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Difference between revisions of "Day By Day"

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Day By Day <ref name="term_75746" />
Day By Day <ref name="term_75750" />
<p> [[A]] celebrated modern writer says, 'Take care of the minutes, and the hours will take care of themselves.' This is an admirable remark, and might be very seasonably recollected when we begin to be 'weary in well-doing,' from the thought of having much to do. The present moment is all we have to do with in any sense; the past is irrecoverable; the future is uncertain; nor is it fair to burthen one moment with the weight of the next. [[Sufficient]] unto the moment is the trouble thereof. If we had to walk a hundred miles, we should still have to set but one step at a time, and this process continued would infallibly bring us to our journey's end. fatigue generally begins, and is always increased, by calculating in a minute the exertion of hours. Thus, in looking forward to future life, let us recollect that we have not to sustain all its toil, to endure all its sufferings, or encounter all its crosses at once. One moment comes laden with its own little burthens, then flies, and is succeeded by another no heavier than the last; if one could be borne, so could another, and another. Even in looking forward to a single day, the spirit may sometimes faint from an anticipation of the duties, the labours, the trials to temper and patience, that may be expected. Now, this is unjustly laying the burthen of many thousand moments upon one.: Youth's Magazine for November, 1819. </p>
<p> [[A]] person says, [['I]] cannot understand bow [[I]] am to get along when [[I]] leave my father's house.' Why should you see it till that time comes? What if a person going on a journey of five years should undertake to carry provisions, and clothes, and gold enough to last him during the whole time, lugging them as he travelled, like a veritable Englishman, with all creation at his back! If he is wise he will supply himself at the different points where he stops. When he gets to London, let him buy what he needs there; when he gets to Paris, let him buy what he needs there; when he gets to Rome, let him buy what he needs there; and when he gets to Vienna, Dresden, Munich, St. Petersburg, and Canton, let him buy what he needs at these places! He will find at each of them, and all the other cities which he visits, whatever things he requires. Why, then, should he undertake to carry them around the globe with him? It would be the greatest folly imaginable. And as to gold, why should he load down his pockets with that? Let him take a circular letter of credit, which is good, yet not usable till he arrives at the place where he needs it. When he gets to London, let him present it to Baring Brothers; when he gets to Paris, let him present it to the Rothschilds. And as he proceeds, let him place it in the hands of the bankers of the various places at which he stops; and he will get the means for prosecuting his journey. Now God gives every believer a circular letter of credit for life, and says, 'Whenever you get to a place where you need assistance, take your letter to the Banker, and the needed assistance will be given you.': Henry Ward Beecher. </p>


== References ==
== References ==
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<ref name="term_75746"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/day+by+day Day By Day from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref>
<ref name="term_75750"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/day+by+day+(2) Day By Day from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref>
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