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The Deaf Shoemaker: To Which Are Added Other Stories for the Young cover

The Deaf Shoemaker: To Which Are Added Other Stories for the Young

Chapter 44: “WHAT I LIVE FOR.”
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About This Book

A collection of short moral and religious tales and sketches aimed at children and young people, offering narratives and reflections that illustrate Christian virtues such as courage, patience, repentance, and charity. The pieces combine anecdotal episodes, devotional meditations, hymnic passages, Sabbath-school addresses, and practical sketches for young men, using everyday domestic incidents and occasional heroic examples to teach right conduct. The book is organized as many brief, self-contained items intended to instruct, encourage faith, and prompt moral reflection.


“WHAT I LIVE FOR.”

I live for those who love me,
For those who know me true;
For the heaven that smiles above me,
And awaits my spirit too;
For the cause that lacks assistance,
For the wrong that needs resistance,
For the Future in the distance,
And the good that I can do.”

We are told that a word, when it has fallen from the lips, never dies away; that the sound goes on widening and widening throughout the immensity of space.

Such are our lives. The acts which we do, the words which we utter, are exerting an untold influence for good or for evil. They are moulding, silently but certainly, the character of those by whom we are surrounded, for weal or for woe. Their influence extends even to eternity.

Fellow Christians! impressed with this solemn thought, let our heart’s desire be to minister to the wants of the sick and dying, to carry the glad tidings of salvation to the hovels of ignorance and poverty, to cheer the homeless orphan, to console the friendless widow; for by so doing, we shall surely gain our reward both in this world and that which is to come. Let us do what we can to dry the tear of sorrow, to gladden the heart of the laborer in his long hours of lonely toil; do what we can by precept, by prayer, by example, by toilsome labor, to win souls to Jesus Christ. Who had not rather be the means of saving one soul, than obtain all the riches or receive all the honors the world can furnish?—