110+ John Lancaster Spalding Quotes On Slavery, Educational And Catholic
John Lancaster Spalding was an American Catholic priest and educator in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was the first superior-general of the Society of Jesus in the United States and the first bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Peoria. He is best known for his book, Life of Father Hecker, which was published in 1891 and is still in print today. Following is our collection on famous quotes by John Lancaster Spalding on slavery, love, educational.
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- John Lancaster Spalding Quotes About Love
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Top 10 John Lancaster Spalding Quotes
- Women are aristocrats, and it is always the mother who makes us feel that we belong to the better sort.
- We are more disturbed by a calamity which threatens us than by one which has befallen us.
- As memory may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape.
- Dislike of another's opinions and beliefs neither justifies our own nor makes us more certain of them: and to transfer the repugnance to the person himself is a mark of a vulgar mind.
- It is difficult to be sure of our friends, but it is possible to be certain of our loyalty to them.
- Be suspicious of your sincerity when you are the advocate of that upon which your livelihood depends.
- The zest of life lies in right doing, not in the garnered harvest.
- Our prejudices are like physical infirmities — we cannot do what they prevent us from doing.
- If thy words are wise, they will not seem so to the foolish: if they are deep the shallow will not appreciate them. Think not highly of thyself, then, when thou art praised by many.
- The doubt of an earnest, thoughtful, patient and laborious mind is worthy of respect. In such doubt may be found indeed more faith than in half the creeds.
John Lancaster Spalding Short Quotes
- It is the business of the teacher ... to fortify reason and to make conscience sovereign.
- If thou wouldst help others deal with them as though they were what they should be
- We are not masters of the truth which is borne in upon us: it overpowers us.
- If all were gentle and contented as sheep, all would be as feeble and helpless.
- The common man is impelled and controlled by interests; the superior, by ideas.
- It is unpleasant to turn back, though it be to take the right way.
- If thou wouldst be implacable, be so with thyself.
- Reform the world within thyself, which is thy proper world.
- Base thy life on principle, not on rules.
- Agitators and declaimers may heat the blood, but they do not illumine the mind.
John Lancaster Spalding Quotes About Love
We have lost the old love of work, of work which kept itself company, which was fair weather and music in the heart, which found its reward in the doing, craving neither the flattery of vulgar eyes nor the gold of vulgar men. — John Lancaster Spalding
Education would be a divine thing, if it did nothing more than help us to think and love great thoughts instead of little thoughts. — John Lancaster Spalding
Faith, like love, unites; opinion, like hate, separates. — John Lancaster Spalding
There are faults which show heart and win hearts, while the virtue in which there is no love, repels. — John Lancaster Spalding
The study of science, dissociated from that of philosophy and literature, narrows the mind and weakens the power to love and follow the noblest ideals: for the truths which science ignores and must ignore are precisely those which have the deepest bearing on life and conduct. — John Lancaster Spalding
As a brave man goes into fire or flood or pestilence to save a human life, so a generous mind follows after truth and love, and is not frightened from the pursuit by danger or toil or obloquy. — John Lancaster Spalding
When guests enter the room their entertainers rise to receive them; and in all meetings men should ascend into their higher selves, imparting to one another only the best they know and love. — John Lancaster Spalding
In education, as in religion and love, compulsion thwarts the purpose for which it is employed. — John Lancaster Spalding
To cultivate the memory we should confide to it only what we understand and love: the rest is a useless burden; for simply to know by rote is not to know at all. — John Lancaster Spalding
When we know and love the best we are content to lack the approval of the many. — John Lancaster Spalding
John Lancaster Spalding Quotes About Educational
The aim of education is to strengthen and multiply the powers and activities of the mind rather than to increase its possessions. — John Lancaster Spalding
Those subjects have the greatest educational value, which are richest in incentives to the noblest self-activity. — John Lancaster Spalding
To think of education as a means of preserving institutions however excellent, is to have a superficial notion of its end and purpose, which is to mould and fashion men who are more than institutions, who create, outgrow, and re-create them. — John Lancaster Spalding
The lover of education labors first of all to educate himself. — John Lancaster Spalding
Exercise of body and exercise of mind are supplementary, and both may be made recreative and educative. — John Lancaster Spalding
Where it is the chief aim to teach many things, little education is given or received. — John Lancaster Spalding
The will the one thing it is most important to educate we neglect. — John Lancaster Spalding
A liberal education is that which aims to develop faculty without ulterior views of profession or other means of gaining a livelihood. It considers man an end in himself and not an instrument whereby something is to be wrought. Its ideal is human perfection. — John Lancaster Spalding
John Lancaster Spalding Famous Quotes And Sayings
We have no sympathy with those who are controlled by ideas and passions which we neither understand nor feel. Thus they who live to satisfy the appetites do not believe it possible to live in and for the soul. — John Lancaster Spalding
