Difference between revisions of "Insidious Nature Ofsin:"
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<p> In the gardens of [[Hampton]] | Insidious Nature Ofsin: <ref name="term_76089" /> | ||
==References == | <p> In the gardens of [[Hampton]] Court you will see many trees entirely vanquished and well nigh strangled by huge coils of ivy, which are wound about them like the snakes around the unhappy Laocoon: there is no untwisting the folds, they are too giant-like, and fast fixed, and every hour the rootlets of the climber are sucking the life out of the unhappy tree. Yet there was a day when the ivy was a tiny aspirant, only asking a little aid in climbing; had it been denied then, the tree had never become its victim, but by degrees the humble weak-S ling grew in strength and arrogance, and at last it assumed the mastery, and the tall tree became the prey of the creeping, insinuating destroyer. The moral is too obvious. Sorrowfully do we remember many noble characters which have been ruined little and little by insinuating habits. [[Drink]] has been the ivy in many cases. Reader, see to it, lest some slowly advancing sin overpower you: men who are murdered by slow poisoning die just as surely as those who take arsenic. </p> | ||
== References == | |||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name="term_76089"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/sin:+insidious+nature+of Insidious Nature Ofsin: from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref> | <ref name="term_76089"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/sin:+insidious+nature+of Insidious Nature Ofsin: from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref> | ||
</references> | </references> |
Latest revision as of 00:10, 13 October 2021
Insidious Nature Ofsin: [1]
In the gardens of Hampton Court you will see many trees entirely vanquished and well nigh strangled by huge coils of ivy, which are wound about them like the snakes around the unhappy Laocoon: there is no untwisting the folds, they are too giant-like, and fast fixed, and every hour the rootlets of the climber are sucking the life out of the unhappy tree. Yet there was a day when the ivy was a tiny aspirant, only asking a little aid in climbing; had it been denied then, the tree had never become its victim, but by degrees the humble weak-S ling grew in strength and arrogance, and at last it assumed the mastery, and the tall tree became the prey of the creeping, insinuating destroyer. The moral is too obvious. Sorrowfully do we remember many noble characters which have been ruined little and little by insinuating habits. Drink has been the ivy in many cases. Reader, see to it, lest some slowly advancing sin overpower you: men who are murdered by slow poisoning die just as surely as those who take arsenic.