands of the believer."
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Personal Development


"A ministry gives us the opportunity to establish roots."
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Personal Development


"We as pastors, as God's ministers, must have right priorities. Only then we will become successful in ministry."
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Personal Development
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"America is rather like life. You can usually find in it what you look for. It will probably be interesting, and it is sure to be large."
Life

"The Waves is an extraordinary achievement ... It is trembling on the edge. A little less - and it would lose its poetry. A little more - and it would be over into the abyss, and be dull and arty. It is her greatest book."
Art

"Humility is a quality for which I have only a limited admiration. In many phases of life it is a great mistake and degenerates into defensiveness and hypocrisy."
Character

"Boys are marvellous creatures. Perhaps they will sink below the brutes, perhaps they will attain to a woman's tenderness."
Observation

"Mr. Pembroke, watching his broad back, desired to bury a knife in it. The desire passed, partly because it was unclerical, partly because he had no knife, and partly because he soon blurred over what had happened. To him all criticism was "rudeness": he never heeded it, for he never needed it: he was never wrong."
Reflection

"Was Mrs. Wilcox one of the unsatisfactory people- there are many of them- who dangle intimacy and then withdraw it? They evoke our interests and affections, and keep the life of the spirit dawdling around them. Then they withdraw. When physical passion is involved, there is a definite name for such behaviour- flirting- and if carried far enough, it is punishable by law. But no law- not public opinion, even- punishes those who coquette with friendship, though the dull ache that they inflict, the sense of misdirected effort and exhaustion, may be as intolerable. Was she one of these?"
Relationship

"I am sure that if the mothers of various nations could meet, there would be no more wars."
Family

"The business man who assumes that this life is everything, and the mystic who asserts that it is nothing, fail, on this side and on that, to hit the truth. "Yes, I see, dear; it's about halfway between," Aunt Juley had hazarded in earlier years. No; truth, being alive, was not halfway between anything. It was only to be found by continuous excursions into either realm, and though proportion is the final secret, to espouse it at the outset is to ensure sterility."
Philosophy

"Fed by neither Heaven nor by Earth he was going forward . . . He hadn't a God or a lover--the two usual incentives to virtue. But on he struggled with his back to ease, because dignity demanded it. There was no one to watch him, nor did he watch himself, but struggles like his are the supreme achievements of humanity, and surpass any legends about Heavan."
Humanity

"Two cheers for Democracy; one because it admits variety, and two because it permits criticism."
Criticism
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