There are who mistake the spirit of pugnacity for the spirit of piety, and thus harbor a devil instead of an angel. — John Lancaster Spalding
In giving us dominion over the animal kingdom God has signified His will that we subdue the beast within ourselves. — John Lancaster Spalding
A Wise man knows that much of what he says and does is commonplace and trivial. His thoughts are not all solemn and sacred in his own eyes. He is able to laugh at himself and is not offended when others make him a subject whereon to exercise their wit. — John Lancaster Spalding
To view an object in the proper light we must stand away from it. The study of the classical literatures gives the aloofness which cultivates insight. In learning to live with peoples and civilizations that have long ceased to be alive, we gain a vantage point, acquire an enlargement and elevation of thought, which enable us to study with a more impartial and liberal mind the condition of the society around us. — John Lancaster Spalding
What is greatly desired, but long deferred, gives little pleasure, when at length it is ours, for we have lived with it in imagination until we have grown weary of it, having ourselves, in the meanwhile, become other. — John Lancaster Spalding
Passion is begotten of passion, and it easily happens, as with the children of great men, that the base is the offspring of the noble. — John Lancaster Spalding
Leave each one his touch of folly; it helps to lighten life's burden which, if he could see himself as he is, might be too heavy to carry. — John Lancaster Spalding
Each forward step we take we leave some phantom of ourselves behind. — John Lancaster Spalding
If our opinions rest upon solid ground, those who attack them do not make us angry, but themselves ridiculous. — John Lancaster Spalding
A hobby is the result of a distorted view of things. It is putting a planet in the place of a sun. — John Lancaster Spalding
If there are but few who interest thee, why shouldst thou be disappointed if but few find thee interesting? — John Lancaster Spalding
The able have no desire to appear to be so, and this is part of their ability. — John Lancaster Spalding
The highest courage is to dare to appear to be what one is — John Lancaster Spalding
One may speak Latin and have but the mind of a peasant. — John Lancaster Spalding
Break not the will of the young, but guide it to right ends. — John Lancaster Spalding
There is some lack either of sense or of character in one who becomes involved in difficulties with the worthless or the vicious. — John Lancaster Spalding
If ancient descent could confer nobility, the lower forms of life would possess it in a greater degree than man. — John Lancaster Spalding
They whom trifles distract and nothing occupies are but children. — John Lancaster Spalding
The power of free will is developed and confirmed by increasing the number of worthy motives which influence conduct. — John Lancaster Spalding
It is the expensiveness of our pleasures that makes the world poor and keeps us poor in ourselves. If we could but learn to find enjoyment in the things of the mind, the economic problems would solve themselves. — John Lancaster Spalding
The writers who accomplish most are those who compel thought on the highest and most profoundly interesting subjects. — John Lancaster Spalding
They who can no longer unlearn have lost the power to learn. — John Lancaster Spalding
The fields and the flowers and the beautiful faces are not ours, as the stars and the hills and the sunlight are not ours, but they give us fresh and happy thoughts. — John Lancaster Spalding
The common prejudice against philosophy is the result of the incapacity of the multitude to deal with the highest problems. — John Lancaster Spalding
Unless we consent to lack the common things which men call success, we shall hardly become heroes or saints, philosophers or poets. — John Lancaster Spalding
If I am not pleased with myself, but should wish to be other than I am, why should I think highly of the influences which have made me what I am? — John Lancaster Spalding
As children must have the hooping cough, the college youth must pass through the stage of conceit in which he holds in slight esteem the wisdom of the best. — John Lancaster Spalding
When one sense has been bribed the others readily bear false witness. — John Lancaster Spalding
The study of law is valuable as a mental discipline, but the practice of pleading tends to make one petty, formal, and insincere. To be driven to look to legality rather than to equity blurs the view of truth and justice. — John Lancaster Spalding
If a state should pass laws forbidding its citizens to become wise and holy, it would be made a byword for all time. But this, in effect, is what our commercial, social, and political systems do. They compel the sacrifice of mental and moral power to money and dissipation. — John Lancaster Spalding
Inferior thinking and writing will make a name for a man among inferior people, who in all ages and countries, are the majority. — John Lancaster Spalding
Your faith is what you believe, not what you know. — John Lancaster Spalding
To secure approval one must remain within the bounds of conventional mediocrity. Whatever lies beyond, whether it be greater insight and virtue, or greater stolidity and vice, is condemned. The noblest men, like the worst criminals, have been done to death. — John Lancaster Spalding
He who leaves school, knowing little, but with a longing for knowledge, will go farther than one who quits, knowing many things, but not caring to learn more. — John Lancaster Spalding
If thou need money, get it in an honest way by keeping books, if thou wilt, but not by writing books. — John Lancaster Spalding
As our power over others increases, we become less free; for to retain it, we must make ourselves its servants. — John Lancaster Spalding
The ploughman knows how many acres he shall upturn from dawn to sunset: but the thinker knows not what a day may bring forth. — John Lancaster Spalding
The doctrine of the utter vanity of life is a doctrine of despair, and life is hope. — John Lancaster Spalding
If there were nothing else to trouble us, the fate of the flowers would make us sad. — John Lancaster Spalding
