WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Fifty Great Cartoons cover

Fifty Great Cartoons

Chapter 30: THE SELF MADE MAN.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A sequence of fifty cartoons paired with short essays and captions that employ satirical illustration and religious imagery to address moral, ecclesiastical, and civic concerns. The pieces criticize church complacency, commercialized worship, temperance issues, hypocrisy, and political corruption while urging spiritual renewal and practical reform. Many images juxtapose individual conscience and public life, dramatizing dilemmas such as poverty, immigration, and personal faith. The collection blends visual wit with didactic commentary to prompt reflection on virtue, duty, and the social role of religion.

THE SELF MADE MAN.

Paul was not “a self made man,” for he said, “I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me.” That was his claim, and it is in pleasing contrast with those individuals whose boast is that their successful careers are monuments of their own endeavor. Crowned with pride, clothed with the tattered rags of self-righteous egotism, with garments a patch work of shabby gentility, such men divide their worship between their unworthy selves and the idol of Mammon which they draw in their train. The track over which they glide in such confident security is slippery and treacherous. Based simply upon reputation it is full of breaks and seams into which any moment the unsuspecting egotist may plunge.

Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.    Prov. 16:18.

COPYRIGHT, 1896, BY FRED’K L. CHAPMAN & CO.

THE SELF MADE MAN.

“The way of a fool is right in his own eyes, but he that hearkeneth unto counsel is wise.”—Prov. XII:15