Difference between revisions of "Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For"

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Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For <ref name="term_76097" />  
 
<p> A [[Traveller]] in [[Venezuela]] illustrates the readiness of men to lay their faults on the locality, or on anything rather than themselves, by the story of a hard drinker who came home one night in such a condition that he could not for some time find his hammock. When this feat was accomplished, he tried in vain to get off his big riding-boots. After many fruitless efforts he lay down in his hammock, and soliloquized aloud, 'Well, I have travelled all the world over; I lived five years in Cuba, four in Jamaica, five in Brazil, I have travelled through [[Spain]] and Portugal, and been in Africa, but I never yet was in such an abominable country as this, where a man is obliged to go to bed with his boots on.' </p> <p> Commonly enough are we told by evildoers in excuse for their sins that no man could do otherwise were he in their position, that there is no living at their trade honestly, that in such a street shops must be open on a Sunday, that their health required an excursion to [[Brighton]] on the [[Sabbath]] because their labours were so severe, that nobody could be religious in the house in which they were engaged, and so on, all to the same effect, and about as truthful as the soliloquy of the drunkard of Venezuela. </p> <p> </p>
Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For <ref name="term_76097" />
==References ==
<p> [[A]] [[Traveller]] in [[Venezuela]] illustrates the readiness of men to lay their faults on the locality, or on anything rather than themselves, by the story of a hard drinker who came home one night in such a condition that he could not for some time find his hammock. When this feat was accomplished, he tried in vain to get off his big riding-boots. After many fruitless efforts he lay down in his hammock, and soliloquized aloud, 'Well, [[I]] have travelled all the world over; [[I]] lived five years in Cuba, four in Jamaica, five in Brazil, [[I]] have travelled through Spain and Portugal, and been in Africa, but [[I]] never yet was in such an abominable country as this, where a man is obliged to go to bed with his boots on.' </p> <p> [[Commonly]] enough are we told by evildoers in excuse for their sins that no man could do otherwise were he in their position, that there is no living at their trade honestly, that in such a street shops must be open on a Sunday, that their health required an excursion to [[Brighton]] on the [[Sabbath]] because their labours were so severe, that nobody could be religious in the house in which they were engaged, and so on, all to the same effect, and about as truthful as the soliloquy of the drunkard of Venezuela. </p>
 
== References ==
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<ref name="term_76097"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/sin:+mans+readiness+to+invent+excuse+for Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref>
<ref name="term_76097"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/sin:+mans+readiness+to+invent+excuse+for Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 01:10, 13 October 2021

Sin: Mans Readiness To Invent Excuse For [1]

A Traveller in Venezuela illustrates the readiness of men to lay their faults on the locality, or on anything rather than themselves, by the story of a hard drinker who came home one night in such a condition that he could not for some time find his hammock. When this feat was accomplished, he tried in vain to get off his big riding-boots. After many fruitless efforts he lay down in his hammock, and soliloquized aloud, 'Well, I have travelled all the world over; I lived five years in Cuba, four in Jamaica, five in Brazil, I have travelled through Spain and Portugal, and been in Africa, but I never yet was in such an abominable country as this, where a man is obliged to go to bed with his boots on.'

Commonly enough are we told by evildoers in excuse for their sins that no man could do otherwise were he in their position, that there is no living at their trade honestly, that in such a street shops must be open on a Sunday, that their health required an excursion to Brighton on the Sabbath because their labours were so severe, that nobody could be religious in the house in which they were engaged, and so on, all to the same effect, and about as truthful as the soliloquy of the drunkard of Venezuela.

References