No sooner does a divine gift reveal itself in youth or maid than its market value becomes the decisive consideration, and the poor young creatures are offered for sale, as we might sell angels who had strayed among us. — John Lancaster Spalding
The innocence which is simply ignorance is not virtue. — John Lancaster Spalding
To think profoundly, to seek and speak truth, to love justice and denounce wrong is to draw upon one's self the ill will of many. — John Lancaster Spalding
We may outgrow the things of children, without acquiring sense and relish for those which become a man. — John Lancaster Spalding
It is not difficult to grasp and express thoughts that float on the stream of current opinion: but to think and rightly utter what is permanently true and interesting, what shall appeal to the best minds a thousand years hence, as it appeals to them to-day, this is the work of genius. — John Lancaster Spalding
Folly will run its course and it is the part of wisdom not to take it too seriously. — John Lancaster Spalding
We may avoid much disappointment and bitterness of soul by learning to understand how little necessary to our joy and peace are the things the multitude most desire and seek. — John Lancaster Spalding
We are made ridiculous less by our defects than by the affectation of qualities which are not ours. — John Lancaster Spalding
The world is a mirror into which we look, and see our own image. — John Lancaster Spalding
The noblest are they who turning from the things the vulgar crave, seek the source of a blessed life in worlds to which the senses do not lead. — John Lancaster Spalding
What we enjoy, not what we possess, is ours, and in labouring for the possession of many things, we lose the power to enjoy the best. — John Lancaster Spalding
Contradiction is the salt which keeps truth from corruption — John Lancaster Spalding
States of soul rightly expressed, as the poet expresses them in moments of pure inspiration, retain forever the power of creating like states. It is this that makes genuine literature a vital force. — John Lancaster Spalding
The exercise of authority is odious, and they who know how to govern, leave it in abeyance as much as possible. — John Lancaster Spalding
Insight makes argument ridiculous. — John Lancaster Spalding
Culture makes the whole world our dwelling place; our palace in which we take our ease and find ourselves at one with all things. — John Lancaster Spalding
In the world of thought a man's rank is determined, not by his average work, but by his highest achievement. — John Lancaster Spalding
Language should be pure, noble and graceful, as the body should be so: for both are vestures of the Soul. — John Lancaster Spalding
If thy friends tire of thee, remember that it is human to tire of everything. — John Lancaster Spalding
A gentleman does not appear to know more or to be more than those with whom he is thrown into company. — John Lancaster Spalding
When we have not the strength or the courage to grasp a new truth, we persuade ourselves that it is not a truth at all. — John Lancaster Spalding
Work, mental or manual, is the means whereby attention is compelled, it is the instrument of all knowledge and virtue, the root whence all excellence springs. — John Lancaster Spalding
If we fail to interest, whether because we are dull and heavy, or because our hearers are so, we teach in vain. — John Lancaster Spalding
There are few things it is more important to learn than how to live on little and be therewith content: for the less we need what is without, the more leisure have we to live within. — John Lancaster Spalding
When we have attained success, we see how inferior it is to the hope, yearning and enthusiasm with which we started forth in life's morning. — John Lancaster Spalding
If we are disappointed that men give little heed to what we utter is it for their sake or our own? — John Lancaster Spalding
Solitude is unbearable for those who can not bear themselves. — John Lancaster Spalding
If we attempt to sink the soul in matter, its light is quenched. — John Lancaster Spalding
If thou wouldst be interesting, keep thy personality in the background, and be great and strong in and through thy subject. — John Lancaster Spalding
Be watchful lest thou lose the power of desiring and loving what appeals to the soul this is the miser's curse this the chain and ball the sensualist drags. — John Lancaster Spalding
Whoever has freed himself from envy and bitterness may begin to try to see things as they are. — John Lancaster Spalding
They who see through the eyes of others are controlled by the will of others. — John Lancaster Spalding
Friends humor and flatter us, they steal our time, they encourage our love of ease, they make us content with ourselves, they are the foes of our virtue and our glory. — John Lancaster Spalding
Say not thou lackest talent. What talent had any of the greatest, but passionate faith in the efficacy of work? — John Lancaster Spalding
If science were nothing more than the best means of teaching the love of the simple fact, the indispensable need of verification, of careful and accurate observation and statement, its value would be of the highest order. — John Lancaster Spalding
As we can not love what is hateful, let us accustom ourselves neither to think nor to speak of disagreeable things and persons. — John Lancaster Spalding
Nothing requires so little mental effort as to narrate or follow a story. Hence everybody tells stories and the readers of stories outnumber all others. — John Lancaster Spalding
Though what we accept be true, it is a prejudice unless we ourselves have considered and understood why and how it is true. — John Lancaster Spalding
Life Lessons by John Lancaster Spalding
- John Lancaster Spalding emphasizes the importance of striving for excellence in all aspects of life, no matter how small the task may be.
- He also encourages us to be mindful of our actions and to take responsibility for our mistakes.
- Finally, he reminds us to never give up and to always strive for the best possible outcome, regardless of the odds.
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