Preaching is to much avail, but practice is far more effective. A godly life is the strongest argument you can offer the skeptic.
About Hosea Ballou
Hosea Ballou D.D.was an American Universalist clergyman and theological writer.
Originally a Baptist, he converted to Universalism in 1789.
More quotes from Hosea Ballou
Real happiness is cheap enough, yet how dearly we pay for its counterfeit.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Forty is the old age of youth, fifty is the youth of old age.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Suspicion is far more to be wrong than right; more often unjust than just. It is no friend to virtue, and always an enemy to happiness.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Education commences at the mother’s knee, and every word spoken within hearsay of little children tends toward the formation of character.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Falsehood is cowardice, the truth courage.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Tears of joy are like the summer rain drops pierced by sunbeams.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
It is easy to be beautiful; it is difficult to appear so.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Preaching is to much avail, but practice is far more effective. A godly life is the strongest argument you can offer the skeptic.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Never let your zeal outrun your charity. The former is but human, the latter is divine.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Theories are always very thin and insubstantial, experience only is tangible.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
The oppression of any people for opinion’s sake has rarely had any other effect than to fix those opinions deeper, and render them more important.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Hatred is self-punishment.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Doubt is the incentive to truth and inquiry leads the way.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
No one has a greater asset for his business than a man’s pride in his work.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Brevity and conciseness are the parents of correction.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Energy, like the biblical grain of the mustard-seed, will remove mountains.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Religion which requires persecution to sustain, it is of the devil’s propagation.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Everything in the world exists to end up in a book.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
There is no such things as “best” in the world of individuals.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Disease is the retribution of outraged Nature.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Those who commit injustice bear the greatest burden.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Error is always more busy than truth.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Exaggeration is a blood relation to falsehood and nearly as blamable.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Never be so brief as to become obscure.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)
Though ambition in itself is a vice, it often is also the parent of virtue.
American Universalist minister (1771-1852)