About This Book
A series of pulpit discourses examines moral and social questions arising from urban life, reading street scenes and industrial growth as sources of ethical instruction. The speaker contrasts mechanization and commercial pursuits with human dignity, insisting that technology and enterprise must be subordinated to spiritual and social welfare. He probes motives such as ambition, the struggle for precedence, and the disguises of pride, while spotlighting poverty, the plight of children, and the social allies of temptation. Closing sermons advocate practical religion and public charity as means to relieve suffering and cultivate civic virtues, urging that inward regeneration be matched by organized efforts to improve daily conditions.
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