PERSEVERANCE— Necessity of. – Charles Spurgeon

IN the heathery turf you will often find a plant chiefly remarkable for its peculiar roots ; from the main stem down to the minutest fibre, you will find them all abruptly terminate, as if shorn or bitten off, and the quaint superstition of the country people alleges, that once on a time it was a plant of singular potency for healing all sorts of maladies, and there- fore the great enemy of man in his malignity bit off the roots, in which its virtues resided. The plant with this odd history, is a very good emblem of many well-meaning but little- effecting people. They might be defined as radiBbus prmmorsis, or rather inxfiiis suecisis. The efficacy of every good work lies in its completion, and all their good works i abruptly, and are left off unfinished. The devil frustrates their efficacy by cutting off their ends ; their un- profitable history is made up of plans and projects, schemes of usefulness that were never gone about, and magnificent undertakings that were never carried forward ; societies that were set t: going, then left to shift for themselves, and forlorn beings who for a time were taken up and instructed, and just when they were beginning to show symptoms of improvement were cast on the world again. — James Hamilton, D.D.

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